Mir Anees Explained

Mir Anees
Honorific Prefix:Khuda-e-Sukhan
Pseudonym:Anis انیس
Birth Date:1800
Birth Place:Faizabad, Oudh State, Mughal India
Death Date:10 December 1874 (aged 74)
Death Place:Lucknow, North-Western Provinces, British India
Occupation:Urdu poet
Nationality:Indian
Period:Mughal era
Genre:Marsiya, Rubai
Subject:Battle of Karbala
Relatives:Mir Khaleeq (father)

Mir Babar Ali Anees (Urdu: {{nq|{{resize|مير ببر على انيس, 1800-1874), also known as Mir Anees was an Indian Urdu poet. He used his pen-name (takhallus) of Anees (Urdu:, Anees means "close friend, companion") in poetry. Anees used Persian, Urdu, Arabic, and Sanskrit words in his poetry.[1] Anis wrote prolonged Marsias, which was a custom of his times, but nowadays only selected sections are narrated even in religious ceremonies. He died in 1291 Hijra, corresponding with 1874 CE.[2]

Family

Mir Babar Ali Anis was born in 1803 CE at Faizabad.[3] In his book Khandaan- e-Mir Anees ke Naamwar Sho’ara (Famous Poets from the family of Mir Anis), Zameer Naqvi lists 22 poets from Mir Anis’ family and their poetry. A researcher in Urdu Literature, Syed Taqi Abedi, has shown that Mir Anis's family has written poetic literature for three centuries, first in Persian and later in Urdu.[4] Mir Anis was a fifth-generation poet, a fact he mentioned in the first stanza of "Namak-e-Khwaan-e-Takallum hai Fasaahat meri":[5]

Education

Anis's mother appears to have been his greatest inspiration.[6] He gained a traditional Shia education.[4] However, research by Nayyar Masood reveals that, while in Faizabad, Anis studied with two religious scholars; one was a Shia Scholar, Mir Najaf and the other was a Hanafi (Sunni) Scholar, Haider Ali Faizabadi. Masood also notes that Anis was well versed in Persian as well as in Arabic. Anis also had military training and gained a thorough knowledge of old and new weapons.[7]

Life

Anis was invited to Lucknow where he reached the zenith of his reputation. He stayed in Lucknow because he believed that his art was not appreciated elsewhere. Yet, after the annexation of Oudh by the British, he was persuaded to visit Azimabad (Patna), Dulhipur (Varanasi), Hyderabad and Allahabad.[8]

In 1870 Nawab Tahwar Jung invited Anis to Hyderabad where he declined to be presented at the court of Mir Mahboob Ali Khan,[3] [9] [10] the then Nizam of Hyderabad State. The Nizam himself went to the Majlis where the poet was to recite. While returning from Hyderabad, he sojourned at Allahabad in 1871 and recited his marsia in the Imambara of late Lala Beni Prasad Srivastava, Vakil, who was a devotee of Imam Husain.[8]

He died in 1874 CE and is buried at his own residence in Lucknow.[3]

Work and contribution

According to Muhammad Hussain Azad, "The late Mīr Sahib must certainly have composed at least ten thousand elegies, and salāms beyond count. He composed as easily and casually as he spoke.".[11] [12] In his essay "How to read Iqbal?" Shamsur Rahman Faruqi wrote: "Iqbal was placed better because he had, among others, Bedil (1644–1720) in Persian and Mir Anis (1802–1874) in Urdu." He further asserts: "The mention of Mir Anis may surprise some of us until we realize it that Mir Anis’s Marsiyas are the best premodern model in Urdu of narrative-historical, narrative-lyrical, and oral-dramatic poetry, and Iqbal’s poetry extends and exploits the possibilities created by Anis."[13]

Mir Anis was criticized for playing on religious sentiments giving his work a vertical appeal at the expense of poetic beauty.[14] While Farhat Nadir Rizvi, in her research, has propounded that Anis was narrating recorded history and was therefore restricted in use of pure imagination and fantasy, yet he dexterously harnessed the art of storytelling in his work and we cannot but accept that he was not only a Marsiya writer but also a successful storyteller.[15] Anis has been compared with Shakespeare.[16] [17] Shakespeare creates imaginary plots and characters so beautifully that they appear real to the reader; Anis narrates events and characters fossilized in history so vividly that they become alive in the eyes of his audience.[18]

Anis is also known as a pioneer in Rubai, an Urdu poetry branch, and enjoys status akin to that of Mirza Sauda, Khwaja Mir Dard and Dabeer.[19] Besides being a master of the Marsia, Anis was also a specialist of the Rubai, the shortest complete poem in Urdu, containing only four lines. He enriched the contents of the Rubai, making it much more colorful and multi-dimensional. Anis introduced the tragic events of Karbala and their moralistic effect to Rubai. Thus, he widened the scope of Rubai to unfathomable limits. The inclusion of Karbala resulted in the florescence of the Urdu Rubai. Thus, many internal and external aspects of our life found their echo in the Urdu Rubai.[20]

Tribute to poet in Urdu literature

Seminars and symposiums

Dabir Academy in London organised an International Seminar on "Position of Anis and Dabir in Urdu literature" on the occasion of bicentennial birthday celebrations of Mir Anis and Mirza Dabir.[21]

A seminar titled "Mir Anis our Adab-i-Aalia" was jointly held on 19 April 2001 by the Arts Council of Pakistan, Karachi and Pak Arab Literary Society, with Farman Fatehpuri in the chair and Mehdi Masud as the chief guest.[22] The Arts Council, Karachi, had also organized in April 2002 an evening to commemorate the second birth centenary of Mir Anis.[23]

