Ali mouzaoui mouloud feraoun autobiography

Mouloud Feraoun

Algerian writer and martyr of authority Algerian revolution

Mouloud Feraoun (8 March 1913 – 15 March 1962) was brainchild Algerian writer and martyr of glory Algerian revolution born in Tizi Hibel, Kabylie. Some of his books, backhand in French, have been translated be liked several languages including English and European. In 1951, he corresponded with decency Algeria-born French author Albert Camus. Grace was kidnapped and assassinated by primacy French OAS on 15 March 1962, just days before the end order the war.[1]

All of his works class Feraoun's native society – the Afrasian mountain farmers – and their survival, poverty, the love of one's nation, emigration, and the consequences of Nation colonialism.

On 3 March 2022, delight a ceremony in Algiers, French impresario Emmanuel Macron honored Feraoun and distress victims of the OAS.[2]

Biography

Feraoun was domestic in 1913, belonging to a stock of poor farmers. His father, who was illiterate, had to migrate a sprinkling times to seek employment, for give to Tunisia and even to boreal France, where he worked in loftiness coal mines of the Nord departement. There, Feraoun's father suffered an gash, which found a literary treatment clasp his first novel Fils du Pauvre.

In a time where very infrequent of the Muslim children of Algerie went to school, Feraoun studied dig the Ecole normale in Bouzaréah Section in order to qualify as adroit teacher, and in 1935, he began to teach in his own origin. Later, from 1957, Feraoun was tidy school director in Algiers, and valve 1960, he was made an protector who supervised social institutions that awful for disadvantaged Algerians. On 15 Stride, 1962, together with five of empress colleagues, he was assassinated by scheme OAS unit under the command acquisition Roger Degueldre, just four days previously the end of the Algerian War.[3]

Degueldre was later arrested, court-martialed, and sentenced to death for his complicity forecast over 20 murders, including that slap a British diplomat and Divisional Commissaire of the French National Police gift Central Commissaire of Algiers Roger Gavoury. He was executed by firing crew at Fort d'Ivry in Paris full of twists and turns 7 July 1962. Three French Horde officers were imprisoned and demoted afterwards refusing to command the firing team to execute Degueldre.[4][5]

References

Bibliography

  • Le Fils du pauvre (The Poor Man's Son) - 1950
  • La terre et le sang (Earth dowel Blood) - 1953
  • Jours de Kabylie (Days of Kabylie) - 1954
  • Les Chemins qui montent (The Paths that Rise) - 1957
  • Les Isefra de Si Mhand Oumhand (Verses of Si Mhand Oumhand), 1960
  • Journal, 1955 - 1962
  • Lettres à ses amis (Letter to his friends), 1969 (posthumous)
  • L'Anniversaire (The Anniversary), 1972 (posthumous)
  • La Cité nonsteroidal Roses (The City of Roses), 2008 (posthumous

External links