Ebrahim Al-Arrayedh

Ebrahim Al-Arrayedh Poems

One day in June
Her shapely hand was raised, and waving still
...

Of life have many sung in pure delight
Others to only grief have toll d the knell
...

3.

In this glorious world
To the child, as you are,
...

How star - like are ye Bards of Yore! Alone,
You heard the silent music of the spheres,
...

Ebrahim Al-Arrayedh Biography

Ebrahim Al-Arrayedh (Arabic: إبراهيم العريّض‎, born 8 March 1908 – died May 2002) was a Bahraini writer and poet, generally considered to be one of Bahrain's greatest poets and one of the leaders of the Bahraini literary movement in the 20th century. Al-Arrayedh was born in Bombay, India to his Bahraini parents on 8 March 1908.[1][2] In 1922, he visited Bahrain for the first time at age 14, where he started his education at the country's first school, the Hidaya al-Khalifa school though he did not permanently reside in the island.His parents remain unknown He returned to Bombay in 1926 and enrolled at a local school where he earned his high school diploma. It was at this school that Al-Arrayedh studied Persian and the English language, alongside Urdu, and had expressed a deep interest in Urdu literature. He later studied Urdu literature at the Aligarh Muslim University. In 1927, Al-Arrayedh returned to Bahrain and was appointed as an English teacher in the Hidaya al-Khalifa school, a position he held for four years. He later became the deputy director of the Jafari school though he was forced to quit his job over disputes with the British colonial authorities. After this, he served as a treasurer in the State Customs Service. In 1937, he moved on to become the head of a translation department in a Bahraini company, which did not last as a result of the outbreak of World War II. In 1943, he traveled to Delhi and worked at a radio station. He later returned to Bahrain where he worked for the Bahrain Petroleum Company until 1967, when he retired. Since the age of 18, Al-Arrayedh began writing poetry, with his first set of poems being published in Baghdad in 1931. Since he was a multi-linguist, he translated the works of poets between Persian, Hindi, Urdu, English, and Arabic. His poems were popular in Iraq, Syria and Egypt; such that the American University of Beirut asked him to deliver lectures on Arab literature, which he had agreed to.[2] He was awarded the Shaikh Isa bin Salman Al Khalifa Order - First Class, by the Bahraini government. He was also a noted reformer setting up a school, and was appointed head of the Constitutional Council by Sheikh Isa Bin Salman Al-Khalifa, who was responsible for developing Bahrain's Constitution in the early 1970s prior to independence from the United Kingdom. Al-Arrayedh died in May 2002 at the age of 94, after suffering breathing problems. He was buried in the "Manama Graveyard" next to his daughter the late Layla Al-Arrayedh who died in 2001 just before her father died. Following his death, the King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa, named one of the Kingdom’s most geographically important roads after him — opposite the Bahrain Financial Harbour. In 2006, his old house, in Gudaibiya, in the capital city of Manama, was turned into a cultural centre, the Ebrahim Al-Arrayedh Poetry House, open to tourists and as a meeting place for poets. In 2008, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation held an exhibition in Al-Arrayedh's honour in its headquarters in Paris, France.)

The Best Poem Of Ebrahim Al-Arrayedh

One Day In June

One day in June
Her shapely hand was raised, and waving still
To those colourful columns filing past
In all their pageantry, the sky was cast
With clouds, and rain kept pouring over sill
And pavement , packed with not a stand to fill,
No bid to jostle, with the crowd so vast
So then, you saw the Queen, my dear.. At last?
Said I. you bet she said. With what a thrill
She saw her Queen go by.. So sweet and fair
For all to see and bless . After her night
Of waiting in the open, with drenched hair
And drooping eyes, she played a glorius part:
Say not the Day was cold and not so bright,
For all the warmth of summer was in her heart.

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