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Baha Taher

    1 janvier 1935 – 27 octobre 2022

    Bahaa Taher était un romancier et conteur égyptien dont les œuvres abordaient souvent le commentaire social. Figure clé des cercles littéraires des années 1960, il fut l'un des écrivains associés au mouvement Gallery 68. Sa carrière précoce à la radio fut interrompue par des persécutions politiques, ce qui le conduisit à une période d'exil en Suisse, où il travailla comme traducteur pour les Nations Unies. À son retour en Égypte, il s'impliqua activement dans la vie culturelle, recevant d'importantes distinctions pour sa production littéraire et s'établissant comme l'un des romanciers arabes contemporains les plus lus.

    Tante Safîja und das Kloster
    As Ddoha Said
    Love in Exile
    • In Love in Exile Bahaa Taher presents multilayered variations on the themes of exile, disillusionment, failed dreams, and the redemptive power of love. Unwilling to recant his Nasserist beliefs, the unnamed narrator is an Egyptian journalist in a self-imposed exile in Europe after conflict with the management of his newspaper and a divorce from his wife. Absorbed in introspection over his impotent position at the paper and in ill health, he suddenly finds himself faced with two issues he cannot ignore: the escalating tensions in Israeli-occupied Lebanon and, more personally, an unexpected love affair with a much younger Austrian woman, Brigitte. The narrator’s familial exile has left him a “long-distance father” facing the difficulties of raising children from whom he is rapidly growing distant. His son is drifting into fundamentalism while his daughter falls under the materialistic sway of the west. After struggling mightily to remain part of their lives, he finds himself marginalized and rejected. Brigitte, also an exile of sorts, encourages him to turn his back on the problems and pressures of the everyday world and cocoon himself in the warmth of their love. However, the horror of events surrounding the occupation of Lebanon in 1982 soon shocks them out of their contentment and safety.

      Love in Exile
    • In Egypt a new era has dawned, but the dawn has taken an ominous turn. President Gamal Abdel Nasser has just proclaimed the first in a series of nationalization decrees, the stock exchange has shut down, and its parking attendant, Sayyid, is staring at penury.

      As Ddoha Said