Hakeem Fateh Mohammad Sehwani
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1882
Sehwan Sharif, Dadu now Jamshoro District, Sindh
Sehwan Sharif, Dadu Sindh
| Born | Fateh Mohammad 1882 Sehwan Sharif, Dadu now Jamshoro District, Sindh |
|---|---|
| Died | 13 December 1942 (aged 60) Sehwan Sharif, Dadu Sindh |
| Pen name | "حڪيم" |
| Occupation | Poet, Scholar, Journalist, Politician |
| Nationality | Indian |
| Genre | Aesthetic |
| Subject | Poetry |
| Literary movement | Progressive |
| Notable works | Books, Linguistic |
Hakeem Fateh Mohammad Sehwani (Sindhi: حڪيم فتح محمد سيوهاڻي) was born in 1882 at Sehwan Sharif, the then Dadu District and now in Jamshoro District, Sindh. He was a scholar, poet, literary, journalist and politician of Sindh. He died on 13 December 1942.[1]
Sehwani received education in Persian and Arabic languages. He became student of Molvi Mohammad Umer Channa and Molvi Atta Mohammad at Mehar, the then well named teachers of Sindh. At the age of 21, he qualified from Madrasa. He opened his own Madrasa at Shah Sadar, Sewhan and practiced as Tibb (Hakeem), which was his ancestral profession.[citation needed]
Professional career
Within short period of time, Hakeem Fateh Mohammad Sehwani was appointed as teacher of Persian at a Madarsa, owned by Syed Allah Aando Shah.
Political career
Hakeem Sehwani took part in political activities under the guidance of Syed Allah Aando Shah. Sehwani would say, “A man without a political insight is like a body without a soul”.
He was one of the main leaders of Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind and a major opponent of the British Empire in the Indian subcontinent. He also remained secretary of Jamiat ul Ulima (Sindh).[2][3] Molana sahab was active worker and secretary of Khilafat Movement in Sindh.[4] He opened a moderate Madarsa for teaching Arabic and Persian languages and a Matabb at Karachi, which was a place of gathering for party workers.[5]
Literary career
Publications
Hakeem Fateh Mohammad Sehwani wrote sixteen books and was the first writer to publish a biography of Muhammad in Sindhi.[6] He is also renowned for his book Qalandar Namo on Lal Shabaz Qalandar, a revered Sufi saint.[7] His other books are on various topics, such as “Bahar e Ikhlaq,” a collection of poems. He also composed nationalistic poetry. He formerly used “Sagheer” and late “Hakeem” as his pen name.[8]
Religiously, he belonged to the Deobandi school of thought. Doing charity and favour to people was his hobby. Some of his works are: Hayat e Nabi (S.A.W),[9] Ikhlaq e Mohammadi (S.A.W),[10] Fatheh Mohammadi (S.A.W), Dastan e Qoum, Ahwal Lal Shahbaz Qalander, Meeran ji Sahibi.[11]