Ahmad Faraz
Syed Ahmad Shah, better known by his pen name Ahmad Faraz, was a Pakistani Urdu poet, scriptwriter and became the founding director general of Pakistan Academy of Letters. He wrote his poetry under the pseudonym Faraz. He criticised military rule and 1999 [Pakistani coup d'état|coup d'état] in the country and was displaced by the military dictators.
Early life and education
Faraz was born Syed Ahmad Shah on 14 January 1931 in Nowshera, NWFP, British India, the son of Agha Syed Muhammad Shah Bark Kohati. He belonged to a Pashtun-Syed family. His father was a teacher who composed Persian poetry and the family spoke Hindko at home. His brother Masood Kausar has been the Governor of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. He studied at Edwardes College, Peshawar and received his Master's degree in Urdu and Persian from Peshawar University. During his college life, the two poets Faiz Ahmad Faiz and Ali Sardar Jafri influenced him and became Faraz's role models.Career
Literature
After gaining early recognition as a poet through recitations of his ghazals on Radio Pakistan Peshawar, Faraz moved to Karachi, where he worked as a radio producer. He later returned to Peshawar and was appointed chairman of the Pakistan Academy of Letters.Faraz emerged as one of the most prominent voices of modern Urdu poetry in the second half of the 20th century. Associated with the post-Progressive tradition, his poetry combined classical ghazal aesthetics with contemporary political, social, and romantic themes. Beginning with his early collections in the late 1950s, Faraz gained wide popularity for his accessible diction, emotional intensity, and engagement with themes of love, resistance, exile, and dissent. His work often reflected opposition to authoritarianism and social injustice, particularly during periods of political repression in Pakistan, which led to censorship and, at times, self-imposed exile. Over the course of his career, he published numerous influential poetry collections and a small body of prose, and he remains one of the most widely read and recited Urdu poets of his generation. His literary contributions have been extensively documented in literary histories, critical essays, and obituaries.
Singers such as Mehdi Hassan, Noor Jehan, Ghulam Ali, Pankaj Udhas, Jagjit Singh and Runa Laila greatly popularized his poetry by singing his ghazals in films and in live concerts.
Ahmad Faraz served as Chairman of the National Book Foundation in Islamabad, Pakistan.
Politics
In his early years, Faraz was associated with the Khaksar movement, reflecting his early exposure to political and social activism. The Khaksar was a socio-political movement founded in British India by Allama Inayatullah Mashriqi, advocating discipline, self-reliance, social equality, and resistance to colonial rule.Faraz was arrested for writing poems that criticised military rulers in Pakistan during the reign of General Zia-ul-Haq. Following that arrest, he went into a self-imposed exile. He stayed for 3 years in Britain, Canada, and Europe before returning to Pakistan, where he was initially appointed as Chairman of the Pakistan Academy of Letters and later chairperson of the Islamabad-based National Book Foundation for several years.
Death and legacy
Earlier in 2008, after a fall in Baltimore, Maryland, there were rumors of his death while he was being treated in a Chicago hospital. But he was able to return to his homeland, Pakistan. Ahmad Faraz later died of kidney failure, confirmed by his son Shibli Faraz, in a private hospital in Islamabad on 25 August 2008. His funeral was held on the evening of 26 August, among many admirers and government officials at H-8 Graveyard, Islamabad, Pakistan.Ahmad Faraz is included in the long list of revolutionary poets of Urdu language and is "acclaimed as one of the most influential modern Urdu poets of the last century."
"This felicity with words is evident in much of Faraz's work, as is an economy of expression, along with an ability to wrap layers of meaning into brief lines, the hallmark of an artist who has a command over his craft."
Awards and recognition
Ahmad Faraz was first awarded the Sitara-i-Imtiaz by the Government of Pakistan and then the Hilal-e-Imtiaz in 2004 by the then President of Pakistan Pervez Musharraf. He returned this award two years later in 2006 "as a means of protest against the actions of the Musharraf regime."On 25 August 2008, he died in Islamabad, and later Government of Pakistan conferred Hilal-e-Pakistan posthumously upon Faraz for his contribution to poetry and Urdu literature.