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SHAIKA
AYAZ
By
Sirajul Haque Memon
In the History of every language some names stand
out as the pioneers and leading lights of literature.
After Shah Abdul Latif Bhitai, Shaikh Ayaz is
the next most outstanding and important poet and
a literary phenomenon. His contribution to Sindhi
literature, both quantitatively and qualitatively,
stands out as a beacon of excellence and brilliance.
His output is simply awe-inspiring. He has to
his credit 50 published works of poetry and prose
and to the best of my personal knowledge he has
left behind three unpublished manuscripts of poems
and the third volume of his autobiography.
It is not only the excellence
of his diction and form in poetry but also its
content. He experimented in almost every genre,
both classical forms of doha, dihira, bait, kafi
and wa’I, forms which had almost become
extinct after Shah and Sachal Sarmast.
These forms have now regained
their grandeur and elegance and every major poet
of Sindhi language now feels almost a compulsion
to follow the path taken by Ayaz. In the modern
forms of verse based on meter, he experimented
in all the major genres that exist in Persian
and Urdu languages. Apart from ghazal and nazm
(including free verse) he also experimented exquisitely
in exotic forms like sonnets, haikus and prose
poems. Nothing was beyond his reach and he gave
a brave new eloquence to every form of art that
he practiced. The greatest achievement of Ayaz
was his total mastery over the dialectal subtleties,
the inner rhythm and lyrical exuberance of the
language. He gave new meaning and content to otherwise
quite plain words. He used to tell me that Sindhi
language has imbibed five thousand years of varied
experiences of culture and civilization and, therefore,
it had the capability as well as the capacity
of expansive expression. Shah Latif Bhitai was
his role-model and like him he gave new content
and semantic subtilities to ordinary words. Shaikh
Ayaz was one of the most well-versed and well-read
persons specially in the field of literature of
the east and the west. He had read almost all
the great poets of all the major languages of
the world. Some he had read in original like the
Persian, Urdu and English literature while he
read the best of Sanskrit, Hindi, Bengali, Greek,
Latin, Russian, German French and Spanish literature
in translation. It was always a delight to sit
with him and listen to his selections from Virgil,
Dante, Shakespeare, Rilke, Lorca, Mayakoviski,
Rumi, Hafiz, Quratul Ain, Kalidasa, Vidyapati,
Ghalib, Iqbal, Faiz and other major poets of the
world. In one of his books in prose, he has recorded
his impressions of these great names of world
literature. He has also copiously quoted thought
- provoking pieces from the best of the great
philosophers, poets and intellectuals of the world
in his two volumes of autobiographical sketches.
He was conscious of the fact that the great poetry
and literature of every language contributed to
the collective and civilizational development
of the people. Having experienced the delights,
the emotional uplifting and cathartic effects
of great literature, especially the poetry, he
consciously tried to achieve the same greatness
and superb sublimity. I can say, without fear
of contradiction, that he did achieve the greatness
which he aspired. He became a role model for poets
and writers of Sindhi language. His influence
on the poets and writers of his own, as well as
later generations is over-whelming and far-reaching.
Every one in Sindh in the field of literature
affectionately referred to him as ‘ustad.’
There is another aspect of Shaikh Ayaz which is
equally important and that is the social and philosophical
content of his poetry. He was a thorough-bred
radical humanist, a socialist in the Fabian tradition
and a nationalist in the tradition of all great
antagonists of imperialism and colonialism. Before
the partition of the subcontinent, he stood by
the freedom fighters. His elegy on Dodo in the
context of Sindh and of Bhaghat Singh in the context
of the subcontinent are among the most moving
pieces of that genre of poetry. After partition,
he accepted Pakistan as a fait accompli and as
his homeland. But within Pakistan he was a great
believer in federalism and the rights of all nationalities
on an equal footing. It was in this background
that he took up the cause of anti-one-unit movement
in Sindh. In the late 50s and early 60s his new
poems became almost an anthem in every political
gathering for the rights of Sindh and its people.
Because of his poems, the anti-one-unit movement
gathered such momentum that even politicians like
G.M. Syed and Khan Abdul Ghafar Khan, who were
in the forefront of the movement were a little
wary because the youth of the province were becoming
too rebellious. It was a similar case when he
took up the stand in favour of amity, peace and
harmony between Pakistan and India because he
thought that it was suicidal for the people of
both the countries to keep on confronting each
other and fighting unnecessary and costly wars.
