Rabai al-Madhoun

Rabai al-Madhoun (born 1945) is a Palestinian journalist, novelist and writer.[1] He was born in the village of al-Majdal in British Mandatory Palestine, near Ashkelon in present-day Israel. His family was driven out of Palestine in the 1948 Palestinian exodus. Madhoun grew up in the refugee camp of Khan Younis located in the Gaza Strip. He went to Alexandria University for higher education, and in 1973 turned to journalism as a career. He was also involved with the Palestinian liberation struggle in the 1970s as a member of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, but quit politics in 1980 to focus on writing full-time. As a journalist, he worked in Beirut (Lebanon),Nicosia (Cyprus) and later on in London where he is now based. Currently a British citizen, Madhoun is an editor at the Al-Sharq Al-Awsat newspaper.[2]

His books include both fiction and non-fiction.[3] His debut novel, The Lady from Tel Aviv, was shortlisted for the 2010 International Prize for Arabic Fiction (dubbed the "Arabic Booker Prize"). The novel has been translated into English by Elliott Colla. His third novel, Destinies: Concerto of the Holocaust and the Nakba was awarded the annual IPAF in April 2016.[4]

Books

  • The Idiot of Khan Younis (short stories; 1977)
  • The Palestinian Intifada (Nicosia-1988) (Haifa-Israel-1989)
  • The Taste of Separation (autobiographical novel; 2 editions 2001, 2011)
  • The Lady from Tel Aviv (novel; 2009, six editions)
  • Destinies: The Concerto of The Holocaust and The Naqba (novel; 2 editions 2015) - 2016 winner, International Prize for Arab Fiction
gollark: Homeschool them and teach only advanced mathematics and anomalous programming.
gollark: Speak in cryptic APL symbols.
gollark: Raise them on assembly language from birth.
gollark: But nobody will complain if I enslave the GPUs constantly for computing or sell them to buy new ones.
gollark: I like the idea of indoctrinating them to my views, of course, but bee the rest of it?!

References



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