History of Urdu poetry
by Anisur Rahman
Urdu language and literature, beyond
their spatial confines, have been more heard of than read. With the
publication of some notable translations, some of them in the recent
past, a new literary culture seems to be emerging from the canons
of the old. Modern Urdu poetry, of which this is the first comprehensive
selection, has its own tradition of the new. It has developed through
stages of a variegated literary history. This history has absorbed
both the native and non- native elements of writing in Arabic and
Persian, and the Urdu language has survived through several crises
and controversies. Some of these are related to its growth and development,
its use by the British to divide the Hindus and the Muslims. it estrangement
in the land of its birth following the Partition of India and its
interaction with Hindi once akin but now an alien counterpart. Even
with the extinction of those generations of Sikhs in Punjab, Muslims
in Bengal and Hindus elsewhere, who nurtured the language with love
and for whom it was the mark of a cultivated man, the language has
survived and developed. It is now the cultural legacy of India and
the adopted national identity of Pakistan, and significant new literature
has emerged in both countries.
Literary centre : Deccan, Delhi and Lucknow
Literature in Urdu grew at three different centres: Deccan, Delhi
and Lucknow. As it happened, the Deccan emerged as the earliest centre,
even though the language had first developed in northern India, as
a result of an interesting linguistic interaction between the natives
and the Muslim conquerors from Central Asia, who settled there in
the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, The period stretching roughly
from the middle of the fourteenth centuries to the middle of the eighteenth
produce a number of poets. They are claimed both by Urdu and Hindi
literary historians, but Quli Qutub Shah (1565-1611) is generally
acknowledged as the first notable poet, like Chaucer is English, with
a volume of significant poetry in a language later named Urdu. He
was followed by several others, among whom Wali Deccani (1635-1707)
and Siraj Aurangabadi ( 1715-1763) deserves special mention. Delhi
emerged as another significant centre with Mirza Mohammad Rafi Sauda
(1713-80), Khwaja Mir Dard (1721-85), Mir Taqi Mir (1722-1810), Mirza
Asadullah Khan Ghalib (1797-1869) and Nawab Mirza Khan Dagh (1831-1905).
It reached its height of excellence during the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries. Lucknow made its way as the third important centre with
Ghulam Hamdani Mushafi (1725-1824), Inshallah Khan Insha (1757-1817),
Khwaja Haidar Ali Atish (1778-1846), Iman Baksh Nasikh (1787-1838),
Mir Babr Ali Anis (1802-74) and Mirza Salamat Ali Dabir (1803-1875).
These literary capitals, where the classical tradition developed,
had their individual stylistic and thematic identities, but broadly
it may be said that the ghazal (love lyric) reached its zenith with
Mir and Ghalib, qasida (panegyric) with Sauda, mathnawi (romance)
with Mir Hasan and marthiya (elegy) with Anis and Dabir.
Hali and Iqbal : new poetry in Urdu
In the period that followed, and before the launching of the Progressive
Writers Movement in the 30s, mention should be made of Altaf Husain
Hali (1837-1914) and Mohammad Iqbal (1877-1938). Hali was a poet of
the newer socio-cultural concerns and advocated 'natural poetry' that
had an ameliorative purpose. His Musaddas is an important example
of this. He was also a theorist who opened new frontiers in Urdu criticism
with his Moqaddama-e-Sher-o-Shairi (Preface to Poetry) which equals
Wordsworth's Preface to Lyrical Ballads in importance, and even surpasses
it in certain respects. He realized that with the impact of the West
a new perspective was required. He, along with Mohammad Husain Azad
(1830-1910), laid the foundations of a new poetry in 1867 under the
auspices of Anjuman-e-Punjab, Lahore. Azad had asserted in the same
year that Urdu poets should come out of the grooves of responses conditioned
by Persian culture and root their works in the ethos of the land.
Seeing no response to his pleas, he reiterated the same point seven
years later on May 8, 1874 during his address on the occasion of the
first mushaira of the Anjuman. These appeals failed to make and impact
as sensibilities rooted in particular tradition are not easily altered
even by impassioned pleas. Hali, creating a new taste for his age.
Iqbal, with his remarkable religio-philosphical vision, and Josh Malihabadi
(1838-1982), with his nationalistic and political fervour, produced
exceptionally eloquent kinds of poetry that continue to reverberate
over the years. Iqbal remained the most influential poet to achieve
artistic excellence while putting forward a philosophical point of
view, and his poetry, quite often, acquired the status of the accepted
truth. A host of others Urdu poets and translators of English poetry
who appeared on the literary scene during the first quarter of this
century experimented with non-traditional poetic forms but they ultimately
echoed sentiments and adopted forms that were more or less tradition-bound.
