Ghazi Sial Explained

Ghazi Sial
Birth Date:c. 1933
Birth Place:Kotka Akundan, Mandan, Bannu District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, British India
Death Date:27 November 2019
Occupation:Poet, folk songwriter
Language:Pashto
Nationality:Pakistani
Notableworks:Banzey, Kashmala, Mangarai, Zama Sandaray Sta Da Para
Awards:Pride of Performance (2006)

Mohammad Ghazi (– 27 November 2019), known by his pen name Ghazi Sial and by an honorific title in Pashto literature as Baba Sandara, was a Pakistani poet and Pashto folk song writer. He wrote sixteen books in Pashto language.

Awards and recognition

Government of Pakistan conferred Pride of Performance award in 2006 upon him in recognition of his literary contribution to Pashto poetry.[1]

Biography

Mohammad Ghazi was born in 1933 at Kotka Akundan village of Bannu District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. He learned classics in Pashto, Arabic and Persian language from his father, Abdul Ghafoor Shah, who was a literary figure and a noted religious scholar. Mohammad Ghazi started composing Pashto folk songs in his late teens. Then he worked for Radio Pakistan at Peshawar for 30 years where he used to write Pashto folk songs. His books Banzey, Kashmala, Mangarai and Zama Sandaray Sta Da Para are among the popular Pashto poetic works he wrote during his literary career.[2]

His folk songs were sung by popular Pashto-language vocalists including Zarsanga, Gulnar Begum, Kishwar Sultana among others. He also wrote scripts, storylines and dialogues for nearly 50 Pashto films.[2]

He was recognized as a prominent poet both in Pakistan and in Afghanistan.[3]

Notes and References

  1. News: President confers 192 civilian awards . https://web.archive.org/web/20070927223940/http://www.dawn.com/2005/08/14/nat1.htm . 27 September 2007. 14 August 2005. Dawn (newspaper). 2 January 2021.
  2. News: Noted Pashto poet Ghazi Sial dies at 86. Dawn (newspaper). 28 November 2019. Sher Alam Shinwari. 2 January 2021.
  3. News: Pashto writer Ghazi Sial dies. The Nation (newspaper). 28 November 2019. 2 January 2021.