Guest of the ilb 2003, 2004, 2008
Boualem Sansal was born in the Algerian town of Téniet el Had in 1949. After completing his training as an engineer and taking a doctorate in economics, he worked as a high-ranking civil servant in the Algerian Ministry of Industry. He began to write relatively late – under the impact of the assassination of president Boudiaf in 1992 and the accelerating Islamisation of his country. He published his first novel, »Le serment des barbares« (1999; t: The oath of the barbarians), at the age of fifty. It appeared in to great critical acclaim. Owing to his playful handling of the French language, Sansal has since been admired for his linguistic innovation. However, owing to the politically explosive subject matter of his satirical and poetic novels, he has been accused of disloyalty in his home country. In 2003 he was dismissed from his post on account of his critical attitudes. His essay »Poste restante: Alger. Lettre de colère et d'espoir à mes compatriotes« (2006; t: Poste Restante: Algiers. A letter of wrath and hope to my compatriots) was banned in Algeria. Nevertheless, the author continues to live with his wife and two children in his home country, and publishes books without the protection of a pseudonym.
In his novels, Sansal shows the Algerians, who have existed as a nation since achieving independence in 1962, possible paths to their own identity. The title of his novel published in 2000, »L‘enfant fou de l‘arbre creux« (t: The crazy child from the hollow tree), is particularly symbolic – the child who is tied up in the courtyard of a jail clearly stands for the Algerian nation in »this giant prison of Algeria. A childish people, blinded, held captive by lies. These people have reached a point where they neither know who they are, where they come from, nor what they want.«
The exuberance of Sansal’s novels speaks for his belief in Algeria’s future, for which »Dis-moi le paradis« (2003; t: Tell me about paradise) offers an initial draft. His novel »Harraga« (2005) – a hommage to Algeria’s women – also salvages hope despite its tragedy. It tells of the conflict between the single, disillusioned doctor Lamia and the maladjusted, fun-loving sixteen year-old Chérifa.
Sansal’s latest novel »Le village de l’Allemand« (2008; t: The town of the German) deals with the participation of former Nazis, deployed as military trainers, in the Algerian struggle for independence. The book tells of how the German-Algerian Schiller brothers face the revelation that their father was not only a heroic fighter in the Algerian National Liberation Front, but also an SS officer in Germany.
The author’s numerous awards include the Prix du Premier Roman, the Prix Tropiques and the Prix Michel Dard. In 2008 Sansal was awarded the Grand Prix de la francophonie and the Prix Nessim Habif. He lives in Boumerdès, near Algiers.
© international literature festival berlin
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