Jabra Ibrahim Jabra was born in 1919 in Adana, which was then part of the French Mandate of Syria, to Ibrahim Yahrin and his wife Maryam. His mother's first husband Dawood and twin brother Yusuf had been killed in the 1909
Adana massacre. After Maryam remarried, her husband Ibrahim was drafted into the
Ottoman Army during
World War I. The couple gave birth to their first son, Yusuf Ibrahim Jabra, in 1915. The family survived the Assyrian genocide, fled Adana, and emigrated to Bethlehem in the early 1920s. After his family moved to Jerusalem in 1932, he enrolled at the
Rashidiya School and graduated in 1937 from the Government
Arab College. Jabra won a scholarship to study English at the
University College of the South West in
Exeter for the academic year 1939–1940, and stayed on in England to continue his studies at the
University of Cambridge, because of the dangers of returning to Palestine by boat during World War II. At Cambridge, Jabra read English and earned a BA in 1943 from
Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, where his censor was
William Sutherland Thatcher. He also wrote a number of articles for local Arabic-language newspapers in Jerusalem. In January 1948, Jabra and his family fled their home in
Katamon in western Jerusalem shortly after the
Semiramis Hotel bombing and moved to Baghdad. Jabra traveled to
Amman,
Beirut, and
Damascus in search of work. In Damascus, Jabra went to the Iraqi embassy, where the cultural attaché, 'Abd al-'Aziz al-Douri, who would later become an eminent Iraqi historian, gave him a visa to teach at the Teachers' Training College for one year. In 1948, Jabra received an MA from
Fitzwilliam College at the
University of Cambridge. The MA did not require any coursework or residence in England as per the "Cambridge MA" system, whereby holders of a BA may obtain an MA after five years and the payment of a fee. In 1952, Jabra married Lami'a Barqi al-Askari. The same year, he received a fellowship from the Rockefeller Foundation, arranged personally by John Marshall, to study English literature and literary criticism at
Harvard University. While at Harvard between the fall of 1952 and January 1954, Jabra studied under
Archibald MacLeish. While there, he translated his first novel,
Cry in a Long Night, from English into Arabic and began writing his second novel,
Hunters in a Narrow Street, which was published in 1960. Following his return to Baghdad, Jabra worked in public relations for the
Iraq Petroleum Company and then for the Iraqi Ministry of Culture and Information. In Baghdad, he taught at various colleges and became a professor of English at the
University of Baghdad. Jabra's home on Princesses' Street in the Mansour District of Baghdad was a meeting place for Iraqi intellectuals. Much of his writing was concerned with modernism and Arab society. This interest led him to become, in the 1950s, a founding member of the Modern Baghdad Art Group, an artists' collective and intellectual movement that attempted to combine Iraq's profound artistic heritage with the methods of modernist abstract art. Although the Baghdad Modern Art Group was ostensibly an art movement, its members included poets, historians, architects and administrators. Jabra was deeply committed to the group's founder,
Jawad Saleem and Saleem's ideals, and drew inspiration from Arab folklore, Arab literature and Islam. Jabra's involvement in the artistic community continued with his becoming a founding member of the
One Dimension Group, established by the prominent
Baghdadi artist,
Shakir Hassan Al Said in 1971. The group's manifesto gave voice to the group's commitment to both heritage and modernity and sought to distance itself from modern Arab artists, which the group perceived as following European artistic traditions. The One Dimension group was part of a broader movement among Arabic artists who rejected Western art forms and sought a new aesthetic, one that expressed their individual nationalism as well as their pan-Arab identity. This movement subsequently became known as the
Hurufiyya movement. Following his death in 1994, a relative, Raqiya Ibrahim, moved into his Baghdad home. However, the house was destroyed when a car bomb targeting the Egyptian embassy next door detonated on
Easter Sunday in 2010, destroying much of the street and killing dozens of civilians. Thousands of Jabra's letters and personal effects were destroyed in this incident along with a number of his paintings. ==Work==