Education
Saadi Yousef studied Arabic literature in Baghdad.
Saadi Yousef studied Arabic literature in Baghdad.
He has published thirty volumes of poetry and seven books of prose. He has also translated many well-known writers into Arabic, including Oktay Rifat, Melih Cevdet Anday, Garcia Lorca, Yiannis Ritsos, Walt Whitman and Constantine Cavafy. Since leaving Iraq, Yousef has lived in many countries, including Algeria, Lebanon, France, Greece, Cyprus, and currently he resides in London.
In 2004, the First Rate (at Lloyd's) Owais Prize for poetry was given to Yousef but was controversially withdrawn after he criticized United Arab Emirates ruler Sheikh Zayed bin al-Nahiyan.
In 2007 Yousef participated in the Poets, Playwrights, Editors, Essayists and Novelists association World Voices festival where he was interviewed by the Wild River Review. In 2014, Yousef"s poems were banned by the Kurdistan Regional Government in school books because of a poem, where he referred to Kurdistan as "Qardistan," which loosely translates to "Monkey-istan".
He was influenced by the free verse of Shathel Taqa and Abd al-Wahhab First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Bayyati and was also involved in politics from an early age, At the time his work was heavily influenced by his socialist and pan-Arab sympathies but has since also taken a more introspective, lyrical turn.