Honorific Prefix: | Nawabzada |
Mir Syed Mosharraf Hossain | |
Native Name: | মীর মশাররফ হোসেন |
Native Name Lang: | bn |
Birth Name: | Mir Mosharraf Hossain |
Birth Date: | 15 November 1847 |
Birth Place: | Lahinipara, Bengal Presidency, British India |
Death Date: | 19 December 1911 (aged 64) |
Death Place: | Bil Padamdi, Bengal Presidency, British India |
Language: | Bengali |
Notableworks: | Bishadsindhu, Jamidar Darpan |
Spouses: | Aziz-un-Nesa, Bibi Kulsum |
Mir Syed Mosharraf Hossain (Bengali: মীর মশাররফ হোসেন; 1847–1912) was a Bengali writer, novelist, playwright and essayist. He is considered to be the first major writer to emerge from the Muslim society of Bengal, and one of the finest prose writers in the Bengali language.[1] [2] His magnum opus Bishad Sindhu (Ocean of Sorrow) is a popular classic among the Bengali readership.[3]
Mir Syed Mosharraf Hossain was born in the village of Lahinipara in Kumarkhali Thana under Kushtia District.[4] He spent most of his life at his ancestral Padamdi Nawab Estate in Baliakandi in erstwhile district of Faridpur (now part of Rajbari District). His widely accepted date of birth is 13 November 1847.[5] But some researchers also claim his date of birth is 26 October 1847.[6] His father was Nawab Syed Mir Moazzem Hossain, Bengali Muslim aristocrat and the Zamindar of the Padamdi Nawab Estate. His mother was called Daulatunnesa Begum, was a convert from Hinduism, her own family being a Bengali Hindu Zamindar family.[7]
Mosharraf Hossain learned Arabic and Persian with a teacher at home and then Bengali at a pathsala. He began his formal education at Kushtia School and then studied up to Class V at Krishnanagar Collegiate School. He was admitted to Kalighat School in Kolkata but could not complete his studies. Mosharraf Hossain began his career looking after his father's landed property. Later he served the Faridpur Padamdi Nawab Estate with relative Mir Nadir Hossain grandfather of Mir Tajrul Hossain whose son is Mir Muqtadir Hossain and, in 1885, the Delduar Zamindari Estate. He lived in Kolkata from 1903 to 1909.[8]
While still a student, Mosharraf Hossain worked as a mofussil reporter for the Sangbad Prabhakar (1861) and Gram Barta Prokashika (1863). His literary career started here.
Syed Mir Mosharraf Hossain's magnum opus is Bishad Shindhu, depicting the Shia version of the tale of martyrdom of Hasan and Husayn in Karbala. He was one of the first Shia writers to emerge from colonial British India. His other works include Jamidar Darpan (Reflections on Zamindars), a play on the plight of common people under the Zamindars (landlords installed by the British colonial government) and their struggle against them.
His literary works were included in the curriculum of school level, secondary, higher secondary and graduation level Bengali Literature in Bangladesh. Mir Mosharraf Hossain wrote his 'Jamidar Darpan' about the background of the peasant uprising against the landlords in Sirajganj 1872–73. He had always shown an active interest in the everyday life of his fellow countrymen. He assisted Rowshan Ali Chowdhury in publishing The Kohinoor monthly.[9]
In 1865 he married Aziz-un-Nesa. His second wife was Bibi Kulsum married in 1874. He died on 19 December 1911.[10] [11]
Gazi miar Bostani
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