His hymns for peace between Pakistan and India
landed him in jail twice. His books were proscribed.
The incarceration did not deter him from following
the path he had chosen for himself as a writer,
as a poet and as an intellectual. He lashed out
at the dictatorship of the time and lambasted
the efforts made to silence him. In one of his
famous poems, which has attained an almost classical
stature, he says: would you achieve in imposing
silence upon me, are thousands of Mansoors who
would continue to defy you! He was also against
the military action in East Pakistan and actively
participated in the efforts to solve the problem
on the basis of the principles of democracy, mutual
understanding and tolerance. Some of his pieces
on the East Pakistan tragedy are very moving and
agonisingly disturbing.AYAZ WAS a humanist in
the truest sense of the word. Universal brotherhood
of mankind was his creed. He was so averse to
religious obscurantism, exploitation of the poor
and downtrodden that he was castigated by some
lobbies as a communist and a heretic. But I know
that he was a deeply spiritual individual. He
was a great believer in co-existence and an intimate
rapport between Urdu and other national languages
of Pakistan. His contribution to Urdu poetry is
also of great quality and calibre. His collection
of poems Bui Gul Nalai Dil and other pieces published
in various journals of eminence qualify him as
a major poet of Urdu as well. His magnum opus,
however, is the translation of Risalo of Shah
Abdul Latif Bhitai into Urdu verse, which has
not only made the message of Shah Abdul Latif
— a message of love, compassion and universal
brotherhood — accessible to the Urdu-speaking
community but also made the Urdu and Sindhi speaking
communities living in Sindh come together to understand
and share the pathos of Sindh. He knew most of
the luminaries of Urdu literature on a personal
level and had been a participant in the Progressive
Writers Movement. Later, he was an active member
of the Pakistan Writers Guild. Sibte-Hasan, Faiz
and Josh were his personal friends. Qudratullah
Shahab, Aali, Ahmad Nadeem Qasim and almost all
the major writers of Urdu recognized his merit
and paid rich tributes to him whenever an occasion
arose. Ayaz was a versatile genius. He was a lawyer
by profession. He had a roaring practice in the
field of criminal law at Sukkur. He travelled
a lot to attend his cases. He came to know the
sociological rigidity of the tribal and feudal
society in Sindh which resulted in cruelty and
violence. He saw cruelty and violence at close
quarters and it made him aware of the emotional
instability of the people involved in criminal
cases. He wrote some fascinating short stories
based on true facts and various tribal and feudal
customs like karo kari. He established a personal
rapport with his clients who would then open their
hearts to him. He understood their emotional turbulence,
their romances, their tribal loyalties overshadowing
their compassion and above all the angularities
of human relationship. This he used as his raw
material for his short stories and autobiographical
sketches. He was appointed as the Vice Chancellor
of Sindh University by Z.A. Bhutto. He brought
a substantive change in the academic atmosphere
of the University and almost compelled the teachers
to undertake research in their respective fields
of knowledge. He would encourage them to publish
their dissertations and lure them to go abroad
on scholarships for improving the quality of their
academic skills. After retirement from his profession,
he shifted from Sukkur to Karachi. It was during
this period of retirement that his output increased.
He had a stroke and then a heart attack. He would
laughingly say that he had fought the angel of
death by showing him the volumes of poetry that
are yet to be published. Sindh, and indeed Pakistan,
have lost a great son. He rose like an everlasting
meteor on the intellectual and literary horizon.
After Faiz Sahib, the death of Ayaz is an irreparable
loss for Pakistan.
