Abdulkarim Baderkhan () (born 22 November 1986) is a Syrian poet, translator and critic. Starting his career in February 2006, he published three poetry collections, and translated seven books from English into Arabic. Also, he published articles, critical studies and translations in several Arabic newspapers and magazines.
Baderkhan was born to a well-educated middle-class family in Homs, Syria in 1986. He became interested in a diverse collections of books, films, and music records and found himself surrounded by bold discussions about history, religion, literature and art. His father Adeeb Baderkhan (Arabic: ãïÃÂè èïñîçÃÂ) was a well-known educator in Homs, who published a novel in 2006 Memory of Migration (Arabic: ðçÃÂñé çÃÂñÃÂÃÂÃÂ) in which he described his grandparentsâ migration from north of Caucasus to the Middle East during the last quarter of the 19th century. His uncle Mohammad Baderkhan (Arabic: àÃÂàï èïñîçÃÂ) is a film director, translator, and writer. He has directed films and television series in Syria, translated several literary works from Russian into Arabic, and published a novel âÂÂSons of The Rain" (Arabic: ãèÃÂçá çÃÂà÷ñ).
In October 2004, Baderkhan chose to enter Faculty of Law in Damascus University, but felt out of place, so he spent his university years reading Arabic literature at home by using his father's books. Then, he started reading English literature by borrowing his friends' academic books.
In 2011, he was a strong supporter of the Arab Spring, and wrote related poems during the first weeks, one of them is: "Dairies of The Syrian Wound" (Arabic: ÃÂÃÂàÃÂçê çÃÂìñàçÃÂóÃÂñÃÂ). Then, he criticized the revolution harshly, when he saw the Islamic groups stepping to the front and taking the lead.
Baderkhan decided to leave Syria in 2013 due to security reasons. He lived in Egypt first, then moved to Turkey where he worked in the humanitarian field. He moved to Norway in November 2015, and he is still living there as a political refugee.
Baderkhan published a poem for the first time in âÂÂAl-Thawraâ newspaper in February 2006. Then, his poems were welcomed by most editors and publishers in Syria.
In 2008, he participated in the âÂÂFestival of Young Poetsâ which was held in Homs and won the first place. Then, he won five poetry awards in 2009: âÂÂArab Writers Union AwardâÂÂ, âÂÂNational Union of Syrian Students AwardâÂÂ, âÂÂSpring of Literature AwardâÂÂ, âÂÂGolan Awardâ and âÂÂOkaz AwardâÂÂ. In 2014, he was awarded âÂÂâ (Arabic: ) which is considered one of the most important literary awards in the Arab world, for his first poetry collection: âÂÂFuneral of The Brideâ (Arabic: ìÃÂçòé çÃÂùñÃÂó).
Atiya Massouh (Arabic: ù÷ÃÂé àóÃÂÃÂ) a Syrian critic and Marxist thinker, praised Baderkhan's poetry in his critical book: âÂÂPoetic Lighthousesâ (Arabic: àÃÂçñçê ôùñÃÂé), and wrote a chapter on the philosophy of sadness in his poetry. Another Syrian critic, Mohammad Taha Al-Othman (Arabic: àÃÂàï ÷àçÃÂùëàçÃÂ) wrote a chapter about Baderkhan's poetry in his critical book: âÂÂEagerness of Text and Horizon of Imageâ (Arabic: êÃÂàçÃÂÃÂõ ÃÂãÃÂàçÃÂõÃÂñé).
Among writers who wrote about his poetry: Mazen Aktham Suleiman in his study: âÂÂCritical Approach to Syrian Poetry in The Time of Revolution and RuinâÂÂ, published in âÂÂAn-Naharâ newspaper, Wajiha Abdulrahman and Mabrouka Ali in âÂÂAl-Arabâ newspaper.
Some of Baderkhan's poems were translated into English, French and German.
He started his translation career when he became interested in English romantic poetry of the 19th century. During 2009 and 2010 he translateda number of poems by Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, Keats and others. In the following years he translated many poems, short stories, articles from English into Arabic.
His style in poetry translating was praised by many Arab translators and critics. He was the first to translate Maya Angelou, Sara Teasdale, Naomi Shihab Nye and Raymond Carver into Arabic. However, he is mostly known as Bukowski's translator in the Arab world.
In prose translation, Baderkhan was the first to translate César Aira into Arabic. His translation of BukowskiâÂÂs novel âÂÂHollywoodâ was highly appreciated, and his introduction to Venus in Furs was the first Arabic study in and Sacher-Masoch literature.