Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Jamil Ahmad (writer)

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Died
  
12 July 2014 Islamabad

Spouse(s)
  
Helga

Name
  
Jamil Ahmad


Born
  
1931
Punjab, Undivided India, Pakistan

Occupation
  
Novelist, Short story writer

Awards
  
Shortlisted for Man Asian Prize- 2011

Jamil Ahmad (1931–2014) was a Pakistani novelist and story writer, who wrote in English language. He is known for his anthology, The Wandering Falcon which was short listed for Man Asian Literary Prize, widely known as Asia's highest literary award, in 2011. The book was also a finalist for DSC prize for South Asian Literature in 2013.

Contents

He died on 12 July 2014.

Biography

Jamil Ahmad was born in Punjab, in the erstwhile undivided India, in 1931. After early education in Lahore, he joined the civil service in 1954, and worked in the Swat valley, a remote Hindu Kush area, near Afghan border. During his career, he worked at various remote areas such as the Frontier Province, Quetta, Chaghi, Khyber and Malakand. His experiences in these tribal valley assisted him in his work which was mainly focussed on the lives of the tribal villagers. He also served as the a minister at the Pakistani embassy in Kabul during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979.

He married Helga whom he met during his London years, who was critical of his early attempts at poetry but diligently tried to promote his work, The Wandering Falcon, which was nominated for Man Asian Literary Prize in 2011. The couple had two sons and a daughter at the time of his death.

Work

The Wandering Falcon can either be construed as a short story collection or a novel, based on differing perspectives. The book narrates the story of Tor Baz (the black falcon) and his travails through the remote tribal areas along the Pakistan - Afghan border where he experiences the lives of the ethnic pashtuns. The stories travel through the strict code of conduct of the tribals known as pashtunwali, the lawlessness of the land where women are traded as commodity, adultery and anarchism, silhouetted against the Baluch desert landscape. The book received critical acclaim.

Jamil Ahmad has also published a short story, The Sins of the Mother, which appeared on Granta112: Pakistan in 2010.

References

Jamil Ahmad (writer) Wikipedia