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Abdel Jabbar Adwan is a Palestinian writer and novelist.[1] He worked in the field of media and communications and used to write a weekly article in Al-Sharqul Awsat Newspaper. He also wrote a weekly article for the Daily Stars Lebanese newspaper.[2] He was a consultant on Middle Eastern affairs during the First Palestinian Uprising (Intifada) for a number of European TV channels. He was one of the founders of the "Arab Organization for Human Rights," and he was elected twice for its presidency in the Britain branch.[citation needed]
Abdel Jabbar Adwan | |
---|---|
Occupation | Author |
Language | Arabic |
Nationality | British |
Citizenship | Palestine |
His Publications
editAdwan published three books: Anyabul Kharuf (The Sheep's Fangs), Ash-Shuhada' (The Martyrs), and Thamanul Istiqlal (The Price of Independence). He was several novels, including Siyasatun Fil Janna (Politics in Paradise), which was banned in some Arab countries,[3] and it was nominated by Dar Al-Farabi publishing for the International Prize for Arabic Fiction – also known as the Poker Prize. His novel Rawi Córdoba (The Storyteller of Córdoba) got the tenth nomination in the International Prize for Arabic Fiction last year. His novel Bumat Barbara (The Owl of Barbara) - published by Dar Al-Farabi Publishing – is a novel based on real events talking about life in the author's village, the Palestinian village of Barbara, which was depopulated and destroyed during the Nakba. His fourth novel, published in 2013, Fitnatul Kursi (The Seduction of The chair), which was described by the author as "a novel whose events take place in the pre-Islamic and post-Islamic eras, and its geography spreads across the whole world." His fifth novel Ḥaffatul Nur (The Edge of Light), and it is a novel in three parts. The first part takes place during 5000 B.C. He also has a novel titled Shaʿabul Jabbarin (Strong People) where he discusses Arabic and Palestinian causes and issues, starting before the first Gulf War and America's occupation of Iraq during the second Gulf War, and their relation to the co-existing solution to the Palestinian Cause, resulting from the Oslo Accords and the events following that, especially 9/11.[citation needed]
Publications
edit- Asral Zaman (Prisoners of Time), Dar Al-Farabi Publishing, 2017.[4]
- Bumat Barbara (The Owl of Barbara), Dar Al-Farabi Publishing, 296 pages, 2010.[5]
- Siyasatun Fil Janna (Politics in Paradise), Dar Al-Farabi Publishing, 232 pages, 2008.[6]
- Thamanul Istiqlal (The Price of Independence), Al-Sharqul Awsat Publishing, Cairo, 455 pages, 1989. Ḥaffatul Nur (The Edge of Light): A Trilogy, Dar Al-Farabi Publishing, 350 pages, 2015.[7]
- Ḥaffatul Nur (The Edge of Light): A Trilogy, Dar Al-Farabi Publishing, 350 pages, 2015.[8]
References
edit- ^ "Abdel Jabbar Adwan". Katara Novels. Archived from the original on 20 August 2017. Retrieved 11 December 2020.
- ^ "Abdel Jabbar Adwan". Daily Star. Archived from the original on 30 October 2020. Retrieved 30 October 2020.
- ^ "Ad-Dustor" (PDF). 30 June 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 March 2016. Retrieved 10 March 2016.
- ^ Adwan, Abdel Jabbar (2018). Asral Zaman (Prisoners of Time) (in Arabic). Dar Al-Farabi. ISBN 9786144328903.
- ^ Adwan, Abdel Jabbar (2010). Bumat Barbara (The Owl of Barbara) (in Arabic). Dar Al-Farabi. ISBN 9789953715858.
- ^ Adwan, Abdel Jabbar (2008). Siyasatun Fil Janna (Politics in Paradise) (in Arabic). Dar Al-Farabi. ISBN 9789953712826.
- ^ Adwan, Abdel Jabbar (1989). Thamanul Istiqlal (The Price of Independence) (in Arabic). Dār al-Sharq al-Awsaṭ lil-Nashr. OCLC 21330044.
- ^ Adwan, Abdel Jabbar (2015). Ḥaffatul Nur (The Edge of Light). Dar Al-Farabi. ISBN 9786144324042.