Sudanese novelist Hammour Ziada draws upon the realm of fantasy, rooted in a culture steeped in myths, to create characters who narrate their own stories in their own unique voices. His own life, meanwhile, has a different narrative—one of a writer eschewing neutrality, something that came at a cost.
In an act of violence, his home was burned down, forcing him to leave Sudan and settle in Egypt, where he lives and works today, building a portfolio of works in which Sudan features prominently, such as The Drowning and The Longing of the Dervish.
The latter earned him the Naguib Mahfouz Medal for Literature in 2014 and secured a spot on the shortlist for the International Prize for Arabic Fiction in 2015, while his book Sleeping at the Feet of the Mountain was adapted into a feature film titled You Will Die at Twenty, which went on to win several international awards.
Ziada’s next offering appears to present a departure from his previous literary approach, which he ascribes to Sudan’s civil war. “Everything that came before the April 2023 war now belongs to the past,” he told Al Majalla. This is the conversation.
What is different about your new novel?
My upcoming work is set in contemporary times, far removed from the village setting. In it, I’ve attempted a new writing style—one that is prevalent and almost dominant among modern authors, though it is nearly my first attempt at it.
As always, I am plagued by anxiety before submitting the work to the publisher. I find myself reconsidering the project a thousand times, contemplating abandoning it altogether and starting a new one. Part of this anxiety stems from the novelty of the style compared to what I am accustomed to, as well as the state of the country I write about—a place that now barely exists.
The events of 2009, which led to your departure from Sudan following objections to a scene you wrote depicting the rape of a child, as well as your prior conflict with an extremist group, are pivotal in your life story. What lasting impact did leaving your homeland have on you?
It was a harrowing experience, and to this day, I haven’t discussed it in detail. It takes a long time to come to terms with the reality that your homeland is no longer safe and that you must choose another. I lived outside Sudan for ten consecutive years, unsure if I would ever see it again.
Then came the Sudanese revolution in December 2018, allowing me to return to my country in 2019. However, the 2023 war forced me back into exile. The same old question resurfaces: Will I ever see my homeland again? It seems exile never truly ends; one exile is merely replaced by another.