Mohamed Said Raihani

Mohamed Saïd Raïhani

Mohamed Saïd Raïhani (in Arabic: محمد سعيد الريحاني) is a Moroccan translator, novelist and short-story writer born on December 23, 1968 in Ksar el Kebir, north of Morocco. He is a member of Moroccan Writers’ Union,[1] holder of M.A. in Translation, Communication & Journalism from King Fahd Advanced School of Translation in Tangier/Maroc and B.A. in English Literature from Abdelmalek Essaadi University in Tétouan/Maroc.

Bibliography

Childhood and early attractions towards arts and literature

Mohamed Saïd Raïhani was born on Monday December 23, 1968 in Ksar el Kebir (Morocco) where he got his primary and secondary schooling before going to Tetouan north of Morocco to carry on his university studies in English literature.

In his early life, he was fond of plastic arts but as he could not access Fine Arts School in Tetouan, 130 kilometers away from his hometown, since he was not yet fifteen years old, he shifted to literature, at the age of sixteen.

When he was sixteen years old, he tried writing his autobiography in French. Yet, on joining the university, he began writing short plays in English, being at that time a great fan of the Irish famous playwright George Bernard Shaw.

He also tried short story writing as he was fascinated by Ernest Hemingway’s writings. However, right after his university studies, he joined the sector of National Education as a teacher. on the literary plane, he shifted right away from writing in English into writing in Arabic, the language of his daily life and his deepest dreams.He, however, kept his love for short story that dates back to his childhood.

In fact, when he was a little boy, a lady who was a friend of his mother’s used to visit them every afternoon to tell them wonderful stories that were nothing but the "Arabian Nights". To this magic story-teller, he did a very special tribute in the first chapter of his "photo-autobiography" entitled "When Photo Talks".[2]

This lady has kindled his passion for fiction since his very early childhood, enabling him master the craft of telling stories before even learning the literary writing techniques.

First steps towards fictive writing

As far as writing is concerned, Mohamed Saïd Raïhani admits being very grateful to “Composition”, a period he used to like most in the elementary school years. In periods of “Composition”, he felt fully free to write as he pleased and, gradually, he found out his growing inclination towards literary writing. However, reading books of great writers set his eyes wide open on worldwide literature.

His early readings were guided by nightly television series he used to watch every night. Thus, Les Misérables by Victor Hugo was perhaps his first French-speaking book that he may have chosen with his own hands at the age of thirteen. Thus, late at night, he used to read on paper the same episodes of the series he had watched on TV in the early 1980s.[3]

Early narrative texts

"In Love" and "Open, Sesame!" are Mohamed Saïd Raïhani’s first short stories written by the end of 1991 when he was 23 years old. "In Love" was not published until fifteen years later. However, "Open, Sesame!", was published on May 9, 1994 on one of the greatest literary Annexes in the 1990s Morocco, "Bayan Al Yawm Al-Thaqafi”.

The central theme in "Open, Sesame!" is repeated several times in Mohamed Saïd Raïhani’s early short stories: Flood. "Open, Sesame!" remains “a short story which invests dream as a narrative technique in a journey from individual dream to the collective one”, wrote Moroccan writer Mohamed Aslim in his preface to Mohamed Saïd Raïhani’s first collection of short stories "Waiting For The Morning” published in 2003.

Literary Philosophy

In 2003, Mohamed Saïd Raïhani wrote a short story entitled "'The Three Keys" (published in the collection "Season of Migration to Anywhere", 2006). This short story "The Three Keys", contains his philosophy related to fiction writing. "The Three Keys" defends free expression, urges love of the written work and dreams of reaching the real reader.It is a desire to reconcile the text with its free and wild nature:

"When Freedom, says Mohamed Saïd Raïhani in an interview with "Le Matin" a French-speaking daily newspaper, will be the direct background of fiction, Love the storyline and Dream the dominant form of narration, only then short story will have taken a wider step to emancipate itself from the present restrains. Yet, writers should realize that Immunity is not necessarily reserved to diplomates but it is also writers' and artists' as well. When writers will realize that and believe in it, they will meet Freedom and will write free texts where they can dream and love to the last dregs."

Literary Works in Arabic

Critical Works in Arabic

Journalistic Reseaches & Investigations in Arabic

Onomastic Researches in Arabic

Works Translated into English


Interviews Collected in Published Books

References

  1. Bousselham M'hamdi, "Contemporary Writers & Thinkers of Ksar El Kebir", Tangiers: 1st Edition, 2008, page167
  2. Mohamed Saïd Raïhani interviewed by Kenza Alaoui , published on Moroccan daily newspaper «Le Matin», (in French), 25 August 2008, page8
  3. Mohamed Larbi Lasri, "Pens & Names from Ksar El Kébir", Tangiers: 1st Edition, Volume 3, 2008, page 239

External links


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