Ṣunʿ Allāh Ibrāhīm (born 1937, Cairo, Egypt) is an Egyptian novelist and social critic best known for his satires, which are characterized by a mixture of realism and dark humour.
In 1959, while a journalist in Egypt, Ibrāhīm was arrested during political purges ordered by Pres. Gamal Abdel Nasser. For five years he was imprisoned and subjected to torture; during his time in jail he also studied extensively and learned from other imprisoned intellectuals. Following his release during the general amnesty of 1964, Ibrāhīm finished his first novel, Tilka al-rāʾiḥah (1966; Eng. trans. The Smell of It, & Other Stories). The work’s descriptions of the experience of imprisonment made it politically subversive, and it shocked Egyptian censors with its frank treatment of sexuality between inmates. The book was banned in Egypt, and two decades passed before an uncensored version was available there. Inseparable from its political context was the novel’s bold realism, which challenged Arabic literary orthodoxy.
In 1968 Ibrāhīm left Egypt. He worked for a time in East Berlin before traveling to Moscow, where he studied the Russian language and filmmaking. Returning to Egypt in 1974, he committed himself again to writing. In Al-Lajnah (1981; The Committee), his best-known novel, he satirized Egyptian Pres. Anwar el-Sādāt’s policy of infitāḥ (Arabic: “opening”), which decentralized the economy and opened Egypt to foreign investment but failed to curb censorship. Because of that censorship, the novel had to be published in Lebanon.
Like The Committee, Ibrāhīm’s subsequent novels satirized the alliances of the political establishment and multinational capitalism while articulating solidarity with the working poor. When chosen to receive a literary award from the Egyptian Ministry of Culture in 2003, he stirred controversy by using the award ceremony to denounce the award as the gesture of a government without credibility.