Saghar Siddiqui

Saghar Siddiqui
Born Muhammad Akhtar
1928
Ambala, British India[1]
Died (1974-07-19)19 July 1974 (aged 46)
Lahore, Pakistan[1]
Pen name Saghar
Occupation poet in both Urdu and Punjabi languages[1]
Nationality Pakistani
Genre Ghazal, Nazm, Free verse

Saghar Siddiqui (Urdu: ساغر صدیقی) is a pen name of Muhammad Akhtar (1928 – 19 July 1974), an Urdu poet from Pakistan.

Biography

Siddiqui was born in 1928 in Ambala (British India) to a well-to-do middle-class family.[2][1] There are few historic records of Saghar's personal life. He rarely spoke to any one in this regard and most of what is known of him tends to be from witness accounts.

Siddiqui was the only child of his parents and spent the early years of his life in Ambala and Saharanpur. He was home tutored and received his early education from Habib Hassan حبیب حسن, a family friend. Young Muhammad Akhtar (later known as Saghar Siddiqui) was much impressed by Habib Hassan, and he got interested in Urdu poetry because of him. Siddiqui started writing poetry as a child. He moved to Amritsar(Punjab), in search of work and used to make wooden combs while writing Urdu poetry. For some time, he used Nasir Hijazi as his pen name, but later he switched to Saghar Siddiqui.[1] When 15 years old, he regularly started attending mushairas (poerty recitals) in Jalandhar, Ludhiana and Gurdaspur.[1]

In 1947, when he was 19, he migrated to Pakistan during the independence and settled in Lahore. In those days with his slim appearance, wearing pants and boski (yellow silky cloth) shirts, with curly hair, and reciting beautiful ghazals in a melodious voice, he became a huge success. He had some tragic turns in his life.

Siddiqui continued to write poetry for the film industry and moved on to publish a literary magazine. The magazine was a critical success but a commercial flop. Disappointed, Saghar shut down the magazine. In his later life, he fell into depression, financially ruined and addicted to drugs.[1]

Siddiqui chose to stay in cheap hotels, rather than settle into a house given by the government to refugees. He would pay the rent with meager amounts earnt by selling his poems to magazines.[1] Sometimes he would have to sell his poetry to other poets for a few rupees. He would use the waste paper spread around to light fires to stay warm during winter nights. Some of these poems were re-sold by these people as their own work.[1]

Within a decade of coming to Pakistan, he became disillusioned as he saw corruption and nepotism being rewarded at the expense of genuine talent. In despair, he turned to morphine, buying it from janitors of hospitals in Lahore. As friends and strangers continued to exploit him, Siddiqui fell further into despair and was soon turned out of hotels and had to live on the streets . He was often seen along Circular Road of Lahore, and in Anarkali Bazar, Akhbaar Market, Aibak Road, Shah Alami, and around the Data Darbar area. He would often hold mushairas on the footpaths, in candle light. He continued to write poems, though most of them are lost and unpublished.[1]

In July 1974, Siddiqui was found dead on a street corner of Lahore at age 46.[1] He was buried at the Miani Sahib graveyard. His dog also died a year later, reportedly at the same spot.[1] His mausoleum at Miani Sahib graveyard[3] in Lahore is marked with a commemorative shrine which was built later.[4]

Julien Columeau, a French writer in Pakistan, wrote a semi-fictional Urdu novel Saghar based on Saghar Siddiqui's life.[5][6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Paracha, Nadeem (29 November 2012). "Saghar Siddiqui: A man, his demons and his dog". Dawn (newspaper). Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  2. "Sagar Siddiqui Biography | Pakistan Social Web". Pakistan.web.pk. Retrieved 2018-06-14.
  3. "A video of Faqeer Poet Saghar Siddiqui.فقیر شاعر ساغر صدیقی Shrine Miani Saib Lahore". Tune.pk website. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  4. "French author becomes Urdu novelist after coming to Pakistan". The Express Tribune (newspaper). 22 May 2014. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  5. "French author in Pakistan writes in Urdu". The Asian Age. AFP. 28 May 2014. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  6. Javed, Kazy. "A Word About Letters". Retrieved 14 June 2018.
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