Umayya Abu-Hanna

Umayya Abu-Hanna (Arabic: أمية أبو حنا) (born 17 March 1961) is a Palestinian-Finnish[2] writer, journalist, and former member of the Helsinki City Council born in Haifa, Israel into a Palestinian family. She moved to Finland in 1981. In 2011, she moved to Amsterdam where she resides with her South African daughter.[3]

Umayya Abu-Hanna
Born (1961-03-17) 17 March 1961[1]
Haifa, Israel
OccupationWriter, journalist, activist
Children1
RelativesHanna Abu-Hanna (father)

Career

In the 1980s, Abu-Hanna was a member of the Helsinki City Council (for the Green Party) and a member of the Real Estate Board of Helsinki.

In the 1990s, she was a journalist, documentary maker and columnist. She became known to the wider public as the first non-white presenter of the weekly current affairs news-program Ajankohtainen Kakkonen at the Finnish Broadcasting Company YLE.

In the 2000s, she was member of the Arts Council Finland (2004–2009) and was the first chair of its Multicultural Board. Abu-Hanna was also the cultural diversity adviser of the Finnish National Gallery.

Her first novel, Nurinkurin, was published in 2003. Her book on identity, Sinut, was published in 2007. A manual for the cultural field, Multikulti, was published in 2012.[4] A cultural history of modern Helsinki, Alienin Silmin, was published in 2014. She co-authored A changing world, perspectives on heritage, with case studies of museums in Afghanistan.

Bibliography

  • Nurinkurin (2003)
  • Sinut (2007),[5]
  • Multkikulti (2012)
  • Alienin silmin (2014)
  • A Changing World, perspectives on heritage (2014)
  • Columns, Metro
  • Columns, Suomen Kuvalehti
  • Columns, Helsingin Sanomat
  • Columns, Finnair's in-flight magazine: Blue Wings

Awards

  • Larin Paraske Award, The Kalevala Women's Association (2008)
  • "Finn of the Year", The Finnish Civic Society (2004)
  • Finland Award (2003), Ministry of Education[6]
  • Bonnier Group Award (2002) for journalistic innovation

References

  1. Umayya Abu-Hanna at IMDb
  2. Helsingin Sanomat (in Finnish). In this article she calls herself Palestinian Finnish.
  3. "Umayya Abu-Hanna: "Lähdin Suomesta suojellakseni tytärtäni"". Archived from the original on 16 January 2013.
  4. 6d interview of Umayya Abu-Hanna, 6d.fi. Accessed 3 February 2022.
  5. "Etusivu – Kirjailijat – Kaikki – Umayya Abu-Hanna". WSOY.fi. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  6. "Etusivu> Kirjat> Sinut (Abu-Hanna, Umayya)". WSOY.fi. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
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