Razan Naiem Almoghrabi

Razan Naiem Almoghrabi (Arabic: رزان نعيم المغربي), also seen as Razan Naim Moghrabi, is a Libyan writer and feminist.[1]

Education

Razan Naiem Almoghrabi studied accountancy before turning to a literary career.[2]

Career

Almoghrabi has been publishing her work in Libyan newspapers since 1991 and was managing editor for a cultural magazine called Horizons.[3] Her published works include several collections of short stories, among themIn Exile and Horses Devour the Sea (2002), Texts with a Lost Signature (2006), An In-between Man (2010), and Soul for Sale (2010); two novels (Migration to the Tropic of Capricorn in 2004 and Women of Wind in 2010) and one volume of poetry.[2]

Her novel Women of Wind (Nisa al rih), in which a Moroccan servant in Tripoli seeks a smuggler to arrange her passage to Europe, was longlisted for the Arabic Booker Prize (International Prize for Arabic Fiction) in 2011.[4] In 2015, Almoghrabi was recognized with an Oxfam Novib/PEN Award for her efforts at freedom for writers and journalists in Libya.[5]

Almoghrabi organized Tripoli's first women's rights conference in 2012, and signed a Statement of Solidarity with the women of Syria, at the Forum on Women’s Rights, Peace and Security in Istanbul.[6] In 2013 she spoke before the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women about women's rights in Libya. Her public feminism, including her choice not to wear a veil, has made her the target of death threats and religious violence; in 2013 the entrance to her home was shot at by several members of the militia.[7][8]

gollark: I used that to make a neat automatic kit machine until someone wiped the kit definition files off the computer and I shut that down.
gollark: With Plethora, CC can interface with AE2.
gollark: The bottom one is hydrogen, the top is hydrogen/deuterium.
gollark: Yep!
gollark: I have this cool bare-metal OC-based management program which ensures they run at max efficiency and don't overheat.

References

  1. Author profile on IPAF website
  2. Razan Naim Moghrabi, Banipal Magazine of Modern Arab Literature, author page.
  3. Fatima El Issawi, "Women and Media: Libyan Female Journalists from Gaddafi Media to Post- revolution: Case Study" Cyber-Orient 8(1)(2014).
  4. Jason Morgan, Toyin Falola, and Bukola Adeyemi Oyeniyi, Culture and Customs of Libya (ABC-Clio 2012): 56-57. ISBN 9780313378607
  5. Pen International, "Oxfam Novib/PEN Awards 2015".
  6. Statement of Solidarity, Om Kvinna till Kvinna (1 October 2012).
  7. "Razan al-Maghrabi", participant profile, Writers Unlimited International Festival Winternachten the Hague.
  8. Lisa Anderson, "Women's Rights Under Growing Pressure in Arab World" Thompson Reuters Foundation News (7 March 2013).
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