Difference between revisions of "Ljubljana City of Refuge (ICORN)"
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Revision as of 11:07, 21 May 2016
Background
In 1993 the Cities of Asylum were founded by the International Parliament of Writers (IPW) that was established by Salman Rushdie, Vaclav Havel, Margaret Drabble and Jacques Derrida among others, in response to the assassination of writers in Algeria. Though the Parliament was later on dissolved, a network of over 30 cities across the world remained active, including Stavanger where the International Cities of Refuge Network (ICORN) is based.
Residents in Slovenia
Ali Amar, a Moroccan writer and journalist, who was censored and persectued because of his inquiries into the Moroccan monarchic system, was a guest writer in Ljubljana from 2011 to 2013. During this period, the city hosted also Zineb El Rhazoui, a journalist, writer and human rights advocate, who strives for a democracy in Morocco, a columnist for Paris-based satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.
Girma T. Fantaye, a co-founder and editor of the now defunct independent Amharic-language weekly Addis Neger in Ethiopia, who lives in exile since 2010, published a volume of poetry in 2012 and his debut novel in Amharic entitled SELF Meda(Field of Queue) in August 2014. In Ljubljana he worked on his second novel.
Presentations
During their stay, the resident writers present their opus and experience at various literary venues and festivals round Slovenia. In 2012 the ICORN joined forces with the Shahrazad - stories for life European project, and invited the writers Manal al-Sheikh (Irak) and Mansur Rajih (Yemen) to join the two residents on the stage of the World Literatures - Fabula Festival in Ljubljana. The Days of Poetry and Wine Festival hosted the Naimeh Doustdar Sanaye from Iran (an ICORN resident in Sweden) in Ali Amar from Marocco, a former Ljubljana ICORN guest writer, in 2013, while the guests of a panel in 2015 were Girma T. Fantaye and Geert van Istendael, a Belgian writer, poet and essayist.