Amir Meenai

Urdu poet of Post-Mughal era
Ameer Minai
Born 1828
Lucknow, Post-Mughal India
Died 13 October 1900(1900-10-13) (aged 71–72)
Hyderabad Deccan, British India
Pen name Ameer
Occupation Poet
Period Post-Mughal era
Genre Ghazal, Nazm, Na`at, Hamd
Subject Love, Philosophy, Mysticism

Ameer Minai (Urdu: امیر مینا ئی ), an Urdu poet of eminence was born in 1828 at Lucknow and died in 1900 at Hyderabad. His full name was Ameer Ahmad Minai, and he also wrote under the pen name `Ameer'. He noted this dual use of his first name in a verse:

نام كا نام، تخلص كا تخلص ہے امير
ايک يہ وصف خداداد مرے نام ميں ہے

(naam kaa naam, takhallus ka takhallus hae ameer / ayk yeh vasf-e khudaadaad miray naam meN hae) (It serves both as my name and my nom de plume / this is a God-given feature of my name)

A popular poet both with the people and the aristocracy, he was held in high esteem by his contemporary poets like Ghalib and Daagh Dehalvi.[1][2] He was also greatly admired by the great Urdu poet, Muhammad Iqbal.

He has been described as "a polymath. He was a poet, prose writer, lexicographer, linguist, Sufi and musicologist. In addition, he was well-versed in Islamic law, studied medicine and philosophy, and was interested in certain branches of the occult, such as jafr - a type of numerology. He knew many languages quite well and wrote in three: Urdu, Persian and Arabic."[3]

Personal details

Born in 1832 in Lucknow into a family of religious scholars. His father, Maulvi Karam Muhammad Minai, was a well-known religious scholar in Lucknow. The family was descended from the famous Sufi saint from Lucknow, Hazrat Makhdoom Shah Mina, whose tomb in Lucknow is still a major attraction for devotees. The Minai family had lived in Lucknow for centuries in the area around Shah Mina's tomb, known as "Mina Bazaar" or "Mohalla-e Minaian" (The Quarter of the Minais). Ameer was educated at Farangi Mahal, Lucknow`s primary educational institute, and attained high standing as an expert in Islamic law and jurisprudence. He joined the royal court of Awadh and was appointed to a position of high responsibility in the judiciary. However, in the British attack on Lucknow in 1856 and the subsequent War of Independence in 1857, the family's homes were all destroyed and Ameer was forced to flee with his family, first to the nearby town of Kakori where he found refuge with the poet Mohsin Kakorvi, and eventually to the state of Rampur, where he found great favor at the court of the ruler, Nawab Yusuf Ali Khan. He held high positions in the judiciary, was appointed head of Rampur's magnificent library, and became the official poetic mentor (ustad) of the ruler, succeeding the great Urdu poet, Ghalib, in this position. Ameer lived in Rampur until 1900 when he decided to go to Hyderabad Deccan to seek financial support for the publication of his beloved Urdu dictionary, "Ameer-ul-Lughaat" — but that was not to be, and he died there on 13 October 1900, barely a month after his arrival. He is buried in Hyderabad.

Ameer Minai had five sons (Muhammad Ahmad Minai, Khursheed Ahmad Minai, Lateef Ahmad Minai, Mumtaz Ahmad Minai and Masood Ahmad Minai), and three daughters (Ma'soom-un-Nisa, Ehtishaam-un-Nisa and Fatima).

Work

Ameer Minai was a poet of Urdu and Persian. He is also known as a lexicographer, Sufi, scholar, editor, prose writer, translator, and connoisseur of language. He had studied logic, law, geography, mathematics, medicine, history, religion, music, philosophy and wrote some 50 books in Urdu and Persian—many of which remain unpublished.

In poetry, Ameer is best known for his ghazals, and for the na`at genre—poems in praise of the Prophet Muhammad—which he helped popularize in Urdu poetry[4][5] among other poets. In accordance with the tradition of his time, Ameer began his poetic career by selecting a mentor from among the established poets of his time. In Ameer's case, this mentor was Muzaffar Ali Aseer, one of the leading poets in Lucknow who was himself the pupil of a giant of Urdu poetry, Shaikh Ghulam Hamadani Mushafi. As such, Ameer alweays considered himself as a member of Mushafi's school of poetry.

