Sneha Girap (Editor)

Omar Abu Risha

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Preceded by
  
Farid Zayn Al-Din

Role
  
Poet

Name
  
Omar Risha


Profession
  
Politician, Poet

Nationality
  
Syrian

Succeeded by
  
Sabah Qabbani

Omar Abu Risha wwwpoemhuntercomip452029045b253jpg

Died
  
July 15, 1990, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

Education
  
American University of Beirut

Parents
  
Kharit Allah Ibrahim Ali Noureddine Alicherti, Shafe bin Al-Sheikh Mustafa Abu Risha

Dr. Abed Ismael: Poet Omar Abu Risha's Neo-Classicism (Arabic)


Omar Abu-Riche (Arabic: عمر أبو ريشة‎‎) (10 April 1910 – 15 July 1990) was an influential Syrian poet known for his pioneering works.

Abu-Riche was born into a wealthy literary family in Manbij, near Aleppo. He received his educational upbringing in Syria and continued his tertiary studies at the University of Damascus. He also studied at the American University in Beirut in 1931, and later read chemistry at the University of Manchester, UK but returned to Syria in 1932. While initially a fan of Abbasid poetry he later began looking for more independent voices in poetry and considered Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis to be the greatest love poem ever written. His favorite poets were Charles Baudelaire and Edgar Allan Poe.

He wrote the poem, "Khatam-ul-Hub"(The end of Love) and produced literary works and attending to his duties as Librarian of Aleppo, Syria. In 1949, the Syrian government appointed him ambassador to Brazil. As a diplomat until 1964, he was ambassador to Argentina, Chile, India, Austria and finally the United States.

His works included several volumes of poetry and poetic dramas.

References

Omar Abu Risha Wikipedia