British playwright and screenwriter, Hanif Kureishi, who rose to fame with his 1985 screenplay My Beautiful Laundrette, a tale of a gay Pakistani man growing up in Thatcherite London, suffered a fall on December 26 in Rome which has left him unable to use his limbs, according to a tweet today.
“I have sensation and some movement in all my limbs, and I will begin physio and rehabilitation as soon as possible,” he tweeted from hospital today. “At the moment, it is unclear whether I will ever be able to walk again, or whether I’ll ever be able to hold a pen…”
Kureishi’s wife, Isabella d’Amico, was with him when he fell. He has asked his followers for any voice-assisted devices that may allow him “to watch, write and begin work again, and continue some kind of half life.”
Kureishi is a giant of postcolonial literature and a sharp critic of the legacy of the Empire. Among other works, he authored The Buddha of Suburbia (1990) which was adapted into a BBC drama series scored by David Bowie. Kureishi was born in London to an English mother and Indian father who left for Pakistan after the Partition.
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