Ameer also developed close friendships with the major poets and writers of his time. Ghalib, though twenty years older than Ameer, counted the latter among his friends—presumably because both were associated with the court at Rampur. Ameer had a very close personal friendship—and a fierce poetic rivalry—with his great contemporary, Daagh Dehalvi. As a major poet in his own right, Ameer was mentor to several significant poets, including Riaz Khairabadi, Jalil Manakpuri, Dil Shahjahanpuri and Muztar Khairabadi. Ameer Minai published two collections of ghazals. The first was Mir'at-ul Ghaeb and the second Sanamkhana-e 'Ishq. He also published collections of devotional prose and poetry called Khayaabaan-e Aafreenish and Mahaamid-e Khaatam-un-Nabiyyeen. Few poets in Urdu have had so many of their lines become part of colloquial usage as Ameer Minai.

Ameer Minai was the founder and leader of the project to produce a comprehensive, multi-volume Urdu dictionary called Ameer-ul-Lughaat. Members of his team included some of the most famous Urdu poets and writers of the time, such as Riaz Khairabadi, Jalil Manakpuri, Waseem Khairabadi and Mumtaz Ali Aah. The project had the patronage of the Nawab of Rampur and the Lieutenant Governor of the Northwest Provinces, Sir Alfred Lyall. However, due to the Nawab's death and the departure of Lyall for another assignment set the project back, and most of Ameer Minai's last two decades were spent looking for new patrons for this project, which he considered to be his primary achievement. Reports indicate that the manuscript was completed, though only two volumes for the letters "alif mamdooda" ( آ ) and "alif" ( ا ) were, in fact, published in 1891 and 1892 respectively. The manuscript for a third volume, for the letter "bay" (ب), has remained in the family and was recently published through the efforts of Ameer Minai`s grandson Israil Ahmed Menai. It was edited by the well-known Urdu philologist and lexicographer, Dr. Rauf Parekh. The remaining volumes appear to have been lost, and even their number remains uncertain. Israil Menai has also re-issued Ameer Minai's divans, `Mir'at-ul-ghaib` and `Sanamkhana-e 'Ishq`, and recently published two more book in one volume. The first is an account of the Prophet Muhammad's early life written in prose. Titled Khayaabaan-i-Aafreenish, it describes Muhammad`s life based on authentic sources. The other is Mahaamid-i-Khaatam-un-Nabiyyeen, the collection of Ameer`s naat poetry.

Mutaala'-e Ameer by Abu Muhammad Sahar, published in 1963 from Lucknow, is an important work on the life and literary works of Ameer Minai.[6]

Popular culture

The famous ghazal 'sarakatee jaayey hai rukh se naqab aahista, aahista...' attributed to Ameer Minai has been sung and popularised by ghazal maestro Jagjit Singh and later also featured in a film starring Rishi Kapoor and Tina Munim. However, there is no evidence from original sources that he was the author of this ghazal. Another famous ghazal attributed to the poet is 'haalaat maekade kay karvaT badal rahay haeN', but this is also probably not by him. Of Ameer Minai's ghazals that have been sung, the best known is 'jab se bulbul too ne do tinkay liye / loTtee haeN bijliyaaN in kay liye', sung by K.L. Saigal, Ghulam Ali, M. Kalim and others. It can be heard here. Ustad Barkat Ali Khan sang another one of his ghazals, 'naavak-e naaz se mushkil hae bachaana dil kaa / dard uTh uTh ke bataataa nae Thikaanaa dil kaa', while Farida Khanum sang `zaahir meN ham faryfta husn-e butaaN ke haeN / par kyaa kahayN nigaah meN jalvay kahaaN ke haeN'.

Bibliography

References

  1. The Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature (Vol.One) by Amresh Datta.p.151. https://books.google.com/books?isbn=8126018038
  2. Sahabaz, Syed Ali. "The famous Urdu and Persian poet of India, Amir Ahmad Meenai". www.imamreza.net/eng/imamreza. Retrieved 21 August 2013.
  3. Parekh, Rauf (4 September 2016). "Poetry in Persian". Dawn News. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
  4. Eulogies on Prophet Muhammad: Selections from Armoghan-e-Naat, compiled and edited by Shafiq Barelvi,published by Royal Book Company in 1987
  5. A history of Urdu literature by Ram Babu Saksena published by Ram Narain lal, Allahabad, in 1940 ps.139&182
  6. The Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature (Vol.One) by Amresh Datta.p.152. https://books.google.com/books?isbn=8126018038
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