Background
Aba was born in 1921 in the Algerian town of Sétif.
Aba was born in 1921 in the Algerian town of Sétif.
His work mainly focuses on political themes, such as the Algerian revolution, the Arab–Israeli conflict and Nazi Germany. In 1990, he established the Fondation Noureddine Aba, which continues to present the annual Noureddine Aba Prize to Algerian writers. In his autobiographical work Le chant perdu au pays retrouve (The Lost Song of a Rediscovered Country, 1978), he described his childhood as an unhappy period, writing: "I had to envy children in some parts of the world who went through childhood with the frivolity of butterflies".
After completing his secondary education in Setif, he spent one year studying law at the University of Algiers.
In the 1940s, he began writing some poetry, including his 1941 collection L"Aube de l"amour (The Dawn of Love). In 1943, he was conscripted into the Algerian army, where he served for two years until the end of the Second World War.
After the war, Aba became a journalist and reported on the Nuremberg Trials. When the magazine Présence Africaine was established in 1947, Aba became one of its writers.
At this point, Aba was living in France, where he spent much of his adult life.
Wartime experiences, particularly his outrage at the Sétif massacre of May 1945, also inspired Aba to commit to writing more poetry. His work is primarily focused on themes relating to politics and the impact of violence on humans, covering topics such as the Algerian revolution, the Arab–Israeli conflict and Nazi Germany. The themes of his work led the scholar Jean Déjeux to compare him to Mohammed Dib.
Aba"s more well-known collections include Gazelle au petit matin (Gazelle in the Early Morning, 1978) and Gazelle après minuit (Gazelle after Midnight, 1979), which take the form of a series of love poems inspired by the deaths of a young couple at the point of the country becoming independent from France.
Aba has also written many plays, which are often farces with political themes. They have been performed in French theatres and on Radio France Internationale.
Plays are rarely performed in Algeria unless they are in Arabic. His 1981 play Tell el Zaatar.
Aba died in 1996 in Paris, aged 74.
The Fondation Noureddine Aba, established by the author in 1990, continues to present the annual Noureddine Aba Prize to Algerian writers writing in French or Arabic. Previous recipients have included Tahar Djaout and Redha Malek.
Throughout his life, he was particularly sympathetic to Palestinian nationalism.
Aba has been a member of the Académie des Sciences d"Outre-mer and the Académie Universelle des Cultures.