Condolence, Events, Karachi, Tribute

Shamsur Rahman Farooqi remembered

The Arts Council of Pakistan, Karachi, on Saturday evening held an event to pay tribute to the renowned Indian critic, fiction writer and linguist Shamsur Rahman Farooqi who passed away last year on Dec 25. Prof Sahar Ansari, one of the three speakers present in the council’s Josh Malihabadi Library, said Farooqi sahib was an institution who was an expert in undertaking a variety of [literary] works in a masterful way. Although he had achievements in various genres of literature, even if he had focused on one of them, he still would have been a big name in the field. Giving this argument, Prof Ansari touched upon the late scholar’s great critical accomplishment Sher-i-Shor Angez. He argued it was important on two counts. One, it provided the reader with the understanding of the great poet Mir Taqi Mir’s poetry on the level of meaning (as is done at educational institutions). Two, it also discussed the poet with reference to philosophical theories such as deconstruction and hermeneutics.

Poet Iftikhar Arif who joined online from Islamabad said after M. H. Askari, Farooqi sahib was the most prominent name in criticism. He launched his literary magazine Shabkhun in the 1960s as a movement. He was a voracious reader who had read literatures from all parts of the world (Persian, Arabic, western). If he had not done anything else except translating his novel Kai Chand Thay Sir-i-Aasman into English alone, he still would have been one of the most important literary figures. His death is a huge loss to the world of letters.

Poet Yasmeen Hameed, who spoke from Lahore, said Farooqi sahib was an extraordinary man. He came to LUMS twice where she was his host and got to know him better on a personal level. He was like a teacher to her. She has learned a great deal from his writings. “He was a thinker. In our part of the world, critics generally do not find the courage to talk about many things with clarity. That was not the case with Farooqi sahib. His criticism was transparent.”

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Arts Council of Pakistan Karachi