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10 Most Famous Pakistanis – Do you agree?

Sir Mohammad Zafrulla Khan (1893–1985), a distinguished jurist, was several times minister of foreign affairs and later a member of the World Court at The Hague; in 1962, he served as president of the 17th UN General Assembly

Bohemia?
Imran Khan
Imran Khan the boxer
Nadia Ali singer
The villian from Iron Man
Faiz Ahmad Faiz (1911–84), imbued with a strongly socialist spirit, and the Urdu short story writer Saadat Hasan Manto (1912–55). Foremost among Pakistan's artists is Abdur Rahman Chughtai (1899–1975).
Habib Jalib
 
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Sir Mohammad Zafrulla Khan (1893–1985), a distinguished jurist, was several times minister of foreign affairs and later a member of the World Court at The Hague; in 1962, he served as president of the 17th UN General Assembly

Bohemia?
Imran Khan
Imran Khan the boxer
Nadia Ali singer
The villian from Iron Man
Faiz Ahmad Faiz (1911–84), imbued with a strongly socialist spirit, and the Urdu short story writer Saadat Hasan Manto (1912–55). Foremost among Pakistan's artists is Abdur Rahman Chughtai (1899–1975).
Habib Jalib
 
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famous personalities of Pakistan are:
Habib Wali Mohammad - He is from a rich industrial background, still chose singing as his mainstream career and became popular as a ghazal singer in the court of King Bahadur Shah Zafar, the last Mogul emperor.


Ishfaq Ahmed - Ishfaq Ahmed is a famous scientist who is felicitated with various awards in the field of physics. He was once a senior member of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission- PAEC in his long adventurous career.


Shakir Ali- Famous as a teacher and Pakistani artist, Shakir Ali was born in the year 1916 and made the country proud with his works in the field of art and crafts till his last breath.


Kafeel Bhai Ghotki Walay- A painter by profession, who started his career from a very low profile and then gradually became very famous in his field of art and painting that made his country famous worldwide.


Prof. Anna Molika Ahmed- A fine arts pioneer in Pakistan and a famous artist herself, Prof. Anna Molika Ahmed was a person who is always in the minds of the art and sculpture lovers with her skillful art works
 
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Where is Allama Iqbal?!!!!





btw, I like them:

Wasim Vhi
Atif Aslam
Gulam Ali
Afridi
Rahat Ali and Fathe Ali
Imran Khan
Jana and PDF moderator team, lol
 
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I thought Allama Iqbal and Ghalib were posted?
anyways thanks skies... he gave concept of our country east n west.
Is he a the national poet of Bengladesh now also?
 
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I thought Allama Iqbal and Ghalib were posted?
anyways thanks skies... he gave concept of our country east n west.
Is he a the national poet of Bengladesh now also?

Hm, I did no see Allama Iqbal's name in first 50 posts.

No, Kazi Nazrul Islam is the national poet of Bangladesh and he is absolutely great and talent if you can understand Bangla.

Kazi Nazrul Islam - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

BTW, Ghalib is Iranian or Pakistani?
 
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Brother, no doubt he was a prominent Pakistani but A recent Israeli study (P R Kumaraswamy: Beyond the Veil: Israel Pakistan relation, Jaffe Centre for Strategic Studies, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, March 2000) brings to light, has Pakistan’s own `pro-Israeli’ lobby’ has been doing since the word go.

He tried his best to drive Pakistan's foreign policy towards Israel (atleast its recognition)..
So what?At that time there was nothing wrong with friendship with Israel.His services rendered to Pakistan is far greater then any thing else.Israel at that time was legitimate entity and it was not occupying any illegal land at that time.Just leaning towards Arabs because they are Muslims is wrong.It was only after 67 war that Israel started occupying more land.Even some Arab States recognize Israel but you'd like to be more Arabs then Arabs themselves.
 
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back to the topic:

Where is Waqar younis ? banana-swing ?? toe-crushers ??
 
