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Susan Abulhawa

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Susan Abulhawa
Abulhawa in 2010
Abulhawa in 2010
Born(1970-06-03)June 3, 1970(age 54)
Kuwait
OccupationAuthor, activist
NationalityPalestinian American
Notable worksMornings in Jenin

Susan Abulhawa(Arabic:سوزان أبو الهوى,born June 3, 1970) is aPalestinianwriter andhuman rightsactivistandanimal rightsadvocate.[1]She is the author of several books, and the founder of anon-governmental organization,Playgrounds for Palestine.[2]She lives inPennsylvania.[3]Her first novel,Mornings in Jenin,was translated into 32 languages and sold more than a million copies. The sales and reach of her debut novel made Abulhawa the most widely read Palestinian author of all time.[4]Her second novel,The Blue Between Sky And Water,was sold in 19 languages before its release, and was published in English in 2015.Against the Loveless World,her third novel, was released in August 2020, also to critical acclaim.[5][6][7]

Early life and education

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Abulhawa's parents, born inAt-TurinEast Jerusalem,were refugees of the1967 war.Her father, according to one account,[3]"was expelled at gunpoint; her mother, who was studying in Germany at the time, was unable to return and the couple reunited inJordanbefore moving to Kuwait, where Abulhawa was born in 1970. "

Her parents split shortly after her birth and Abulhawa's childhood was turbulent, moving between Kuwait, the United States, Jordan, and Palestine. She lived in the United States with an uncle until she was 5, then spent several years moving between relatives in Jordan and Kuwait. She lived in Dar el Tifl, a Jerusalem orphanage, from the age of 10 to 13.[3]

At 13, Abulhawa came to the US, where she lived with her father briefly before entering the foster care system in the US.[citation needed]

Prior to writing her first book, Abulhawa had a career in biomedical science, where she worked as a researcher for a pharmaceutical company.[citation needed]

In addition to three novels, in 2013 Abulhawa published a collection of poetry entitledMy Voice Sought the Wind.[8]

Abulhawa is the founder of Playgrounds for Palestine,[9]anNGOthat advocates for Palestinian children by building playgrounds in Palestine and UN refugee camps in Lebanon. The first playground was erected in early 2002.[10]

Activism

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She is involved in the campaign forBoycott, Divestment and Sanctions(BDS) and as a speaker for Al Awda, the Right to Return coalition.[3]

Abulhawa is signatory to the boycott campaign against Israel, including the cultural boycott. She gave the keynote address at one of the first campus BDS conferences at theUniversity of Pennsylvania.[11]Abulhawa claimed the BDS movement, according to a 2012 profile, "as one of the most effective ways to promote Palestinian rights and achieve justice against Israel's ongoing ethnic cleansing".[12]

She hascompared Israel toapartheid South Africa.[13][14]In 2013, Abulhawa declined an invitation fromAl Jazeerato participate in a discussion about the Israel-Palestine issue with several Israelis, including some who were highly critical of Israeli policy.[15]

2023 Adelaide Writers' Week

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In February 2023, invited to speak at theAdelaide Writers' Weekfestival in Australia, Abulhawa caused controversy due to her Twitter comments describing Ukrainian PresidentVolodymyr Zelenskyyas a "Nazi-promotingZionist"and accusing him of dragging" the whole world into the inferno of WWIII ", leading to three invited Ukrainian authors withdrawing from the event.[16]

Works

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Abulhawa's novelMornings in Jenin,which was published in 2010 byBloomsbury,has been translated into Arabic by Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Publishing.[3]It has also been translated into at least two dozen other languages and has become an international bestseller.[17]

The French author andphilosopherBernard-Henri LévycalledMornings inJenin"a concentration of anti-Israeli and anti-Jewishclichésmasquerading as fiction ".[18]Abulhawa responded by dismissing Levy as a "French pop star of philosophy and intellectual elitism" and accusing him of "name-calling": "He simply slaps on the word 'anti-Semitism' to discredit any negative portrayal of Israel.... Mr. Levy accuses us of 'demonizing Israel', when in fact, all we do is pull back the curtain, however slightly, to show a dark truth he wishes to keep hidden. I suspect that Mr Levy feels, as most Jewish supporters of Israel do, that he is more entitled to my grandfather's farms than I am. After all, that is really the foundation of Israel, isn't it?"[19]

Filmworks Dubai bought the film rights toMornings in Jenin,planning to begin production in late 2013. Anna Soler-Pont, head of the Pontas agency, which sold the film rights to the novel, said: "This is going to be a special project. There aren't any epic films on Palestine yet."[20]However, the producer died shortly after and the rights reverted to her.[citation needed]

Novels

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  • Mornings in Jenin(Bloomsbury, 2010,ISBN978-1608190461).
  • The Blue Between Sky and Water(Bloomsbury, 2015,ISBN978-1632862228).
  • Against the Loveless World(Bloomsbury, 2020,ISBN978-1526618801).

