Denys Johnson-Davies has made his name as a prolific and knowledgeable interpreter of fiction.
Denys Johnson-Davies has made his name as a prolific and knowledgeable interpreter of fiction.

Open to interpretation



"What I think about this book," explains Denys Johnson-Davies, "is that people who live there now, and who live the life of old Riley and think that this is great, should know that there was something there before - that people didn't really have enough to eat et cetera et cetera, but that they had their own culture." The book in question is In a Fertile Desert, a collection of Emirati short stories which Johnson-Davies selected and translated from Arabic. The "there" is the territory of the UAE, which the author visited in 1950, worked in as a broadcaster in the late 1960s and where, in 2007, he received the first Sheikh Zayed prize for Personality of the Year.

When I met him in March, prior to the book's publication he explained that the idea behind the project had been to express his gratitude. "I just thought it would be a nice thing to repay this in some way by doing a volume of stories," he said. It turned out to require more digging than he had bargained for. "Little did I realise," he said, "I know this person, Muhammad al Murr - but apart from him I really didn't know anybody."

Al Murr needs little introduction. Both as the author of The Wink of an Eye and as vice chairman of the Dubai Culture & Arts Authority, he is perhaps the UAE's best-known literary figure. He also contributes the collection's most polished story. Two Neighbours recounts the conversation of a pair of charmingly well-spoken newborns as they lie side by side in a maternity ward, comparing their families and likely destinies.

It's a droll conceit which becomes the vehicle for a surprisingly resonant essay on the accidents which shape character. There are other familiar names on the contents page, too. Nasser al Dhaheri, the former editor of Al Ittihad, supplies a tale called The Little Tree, in which the shifting social role of a lotus tree serves as an emblem for wider historical upheavals. Abdul Hamid Ahmed, the editor of Gulf News, offers a jazzy exercise in dirty realism with A Slap in the Face, in which a young man is arrested for propositioning a woman in the street. All the same, many of the stories come from unknowns and first-time authors.

To discover them Johnson-Davies had to trawl the web for unpublished work, solicit manuscripts and generally use up a good deal of shoe leather. "It took a lot of exploration for me to find 20 stories," he said. "I went to the internet and found a lot of stuff there, most of which was not very good... What one needs, really, is somebody who decides whether to publish something or not to publish it. On the internet, I gather you just put it there and there you are."

When I call him this week, however, he concedes that he had a bit of help. "Well, you know," he explains from his flat in the south of France, "the whole world there was looking around, knowing that Denys was looking for short stories." That might sound rather grand, but Johnson-Davies is certainly a major figure in Arabic literature. Born in Canada in 1922 and raised in Sudan, he has had an intimate connection with the Arabic-speaking world all his life. He studied Arabic at Cambridge at 15, returned to the East at the earliest opportunity and was exempted from military service on account of his talents as a translator.

When the influence of European literary models such as Flaubert and de Maupassant first started to be felt thanks to a wave of Arabic editions, he was among the earliest westerners to take an interest in the results. In time he became the friend and translator of icons such as Naguib Mahfouz and Tawfik Hakim, assisting in their literary development and introducing their work to western readers. Edward Said called him "the leading Arabic-English translator of our time", which, though not an unambiguous compliment coming from the great critic of Orientalism, at least gives an idea of Johnson-Davies' stature.

I ask him what his selection criteria had been for the UAE collection. "I was looking for stories about the sea," he says. "I knew that these people were pearl fishers, they were making a living out of ordinary fishing and so on and so forth. That they had their birds, their hawks and all this, and that this was their traditional life. And I found it very attractive..." In other words, he started out with a principled aversion to stories about urban life in the Emirates.

As it turned out, though, he didn't find many examples to exclude. "And I'm not surprised," he snorts. "I find it very difficult to think that people are today writing short stories with somebody living in the flat in the 74th storey of a building, about a girl who he's in love with in the 94th storey next door." The world of gleaming towers does make its presence felt throughout the collection, however. In Ibrahim Mubarak's Grief of the Night Bird, a young man causes a commotion when he takes his hawk to a nightclub. Ashamed, he concludes that the bird's loyalty is worth more to him than his fairweather companions and resolves never to return. There's a subtler weighing of the claims of the old world and the new in Maryam al Saedi's The Old Woman. The title character, unnamed - indeed a relic from a time when "she was 'the woman' and was not known by any name" - is an illiterate sheep herder, whose sheep are more precious to her than her own children.

The feeling is mutual: as her sons go on to their various illustrious careers, her backwardness becomes a source of embarrassment. They make her give up her tent and her flock, install her in an air-conditioned room and try to get her to behave herself, but she can't get comfortable. The story is understated, ambiguous and sad. It's also al Saedi's first in print. Johnson-Davies read it in manuscript and was quickly convinced of a promising young talent.

