Homage to the figures of Monastir

A touch of loyalty to the personalities of Tunisia and Monastir in particular, men and women who helped build the glory of our dear homeland, the nucleus of the national movement during the resistance of the brutal colonialist and then during the construction of modern Tunisia afterwards. independence, The city of Monastir gave thinkers, professors, doctors and economists who contributed to the development of the institutions of the modern national state, Mr. Akram El-Sebri, the governor of Monastir, tonight, Monday 07 Joan 2021, in the presence of
Messrs Tariq Al-Bakoush, the first authorized representative, Wajeeh Boumeza, the acting representative of Monastir, Al-Mundhir Marzouk, the mayor of Monastir, and a group of regional executives and representatives of the components of civil society and a number of families of the late Muhammad Faraj Al-Shazly and Mansour Al-Sakhiri, inaugurated a street at the intersection of Al-Foz in the city of Monastir in the name of the late Professor Muhammad Farag Al-Shazly, and a street at the level of the intersection of the fountain in the name of the late Mansour Al-Sakhiri
Mohamed Faraj El-Shazly: Son of Monastir and Tunisian statesman, he was born on May 9, 1927 and died in Monastir on April 13, 2014.
Mohamed Faraj El-Shazly obtained a certificate of competence in educational pedagogy at the House of Superior Masters of Tunis. He has worked since 1957 as a teacher and principal of primary and secondary schools, including the primary school of Sidi Bou Saïd and Rafraf of governorate of Bizerte, the high school of Menzel Tamim, and the high school of Beja, then he was appointed in 1970. Inspector General of Secondary Education in Arabic Language and Literature.
the late Mohamed Farag El-Shazly was appointed Chief of Staff to the Minister of Education and Secretary General of the National Commission for UNESCO in 1971. In 1973 he was appointed Chief of Staff to the Minister of Culture and Director from the Department of Arts to the Ministry, he was then appointed Director of Primary Education in 1978, then appointed to the post of Minister of Education in the government of Mohamed Mazali between April 25, 1980 and May 5, 1986, and in the As part of his supervision of this ministry, he supported the policy of Arabization of education launched by Mohamed Al-Mazali, and he launched the Model Institutes, the first of which was the Model Institute in Ariana.
Storyteller and novelist, Mohamed Faraj El-Shazly published several of his books in the magazine Al-Fikr (published between 1955 and 1986), founded by Mohamed Mazali and of which Bashir Ben Salama was the editor-in-chief.
The late Faraj Al-Shazly was also awarded the First Class of the Independence Medal, the First Class of the Order of the Republic and the First Class of the Medal for Educational Merit.
Mansour Skhiri: born May 9, 1929 and died February 23, 1994, he studied in Sousse then obtained a civil engineering degree at the Ecole Supérieure des Travaux Publics in Paris then returned to Tunisia in 1964, to which he was appointed Director of the Maritime Region of Tunis of the Ports Administration then served as Director of Works for the Municipality of Tunis.
In 1973, he was appointed general engineer and director of habitat, town planning, land use planning and development at the Ministry of Equipment, then in 1974 he was appointed governor of Sousse, then in 1977 he was appointed governor of Monastir, and he remained in his post until September 1985, date of his appointment as minister and director of the presidential cabinet on the proposal of Prime Minister Mohamed Mazali, and on April 7, 1986, the portfolio of the function public and administrative reform was added to it, which took on particular importance in light of the campaign announced by President Bourguiba against corruption.
In June 1986 he was appointed one of the three deputy general secretaries of the ruling Socialist Constitutional Party, and in November of the same year he was elected member of the House of Representatives for the district of Monastir, and on 30 March, 1987, the transport portfolio was added to him, and on May 16, 1987, he was also appointed Minister of Equipment and Housing.