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Muhammad al-Maghout محمد الماغوط | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1934 |
| Died | 3 April 2006 (aged 72) Damascus, Syria |
| Occupation | poet,playwright,columnist |
| Language | Arabic |
| Nationality | Syrian |
| Literary movement | Modernism |
| Notable works | A Room with Million Walls East of Eden, West of God I will betray my homeland Sadness in the Moonlight |
Muhammad al-Maghout (1934–April 3, 2006) (Arabic:محمد الماغوط) was a renownedSyrian writer and poet.
He was born in the town ofSalamiyah,Hama Governorate, inSyria to anIsma'ili family.[citation needed] He was married to the poetSaniya Salih.[1]
Muhammad Maghout has been credited as the father of Arabic free verse poetry, liberating Arabic poems from the traditional form and revolutionizing the structure of the poem. While in prison in the 1950s, he wrote his first poems on cigarette papers as a personal memoir of his prison experience, later discovered to be revolutionary poetry. Without formal education, his future work tapped into his vivid imagination, innate mastery of words, and intuition. He wrote for theater, TV, and cinema. Maghout's work combined satire with descriptions of social misery and malaise, and what he viewed as an ethical decline among rulers in the region. Some of his themes included the problems of injustice and totalitarian governments. The struggle of the marginalized was at the heart of all his work. His first theatrical production, "The Hunchback bird", was originally a long poem that he wrote while in hiding in a small, low-ceilinged room. A dialogue emerged within the poem, transforming it to his first theatrical production. This was followed by another play, "The Clown", played by the renowned Lebanese actor Antoin Kerbaj. He cooperated with Syrian actorsDureid Lahham and Nihad Qal'i to produce some of the region's most popular and acclaimed theatrical works, such asKasak ya Watan (Toast to the homeland),Ghorbeh (Estrangement), and "Dayat Tishreen" (October's Village).
Al-Maghout is also known for his book "I will betray my homeland", a collection of columns concerned with the dream of freedom.
Al-Maghout died in April 2006 at the age of 72.
"Policemen, Interpol men everywhere; you search for the perfect crime... there is only one perfect crime; to be born an Arab."
"I am the one who has not been killed yet at war, by earthquake or street accident."
"The Arab world is astonishingly devoid of listening devices, simply because nobody speaks there"