In August 2003 there was a national seminar on "Mir Anis Ke Marsia Mein Jang ke Anasir" organized by Urdu Department, Hyderabad Central University.[24]

Books on Mir Anis

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: T2F moot eulogises poetry of Mir Anis. Daily Times. Asad Farooq. 21 November 2011. 17 July 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140725111609/http://archives.dailytimes.com.pk/karachi/21-Nov-2011/t2f-moot-eulogises-poetry-of-mir-anis . 25 July 2014 .
  2. Web site: The Master Of Marsia – Mir Babar Ali Anis. pakistan.web.pk.
  3. Book: The Twelver Shîʻa as a Muslim Minority in India: Pulpit of Tears . Routledge . 2005 . 17 August 2023 . History . 14, 18, 23, 63. 9780415362344 .
  4. http://www.drtaqiabedi.com/-/Aritcles/ARTICLE_2.pdf Daily Siasat
  5. Web site: About shia poet. ALI WARIS.
  6. News: A poet worth Remembering!. 8 July 2013. The Lucknow Tribune. 26 July 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140726093141/http://www.thelucknowtribune.org/news.php?cat=873. 26 July 2014. dead.
  7. https://www.dawn.com/news/625039 The life and works of Mir Anis
  8. "A History of Urdu Literature" by Ram Babu Saxena, Allahabad, 1927
  9. Web site: Salman Book Centre – Hyderabad, India – Marsias, Majalis, Nauhay, Ashoor, Khanas, Azadari, Duas, Munajath, Qasiday, Books. www.salmanbookcentre.com.
  10. Book: Legacy of the Nizam's . Vani Prakashan . 2002 . 18 June 2013 . Lallana Rāya . 282. 9788170551645 .
  11. Web site: Ab-e hayat, page 519 – Digital South Asia Library. dsal.uchicago.edu.
  12. Aab-e-Hayat (English Translation), Translated and edited by Frances W. Pritchett, in association with Shamsur Rahman Faruqi
  13. https://books.google.com/books?id=ZHe5MgAACAAJ How to Read Iqbal? Eassays on Iqbal, Urdu Poetry and Literary Theory
  14. Book: Tauhid, Qamar . 20 July 1972. Mir Anis Mere Ta'assub Ke Aaine Me . Mir Anis. Mir Anis in the Mirror of My Prejudice. Mir Anis . Urdu . Patna, India . Ghalib Club . 108.
  15. Book: Farhat Nadir Rizvi. 2 November 2017. Mir Anis Aur Qissa Goi Ka Fan. Mir Anis and the Art of Story Telling. Urdu . Lucknow, India . Lucknow Educational And Development Trust. 9781977566805. 468.
  16. Web site: mir anis-William Shakespeare Comparison – Intro . urdu shahkar . 23 December 2017.
  17. Web site: ANIS AND SHAKESPEARE – A COMPARISON by Syed Ghulam Imam(publication 1950). 23 December 2017.
  18. Book: Shabbir Hasan Rezvi . 20 July 1972. Mir Anis Ka Shaoor-e-Tanasub . Mir Anis. Mir Anis' Sense of Proportions. Mir Anis . Urdu . Patna, India . Ghalib Club . 75.
  19. Extracted from: Rubai Aik Qadeem Sanaf-e-Sukhan (in Urdu Language) research of Dr. Younus Hassani, published in Midweek Magazine issued by the Daily Jang, Karachi in its issue of 9 July 2014
  20. Web site: MEER BABAR ALI ANEES. urdushayari.in. January 2012.
  21. Web site: SEMINAR ON ANIS AND DABIR. The Milli Gazette. 16 December 2003.
  22. Web site: Mir Anis hailed as great poet. article.wn.com. 19 April 2001. Hasan Abidi.
  23. Web site: Celebrating Mir Anis's bicentenary . 14 April 2002. Daily Times. Asim Ghani. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304001416/http://archives.dailytimes.com.pk/national/14-Apr-2002/celebrating-mir-anis-s-bicentenary . 4 March 2016 .
  24. http://jammuuniversity.in/NAAC/urdu.htm Faculty of Department of: Urdu
  25. Web site: Dr. Nayyer Masood. Mohammad Ali Jinnah University, Pakistan . 14 July 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140716045220/http://www.jinnah.edu.pk/faculty/cv_fulview/param/142/dept/6 . 16 July 2014 .
  26. Web site: WELCOME TO DR. TAGHI ABEDI WEBSITE. www.drtaqiabedi.com.
  27. published by Oxford University Press, Karachi Pakistan – http://www.oup.com.pk
  28. Web site: Poetic Literature. Utar Pradesh Urdu Akademi. 5 August 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140718181422/http://upurduakademi.org/eng/publication2.aspx . 18 July 2014 .
  29. Web site: Allama Syed Zameer Akhtar Naqvi. www.allamazameerakhtar.com.
  30. Book: Mir Babbar Ali Anis. David Matthew. The battle of Karbala: a marsiya of Anis. 1994. Rupa & Co.. 978-81-7167-213-4.
  31. Haftroza Nawaye Waqt Family Magazine, Lahore (10–16 Dec 2017). p. 46
  32. Web site: Urdu Daily Qaumi Tanzeem, Lucknow Nov 9, 2017 P.3. qaumitanzeem.com. 29 November 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20171213144044/http://qaumitanzeem.com/editions/lucknow-edition/archives/09_11_2017/epage-03.html. 13 December 2017. dead.