Jaime Sabines Gutiérrez (March 25, 1926 â March 19, 1999) was a Mexican contemporary poet. Known as "the sniper of literature" () as he formed part of a group that transformed literature into reality, he wrote ten volumes of poetry, and his work has been translated into more than twelve languages. His writings chronicle the experience of everyday people in places such as the street, hospital, and playground. Sabines was also a politician.
Jaime Sabines Gutiérrez was born on March 25, 1926, in Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas. He was of Lebanese and Spanish descent.
Before he devoted himself to the study of literature, he spent three years studying medicine before moving on to his real vocation:literature, studying at UNAM Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Sabines was an outstanding member of the Mexican Writers Centre from 1964 to 1965 and part of the jury for the Casa de las Americas prize. In addition to his literary activity, he participated in politics and became a federal deputy for the First District of Chiapas from 1976 to 1979, and for the Federal District in 1988. Sabines was awarded the Chiapas Award (1979), the Xavier Villaurrutia Award (1972), the Elias Sourasky Award (1982) and the National Literature Award (1983).
A collection of his work, Nuevo recuento de poemas, was issued by the publisher JoaquÃÂn Mortiz in 1977, and the Secretariat of Public Education in 1986. In 1994 he received from the Senate of Mexico the Belisario DomÃÂnguez Medal of Honor; in 1995, his selected poems, Pieces of Shadow (trans. W.S. Merwin), was brought out in a bilingual edition by Papeles Privados; and in 2004 Exile Editions (Toronto, Canada) published a bilingual volume of two early Sabines books, Adam and Eve & Weekly Diary and Poems in Prose (trans. Colin Carberry.) Octavio Paz considered him "one of the greatest contemporary poets of our [Spanish] language".
As a politician affiliated with the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), he served two terms in the Chamber of Deputies. In the 1976 general election, he was elected for Chiapas's 1st district and, in the 1988 general election, he won a first-region plurinominal seat.
Sabines died in Mexico City on March 19, 1999, at the age of 72. President Ernesto Zedillo sent his condolences and offered a ceremony of homage at the Palacio de Bellas Artes; the family, however, declined the offer.
The Jaime Sabines International Poetry Prize, an initiative of the Chiapas State Government, the University of Sciences and Arts of Chiapas and the State Council for Culture and the Arts, was inaugurated in 1993.
The Centro Cultural de Chiapas Jaime Sabines in Tuxtla Gutiérrez was opened to the public in 2000. It houses the state library, two auditoriums, a book shop, and spaces for exhibitions and workshops.