Who is Khalil Gibran ?
Khalil Gibran, christened as Gibran Khalil Gibran, was born on January
6, 1883 in the ancient town of Bsharri, in the Mount Lebanon
Mutasarrifate located in the Kadisha Valley in northern Lebanon, into a
family of Maronite Christians. At the time of his birth, it was a
semi-autonomous part of the Ottoman Empire. Khalil’s father,
Khalil Gibran Saad Youssef Gibran, was initially a clerk in his uncle’s
apothecary shop, but before long he accumulated a huge debt from
gambling and lost his job. Later he was appointed a strong man by a
local administrator, Raji Bey. He was rough and bad tempered. Khalil’s
mother, Kamila nee Jubran/Rahme, was married twice before and Khalil’s
father was her third husband. She had a son named Peter (Butros) from
her first marriage. Six years senior to Khalil, he was very industrious
and devoted to the family. Apart
from his step-brother Peter, Khalil had two younger sisters, Mariana
and Sultana. Their life in the isolated village in Kadisha Valley was
devoid of earthly comforts. Khalil never went to school, but was taught
Arabic and Bible by the priests who visited their house.
In
1891, Khalil’s father was jailed on charges of graft and their property
was confiscated by the authorities. Left homeless, they initially lived
in the homes of their relatives, before deciding to follow Kamila’s
brother to the USA. Their
father’s irresponsible behavior had already alienated the family,
especially Peter. Therefore, even though he was released from prison in
1894 his family refused to change their plan and leaving him alone in
Lebanon, they left for the USA on June 25, 1895. In
the USA, the family joined their relatives, sharing their tenement in
South Boston, Massachusetts. While Peter took charge of the family, to
augment the family’s income, Kamila began to peddle laces and linens
from door to door. Later she opened a dry goods store.
It
was in Boston that twelve-year-old Khalil Gibran started going to
school for the first time and was enrolled at Quincy School on September
30, 1895. Till then known as Gibran Khalil Gibran, his name was
shortened at the time of registration to Khalil Gibran. At
the school, he was placed in a special class with other immigrant
children, where emphasis was placed on teaching them English language.
Concurrently, he also started going to Denison House Social Center, an
art school located in a nearby settlement house. His
teachers, noticing his artistic skill, introduced young Gibran to the
noted photographer and publisher Fred Holland Day. On discovering his
aptitude for literature and art, Day began to mentor him, calling him a
‘natural genius’. Under
Day’s mentorship, Gibran started illustrating books and drawing
portraits. Eventually Day started introducing him to his friends. In
1898, one of his paintings was used as a book cover. Watching
him getting attracted to western culture, Gibran’s mother and brother
decided to send him back to Lebanon so that he could first learn about
his own heritage. Accordingly in 1898 he returned to Beirut, where he
gained admission at the Madrasat-al-Hikmah, a Maronite-run preparatory
school and higher-education institute. After
the completion of his education at Beirut, Gibran returned to Boston on
May 10, 1902. By then, his younger sister Sultana had died of
tuberculosis. In 1903, Peter died from the same disease and his mother
from cancer. With the support of Mariana, now a seamstress, Gibran
resumed his art work.
Reference: https://www.thefamouspeople.com
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