Sunday, 12 October 2014

Sad Poetry in Urdu

Sad Poetry in Urdu Biography

Source(Gogle.com.pk)
Habib Jalib Ghazal Sms Collection |Donpk.com
GHAZAL SMS, SMS 0 COMMENTS

habib jalib Sad PoetryHabib jalib is one of the Pioneer Urdu poets. He was born on 24 March 1928 in a village near Hoshiarpur, India. He transmigrated to Pakistan after the partition of India and worked as a reader for Daily Imroze of Karachi.

He was a liberal writer and soon started to catch the consultation with his keen practice of poetry. He wrote in plain language, adopted a simple style and addressed common people and issues. But the condemnation behind his words, the music of his voice and his emotional energy coped with the sensibility of the socio-political circumstance is what invoked the audience.

Donpk.com is sharing Habib Jalib Best Poetry Collection, Habib jalib shayari, habib jalib love Poetry, habib jalib Sad Poetry and much more……..

Habib Jalib Best Poetry Collection on DONPK.COM

Wo Bi Khayif Nahi Takhta-e Dar Se
Mai Bi Mansoor Hoon Keh Do Aghayar Se
Kun Darate Ho Zindan Ki Deewar Se
Zulm Ki Baat Ku Jahl Ki Raat Ku
Main Nahi Manta Main Nahi Janta

Tum Ne Loota Hai Sadyon Hmara Sukoon
Ab Na Ham Par Chale Ga Tumhara Fasoon
Chara Gar Main Tumhain Kis Tarah Se Kahon
Main Nahi Manta Main Nahi Janta

Deep Jis Ka Mahlaat Main Hi Jale
Chand Logo Ki Khushiyon Ko Le Kar Chale
Wo Jo Saye Main Har Maslihat Ke Play

Aese Dastoor Ko Subah-e Be Noor Ku
Main Nahi Manta Main Nahi Janta
Bano Qudsia (born 1928) is a writer, intellectual, playwright and spiritualist from Pakistan who is regarded among the best Urdu novelists and short story writers of modern times. She is best known for her novel Raja Gidh. She writes for television and stage in both Urdu and Punjabi languages. She is the wife of famous novelist Ashfaq Ahmed. She has written a number of popular television plays.Bano moved with her family to Lahore during the Partition of India. Her father, a landlord with a Bachelor's degree in agriculture, died when Bano was very young. She attended school in Dharamsala in eastern India before moving to Lahore. Her mother, Mrs. Chattah, was an educationalist, and this inspired the young Bano to develop a keen interest in academics, which turned her into a conscientious student. Her marriage to Ashfaq Ahmed consummated the artist in her, though she says she never discussed any of her works with her husband nor has the writer-spouse ever tried to influence her writings. "We work very independently. Writing a book is like bearing a child and you do not share that with anyone. God is your only confidant. It is also like falling in love. You keep it personal and private.As a student, she wrote for college magazines and other journals. Her memories of her days at Kinnaird College in Lahore, from where she graduated, are still quite vivid. She talks of the literary inspiration that was a hallmark at Kinnaird's campuses during those days. Though her stay at Kinnaird went a long way in sharpening her scholarly skills, Bano felt an incessant need to polish her expressions in Urdu, the only language with which she could reach the minds of the people. So in 1951, she completed her M.A. degree in Urdu from the Government College Lahore with distinction.She has authored numerous short stories, novelettes, television and radio plays, and stage plays. Her short stories include Baz Gasht, Amar Bail, Doosra Darwaza and Twajju ki Talib. Of her novels, none has received as much recognition as Raja Gidh which centers around the forbidden truth. The plot buildsaround the symbol of a vulture, a bird of prey, that feeds on dead flesh and carcasses. The moral sought implies that indulgence in the forbidden leads to physical and mental degeneration.Some of her best plays include Tamasil, Hawa key Naam, Seharay and Khaleej. The plight of women and other socio-economic issues have often been the subject of her television serials that have inspired families wherever they have been aired. The Graduate Award for Best Playwright was conferred on Bano in 1986, followed by the same award for three consecutive years from 1988 to 1990. In 1986, she was also given the Taj Award for Best Playwright.Rather critical of the deviation of today's woman from her natural role of mother and home keeper, Bano decries what she terms 'a woman's unsolicited and disoriented escape from responsibility.' Interestingly, though, she blames men for plotting a conspiracy to push women out of the house, her only domain. "And women fall easy prey to this trap. Men of the post-industrialization era gave women a taste of luxurious lifestyles and then instigated them to step out of the house and earn that lifestyle. The woman developed a taste for what she thought was freedom for her, but which actually bonded her as a labourer and a breadwinner."She cites the example of the woman who does the dishes in her home. "This woman is more liberated than your modern women, since she does not suffer from any conflicts of the 'self'. Poverty is all that hurts her and she is not caught in a rat race to prove something to herself or carve out an identity for herself. Her existence is identity enough.Bano also feels that what she calls women's 'strength of softness' has been - See more at: http://www.tafreehmella.com/threads/famous-writers-and-poets-biography.188937/#sthash.riGnBl3v.dpuf
Sad Poetry in Urdu in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Sad Poetry in Urdu in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Sad Poetry in Urdu in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Sad Poetry in Urdu in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in Englishin English
Sad Poetry in Urdu in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Sad Poetry in Urdu in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Sad Poetry in Urdu in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Sad Poetry in Urdu in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Sad Poetry in Urdu in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English
Sad Poetry in Urdu in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Sad Poetry in Urdu in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Sad Poetry in Urdu in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Sad Poetry in Urdu in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

No comments:

Post a Comment