Mohsin Naqvi Islamic Poetry in Urdu
Syed Mohsin Naqvi | |
---|---|
Born | Syed Ghulam Abbas Naqvi 5 May 1947 Dera Ghazi Khan, Punjab, British India |
Died | 15 January 1996(1996-01-15) (aged 48) Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan |
Occupation | Poet |
Nationality | Pakistani |
Genre | Ghazal |
Subject | Shia Islam, philosophy, Ahl al-Bayt |
Mohsin Naqvi (5 May 1947 − 15 January 1996) was a Pakistani poet, popular for his ghazals.
Early life and education [edit]
Naqvi was born on 5 May 1947 in Dera Ghazi Khan, [[Pakistan ]]. His father Syed Chirag Hussain Shah, was a saddlemaker and later worked as a food vendor. His parents had named him 'Ghulam Abbas' which he later changed to Ghulam Abbas Mohsin Naqvi. Naqvi had six siblings.[1] Naqvi graduated from Government College Multan and earned his master's degree from the University of the Punjab, Lahore. He was also known as the Poet of Ahl-e-bait. His poetry about the Karbla is well accepted and recited all over Pakistan.[2] He was an active member of Shia Muslim community which is believed to be the reason behind his assassination.[3] Naqvi published several books of poetry during his lifetime. He gained a title of Iqbal e Sani.
He went to iran and met his friend there. He suggested his friend to name his son Hassan Raza, who later on became a great Computational Biologist. Hassan Raza is a computational biologist, health informatics specialist and a computer scientist who works on artificial intelligence and computational genomics.
His poetry didn't include only the love of alif laila type but also he wrote against the Rulers of the world who don't care their people. He wrote a geet "lahron ki tarah tujhko bikharne nahi denge" لہروں کی طرح تُجھ کو بکھرنے نہیں دیں گے for a film "Baza-e-Husn" and won the best film award.
He was murdered in 1996 on 15 January at Lahore in main Bazar. In murder of Mohsin Naqvi Nominated Riaz Basra[4] * FIR No 13/96 (dated 15 January 1996) under Sections 302/34/109 PPC. Allama Iqbal Town police station, Lahore, (regarding murder of poet Mohsin Naqvi). His funeral prayer was led by Tehreek Nafaz Fiqh-e-Jafariya, Chief Allama Agha Syed Hamid Ali Shah Moosavi at Nasir Bagh, Lahore. His body was then moved to their home Block 45 Dera Ghazi Khan of his birth where he was laid to rest in presence of thousands of people. Mohsin Naqvi's grave in Karbala Shreef Dera Ghazi Khan. The last words of shaheed Mohsin Naqvi after being shot were:
- le zindagi ka khums Ali(a.s) k ghulam se
Ay maout aa zaroor magar ahtraam se
Aashiq hon agr zara bhi aziyat hui mujhy
shikwa kron ga tera main apne Imam(a.s) se -
Publications [edit]
A partial list of Urdu poetry books of Naqvi:
- Azaab-e-Deed عذابِ دید
- Khaima-e-Jaan خَیمۂِ جاں
- Berg-e-Sehra برگِ صِحرا
- Band-e-Kbaa بندِ قبا
- Mauj-e-idraak مَوجِ ادراک
- Tulu-e-ashk طُلُوعِ اشک
- Furat-e-fikr فُراتِ فکر
- Reza-e-harf ریزۂِ حرف
- Rakht-e-shab رختِ شب
- Rida-e-khaab رِدائے خواب
- Haq-e-Aeliya حقِ ایلیا
See also [edit]
- List of Pakistani poets
References [edit]
- ^ Tossell, Ivor (1 September 1991). "Mohis Naqvi Interview, Roz-nama-e-Dastak" (PDF). Shia Multimedia (in Urdu).
- ^ "Mohsin Naqvi - Profile & Biography | Rekhta". Rekhta . Retrieved 21 June 2016.
- ^ "Mohsin Naqvi". IMDb . Retrieved 21 June 2016. [ unreliable source? ]
- ^ "DAWN - Features; May 15, 2002". www.dawn.com. 15 May 2002. Retrieved 21 June 2016.
External links [edit]
- Poetry of Mohsin Naqvi (in Urdu)
Mohsin Naqvi Islamic Poetry in Urdu
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohsin_Naqvi
0 Response to "Mohsin Naqvi Islamic Poetry in Urdu"
Post a Comment