Hanna Abu-Hanna | |
Birth Date: | 16 October 1928 |
Birth Place: | Reineh, Mandatory Palestine |
Nationality: | Palestinian |
Known For: | poetry and writing |
Hanna Abu-Hanna (16 October 1928 – 2 February 2022) was a Palestinian writer, poet, and researcher. He was born in Reineh, Mandatory Palestine on October 16, 1928.[1] He belongs to the first generation of Arab resistance poets in Israel. Hanna worked as Director of the Arab Orthodox College in Haifa until 1987. He was also a lecturer at the University of Haifa and at the Teacher Education College in 1973. Abu-Hanna earned a Master's degree in literature. He edited and prepared student programs in Jerusalem and Near East radio stations. He participated in the publication of the Al-Jadeed magazine in 1951, the Al-Ghad magazine in 1953, Al-Mawakib in 1984, and Al-Mawqaf in 1993.[2]
Abu-Hanna was born in 1928 in Reineh, a town 3 km north of Nazareth. Because of his father's work, he moved between Jerusalem, Ramallah, Jaffa, Ashdod, Najd, Haifa, Nazareth, and then back to Reineh. He first attended school in Ashdod, after which he attended the Al Maaref School for Boys in Haifa. He then moved to Nazareth, where he participated in the 1936 Arab revolt. He later attended the Latin School in Reineh for a while, before completing secondary studies at the Ma'arif School in Nazareth.[3]
After high school, Abu-Hanna studied at the Arab College in Jerusalem, which enrolled outstanding students from Palestinian government schools. He was chosen to pursue studies in Britain. A government mission was assigned to him in 1947, but family circumstances and the Nakba eliminated this opportunity. He held a BA in English Literature from the University of Haifa.
After the Nakba, Abu-Hanna returned to Haifa in 1950, where he worked for the editorial board of the Al-Ittihad with Tawfik Toubi, Emile Habibi, Emile Touma, Saliba Khamis, Muhammad Khas, Ali Ashour, and Jabra Nicola.[4] He helped to establish the Al-Ghad and Al-Jadeed magazines, which were issued in 1951 as a supplement to Al-Ittihad and then resumed publishing in 1953 after obtaining a license.[5] Israeli authorities imprisoned him in Ramle Prison in 1958.[6]
Abu-Hanna married Samia Farah, who was from Shefa-Amr. The couple had two daughters, Rabab Abu-Hanna and journalist Umayya Abu-Hanna, and a son, professor Amin Abu-Hanna.[7] [8] [9] He died on 2 February 2022, at the age of 93.[10]
Red Green | Hanna Abu-Hanna | Drawings: Sawsan Al Majidi | 2001 | ||
Epic literature | Hanna Abu-Hanna | 1983 | |||
Arnoub and Farfour | Hanna Abu-Hanna | Drawing Sawsan Al Majidi. | 2001 | ||
Dima’s fingers | Hanna Abu-Hanna | Drawings: Sawsan Al Majidi | 2001 | ||
Green Leaves | Hanna Abu-Hanna | 2004 | |||
I drank your poison until reaching immunity: Poetry | Hanna Abu-Hanna | 1990 | |||
Three poets: Ibrahim Tuqan, Abdul Rahim Mahmoud, Abu Salma | Hanna Abu-Hanna | 1995 | |||
Juha and the Moon | Hanna Abu-Hanna | Drawings: Louay Dokhi | 2003 | ||
Ash Yeast: A Biography | Hanna Abu-Hanna | 2004 | |||
Palestinian Poetry divan | Hanna Abu-Hanna | 1991 | |||
A journey in search of heritage | Hanna Abu-Hanna | 1994 | |||
Secret of King Kessar | Hanna Abu-Hanna | Drawings: Sawsan Al Majidi. | 2002 | ||
Shadow of the Cloud: A Biography | Hanna Abu-Hanna | 2001 | |||
The world of the short story | prepared and presented Hanna Abu-Hanna | 1979 | |||
The Fortune teller of Carmel: Poetry | Hanna Abu-Hanna | 2005 | |||
Literary pistachio | Hanna Abu-Hanna | 2004 | |||
Poems from the Garden of Patience | Hanna Abu-Hanna | 1988 | |||
My cat is Princess | Hanna Abu-Hanna | Drawings: Sawsan Al Majidi | 2001 | ||
King of the Jungle | Hanna Abu-Hanna | Drawings: Raad Abdul Wahid | 2016 | ||
Among the problems of education in the Arab sector | Hanna Abu-Hanna [and] Sami Geraisy | 1977 | |||
The Owl's Pony: A Biography | Hanna Abu-Hanna | 2004 |