Salah Niazi (Arabic: صلاح نيازي, (Ṣalāḥ Nīyāzī); born 1935) is an Iraqi poet and translator from the city of Nasiriyah currently living in the United Kingdom.
Salah Niazi | |
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Born | 1935 (age 86–87) Nasiriyah |
Occupation | Poet, Translator |
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Salah Niazi has lived in the United Kingdom since 1964, when he was exiled from Iraq.[1] He has made important contributions to post-World War II contemporary war poetry[2] and has participated in the literary life of the Iraqi migrant community in the UK.[3] His poems have been translated into several languages, including into English, Spanish, and French. He worked at the BBC Arabic Service for almost twenty years and also received a doctorate from the University of London. [4]
Salah Niazi is married to Samira al-Mani (Arabic: سميرة المانع, Samīra al-Māniʿ) who is also a writer from Iraq. Together, they founded a literary journal in 1985, al-Ightirab al-adabi (Arabic: الإغتراب الأدبي, al-ʾiġtirāb al-ʾadabī, Literature in Exile), which highlighted the work of the Iraqi exile community.
Niazi has also translated notable works of the English language, such as James Joyce's Ulysses, which he did so in part to distract himself from the horrors of the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s.[5] Other translations into Arabic include William Shakespeare's plays, Macbeth, King Lear, and Hamlet.[6]
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