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A01=Abdelrahman ElGendy
al ikhwan
arab spring
Author_Abdelrahman ElGendy
cairo
Category=DNC
Category=JPVR1
Category=NHG
egypt and the contradictions of liberalism
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
evin prison bakers club
forthcoming
muslim brotherhood
omar el akkad
one day everyone will have always been against this
radwa ashour
sisi
tahrir square
the stillborn by arwa salih
you have not yet been defeated

Product details

  • ISBN 9781836433057
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: Oneworld Publications
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A gripping, deeply moving memoir of survival, education, and resistance.

In 2013, seventeen-year-old Abdelrahman ElGendy was a budding student activist in Cairo. Two years after the January 25 revolution, hope for a free Egypt had dissipated; when that summer’s military coup unleashed unprecedented massacres of protesters, Abdelrahman didn’t hesitate—he joined the street movement. His father, fearing for his son’s safety, accompanied him to a mass demonstration. But minutes after they arrived, they were swept up in a brutal police crackdown, and their lives were shattered.

Crushed inside a holding cell, Abdelrahman first heard the words of the Arab world’s most enduring protest song, ‘Sawfa Nabqa Huna’ – We Will Remain Here. He wondered: If no one wanted to remain behind bars, what was the ‘here’ they chose to inhabit?

Abdelrahman would spend the next six years as a political prisoner chasing this Huna, shuffled, alongside his father, from jail cell, to pre-trial detention center, to The Scorpion, Egypt’s most infamous prison complex. As his body broke under the grind of incarceration with no end in sight, he turned to the only refuge left to him: the page. He earned his bachelor’s degree in engineering while imprisoned, read and wrote voraciously, and, through writing, bore witness.

In his remarkable debut, Abdelrahman offers not a promise of hope, but a provocation. When the very things that can save you – tenderness, family, friendship, language – are used against you, how can you find the courage to love? Huna is a reckoning with what it takes – and what it costs – to remain when erased, and of what endures beyond hope. 

Abdelrahman ElGendy is an author and translator from Cairo. A winner of the Samir Kassir Press Freedom Award, he holds an MFA in Nonfiction Writing from the University of Pittsburgh, and his work appears in publications including the Washington Post, Foreign Policy, The Nation, and Guernica. His poetry and prose translations from Arabic appear in Ploughshares, Poetry Northwest, Literary Hub, Words Without Borders, and elsewhere. ElGendy’s work has received awards or fellowships from the Elizabeth George Foundation, the Heinz Foundation, the de Groot Foundation, Virginia Center for Creative Arts, and the Arab American National Museum. Huna is his debut memoir.

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