Ikram Antaki

Ikram Antaki (July 9, 1948 – October 31, 2000) was a Mexican writer.

She was born in Damascus, Syria. Her mother loved Russian literature and her grandfather had been the last governor of Antioch. At the age of four, she entered a French language Franciscan school, where she remained until obtaining her baccalaureate. Later, she emigrated to France to study comparative literature, social anthropology, and ethnology of the Arab world at the University of Paris VII. In 1975, in her own words, she decided to travel "to the end of the earth," choosing Mexico as the most distant possible place from her native Damascus. She eventually became a Mexican citizen and lived there the rest of her life.

Antaki published 29 books in Spanish, French, and Arabic. During her stay in Mexico she collaborated with Mexican television channels 11 and 13 and gained popularity due to her participation on Monitor radio news, one of the most popular in the central region of the country. Her opinions were rather unorthodox: on several occasions she remarked that the generation of youth that participated in the movement of 1968 had been the poorest intellectually of 20th-century Mexico, that democracy had no place in the family or the school, and that plebiscites were a fascist invention.

Those who have written about her describe her as an extremely reserved person. She never learned to dance or to swim. Her readers, on the other hand, note the lightheartedness of her writings and lectures, the profundity of her investigations and her own originality.

She died October 31, 2000 in Mexico City, survived by one son, the Mexican filmmaker Maruan Soto Antaki.

Some Ikram Antaki works

References

This article originated as a translation of the corresponding article in the Spanish-language Wikipedia.

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.