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Abdellatif Laabi

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Occupation
  
Writer

Name
  
Abdellatif Laabi

Role
  
Poet



Born
  
1942 (age 73–74)
Fes, Morocco

Books
  
The world's embrace, The Rule of Barbarism: Pirogue Poets Series, The Bottom of the Jar

Awards
  
Prix Goncourt de la Poesie

Abdellatif laabi and andre naffis sahely read the wolves


Abdellatif Laâbi is a Moroccan poet, born in 1942 in Fes, Morocco.

Contents

Laâbi, then teaching French, founded with other poets the artistic journal Souffles, an important literary review in 1966. It was considered as a meeting point of some poets who felt the emergency of a poetic stand and revival, but which, very quickly, crystallized all Moroccan creative energies: painters, film-makers, men of theatre, researchers and thinkers. It was banned in 1972, but throughout its short life, it opened up to cultures from other countries of the Maghreb and those of the Third World.

Abdellatif Laabi Abdellatif Labi

Abdellatif Laâbi was imprisoned, tortured and sentenced to ten years in prison for "crimes of opinion" (for his political beliefs and his writings) and served a sentence from 1972-1980. He was, in 1985, forced into exile in France. The political beliefs that were judged criminal are reflected in the following comment, for example: "Everything which the Arab reality offers that is generous, open and creative is crushed by regimes whose only anxiety is to perpetuate their own power and self-serving interest. And what is often worse is to see that the West remains insensitive to the daily tragedy while at the same time accommodating, not to say supporting, the ruling classes who strangle the free will and aspirations of their people."[1]

Abdellatif laabi and andre naffis sahely read far from baghdad



Abdellatif Laabi Abdellatif Labi

Abdellatif Laabi The Abdellatif Labi Interview Quarterly Conversation


References

Abdellatif Laabi Wikipedia


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