Mouloud Feraoun

Mouloud Feraoun

Personal Info

  • Known for

    Acting

  • Gender

    Male

  • Birthday

    1913-03-08

  • Day of Death

    1962-03-15 (49 years old)

  • Place of Birth

    Tizi Hibel, Algeria

Biography

Mouloud Feraoun (in Kabyle: Mulud At Ceɛban), born March 8, 1913 in Tizi Hibel in Haute Kabylie (Algeria) and died assassinated by the OAS in Algiers on March 15, 1962, is a Algerian speaking writer. His most famous work is the trilogy The Poor Man's Son (1950), The Earth and the Blood (1953) and The Roads That Rise (1957).

Born officially on March 8, 1913 in the village of Tizi Hibel, he belongs to the clan (takheroubt) of Aït-Chabane, Feraoun being the name imposed by officers of Native Affairs responsible for the establishment of a civil status for the Algerian populations after the insurrection of 1871. His parents were poor peasants, who had eight children, only five of whom survived. Mouloud is the third of them, and the first son. Since 1910, the father has had the habit of emigrating periodically to mainland France to provide for the needs of his family. In 1928, he suffered an accident and began living on a disability pension. These family, social and cultural roots are preponderant for Mouloud Feraoun, who titles his first autobiographical novel "Le Fils Du Pauvre" and makes Kabyle culture the main component of his identity.

Acting