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1. Sir M. A. Jinnah, The Father of Pakistan

2. Imran Khan , Politician and The Captain of the World Cup Winnter Team.

3. Waseem Akram, My Favourite Allrounder and Captain

4. Musharraf, The Onw who had deep Impact on Global Affairs of Pakistan in Recent Times.

5. Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, The Legend

6. A. Q. Khan, The Father of The Islamic Bomb

7. Umar sharif. Famous Pakistani Stage Actor.

8. Madam Noorjahan. Legandary Female Singer.

9. Najam Sethi. An award winning Pakistani journalist, editor, and media personality

10. Benazir Bhutto , The Famous PM.

11. My fav. Amanat chan. Pakistani Stage play Artist.


Yes I was about to add Umar Sharif as well.. His Bakra Kihston pe made Pakistani drama popular in India and other part of world..

Few other people from Pakistan, Who should made in to the list :-

1) Sir Iqbal
2) All Generals, Mr Zia-ul-Haque, Mr Ayub Khan and Mr Parvez Musharraf. Because of them most of the recent history of Pakistan is made.
 
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My List of role models and Famous Pakistanis:pakistan:

Muhammad Ali Jinnah



FATHER OF THE NATION

In the endless corridors of history, a name was added in August 1947. It was that of Quid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah.,the Founder of Pakistan.

Born into a Karachi mercantile family on December 25, 1876,Quid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah had his early schooling at Karachi.Later ,he joined the Lincolin's Inn,to become the youngest Indian barrister to be called to the bar.By sheer native ability and determination ,young Jinnah rose quickly to prominence ,and soon became a successful lawyer.

In 1910 he was elected by Bombay Muslims to the newly constituted Imperial Legislative Council.All through his parliamentry career,which spanned some four decades,he supported or opposed measures solely on their marits.His was also among the most powerful voices on the cause of India's freedom,Indian rights and freedom.

By 1917, Quid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah's reputation as one of the outstanding and highly respected leaders of South-Asian subcontinent was firmly established.He was a prominent member of Congress Party and an outspoken champion India's freedom in the Imperial Legislative Council.Simultaneously, he was the President of all India Muslim-Legue.He brought the Congress and the Legue together, and was chiefly responsible for the Congress-Legue pact (1916),a joint scheme for postwar reforms.For his untiring efforts to effect a communal settelement ,he was hailed as the "ambassador of Hindu-Muslim Unity".

Since he stud for civic freedoms,he resigned from the Imperial Council in 1919,when the Rowlett Bill was passed into law; and since he stood for "Oredered Progress",moderation,gradualism, and constitutionalism,he left the Congress in 1920 when it opted for M.K. Gandhi's direction action and non-cooperation plank.Jinnah's ascendency to national leadership had received a serious setback.

Returning to active politics after three years , Quid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah re-organizes League of which he was President since 1916,and devoted the next seven years to bringing about unity among Muslim ranks.To him a Hindu-Muslim settelment was still a precondition for Indian freedom.He attended several unity conferences,authored the Delhi Muslim proposals (1927),pledged for the incorporation of basic Muslim demands in the Nehru report (1928),fourmulated the "fourteen points" (1929),as minimum Muslim demands for any constitutional settelment and as a riposte to Nehru report ,and participated in the Round Table conference (1930) in London ,called the British to formulate a new constitution of India.

Despaired alike of the "negative" Congress attitude and a chronic disunity in Muslim ranks,he was into self-exile in London (1931),but returned to India. In 1934 at the fervent appeal of Muslims,became the President of reunited Muslim League,and assumed its leadership.

When Quid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah took up the leadership of the Muslims in 1936,they were a mass of demorilised men and women,politically disorganized and without a clear-cut political programme.During the next three years , Quid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah made energetic efforts to broaden his mass support ,bringing the Muslims on the one platform,breating new life into the moribund League, democrating its structure and organizational network, giving it a coherent all-India policy and programme,and made Muslim India a power to be reckoned with.By 1939 he had become the sole spokesman of the Indian Muslims,their Quid-e-Azam ("the Great Leader").

In 1940 he spelled out the concept of Muslim nationhood ,asserting that "We are a nation ,with our own distinctive culture and civilization ,language and litrature ,art and architecture, names and nomen culture,sense of value and propertion,legal laws and moral code,customs and calendar,history and traditions ,aptitudes and ambitions ,in short , we have our own distinctive outlook on and of life.By all canons of international law we are a nation".And on that basis of demand the setting up of an independent Muslim homeland in the predominantly Muslim northwestern and eastern India.

