Hannah Azieb Pool (born 1974) is a British–Eritrean writer and journalist. She was born near the town of Keren during the war for independence from Ethiopia. She is a former staff writer for The Guardian newspaper,[1] and writes for national and international media. She is a patron of the SI Leeds Literary Prize for unpublished fiction by Black and Asian women in the UK.[2] Since 2019, Pool has been artistic director/CEO at the Bernie Grant Arts Centre in Tottenham, north London.[3][4]
Biography
Early life and education
At the age of six months, Pool was adopted by a British scholar working in Sudan. At first she was raised in Khartoum and then Norway, before finally settling in Manchester, England. She grew up believing that her genetic parents had died shortly after her birth.[5] She was educated at Liverpool University, where she studied Sociology.[6]
Career
After leaving university, Pool became a journalist on the Manchester Evening News. She has written extensively for The Guardian newspaper, where for several years she wrote the fashion column "The New Black".[7]
At the age of 19 she received a letter telling her that her genetic father and siblings were alive in Eritrea.[5] Her memoir, My Fathers' Daughter: A story of family and belonging, was published in 2005 and is an account of the journey she made back to Eritrea, aged 29, and her encounters with her family.[8][bettersourceneeded]