Categories
Politics
Reflections
Arts & Culture
Consumer
HomeAboutContact

Subscribe for updates

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
HomeAboutContact
Politics
Reflections
Arts & Culture
Consumer
Twitterfacebooklinkedinemail
print

Elias Khoury and NYU's Abu Dhabi Institute

Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
October 8, 2008
March 19, 2022
Elias Khoury and NYU's Abu Dhabi Institute
Share this:
Twitterfacebooklinkedinemail
print

Elias Khoury and NYU’s Abu Dhabi Institute

The Lebanese novelist and journalist Elias Khoury gave a talk on the art of the novel here in Abu Dhabi on Tuesday as the first event of the inaugural season of New York University Abu Dhabi Institute’s fall 2008 lecture series.

The NYU Abu Dhabi Institute is the research hub and community outreach arm of NYU’s Abu Dhabi campus, which is scheduled to open in September 2010, according to Mariet Westermann, NYU's vice chancellor for regional campus development. It is starting to hold lectures from this month to make its presence felt in Abu Dhabi and to interact with the local community.

Held in the posh Al Mamoura auditorium of the Aldar Properties building just off Muroor Road, Khoury’s talk was an intimate conversation with the faculty director of NYU Abu Dhabi Institute Philip Kennedy about how he writes and the problems he’s faced.

Kennedy’s long-winded introduction was felt by some to be excessively fawning and yawn inducing. But for myself and others who had never read anything by Khoury it was educational.

Born in 1948 in Beirut, Khoury travelled to Jordan in 1967 at the age of 19 and visited a Palestinian refugee camp which would leave a lasting impression upon the writer. His outrage at what he encountered pushed him to join the Fatah faction of the Palestine Liberation Organization and remain in Jordan until 1970 when Palestinian guerilla forces were crushed by King Hussein in the Black September offensive.

Fleeing to Paris, Khoury continued his studies there. Upon returning to Beirut he joined the PLO’s research center, working with leading Palestinian intellectuals such as Hisham Sharabi and the poet Mahmoud Darwish. When the Lebanese civil war broke out in 1975, Khoury took part in it and was seriously injured, temporarily losing his eyesight.

The Palestinian experience of being forced out of Palestine by Jewish settlers in the Nakba (Catastrophe) of 1948 has been a major theme of many of Khoury’s novel especially Bab al Shams (Gate of the Sun) which he wrote in 1981. Translated into English in 2005, this book gained him critical acclaim in Britain and the US for its lyrical style and unconventional use of multiple viewpoints.

So intense is Khoury’s attachment to the Palestinian cause that even I doubted for a moment during the lecture whether he was in fact a Lebanese of Palestinian origin. A colleague of mine even asked the author after the lecture whether he was Palestinian and he said in a slightly offended voice: “I am not Palestinian by blood. Both of my parents were Lebanese, but I feel Palestinian in my heart.”

Another colleague of mine who also attended the lecture, and had just finished reading Bab al Shams in English, said it was a difficult book to read because of the shifting narratives. “But eventually it all came together and I could see how the different stories had something in common,” she said.

Khoury said that writing a new book was always difficult for him as he always feels like he needs to relearn how to write whenever he starts work on a new book. He also said that the truth can never be found in the recollection of an event by a single person, but rather in the varied recollections of many people.****

NYU Abu Dhabi Institute’s Fall 2008 lecture series continues with a discussion of Stephen Hawking’s A Briefer History of Time by NYU Professor Glennys Farrar on November 12 at 6 pm (also at the Al Mamoura auditorium); a look at the results of the US elections on Nov. 16 at 6 pm with NYU’s Rogan Kersh, who is associate dean and professor and public policy, and Robert Shrum, political strategist, and finally Marina Warner discussing Edward Said on December 17 at 6 pm.

For a complete schedule of the lecture series, click here.

To read Elias Khoury's appreciation of his friend and poet the late Mahmoud Darwish, that appeared in The National on Aug. 29, 2008, click here.

Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
Tags:
No items found.
Share this:
Twitterfacebooklinkedinemail
print

Comments

Anonymous
10/16/2008 8:07 AM
3/16/2022 7:04 PM

Hi! I've read some of your articles in different publications.


I hope many countries with conflicts involving Muslims will air the hit Canadian sitcom "Little Mosque on the Prairie". The show best exemplifies Canada's position as the definitive quintessence in today's world of multiculturalism/ pluralism.


Here are the links:


Little Mosque on the Prairie
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Mosque_on_the_Prairie


List of Little Mosque on the Prairie episodes
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Little_Mosque_on_the_Prairie_episodes


Thanks.

Leave a comment

Name
Comment
Your comment has been submitted! Refresh your page, it will appear shortly.
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form. Try again!

Other posts

·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Palestinos famintos e a dissonância americana
Politics
July 2, 2025
July 3, 2025

Palestinos famintos e a dissonância americana

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
Starving Palestinians and American dissonance
Politics
July 1, 2025
July 3, 2025

Starving Palestinians and American dissonance

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
America is being dismantled
Politics
June 28, 2025
July 3, 2025

America is being dismantled

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
My thoughts on Gaza, Trump and illegal imigrants in the US
Politics
February 11, 2025
February 11, 2025

My thoughts on Gaza, Trump and illegal imigrants in the US

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
Next
1 / 71
January 31, 2012
March 16, 2022

The culture shock of being a domestic helper in Arabia

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
January 31, 2012
March 16, 2022

O choque cultural de ser uma doméstica na Arábia

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
Politics
December 20, 2011
March 16, 2022

As sauditas vão poder votar antes de dirigir: O Globo

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
Politics
December 4, 2011
March 16, 2022

A Primavera Árabe esta longe de terminar: meu artigo no O Globo

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
Previous
Next
2 / 85
RW Logo
HomeAboutContact
Categories
Politics
Reflections
Arts & Culture
Consumer
Subscribe for updates
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

© Rasheed's World 2021. All rights reserved.

Site by