Farah Awl Explained

Farah Awl
Native Name:فارح عول
Birth Name:Faarax Maxamed Jaamac Cawl
Birth Place:Las Khorey, British Somaliland (now Somaliland)
Death Place:Beledweyne, Somalia

Farah Mohamed Jama Awl (Somali: Faarax Maxamed Jaamac Cawl, Arabic: فارح محمد جامع عول; 1937 - 1991), usually credited as Farah Awl,[1] was a Somali writer. His surname Cawl (pronounced as /so/) means "gazelle", which was the nickname of his great-grandfather who was the Sultan of the Warsangali clan. The Awl family also includes the Warsangali Sultan Mohamoud Ali Shire.[2]

Biography

Awl was born in 1937 in the town of Las Khorey in North eastern Somalia. In his youth, he obtained a scholarship to study aeronautical and automobile engineering in London in the United Kingdom (1959–62). Upon graduation, he moved to Somalia and worked with the police force and the National Transport Agency in Mogadishu.

The vivid descriptions of Somalia's scenery and fauna in Awl's literary corpus, as well as the inclusion of traditional Somali poetry, make it stand out in particular. He also has the distinction of being the first Somali novelist to write in the nascent Latin script for the Somali language after its formalization in 1972.

Awl was a member of the royal family of the Warsangali clan. Reportedly because of his membership in the Darod clan family, Awl, along with three of his children, was killed in 1991, at the height of the civil unrest that gripped the town of Beledweyne in the Hiiraan region.

He is survived by his wife and one son, Dahir Farah.[3]

Bibliography

See also

References

  1. Mohamed, Jama. "'The evils of locust bait': Popular nationalism during the 1945 anti-locust control rebellion in colonial Somalia." Past & present 174 (2002): 184-216.
  2. Horn of Africa, Volume 15, Horn of Africa Journal., 1997, p. 72
  3. Faarax MJ Cawl, Ignorance is the enemy of love., Translated from the Somali with introduction and notes, London, Zed Books, 'New Fiction' Series. (Revised reissue of the 1982 edition), 1984