Despite the vehement opposition of the Congress and the antipathy of the British to his demand, Quid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah organized his movement gathered momentum within a few years ,became the central issue in all subsequent constitutional proposals, and was overwhelmingly voted for by Muslims in the 1945-46 general elections.Pakistan was finally established on 14th August, 1947, and Quid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, then became the first Governer General.

Indeed, few nations in the world started on their career with less resources and in more difficult circumstances than Pakistan. That it survived at all was largely the hardwork of one man Quid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, who filled in need for a charismatic leader at the critical juncture in the nation's history. He deftly exploited the immense prestige and utmost loyalty he commanded among the people to energize them, to raise their morals ,and canalise the profound feelings of petriotism the coming of freedom had generated, along constructive channels.Thoug tired and in poor health, Quid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah carried the haviest part of the burden in that first, critical year. He devoted the last year of his life to the onrous task of consolidating Pakistan and securing its survival. He died on 11th September, 1948.

Quid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah believed in peace within and without ,and in the principle of "live and let live". Actually, the Pakistan demand itslef, as defined by him ,was based on this principle : "let the two major nations, Hindus and Muslims,manage their affairs in their respective aread according to their own rights and traditions and unthwarted by the instruction of each other, thus paving the way for two nations to live in peace and good neighbourliness with each other in the Subcontinent. "Pakistan presupposed freedom for the Subcontinent as a whole".

His passion for freedom was ,however not restricted either to Muslims or Hindus; It extended to all the enslaved people of the world struggling to liberate themselves from foreign yoke. While engrossed all the while in the consuming task of wresting freedom for Muslims of the South-Asian Subcontinent, he took timeout on on various occasions to lend his and Muslim India's moral support to freedom movements in other Asian and African countries.

One of the great nation builders, Quid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, invites comparison with some of the greatest names in modern times : Washington, Bismark, Cavour, Gribaldi, Lenin, Ataturk, What, however, makes him so remarkable even in the galaxy of nation- builders is the fact that while others assumed the leadership of traditionally well-defined nations and led them to freedom, he created a nation out of an inchoate and backward minority and established a cultural and national home for it. And all that within a decade.

The Quid was the recipient of some of the greatest tributes paid to any one in modern times ,some of them even from those who held a polarized viewpoint, The Agha Khan considered him "the greatest man he ever met"; Beverly Nichols, the auther of virdict of India, called him "the most important man in Asia"; and Dr. Kailasnath Katju, the West Bengal Governer in 1948, thought of him as "an outstanding figure of this century, not only in India but in whole world"; While Adul Rehman Azzam Pasha, Secretary General of Arab League, called him "one of the greatest leader in the Muslim world", the Grand Mufti of Palestine considered his death as a "great loss" for the entire world of Islam. It was ,however,given to Sarat Chandra Bose, leader of the forward block Wing of the Indian National Congress to sum up his personal and political achievements. "Mr. Jinnah" he said on his death on 1948, "was great as a lawyer, once great as a Congressman, great as a Leader of Muslims, great as a world politician and diplomat, and greatest as of all as a man of action. By Mr. Jinnah's passing away, the world has lost one of the greatest statesmen and Pakistan its life-giver, philosopher and guide."

Such was Quid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah,the man and his mission ; such the range of accomplishment and achievements.
what a personality


Sir Syed Ahmad Khan [1817-1898]



The greatest Muslim reformer and statesman of the 19th Century, Sir Syed Ahmad Khan was born in Delhi on October 17, 1817. His family on the maternal and paternal side had close contacts with the Mughal court. His maternal grandfather, Khwajah Farid was a Wazir in the court of Akbar Shah II. His paternal grandfather Syed Hadi held a mansab and the title of Jawwad Ali Khan in the court of Alamgir II. His father, Mir Muttaqi, had been close to Akbar Shah since the days of his prince-hood. Syed Ahmad's mother, Aziz-un-Nisa, took a great deal of interest in the education and upbringing of her son. She imposed a rigid discipline on him and Sir Syed himself admitted that her supervision counted for much in the formation of his character.
The early years of Sir Syed's life were spent in the atmosphere of the family of a Mughal noble. There was nothing in young Syed's habits or behavior to suggest that he was different from other boys, though he was distinguished on account of his extraordinary physique. As a boy he learnt swimming and archery, which were favorite sports of the well-to-do class in those days.

Sir Syed received his education under the old system. He learnt to read the Quran under a female teacher at his home. After this, he was put in the charge of Maulvi Hamid-ud-Din, the first of his private tutors. Having completed a course in Persian and Arabic, he took to the study of mathematics, which was a favorite subject of the maternal side of his family. He later became interested in medicine and studied some well-known books on the subject. However, he soon gave it up without completing the full course. At the age of 18 or 19 his formal education came to an end but he continued his studies privately. He started taking a keen interest in the literary gatherings and cultural activities of the city.

The death of his father in 1838 left the family in difficulties. Thus young Syed was compelled at the early age of 21 to look for a career. He decided to enter the service of the East India Company. He started his career as Sarishtedar in a court of law. He became Naib Munshi in 1839 and Munshi in 1841. In 1858 he was promoted and appointed as Sadar-us-Sadur at Muradabad. In 1867 he was promoted and posted as the judge of the Small Causes Court. He retired in 1876. He spent the rest of his life for Aligarh College and the Muslims of South Asia.

Sir Syed's greatest achievement was his Aligarh Movement, which was primarily an educational venture. He established Gulshan School at Muradabad in 1859, Victoria School at Ghazipur in 1863, and a scientific society in 1864. When Sir Syed was posted at Aligarh in 1867, he started the Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental School in the city. Sir Syed got the opportunity to visit England in 1869-70. During his stay, he studied the British educational system and appreciated it. On his return home he decided to make M. A. O. High School on the pattern of British boarding schools. The School later became a college in 1875. The status of University was given to the college after the death of Sir Syed in 1920. M. A. O. High School, College and University played a big role in the awareness of the Muslims of South Asia.

Unlike other Muslim leaders of his time, Sir Syed was of the view that Muslims should have friendship with the British if they want to take their due rights. To achieve this he did a lot to convince the British that Muslims were not against them. On the other hand, he tried his best to convince the Muslims that if they did not befriend the British, they could not achieve their goals. Sir Syed wrote many books and journals to remove the misunderstandings between Muslims and the British. The most significant of his literary works were his pamphlets "Loyal Muhammadans of India" and "Cause of Indian Revolt". He also wrote a commentary on the Bible, in which he attempted to prove that Islam is the closest religion to Christianity.

Sir Syed asked the Muslims of his time not to participate in politics unless and until they got modern education. He was of the view that Muslims could not succeed in the field of western politics without knowing the system. He was invited to attend the first session of the Indian National Congress and to join the organization but he refused to accept the offer. He also asked the Muslims to keep themselves away from the Congress and predicted that the party would prove to be a pure Hindu party in the times to come. By establishing the Muhammadan Educational Conference, he provided Muslims with a platform on which he could discuss their political problems. Sir Syed is known as the founder of Two-Nation Theory in the modern era.

In the beginning of 1898 he started keeping abnormally quiet. For hours he would not utter a word to friends who visited him. Medical aid proved ineffective. His condition became critical on 24th of March. On the morning of March 27, a severe headache further worsened it. He expired the same evening in the house of Haji Ismail Khan, where he had been shifted 10 or 12 days earlier. He was buried the following afternoon in the compound of the Mosque of Aligarh College. He was mourned by a large number of friends and admirers both within and outside South Asia.

Sir Muhammad Iqbal



9th of November, what is the importance of this day, why it's been declared as a national holiday? Well, it's the day when our great national poet Allama Muhammad Iqbal was born!
A brief intro of Allama Iqbal:
Sir Muhammad Iqbal born (November 9, 1877 – April 21, 1938) was a Muslim poet, philosopher and politician born in Sialkot, British India (now in Pakistan), whose poetry in Urdu and Persian is considered to be among the greatest of the modern era, and whose vision of an independent state for the Muslims of British India was to inspire the creation of Pakistan.
Most of Allama Iqbal's writings were devoted to a revival of Islam. In his presidential address to the Muslim League in 1930, he first suggested that the Muslims of northwestern India should demand a separate nation for themselves.

Some of his writings include:

Bang-e-Dara (The Call of the Marching Bell)
Asrar-e-Khudi (Secrets of the Self) in Persian.
Payam-e-Mashriq (The Message Of The East)
Tulu'i Islam (Dawn of Islam).

Most of his work was in Persian however, he wrote renowned poems in Urdu too!

Today, Muslims are in crises, they are fighting against each other, they have forgotten the preaching of our Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H). It's time to remember what they have left behind! Allama Iqbal would never have dreamt of such a Pakistan!

Choudhary Rahmat Ali



Chaudhry Rahmat Ali was born on November 16, 1897 in village Balachaur, district Hoshiarpur, Punjab. He got his early education in Jalandhar and graduated from Islamia College, Lahore in 1919. In 1930, he left for Cambridge (England) for his postgraduate studies in Law. He spent the rest of his life in England and died there.


From his early years Chaudhry Rahmat Ali was convinced that the destiny of the Indian Muslims lay in carving out a separate independent homeland of their own in North-Western India and he relentlessly pursued this goal throughout his life.

The credit for coining the word "PAKISTAN' (meaning Land of the Pure) goes to him when he first used it in his pamphlet titled "Now or Never" published on January 28, 1933. Each alphabet in the word "Pakistan" stood symbolically for the territories that were later to constitute Pakistan i.e. 'P' for Punjab, ' A' for Afghania (i.e. the NWFP), 'K' for Kashmir, 's.' for Sindh, and 'TAN' for Baluchistan. This name soon caught the imagination of the multitudes and even the foreign newspapers began to call the proposed country by this name.

Chaudhry Rahmat Ali launched the Pakistan National Movement by issuing and distributing pamphlets, tracts, handbills and other literature. A weekly newspaper under the title 'Pakistan' was also started.


Chaudhry Rahmat Ali came to Pakistan on a short visit and then went back to Cambridge (England) where he died on February 3, 1951.
 
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Fatima Jinnah [1893-1967]



Miss Fatima Jinnah, younger sister of Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, was born in 1893. Of his seven brothers and sisters, she was the closest to the Quaid. Jinnah became her guardian upon the death of their father in 1901. Due to her brother's keen interest, and despite strident family opposition, Miss Fatima received excellent early education. She joined the Bandra Convent in 1902. In 1919 she got admitted to the highly competitive University of Calcutta where she attended the Dr. Ahmad Dental College. After she qualified, Jinnah went along with her idea of opening a dental clinic in Bombay and helped her set it up in 1923.
Miss Fatima Jinnah initially lived with her brother for about eight years till 1918, when he got married to Rutanbai. Upon Rutanbai's death in February 1929, Miss Jinnah wound up her clinic, moved into Jinnah's bungalow, and took charge of his house; thus beginning the life-long companionship that lasted till Jinnah's death on September 11, 1948.
 
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Faiz Ahmed Faiz, pseud. of Faiz Ahmed (1910-1984)

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Pakistani poet and journalist, who combined in his poetry the themes of love, beauty, and political ideals into a vision of a better world and goodness. Faiz's first language was Punjabi but he gained fame with his poems written in Urdu, a language similar to Arabic. Due to his opposition to the government and military dictators, Faiz spent several years in prison and was forced to go into exile at different times in his career. Next to Muhammad Iqbal (1877-1938), Faiz is one of the best-known poets of Pakistan.

