Navid Kermani

Navid Kermani
Born (1967-11-27) 27 November 1967
Siegen, West Germany
Occupation Novelist, essayist
Nationality German

Navid Kermani (Persian: نوید کرمانی; Persian pronunciation: [næviːd cɛrmɑniː]; born in Siegen, Germany, 27 November 1967), is a German writer and a scholar of Islam. He is the author of several novels as well as books and essays on Islam, the Middle East and Christian-Muslim dialogue.[1][2] He has won numerous prizes for his literary and academic work, including the Peace Prize of the German Booksellers' Association on 18 June 2015.[3]

Life

Navid Kermani in Priština (2013)

Navid Kermani was born the fourth son of Iranian parents in Siegen, West Germany. He began his writing career at age 15 as a local reporter for the Westfälische Rundschau.[4] As a student he published in German national newspapers; from 1996 to 2000 he was a regular contributor to the feuilleton section of Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. He studied philosophy, Oriental studies and drama in Cologne, Cairo and Bonn. His doctoral thesis has been published in English translation as God Is Beautiful: The Aesthetic Experience of the Quran.[5]

He regularly publishes articles, literary reviews and travelogues, especially in Süddeutsche Zeitung, Die Zeit, and Neue Zürcher Zeitung.

Kermani holds German and Iranian citizenship. He is married to the Islam scholar Katajun Amirpur and has two children. He lives in Cologne.

Bibliography

In English translation

Awards and distinctions

Hessian cultural award controversy

In 2009, the German state of Hesse decided to award its 45,000 euro Hessian Cultural Prize in July 2009 jointly to a Jew, a Muslim, a Catholic and a Lutheran to honour those involved in interfaith dialogue. There was controversy over Kermani's nomination as one of the three winners because of an essay in which Kermani had written about his feelings on seeing a painting of the crucifixion by the seventeenth-century Italian painter Guido Reni. The issue was ultimately resolved, and Cardinal Karl Lehmann, Peter Steinacker, Kermani, and Salomon Korn jointly received the prize on 26 November 2009.[13][14] Kermani donated his share of the award to a Christian priest.[15]

References

External links

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