Dareechah-e-Nigaarish

Dareechah-e-Nigaarish
Toronto, ON
Canada

talat.afroze@dareechah.com

Follow us:TwitterFacebook

  • Home
  • What's New this month?
  • Urdu eBook: How to Type and Publish Urdu eBook
    • Learn to Type Urdu (Urdu Keyboarding)
    • Create Urdu eBook in 10 Steps
    • Register Copyright for Urdu eBook
    • Get International Standard Book Number (ISBN)
    • InPage Urdu Software Commands
  • Setting Up an Urdu eBook Publishing Company
  • Urdu Content Web Site: How to Build Urdu Web Site
    • Install Urdu Typing Capability on Your Computer
  • Urdu eBooks on the Internet
  • Improve Your Writing Skills
  • Modern Urdu Poems
    • Videos of Majeed Amjad Poems
    • Early Poems of Majeed Amjad
    • Majeed Amjad: On Man and his Abode
    • Majeed Amjad : Romantic Poems
    • Majeed Amjad: Socio-Political Poems
    • Majeed Amjad: Poems about Children
    • Majeed Amjad: Poems about Art
    • Munir Niazi : Urdu Poems
    • Munir Niazi: Poems about Nighat
    • Munir Niazi: Poems Narration and Interview Videos
    • Fahmida Riaz : Poems
    • Fehmida Riaz : Videos
    • Ahmad Faraz: Urdu Poems
    • Sarmad Sehbai : Urdu Poems
    • Sarmad Sehbai : Videos
    • Ahmed Shamim: Biography
    • Ahmed Shamim: Poems
    • Ahmed Shamim: Videos
    • Zahid Dar : Biography
    • Zahid Dar: Poems
    • Parveen Shakir: Poems
    • Sarwat Hussain: Poems
    • Sara Shagufta Poems
    • Amjad Islam Amjad: Poems
    • Maqsood Wafa: Urdu Poems
    • Iftekhar Bukhari: Urdu Poems
    • Farooq Hassan: Biography
    • Farooq Hassan: Urdu Poems
    • Mohsin Naqvi: Poems
  • Modern Urdu Ghazals-1
    • Videos of Majeed Amjad Ghazals
    • Majeed Amjad : Ghazals
    • Munir Niazi : Ghazals
    • Munir Niazi: Ghazal Videos
    • Nasir Kazmi : Ghazals
    • Nasir Kazmi: Ghazal Videos
    • Ahmad Mushtaq: Ghazals
    • Ahmad Mushtaq: Videos
    • Parveen Shakir : Ghazals
    • Parveen Shakir: Videos
    • Ahmad Faraz : Ghazals
    • Ahmad Faraz: Videos
    • Mustafa Zaidi: Ghazals
    • Mustafa Zaidi: Videos
    • Adeem Hashmi : Ghazals
    • Shabnam Shakil : Ghazals
    • Zaheer Kashmiri: Modern Urdu Ghazals
    • Saltanat Qaiser: Ghazals
    • Shahryar: Urdu Ghazals
    • Shahryar Ghazals: Music Videos
    • Shahryaar: Ghazal Audio Files
    • Soofi Tabassum Ghazal Videos
    • Saifuddin Saif: Ghazals
    • Saifuddin Saif: Music Videos
    • Saifuddin Saif: Critique of Craft
    • Saghir Siddiqui: Biography
    • Saghir Siddiqui : Ghazals
    • Saghir Siddiqui: Videos
    • Sarmad Sehbai : Ghazals
    • Meena Kumari : Ghazals
    • Meena Kumari Sings her Ghazals
  • Modern Urdu Ghazals-2
    • Zafar Iqbal Ghazals
    • Obaidullah Aleem: Ghazals
    • Athar Nafees: Ghazal Videos
    • Hameeda Shaheen: Ghazals
    • Sudarshan Faakir: Urdu Ghazals
    • Imdad Husain Ghazals
    • Khatir Ghaznavi: Ghazals and Audio Gallery
    • Shakaib Jalali: Ghazals
    • Ahmed Shamim: Ghazals
    • Mohsin Naqvi: Ghazals
    • Fareed Javaid: Ghazals
