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Dilshad Meriwani

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Dilshad Meriwani
Born
Dilshad Muhammad Amin Fatah

1947
Died1989
Amna Suraka (lit. Red Prison)
Cause of deathExecution (Gunshot wound to the head)
Burial placeNot Discovered, Unknown
EducationKurdish Language and Literature
Alma materUniversity of Baghdad
OccupationTeacher
Years active1959-1989
Known forPoet, Critic, Activist, Revolutionary
SpouseŞîrîn Kemal Eḥmed Saļiḥ alias Sirin K. (b. 1954)
Children3 daughters

Dilshad Muhammad Amin Fatah (March 28, 1947 – March 13, 1989), better known by his pen name "Dilshad Meriwani", was an influential Kurdish poet, playwright, actor, critic, essayist, teacher and a translator who was executed by the Iraqi government during the Saddam Hussein era on March 13, 1989, for teaching the Kurdish Latin alphabet to his students.[1]

Life and career

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He was born in Slemani, Iraqi Kurdistan. He graduated in 1972 from the University of Baghdad in Kurdish Language and Literature. Meriwani was active in the Students' Union from 1959 to 1962.

From 1962 to 1966, he was involved in his co-founded Society for the Revival of Kurdish National Resources[a], an underground literary and artistic organization which published resistance works[b] which were distributed hand-by-hand. In March of 1963, he started participating in political activities and engaged in clandestine struggle which resulted in his being imprisoned, tortured and exiled multiple times. He experienced guerrilla life in the city beginning from the revolution of 1961 to the revolution of June 1976. While in the mountains as a pêşmerge between 1983 to 1985.

He married Şîrîn Kemal Eḥmed Saļiḥ[c], a Kurdish poet, in 1975, who belonged to an active political Kurd family. Dilshad and Sirin did not live together or have a home till 1978 due to exile, imprisonment and work. They had three daughters.

In September 1984, he abandoned all political activity and returned to writing. He committed himself to being a teacher. Throughout his life, he composed, translated and produced more than 17 plays, including his popular resistance play 'Çawî Vietnam' (Vietnam’s Eye, 1973). He performed in two plays and starred in a 12-minute film in 1972. Merwani translated both eastern and western resistance poetry to Kurdish language, including the works of Mayakovsky, Darwīsh, Neruda, Éluard and Yesenin. Among his complete works are 8 poems, 2 collections of stories and a work on literary criticism. For 12 years, he presented several readings, literary and cultural lectures, and critical gatherings in cities such as Slemani, Hawler, Duhok and Baghdad.

In public service, he served as a language supervisor for the Ministry of Information and was a Technical Instructor in the Department of Kurdish Language and Literature. He was a guest professor at Slemani University for a month. He was also a journalist at the Ministry of Transport in Baghdad, and an editor of the Risala magazine.

After several years of publishing political plays, poems, and essays, the Ba'athist dictator regime arrested and executed him on 13th March 1989. The security members of the regime executed him by a headshot at Amna Suraka in Slemani for his programme of teaching the Kurdish Latin alphabet to Kurdish schoolchildren. The regime did not allow his family to give him a funeral and his burial place is unknown.[1][2][3]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Dilshad Mariwani". Revista Altazor. University of Chile. ISSN 2452-5332.
  2. ^ Hassan, Saman Salah (2013). Women and Literature: A Feminist Reading of Kurdish Women’s Poetry. University of Exeter. pp. 231–232. ProQuest 1651903635 – via ProQuest.
  3. ^ Rashidirostami, Mahroo (2015). Theatre and Cultural Nationalism: Kurdish Theatre Under the Baath, 1975-1991. University of Exeter. p. 136.

Notes

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  1. ^ Natively called Komeley Bûjandinewey Samanî Netewayetî Kurd.
  2. ^ It included works by Kurdish writers and many translations of Arabic, Persian and European resistance poetry.
  3. ^ She was more commonly known by her pen name "Sirin K.".