They also looked towards the West, the traditional source of literary
influence, but that was a world apart and too far to seek, They could
reach only the Romantics who had already become outmoded in an age
identified with Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot. A characteristically modern
poem in form and value, tone and tenor, remained at best an intriguing
possibility.
Progressive Writers Movement
The 1930s emerged as the archway for entry into a new world and achieve
the unachieved. Some young Indians-- Sajjad Zaheer, Mulk Raj Anand,
and Mohammad Deen Taseer-- who wee then studying in London, musing
on the role of literature in a fast-changing world, came up with a
manifesto for what came to be known as the Progressive Writers Movement.
Even before this, Sajjad Zaheer, during his stay in India had published
Angare (Embers), an anthology of short stories, with explicit sexual
references and an attack on the decadent moral order. The book had
to be banned, like Lady Chatterley's Lover, but the stories had an
impact, as they were thematically interesting and technically innovative.
The reader had suddenly become exposed to the worlds of Freud, Lawrence,
Joyce and Woolf. There was a world of new values waiting to be explored
by an emotionally charged and intellectually agile reader. the Progressive
Writers Movement was launched at the right time. This was the precise
hour to shed the age-old traditions, take leave to the clichés,
proposed new theories, and explore a new world order.
Akhter Husain Raipuri, in his well-timed Adab aur Inqilab (Literature
and Revolution) published in 1934, discarded the classical Urdu poets,
including Mir and Ghalib, as degenerate representative of a feudalistic
culture. This rejection was, however, based on extra-critical considerations
as he was more intent on popularizing Marxist thought in literature.
Premchand's famous presidential address to the conference of Progressive
Writers Association in Lucknow two years later in 1936, came as a
more precise call to relate literature to social reality. ' We will
have to change the standards of beauty, ' he had said, and beauty
of him was that which Eliot identified as ' boredom and horror' in
his own context. The movement focussed on poverty, social backwardness,
decadent morality, political exploitation; it dreamt of an ideal society
and a just political system.
Every rebel was, therefore, a progressive writer and vice-versa during
those exhilarating days. He was basically wedded to the idea of political
and social revolution. He drew his inspiration from Marx. He rejected
the striving for individual signatures, new modes of expression and
new experiments in form. It was important for the poet to denote rather
than connote, and to appeal to the larger humanity rather than to
the individual. Falling victim of these errors before long, the movement
alienated some noted poets, the most important of them being N. M.
Rashed (1910-75) and Miraji (1912-49), who came together to lead a
group called Halqa-e-Arbab-e-Zauq (Circle of Connoisseurs) in 1939.
The progressive writers insistence on ideology and the impatience
of those who cared more for art are reminiscent of the British poets
of the 1930s and the later stance of W. H. Auden.
Faiz Ahmad Faiz (1911-84) is the most prominent and the finest of
the poets who subscribed to the progressive ideology. he was singularly
successful in striking a balance between art an ideas. He was drew
upon sources other than Urdu and Persian and imparted an individual
tone to his poetry. he did not raise slogans; he only uttered soft
notes of expostulation. he was inspired more by the spirit of liberation
than by slogans raised elsewhere. Prominent among other progressive
poets were Asrarul Haq Majaz (1908-56), Makhdoom Mohiuddin (1908-69),
Ali Sardar jafri (b.1913), Jan Nisar Akhter (1914-76), Kaifi Azmi
(b.1918) and Sahir Ludhianawi (1921-80). They are mentioned here not
only for the individual qualities of their poetry by also for their
importance in this movement at a particular juncture in literary history.
Despite the deep political complexion of the Progressive Writers Movement,
it prominence was a short-lived affair. The next generation of poets
expressed certain misgivings about their emphasis on class struggle
in a materialistic and scientific world. The new poet wished to shake
off all external shackles and apprehend his own experience for himself.
The modernism
N. M. Rashed and Miraji are the two most remarkable poets in this
group.They along with Faiz, represent in the Urdu language what Eliot
and the Symbolists do in English and French. They appeared later but
also showed a unique resilience and vitality. Faiz was a poet with
a message, one woven artistically into a pattern of symbols and delivered
in a mellifluous tones. Rashed treated the Urdu language in a fresh
way and created complex symbiotic fusion. Faiz appeals alike to the
philanthropist and the philanderer, the pious and profane, the music
makers and dreamers of dreams, but Rashed appeals only to a select
readership. Faiz emerged as a myth in his own lifetime while Rashed
and Miraji are yet to be fully appreciated. Rashed's resources are
immense. The merging to the eastern and western influences accounts
for the richness of his verse enhanced by linguistic innovation and
poetic skill. Miraji, who reminds one of Tristan Corbiere in his bohemianism,
drew upon Oriental, American and French sources, meditated upon time,
death, the mystery if human desires, the raptures of sex and wrote
in a variety of verse forms -- regular, free, and prose-like. He opted
for esoteric symbolism, resorted to the stream-of-consciousness method
and emerged as a unique modernist movement in Urdu poetry.