    • Aanis Moeen Ghazals
    • Javed Qureshi: Ghazals and Audio Gallery
    • Maqsood Wafa: Ghazals
  • Urdu Songs-1
    • Modern Urdu Songs
    • Majeed Amjad: Urdu Songs
    • Munir Niazi: Song Videos
    • Sahir Ludhianvi Song Videos
    • Sahir Ludhianvi Songs: Audio Files
    • Kaifi Azmi Songs: Text and Videos
    • Rajinder Krishan Songs
    • S. H. Bihari Songs
    • Majrooh Sultanpuri Songs
    • Gulzar Song Videos
    • Gulzar Songs
    • Indeevar: Urdu Songs
    • Hasrat Jaipuri Songs
    • Bharat Vyas: Urdu Songs
    • Shakeel Badayuni : Song Videos
    • Anand Bakhshi: Songs
    • Anand Bakhshi Songs: Videos
    • Raja Mehdi Ali Khan Songs
    • A. M. Turaz Songs
    • Sudarshan Faakir: Urdu Songs
  • Urdu Songs-2
    • Irshad Kamil Songs
    • Fayyaz Hashmi Songs
    • Nakhshab Jarchavi: Songs and Ghazals
    • Asad Bhopali Song Videos
    • Manoj Muntashir: Urdu Songs
    • Masroor Anwar Songs
    • Saba Afghani Song Mere Mehboob Na Ja
    • Sarmad Sehbai : Urdu Songs
    • Sarmad Sehbai: Song Videos
    • Amjad Islam Amjad: Urdu Songs
    • Naqsh Lyallpuri Songs
    • Parveen Shakir: Urdu Songs
    • Amir Zaki Songs
    • Kulwant Jani Songs and Music Videos
    • Building Blocks of Nostalgia Nagar
    • Building Blocks of Nostalgia Nagar 02
    • Pehchaan Aashkaar Kartay Safar kay Geet
    • Fusion Music Urdu Song Videos
  • Modern Punjabi Poetry
    • Problems in Typing Punjabi using Urdu Fonts
    • New Shahmukhi Alphabet Characters for some Quintessential Punjabi Sounds
    • Munir Niazi Punjabi Poetry
    • Amrita Preetam Punjabi Poetry
    • Shiv Kumar Batalvi : Biography
    • Shiv Kumar Batalvi Poems
    • Shiv Kumar Batalvi Songs
    • Videos of Shiv Kumar Batalvi's Poetry
    • Nasreen Anjum Bhatti: Biography
    • Nasreen Anjum Bhatti: Punjabi Poems
    • Paash (Avtaar Singh Sandhu)
    • Manzoor Jhalla: Songs
    • Manzoor Jhalla Song Videos
    • Ahmad Rahi: Song Videos
    • Tanvir Naqvi Punjabi Song Videos
    • Hazeen Qadri: Punjabi Songs
    • Khawaja Pervaiz Punjabi Songs
    • Nasreen Anjum Bhatti: Poems
    • Professor Mohan Singh: Punjabi Poems
    • New Punjabi Songs
    • Saraiki Songs
    • Fusion Music Punjabi Song Videos
    • Punjabi Folk Songs
    • Punjabi Folk Songs: Video Gallery
    • Punjabi Folk Songs: Audio Gallery
    • Shah Husain Kafis: Audio Gallery
    • Syed Asif Shahkar: Punjabi Poems
  • New Voices !!
    • Kanwal Hussain
    • Kanwal Hussain: Ghazal Videos
    • Sana Fatima: Nasree Nazmein
    • Asad Ghafoor
    • Hussain Abid
    • Yaseen Zameer
    • Arifa Shahzad
    • Hasan Mehdi Syed
    • Tabinda Sehar Abdi
  • Hum Kahaan se chale thay
    • People's History of Pakistan : First Set of Videos
    • People's History of Pakistan: 2nd Set of Videos
    • A Leftist View of Pakistan's History
    • Progressive Writers Movement (India, Pakistan)
    • Dr Rasheed Jahan: Short Story Writer, Playwright
    • Sajjad Zaheer: London Kee Aik Raat
    • Sajjad Zaheer: Progressive Writers Movement & the Left
