5 min listen
Naim Araidi and the people of the Galilee
ratings:
Length:
7 minutes
Released:
Oct 28, 2015
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
"People of the Galilee are strong as the sunRough as the terebinth tender as the oakFiery as the fires of SodomSodden as the salt of the seaSo far from their bodies."
Host Marcela Sulak reads some of the poetry of Israeli Druze poet Naim Araidi, who passed away on October 2 this year. Araidi was born in 1950 in the Druze Village of Maghar in the Galilee and received his PhD in Hebrew Literature from Bar-Ilan University. Like another Arab-Israeli writer, Anton Shammas, Araidi chose to write in Hebrew as well as Arabic.
Among the legacies of Naim Araidi is the Nissan organization for Literature, which he established in 1999. The international Nissan Festival is held annually in April in Maghar, his native village. This village of Maghar is said to have the highest density of poets per capita — 17 in a population of 1,000.
Texts:Back to the Village by Naim Araidi, translated by Karen Alkalay-Gut, Herzlia: Levant, 1994.“What Shall We Say to Whom,” translated by Karen Alkalay-Gut, Jerusalem Review, 5-6, 2006. 154-158.“Jerusalem Divides,” translated by Karen Alkalay-Gut, Jerusalem Review, no 8. 2015, 13-14.Other poems forthcoming in Jerusalem Review, January, 2016.
Music:Riad El Sonbati - Ya Nassini (performed by the Jewish-Arab Orchestra)Jamil Bey Tanburi- Samai Shad Araban (performed by the Jewish-Arab Orchestra)Sovu Be Machol - Debka DruzitNadech Seisi - (Unknown)
Released:
Oct 28, 2015
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Rahel The Poet: The mother of Hebrew Poetry, and one of the first women poet's in theHebrew language since the Biblical Deborah. She switched from paining artand playing music to painting with the soil and playing with the hoe. Book: Flowers of Perhaps. A... by Israel in Translation