Ryszard Kapuscinski, prominent writer

Ryszard Kapuscinski, prominent writer

RYSZARD KAPUSCINSKI, a Polish writer and journalist who gained international acclaim for his books chronicling the unrest in Africa and the Middle East, has died.

He was 74. Kapuscinski died following heart surgery, said Marek Zakowski, President of Czytelnik publishing house, which has published several of Kapuscinski’s books.”There is no one among Poland’s writers to fill in the space left by him,” said Zakowski, who knew the writer for more than 30 years.”It’s a rare kind of great personality.He was always curious to learn more about the world, he was curious to meet people.”In the late 1950s and early 1960s, Kapuscinski served as the sole Africa correspondent for the Polish Press Agency, or PAP, reporting on the upheaval streaking across the continent as African nations shook off colonial rule and declared independence.He went on to publish books such as ‘The Emperor’, which chronicled the decline of Haile Selassie’s regime in Ethiopia, and was widely interpreted by Polish readers as a criticism of Poland’s communist regime.Three years later, he published ‘Shah of Shahs’, a book about the 1979 Iranian revolution that toppled Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, ushering in the era of the Ayatollahs.Several of his other books were also translated into English.He also wrote ‘Another Day of Life’, about the Angolan civil war, ‘Imperium’, about the waning days of the Soviet Union, ‘The Soccer War’, and ‘The Shadow of the Sun’.Nampa-APKapuscinski died following heart surgery, said Marek Zakowski, President of Czytelnik publishing house, which has published several of Kapuscinski’s books.”There is no one among Poland’s writers to fill in the space left by him,” said Zakowski, who knew the writer for more than 30 years.”It’s a rare kind of great personality.He was always curious to learn more about the world, he was curious to meet people.”In the late 1950s and early 1960s, Kapuscinski served as the sole Africa correspondent for the Polish Press Agency, or PAP, reporting on the upheaval streaking across the continent as African nations shook off colonial rule and declared independence.He went on to publish books such as ‘The Emperor’, which chronicled the decline of Haile Selassie’s regime in Ethiopia, and was widely interpreted by Polish readers as a criticism of Poland’s communist regime.Three years later, he published ‘Shah of Shahs’, a book about the 1979 Iranian revolution that toppled Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, ushering in the era of the Ayatollahs.Several of his other books were also translated into English.He also wrote ‘Another Day of Life’, about the Angolan civil war, ‘Imperium’, about the waning days of the Soviet Union, ‘The Soccer War’, and ‘The Shadow of the Sun’.Nampa-AP

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