Raza Ali Abidi رضا علی عابدی | |
Birth Date: | 1935 11, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Roorkee, Uttarakhand |
Occupation: | broadcaster, journalist, author |
Nationality: | Pakistani |
Genre: | Travelogues, Fiction and Popular History |
Raza Ali Abidi (Urdu: رضا علی عابدی; born 30 November 1935) is a Pakistani journalist and broadcaster best known for his radio documentaries on the Grand Trunk Road in Pakistan (also known as Sher Shah Suri Marg in India) and his travelogue along the banks of the Indus River. His published works include several collections of cultural essays and short stories. He worked with the BBC Urdu Service until his retirement in 1996.
Raza Ali Abidi was born in 1935 in Roorkee, a city in the Saharanpur District of the United Provinces of British India. He moved to Karachi, Pakistan with his family in 1950, three years after the Partition of India which created Pakistan as a homeland for British Indian Muslims. He graduated from Islamia College, Karachi and worked as a relatively unknown journalist for 15 years. Then, he moved to London and worked for the BBC from 1972 to 2008.[1]
"Raza Ali Abidi is a writer of consequence because of his travels. He owes almost all his writings to his travels but he doesn't travel at random."In November 2013, he was awarded an honorary doctorate degree by The Islamia University of Bahawalpur in recognition of his services to the field of broadcasting, journalism and arts.[2]
"Abidi long remained associated with the BBC Urdu Service. There seems to have been an understanding between the BBC and South Asia as each time it was the BBC which had a project in store for him. And each time it was a journey in a different manner."
This book is about his bus travel on 'The Grand Trunk Road'. A newspaper columnist describes it this way, "The first was bus travel on the Grand Trunk Road, commonly known as Jurnaili Shahrah, from Peshawar to Calcutta, now called Kolkata. After the journey, Abidi headed to London and narrated his adventures to his listeners at the BBC Urdu service."[3]
A journey from Laddakh to Thatta in Pakistan all along the banks of river Indus also called the Lion River (Sher Darya)
Raza Ali Abidi, as a BBC producer, traveled from Quetta to Calcutta by all sorts of trains.[5] "Later he produced a radio documentary named 'Rail Kahani'." A radio documentary with 16 episodes.
This book was launched in 2012 at the Arts Council of Pakistan, Karachi. "Speaking on how the idea of the book came about, Mr Abidi said in 1975-76, while working for the BBC, he presented a proposal to his bosses that the relatively less known books written by 19th century Indian authors (which could be found in the India Office Library and Records) should be discussed in a programme."[7] BBC officials gave him the green signal and he went ahead with the project.[7]