| Novelist
Abd al-Rahman Munif Mourned
Arab
intellectuals are mourning the loss of Abd al-Rahman Munif,
one of the greatest and most controversial Arab novelists,
who died of a heart attack on January 24 in Syria. He was
71.
Born
in Amman, Jordan, to a Saudi father and an Iraqi mother, Munif
completed his secondary school education in Jordan. After
studying law in Baghdad, he continued his studies in Cairo,
ultimately earning a Ph.D. in petroleum economics at the University
of Belgrade. During his oil industry career he served as an
oil economist in Baghdad, and for OPEC.
In
1975 he traveled to Baghdad, where he edited a monthly periodical,
Al-Naft wa al-Tanmiyya (Oil and Development). In 1981 he moved
to France, and five years later to Damascus, Syria, where
he and his wife took up residence.
From
1981 Munif devoted himself entirely to writing. He became
one of the most prominent Arab novelists to have used modernist
narrative techniques
His
most famous work includes the quintet "Cities of Salt"
(Mudun al-milh), which gives a portrait of traditional
Bedouin society, starting with the establishment of the Middle
Eastern sultanate of Mooran, the thinly veiled Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia. The late Edward Said described it as "the
only serious work of fiction that tries to show the effect
of oil, Americans and the local oligarchy on a Gulf country."
The work was banned in Saudi Arabia, and Munif's Saudi passport
was withdrawn.
His
other famous novels include "The Assassination of Marzuq,"
“The Endings,” and "World Without Maps," which he
co-wrote with the late Jabra Ibrahim Jabra.
Among
the many awards he received was the 1998 Cairo Award for Creative
Narration.
One of his articles was translated from the
Arabic into English by Al Jadid’s editor, Elie Chalala. In
the article which appeared in 1999 in Al Jadid, Munif remembers
a noted Syrian artist, Fateh al-Moudaress, with whom he shared
a commitment to progress, a sympathy for the oppressed, and
an unshaken belief in social equality.
Compiled and edited by Al Jadid Staff.
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