Akbar Shah (11 November 1917 – 13 April 1997),[2] known by his pen name as Farigh Bukhari (romanized: Fārigh Buk̲h̲ārī), was a Pakistani multilingual poet and progressive writer.[3] He wrote books, including poetry on various subjects such as literature, social issues and politics in Hindko, Pashto and predominantly in Urdu language. Some of his publications appear about universal values and humanism.

Farigh Bukhari
Syed Mir Akbar Shah a.k.a. Farigh Bukhari
Syed Mir Akbar Shah a.k.a. Farigh Bukhari
Native name
فارغ بخاری
BornSyed Mir Akbar Shah
(1917-11-11)11 November 1917
Peshawar, British India, (present-day Pakistan)
Died13 April 1997(1997-04-13) (aged 79)
Peshawar, Pakistan
Pen nameFarigh Bukhari
OccupationPoet, writer
LanguageUrdu, Pashto, Hindko
PeriodBangladesh Liberation War
SubjectPolitics, Social, Literature
Literary movementProgressive Writers' Movement[1]
Years active1934–1997

Farigh was born in British India (in modern-day Peshawar, Pakistan).[a][4][1] He along with Raza Hamdani is credited with introducing Urdu literature to Pukhtuns of Attock city, making him the 20th century's first writer of Peshawar translating Urdu into Pashto literature.[b]

Literary career

edit

He started writing around in 1934, and participated in a mushaira in Calcutta (now Kolkata) where he recited his first-ever ghazal presided over an Urdu poet Raza Ali Wahsat. Besides gazals, a few of his poetic conversations appear emotional and imaginative. He used to criticise wars through his poetry. In 1971, he wrote about East Pakistan (in modern-day Bangladesh), and covered historical events of the war. Later, he opposed military conflicts occurring in East Bengal through one of his poetry collections titled the tragedy of East Bengal.[5][6][7]

Prior to writing about 1971, he wrote an Urdu poetry collection titled Zairo Bam in January 1952, and his house in Peshawar was subsequently raided by the local police who arrested him for his not-known involvement in keeping the formula of an explosive device called "zero bomb". He was also imprisoned, and later displaced for writing about politics involving plural society and social justice. In 1991, he wrote a book titled Tahrik-i Azadi Aur Baca Khan (Freedom movement and Bacha Khan)[c] on a Pashtun activist Abdul Ghaffar Khan covering his independence struggle and political movements carried out during the period of partition. The book was later published by the University of California on 5 March 2007.[4][8]

Bibliography

edit
  • Buk̲h̲Ārī, Fārig̲h̲ (1974). سرحد كے لوک گيت.
  • Buk̲h̲Ārī, Fārig̲h̲ (1978). Albam.
  • Buk̲h̲Ārī, Fārig̲h̲ (1978). خوشبو کا سفر.
  • Buk̲h̲Ārī, Fārig̲h̲ (1982). Farigh's poems: Songs of love & struggle.
  • Buk̲h̲Ārī, Fārig̲h̲ (1982). Piyāsī hāth.
  • Buk̲h̲Ārī, Fārig̲h̲ (1982). Dūsrā albam: Qalmī k̲h̲āke.
  • Buk̲h̲Ārī, Fārig̲h̲ (1983). G̲h̲azaliyyah.
  • Buḵh̲Ārī, Fārig̲h̲ (1991). Tahrik-i azadi aur baca Khan.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Natarajan, Nalini; Nelson, Emmanuel Sampath (2 June 1996). Handbook of Twentieth-century Literatures of India. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780313287787 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ "Roznama Dunya: اسپیشل فیچرز :- فارغ بخاری".
  3. ^ "PAL books highlight literary contributions". www.thenews.com.pk.
  4. ^ a b Shinwari, Sher Alam (31 December 2017). "Farigh Bukhari remembered as a committed progressive writer". DAWN.COM.
  5. ^ Ahmar, Yunus (2 June 1999). Modern Urdu Poets. Adam. ISBN 9788174351623 – via Google Books.
  6. ^ Ahmad, Aijaz (2 April 2002). Lineages of the Present: Ideology and Politics in Contemporary South Asia. Verso. ISBN 9781859843581 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ "Farigh Bukhari, Raza Hamdani remembered for literary contributions". www.thenews.com.pk.
  8. ^ "Farigh Bukhari Poetry – Urdu Shayari, Ghazals, Nazams & Poems". UrduPoint.

Notes

edit
  1. ^ He was born before 1947 (i.e in British India)
  2. ^ 20th century's first writer only in Peshawar, not world's first writer
  3. ^ see bibliography section for book citation
edit

Farigh Bukhari at Rekhta Foundation