Journalism is the journalist's industry of articles concerned with all the events taking place in our society, and journalists are the people who belong to it, read it, and work in it. The first to use the term journalism, in its current sense, was Sheikh Naguib Al-Haddad, the creator of the newspaper "Lisan Al-Arab", in Alexandria, and the grandson of Sheikh Nassif Al-Yaziji, to whom this term is credited with "press", and then imitated by other journalists, after that.
Arabs and Europeans will use many terms to describe journalism, in its various forms. When the press first entered the press, at the beginning of the nineteenth century, it was called the "facts", including the Egyptian newspaper Al-Waqa'a, as Rifa'a al-Tahtawy called it. It was also called "Gazte", after a piece of money in which the newspaper was sold. It was also called the Journal. The ancient Arabs usedThe word «journalist» means the paper that is quoted in newspapers, and it was said about some of them: «So-and-so who knows people if it were not for the fact that he is a journalist» in the sense that he is quoted from newspapers or newspapers. Some have defined modern journalism as any printed bulletin that includes news and general information, including the course of incidents, observations and criticisms that express the feelings of public opinion, are sold at specific periodic dates and presented to the public by subscription and purchase.