Mohammad Said Ibrahim Efendi Fayad (; 1921âÂÂ2003) known as Said Fayad, was a Lebanese poet and literary journalist from the village of Ansar in the Nabatieh Governorate of southern Lebanon.
Fayad was the eldest son of Ibrahim Efendi Fayad, a local notable who served as a district governor under the French mandate, and Lamia Ali Dhaher, niece of the poet and religious figure Sheikh Suleiman Dhaher, an intellectual in the Nabatieh governorate.
Said was schooled in Nabatieh, Hasbaya, the Maqased in Saida and the Freres.
He married Badriya Fayad and they had eight children: Afaf (step-daughter), Talal, Hilal, Daad, Dalal, Dunia, Ghada and Randa.
He spent most of his career between Lebanon and Saudi Arabia and then after retirement lived in Switzerland, the United Kingdom and Morocco. He returned to Lebanon in the late 1990s where he died on 15 October 2003.
Said began his career in Saudi Arabia with al-Riyad Magazine and Saudi Radio in Mecca. He then returned to Beirut as a correspondent for Saudi Radio and wrote for the newspapers al-Hadaf and al-Rased from 1958 to 1968. His poems were published in magazines including Al-Wuroud, Al-Irfan and Al Adab.
He also produced some programmes for Lebanese radio, including Fairuz Shah (Arabic ÃÂÃÂñÃÂò ôçÃÂ) and Hamza al-Arab (Arabic ÃÂàòé çÃÂùñè).
In 1963, he returned to Jeddah to work for the radio broadcasting office where he produced the daily radio programmes With the People (Arabic àù çÃÂÃÂçó), Wisdom of the Day (Arabic ÃÂÃÂàé çÃÂÃÂÃÂà), and Afternoon Sun (Arabic ôàó çÃÂãõÃÂÃÂ) until his retirement in 1975 for medical reasons. He wrote the Saudi national anthem (èÃÂçïàèÃÂçïààÃÂçñ çÃÂÃÂïÃÂ]).
In 1975, he moved to London, then in 1985 to Switzerland. From 1988 to 1996 he lived in Morocco in a suburb of Casablanca, close to his eldest son. He returned to Lebanon in the late 1990s where he continued to write poetry, as well as his memoirs.
Pierre Khabbaz (ï. èÃÂçñ îèçò) of the Lebanese University published a study of his works in 1998 (óùÃÂï ÃÂÃÂçö ôçùñç - ïñçóé ìàçÃÂÃÂé ÃÂÃÂóÃÂé).
Since 2004, the Said Fayad Literary Prize (Arabic ìçæòé óùÃÂï ÃÂÃÂÃÂçö ÃÂÃÂÃ¥èïçù çÃÂôùñÃÂ) has been awarded annually in Beirut to promote and encourage excellence in Arab poetry. The prize is worth 5,000,000 Lebanese Lira (US$3,333).
Major poetic works include:
He produced two anthologies of articles and works in prose: