Don Quichotte was a weekly Communist publication which existed between 1939 and 1940 in Cairo, Egypt.
The title, which was given by Henri Curiel, a cofounder, was a reference to Gabriel Alomar, a Catalan poet and writer.
Don Quichotte covered social and class issues in addition to news from Egypt and other countries and featured articles about arts, science, fashion and sports.
[1] However, the ultimate goal was to create a platform to oppose the emerging threat of European Fascism.
[5] The contributors were both Communists, including Raymond Aghion, Lutfallah Sulayma and Albert Simon, and artists, including Marcelle Biagini, Henri Dumani, Edouard Levy, Marcel Laurent Salinas, Sayf Wanli and Angelo de Riz.