Misplaced Pages

Fariba Hachtroudi

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
French-Iranian journalist and writer (born 1951)
Portrait of Fariba Hachtroudi

Fariba Hachtroudi (Hashtroodi) (Persian: فریبا هشترودی; born 1951 in Teheran) is a French-Iranian journalist and writer.

Early life

Fariba Hachtroudi is the daughter of Mohsen Hashtroodi, a prominent Iranian mathematician, and Robab Hashtroodi, a professor of humanities and Persian literature. Sheikh Ismail Hashtroodi was her grandfather.

In 1963, Hachtroudi moved to France. She trained as an archaeologist, receiving her doctoral degree in 1978.

Career

Early in her journalistic career, Hachtroudi covered the Iran–Iraq War.

Following the Iranian Revolution, Hachtroudi began writing polemics against Khomeini and the religious authorities in Iran. Between 1981 and 1983, she lived in Sri Lanka, teaching at Colombo University.

In 1985, she entered Iran secretly via Baluchistan and travelled around the country, investigating the consequences of the Revolution and the Iran–Iraq War on life in the country. Her first book, L’exilée, describes her experiences.

From 1995, Hachtroudi has led the humanitarian and cultural organisation Mohsen Hachtroudi (MoHa), an initiative of which is the Gitanjali Literary Prize.

Hachtroudi's first novel, Iran, les rives du sang, was awarded the French Republic's Human Rights Prize in 2001.

Selected works

Non-fiction

Novels

Poetry

In English translation

  • Twelfth Iman's a Woman?. Translated by Robyns, Sian. Key Publishing House. 2011. ISBN 9781926780054.
  • The Man Who Snapped His Fingers. Translated by Anderson, Alison. Europa Editions. 2016. ISBN 9781609453060.

References

  1. ^ Ghazal, Rym (May 22, 2014). "Fariba Hachtroudi is inspired by the powerful women of Islamic history". The National.
  2. Gihousse, Marie-Françoise (January 20, 2014). "Quand bourreau et victime se retrouvent". L'Avenir.
  3. ^ Peras, Delphine; Liger, Baptiste; Payot, Marianne; Bacrie, Lydia (April 7, 2014). "Les cinq prétendantes au Prix Lilas 2014". L'Express (in French).
  4. "Fariba Hachtroudi, 2009-2010". France in New Zealand. November 28, 2014.
  5. "Fariba Hachtroudi". French Embassy in the United States. February 2016. Archived from the original on August 12, 2017. Retrieved July 1, 2016.

External links

Categories: