GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
Tawfiq Husayn al-Hakim

Tawfiq Husayn al-Hakim

Egyptian playwright, novelist, essayist, and public intellectual

EgyptBorn 1898 · Died 1987creatorEgyptian Ministry of JusticeEgyptian Ministry of EducationCairo University
54
MIXED

of 100 · stable trend · Some good traits but inconsistent

Standing

54/100

Raw Score

44/85

Confidence

66%

Evidence

Medium

About

Tawfiq al-Hakim helped found contemporary Egyptian drama and repeatedly used literature to test justice, power, and moral responsibility. His record is strongest on cultural contribution, truthful critique, and later self-correction, while public proof is much thinner on direct material care for vulnerable people and on private devotional practice.

The observable pattern is meaningfully positive but mixed. Al-Hakim consistently turned literary prestige toward questions of justice and political truth, and he later criticized both Arab defeat narratives and his own earlier closeness to Nasserism. The profile stays under review because his strongest public evidence is intellectual and cultural rather than direct service, and his belief and worship life are only partly visible in the record.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview72%(18/25)
Contribution to Others27%(8/30)
Personal Discipline30%(3/10)
Reliability80%(4/5)
Stability Under Pressure73%(11/15)

Al-Hakim scores best where the record is clearest: intellectual seriousness, repeated critique of unjust official narratives, and later public self-correction. He scores much lower on social-care and worship items because the public evidence is sparse on direct material aid, family obligations, regular prayer, and disciplined charity, so the result is meaningfully positive but far from exemplary.

Goodness over time

Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Core Worldview

Belief in god4/5
Belief in unseen order3/5
Belief in revealed guidance4/5
Belief in prophets as examples4/5
Belief in accountability last day3/5

Contribution to Others

Helps relatives1/5
Helps the poor or stuck2/5
Helps people who ask directly1/5
Helps free people from constraint2/5
Helps orphans or unsupported young people1/5
Helps travelers strangers or cut off people1/5

Personal Discipline

Prays consistently2/5
Gives obligatory charity1/5

Reliability

Keeps promises agreements contracts commitments and clear communication4/5

Stability Under Pressure

Patient during personal hardship4/5
Patient during financial difficulty3/5
Patient during conflict pressure fear or battlefield moments4/5

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1933

Published The People of the Cave and established himself as a founder of modern Egyptian drama

Ahl al-kahf brought him major recognition and helped make prose drama a respected Arabic literary form rather than a lightweight stage genre.

Created a durable cultural contribution that reshaped Arabic drama and broadened the intellectual reach of the theatre.

high
1936

Left government service to devote himself fully to writing

After work in the ministries of Justice and Education, he resigned in order to center his public life on literary production rather than bureaucratic advancement.

Signaled durable commitment to a vocation he believed mattered for public thought and culture.

medium
1937

Turned his legal experience into a satire of official justice in Diary of a Country Prosecutor

The autobiographical novel later translated as The Maze of Justice used rural prosecutorial experience to expose the distance between legal rhetoric and lived justice in Egypt.

Strengthened his public pattern of using literature to tell uncomfortable truths about institutions rather than merely decorate power.

high
1968

Used drama to confront the false victory narrative after the 1967 Arab defeat

His play Soiree for the 5th of June delivered a devastating commentary on defeat and official propaganda in the aftermath of the Six-Day War and was consequently banned.

Showed willingness to speak into a climate of humiliation and propaganda even when that speech carried direct consequences.

high
1974

Published Return of Consciousness and publicly criticized the Nasser era, including his own earlier accommodation

After years of being treated as culturally close to Nasser's Egypt, al-Hakim issued a sharp post-Nasser critique that became controversial because it condemned the regime and implicitly his own earlier silence or misjudgment.

Provides one of the clearest public proofs of self-correction and truth-telling in his later life, even if it came after a long period of proximity to power.

high
1987

Died in Cairo after a career that permanently altered modern Arabic literature

By his death, he was widely recognized as a leading figure in modern Arabic literature and as the writer who made modern Egyptian prose drama respectable at scale.

Confirms that his contribution was not brief or local but durable across generations.

medium

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

Long proximity to ministries and official prestige

1930

His career passed through state institutions and later national cultural prestige.

Response: This complicates the pressure story because courage became clearest later, not earliest.

mixed

Soiree for the 5th of June

1968

He responded to the trauma and propaganda of the 1967 defeat with a play so sharp that it was banned.

Response: He used art to confront pressure and false reassurance rather than retreat into silence.

positive

Return of Consciousness

1974

After Nasser's death he published a controversial critique of the regime and of earlier public illusions.

Response: He accepted reputational risk in order to revise the record publicly.

positive

Progression

crisis years

War, censorship, and the moral strain of closeness to state prestige produced sharper public critique.

testing

current stage

A settled historical legacy that remains constructive but morally mixed.

stable

early years

Legal study, theatre exposure, and the beginnings of a serious literary vocation.

forming

growth years

Rapid rise as a dramatist who merged philosophy, history, and Arabic prose drama.

upward

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Used artistic prestige to ask moral and political questions rather than only entertain or flatter power.
  • Showed durable commitment to literary work over bureaucratic convenience.
  • Later-life self-correction is visible in his criticism of Nasser and official mythmaking.

Concerns

  • Direct evidence of personal charitable practice and family-specific care is thin.
  • Parts of his public life unfolded close to state cultural power before his later break in tone.
  • Many public proofs come through literature and essays, which makes moral inference less concrete than in records built from direct social action.

Evidence Quality

4

Strong

4

Medium

0

Weak

Overall: medium

This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.