Peerzada Ghulam Ahmad Mahjoor | |
---|---|
Native name | مَہجوٗر |
Born | Mitrigam, Kashmir and Jammu | 11 August 1885
Died | 9 April 1952 Mitrigam, India Administered Jammu and Kashmir | (aged 66)
Resting place | Mitrigam (exhumed) then Athwajan, Jammu–Srinagar National Highway, Kashmir |
Pen name | Mahjoor |
Occupation | Regional administrator, Poet |
Notable works | Poshe-mati – Janano,[1] Bage Nishat Ke Gulo,[1] Sahibo sath cham |
Peerzada Ghulam Ahmad (August 1885 − 9 April 1952), known by his pen name as Mahjoor, was a poet of the Kashmir Valley, along with contemporaries, Zinda Kaul, Abdul Ahad Azad, and Dinanath Nadim.[2][3][4] He is especially noted for introducing a new style into Kashmiri poetry and for expanding Kashmiri poetry into previously unexplored thematic realms.[5] Mahjoor is recognized as father of Kashmiri language.
It is at this stage that the poet Mahjoor swam into the poetical firmament to redeem Kashmiri poetry from this plight. His contribution and that of other major poets of the modern era like Zinda Kaul, Abdul Ahad Azad, Dina Nath Nadim
Famous writers of this era were: Pirzada Ghulam Ahmad 'Mahjoor' (Poet), Abdul Ahad Azad and Master Zinda Koul.
The literary figures who dominated Kashmiri in this period are Zinda Kaul (1884–1965), the universally respected poet of the Bhakti tradition; AA. Azad (1903–68), Dinanath Nadim (1916–88) and of course Mahjoor (1885–1952), who broke the long monotony of mystic poets with a distinctly new personal voice and at the same time created a body of poetry of public protest.