Euphrase Kezilahabi (1944 nî 4 goe̍h 13 – 2020 nî Chiaⁿ--goe̍h chhe 9)[1] sī chi̍t ūi Tanzania ê siáu-soat ka, si-jîn, mā sī ha̍k-chiá.[2] I tī Tanganyika ê Ukerewe (iā-tio̍h-sī chit-má Tanzania Mwanza Khu ê Ukerewe Khu) chhut-sì. Bóe-á i tī Botswana Tāi-ha̍k chia̍h thâu-lō͘, tī Hui-chiu Gí-giân Hē (chit-má ê Hui-chiu Bûn-hòa Hē) chò chō͘-lí kàu-siū.[3]

I kō͘ Swahili siá-chok lâi piáu-ta̍t chhan-chhiūⁿ "Hiān-tāi Swahili Ōe Tang-tiong ê Án-chóaⁿ Chiah Sī Súi ê Chhiong-tu̍t" í-ki̍p "Hui-chiu Siáu-soat Lāi-té ê Kak-sek ê Khài-liām".

Tù-chok siu-kái

  • Liû-lōng ê Chin-siòng: Euphrase Kezilahabi ê Si Soán (Annmarie Drury hoan-e̍k chò Eng-gí pán: Stray Truths: Selected Poems of Euphrase Kezilahabi)- 2015[4]
  • Mzingile - 1991
  • Nagona - 1990
  • Karibu Ndani - 1988
  • Rosa Mistika - 1988
  • Dunia Uwanja wa Fujo (2007)
  • Kichwamaji (1974)
  • Gamba la Nyoka (2006)
  • Hui-chiu Siáu-soat Lāi-té ê Kak-sek ê Khài-liām (The Concept of the Hero in African Fiction) - 1983
  • Iû Hoan-e̍k Si Tiong-sim só͘ hoan-e̍k.[5]

Éng-hióng siu-kái

  • Vincent R. Ogoti

Chham-khó Lâi-goân siu-kái

  1. Vincent, Asibabi (10 January 2020). "Professor Kezilahabi, 'Mayai Waziri Wa Maradhi' writer, is dead". Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  2. I siá i ka-tī ê kò͘-sū.
  3. NALRC Archived 2010-06-10 at the Wayback Machine
  4. "MSU Press | Stray Truths". Michigan State University Press. Retrieved 2020-01-18.
  5. "Euphrase Kezilahabi". www.poetrytranslation.org. Retrieved 2016-03-24.