The suspense that lasts between killers and weapons
as they gamble: who will die and whose turn is next?
That bet has now been place on me.
So bring the order for my execution.
I must see with whose seals the margins are stamped,
recognize the signatures on the scroll.
(from 'So Bring the Order for My Execution', trans. by Agha Shadid Ali)
Faiz Ahmed Faiz was born in Sialkot in the Punjab, then a part of India under British rule. His family were well-to-do landowners. Faiz's father was a prominent lawyer, who was interested in literature, and whose friends included several prominent literary figures, including Sir Muhammad Iqbal (1873-1938), the national poet of Pakistan. Faiz received his education at mission schools in Sialkot in the English language, but he also learned Urdu, Persian, and Arabic. His first poems Faiz wrote already at school. He studied English and Arabic literatures at Government College, Lahore, receiving in 1932 his M.A. in English, and in Arabic from Oriental College, Lahore. Besides formal studies, very important for Faiz's development was participating in the activities of literary circles, which gathered at homes of established writers. After graduating he worked as a teacher from the mid-1930s in Amritsar and Lahore.

In the 1930s Faiz came under the influence of the leftist Progressive Movement. Under the leadership of Sajjad Zaheer (1905-1973), authors were expected to follow the dictates of the Socialist Realism, but by the 1950s the movement had ceased to be an effective literary force. During World War II, Faiz served in the Indian army in Delhi, and in 1944 he was promoted to the rank of Lieut. Colonel. After the Islamic republic of Pakistan was established in 1947 the country experienced an era of chronic political instability, heightened by tensions between Hindus and Muslims. With the division of the subcontinent, Faiz resigned from the army and moved to Pakistan with his family. Alys Faiz, whom he had married in 1941, later published a book of memoirs, Over My Shoulder (1993), about her life as a British expatriate living in Pakistan. Alys died in 2003. India's awakening Faiz called a ''night-bitten'' morning, a ''pockmarked'' daybreak. Faiz became editor of the leftist English-langauge daily, the Pakistan Times. He also worked as managing editor of the Urdu daily Imroz, and was actively involved in organizing trade unions.

In 1951 Faiz and a number of army officers were implicated in the so-called Rawalpindi Conspiracy case and arrested under Safety Act. The goverment authorities alleged that Faiz and others were planning a coup d'etat. He spent four years in prison under a sentence of death and was released in 1955. During this perod Alys Faiz worked for the Pakistan Times to support his family. Faiz became the secretary of the National Coucil of the Arts, and in 1962 he was awarded the Lenin Peace Prize by the Soviet Union. During his years in exile he was editor of the magazine Lotus in Moscow, London and Beirut. In Pakistan his poems, which renewed the traditional romantic imagery of Urdu poetry, gained a huge popularity. Faiz also supported to the use of regional languages of Pakistan in education, the media, and literary expression. After a period of exile in war-torn Lebanon from 1979 to 1982, Faiz returned to his home country. He died in Lahore on November 20, 1984.

Faiz's first collections of poetry, Naqsh-e faryadi (1943), Dast-e saba (1952), and Zindan Namah (1956), were politically motivated, and include some of his most famous poems based on his prison experiences. Faiz describes his life behind the walls, in confinement, finding consolation in the thought that "though tyrants may command that lamps be smashed / in rooms where lovers are destined to meet / they cannot snuff out the moon..." (from 'A Prison Evening') His tone is introspective along the conventions of ghazal, the favorite form of traditional Urdu poetry. But Faiz also expresses feelings of other political prisoners when he writes: "I make a toast to my friends everywhere, / here in my homeland and scross the world: 'Let us drink, my dear ones, to human beauty, / to the loveliness of earth.'" (from 'Solitary Confinement'). Fredric Jameson has argued in his essay 'Third World Literature in the Era of Mulatrinational Capitalism' (Social Text, fall 1986) that "the story of the private individual destiny is always an allegory of the embattled situation of the public third-world culture and society". In one of his prison poems Faiz paralles his own fate with the authoritarian system outside the prison : "If you look at the city from here / there is no one fully in control of his senses. / Every young man bears the brand of a criminal, / every young woman the emblem of a slave." (from 'If You Look at the City from Here')

