The Translator: A Tribesman's Memoir of Darfur

The Translator: A Tribesman's Memoir of Darfur

by Daoud Hari (Author)

Synopsis

Daoud Hari lost a way of life in Darfur. But amidst the carnage and turmoil, he found a new calling...As a Zaghawa tribesman in the Darfur region of Sudan, Daoud Hari grew up racing camels across the desert, attending gloriously colourful weddings and, when his work was done, playing games under the moonlight. But in 2003, helicopter gunships swooped down on Darfur's villages and shattered that way of life for ever. Soon, Sudanese government-backed militias, attacking on horseback, came to murder, rape and burn. To drive the tribesmen from their lands.When Hari's village was attacked and destroyed, his family was decimated and dispersed. He escaped and together with a group of friends roamed the battlefield deserts, helping the weak and vulnerable find food, water and a path to safety. And when international aid groups and reporters arrived, Hari gave his services as a translator and guide. To do so was to risk his life, for the Sudanese government had outlawed journalists, punishing aid to 'foreign spies' with death. Yet Hari did so time and again. Until, eventually, his luck ran out and he was captured..." The Translator" is a harrowing tale of selfless courage in terrifying conditions.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 224
Publisher: Penguin
Published: 05 Jun 2008

ISBN 10: 0141037008
ISBN 13: 9780141037004

Media Reviews
The age of the African chronicler lives on in Daoud Hari's ground-level account of turmoil in Darfur. So much more than a history book, The Translator is a work of lyrical beauty, a moving elegy to the otherwise overlooked victims of a modern genocide -- Tim Butcher, author of * Blood River *
If you read nothing else about Africa this year read this book * Terry Waite *
If you read nothing else about Africa this year read this book * Terry Waite *
Author Bio
Daoud Hari was born in the Darfur region of Sudan. After escaping an attack on his village, he entered the refugee camps in Chad and began serving as a translator for the BBC, New York Times and other media, and for various NGOs. He now lives in the US, where he is a spokesperson for www.SaveDarfur.org.