Omar Sakr | |
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Born | Western Sydney, Australia |
Occupation | Poet and novelist |
Website | |
www |
Omar Sakr is a contemporary Arab Australian poet, novelist and essayist.
Sakr has been a published poet since 2014, with over 80 poems appearing in literary journals including Meanjin, [1] Overland [2] and other publications. [3] [4] His first book of poetry These Wild Houses was published in 2017 by Cordite Books. [5]
In 2020, he was the first Arab-Australian Muslim to be shortlisted for and then win the prestigious Prime Minister's Literary Award for poetry for his book The Lost Arabs. [6] [7] The judging panel described The Lost Arabs as a collection of “vital, energy-driven poems” that “speak with a clear and fearless voice, a voice that is often passionate and sometimes angry, but always lucid and warmly human." [8]
His first novel, Son of Sin, was published by Affirm Press in 2022. Rafqa Touma in The Guardian described in as “laced with charm, candor and a vital sense of warmth”. [9] Sakr's work has been translated into Arabic and Spanish [10] and he was the poetry editor of The Lifted Brow from 2017 to 2020. [11] In 2022, Sakr was named by The Australian as one of the top 100 cultural leaders in the arts. [12] His latest poetry collection, Non-Essential Work, was published by University of Queensland Press in 2023. [13]
In 2024, Sakr was scheduled to appear at the State Library Victoria's Teen Writing Bootcamp series for young people alongside Alison Evans, Amie Kaufman, Ariel Slamet Ries, Morgan Rose and Jinghua Qian. On 28 February, two days before Sakr's scheduled appearance on 1 March, the entire program was cancelled by the library who cited that a "child and cultural safety" review was necessary. Public speculation followed that public support of Palestine by Sakr and three other authors was the actual reason for the cancellation, [14] [15] claims that were supported by numerous Library staff. [16] Internal emails relating to the incident, obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, later confirmed that the Library had indeed scrutinised the political and religious views of the authors on various topics and especially Palestine when making the decision to cancel the workshops. One employee had raised concerns that Sakr, as a Muslim, should not be paired with a Jewish writer. [17]
Sakr was born to immigrant Turkish-Lebanese parents in Western Sydney, where he still lives. [18] He attended Liverpool Boys High, received his BA in communication from the University of Technology, Sydney in 2010 and his Master in Creative Writing from the University of Sydney in 2013. Sakr is bisexual. [19]
In 2019, Sakr was part of the Big Anxiety festival, where he spoke of how he had experienced anxiety and depression as he navigated his sexuality in a religious household, and how writing poetry had allowed him to channel his feelings and "take the pain in my life and transform it into something beautiful." [20]
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