In spite of his Marxist beliefs, Faiz did not burden his poems with ideological rhetoric. He fused classic traditional forms of poetry with new symbols derived from Western political ideas. However, in an interview Faiz has criticized the view that a poet "should always present some kind of philosophical, political or some other sort of thesis..." Like Muhammad Iqbal, he reinterpreted the most important theme in the Urdu ghazal, the theme of love. The word ghazal comes from Arabic and has been translated as "to talk with women" or "to talk of women." Faiz often addressed his poem to his "beloved", who can be interpreted as his muse, his country, or his concept of beauty or social change. "Your beauty still delights me, but what can I do? / The world knows how to deal out pain, apart from passion, / and manna for the heart, beyond realm of love. / Don't ask from me, Beloved, love like that one long ago." (from 'Don't Ask Me Now, Beloved') The traditional beloved of ghazal cannot offer the poet answer to human suffering and social problems - "Bitter threads began to unravel before me / as I went into alleys and in open markets / saw bodies plastered with ash, bathed in blood. / I saw them sold and bought / again and again. / This too deserves my attention."

For further reading: Encyclopedia of World Literature in the 20th Century, vol. 2, ed. by Steven R. Serafin (1999); Over My Shoulder by Alys Faiz (1993); The Tradition and Innovation in the Poetry of Faiz by G. Ch. Narang (1985); Dear Heart: To Faiz in Prison, 1951-1955 by Alys Faiz (1985); 'Tradition and Innovation in Urdu Poetry' by G. Narang, in Poetry and Renaissance: Kumaran Asan Birth Centenary Volume (1974); 'The Pakistani Poet Faiz Ahmed Faiz' by M.A. Malik, in Afro-Asian Writings, 22 (1974); A History of Urdu Literature by M. Sadiq (1964) - For further information: Faiz Ahmed Faiz - Faiz Ahmed Faiz (1911-1984) - Faiz Ahmed Faiz: Life and Ghazals - Faiz Ahmad Faiz - Faiz Ahmad Faiz (1914-1978): Selected Poems - Faiz Ahmed Faiz - Faiz Ahmad Faiz, interview by Dr. Ebadat Brelvi - Note: The exact date of Faiz's birth is unclear - he used the date 7th January 1910, in some sources it is February 13th, 1911; or the year 1912.
Selected works:

Naqsh-e faryadi, 1943
Dast-e saba, 1952
Zindan namad, 1956
Mizan, 1964
Dast-e tah-e sang, 1965
Harf harf, 1965
Sar-e vadi-ye sina, 1971
Poems by Faiz, 1971 (trans. by V.G. Kiernan)
*** di ***, 1975
Sham-e shahri-yaran, 1978
Mere dil, mere musafir, 1980
Nuskha-Hai-Wafa, 1984
The True Subject: Selected Poems of Faiz Ahmed Faiz, 1987 (trans. Naomi Lazard)
The Rebel's Silhouette, 1991 (trans. by Agha Shahid Ali)
The Rebel's Silhouette: Selected Poems, 1995 (rev. ed. trans. by Agha Shahid Ali)
Poems of Faiz Ahmad Faiz: A Poet of the Third World, 1998 (trans. by Mohammed Zakir, and M.N. Menai)
100 poems by Faiz Ahmed Faiz, 1911-1984, 2002 ed. by Sarvat Rahman
Selected poems of Faiz Ahmad Faiz: With original Urdu text, roman and Hindi transliteration and poetical translation into English, 2002
Culture And Identity: Selected English Writings of Faiz Ahmad Faiz, 2006
 
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Liaquat Ali Khan [1896-1951]



Nawabzada Liaquat Ali Khan, the second son of Nawab Rustam Ali Khan, was born on October 1, 1896, in a Madal Pathan (Nausherwan) family. He graduated in 1918 from M. A. O. College, Aligarh. After his graduation, he was offered a job in the Indian Civil Services, but he rejected the offer on the plea that he wanted to serve his nation. He married his cousin, Jehangira Begum in 1918. After his marriage, he went to London for higher education. In 1921, he obtained a degree in Law from Oxford and was called to Bar at Inner Temple in 1922.
On his return from England in 1923, Liaquat Ali Khan decided to enter politics with the objective of liberating his homeland from the foreign yoke. Right from the very beginning, he was determined to eradicate the injustices and ill treatment meted out to the Indian Muslims by the British. In his early life, Liaquat Ali, like most of the Muslim leaders of his time, believed in Indian Nationalism. But his views gradually changed. The Congress leaders invited him to join their party, but he refused and joined the Muslim League in 1923. Under the leadership of Quaid-i-Azam, the Muslim League held its annual session in May 1924 in Lahore. The aim of this session was to revive the League. Liaquat Ali Khan attended this conference along many other young Muslims.

