Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Mahwi

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Role
  
Poet


Name
  
Mahwi Mahwi

Died
  
1906

Mahwi s3picofilecomfile7488276341mahwijpg

Mahwi basit


Mahwi or Mehwî (Central Kurdish: مەحوی‎, Northern Kurdish: Mehwî; full name: Mala Muhamad Osman Ballkhi), (1830-1906), was one of the most prominenet classical Kurdish poets and sufis from Kurdistan Region of Iraq. He studied in Sablakh and Sanandaj in Iranian Kurdistan. He became a judge in the court of Sulaimaniya, in today's Iraq, in 1862, which was then part of the Ottoman Empire. He travelled to Istanbul and met Abd-ul-Hamid II in 1883. He established a khaneqah, an Islamic religious school and mosque, in Sulaimniya and named it after an Ottoman emperor. In his poems, he mainly promotes sufism, but also deals with the human condition and existential problems, such as questions about the meaning of life.

Contents

Mahwi httpsiytimgcomvi9B9987Sr4omaxresdefaultjpg

شاعیری گەورەی کورد مەحوی (kurdish great poet Mahwi)


Works

A collection of his poems has been published several times.

  1. Dîwanî Mehwî, Sulaimaniya, 1922.
  2. Dîwanî Mehwî, Edited by Jamal Muhammad Muhammad Amin, Serkewtin Publishers, Sulaimaniya, 1984.
  3. Dîwanî Mehwî, Edited and Analyised by Mala Abdolkarimi Modarres and Muhammad Mala Karim, Hissam Publishers, Baghdad, 1977 and 1984.

References

Mahwi Wikipedia