
Episode 3
Libyan writer Hisham Matar's powerful memoir describing his search for his father, Jaballa, kidnapped by Gaddafi's regime in 1990 and disappeared without trace in 1996.
In the era of rolling news and social media connectedness, it's easy to become blasé about world events and overlook their human cost. In this beautifully written memoir, Hisham Matar offers us a vivid and very moving account of what it's like to be swept up in a situation completely outwith your control and the ways in which it comes to define your life.
In 1990, Hisham Matar was nineteen when his father, a prominent critic of the Libyan regime, was kidnapped and taken to prison in Tripoli. He would never see him again. Two decades later, in 2012, after the fall of Qaddafi, Hisham was finally able to return to his homeland. He recounts his return to a country and a family he thought he would never see again and describes the pain of not knowing what happened to his father - it's likely that he died in a massacre at one of Qaddafi's cruellest prisons, Abu Salim in 1996, but he can find no-one able to say absolutely that he did. However, after the fall of the regime, prisons were liberated and the spark of hope that his father had somehow survived slowly petered out. He and his family must come to terms with the fact that they will never know what happened to him.
Reader: Khalid Abdalla
Writer: Hisham Matar
Abridger: Anna Magnusson
Producer: Kirsteen Cameron.
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Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Reader | Khalid Abdalla |
| Author | Hisham Matar |
| Abridger | Anna Magnusson |
| Producer | Kirsteen Cameron |
Broadcasts
- Wed 5 Oct 201609:45BBC Radio 4 FM
- Thu 6 Oct 201600:30BBC Radio 4
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