Abdelaziz Baraka Sakin


Abdelaziz Baraka Sakin is a Sudanese writer of fiction, whose literary work has been banned in Sudan since 2012. Since then, he has lived in exile in Austria.

Life and work

Abdelaziz Baraka Sakin was born in the Sudanese town of Kassala, but the roots of his family go back to Darfur in western Sudan. He graduated in business administration from the University of Assiut in Egypt, and has exercised many professional activities during his life: as manual worker, secondary school teacher, consultant for UNICEF in Darfur, or as employee of an NGO in Sudan.
His literary work, which includes references to the Darfur genocide and the dictatorship in Sudan, is published in Arabic in Egypt and Syria. It is very popular with Sudanese readers, who have been smuggling his books into their country, since their interdiction by the Sudanese authorities.
In 2009, he received the prestigious Tayeb Salih Prize at the Khartoum Book Fair for his novel The Jungo - Stakes of the Earth, and that deals with the conditions in a women's prison. Shortly after its release, the Sudanese authorities confiscated and banned his books. In 2012, Baraka Sakin left Sudan, seeking exile in Austria, where he has lived since 2012.
In 2016, his novel The Messiah of Darfur was published in a French translation, followed by Les Jango in 2020. In France, he also published children's books as a multilingual edition in Arabic, English and French.
Several of his short stories have been published also in German translations. In September 2016, he was invited to the German capital Berlin as participant of its International Festival of Literature and in 2019 to the Festival of African Literature Crossing Borders in Cologne, Germany.
Baraka Sakin has written for several Arabic-language magazines: Al Arabi Magazine, Al Naqid , Nazwa magazine , Journal of Palestinian Studies, Doha Magazine , Banipal , or Dastoor Newspaper.

Selected bibliography

; Novels
; Short stories