Badr Shakir al Sayyab ( ar, بدر شاكر السياب) (December 24, 1926 in Jaykur, near
Basra – December 24, 1964 in
Kuwait) was a leading Iraqi poet, well known throughout the
Arab world and one of the most influential
Arab poets of all time. His works have been translated in more than 10 languages including
English,
Persian,
Somali and
Urdu.
Early life and career
He was born in
Jaykur, a town south of
Basra, the eldest child of a date grower and shepherd. He graduated from the Higher Teacher Training College of Baghdad in 1948 but was later dismissed from his teaching position for being a member of the
Iraqi Communist Party
The Iraqi Communist Party ( ar, الحزب الشيوعي العراقي '; ku, Partiya Komunista Iraqê حزبی شیوعی عێراق) is a communist party and the oldest active party in Iraq. Since its foundation in 1934, it has dominated the ...
.
Banned from teaching because of his political views, he next found employment as a taster, working for the Iraqi Date Company in Basra. He soon returned to Baghdad however, where he worked as a security guard for a road paving company. He was actively involved in the 1952
Iraqi Intifada, in which he joined his fellow workers in sacking the offices of the
US Information Service, climbed up an electricity pole and declaimed a revolutionary poem he had composed the previous night. The government instituted a campaign of repression against Communist sympathisers in the wake of the uprising, and Sayyab feared that he would be arrested. He decided to flee the country, obtained a false Iranian passport under the assumed name of Ali Artink, and escaped over the border to Iran. From
Abadan
Abadan ( fa, آبادان ''Ābādān'', ) is a city and capital of Abadan County, Khuzestan Province, which is located in the southwest of Iran. It lies on Abadan Island ( long, 3–19 km or 2–12 miles wide). The island is bounded ...
he then sailed to
Kuwait in 1953. This journey was the subject of his poem '' 'An Escape' '' (Farar).
He worked for a while at the Kuwait Electricity Company, but in 1954 he returned to Iraq and severed all his links with the Communist Party. He was therefore allowed to work in the Iraqi public service again, and given a job in the General Directorate for Import and Export. However after the
14 July Revolution
The 14 July Revolution, also known as the 1958 Iraqi coup d'état, took place on 14 July 1958 in Iraq, and resulted in the overthrow of the Hashemite monarchy in Iraq that had been established by Faisal I of Iraq, King Faisal I in 1921 under the ...
he wrote poetry critical of the new head of state
Abd al-Karim Qasim, and was therefore dismissed from his post once again in April 1959. Following the
Kirkuk Massacre he became outspokenly anti-Communist and published a series of essays called ''‘Kuntu shiyū‘iyyan’'' (‘I was a Communist').
In 1957 the Syrian poet
Adunis and the Lebanese poet
Yusuf al-Khal
Yusuf al-Khal ( ar, يوسف الخال; December 25, 1917 – March 9, 1987) was a Lebanese-Syrian poet, journalist, and publisher. He is considered the greatest exponent of prose poetry (''qaṣīdat al-natr'') as well one of the pioneers ...
began publishing a new magazine, ''Majallat Shi'r'' ('Poetry Magazine') in Beirut. Sayyab began writing for it and this brought him into contact with other writers in their circle, including
Ounsi el-Hajj
Ounsi el-Hajj ( ar, أنسى الحاج; 1937–2014) was a Lebanon, Lebanese poet, journalist, and translator.
Life and career
Ounsi completed his studies at Lycée Francais and La Sagesse High School. He began a professional career in journali ...
, and Khalil Hawi. In 1960 Sayyab visited Beirut to publish a collection of his poetry, and won first prize (1000 Lebanese pounds) in a competition run by ''Majallat Shi'r'' for his collection
''Onshudat al-Matar'' (The Rain Song) which was later to become among his most widely acclaimed works.
Illness and death
Returning to Iraq, Sayyab was given a job at the Iraqi Ports Authority and moved to Basra. However he was arrested again on 4 February 1961 and held until 20 February. By this time his political stance and rising literary fame had brought him to the attention of the
Congress for Cultural Freedom which invited him to attend a conference entitled 'The Arab Writer and the Modern World’ in Rome.
However in the same year, his health began to deteriorate. In April 1962 he was admitted to the American University Hospital in Beirut, and his literary friends, including Yusuf Al-Khal, paid his fees. On his return to Basra in September 1962 the Congress for Cultural Freedom provided ongoing financial assistance to him and arranged for him to go to London to seek medical advice.
At the end of 1962, Sayyab travelled to the UK. Professor
Albert Hourani had managed to grant him a fellowship at
Durham University
, mottoeng = Her foundations are upon the holy hills (Psalm 87:1)
, established = (university status)
, type = Public
, academic_staff = 1,830 (2020)
, administrative_staff = 2,640 (2018/19)
, chancellor = Sir Thomas Allen
, vice_chan ...
and he also thought about registering as a student at
Oxford University to undertake a PhD, but was not able to do so. Admitted to
St Mary's Hospital, London
St Mary's Hospital is an NHS hospital in Paddington, in the City of Westminster, London, founded in 1845. Since the UK's first academic health science centre was created in 2008, it has been operated by Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, wh ...
his illness was finally diagnosed as
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as motor neuron disease (MND) or Lou Gehrig's disease, is a neurodegenerative disease that results in the progressive loss of motor neurons that control voluntary muscles. ALS is the most comm ...
