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Sindhi inqlabi poetry
Sindhi inqlabi poetry








sindhi inqlabi poetry

Sobho Gianchandani had been educated at the Shantiniketan of Tagore and upon his return he was active in practicing law along with many trade unions. Here he remained in the company of left-wing writers and politicians Sobho Gianchandani, Gobind Malhi, Ibrahim Joyo and the founder of the modern nationalist ideology of Sindh, Hashoo Kewalramani.

sindhi inqlabi poetry

In 1940, Shaikh Ayaz took admission in D.G.

sindhi inqlabi poetry

Under the influence of communists in Karachi At that time, children’s journals were also issued from Shikarpur. In the days when Ayaz was studying at C&S College, Shikarpur, when the movement for Hindu-Muslim unity was on theatre groups used to present dramas to make the movement effective. The Seva-panthis here built welfare hospitals and educational institutions. If the trade relations of this city extended to Samarqand, then its spiritual relations spread till Guru Nanak and Kabir. Shikarpur is identified with pickles, preserves and chutney these days but before the Partition of India, this city was known in the region as a centre of trade, learning and literature – and inter-religious harmony. Ayaz’s mother was a Hindu widow who fell in love with his father and abandoned her family to come to him and performed nikah. His father served in the Department of Revenue and married three times.

sindhi inqlabi poetry

Shaikh Ayaz was born in Shikarpur on March 2, 1923, in the home of Ghulam Hussain Shaikh and he passed away on the evening of December 27, 1997. Shaikh Ayaz had composed this poem under the influence of this very mutiny. Aslam Khawaja, author of The Role of Sindh in the 1857 Uprising, writes that the supporters of the naval mutiny were communists who were led by Sobho Gianchandani and A.K. This young revolutionary would later become famous as Shaikh Ayaz. Revolution, revolution, sing revolution sing revolution) Usher in that new system which the people want (Shake the foundations of society, topple imperialism Inquilab, inquilab, gao inqilab, gao inqilab’ Processions were taken out on the roads of the city and a song written by a young man was sung: Those were the last days of the British Empire, sailors of the Royal Indian Navy (RIN) had captured HMIS Hindustan, berthed at Karachi harbour and military installations established on Manora Island.










Sindhi inqlabi poetry