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  • Ghulam Ahmad Mahjoor

  • Ghulam Ahmad Mahjoor


    Ghulam Ahmad Mahjoor(3 September 1885 - 9 April 1952)

    Peerzada Ghulam Ahmad (Kashmiri: ?????? ???? (Devanagari), ???? ????

    (Nastaleeq)), better known by the pen name Mahjoor (Kashmiri: ?????

    (Devanagari), ????? (Nastaleeq)), was a renowned poet of the Indian Kashmir

    Valley, along with contemporaries, Zinda Kaul, Abdul Ahad Azad, Dinanath

    Nadim. He is especially noted for introducing a new style into Kashmiri poetry

    and for expanding Kashmiri poetry into previously unexplored thematic realms.

    In addition to his poems in Kashmiri, Mahjoor is also noted for his poetic

    compositions in Persian and Urdu.

    Early Life

    Mahjoor was in the village of Metragam, Pulawama, which is located

    approximately 37 km from the city of Srinagar. Mahjoor followed in the academic

    footsteps of his father, who was a scholar of Persian language. He received the

    primary education from the Maktab of Aashiq Trali (a renowned poet) in Tral.

    After passing the middle school examination from Nusrat-ul-Islam School,

    Srinagar, he went to Punjab where he came in contact with Urdu poets like Bismil

    Amritsari and Moulana Shibi Nomani. He returned to Srinagar in 1908 and

    started writing in Persian and then in Urdu. Determined to write in his native

    language, Mahjoor used the simple diction of traditional folk storytellers in his

    writing.

    Mahjoor worked as a patwari (regional administrator) in Kashmir. Along with his

    official duties, he spent his free time writing poetry, and his first Kashmiri poem

    'Vanta hay vesy' was published in 1918.

    Poetic Legacy

    Many of the themes of the poetry of Mahjoor involved freedom and progress in

    Kashmir, and his poems awakened latent nationalism among Kashmiris. His

    popular verses engaged such topics as love, communal harmony, social reform,

    and the plight of the Kashmiris. He also wrote on such timeless themes as youth,

    the flowers of Nishat Garden, peasant girls, gardeners, and the golden oriole. At

    that time, such songs were unknown in formal Kashmiri poetry.

    Mahjoor is also recognized as a poet who revolutionized the traditional forms of

    nazm and ghazal,

    In 1972, a bilingual film named Shayar-e-Kashmir Mahjoor was released with the

    Hindi version starring Balraj Sahni. A square in Srinagar is named after him. He

    is buried near the poetess Habba Khatoon at a site near Athwajan on the Jammu-

    Srinagar national highway


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