In 1924 Saroukhan left for
Egypt with more than 125 pieces of his art work. His drawings were published in a satiric magazine called "Armenian Cinema". Saroukhan presented some of his works at an exhibition in
Cairo and then in
Alexandria. Through those exhibitions, he met Egyptian journalist
Mohamed El-Tabii. Through mutual cooperation, they both became the most important and influential journalists in Egypt for 20 years. Saroukhan worked as a caricaturist for the widely circulated
Rose el-Yusuf magazine, where El-Tabii was editor. Saroukhan's drawing of Rose el-Yusuf was his first to appear on the cover of the magazine in March 1928. From then on, Saroukhan became known as a ‘political' caricaturist. His character "
El Masri Efendi" (meaning Egyptian Efendi, المصري أقندي in Arabic) also helped establish his fame. However, because of a dispute between Rose (aka Fatima) el-Yusuf and Mohamad el-Tabii, Saroukhan left the magazine and joined the staff of another Egyptian well-known paper, "Akher Sa'a" (Last Hour), which el-Tabii published until 1946. When
Mohamed El-Tabii sold "
Akher Saa" to "
Akhbar El Yom" (Today's News in Arabic), Saroukhan moved to the new newspaper and worked for it until his death in 1977. He established a French-language humor magazine "La Caravane," published between 1942 and 1945. He also contributed to Egypt's foreign language press, with cartoons in "La Presse Egyptienne", "Image" and Armenian daily
Arev. He had many exhibitions in Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Romania. ==Publications==