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Somalia’s Poets Keep Hope Alive for Storytelling and for Peace
Somali poets gather at the National Theater and beyond to use verse for peace and unity, with the Somali Council of Poets counting about 400 members worldwide.
- On Nov. 11, 2025, Somali poets performed at a cultural event in Mogadishu, Somalia, and continue reciting on local radio stations to sustain oral tradition.
- Poets frame their work as preserving Somalia's oral-poetry tradition, using oral verse to promote security, good governance and community integration across the country.
- The Somali Council of Poets reports 400 members including many in the diaspora, while Maki Haji Banaadir, deputy director of the National Theater, toured Somalia in 2003 with six other poets to preach reconciliation.
- Despite limited ministry funding and National Theater support, Daud Aweis, Somalia's culture minister, said poets play `a vital role in Somali society` amid financial and security challenges.
- Amid Somalia's fragile security environment, the federal government of Somalia controls little outside Mogadishu, with at least two semi-autonomous regions seeking secession; the National Theater has faced a deadly suicide bombing and now requires security checkpoints and intelligence notifications for access.
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9 Articles
9 Articles
Coverage Details
Total News Sources9
Leaning Left7Leaning Right0Center2Last UpdatedBias Distribution78% Left
Bias Distribution
- 78% of the sources lean Left
78% Left
L 78%
C 22%
Factuality
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