It was on this tradition that individual poets later developed their
own version of modernism. Majeed Amjad (1914-74), Akhtarul Iman (b.1915)
and Mukhtar Siddiqi (1917-72) deserves special mention here. A poem
for them was a delicate work of art that succeeded or failed for its
artistic worth. Akhtarul Iman wrote ironic, nostalgic and dramatic
poems, while Majeed Amjad wrote in an inimitable introspective mood
and ideas. They served as models for the younger poets to follow.
The impact of Rashed, Miraji and Faiz was immense and far-reaching.
Their successors echoed them, learnt from them and so came to acquire
their own voices in course of time.
The generations of poets since the 1950s faced new predicaments. The
Partition of India was an experience they had suffered, while the
world around was also terribly alive and eventful. Groups of poets
followed on after another; Wazir Agha (b.1922), Muneer Niyazi (b.1927),
Ameeq Hanfi (1922-88), Balraj Komal (b.1928), Qazi Saleem (b.1930)
grappled with the world around in an idiom and form that were decidedly
new and had nothing to do with Progressive aesthetics. All of them
acquired their own individual identities and made their mark in the
development of modern poetry. They looked back at their won masters--
Mir and Ghalib-- and fared forward to Eliot and Empson. Modern literary
and philosophical movements no longer remained alien. Realism, symbolism,
existentialism, and surrealism, were drawn closer home. Kumar Pashi
(1935-92), Zubair Rizvi (b.1935), Shahrayar (b.1936), Nida Fazli (b.1938)
and Adil Mansoori (b.1941), on the one hand, and Gilani Kamran (b.1926),
Abbas Ather (b.1934), Zahid Dar (b.1936), Saqi Farooqi (b.1936), Iftekhar
Jalib (b.1936), Ahmed Hamesh (b.1937), Kishwar Naheed (b.1940) and
Fehmida Reyaz (b.1946), on the other, experimented in form and technique,
bringing in new diction and finding a place for new experiences. The
new poem had come into being; modernism had firmly established itself
by the mid-1970s.
Shaabkhoon, a literary journal, projected this movement in a big way
and identified the poets of the new order. Ever since its inception
in 1966, it has done a singular job -- especially during the vital
60s and 70s -- of creating a taste for modernism. Shamsur Rehman Farooqi,
the most perceptive of the modern Urdu critics, played a vital role
in helping recognize the contours of modernism with his critical studies.
his studies appraising modern poets, as well as classical poets who
bear upon the modern tradition, developed sound critical theories
and helped in creating an atmosphere for the acceptance and appreciation
of modernism.
Poetry in Pakistan
It may not seem quite right to speak of Urdu poetry in terms of Indian
and Pakistani poetry, but it would be reasonable to say that the new
urdu poetry in Pakistan is remarkable for its variety and vitality.
Emerging from the common sources and traditions of history and culture,
poetry in Pakistan has achieved its own frames of reference, its own
tones of voice, its own notes of protest, largely because of the socio-political
compulsions. Its poetics is characterized by a healthy adherence to
tradition and somewhat virile improvisation of the traditional modes
of expression.
The new poet in Pakistan has created his own blend of the lyrical
with the prosaic, the manifest with the allegorical. he expressed
his own predicament and that of the world around him which arouse
both hope and fear, dreams and despair. Faiz Ahmad Faiz, Majeed Amjad
and Muneer Niyazi, with their vitality and strength, have led us to
the still more varied and vibrant Sermad Sehbai, Asghar Nadeem Syed,
Afzal Ahmad Syed, Zeeshan Sahil and the vital feminine voices of Kishwar
Nahed, Fehmida Reyaz, Nasreen Anjum Bhatti, Sara Shagufta, Shaista
Habib and Azra Abbas. All these and many more form part of a formidable
poetic scene. They are rich in their experience and execution and
may well be placed among the prominent Third World voices that are
being heard today with great curiosity and interest.
Modernism is an international phenomenon and modern Urdu poetry is
a part of it. It has made its mark with its recognizably individual
poetics. The Urdu poet is now free to make his choice; he has drawn
upon sources both indigenous and foreign, literary and extra-literary,
including philosophy, sociology and mythology. The issues regarding
the form of the poem, the language, experiential capital and aesthetic
dimensions have been resolved. the modern reader has finally identified
his poem.
[ From the introduction to the book ' Fire and the Rose ' ]
Rahman, Anisur ; Fire and the Rose; an anthology of modern Urdu poetry;
Rupa & Co. 1995.
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