Tāhā Husayn

Ṭāhā Ḥusayn, also
spelled Taha Hussein or Taha Husain (b. Nov. 14,
1889, Maghāghah, Egypt—d. Oct. 28, 1973, Cairo),
outstanding figure of the modernist movement in
Egyptian literature whose writings, in Arabic,
include novels, stories, criticism, and social and
political essays. Outside Egypt he is best known
through his autobiography, Al-Ayyām (3 vol.,
1929–67; The Days), the first modern Arab literary
work to be acclaimed in the West.
Ṭāhā Ḥusayn was
born in modest circumstances and was blinded by an
illness at age two. In 1902 he was sent to al-Azhar
seminary in Cairo, the leading Sunni centre of
higher Islamic education, but he was soon at odds
with its predominantly conservative authorities. In
1908 he entered the newly opened secular University
of Cairo, and in 1914 he was the first to obtain a
doctorate there. Further study at the Sorbonne
familiarized him with the culture of the West.
Ṭāhā Ḥusayn
returned to Egypt from France to become a professor
of Arabic literature at the University of Cairo; his
career there was frequently stormy, for his bold
views enraged religious conservatives. His
application of modern critical methods in Fi al-shiʾr
al-jāhilī (1926; “On Pre-Islamic Poetry”) embroiled
him in fierce polemics. In this book he contended
that a great deal of the poetry reputed to be
pre-Islamic had been forged by Muslims of a later
date for various reasons, one being to give credence
to Qurʾānic myths. For this he was tried for
apostasy, but he was not convicted. In another book,
Mustaqbal al-thaqāfah fī Miṣr (1938; The Future of
Culture in Egypt), he expounds his belief that Egypt
belongs by heritage to the same wider Mediterranean
civilization that embraces Greece, Italy, and
France; it advocates the assimilation of modern
European culture.
Serving as minister
of education (1950–52) in the last government formed
by the Wafd party before the overthrow of the
monarchy, Ṭāhā Ḥusayn vastly extended state
education and abolished school fees. In his later
literary work he showed increasing concern for the
plight of the poor and interest in energetic
governmental reforms; he also strongly defended the
use of literary over colloquial Arabic.
The first part of
Al-Ayyām appeared in 1929 (Eng. trans. An Egyptian
Childhood) and the second in 1932 (Eng. trans. The
Stream of Days). At age 78 he published a book of
memoirs, Mudhakkirāt (1967; Eng. trans. A Passage to
France), considered a third volume of Al-Ayyām. In
1997 all three parts were published together in
English translation as The Days.