18-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Morocco World
30th SIEL Edition Kicks Off in Rabat with Books, Debates, and Culture
Rabat – With a breeze of fresh ink and rustling pages, the 30th edition of the International Book and Publishing Fair (SIEL) opened its doors today in Rabat, kicking off a ten-day celebration of books, ideas, and imagination.
The atmosphere? Bookish, buzzing, and bursting with promise.
From the moment the gates opened, readers flooded the aisles, leafing through titles in Arabic, Amazigh, French, English, and more.
More than 775 exhibitors from 51 countries are taking part in this landmark edition, which places Rabat at the heart of global literary exchange. With over 100,000 titles on display, this year's SIEL doesn't just promise quantity, it delivers authenticity, depth, and discovery.
The event, organized by Morocco's Ministry of Youth, Culture, and Communication, alongside the Rabat-Sale-Kénitra region and the city of Rabat, unfolds as part of broader efforts to position the capital as a cultural beacon, a goal that gains momentum as Rabat prepares to become UNESCO's World Book Capital in 2026.
The fair's theme this year revolves around memory, literary, historical, and collective. Tributes throughout the program honor Moroccan icons such as Driss Chraïbi, Abdellatif Laabi, and Leila Abouzeid, among others, whose words continue to echo across generations.
Morocco has long stood as a literary haven, its cities casting a spell over some of the most iconic writers of the 20th century. From the winding alleys of Tangier to the ochre walls of Marrakech, the country has inspired foreign authors who found in it a depth of culture, contrast, and storytelling unlike anywhere else.
Paul Bowles made Morocco his lifelong muse. Anaïs Nin, meanwhile, was enchanted by the haunting beauty of Fez, its maze-like medina, its hidden courtyards, and its sense of timelessness. In her diaries, she captured the city's surreal atmosphere with the same introspective intensity that defined her work, letting Fez seep into her imagination like a half-remembered dream.
Tennessee Williams and William S. Burroughs sought creative refuge in its layered landscapes, just as Edith Wharton and George Orwell captured fragments of its spirit in their travel writings. Jean Genet found poetry in its margins, and Esther Freud followed in the footsteps of this long line of literary pilgrims. Time and again, Morocco has proven its literary weight against all odds.
Back to SIEL. The week ahead is packed with panel discussions, workshops, and debates touching on Moroccan and foreign literature, women and writing in Morocco, publishing challenges, poetry, and even the literary landscapes shaped by the Moroccan diaspora. Gaza, and the power of resistance through words, also finds a place in the book fair.
This year's guest of honor, Sharjah, brings its own cultural depth to the fair. Emirati publishers and writers are joining hands with Moroccan counterparts in conversations that bridge the Arab world. Traditional heritage shows, Arabic calligraphy sessions, and workshops for children offer visitors a glimpse into Sharjah's literary heartbeat.
As the sun set on the first day, this edition proved that it's a stride forward in Morocco's evolving cultural journey, placing books at the center of civic life and imagination, in hope that reading becomes a lasting part of daily life for Moroccans.
If the first day is any indication, the coming days promise an interactive celebration of literature's power to bring people together, one page at a time. Tags: Book fairbooks moroccoMorocco literatureMorocco SIELSIEL 2025