Ashraf Fayadh Palestinian Poet & Artist from Saudi Arabia
http://www.newsbharati.com/
Ashraf Fayadh Palestinian Poet &
Artist from
Saudi Arabia
Palestinian poet and artist Ashraf Fayadh punished in Saudi Arabia
The Palestinian artist, curator, and poet Ashraf Fayadh, 35, has been sentenced to deth by beheding.
Saudi Arabian authorities have declared his crime as “apostasy,” or abandoning one’s religion—in this case, renouncing
Islam. Several other charges were also leveled against Fayadh, including allegedly photographing women and storing their pictures on his phone, a violation of the country’s Anti-Cyber
Crime Law. He pleaded his innocence to all the charges.
Amnesty International UK states that, “Throughout this whole process, Ashraf was denied access to a lawyer—a clear violation of international human rights law, as well as Saudi Arabia’s national laws.” The reasons for Fayadh’s arrest and imprisonment are contested, emanating from a personal dispute with another artist which escalated into the larger accusation of apostasy and blasphemy, including by the
Saudi religious police. In addition, his 2008 book of poems,
Instructions Within, was cited as promulgating “atheism and destructive thoughts.”
Poets, artists, and intellectuals from the
Arab world and throughout the world have been speaking out, writing articles, signing petitions, and calling for Fayadh’s acquittal. In
February 2014, one hundred
Arab intellectuals demanded his release from Saudi prison.
The PEN American Center sent a letter to
President Obama in
December 2015 calling on him to press Saudi Arabia’s ruler,
King Salman, to release Fayadh.
Experts, however, do not expect the
United States—which has close ties with Saudi Arabia—to exert any pressure on the kingdom to overturn Fayadh’s sentence. “Our only hope now is that the Saudi king will stop this madness and save Ashraf, together with the other seven people given the deth penalty because of political speeches or peaceful protests,” writes a Saudi author. Saudi Arabia’s recent exections of 47 individuals on January 2, 2016, including prominent
Shi`a cleric
Nimr al-Nimr, have fueled the animosity between the kingdom and the
Islamic Republic of Iran. This also underlined, again, the country’s highly conservative religious worldview, intolerance of dissent, and heavy-handed methods. Many also question the
United Nations’ appointment of the country to the
Human Rights Council in
September 2015; although the
US State Department said that it welcomes the news that Saudi Arabia would actually head this council, many other countries and nongovernmental organizations were appalled. A world-wide reading of Fayadh’s poems, sponsored by the international literature festival
Berlin (ilB), is scheduled for today,
January 14.
The list of events grows by day, and now includes the
University of Iowa’s prestigious
International Writing Program. Signers of this initiative hail from many countries, including from the
Middle East and North Africa,
Europe, and
North and South America, as well as
International PEN groups. Newly translated poems have been posted to the internet for reading on
January 14th. Fayadh’s family is originally from
Gaza, but he was born in Saudi Arabia and has been living and working in the southwestern Saudi city of
Abha. Ironically, it was Fayadh who has played a key role in bringing Saudi art to world audiences, most notably as a member of the Saudi-British collaborative project,
Edge of Arabia. In addition, the 55th
Venice Biennale featured “Rhizoma,” a show curated by Fayadh and the
Guggenheim Museum’s
Sara Raza. “RHIZOMA’s premise draws from the actual rhizoma, the ancient
Greek word for the underground root of a plant that shoots its roots both horizontally and vertically as a metaphor for a bold new generation of [Saudi] artists who are challenging the force of gravity through inspiring projects.” It is most troubling and, indeed, horrifying that the
Saudi government has chosen to deal a blow to such efforts, and actually sever the roots of free speech and expression.