upper waypoint

Baha'i Poet Jailed in Iran Wins Free Speech PEN Pinter Prize

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

Mahvash Sabet in 2016 (via Facebook)

A Baha’i poet who was jailed for almost a decade in Iran has won a writing award celebrating free speech.

Mahvash Sabet shares the PEN Pinter prize with Northern Ireland poet Michael Longley. The award was announced Tuesday in London.

Sabet was one of seven Baha’i leaders detained in 2008 and sentenced for espionage in 2010. She was released in September.

A volume of her verses, Prison Poems, was published in Britain in 2013.

Iran’s Baha’i minority has been persecuted since the religion was banned after the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Sponsored

The award was established in 2009 in memory of Nobel Prize-winning playwright Harold Pinter. It goes jointly to a British, Irish or Commonwealth writer who shares Pinter’s “unflinching, unswerving” gaze on society, and an international writer who has faced persecution.

lower waypoint
next waypoint
This Year’s Taiwanese American Culture Fest Will Be Bigger Than EverSunnyvale’s Secret Japanese Whisky Bar Serves Killer Late-Night KaraageTracy's Popular Gas-Station Filipino Dessert Shop Is MovingSF’s Zach Rodell Is a Go-To Artist for Tripped-Out Concert VisualsSan Francisco’s Unofficial Fashion Week Is About to Hit the RunwayA ‘Latina Takeover’ for Bay Area Hip-HopBarbara Stauffacher Solomon, Visionary Artist Who Invented Supergraphics, Dies at 95This Cozy Thai Cafe Serves Eye-Popping Desserts Until MidnightOaklanders Say ‘We Still Here’ With a 510 Day Rally and Free ConcertKaty Perry’s Own Mom Fell for Her Met Gala AI Photo. Do You Know What to Look for?