Tahar Bekri 1951–
gabès, tunisia
A
poet, essayist, and literary critic, Bekri is not only one of the leading
Maghrebian writers but also a specialist on Maghrebian literature. His
work is marked by its revolutionary impulses and the author’s search
for and evocation of an ailleurs, an ‘‘elsewhere.’’ Bekri was twice arrested and
finally sent into political exile (1976–1989) for his militant action for democracy
and justice in his country. In 1976 he settled in Paris. He writes in both French
and Arabic. Principal works: Le Laboureur du soleil, 1983, 1991; Le Chant du roi
errant, 1985; Le Coeur rompu aux océans, 1988; Poèmes à Selma, 1989, 1996 (in
Arabic); Marcher sur l’oubli, 1991; La Sève des jours, 1991; Les Chapelets d’attache,
1993; Journal de neige et de feu, 1997 (in Arabic); Les Songes impatients, 1997.
Return to Tunisia
XIV
Sounding
the criée
in the morning the wello√ rivals
On the wharves
Our steps like empty crates
Resound in the unskilled secret
Sails bring back our bluetinged troubles
XV
Spilling
into our days
Traces of flowering mimosas
The waters stagnant as sobs
Snared in the gleams of moorings
Happiness stolen in litany
The friend set aside some pears on the way