Poet
Ahmed Barakat
Ahmed Barakat
(Morocco, 1960)
Biography
Ahmed Barakat was born in 1960 in Casablanca where he grew up, studied, and worked. He was a journalist for the Moroccan newspaper Bayane Al Yawm. His death in 1994 at the age of 34, in the prime of his poetic career, felt like a personal shock to most Moroccan poets. Barakat was a champion of the prose poem in Morocco, and is believed to be the writer of the first Moroccan manifesto defending
and celebrating the Moroccan prose poem.
The poetry of Ahmed Barakat, like that of Jalal El Hakmaoui and Abdel-ilah Salhi, reflects the urban cosmopolitan experience, to the extent that one can say his poetry is one long interrupted eulogy to the city of Casablanca. He is also the first prose poem writer to succeed in transmitting the newness of the prose poem experience a wider poetry audience. Indeed, his early poem ‘abadan lan ussai’da azzilzal’ (‘Never will I sustain the schism’), first published in the Arab London magazine Annakid was the spark that kindled the flame of the prose poem for many Moroccan readers of poetry afterwards.
If, as American poet Charles Bukowsky said, “Genius is the ability to say a profound thing in a simple way”, we can undoubtedly say that Barakat was a poet of genius, since one cannot miss the profundity of each of his poems no matter how simple or short it is.
© Norddine Zouitni
Poems{id="3843" title="Afterwards"}
{id="3847" title="Casablanca 25/06/1993"}
{id="3841" title="A Small Word"}
{id="3845" title="Black Pain"}
{id="3849" title="The Torn Flag"}
Bibliography
Abadan lan Ussai’da Azzilzal. Manshourat Ittihah Kuttab al Maghreb, Rabat 1991.
Dafatir al Khusran. Manshourat Ittihah Kuttab al Maghreb, Rabat 1994.
Poems
Poems of Ahmed Barakat
Sponsors
Partners
LantarenVenster – Verhalenhuis Belvédère