Antoine de Saint-Exupery, a French writer, and poet, who was killed in the Second World War, has no small place in French literature. According to the November 1987 issue of Turk Edebiyat (Turkish Literature), with his works “he answered the hunger and thirst of the Christian West in a world that was becoming more materialistic and literature that was becoming more materialistic.”

For example, in one of his works Saint-Exupery says: “It is only men who are buried in loneliness in a world in which life unites with life, flowers blend with flowers in the breast of the wind, and the swan knows all the swans.” And so men should be brothers in finding God. According to Saint-Exupery: Otherwise, “while working only for money, man weaves his prison with his own hands.”