RAMALLAH, West Bank (AFP) — Palestinians were making plans on Monday for a funeral of pomp and ceremony for their "national" poet Mahmud Darwish, whose writings captured the spirit of the Palestinian struggle.
Thousands of Palestinians including president Mahmud Abbas are expected to attend what will effectively be a state funeral on Wednesday of the kind not seen since Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat was laid to rest in 2004.
Darwish, who died on Saturday at the age of 67 in a US hospital from complications following open-heart surgery, will be buried near the Cultural Palace in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Palestinian Authority officials said.
His grave will face the outskirts of Jerusalem, where the Palestinians hope to create the capital of a future state which Darwish had yearned for in his poems written over a half a century.
An official Palestinian delegation was in the United States to supervise the transfer of the body to Jordan and then on to Ramallah, where 5,000 flags stamped with pictures of Darwish will be displayed across the city.
Palestinian foreign minister Riya al-Maliki said Darwish, who was born in an Arab village in what is now northern Israel, will be buried in Ramallah "according to his wish."
Maliki said the Palestinians have not asked Israel to allow a funeral in Darwish's native village which his family fled during the 1948 war that followed the creation of the Jewish state.
Tuesday's funeral is being organised by the office of Abbas, who succeeded Arafat after his death in November 2004.
Darwish, who gave a voice to the Palestinian decades-old struggle, is widely considered one of the Arab world's greatest writers, winning numerous international literary prizes.
He penned over two dozen books of poetry and prose in a career spanning nearly five decades that captured the Palestinian experience of war, exile, and the struggle for national self-determination.
Darwish had been harshly critical of Israel over the years and was detained several times in the 1960s before going into self-imposed exile in 1970. Over the next 25 years he lived briefly in Paris, Moscow, and several Arab capitals before settling in Ramallah.
A sequence of poetic prose written about his experience of life in Beirut during the Israeli invasion and bombardment of Lebanon in 1982 was translated into English in 1995 under the title "Memory for Forgetfulness."
In 1988, Darwish wrote the official Palestinian declaration of independence and served on the executive committee of the Palestine Liberation Organisation until 1993, when he resigned in protest at the Oslo autonomy accords.
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