Zoraida Burgos i Matheu (10 March 1933 â 4 January 2026) was a Spanish Catalan writer, poet and librarian. She also studied and worked as a graphologist and art restorer.
The eldest of three sisters, Zoraida was born in Tortosa on 10 March 1933, just a few years before Franco's attempted coup dâÂÂétat in Spain. The subsequent three years of the Spanish Civil War (1936âÂÂ1939) led to most of the inhabitants of Tortosa having to evacuate the city and find refuge from the fascist forces in small houses in the surrounding countryside or nearby villages. The Burgos i Matheu family had to move three times before returning to Tortosa in 1939. The war and Franco's fascist dictatorship left its mark on Zoraida's generation.
Zoraida studied Library and Information Science at the University of Barcelona in the early 1950s and worked for most of her professional career as a librarian. Her first post was a temporary one at Ulldecona Library (1955âÂÂ56), following which she spent almost a year (1956âÂÂ57) in London learning English and working in a nursery. She then worked at Amposta Library from 1957 until her contract finished in 1965 when she decided to take a break to bring up her family. She returned to work as a librarian at Tortosa Library in 1976 where she was later made Library Director in 1983 â a role she held until her retirement in 1998. Zoraida also studied handwriting analysis and obtained the official certificate necessary to work in legal cases which she often did alongside her work at the library. On her official retirement in 1998, she took up art restoration studies at the Tortosa Art School and continued to work there restoring a variety of works of art.
Her literary career began in 1971 when she published the poetry collection D'Amors, d'Enyors i d'Altres Coses (Of Love, Longing and Other Matters) which had won the Màrius Torres award in Lleida, 1970. Around the same time and in following years more of her poems were included in numerous anthologies. Her next poetry book was Vespres (Evenings) in 1978, followed by Cicle de la Nit (Cycle of the Night) (1982) with illustrations by Manolo Ripollés. In 1989 she published Reflexos (Reflections) which included the Cicle de la Nit poems and new poems, collaborating once more with the artist Manolo Ripollés. Next came Blaus (Blues) (1993), for which she received the Guerau de Liost poetry award in Olot in 1992. Then in 2013, Zoraida published Absolc el Temps (I Forgive Time), winner of the Vila de Lloseta poetry prize (2012). In 2015 she published a short collection of seven poems along with seven paintings by Pilar Lanau in Assaig (Essay/Rehearsal). A complete anthology of her published poetry was brought out by La Breu publishers in 2017, Convivència dâÂÂAigues (The Co-existence of Waters). It obtained the Catalan Critics Poetry Prize for best published Catalan poetry in 2017.
Her prose work began in 1971 with the publication of a series of four children's books illustrated by her own young daughter with the Editorial Joventut publishing house. In the twenty-first century (2008âÂÂ2018) she would return once again to writing children's stories. (see complete list below).
In 1994 she published her first and only narrative book for adults, LâÂÂObsessió de les Dunes (The Obsession of the Dunes), a poetical fictionalized description of Zoraida's thoughts and experiences of places she has travelled to or visited. The book received the Josep Pin i Soler narrative award in 1993.
She also had stories published in a variety of collective books and also had many articles, prologues, and essays published in different books, magazines, newspapers and art catalogues.
In 1965 Zoraida translated Letter from Birmingham Jail, a shortened version of the letter Martin Luther King sent to his followers in 1963 which had been adapted by the composer Paul Reif to be performed musically by choir and piano.
She translated three poems by Manoel de Barros which were included alongside translations by other Catalan writers and poets in an anthology in 2005 (published by Lleonard Muntaner).
Together with the poet Albert Roig, Zoraida translated poems and other texts by Rainer Maria Rilke into Catalan to be included in Roig's biography of Rilke, Gos, published in 2016 (Galaxia Gutenberg publishers).
Many of Zoraida's poems have been translated into Spanish, French and Portuguese.
Fragments of her texts and poems have been set to music by the singer-songwriter Montse Castellàon her LâÂÂEscriptor Inexistent album (2006) and Punts de Llibre (2018). The poem Hi Ha Cançons Que TâÂÂApropen was set to music by Júlia Castellà.
Burgos I Matheu died in Tortosa on 4 February 2026, at the age of 92.
In 2003 Zoraida was invited to participate in the poetry recital Parallel Voices alongside three other Catalan poets (Montserrat Abelló, Teresa Pascual and Susanna Rafart) and four Portuguese poets (Maria Velho da Costa, Ana Marques Gastao, Ana LuÃÂsa Amaral, and Ana Hatherly) in an event organized by the Catalan Language Institution.
In 2011, a major recital to pay homage to Zoraida's work was organized in Tortosa. Bearing the same name as the later-published anthology, Convivència dâÂÂAigues, it included speeches by the writers Albert Roig, Ricard MartÃÂnez Pinyol, Andreu Subirats and Albert Aragonès, all of whom have collaborated closely with Zoraida over the years, followed by the actress SÃÂlvia Bel's recital of a selection of poems.
Her poem Només La Veu (Only the Voice) was translated into 20 different languages by the Catalan Language Institute to be given out and narrated in libraries and other public institutions celebrating World Poetry Day 2013.
In 2015 the public body the Catalan Women's Institute organized an itinerant exhibition featuring twelve women from the worlds of art, business, science, sport, or politics from the Ebre region of Catalonia â one of which was Zoraida.
In 2018 the Catalan cultural association ÃÂmnium Cultural awarded her the Grifonet award.
In 2023 she was awarded the Catalan government's prestigious Creu de Sant Jordi award.
Antologia de la poesia social catalana (Alfaguara, 1970)