Faiz Ahmad Faiz

Poet

Birthday February 13, 1911

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Narowal District, Punjab, British India (now in Punjab, Pakistan)

DEATH DATE 1984-11-20, Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan (73 years old)

Nationality India

#26612 Most Popular

1911

Faiz Ahmad Faiz (Punjabi,, ; 13 February 1911 – 20 November 1984) was a Pakistani poet and author of Punjabi and Urdu literature.

Faiz was one of the most celebrated, popular, and influential Urdu writers of his time, and his works and ideas remain widely influential today in Pakistan and beyond.

Outside of literature, he has been described as "a man of wide experience", having worked as a teacher, military officer, journalist, trade unionist, and broadcaster.

Born in Sialkot District, Punjab, during the British rule, Faiz studied at Government College and Oriental College and went on to serve in the British Indian Army.

Faiz Ahmad Faiz was born into a Punjabi Jat family on 13 February 1911, in Kala Qader (present-day Faiz Nagar), in Sialkot District, Punjab, British India.

Faiz hailed from an academic family that was well known in literary circles.

His home was often the scene of a gathering of local poets and writers who met to promote the literacy movement in his native province.

Faiz's father, Sultan Muhammad Khan, was a prominent barrister who worked for the British Government and an autodidact who wrote and published the biography of Amir Abdur Rahman, an Emir of Imperial Afghanistan.

Khan was the son of a peasant whose ancestors migrated from Afghanistan to British India.

Khan worked as a shepherd as a child but was ultimately able to study law at Cambridge University.

Following the Muslim tradition, Faiz's family directed him to study Islamic studies at the local mosque to be oriented to the basics of religious studies by Maulana Hafiz Muhammad Ibrahim Mir Sialkoti, an Ahl-i Hadith scholar.

Following the Muslim tradition, he learned Arabic, Persian, Urdu, and the Quran.

Faiz was also a Pakistan nationalist, and often said, "purify your hearts, so you can save the country..."

His father later pulled him from Islamic school because Faiz, who went to a madrasa for a few days found that the impoverished children there, were not comfortable having him around and ridiculed him.

Faiz came to the madrasa in neat clothes, in a horse-drawn carriage, while the students of the school were from very poor backgrounds and used to sit on the floor on straw mats.

Faiz's close friend, Dr. Ayub Mirza, recalls that Faiz came home and told his father he was not going to attend the madrasa anymore.

His father then registered him at the Scotch Mission School which was managed and run by a local British family.

1926

In 1926, Faiz enrolled in Department of Languages and Fine Arts of the Government College, Lahore.

While there, he was greatly influenced by Shams-ul-Ulema, Professor Mir Hassan who taught Arabic and Professor Pitras Bukhari.

Professor Hasan had also taught the renowned philosopher, poet, and politician of South Asia, Dr. Muhammad Iqbal.

In 1926, Faiz attained his BA with Honors in Arabic, under the supervision of Professor Mir Hassan.

1930

In 1930, Faiz joined the post-graduate program of the Government College, obtaining an MA in English literature in 1932, and wrote his master's thesis on the poetry of Robert Browning.

The same year, Faiz completed a first-class degree at Punjab University's Oriental College.

It was during his college years that he met M. N. Roy and Muzaffar Ahmed who influenced him to become a member of the Communist Party.

In addition to Urdu, English, and Arabic, Faiz was also fluent in French and Persian.

1935

In 1935 Faiz joined the faculty of Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College at Amritsar, serving as a lecturer in English and British literature.

1936

In 1936, Faiz joined a literary movement, (PWM) and was appointed its first secretary by his fellow Marxist Sajjad Zaheer.

In East and West-Pakistan, the movement gained considerable support in civil society.

1937

Later in 1937, Faiz moved to Lahore to reunite with his family after accepting the professorship at the Hailey College of Commerce, initially teaching introductory courses on economics and commerce.

1938

In 1938, he became editor-in-chief of the monthly Urdu magazine "Adab-e-Latif (lit. Belles Letters) until 1946. In 1941, Faiz published his first literary book "Naqsh-e-Faryadi" (lit. Imprints) and joined the Pakistan Arts Council (PAC) in 1947.

Faiz was a good friend of Soviet poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko who once said "In Faiz's autobiography... is his poetry, the rest is just a footnote".

1951

After the partition of India, Faiz served as editor-in-chief of two major newspapers — the English language daily Pakistan Times and the Urdu daily Imroze. He was also leading member of the Communist Party before his arrest and imprisonment in 1951 for his alleged part in a conspiracy to overthrow the Liaquat administration and replace it with a left-wing, pro-Soviet government.

Faiz was released after four years in prison and spent his time in Moscow and London, becoming a notable member of the Progressive Writers' Movement.

After the downfall of Ayub Khan's government, and the Independence of Bangladesh, he worked as an aide to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, but exiled himself to Beirut after Bhutto's execution at the hands of Zia ul-Haq.

Faiz was a well-known Marxist and is said to have been "a progressive who remained faithful to Marxism."

Critics have noted that Faiz took the tenets of Marxism where Muhammad Iqbal had left it, and relayed it to a younger generation of Muslims who were considered more open to change, more receptive to egalitarianism, and had a greater concern for the poor.

1962

Faiz was the first Asian poet to be awarded the Lenin Peace Prize (1962) by the Soviet Union and was also nominated for the Nobel Prize in literature.

1979

Literary critic Fateh Muhammad Malik argues that while initially Faiz was more of a secular Marxist he eventually subscribed to Islamic socialism as his life progressed, as his poems getting more religious in tone over the years demonstrate, even suggesting that Faiz ultimately aimed for an Islamic revolution, having endorsed the 1979 Iranian revolution.

1990

He was posthumously honoured when the Pakistan Government conferred upon him the nation's highest civil award — the Nishan-e-Imtiaz — in 1990.

2011

Faiz attended Murray College at Sialkot for intermediate studies (11th and 12th grade).