    • Zaheer Kashmiri: Leftist Politics in British India
    • Qamar Yoorish: Short Story Writer
    • Shahid Mahmood Nadeem: Playwright/Director
    • Missing Persons in Pakistan: Activists, Journalists, Writers
    • Tayyaba (10 Yr Old Pakistani Maid) Tortured
    • 100,000 Pakistani Laborers Sent Back from Saudi Arabia
    • Mosque Schools in Pakistan
  • An Alternative History of Man with Videos
    • The Ascent of Man
    • Civilization by Kenneth Clark
    • Astrobiology and Intelligently Designed Man
    • Documented Encounters with Spirits in Pakistan: Shahab Nama and Alkh Nagri
  • English Translations of Urdu Poetry
    • Majeed Amjad: Romantic Poems Translated
    • Majeed Amjad: Socio-Political Poems Translated
    • Ahmed Shamim: Poems Translated
    • Punjabi Translations of Urdu Poetry
  • Translations of Foreign Poetry
  • Urdu Fiction Writers
    • Dr Rasheed Jahan: Feminist Progressive Urdu Fiction Writer
    • Sajjad Zaheer: Modern Urdu Fiction Writer
    • Ghulam Abbas
    • Saadat Hasan Manto
    • Ismat Chughtai
    • Quratulain Haider
    • Krishan Chander: Urdu Novelist & Short Story Writer
    • Aziz Ahmad
    • Hajra Masroor: BioSketch
    • Hajra Masroor: Short Stories
    • Jamila Hashmi
    • Abdullah Hussein: BioSketch
    • Abdullah Hussein: Selected Passages from his Novels
    • A. Hameed
    • A. Hameed: Photo Gallery
    • Julien Columeau: Urdu Novelettes, Short Stories
  • Punjabi Fiction Writers
    • Nanak Singh: Modern Punjabi Novelist
    • Fauzia Rafique: English Novel about Pakistani Punjab
  • Third World Fiction Writers
    • Abdulrazak Gurnah Tanzanian Novelist
    • Kiran Desai
    • Manju Kapur Novels
    • Elif Shafak Novels
    • Arundhati Roy
    • Rani Manicka
    • Taslima Nasreen
    • Monica Ali
    • Anita Rau Badami
    • Mohammed Hanif
    • Halima Khatun
  • Developed World Fiction Writers
    • Helen Norris: Short Stories and Novels
  • Art Films
    • SCENES from Art Films
    • Elia Kazan's "America America"
    • Taiwanese Art Films
    • Chinese Art Films
    • Some Indian Art Films
    • Avishkaar: Indian Art Film 1973
    • Mrinal Sen: Antareen (The Confined)
    • Indian Art Films-1: YouTube Links
    • Indian Art Films-2: YouTube Links
    • Indian Romantic Comedies: YouTube links
    • Iranian Art Movies
    • Italian Art Films
    • American Art Films
    • New Zealand Art Films
    • British Art Films
  • Urdu Publishers in Pakistan
    • Online Stores Selling Urdu eBooks Urdu Print Books
  • Punjabi Publishers in Pakistan
  • Book Stores in Pakistan
  • Links to Web Resources
    • InPage Urdu Software
  • Videos Talat Afroze Poems-1
  • Videos Talat Afroze Poems-2
  • Talat Afroze: Urdu Poems
  • Talat Afroze: Urdu Songs
  • Talat Afroze: Urdu Ghazals
  • Talat Afroze: Punjabi Poems
  • Talat Afroze: Short Stories
  • Talat Afroze: Urdu Novel (in preparation)
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Krishan Chander: Urdu Novelist & Short Story Writer