"I particularly liked The Old Woman," he says, "because I felt that here it gave you the contempt in which this poor old woman, who is the only natural one among them, is held by the other members of the family... She had, I don't know, 14 sheep which she adored, but nobody's interested in that any longer." There's a mournful strain in this verdict which recurs throughout our conversation. One wonders if after his decades in the book business Johnson-Davies doesn't empathise with the old woman's loss a little.

Reflecting on the future of short fiction in Arabic, he says bleakly: "Everywhere, money is everything today. And unless one makes money out of a short story, do you write a short story?" He speaks amusingly of the hope that he'll live long enough to write his erotic novel, though he doubts whether it will ever see the light of day if he does finish it. "One of the great difficulties in life I have found," he announces, "is to find a publisher." Later he confesses: "My main occupation is writing children's books. I'm not interested in children's books at all. Or in children. But I can get them published."

He certainly can. Johnson-Davies claims to have 50 such titles on the market, most famously Goha the Wise Fool, adapted from Middle Eastern folk tales. Four similar works are due out within the next four months, each an illustrated book of animal fables drawing on the folk literature of the Arabic-speaking world. With a work rate like this, it's easy to see how familiarity might breed contempt. But it isn't true to say that Johnson-Davies has been ghettoised in children's literature. Three years ago, for instance, he put out a well-reviewed memoir of his life in translation, and in 1999 he published a book of his own short fiction, The Fate of a Prisoner, a restrained and ironic collection which took exile as its loose theme. He is also working with the religious scholar Ezzedin Ibrahim on a thematically arranged edition of the Quran - "a big job", he observes wanly, "it just goes on and on forever." Happy is the writer to whom publishers grant such latitude.

Johnson-Davies keeps his hand in as the pre-eminent translator of Arabic into English, too, notably rendering Mohammad Al Bisatie's Hunger, one of the titles shortlisted for the 2009 Arabic Booker. All the same, he takes a bleak view of the modern Arabic scene. "I find that most of the recent stuff isn't all that great," he tells me. "I'm working, actually, on a book of modern Egyptian short stories, and am just waiting to find yet another one which I think is worthwhile." Among contemporary names he singles out Alaa Al Aswany, the author of the hit satire The Yacoubian Building, for praise. "He has opened the door very much for the average reader," Johnson-Davies says. "Of course a lot of Egyptians aren't very happy about this because he doesn't paint a very pleasant picture of Egyptian life." He then chuckles.

Above all, Johnson-Davies seems concerned to assemble primers on the great Arabic authors he befriended decades before. He has edited collections of the essential work by Tawfik Hakim and Yusuf Idris, and wants to do the same for Tayeb Salih and Ghassan Kanafani. "He was somebody who was murdered by the Israelis," Johnson-Davies explains. "He was a personal friend of mine and I think he was a talented writer. I would like to do an Essential Ghassan Kanafani."

There is at least one young writer whose work he is excited about, though: al Saedi. "I wrote to her the other day," he tells me, "and said, 'You know, if you've got anything else, I'd like to know..." She hadn't got back to him at the time of our conversation, but Johnson-Davies sounds optimistic. It isn't like him at all.

COMPANY PROFILE
Name: Kumulus Water
 
Started: 2021
 
Founders: Iheb Triki and Mohamed Ali Abid
 
Based: Tunisia 
 
Sector: Water technology 
 
Number of staff: 22 
 
Investment raised: $4 million 
In numbers: PKK’s money network in Europe

Germany: PKK collectors typically bring in $18 million in cash a year – amount has trebled since 2010

Revolutionary tax: Investigators say about $2 million a year raised from ‘tax collection’ around Marseille

Extortion: Gunman convicted in 2023 of demanding $10,000 from Kurdish businessman in Stockholm

Drug trade: PKK income claimed by Turkish anti-drugs force in 2024 to be as high as $500 million a year

Denmark: PKK one of two terrorist groups along with Iranian separatists ASMLA to raise “two-digit million amounts”

Contributions: Hundreds of euros expected from typical Kurdish families and thousands from business owners

TV channel: Kurdish Roj TV accounts frozen and went bankrupt after Denmark fined it more than $1 million over PKK links in 2013 

Dirham Stretcher tips for having a baby in the UAE

Selma Abdelhamid, the group's moderator, offers her guide to guide the cost of having a young family:

• Buy second hand stuff

 They grow so fast. Don't get a second hand car seat though, unless you 100 per cent know it's not expired and hasn't been in an accident.

• Get a health card and vaccinate your child for free at government health centres

 Ms Ma says she discovered this after spending thousands on vaccinations at private clinics.

