Illumination of the National Museum to commemorate World Rare Disease Day

The Minister of Culture, Muhammad Wissam Al-Mortada, lit the National Museum, this evening, Monday, in green, rose and blue colors, to commemorate the “World Rare Disease Day”, where Lebanon joined the group of countries that commemorate this day by lighting one of its monuments in the context of shedding light to support Patients on the one hand, and advocate for those who stand beside them.

Al-Murtada stressed in a speech on “the importance of awareness and awareness,” and said: “To illuminate an angle in awareness, and open our minds to an imminent danger here, and a disease coming from there. Directly on what threatens us now and in the future. That is the issue, dear friends, to raise awareness.”

He added: “In front of the rust that may affect our minds, it stops thinking and becomes lethal. Imam Ali bin Abi Talib used to say: We seek refuge in God from the slumber of the mind and the ugliness of slips.”

And he continued: “Our role as officials, regardless of the level of responsibility we assume, is to warn of dangers and not be satisfied with that on the level of formal or color lighting, if you will, but rather to support all those who represent the movement of awareness, and all these guides to our weaknesses so that we can walk.” They have everything that preserves and preserves our society now and in the future.”

And he called for “unity”, and said: “While I salute the owner of the idea that we shed light on everything that represents a threat to us at the health level, I urge everyone to look for all our weaknesses in our country, and we will not find a weak point more dangerous than division or point.” A strength greater and stronger than unity, so come to shine on our unity and walk on the guidance of this light to find ways of salvation and ways of salvation for our society, our people and our country.

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