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Mohammad Sanaullah Dar (25 May 1912 – 3 November 1949), better known as Miraji was an Indian poet. Miraji. Baidar Bakht. Columbia University. He lived the life of a , working only intermittently.


Early life
Born into a Kashmiri family
(2025). 9780804733298, Stanford University Press.
of and named Mohammed Sanaullah Dar, he passed his childhood days in Kucha Sardar Shah, Mozang, . His father, Munshi Mohammad Mahtabuddin, was a railway engineer, so his family had to often move from one place to another. He lived in , Bostan (Baluchistan), and .

Miraji began composing poetry, under the pseudonym of Sasri, when he was at school. It was from his later encounter with a girl, Mira Sen, who was a daughter of an accounts officer serving in Lahore, that he fell deeply in love. This left a permanent trace in his life that he adopted his pen name on her name. Though brought up in affluent surroundings, Miraji left his home and family and chose to lead the life of a homeless wanderer, mostly staying with his friends and making a living by selling his songs. Urdustan: Meeraji Julien Columeau, a French novelist who also writes in Urdu and Hindi has authored a very unusual but engaging short novel on the life of Miraji. Aaj Shumara Number - 71. Rekhta.


Literary life
Miraji was associated with Adabi Duniya (Lahore), and later worked for All India Radio, . He wrote literary columns for the monthly Saqi () and for a short period helped editing Khayal (). After Partition, he settled permanently in .

From his teenage days, Miraji felt attracted towards . He often used vocabulary in his poetry, prose and letters. He acknowledged his debt to the poet and the poet . He also translated certain works of the poet, and of the poet, .

Miraji is considered to be one of the pioneers of symbolism in Urdu poetry, and especially introducing . Along with N. M. Rashid, he was a leading poet of the group Halqa-e Arbab-e Zauq, which broke away from the classic convention of radeef and , explored the rich resources of and , rejected the confines of the socially "acceptable" and "respectable" themes, rejected the stranglehold of Persianised diction, and explored with sensitivity and skill, the hitherto forbidden territories of sexual and psychological states. He also wrote illuminating criticism of poetry and yearned to alter the expression of his age.

(1996). 031303267X, Greenwood Press. . 031303267X


Works
Miraji's literary output was immense but he published very little of his poetry during his lifetime. However, , in his article "Meera Sen's forgotten lover," records that during Miraji's lifetime four collections of Miraji's works were published by Shahid Ahmed Dehlavi, and one by Maktaba-e-Urdu, Lahore. His complete works Kulliyat-e-Miraji appeared only in 1988 edited by Dr. .Dr Jameel Jalibi again edited the Kulliyat and published in 1994 from Lahore with all his remaining works. Another collection titled Baqiyat-e-Miraji was edited by Sheema Majeed in 1990. A book titled "Iss Nazm Mein" containing Essays of Miraji was published during his lifetime.

List of works:

  1. "Geet he Geet" (songs)
  2. "Miraji ke Geet" (Poems)
  3. "Miraji ki Nazmen"(Poems)
  4. "Teen Rang" (Poems)
  5. "Iss Nazm Mein" (Literary criticism)
  6. "Kulliyat-e-Miraji" (Poems) compiled by Altaf Gauhar and published by Dr. Jameel Jalibi, Urdu Markaz U.K.
  7. "Baqiyat-e-Miraji" (Poems) edited by Sheema Majeed and published by Pakistan Books and Literary Sounds, Lahore.
  8. "Intikhab-e-kalaam"
  9. "Pratinidhi Shairy"
  10. "Seh Aatishah (poems)
  11. "Mashriq o Maghrib ke Naghmay
  12. "Paband Nazmen (poems)
  13. "Miraji ki Nazmen," edited by Anees Nagi (poems)
  14. "Nigar Khana" (translation)
  15. "Khemay ke aas paas" (translations)
  16. "Nagri nagri phira musafir ghar ka rasta bhool gaya," sung By Ghulam Ali


Personality
Miraji adopted a deliberately outlandish style in his dress, sporting long hair, a dagger-like mustache, oversize earrings, colorful headgear, an amulet and a string of beads around his neck. Mehr Lal Soni Zia Fatehabadi, his poet friend and former class fellow, recalled that the only time Miraji trimmed his long hair was when he joined All India Radio, New Delhi.


Death
Akhtar ul Iman, his poet friend, who was himself influenced by Miraji and Noon Meem Rashid, and with whom Miraji spent the last days of his life in and Bombay, reported that his excessive drinking, cigarette-smoking, and sexual dissipation had drained away his strength and damaged his liver. Then, there came the additional agony of his psychic ailment, for which he had to be admitted to hospital where he was given electric shocks to cure him of his insanity—a treatment which he dreaded. The end came at 4 p.m. on 3 November 1949, in King Edward Memorial Hospital in Bombay.


Works on Miraji
  • "Miraji" a monograph on the Urdu poet written by .
    (2025). 9788126013098, Sāhityah Akādmī.
  • "Miraji : Shakhsiyat aur Funn" - Doctoral dissertation of Dr. .A critical appraisal of the personality and art of Miraji. http://www.sherosokhan.com/id828.html
  • "Miraji aur Amli Tanqeed" published by Mah-e-Nau, Lahore in May, 1979. A study of Miraji's methods of literary criticism.
  • "A dense tranquillity, a harsh solitude: the ‘un-natural’ modernism of Miraji" by Judhajit Sarkar, Journal of South Asian History and Culture, Https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/19472498.2024.2371246.


See also

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