Kazi Abdul Wadud | |
Birth Date: | 26 April 1894 |
Birth Place: | Faridpur District, Bengal Presidency, British India (now in Bangladesh) |
Alma Mater: | Presidency University, Kolkata Kolkata University |
Death Place: | Calcutta, West Bengal, India |
Kazi Abdul Wadud (26 April 1894 - 19 May 1970) was a Bengali essayist, prominent critic, dramatist and biographer. He was born into a lower-middle-class family, in larger Faridpur (present) Rajbari, Pangsha. His father's name was Kazi Sagiruddin.
In 1913, he passed matriculation from Dhaka Collegiate School. Then he passed l.A. and B.A. from Presidency College, Kolkata. In 1919 he completed an M.A. in economics from Calcutta University.
In 1926, he founded Muslim Sahitto Somaj[1] in Dhaka and he also led the Buddhir Mukti (rising up from ignorance) movement[2] with some young writers. His newspaper Shikha[3] helped to increase the growth of the movement. Sayed Abdul hossen and Qazi Motahar Hossain also joined this movement. Kazi Abdul Wadud was closely related with the Bengali Muslim literary movement.
He took a job with Kolkata textbook board. In 1920 he joined Dhaka intermediate college (now Dhaka College) as a professor of literature because it was very rare to find a graduate post in Bengali. After 1947, Dhaka University proposed him for teaching but he got more opportunities for writing in Kolkata and stayed there for the remainder of his life.
In 1916, he married his uncle's eldest daughter, Jamila Khatun. She died in 1954.[4]
In 1970, he got "Shisir kumar award"[5]
"I don't want poverty for man, I want that which is great prosperity."[6]