Madhoun and his book.
Palestinian writer, Rabai Al-Madhoun (70), is the winner of
the International prize for Arabic Fiction (the Arabic Booker
Prize) for his novel Destinies: Concerto of the Holocaust and the Nakba.
The announcement took place in an Abu Dhabi Hotel. In addition to winning $50,000, Rabai al-Madhoun is guaranteed an
English translation of his novel, as well as an increase in sales
and international recognition. The book is published by Maktabat Kul Shee (Haifa, Israel).
Al-Madhoun’s family came from Ashkelon, Palestine – now occupied by Israel – but went to the Gaza strip after the 1948 nakba exodus.
Leaving Gaza to attend Alexandria University, he later became involved
with the Palestinian liberation struggle as a member of the Democratic
Front for the Liberation of Palestine.He left activism in 1980 to focus on writing and has written a number
of works of fiction and non-fiction. This is the 70-year-old author’s
third novel.
His 2010 novel, The Lady from Tel Aviv, was shortlisted for
the 2010 International Prize for Arabic Fiction. It was also published in English in 2013 (Telegram Books) and won the
English PEN Writers in Translation award that year.
The 2016 judging panel for this year are Amina Thiban (Chair), an Emirati poet and academic specialising in
literature; Sayyed Mahmoud, an Egyptian journalist and poet, who is
currently editor of Al-Qahira newspaper; Mohammed Mechbal, a Moroccan
academic and critic; Munir Mujić, a Bosnian academic, translator, and
researcher; and Abdo Wazen, a Lebanese poet, critic and editor-in-chief
of the cultural pages of Al-Hayat newspaper.
The judging panel said in about Madhoun's novel “In Destinies: Concerto of the Holocaust and the Nakba,
Rabai al-Madhoun invents a new fictional form in order to address the
Palestinian issue, with questions of identity underpinned by a very
human perspective on the struggle. This tragic, polyphonic novel borrows
the symbol of the concerto, with its different movements, to represent
the multiplicity of destinies. Destinies can be considered the complete Palestinian novel, travelling back to a time before the nakba in
order to throw light on current difficulties faced by the Palestinian
diaspora and the sense of displacement felt by those left behind.”
Former IPAF judge and leading Arab critic, Faisal Darraj, has likened
the novel to works by Palestinian literary giants Ghassan Kanafani,
Emile Habibi and Jabra Ibrahim Jabra, saying “Destinies has added to all
these a fresh dimension that the Palestinian novel has not seen before.
It has laid a foundation for new innovation in Palestinian writing”. He
praised al-Madhoun’s ability to capture “the eloquence of longing”.
(Al-Ghad newspaper.)
The five other shortlisted finalists Egyptian Mohamed Rabie, Moroccan
Tareq Bakari, Palestinian Mahmoud Shukair, Syrian Shahla Ujayli, and
Lebanese George Yaraq were honoured at the ceremony alongside the
winner; each of the finalists, including the winner, receives $10,000.
The International Prize for Arabic Fiction is an annual literary prize
for prose fiction in Arabic. It is run with the support of the Booker
Prize Foundation in London and is funded by the Abu Dhabi Tourism and
Culture Authority (TCA Abu Dhabi) in the UAE.
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