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Majeed Amjad (Punjabi, Template:Langx) (29 June 1914 – 11 May 1974) was an Urdu poet<ref name="nation.com.pk"/><ref name="dawn.com">Template:Cite news</ref> from Pakistan.<ref name="pakistaniat.com">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> One newspaper described him as a "philosophical poet of depth and sensitivity".<ref name="nation.com.pk">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="sajjanlahore.org"/> His ghazals have been sung by various Pakistani singers.<ref name="sajjanlahore.org">Template:Cite news</ref>

Personal lifeEdit

BackgroundEdit

Amjad was born on 29 June 1914 in Jhang,<ref name="nation.com.pk"/> a small town in the Pakistani province of Punjab. He was taught by his maternal grandfather. Then for a few years he studied Arabic and Persian under the supervision of his maternal grandfather Noor Muhammad at a local mosque before enrolling in first grade in a government school. He obtained his Matriculation certificate in the first division from Islamia High School, Jhang.<ref name="nation.com.pk"/> Two years later he completed his Intermediate exam, also in the first division from Government College, Jhang.<ref name="nation.com.pk"/> Later he moved to Lahore for higher education that was not available in Jhang. He eventually received his bachelor's degree in 1934 from Islamia College Lahore.<ref name="nation.com.pk"/>

During the Great Depression, economic opportunities were limited even for educated people like Amjad, who returned to Jhang and joined a weekly newspaper named Arooj.<ref name="elevenelevenjournal.com">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He remained as an editor of the newspaper until 1939 and regularly published his own prose and poetry. At the advent of the Second World War, a poem of his against the British Empire was printed on the front page of Arooj and he was forced to leave the newspaper. After that he found a job as a clerk in the Jhang District Board. In 1944, the government set up a civil supplies department to ration food and clothing.<ref name="nation.com.pk"/> He passed an entrance exam and joined this department and served on with the Food Department until his retirement in 1972. He lived in many small and large towns all over Punjab during his employment with the Food Department including Lyallpur (now Faisalabad), Gojra, Muzaffargarh, Rawalpindi, Arifwala, Lahore and Montgomery. In 1939 he married his cousin, a school teacher, but they had different opinions and divorced.<ref name="nation.com.pk"/> Amjad lived the last 28 years in Sahiwal, while his wife stayed in Jhang. He spent last days of life in Farid Town Sahiwal where He died on 11 May 1974.He was buried in lolly Shah Graveyard Jhang.<ref name="nation.com.pk"/>

Literary careerEdit

Amjad's first collection of poetry, Shab-e-Rafta, was published in 1958<ref name="nation.com.pk"/> for which he wrote a preface in verse. This was published by Naya Idara in Lahore and was the only collection published in his lifetime even though he had written steadily throughout his life. After his death, the manuscripts of his unpublished poetry were preserved by Javaid Qureshi who was then the deputy commissioner of Sahiwal. In 1976, Javaid Qureshi and others published a second collection of his poetry titled Shab-e-Rafta Ke Baad. It was not until 1989 that the Urdu critic Khawaja Muhammad Zakariya edited and published a complete collection of his works called Kuliyat-e-Majeed Amjad. Samira Gilani has published several articles on Majid Amjad's poems at the universities of Tehran and Punjab.<ref name="sajjanlahore.org"/>

BibliographyEdit

  • Shab-e-Rafta<ref name="nation.com.pk"/><ref name="sajjanlahore.org"/> (شبِ رفتہ)
  • Shab-e-Rafta Ke Baad<ref name="sajjanlahore.org"/> ( شبِ رفتہ کے بعد)

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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