Shaik
Ayaz
By Amar Jaleel
Like
all great poets, writers, scholars and intellectuals
Shaikh Ayaz was at times misunderstood, misinterpreted
and misjudged not only by his die hard adversaries,
but by his admirers as well. Intrinsic meaning
in his poetry and prose had an aura of profundity
and always surpassed the apparent meaning of the
words he used in his compositions. Surrounded
by controversies and shrouded in mysteries, Shaikh
Ayaz was an enigma. More than thirty years before
he embarked upon his eternal journey into the
unknown on Sunday, 28 December, 1997 he had become
a legend in his lifetime. He then had produced
remarkable literature of resistance to wage a
gruelling war against the dictator Field Marshal
Mohammad Ayub Khan. In the final analysis his
pen proved mightier than the sword. Thereafter,
the world saw the emergence of a totally different
Sindh imbued with defiance:many voices shall thou
silence, dictator! am not alone, but many. For
some Shaikh Ayaz was a saint, and for others a
sinner; for some he was a believer and for others
he was a non-believer; for some he was a patriot
and for others he was a traitor; for some he was
a mystic and for others he was an atheist. He
was always vehemently and emotionally debated
and discussed. You may like him, or you may not,
but to ignore him was inconceivable. To understand
Shaikh Ayaz is to first understand his thought
process and consciousness. An enormous vocabulary
does not turn a poet into a great poet. It is
something else that elevates a person from the
ordinary to the realms of reverence. A highly
receptive sensibility, penetrative perception
and persuasive eagerness to understand the ethos
of the political, social, cultural and economic
conflicts in proximity transform a poet into a
great poet, and a writer into a great writer of
his time. A poet of paramount prominence must
pronounce his opinion with convictions: the pearls
he carries, not pelt him with stones, the minstrel
will not return. The partition of India had a
traumatic bearing on the prose and poetry of Shaikh
Ayaz. Enduring pathos became a hallmark in his
expression. He became the poet of suffering humanity
and arose above petty politics. He was not concerned
with the creation or disintegration of a country,
but what plunged him in unbearable agony and pain
was the division and separation of people, separation
of friends and loved ones. To give vent to his
feelings, Ayaz drowned in anguish and wrote profusely.
Never before had Sindhi literature experienced
such volcanic force steeped in tragedy.in a battle
field, front of Narayan Sham, am I to kill him!(Narayan
Sham was a childhood friend of Ayaz, and a remarkable
poet, and had migrated to India after partition.
He passed away a few years ago). Thus, Shaikh
Ayaz was hounded by those who are infested with
a perverse desire to sit in judgment on other
people’s conscience and consciousness. For
undemocratic and sick minds Ayaz was a traitor;
he was incarcerated. The One Unit, sinister and
political fiends in the history of Pakistan (1956-68)
left a deep and everlasting impact on the soul
of Shaikh Ayaz. He was not prepared to accept
Sindh as sabiq , (former) Sindh; for Shaikh Ayaz,
Sindh was a living entity; Sindh could not become
sabiq under any pretext. And then, an anthem for
a living and vibrant Sindh echoed throughout the
region: land of the country called Sindh, , I
bow before thee, , adore my forehead thy soil.
Vicious campaigns of slur and hatred were unleashed
against Ayaz. He was censured for arousing separatist
tendencies among the youth of Sindh. He was incriminated
for infusing a movement for Sindhudesh, and revolt
against the federation. He was accused of farming
hatred against the State and was charged with
sedition. By then, Shaikh Ayaz had become a household
name in Sindh. By temperament Shaikh Ayaz was
anti-authoritarian. Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto did not
want to pick trouble with Shaikh Ayaz, and he
became instrumental in his appointment as Vice
Chancellor of Sindh University. Ayaz was not an
educationist. By no stretch of imagination was
he an administrator. He was genuinely and naturally
inclined as a poet and had digested the classical
literature of English, Sindhi, Urdu, Hindi, and
Persian languages. Soon he entered into disagreement
with the students and the University teachers.
The years Ayaz spent at the University tarnished
his image. He came lonely, sad, and forlorn and
went into oblivion for sometime. And thus commenced
the final phase in the turbulent life of the great
poet. There was something strange, inexplicable
about Shaikh Ayaz. He composed poetry in the modern
times, but in his diction he had established a
spiritual link with Kabir, Kalidas, Rumi, Milton,
Keats, Farid, Bulhay Shah, Sachal Sarmast, and
Shah Latif Bhatti. One often wonders whether he
was their disciple who had put on a mysterious
cloak and had surmounted the phenomenon of timelessness
to be with us! I do not know. Those of us who
claim to have known Ayaz intimately, in fact do
not know him. After Shah Latif Bhitai, Shaikh
Ayaz was bestowed with enormous vocabulary to
express the complexities of life in multiple forms
with effortless ease and simplicity in his expressions.
And, after Sachal Sarmast, Mansoor Hallaj of Sindh,
Shaikh Ayaz was the bold, brave, and fearless
poet who during the closing years of his life
wrote of direct communion with his Creator....
the true essence of a mystic sufi!
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