The Nobel Prize in Literature goes to Tanzanian author Abdul Razzaq


The author's novel was also nominated for a Booker Prize

Honored for creating literature describing the negative impact of colonialism on the poor

Stockholm: This year's Nobel Prize in Literature will be awarded to Tanzanian author Abdul Razzaq Gurnah. He will be honored with the most prestigious and coveted award in the world for writing a wonderful essay on the impact that monarchy has had on the oppressed class of society.

Due to the colonialism spread all over the world by the British and the white people, the fate of millions of refugees in the world was totally uncertain between their culture and their continent. This unprecedented contribution by Abdul Razzaq, who created excellent literature by writing a very in-depth heartfelt text of all these things, was noted by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Sweden.

Born on the island of Zanzibar in 1948 and now a resident of Britain, Abdul Razzaq is doing a great job teaching students as a professor at the University of Kent. Abdul Razzaq is an excellent author as he has written 10 novels so far, including his world-famous novel Paradise.

His novel Paradise was nominated for a Booker Prize in 1994. Anders Olsen, chairman of the Nobel Committee for Literature, called him the most respected author since colonialism. The winner of the Nobel Prize is awarded a cash prize of 10 million Swedish kronor (11. 11.40 million).

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