From London he went to Paris for a week in March 1963, where his diagnosis was confirmed.
In February 1964 his already poor health took a sudden turn for the worse, and he was taken into the Basra Port Hospital with double pneumonia, heart problems and an ulcer. As his treatment continued beyond what he could afford, the Society of Iraqi Authors and Writers, of which he was a member, secured the agreement of the Ministry of Health to continue caring for him. Eventually the Kuwaiti poet Ali Al-Sabti persuaded the Kuwaiti government to take over his treatment, and he was moved to the Amiri Hospital in Kuwait on 6 July 1964. While being treated there, he published a number of poems in the magazine ''Al-Ra'ed al-'Arabi'' ('The Arab Pioneer'). He died in the hospital on 24 December 1964.
Legacy
Badr Shakir al-Sayyab's experiments helped to change the course of modern
Arabic poetry
Arabic poetry ( ar, الشعر العربي ''ash-shi‘ru al-‘Arabīyyu'') is the earliest form of Arabic literature. Present knowledge of poetry in Arabic dates from the 6th century, but oral poetry is believed to predate that.
Arabic poetry ...
. He produced seven collections of poetry and several translations, which include the poetry of
Louis Aragon,
Nazim Hikmet, and
Edith Sitwell, who, with
T. S. Eliot
Thomas Stearns Eliot (26 September 18884 January 1965) was a poet, essayist, publisher, playwright, literary critic and editor.Bush, Ronald. "T. S. Eliot's Life and Career", in John A Garraty and Mark C. Carnes (eds), ''American National Biogr ...
, had a profound influence on him.
[Divine Inspiration: The Life of Jesus in World Poetry By Robert Atwan, George Dardess, Peggy Rosenthal Published by Oxford University Press US, 1997 p 177] At the end of the 1940s he launched the
free verse movement in Arabic poetry, with
Nazik al-Mala'ika
Nazik al-Malaika ( ar, نازك الملائكة; 23 August 1923 – 20 June 2007) was an Iraqi poet. Al-Malaika is noted for being among the first Arabic poets to use free verse.
Early life and career
Al-Malaika was born in Baghdad to a cultu ...
,
Abd al-Wahhab Al-Bayati and
Shathel Taqa, giving it credibility with the many fine poems he published in the fifties. The publication of his third volume, ''
Rain Song'', in 1960 was one of the most significant events in contemporary Arabic poetry, instrumental in drawing attention to the use of myth in poetry. He revolutionized every element of the poem and wrote on highly involved political and social topics, as well as many personal themes. The
Palestinian poet
Mahmoud Darwish was greatly impressed and influenced by the poetry of Badr Shakir al-Sayyab.
[Guardian](_blank)
11 August 2008 ''Mahmoud Darwish'' by Peter Clark
In the realm of literary controversy, Sayyab stated that Nazik al-Malaikah's claim to have discovered free verse herself was false, and drew attention to the earlier work of
Ali Ahmad Bakathir
Ali bin Ahmad bin Mohammed Bakathir (21 December 1910 - 10 November 1969) (Arabic: علي أحمد باكثير) is an Egyptian poet, playwright and novelist of Hadrami origin, who is Indonesian-born. He was a prominent playwright, his best-k ...
(1910–69) who had developed the two-hemistich format in the mid 1930s. It was Bakathir in fact who had written fractured (
caesura) poetry for the first time in Arabic poetry. Bakathir (1910–69), in the second edition of his book "Akhnatun wa Nefertiti", acknowledged the recognition Sayyab had brought him.
In 2014, some of Sayyab's works were banned from the
Riyadh International Book Fair by the Saudi authorities.
Poetry
*''Christ After Crucifixion'' (المسيح بعد الصلب)
* ''Wilting Flowers'' (أزهار ذابلة, 1947)
* ''Hurricanes'' (أعاصير, 1948)
* ''Flowers and myths'' (أزهار وأساطير, 1950)
* ''Dawn of Peace'' (فجر السلام, 1951)
* ''The Grave Digger'' (Long Poem) (حفار القبور, 1952)
* ''The Blind Prostitute'' (المومس العمياء, 1954)
* ''Weapons and Children'' (الأسلحة والأطفال, 1955)
* ''
Rain Song'' (انشودة المطر, 1960)
* ''The Drowned Temple'' (1962, المعبد الغريق)
* ''Alaguenan''
? Home (1963)
* ''The Balcony of the Nobleman's Daughter'' (1964, شناشيل ابنة الجلبي)
See also
*
List of Iraqi artists
Footnotes
Suggested reading
*Placing the Poet: Badr Shakir Al-Sayyab and Postcolonial Iraq by Terri DeYoung State University of New York Press (31 May 1998)
The Poetry of B.S. Al-Sayyab: Myth and the Influence of T.S. Eliot
Reading T.S. Eliot in Arabic: A Talk with Ghareeb Iskander.ArabLit Quarterly, October 17, 2020
External links
Badr Shakir al-Sayyab BiographyBadr Shakir al-Sayyab PoemsBadr Shakir Al-Sayyab Youssef Rakha outlines the life course of a modern legend.
Extended Biography
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sayyab, Badr Shakir
1926 births
1964 deaths
Iraqi Communist Party politicians
Iraqi communists
20th-century Iraqi poets
Iraqi Shia Muslims
People from Basra
Muslim socialists