Palestinian singer Dalal Abu Amna is launching this week, in conjunction with the conclusion of the activities of Jerusalem, the capital of Islamic culture, her new album, "Nour", which takes on a special spiritual character, and includes songs from the poems of senior mystics.

Dalal said that the new album, "A Musical Journey with Sufi Poetry, contains continuous songs over 50 minutes for Sufi poets, such as Ibn Arabi, Jalal Al-Din Al-Roumi, Rabaa Al-Adawiya, Al-Hallaj and Ibn Al-Fard."

"I chose clips for Jalaluddin Rumi because they are translated from Persian to Arabic, and they do not have a rhyme to be links between other songs down and up," Dalal said during a press conference in Ramallah the day before yesterday.

Dalal was born in the city of Nazareth in 1983, and is interested in providing traditional songs and reviving Palestinian folklore. And she founded "Ya Siti" project in partnership with a group of Palestinian women to revive wedding songs and parties in the ancient territories of Palestine.

On the idea of ​​the album, Dalal, who recently got a PhD in neuroscience, added that the idea started three years ago, and that she recently presented some of his songs in Canada, the United States, and France, but it will now be released in Jerusalem.

She added that among the reasons for choosing the form and content of this album is that Sufi singing is receiving great acceptance in the world today, which is what I touched on her own through the presentations she gave in the West. And she continued: "This spiritual and mystic intermarriage requires depth in scientific research in brain science, and when I entered this field I was looking for the link between body and soul, and the project of light is the soul."

And the new album is composed by Kinan Abu Afash, who made an intervention in the press conference through the application "Skype" from the United States, in which he said that choosing the lyrics for the songs of the album may have taken the longest time in preparing for it, and then came the stage of composing and distributing.

During the conference held at the Edward Said National Conservatory of Music, Dalal Abu Amina showed a video recording of one of the album's tracks, including a Sufi dance.

"The audiences of the exhibition will be in the Sufi presence, because the Sufi show does not complete the scene in it unless the audience is part of it, in addition to an exhibition of art paintings by the artist Cecil Kahli, inspired by the album, as well as Sufi dance."

• A musical evening that includes 50-minute continuous tracks.

• 50 minutes duration of the tracks contained in the new album.