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Rawi Hage: The Call

Rawi Hage

The Call

With a foreword by Priya Basil

Softcover, 48 pages

Date of publication: 17.11.2025

DE

Following one of the Turfan archaeological expeditions in the early 1900s, a fragment of a Manichaean text written in Uyghur and Old Turkic found its way to the Museum für Asiatische Kunst of the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. Originating from the Northern Silk Road region (now the Xinjiang Uyghur Region in China), these “loose leaves” became a source of inspiration for Rawi Hage: “I was born near Byblos in Lebanon. The ancient city of Byblos is believed to be the place where the first alphabet was invented.” Encountering this rare and precious manuscript, with its layered and multicolour words, Hage reflects on the movement, uprooting, displacement  and migration of both objects and people.

  • China
  • curatorial practice
  • archaeology

My language
English

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Rawi Hage

Rawi Hage was born in Beirut and survived the Lebanese civil war of the 1970s and 1980s. He emigrated to New York and later moved to Montreal, where, as a photographer and writer, he explores themes of rootlessness, exile, and consequences of war. His novels have received internationally acclaimed literary awards and have been translated into thirty languages.
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