Sana'a: An Open City
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sana'a: An Open City (صنعاء مدينة مفتوحة) is a short novel by Yemeni author Mohammad Abdul-Wali. It was included in the Arab Writers Union list of the 105 best Arabic novels of the 20th century.[1] It was published posthumously in 1977; Abdul-Wali had died in an airplane crash four years earlier.
The book's title refers to the sack of Sana'a, Yemen's capital, following the 1948 assassination of Imam Yahya, part of a coup attempt. His son Ahmad, then the crown prince, secured support from tribal groups to take power; in exchange, he permitted them to sack Sana'a (declaring it "an open city", or permissible to loot), as well as other Yemeni cities.[2]
The novel caused controversy in 2000, decades after its publication, when the Arab Writers Union included it on their list of the best Arabic novels of the 20th century.[3] Passages in the book suggesting that God is unjust prompted some Islamists to declare the author an apostate.[4] The editor-in-chief of al-Thaqafiyah, Samir al-Yusufi, was prosecuted and imprisoned for republishing the novel, and was reportedly harassed by members of the Islamist Islah party. However, the case was later dropped and al-Yusufi freed.[5]