 

Krishan Chander 1914-1977

Urdu Novelist & Short Story Writer

 

Krishan Chander and wife Salma Siddiqui
(married in 1961 when Krishan Chander converted to Islam and adopted the Muslim name of Waqar ul Mulk)



Bio Sketch of Krishan Chander courtesy of Kashmir Monitor

 Krishan Chander was born in 1914 in a family originally hailing from Wazirabad, British India (now in Pakistani Punjab), and later settled in Lahore.

 

Dareeechah addendum (based on a video interview with Krishan Chander's wife uploaded to the Facebook group "Teri Meri Kahani" ):

According to Krishan Chander's mother (MaaN Jee) and Krishan's wife Salma Siddiqui's video interview, Krishan Chander was born in Poonchh (Kashmir State, British India): Krishan's mother travelled from Wazirabad to Poonchh for the last few months of her pregnancy and gave birth in Poonchh to Krishan Chander who was her eldest son (she always called him "Kaakaa" .... Punjabi word for  baby boy). 

 

Back to Kashmir Monitor Bio Sketch:

Later, when he moved to Lahore, the young Krishan Chander was able to partake of the cosmopolitan culture prevalent in the city, to which he would return repeatedly in his short stories and nostalgically remember till the end of his life. He obtained his Masters’ degree in English from the city’s Forman Christian College (now a chartered university maintained by Presbyterian Church, USA) and some of his lifelong affiliations with fellow comrades of the Progressive Writers Movement such as Saadat Hasan Manto were initiated in Lahore.

 

Krishan Chander not only produced an astonishing oeuvre of about 30 collections of short stories and 20 novels, but was also a brilliant essayist and involved in the film industry. Moreover, unlike many of his fellow comrades, he was actively involved in practical socialist politics, like his presidency of the ‘bhangis’ union and his membership of the Socialist Party.

 

Chander was also the closest among all the Progressive Writers Movement stalwarts to realising the progressive ideals in literature. He believed in the ascendancy of a socialist society and throughout his life dedi-cated his efforts to helping the marginalised, the peasants and the workers, as well as writers and artists; in fact, his house often served as a home to the latter.

 

Most of the heroes and heroines of Krishan Chander’s stories are from the oppressed sections of society. He also comes out forcefully against communalism of every variety, and not only as it was reflected in the rioting and communal carnage following Partition. Two of his best-known stories:

 

‘Kachraa Baba’ (Old Man Rubbish) and

 

‘Kalloo Bhungee’ (Kalloo the Street Sweeper)

 

starkly bring out, in an unsentimental and unvarnished way, the humanity and the pathos of the lives of municipal street sweepers/garbage collectors, and the scorn they face from society in general.

 

At the same time, there’s much, much more to Krishan Chander’s varied oeuvre. While he has been accused by his critics of devoting his literary talents exclusively to the pursuit of socialism, revolution and class struggle at the cost of his art, this is unfair criticism.

 

Krishan Chander’s creative life can be understood as having passed through three phases. In 1939 he was in the grip of romantic ideas; from 1940 onwards he makes it a priority to encap-sulate the realities of life in his work (this is also the phase that his fictional work is losing its previous abstraction, perhaps due to the influence of James Joyce, Ezra Pound and D.H. Lawrence); and from 1945, he begins to be influenced by the great wars of national liberation against colonialism in India and across the world, and dreams avidly of socialist revolution.

 

There is thus remarkable variety in Krishan Chander’s creative output, even when one takes into account his dedication to socialist realism. My own introduction to his work came as a teen-ager when one of the short stories we were required to read as part of the Urdu syllabus was ‘Maha Laxmi ka Pull’ (The Bridge of Maha Laxmi):

“The Prime Minister’s car did not stop here and he cannot see those six saris; he proceeded to Chowpati for his speech. That’s why I now want to say to you: If your car ever crosses this side, please do see these six saris which are hanging on the left side of the Maha Laxmi Bridge; and then see those bright silk saris too which the dhobis have hung up to dry on the right side of the same bridge, and which belong to houses where the owners of factories with high chimneys and those with high salaries live. Do see to the right and left sides of the bridge and then ask your-selves which way is it you want to go? Note that I’m not asking you to become a socialist, neither am I advising you on the need for a class war, I just want to know if you are on the right or left side of the Maha Laxmi Bridge.”

 

Another remarkable story by Krishan Chander, and one of the first examples of stream-of-consciousness writing in Urdu literature, is ‘Do Farlaang Lambi Sarrak’ (The Two-Furlong Long Road). It is a sharp comment on the injustices ordinary people have to face on a daily basis:


“No one pities anybody. The road is silent and desolate. It sees everything, hears everything, but remains unmoved, merciless, insensitive and savage like the human heart. In my angriest moments, I often think about what will happen if I have a chance to blow the road up with dynamite. Its pieces will be seen floating in the air with a high explosion. No one would be able to imagine my happiness. Sometimes I wish to dance naked on the road and shout at the top of my voice that I am not human, am mad, that I hate humans. Grant me the servitude of the asylum, I don’t desire the freedom of these roads. The road is silent and desolate.”


As we celebrate Krishan Chander’s works, we need to remind ourselves of the continuing relevance of this master story-teller and humanist par excellence whose presence in our midst is perhaps more needed than ever before ?

 


Copyright 2010

Dareechah-e-Nigaarish.

 

All rights reserved.

 

Web Hosting by Turbify

Dareechah-e-Nigaarish
Toronto, ON
Canada

talat.afroze@dareechah.com

Follow us:TwitterFacebook