Dr. Abdus Salam

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Abdus Salam
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1979 Biography
Abdus Salam was born in Jhang, a small town in what is now Pakistan, in 1926. His father was an official in the Department of Education in a poor farming district. His family has a long tradition of piety and learning.

When he cycled home from Lahore, at the age of 14, after gaining the highest marks ever recorded for the Matriculation Examination at the University of the Punjab, the whole town turned out to welcome him. He won a scholarship to Government College, University of the Punjab, and took his MA in 1946. In the same year he was awarded a scholarship to St. John's College, Cambridge, where he took a BA (honours) with a double First in mathematics and physics in 1949. In 1950 he received the Smith's Prize from Cambridge University for the most outstanding pre-doctoral contribution to physics. He also obtained a PhD in theoretical physics at Cambridge; his thesis, published in 1951, contained fundamental work in quantum electrodynamics which had already gained him an international reputation.

Salam returned to Pakistan in 1951 to teach mathematics at Government College, Lahore, and in 1952 became head of the Mathematics Department of the Punjab University. He had come back with the intention of founding a school of research, but it soon became clear that this was impossible. To pursue a career of research in theoretical physics he had no alternative at that time but to leave his own country and work abroad. Many years later he succeeded in finding a way to solve the heartbreaking dilemma faced by many young and gifted theoretical physicists from developing countries. At the ICTP, Trieste, which he created, he instituted the famous "Associateships" which allowed deserving young physicists to spend their vacations there in an invigorating atmosphere, in close touch with their peers in research and with the leaders in their own field, losing their sense of isolation and returning to their own country for nine months of the academic year refreshed and recharged.

In 1954 Salam left his native country for a lectureship at Cambridge, and since then has visited Pakistan as adviser on science policy. His work for Pakistan has, however, been far-reaching and influential. He was a member of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission, a member of the Scientific Commission of Pakistan and was Chief Scientific Adviser to the President from 1961 to 1974.

Since 1957 he has been Professor of Theoretical Physics at Imperial College, London, and since 1964 has combined this position with that of Director of the ICTP, Trieste.

For more than forty years he has been a prolific researcher in theoretical elementary particle physics. He has either pioneered or been associated with all the important developments in this field, maintaining a constant and fertile flow of brilliant ideas. For the past thirty years he has used his academic reputation to add weight to his active and influential participation in international scientific affairs. He has served on a number of United Nations committees concerned with the advancement of science and technology in developing countries.

To accommodate the astonishing volume of activity that he undertakes, Professor Salam cuts out such inessentials as holidays, parties and entertainments. Faced with such an example, the staff of the Centre find it very difficult to complain that they are overworked.

He has a way of keeping his administrative staff at the ICTP fully alive to the real aim of the Centre - the fostering through training and research of the advancement of theoretical physics, with special regard to the needs of developing countries. Inspired by their personal regard for him and encouraged by the fact that he works harder than any of them, the staff cheerfully submit to working conditions that would be unthinkable here at the (International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna (IAEA). The money he received from the Atoms for Peace Medal and Award he spent on setting up a fund for young Pakistani physicists to visit the ICTP. He uses his share of the Nobel Prize entirely for the benefit of physicists from developing countries and does not spend a penny of it on himself or his family.

Abdus Salam is known to be a devout Muslim, whose religion does not occupy a separate compartment of his life; it is inseparable from his work and family life. He once wrote: "The Holy Quran enjoins us to reflect on the verities of Allah's created laws of nature; however, that our generation has been privileged to glimpse a part of His design is a bounty and a grace for which I render thanks with a humble heart."

The biography was written by Miriam Lewis, now at IAEA, Vienna, who was at one time on the staff of ICTP (International Centre For Theoretical Physics, Trieste).

From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1979, Editor Wilhelm Odelberg, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1980

This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.



Abdus Salam died on November 21, 1996.
 
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