16 Quotes & Sayings By Tahar Ben Jelloun

Tahar ben Jelloun was born in Casablanca, Morocco in 1963. He is the author of more than 30 books, including Palestine, published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. He is also the recipient of the Carthage-Morocco Foundation Award for Culture. He has been awarded the Prix Goncourt, which is given out by France's Academy of Letters every other year to the author of the best work of fiction written in French; he won it in 2006 for his novel The Meursault Investigation Read more

His work has been translated into thirty languages. In 2006, Queen Elizabeth II granted him an honorary knighthood "for services to literature."

1
Pain, too, comes from depths that cannot be revealed. We do not know whether those depths are in ourselves or elsewhere, in a graveyard, in a scarcely dug grave, only recently inhabited by withered flesh. This truth, which is banal enough, unravels time and the face, holds up a mirror to me in which I cannot see myself without being overcome by a profound sadness that undermines one's whole being. The mirror has become the route through which my body reaches that state, in which it is crushed into the ground, digs a temporary grave, and allows itself to be drawn by the living roots that swarm beneath the stones. It is flattened beneath the weight of that immense sadness which few people have the privilege of knowing. So I avoid mirrors. Tahar Ben Jelloun
2
I have at least the whole of my life to answer a question: Who am I? And who is the other? A gust of wind at dawn? A motionless landscape? A trembling leaf? A coil of white smoke above a mountain? I write all these words and I hear the wind, not outside, but inside my head. A strong wind, it rattles the shutters through which I enter the dream. Tahar Ben Jelloun
3
Did my father talk to me? It's true, he didn't say a lot to me, but I knew what had to be done. No need for big speeches. He taught me the fundamentals of our religion: My son, Islam is simple: you are alone responsible for yourself before God, so if you are good, you will find goodness in the afterlife, and if you are bad, you'll find that instead. There's no mystery: everything depends on how you treat people, especially the weak, the poor, so Islam, that means you pray, you address the Creator and don't do evil around you, don't lie, don't steal, don't betray your wife or your country, don't kill- but do I really need to remind you of this?. Tahar Ben Jelloun
4
Man is more noble dead than alive, because in returning to the earth he becomes earth, and nothing is nobler than the earth that entombs us, closes our eyes, and blossoms in a beautiful eterneity. Tahar Ben Jelloun
5
But you'll see, you can feel time on the wind it whips up as it passes. We don't worry about time or the wind. Nothing can touch us any more. As long as people remember us, we are here. Anyway, it's the wind that tells us, lets us know about the thigs we've left behind. Tahar Ben Jelloun
6
Emigration is no longer a solution; it's a defeat. People are risking death, drowning every day, but they're knocking on doors that are not open. Tahar Ben Jelloun
7
The power of the word in Morocco belonged to men and to the authorities. No one asked the point of view of poor people or women. Tahar Ben Jelloun
8
Intellectuals try to keep going. But their situation is very difficult. Those who have had the courage to voice their opposition have often paid a very high price. Tahar Ben Jelloun
9
Real friendship, like real poetry, is extremely rare - and precious as a pearl. Tahar Ben Jelloun
10
I love life in spite of all that mars it. I love friendship, jokes and laughter. Tahar Ben Jelloun
11
Poetry is a form of mathematics, a highly rigorous relationship with words. Tahar Ben Jelloun
12
Poetry is not only a set of words which are chosen to relate to each other it is something which goes much further than that to provide a glimpse of our vision of the world. Tahar Ben Jelloun
13
For me, poetry is a situation - a state of being, a way of facing life and facing history. Tahar Ben Jelloun
14
I came to poetry through the urgent need to denounce injustice, exploitation, humiliation. I know that's not enough to change the world. But to remain silent would have been a kind of intolerable complicity. Tahar Ben Jelloun
15
I have written about the dispossessed, immigrants, the condition of women who do not enjoy the same legal rights as men, the Palestinians who are deprived of their land and condemned to exile. Tahar Ben Jelloun