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Ifti Nasim

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Cause of death
  
Heart attack

Role
  
Poet

Name
  
Ifti Nasim

Occupation
  
Poet

Nationality
  
American


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Born
  
1946
Faisalabad, Pakistan

Died
  
July 22, 2011, Chicago, Illinois, United States

Ifti nasim poet scholar talks on ayan television part i


Ifti Nasim (1946 – July 22, 2011) was a gay Pakistani American poet. Having moved to the United States to escape persecution for his sexual orientation, he became known locally for establishing Sangat, an organization to support LGBT south-Asian youths, and internationally for publishing Narman, a poetry collection that was the first open expression of homosexual themes in the Urdu language. Nasim was inducted into the Chicago Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame in 1996.

Contents

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Ifti nasim reciting his poetry in chicago usa


Personal life

Ifti Nasim Ifti Nasim Poet amp Scholar Talks on AYAN Television Part

Nasim was born in Faisalabad, Pakistan (then called Lyallpur) shortly before independence, a middle child in a large family. As a teenager he felt ostracized and alone, and was unable to live as openly gay; at the age of 21 he emigrated from Pakistan to the US, inspired in part by an article in Life magazine that he recalls describing the US as "the place for gays to be in". Several of his siblings later followed him to the US, and he eventually naturalized as a US citizen.

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Ifti Nasim died in hospital in Chicago on July 22, 2011 following a heart attack, at the age of 64.

Poetry

Ifti Nasim Mr Wrong Ifti Nasim 1946 2011

The publication for which Ifti Nasim was best known was a book of poetry entitled Narman, a word meaning "hermaphrodite" or "half-man, half-woman" in Persian. It met immediate controversy in Pakistan and had to be distributed underground; even the printer of the book, belatedly realizing its contents, was reported to shout, "Take these unholy and dirty books away from me, or I'll set them on fire!” However, its frankness inspired a younger generation of Pakistani poets to write "honest" poetry, a genre becoming known as "narmani" poetry.

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He later released Myrmecophile in 2000, and Abdoz in 2005.

References

Ifti Nasim Wikipedia


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