[ad_1]
The Sudanese novelist Baraka is a resident. Novels taught in the Austrian curriculum
Abdul Aziz Baraka Sakan: Sudanese writer and novelist, winner of the Goodwill Award for the novel at its seventh session, and his work caught the attention of readers and critics alike. He was born in Kassala in 1963. He grew up in Khashm al-Qirba near the city of Gedaref where he was educated at the elementary school El-Nour for boys in Rabat and joined the school. Khashm al-Qirba Secondary School. "New Halfa" in high school, and continued his university studies in Egypt, Fadr Business Administration at the University of Assiut. He is currently resident of Austria, married and father of two children: Mahatma and Enlighten
taught English from 1993 to 2000 and held several positions, including: his work as a rights advisor Darfur child from 2007 And the director of development projects in the World Bank Development Fund at the World Bank in Blue Nile, until he finished to write, a job that is stored by his complete and permanent passion and that he calls the "magician's craft". Al-Arabi Magazine, the London Critics Journal and Al-Doh Magazine The Al-Dostour Newspaper, Al-Jazeera Net, and others.
His novel "The Jungle of the Earth" won the Good Novel Prize in 2009, to be released soon after the decision of the Sudanese Ministry of Culture to ban the novel and prevent circulation In 2005, the authorities banned the presentation of his books at the International Book Fair in Khartoum, while he considered the intransigence of censorship as unacceptable, pointing out that he was "a writer good and moral but a defender of peace and freedom ". The sergeant does not read me except otherwise. The BBC award for a short story in the Arab world in 1993 was given to its story: A Kempo Kedis Woman, and the BBC's "Air Stories" With Al-Arabi magazine on its stories: "bone music" and "physics of color", decided in 2013 the Salzburg Higher Institute of Art in Austria to include in its novel program "imagination Khandris" in the German version , translated by Dr. Ishraqa Mustafa in 2011. [19659003] Wikipedia – Hindawi
Source link