Other

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  • Will the Flower Slip Through the Asphalt: Writers Respond to Capitalist Climate Change[21](LeftWorld Books, 2017)
  • This Is Not A Border: Reportage & Reflections from the Palestine Festival of Literature(2017)[22]
  • Shattered Illusions,anthology (Amal Press, 2002)[23]
  • Searching Jenin,anthology (Cune Press, 2003).[23]
  • Seeking Palestine: New Palestinian Writing on Exile and Homeanthology (2012)[24]
  • My Voice Sought The Wind,poetry collection (Just World Books, November 2013)[25]

Awards

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References

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  1. ^Rhodes, Giulia (June 6, 2015)."Building playgrounds in Palestine: 'This is their special place and refuge'".The Guardian.
  2. ^"Susan Abulhawa".Al Jazeera.
  3. ^abcdeYaqoob, Tahira (April 26, 2012)."Arab-American novelist fights for justice in Palestine".The National.Abu Dhabi.RetrievedMarch 30,2023.
  4. ^"Susan Abulhawa (June 1970–present)".kotobli.RetrievedJune 1,2024.
  5. ^Khadivi, Laleh(August 26, 2020)."A Beautiful, Urgent Novel of the Palestinian Struggle".The New York Times.RetrievedJuly 13,2021.
  6. ^"Fiction Book Review:Against the Loveless Worldby Susan Abulhawa ".Publishers Weekly.RetrievedJuly 13,2021.
  7. ^"Review:Mornings in Jenin".Kirkus Reviews.
  8. ^"Susan Abulhawa's My Voice Sought The Wind – Poetry Review".Palestine Chronicle.October 25, 2013.
  9. ^"Meet Us".Playgrounds for Palestine.RetrievedJune 1,2024.
  10. ^Adams, John (March 2003),"Playgrounds for Palestine Brings Playground for Peace"(PDF),Today's Playground,archived fromthe original(PDF)on July 28, 2007,retrievedOctober 13,2009
  11. ^Robbins, Annie (February 15, 2012)."Out of the Ballpark: Susan Abulhawa's speech to the PennBDS conference".Mondoweiss.
  12. ^Bland, Sally (March 27, 2012)."Susan Abulhawa: Writing for Palestine".The Jordan Times.Archived fromthe originalon December 5, 2013.RetrievedNovember 22,2013.
  13. ^Abulhawa, Susan (2009)."Palestinians Will Never Forget".Washington Report on Middle East Affairs.American Educational Trust.RetrievedAugust 17,2015.
  14. ^"Israel's apartheid against Palestinians: Cruel system of domination and crime against humanity".Amnesty International.RetrievedSeptember 27,2023.
  15. ^Weiss, Philip (May 19, 2013)."Abulhawa declines to balance out several Israelis in Al Jazeera forum on Nakba".Mondoweiss.
  16. ^Keane, Daniel (February 22, 2023)."Ukrainian authors withdraw from Adelaide Writers' Week amid line-up controversy".ABC News.RetrievedFebruary 22,2023.
  17. ^Badih, Samia (May 4, 2012)."Palestine on Her Mind".Gulf News.
  18. ^Lévy, Bernard-Henri(December 3, 2010)."The Antisemitism to Come".Huffington Post.
  19. ^Abulhawa, Susan (December 22, 2010)."The Antisemitism to Come? Hardly".Huffington Post.
  20. ^Evans, Chris (November 17, 2011)."Filmworks Dubai Takes Rights to Best-Selling Novel Mornings in Jenin".Screen Daily.
  21. ^"Will the Flower Slip Through the Asphalt",Amazon
  22. ^"This Is Not a Border: Reportage & Reflection from the Palestine Festival of Literature".Bloomsbury.
  23. ^ab"Bloomsbury Biography".Archived fromthe originalon December 4, 2010.RetrievedNovember 24,2010.
  24. ^(Researcher), Penny Johnson; Shehadeh, Raja (2012).Seeking Palestine: New Palestinian Writing on Exile and Home.Women Unlimited.ISBN978-8188965731.
  25. ^"My Voice Sought the Wind".Archived fromthe originalon October 27, 2016.RetrievedJuly 7,2015.
  26. ^"Susan Abulhawa EAA '03".Leeway Foundation.RetrievedJune 1,2024.
  27. ^"Susan Abulhawa in conversation with Gillian Slovo, Part of Shubbak Festival at the British Library".The British Library.July 16, 2017.[permanent dead link]
  28. ^"MEMO Book Awards 2013 honours Rashid Khalidi, Raja Shehadeh and Penny Johnson".Palestine Book Awards.November 14, 2013.
  29. ^"All 4 Palestine | Model Role Details".all4palestine.
  30. ^"2021 Arab American Book Award Winners".Arab American National Museum.
  31. ^"Palestinian author Susan Abulhawa's 'Against the Loveless World' nominated for US literary award".Arab News.March 3, 2021.RetrievedMarch 3,2021.

Further reading

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  • Mohammed Alwuraafi, Ebrahim (2024). "Narrating the Other Half of the Palestinian Story: Reading Susan Abulhawa's Novels as Counternarratives".International Critical Thought.14(1): 119–142.doi:10.1080/21598282.2024.2325840.
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