• Join mum and baby coffee mornings provided by clinics, babysitting companies or nurseries.

Before joining baby classes ask for a free trial session. This way you will know if it's for you or not. You'll be surprised how great some classes are and how bad others are.

• Once baby is ready for solids, cook at home

Take the food with you in reusable pouches or jars. You'll save a fortune and you'll know exactly what you're feeding your child.

The specs

Engine: Four electric motors, one at each wheel

Power: 579hp

Torque: 859Nm

Transmission: Single-speed automatic

Price: From Dh825,900

On sale: Now

COMPANY%20PROFILE
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The more serious side of specialty coffee

While the taste of beans and freshness of roast is paramount to the specialty coffee scene, so is sustainability and workers’ rights.

The bulk of genuine specialty coffee companies aim to improve on these elements in every stage of production via direct relationships with farmers. For instance, Mokha 1450 on Al Wasl Road strives to work predominantly with women-owned and -operated coffee organisations, including female farmers in the Sabree mountains of Yemen.

Because, as the boutique’s owner, Garfield Kerr, points out: “women represent over 90 per cent of the coffee value chain, but are woefully underrepresented in less than 10 per cent of ownership and management throughout the global coffee industry.”

One of the UAE’s largest suppliers of green (meaning not-yet-roasted) beans, Raw Coffee, is a founding member of the Partnership of Gender Equity, which aims to empower female coffee farmers and harvesters.

Also, globally, many companies have found the perfect way to recycle old coffee grounds: they create the perfect fertile soil in which to grow mushrooms. 

How much sugar is in chocolate Easter eggs?
  • The 169g Crunchie egg has 15.9g of sugar per 25g serving, working out at around 107g of sugar per egg
  • The 190g Maltesers Teasers egg contains 58g of sugar per 100g for the egg and 19.6g of sugar in each of the two Teasers bars that come with it
  • The 188g Smarties egg has 113g of sugar per egg and 22.8g in the tube of Smarties it contains
  • The Milky Bar white chocolate Egg Hunt Pack contains eight eggs at 7.7g of sugar per egg
  • The Cadbury Creme Egg contains 26g of sugar per 40g egg
Sheikh Zayed's poem

When it is unveiled at Abu Dhabi Art, the Standing Tall exhibition will appear as an interplay of poetry and art. The 100 scarves are 100 fragments surrounding five, figurative, female sculptures, and both sculptures and scarves are hand-embroidered by a group of refugee women artisans, who used the Palestinian cross-stitch embroidery art of tatreez. Fragments of Sheikh Zayed’s poem Your Love is Ruling My Heart, written in Arabic as a love poem to his nation, are embroidered onto both the sculptures and the scarves. Here is the English translation.

Your love is ruling over my heart

Your love is ruling over my heart, even a mountain can’t bear all of it

Woe for my heart of such a love, if it befell it and made it its home

You came on me like a gleaming sun, you are the cure for my soul of its sickness

Be lenient on me, oh tender one, and have mercy on who because of you is in ruins

You are like the Ajeed Al-reem [leader of the gazelle herd] for my country, the source of all of its knowledge

You waddle even when you stand still, with feet white like the blooming of the dates of the palm

Oh, who wishes to deprive me of sleep, the night has ended and I still have not seen you

You are the cure for my sickness and my support, you dried my throat up let me go and damp it

Help me, oh children of mine, for in his love my life will pass me by. 

A MINECRAFT MOVIE

Director: Jared Hess

Starring: Jack Black, Jennifer Coolidge, Jason Momoa

Rating: 3/5

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Three ways to get a gratitude glow

By committing to at least one of these daily, you can bring more gratitude into your life, says Ong.

  • During your morning skincare routine, name five things you are thankful for about yourself.
  • As you finish your skincare routine, look yourself in the eye and speak an affirmation, such as: “I am grateful for every part of me, including my ability to take care of my skin.”
  • In the evening, take some deep breaths, notice how your skin feels, and listen for what your skin is grateful for.
Company%20Profile
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Washmen Profile

Date Started: May 2015

Founders: Rami Shaar and Jad Halaoui

Based: Dubai, UAE

Sector: Laundry

Employees: 170

Funding: about $8m

Funders: Addventure, B&Y Partners, Clara Ventures, Cedar Mundi Partners, Henkel Ventures

Skewed figures

In the village of Mevagissey in southwest England the housing stock has doubled in the last century while the number of residents is half the historic high. The village's Neighbourhood Development Plan states that 26% of homes are holiday retreats. Prices are high, averaging around £300,000, £50,000 more than the Cornish average of £250,000. The local average wage is £15,458.