Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Shamim Karhani

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Occupation
  
Poetteacher

Role
  
Poet

Ethnicity
  
Asian

Died
  
March 19, 1975, New Delhi

Citizenship
  
Indian

Spouse
  
Syeda Kazmi Bano

Name
  
Shamim Karhani


Shamim Karhani httpsrekhtaorgImagesShayarRoundshamimkarh

Born
  
8 June 1913Karhan, Uttar Pradesh, India (
1913-06-08
)

Children
  
Abid Karhani, Murad Karhani, Salman Karhani

Siblings
  
Syed Azam Husain, Syed Ali Haider, Syed Ghazanfar Husain, Syed Husaam Uddin Haider, Mamzooran Bibi

Parents
  
Mohammad Akhtar, Ummat ul Zehra

Education
  
Aligarh Muslim University (1957), Maulavi Kaamil Munshi

Abid karhani recites poetry at an event in honour of shamim karhani


Shamim Karhani was an eminent Urdu poet ('Shayar') of the 20th century. He was born on 8 June 1913 in village 'Karhan' district Mau, UP.

Contents

Azam abbas shakeel recites shamim karhani s ghazal


Early life, education and employment

Shamim Karhani (Urdu: شمیم کرھانی ‎) was born in a 'Zamindar' family to Syed Muhammad Akhtar and Ummat ul Zehra on 8 June 1913 in village 'Karhan' district Mau, UP in India. His real name was 'Syed Shamsuddin Haider'. He himself chose 'Shamim Karhani' as his pen name ('Takhallus'). Later, this pen name of his became so famous that once, at an interview, when he was asked his name, he himself had to pause for a moment to remember his real name! He did his secondary education from Aligarh Muslim University and also did 'Maulvi Kamil Munshi'. For his profession, he chose to be a teacher. He worked with Dayanand Anglo-Vedic Schools System, Kaumi Awaz and Anglo Arabic School (New Delhi). He was a scholar of the Persian language; however he did all his poetry in Urdu.

Poetry and India's freedom struggle

Shamim had a taste in poetry since he was a kid. He composed his first couplet at the age of eight. He now was aware what he was born for. He started writing and was adored all over Uttar Pradesh. This was the era when India was vehemently trying to get out of snare of British rule. Being an Indian he started writing poems that conveyed the moral of adhesion to one's own country. These poems became so influential that his popular revolutionary 'Nazms' and 'Naghmas' ('Geets') were sung in the 'Prabhat-Pheris' taken out on the streets of cities like Lucknow and Varanasi during the freedom struggle.

Soon Shamim Karhani's nationalist and revolutionary poetry started attracting the attention of both the common people and the literati. It was through this nationalist platform that he joined the Progressive Writers' Movement. In 1948 he composed a poem entitled Jagao Na Bapu Ko Neend Aa Gayi Hai just after the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi. The above poem had such an emotional appeal that it spread like the jungle fire. Once, Shamim Karhani had the opportunity to recite the poem in the presence of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, the first Prime Minister of India. Nehru, after listening to the poem, got impressed by Shamim's work and asked him to come to Lucknow to recite his poems in Congress election meetings. Later, after independence, Nehru asked Shamim to come to Delhi. He migrated to Delhi in 1950 and met Nehru at 'Teen-Murti'. Nehru asked him to compose an epic in Urdu on the freedom movement of India and started giving him a stipend for the job from his personal pocket. On 7 February 1950 he wrote in Shamim's diary:

His collection entitled "Roshan Andhera" was entirely devoted to the "Quit India Movement".

Shamim Karhani was a contemporary of eminent poets like Faiz Ahmed 'Faiz', Ali 'Sardar' Jafri, 'Majaz Lucknawi', Moin Ahsan 'Jazbi', Ali 'Jawad' Zaidi, etc. Being basically a 'Ghazal-go' (one who composes 'Ghazals'), however, tried his hand on each and every 'genre' of Urdu poetry and some of his compositions found eternal place in Urdu literature. He has composed (apart from ghazals) poems, 'rubaees', 'qataat', 'geet', elegies, 'marsiyas', 'eulogies' etc.

List of works

  • Burq-o-Baaran (1939)
  • Roshan Andhera (1942)
  • Taraaney (1944)
  • Badh Chal Re Hindustan (1948)
  • Tameer (1948)
  • Aks-i-Gul (1962)
  • Intekhaab-i-Kalaam-i-Shamim Karhani (1963)
  • Zulfiqaar (1964)
  • Harf-i-Neem Shab (1972)
  • Jaan-i-Baraadar (1973)
  • Subh-i-Faaran (1974)
  • Main Bootarabi (1974)
  • Kileed-i-Insha
  • Pushp Chhaya (Hindi translation of Aks-i-Gul)
  • Awards

  • Award from the government of Uttar Pradesh (India) for his collection 'Aks-i-Gul' in 1964
  • Award from Uttar Pradesh (India) Urdu Academy for his collection ‘Harf-i-Neem Shab’ in 1972
  • Saroop Narayan Urdu Nazm Award in 1972
  • Award from Government of India for his collection ‘Ranga Ke Geet’
  • References

    Shamim Karhani Wikipedia


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