Dewan Mohammad Azraf | |
Native Name: | দেওয়ান মোহাম্মদ আজরফ |
Birth Date: | 25 October 1906 |
Birth Place: | Teghoria, Assam, British India |
Death Place: | Dhaka, Bangladesh |
Nationality: | Bangladeshi |
Awards: | Ekushey Padak |
Alma Mater: | Murari Chand College University of Dhaka |
Relatives: | Hason Raja (grandfather) |
Dewan Mohammad Azraf (Bengali: দেওয়ান মোহাম্মদ আজরফ; 1908–1999) was a Bengali philosopher, teacher, author, politician, journalist and activist. In 1993, he was honoured as a National Professor in Bangladesh. He was also a supporter of the Bengali Language Movement. For his support of the movement, he was dismissed from the post of the principal of Sunamganj College in 1954, the same year he was promoted to the post. His support was particularly influential when he edited the Nao Belal in 1948. He was actively involved with Kaikobad Sahitya Majlish (1972–99).[1]
Influenced by the thought of Muhammad Iqbal, he has been described as "a prolific writer" who "produced sixty monographs, over 1,000 articles in Bangla and English, 109 novels, poems, songs, and ninety short stories. His works range from literature, arts, music, and religion to philosophy."[2] [3]
Azraf was born on 1 January 1908 into Teghoria, Sunamganj, Eastern Bengal and Assam, British Raj (now, Sylhet Division, Bangladesh) in the home of his maternal grandfather, the poet Hason Raja. He completed his schooling at the Middle English School in Duhalia. He passed BA with distinction from Murari Chand College, Sylhet in 1930 and received MA in philosophy from the University of Dhaka in 1932.[4] As a college student, he was able get Kazi Nazrul Islam to visit Sylhet.[5]
Azraf joined Sunamganj College as a teacher in 1948 and principal in 1954. He was dismissed from college for supporting the Bengali Language Movement. After his dismissal from Sunamganj College, he taught at various colleges. In 1967, he was appointed the principal of Abujar Ghifari College in Dhaka, where he served till 1980. He taught part-time at the departments of philosophy and Islamic studies of the University of Dhaka from 1973 to 1990.
A supporter of Abdul Hamid Khan Bhasani, he joined the Muslim League in 1946 in protest of the treatment of Muslim immigrants in Assam, and afterward was elected to the Assam Provincial Committee. He also served 10 months of a prison sentence for violation of Section 144. He helped the formation of the Kendriya Muslim Sahitya Sangsad unit in Sylhet and served as its president from 1940 to 1943. He was a member, as well as a treasurer for some time, of the Pakistan Philosophical Congress. From 1984 to 1989, he served as the president of the Bangladesh Philosophical Association.
Azraf died on November 1, 1999.[6]
Some of his notable publications include: