Mahmud Arif Explained

Mahmud Arif should not be confused with Khalid Mahmud Arif.

Mahmud Arif
Native Name:محمود عارف
Native Name Lang:ar
Birth Place:Jedda, Hejaz vilayet, Ottoman Empire
Death Place:Jedda, Saudi Arabia
Occupation:
  • poet
  • journalist
  • official
Language:Arabic
Nationality:Ottoman (1909-1916)
Hejazi (1916-1925/1932)
Saudi Arabian (1932-2001)
Years Active:1963-2000

Mahmud Abd al-Khayr Al Arif (Arabic: محمود عارف|translit= Maḥmūd ʿĀrif; 1909 – 1 March 2001), commonly known as Mahmud Arif, was a Saudi Arabian poet. He was born in Old Jedda, Hejaz. After studying in Kuttab for three years, he joined Al Falah School and graduated. He worked as a teacher there for seven years, then moved to government jobs and worked in various office and administrative support occupations, such as: editor, copy typist and lawyer in the Civil Endowments Department of the Sharia judiciary, director of passports and government residency and finally moved to the accounting department. He was chosen a member of the Consultative Assembly until his retirement in 1978. In 1963, appointed as editor-in-chief of Okaz newspaper for a year at the beginning of the new system for journalistic institutions in Saudi Arabia. He is one of the founding members of the Jeddah Society of Culture and Arts in 1975. As a poet, he published many collections of poetry and several other prose books.[1] [2] [3] [4]

Biography

Mahmud Abd al-Khayr Āl Arif was born in Jeddah in 1909. An Afro-Saudi,[5] as a child, he joined the Al-Azim kuttab, then Al Falah School, where he studied under several famous teachers, including: Muhammad Husayn Awwad, Hussain Qattar, Mustafa Nilawi, Muhammad al-Mazruqi and Abd al-Wahhab Nashar. Among his colleagues at the school were: Ahmad Qandil, Salem Ashraf, Abbas Halawani and others.

Occupations

After graduating he worked as a teacher in Al-Falah School for seven years, then moved to government jobs and worked in various office and administrative support occupations. He worked in as editor, copy typist and lawyer in the Civil Endowments Department of the Sharia judiciary, director of passports and government residency and finally moved to the accounting department in Al-Kandasah, the agency specialized in desalinating sea water in Jeddah. A member of the Jeddah Municipality, he was also chosen a member of the Consultative Assembly until his retirement in 1978.

In 1963, appointed as editor-in-chief of Okaz newspaper for a year at the beginning of the new system for journalistic institutions in Saudi Arabia. He is one of the founding members of the Jeddah Society of Culture and Arts in 1975. He also entered the sport as he co-founded Al Ahli Saudi FC in Jeddah with Omar Shams and Hassan Shams, and later left them to devote himself to his favorite team Al-Ittihad Club.[6]

Poetry

He is best known as a sentimental poet and "a lover of beauty", he also wrote political poetry.[7] Mahmud Arif belongs to the second generation of 20th-century Saudi Arabian poets. In some respects, his experience was romantic. He did not deviate in his poetry from the traditional Al-Khalili Arabic prosody; classic in terms of form, but its language is modern, dominated by his vision of public issues, occasions, social and historical transformations. According to Hasan al-Ni'mi, "He is one of the romantic poets who delve into the ego and his past, convinced of the badness of the outside world and its inadequacy for life... He is one of the romantic poets who dive into the pain and misery of the ego, convinced of the badness of the outside world and its inadequacy for life...who makes his poetry a permanent nostalgia for the world of salvation from evils and sins." He published many collections from 1978, most of them were collected in a two-volume book entitled The Night Hymns (Arabic: ترانيم الليل) in 1984. He also wrote several prose books.

Personal life

Mahmud Arif parents died when he was young, a maternal aunt became his legal guardian. He married at a late age and had three daughters and three sons. His wife died before him.

Death

He died on 22 February 2001 or 1 March in Jeddah at the age of 92. [8]

Awards

Works

Poetry collections:

Books:

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Yaʻqub. Imil. Muʻjam al-shuʻarāʼ : mundhu badʼ ʻaṣr al-Nahḍah. ar:معجم الشعراء منذ بدء عصر النهضة. Dictionary of poets since the beginning of Nahda. 3. 278. 2004. Dar Sader. Beirut, Lebanon. first . ar.
  2. Book: Al-Jaburi . Kamel Salman . Mu'jam Al-Udaba' min Al-'Asr Al-Jahili Hatta Sanat 2002. ar:معجم الأدباء من العصر الجاهلي حتى سنة 2002. Dictionary of writers from the pre-Islamic era until 2002. 6. 2003 . Dar Al-Kotob Al-Ilmiyah . Beirut, Lebanon . 185 . first . ar.
  3. Web site: الأستاذ محمود عارف . alithnainya . 8 August 2022 . ar.
  4. Book: Ibn Silm. Ahmad Sa'id. Mawsuʻat al-udabaʼ wa-al-kuttab al-Saʻudiyin: khilala sittin ʻaman, 1350 H-1410 H. ar:موسوعة الأدباء والكتاب السعوديين خلال ستين عامًا 1350 هـ - 1410 هـ. Encyclopedia of Saudi literati and writers during sixty years 1350 AH - 1410 AH. 1992. 2. 232 . Dar al-Minar. Medina, KSA. 9789775254221. first . ar.
  5. Book: Al-Wahhabi . Abd al-Rahman ibn Muhammad . ar:في الأدب السعودي، التطوير والتغيير؛ تأملات نقدية. In Arabic Literature: A Critical Reflection. 2020 . Dar al-Massira . Riyadh, Saudi Arabia . 9789957971731. 105 . first . ar.
  6. Web site: محمود عارف الشاعر المسكون بهاجس الزمن . okaz.com . 9 August 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220809191407/https://www.okaz.com.sa/article/467334 . 9 August 2022 . ar . 4 April 2012.
  7. Book: Sasi. Umar al-Tayyib. al-Mūjaz fī tārīkh al-adab al-ʻArabī al-Saʻūdī . ar:الموجز في تاريخ الأدب العربي السعودي. Summary in the history of Saudi Arabian iterature. 1983. 136. Tihamah. KSA. first . ar.
  8. رحيل محمود عارف . Al-Faisal . March 2001 . 295 . 125 . ar.