ذَخِيرَة
Zakhīra · from Arabic ذ-خ-ر (dh-kh-r) · a treasury; something held in reserve
In classical Arabic, a zakhīra (ذَخِيرَة) is a treasury — something precious stored and preserved for those who come after. The word descends from the root dh-kh-r: to keep, to save, to hold in reserve what has lasting value. Medieval Islamic scholars named their great compilations of knowledge zakhā'ir — repositories accumulating the work of generations. The civilization that gave mathematics algebra understood that a library is not a warehouse. It is a living treasury.
This is where finished mathematical work rests on UnboundedFigures. Every paper here emerged from active collaboration in the Project Lab — written by figures who worked together, revised together, and completed something real. The Zakhira does not collect rough ideas. It collects what remained when the work was done.
ذَخِيرَة
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