Mn Qlb Aldar Hsrya Am Shrmwt---... -

That line changes everything. Layla starts small. She sneaks out at night — not to anything wild, but to a women’s poetry circle run secretly by an old friend, NADIA . There, she meets YOUSSEF (30s), a quiet librarian who recites verses about women who chose themselves.

Nadia smuggles a message to Youssef. He waits outside the house gate for two nights. mn qlb aldar hsrya am shrmwt---...

On the third night, Layla does the unthinkable: she walks out through the front door, , while the family is having dinner. She doesn’t run. She walks slowly, past her brother’s frozen face, past her niece’s tears, past the whispers. That line changes everything

It looks like you’ve written a phrase in Arabic (likely using an informal or dialect spelling): Which might translate to something like: “From the heart of the house/place, secretly or openly?” or “From the heart of the homeland, secretly or as prostitutes?” (Depending on dialect, “shrmwt” could be a misspelling of “sharamit” or similar.) Since you said: “make a long feature” — I’ll assume you want me to take that raw emotional/ambiguous line and expand it into a long narrative feature (story / film synopsis / literary piece) . There, she meets YOUSSEF (30s), a quiet librarian

From outside, she is the perfect daughter. Inside, she is crumbling.

Meanwhile, the word shrmwt (slur for prostitute/whore) haunts the neighborhood gossip — any woman seen out at night, any woman without a man’s permission, any woman who dares to be free, is called that. Layla hears it whispered about a neighbor. She realizes: “They will call me that too. The question is — do I care?” The climax: Majed finds her notebook of poems — all about leaving. He locks her in her room for three days. The family elders gather. They give her a choice: marry a distant cousin she’s never met, or be cast out as “shrmwt” — a woman beyond honor.

One night, Layla discovers an old diary of her mother’s hidden behind a loose stone in the wall. In it, her mother writes: “I loved a man before your father. I chose the house. I died here, alive.”