Khaberni - The Egyptian cultural circles were deeply saddened by the sudden passing of the young poet Mohamed Abu Al-Azayem, who died in a motorcycle accident linked to the company "Uber", but he predicted his death in his last moments while on the hospital bed and asked to call his mother to say goodbye in a painful way.
In a literary style charged with human emotions, his psychologist Dr. Mona Qabil, who also had a close personal connection with him, revealed in a lengthy and touching post on her Facebook page the details of the poet's touching departure, who contacted her in those moments to tell her decisively: "I am dying".
Qabil said: "Last Wednesday evening, around eight-thirty, everything seemed normal, Mohamed on an Uber motorcycle behind the driver, returning from his job as a pharmacist, then in one moment the scene flipped, a passing accident in the eyes of bystanders, but it was the end we were not prepared for."
She added: "The ambulance arrived quickly and took them, Mohamed was still alive, his breaths weak but present. At the hospital, it seemed simple to those looking from the outside, but the internal bleeding was silently doing its work from within, taking him quietly in the same night, without giving us a chance to say a last word or hold his hand any longer."
She continued, saying: "He felt the time of parting had come and told me on Monday that he was leaving. I tried to lighten the matter but I believed his instinct that never lied, an instinct that made him call his mother to bid her goodbye and to ask her to take good care of herself."
The doctor documented her testimony about him as a poet and as a human being, saying: "He was not just a friend, he was a real brother, a human with a green heart, not fragile, very sensitive, saw what others did not see and suffered for it, he went through bouts of depression like any human, but his deepest wound was in the injustice of those closest to him, and in his disappointments in people he thought were his support."
She added: "He was not just a passing poet, he was a true voice, a genuine pain walking among us, and a continuous attempt to understand the world without corrupting it."
And concluded her testimony saying: "Farewell Mohammed, you walked with the lightness of one who knows that words are heavier than mountains, and you hid in your pocket poems that have not yet been written, afraid of them from eyes that see only ink and forget the heart that bleeds beneath it."
The poet Mohamed Abu Al-Azayem was famous for his fluent language and the emotional poem that stirs feelings in simplicity and astonishment without melodramatic exaggerations, and among his notable works is the collection "When the Timers Turn Red".



