Abdulla Pashew
Abdullah Pashew | |
---|---|
Native name | عەبدوڵڵا پەشێو |
Born | 1946 Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan, Berkot neighborhood |
Occupation | poet Translator |
Language | Kurdish Arabic Russian German English Finnish Persian |
Nationality | Kurdish |
Website | |
pashew |
Abdulla Pashew (Kurdish: عەبدوڵا پەشێو, romanized: Ebdulla Peşêw) is a Kurdish poet.[1][2] He was born in 1946 in Hewlêr, southern Kurdistan. He studied at the Teachers' Training Institute in Hewlêr (Erbil), and participated in the Foundation Congress of the Kurdish Writers' Union in Baghdad in 1970. In 1973 he went to the former Soviet Union, and in 1979 he received an M.A. in pedagogy with a specialisation in foreign languages. In 1984 he was granted a PhD in Philology from the Institute of Oriental Studies of the USSR Academy of Sciences. For the next five years he was a professor at al-Fatih University in Tripoli, Libya. He has lived in Finland since 1995.[3] He was a refugee until 1997.[4]
He published his first poem in 1963 and his first collection in 1967. Since then he has published ten collections. The latest, Sawlm Pola u Kanarish dur (My Oars are Iron, yet the Shore is Far), was published in 2019 in Kurdistan. He is fluent in English and Russian and has translated the works of Walt Whitman and Alexandr Pushkin into Kurdish.[5]
Notes
[edit]- ^ Alana Marie Levinson-LaBrosse (16 August 2014). "Kurdistan: Where Poets Are More Than Poets". Retrieved 14 December 2015.
- ^ "Kurdish poet Abdulla Pashew visits Diyarbakir". 18 May 2014. Archived from the original on 13 January 2016. Retrieved 14 December 2015.
- ^ "Abdulla Pashew". Poetry Translation Centre. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
- ^ "The Poetry of Truth: An Interview with Abdulla Pashew". January 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-01-05.
- ^ "New Translations of Abdulla Pashew". The Iowa Review. 30 September 2014. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
External links
[edit]- 1946 births
- Living people
- Kurdish poets
- 21st-century Kurdish writers
- Iraqi expatriates in the Soviet Union
- 20th-century Iraqi poets
- 20th-century male writers
- 21st-century Iraqi poets
- 21st-century male writers
- People from Erbil
- Academic staff of the University of Tripoli
- Iraqi emigrants to Finland
- Iraqi refugees
- Refugees in Finland