Ibtisam Barakat
“My writing is a clear and spacious window,” Barakat states in a feature on her life on the Institute for Middle East Understanding’s website. “I know whether it’s morning or it’s night, whether it’s a rainy day or a summer day, and whether it’s a season of freedom outside and inside or a season of fear, all through what I see reflected in my writing.” Barakat’s free-verse, short-lined poems often use metaphor as a point of entrance in their explorations of themes such as healing, peacemaking, and children’s experiences of war.
Her memoir, Tasting the Sky: A Palestinian Childhood (2007), received considerable critical acclaim, was chosen by Booklist as one of the Top Ten Biographies for Youth, received the 2008 International Reading Association’s Best Nonfiction Book Award for Children and Young Adults as well as the Arab American National Museum Book Award for Children’s Literature, and has been translated into several languages. Barakat’s stories and poems have been anthologized in Shattered (2002), The Flag of Childhood (2002, edited by Naomi Shihab Nye), Teaching Powerful Writing: 25 Read-Aloud Stories (2001), and elsewhere. In 1994 Barakat won the National Library of Poetry’s Outstanding Poetry Award.
Barakat has taught at Stephens College and is the founder of the Write Your Life seminars.
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Audio & Podcasts
Poetry Lectures-
Five Muslim American Poets: Part I
Literary discussion featuring readings by poets Raza Ali Hasan, Ibtisam Barakat, Fady Joudah, Kazim Ali, and Khaled Mattawa.
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Five Muslim American Poets: Part II
Literary discussion featuring readings by poets Raza Ali Hasan, Ibtisam Barakat, Fady Joudah, Kazim Ali, and Khaled Mattawa.
Poet Categorization
POET’S REGION U.S., Midwestern
LIFE SPAN 1964–
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