In conjunction with the tenth anniversary of the January 25 revolution, 2011, and in light of the complete and unprecedented absence of calls to protest and go down to the street, hashtags related to the anniversary topped the list of the most prominent on the social networking site Twitter in Egypt, and spread extensively on Facebook.

Among the top ten list on Twitter in Egypt, the hashtag "# 25_January" in Arabic and English, as well as the hashtags "# People's Revolution," "# Voice_Freedom," and "# Martyrs of the Revolution" appeared.

Activists replaced the presence in the streets and squares to commemorate the memory of the revolution by emphasizing through social media their value, presence in their conscience and faith in its ideas and goals, and not despairing of its success even after a while.

Today, Monday, marks the tenth anniversary of the Egyptian revolution, whose first spark broke out on January 25, 2011, and which toppled 18 days later the regime of the late President Hosni Mubarak (1981-2011).

#Decoration_Spring |

Between living and freedom or toppling the regime .. 10 years after the #people revolution, what has been achieved from the demands of January 25th?

pic.twitter.com/A9f9ePtXde

- Al Jazeera Egypt (@AJA_Egypt) January 25, 2021

In these hashtags, Egyptian activists expressed their pride in that moment and their pride in participating in it, considering the days of the revolution as the best days that their country had passed through in recent decades, while others saw that the outbreak of the revolution and its success in overthrowing the ousted President Hosni Mubarak - despite this not being expected - confirm the survival of hope In the change.

While interacting only with compassion for the martyrs of the revolution and expressing grief and sorrow for not achieving what they died for, others invoked the memory of those martyrs in the context of affirming that the spirit of the revolution remains present to them, and that they continue on the path of those who died for it.

Others were keen to recall the moments of the street's victory and the defeat of the security force, and political and media figures and activists also recovered their memories of the days of the revolution.

Arab interaction with the memory was not lost, as some activists showed their pride in their presence and participation in its activities, and others expressed their regret for what happened in Egypt 10 years after its outbreak.

Some expressed their continued remorse for not participating in the days of the revolution, as they were absent from it due to their presence outside the country, recalling through photos and videos their participation with Egyptian communities in supportive activities in the countries in which they lived.

Think about them. They sacrificed their lives for your freedom,


may God have mercy on all the martyrs of the January 25 revolution. The


youth who opened in Janayen Egypt 💙 # Resistance_ is_the solution pic.twitter.com/6kQ8VTfJiD

- Bilal- Ali (@Bilal_Ali_Badr) January 24, 2021

The tenth anniversary of the January 25 revolution


May God have mercy on the martyrs who died for us 🗣️💔 # 25Jan 🤍 pic.twitter.com/ILpE9XrJ03

- kAlBAz.

(@KalBaz_Diaa) January 25, 2021

Before # 25_January, if you had asked any sane person, the possibilities that the people are making a revolution in the amount of water, they would have told you 0%


at this time exactly.

Rate 0% # 25Jan

- Mena Adel (@menaadel_gh) January 25, 2021

It was a beautiful dream in our imagination ... and


no foolishness in one day on our mind ... and we


had palaces ... and we brushed flowers ... for


our life and our future

,

and you found


me in glory here ...


and the world is happy and


oh

... you

congratulate my beloved with me .. and


say to everyone you are comfortable .. this is not


happy in the world ..


Like Al-Farhan with his success ..


——-


Today's dreams come true. # 25 Jan

- Ba7eb Torabha (@ Ba7ebTorabha) January 25, 2021

On every street in my country, the voice of freedom was my name 💔


Peace be upon me, the 25th of January❤🇪🇬 pic.twitter.com/T2GluUX76g

- Hend Hewadi (@HHewadi) January 25, 2021

Political and artistic symbols were keen to record their presence on the anniversary through tweets of various goals, between asserting that they did not fail and being proud to participate in them, while others tried to record lessons learned from what the situation reached during the ten years that followed that revolution.

Among the most prominent of those who recorded this attendance were Mohamed El Baradei, former Egyptian Vice President Adly Mansour, former presidential candidate Hamdeen Sabahi, political science professor Saif Abdel Fattah, and jurist Khaled Ali.

Your morning January, your memories of January, and your morning chants, your morning light coming from the faces of the graves, every martyr, every detainee and every oppressed witness to us. / iyWdL0CqKD

- Haiam Othman (@haiamothman) January 25, 2021

Egyptians revolted for their freedom and dignity when the doors for change were blocked in front of them.

They faced many challenges and obstacles, were deceived a lot, made a lot of mistakes, and sacrificed a lot, but in all of that they learned and changed a lot.

The march of peoples towards freedom is always long, and if it is possible to disrupt it, it is impossible to wipe it out. # Revolution January

- Mohamed ElBaradei (@ElBaradei) January 24, 2021

10 years ago, I fell asleep on this night, terrified.

I was terrified of my opinion.

Terrified say no.

Terrified I say I am not a fool.

Frightened I say enough injustice.

On the second day, demonstrations took place in Shubra and Tahrir.

But while I was in the midst of people, I felt another feeling purely.

A sense of completely opposite to horror.


It was my last night I fell asleep, and I was terrified of my opinion.

- Amr Waked (@amrwaked) January 24, 2021

January 25 is not a past, it


is proof that change is possible,


evidence that the people are not dead

Confirmation that the calculations of the elites,


groups, currents, and warring parties


are always late in understanding peoples

January 25 affirmed that tolerating


darkness and murderers, the crime of the


revolution, should erase injustice,


not rely on it and leave it

We learn, move forward


and never give up pic.twitter.com/wq4aGGBPMu

- Dr.

Basem Kamal Khafagy (@drbassemkhafagy) January 25, 2021

Mustafa Ragab ... the first martyr in the Egyptian revolution - Suez # Revolution_25_ January pic.twitter.com/Bep9TzVl6X

- Revolutionary Socialists (@RevSocMe) January 25, 2021

Our only consolation is that they still fear us,


the January revolutions forever # Glory_to the martyrs pic.twitter.com/Ypu4N1Twwa

- GehadQuisay (@ghqsy_) January 25, 2021