Taskeen Manerwal | |
---|---|
Native name | تسکین مانیروال |
Born | Mohammad Taskeen 15 September 1949 Swabi, Pakistan |
Died | 10 January 2022 72) Swabi, Pakistan | (aged
Resting place | Maniri Payan, Swabi District |
Occupation | poet, writer, intellectual, author |
Language | Pashto |
Nationality | Pakistani |
Alma mater | Government Post Graduate College, Swabi |
Mohammad Taskeen Manerwal (Pashto: محمد تسکین مانیروال; 15 September 1949 – 10 January 2022) was a Pakistani intellectual, writer, and author of Pashto literature and poetry.[1][2] He was also a teacher and retired from the Department of Education in 1999 as a headmaster. He belonged to Maniri Swabi.
Early life
Mohammad Taskeen was born on 15 September 1949[lower-alpha 1] in Maniri village of Swabi. He had three sisters and three brothers, and his father Mohammad Yameen was the school headmaster. Taskeen was nicknamed "Manerwal" after his village, while the name "Taskeen" was originally given to a deceased elder brother.[3]
Manerwal began primary school in 1953. He matriculated from Swabi High School in 1965, and finished intermediate college at Government Post Graduate College, Swabi in 1967. He later completed a private[lower-alpha 2] B.A. (1977) and a B.Ed (1980). He became a schoolteacher in 1969,[3] and retired from the Department of Education in 1999 as a headmaster.[5]
Career
Manerwal started writing poetry when he was a fifth-grade student, influenced by the Pashto poets Rahman Baba and Khushal Khan Khattak. When Taskeen was studying at Government Post Graduate College, Swabi, he was involved in the publication of the Neelab Magazine.[5] His writing in Neelab brought him to the attention of established Pashto writers such as Abdul Ghani Khan.[3] Manerwal's numerous ghazals and poems,[5] such as "Cha Kha Khoshay Shara Wy" (1973),[3] were popular among Pashtuns not only in Pakistan but also in Afghanistan.[5] His only book, the poetry collection Cha Kha Khoshay Shara Wy, was published in 2011,[6] strengthening his reputation as a romantic poet.[5]
Personal life and death
Manerwal was unmarried, but said he would live among the people through his poetry. According to his colleagues, his life was difficult, but when he was among the people, he was a true advocate of peace.[5] He disliked politics, and was a reader of Sufi poetry.[3]
Manerwal died in Swabi on 10 January 2022.[7] He was buried at his ancestral graveyard in Maniri Payan, Swabi. Qaumi Watan Party Provincial Chairman Sikandar Hayat Khan Sherpao, Awami National Party Khyber Pakhtunkhwa President Aimal Wali Khan, General Secretary Sardar Hussain Babak and Culture Secretary Khadim Hussain expressed their condolences.[7][8][9]
Explanatory notes
References
- ↑ "د د ستار سڑی پہ شمار دی" [The stars are counted]. dailyshahbaz.com. 11 September 2021.
- ↑ "معروف پشتو شاعر تسکین مانیروال کے اعزازمیں تقریب" [Ceremony in honor of renowned Pashto poet Taskin Manirwal]. UrduPoint. 21 October 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "تسکین کا متلاشی شاعر" [A poet seeking solace]. dailyshahbaz.com. 16 November 2019.
- ↑ "Private Examinations: BA and BSc". University of Peshawar. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Correspondent, The Newspaper's (11 January 2022). "Poet Taskeen Manerwal passes away in Swabi". DAWN.COM.
- ↑ Manerwal, Taskeen (2011). چې ښه خوشې صحرا وې [That was a beautiful desert] (in Pashto). Peshawar: يونيورسټى بک ايجنسى. OCLC 805703012.
- 1 2 "پشتو ادب کے نامور شاعر و ادیب تسکین مانیروال صوابی میں سپردخاک" [Famous Pashto poet and writer Taskin Manirwal buried in Swabi]. dailyshahbaz.com. 10 January 2022.
- ↑ "قومی وطن پارٹی کا پشتو زبان کے ممتاز شاعر و ادیب تسکین مانیروال کی وفات پر دلی رنج و غم اور افسوس کا اظہار" [Qaumi Watan Party expresses heartfelt grief and sorrow over the death of prominent Pashto language poet and writer Taskin Manirwal]. UrduPoint. 10 January 2022.
- ↑ "سکندر حیات شیرپاؤ کی تسکین مانیروال کی وفات پر تعزیت" [Sikandar Hayat Sherpao's condolences on the death of Taskin Manirwal]. Daily Pakistan. 11 January 2022.