Saleh al-Badri

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Saleh al-Badri
صالح البدري
Born1893
Died1943
NationalityIraqi
Alma materAl-Rashdiya School
Occupation(s)Poet, translator and novelist

Sayyid Saleh Mahdi al-Badri (1893 - 1943) was an Iraqi poet. He was born in the city of Samarra, then part of the Ottoman Empire, where he was educated and then at Al-Rashdiya School in Baghdad. He worked as an employee in real estate departments in numbers of Iraqi cities. He was fluent in Turkish, translated into Arabic and had knowledge of French and Persian. He won local awards for Iraqi poetry competitions. His complete poetry collection collected by his son and called it Wishes. Al-Badri died in Baghdad.[1][2][3]

Life[edit]

Sayyid Saleh bin Mahdi bin Hussein bin Zahir al-Badri, was born in 1893 in Samarra. He grew up in Baghdad and completed his initial studies there, where he became acquainted with notables poets such as Marouf al-Rasafi, Jamil Sidqi al-Zahawi and Abdul Rahman al-Banaa. He held several positions in governmental real estate departments . He and his brother, Mahmoud al-Badri, contributed to the establishment of a private school in Baghdad called "Al-Tahzeeb Primary Private School". He had learned Turkish, Persian and French. Wrote many poets in nostalgia and tenderness, published them in the Iraqi newspapers. His son Walid Saleh Badri published his collection in 1959 and called it The Diwan of Wishes and reprinted in 1961, and also wrote The Innocent Criminal or Truth of Conceived printed in 1928.
Saleh al-Badri died in Baghdad in 1943.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Kamil Salman al-Jabbouri (2002). Muʻjam al-shuʻarāʼ : min al-ʻAṣr al-Jāhilī ḥattá sanat 2002 M (in Arabic). Vol. 2nd (1st ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dār al-Kutub al-ʻIlmīyah. pp. 192–193. ISBN 9782745136930.
  2. ^ Imil Badi' Ya'qub (2004). A dictionary of poets from the beginning of al-Nahda (in Arabic). Vol. 2nd (1st ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar Sader. p. 562.
  3. ^ Abdulaziz Al-Babtain. "Al-Babtain Dictionary of 19th and 20th Century Arab Poets". www.almoajam.org (in Arabic). Retrieved 29 September 2019.