I still can remember vividly the child I was, growing up under the shadow of Gaddafi regime. Opposing Gaddafi at our home, like many Libyan homes, was normality, but there was always a warning from our parents to never speak negatively about him outside the house or in the presence of strangers or at school. Living a double life was the best way to survive in Libya for a vast sector of society; it was passive way of expressing opposition to a regime that sent its opponents behind the sun. Gaddafi regime was determined to seep into every detail of […]
Imtidadblog
Posts by Ghazi غازي Gheblawi القبلاوي:
On a hot day at Kingston -Upon-Thames
Poem by: Giuma Bukleb If that part of the river Thames, below “Kingston Bridge”, where the trees are willingly anchored, on both banks, Had eyes It might have glanced, on that hour of the evening, the alertness of my anxiety, It might have noticed, at the same moment, how the desire of the poem, setting its traps in my blood for the seagulls’ flutter, And pigeons’ revelation! If that part of the river Thames, where “Kingston Town” is floating like a paper boat, had eyes It might have sighted, with astonishment, how my body beats with the fever of the […]
Too many to choose from!
Erasing Gaddafi
If you walk inthe streets of the Libyan capital Tripoli these days, you will probably feelthat this city hasn’t been under the siege of a brutal dictator for nearly sixmonths of the Libyan revolution. The presence of Gaddafi is being erased notonly from the walls and billboards of the capital where they used to stand, butalso from the memory of many Libyans. Living all yourlife under a cult dictatorship and then coming to the realisation that thetyrant isn’t sharing the air that you breath anymore, isn’t easy to reach. As aLibyan you were faced everyday with a reminder that Gaddafi […]
Libyan Chronicles (5)
“I’ve never witnessedsuch rain in all my life!” that’s what most Libyans will tell you when talkingabout the amount of rain the country has seen in the last few weeks sinceGaddafi was toppled. Libyans consider rain a good omen, in a country where 90%of its land is a dry desert; it’s not surprising that any drop of rain will be cherishedand interpreted as a blessing from heavens, especially when many will admit thatthe evilness of Gaddafi kept rain away from falling on the country. And I mustadmit that I myself have never witnessed such rain in my life! During the […]
Libyan Chronicles (4)
If you walk along thenorthern edge of Tripoli old town, close to the ancient roman Marcus Aurelius arch,you are most likely going to meet many of the Libyan artists that have beenoccupying small studios in the old European consulates that used to be based inthis area of town. Radwan Abushwisha was walking under the afternoon sun withhis shoulder bag, a bearded middle aged man, with lines of a hard life carvedon his face. Radwan is a poet, writer and painter, who lived for many years inIreland in the 1970’s and 1980’s, is a unique example of the Libyanintelligentsia, that suffered […]
Libyan Chronicles (3)
Just across the streetfrom the United Nations mission headquarters in Tripoli’s Baladiya Street, stands al-Safwa hotel.A decade ago, young and upcoming Libyan writers and intellectuals used to meetup at its small cafe, where it became during the years a centre for Libyanintelligentsia in Tripoli to meet, and discuss and read their latest literaryworks. I used to visit the place every time I visited Libya, but during theyears this group that often visited the cafe stopped coming back, some weresucked into the pressure of the daily hardships of life, others found newplaces, as public places in the city grew in number, […]
Libyan Chronicles (2)
Waking up in the old room,adjusting to the new reality of the place, recalling the details of the housethat used to be and still is home, after long and eventful weeks and months, Irealised that I am back in Libya. I didn’t have a plan for thisvisit, besides spending good time with the family and listening to themnarrating their account of the past months, their hopes and fears, I decided tolet my plans loose, and to reflect on the dramatic change the country is goingthrough. I found a stack of new Libyannewspapers; my brother got me before I arrived, so […]
Libyan Chronicles (1)
The way to Libya started in Tunisia, as it all began during this year of revolutions. I took the plane from Tunis to Djerba around six o’clock in the evening. The Tunisair express plane was full of Libyan families, with children mostly wearing t-shirts brandishing the images and symbols of the Libyan revolution. A lone young man with crutches hopping on the plane stairs, his left arm bandaged, which I assumed was one of the injured and wounded young Libyans crushed in this bloody war for liberation. Arriving at Djerba in the after seven in the evening, I took a […]
Prison Tales (By: Omar Abulqasem al-Kikli)
By:Omar Abulqasem al-Kikli Omar al-Kikli is a prominent Libyan short story writer, from a generation of Libyan writer that suffered greatly under Gaddafi regime. He was one of a new generation of Libyan writers in the early in 1970’s that came onto the literary scene full of hope and new styles and ideas, only to be imprisoned for a decade, accused of plotting to topple the Gaddafi regime. These are a sample of a collection of short stories named (Sejneyat), written to commemorate two decades of his release from prison in 1988; they are a testament of the years […]