Awaz Sayeed

From Bharatpedia, an open encyclopedia
Information red.svg
Scan the QR code to donate via UPI
Dear reader, We need your support to keep the flame of knowledge burning bright! Our hosting server bill is due on June 1st, and without your help, Bharatpedia faces the risk of shutdown. We've come a long way together in exploring and celebrating our rich heritage. Now, let's unite to ensure Bharatpedia continues to be a beacon of knowledge for generations to come. Every contribution, big or small, makes a difference. Together, let's preserve and share the essence of Bharat.

Thank you for being part of the Bharatpedia family!
Please scan the QR code on the right to donate.

0%

   

transparency: ₹0 raised out of ₹100,000 (0 supporter)


Awaz Sayeed
307 × 416 pixels
Awaz Sayeed
Personal details
Born(1934-03-03)3 March 1934[citation needed]
Hyderabad, Telangana, India
Died2 July 1995(1995-07-02) (aged 61)[citation needed]
Chicago, United States
OccupationWriter and Poet (Urdu)

Awaz Bin Sayeed Bin Awaz Bin Jabir Bin Abdullah (3 March 1934 – 2 July 1995) (Urdu: عوض سعید‎) (pen name: Chaand, چاند), was a modern short-story writer, poet, playwright, Khaka-naveez and humorist from Hyderabad, India.  

Early life and family[edit]

Awaz Sayeed was born on 3 March 1934 to Sayeed Bin Awaz Bin Jabir Bin Abdullah (father) and Noorunnissa Begum Al Khulaqi (mother).[citation needed]

Awaz Sayeed was a Hadhrami Arab by descent belonging to a family of Hyderabad Deccan, with roots in Mukallah in Hadhramaut (present-day Yemen).[citation needed] He belongs to the Al-Musalli Clan of the Al-Yafai Tribe. His father served as State Financier under His Highness Sultan Omar bin Awadh Al Qu'aiti (Nawab Sir Jan-Baz Jung Bahadur K.C.I.E.) and His Highness Sultan Sir Saleh bin Ghalib Al Qu'aiti (Saif Nawaz Jung Bahadur).[citation needed]

Sayeed completed his early education from Anwar-ul-Uloom High School.[citation needed] Thereafter, he passed out Matriculation from the City College in April 1948, Intermediate from the Chaderghat College in April 1952 and took enroled in Anwar-ul-Uloom College to pursue Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) but only completed the first year owing to his getting employment in the Food Corporation of India in 1954.[citation needed] Awaz Sayeed married Kaneez Fatima in 1960.[citation needed]

Literary career[edit]

Sayeed's first Urdu afsana Jeetey Jaagtey was published in 1949 in Nizam-e-Lahore. Thereafter, several of his stories have been published in Urdu magazines of the Indian Sub-continent.[citation needed]

He also wrote humorous works including Shaqsi-Khaka-Nigari (life-sketches) in which he portrayed known personalities of Urdu literature.[citation needed]

Awaz Sayeed's stories have been translated into English, Hindi, and Malayalam.[citation needed]

Some English translations of his Urdu short stories have been included in at least two recent English compilations of translated works by Urdu writers of the Indian Sub-Continent. The first book Despairing voices: a collection of modern Urdu short stories edited and translated by Syed Sarwar (Satyam Publishing House, 2011) includes his four Urdu short stories Raat Wala Ajnabi ('The Night's Stranger'), Udaas Nasal Ka Aakhri Aadmi ('Last Man of the Melancholic Race'), Andha Kunwan ('Dry Well') and Coma. The second book New Urdu Writings: From India and Pakistan by Rakhshanda Jalil (Westland Ltd, 2013) includes the story Chubhan ('Pin-Prick').

The 1998 M.Phil thesis of Nusrat Jahan is titled ‘Awaz Sayeed Ki Shaqsiyat Aur Fan’ (عوض سید - شخصیت اور فن) and the 2006 M. Phil thesis by Aliya Maqsood is titled 'Awaz Sayeed Ba Haisiyat Khaka Nigar' (عوض سید - بحیثیت خا کہ نگار).[citation needed]

Books[edit]

Awaz Sayeed wrote seven books: six of them short stories: Sai Ka Safar (1969), Teesra Mujasamma (1973), Raat Wala Ajnabi (1977), Kohe-Nida (1977), Benaam Mausamon Ka Nauha (1987) and Kuwaan Aadmi Aur Samandar (1993) and a book on khake (personality sketches) called Khake (1985).[citation needed]

The second reprint of the book Khake was produced in 2006 by his son Ausaf Sayeed in association with the Urdu Academy Jeddah.[citation needed] The book was released by Arjun Singh, the Minister of Human Resource Development, Government of India, during a special function in Jeddah.[citation needed] In August 2009, Sayeed's published and unpublished works was published in two volumes titled Kuliyaat-e-Awaz Sayeed by his son Ausaf Sayeed, which was released by Shri Mohammad Hamid Ansari, Vice-President of India.[citation needed] The book has been published by Educational Publishing House, New Delhi.[citation needed]

Death[edit]

Sayeed died on 2 July 1995, following a heart failure while on a visit to Chicago, Illinois, USA.[citation needed] He is buried at the Rosehill Cemetery, Peterson in Chicago.[citation needed]

External links[edit]