Raushan Yazdani

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Born(1917-02-27)February 27, 1917
Bidyaballabh, Kendua, Mymensingh District, Bengal Presidency (now in Netrokona District, Bangladesh)
DiedJune 23, 1967(1967-06-23) (aged 49)
Bidyaballabh, Mymensingh District, Dacca Division, East Pakistan
KnownforFolk research
SpouseZubaydah Akhtar Khatun
Mohammad
Raushan Yazdani
রওশন ইজদানী
Born(1917-02-27)February 27, 1917
Bidyaballabh, Kendua, Mymensingh District, Bengal Presidency (now in Netrokona District, Bangladesh)
DiedJune 23, 1967(1967-06-23) (aged 49)
Bidyaballabh, Mymensingh District, Dacca Division, East Pakistan
Known forFolk research
SpouseZubaydah Akhtar Khatun
Children3
AwardsAdamjee Literary Award
Academic background
EducationAshujia High School

Mohammad Raushan Yazdani (Bengali: মোহাম্মদ রওশন ইজদানী) was a Bengali author and researcher of folk literature.[1] As a folklorist, his work was crucial due to his discoveries of tales and poems from the remotest villages of eastern Bengal (now Bangladesh).[2] His most celebrated work is Momenshahir Loka-Sahitya dedicated to folk literature in Momenshahi (Mymensingh)[3] Yazdani was one of the most popular Bengali poets in the Pakistan period.[4]

Yazdani was born in the village of Bidyaballabh, Kendua in the District of Mymensingh (now in Netrokona District) on 27 February 1918. His father, Shaykh Ali Kabir, was a practitioner of alternative medicine. After completing primary education at a local Old Scheme Madrasa, Yazdani studied in Ashujia Joy Nath Coronation High School until class 10. Around this time at the age of 18, his mother died and Yazdani became negligent of his education and started accompanying syncretic mystics. Yazdani eventually left these mystics, returning to orthodox Sunni Islam after marrying Zubaydah Akhtar Khatun, a Bengali Muslim woman with whom he started a family.

Career

সন্ধ্যা ঘনিয়ে এলো বেলা গেল ঐ
Shondha ghoniye elo bela gelo oi
কোথায় গেল হাঁসগুলো তৈ তৈ তৈ
Kothay gelo haashgulo toi toi toi

Two famous lines from a children's poem by Yazdani.[5]

Yazdani had taken on multiple career paths throughout his life. He started working as a primary school teacher at a village in 1940. Shortly afterwards, he became a clerk of the Debt Settlement Board. He later began his career in grade one proofreading for Franklin Publications in 1956 as well as The Azad. He left his job as a proofreader in 1959 due to ill health and returned to his village home and devoted himself to literary pursuits. He was inspired by the likes of Kazi Nazrul Islam and Jasimuddin as well as the rich puthi literature (Dobhashi poetry) of Bengal. His poetry focused much on the glory of Muslims as well as village life.[6] Poems about the latter include Chinu Bibi and Rongila Bondhu. Some of his poems were about rebellion like Bojrobani.[7]

With a growing hobby of collecting Bengali language folk literature, Yazdani became known as a folklorist. He started writing essays on folk literature which were published in popular journals and newspapers. He was awarded the Adamjee Literary Award by the President of Pakistan Ayub Khan in 1959.[8][9] This was for writing Khatamun Nabiyyeen (Seal of the Prophets), a biographical poem on Muhammad, the final Islamic prophet in verse.[10][11] This poem was later translated to English as The Word of God.

Works

Death and legacy

References

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