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Ahmed Ali

Ahmed Ali (1 July 1910 in Delhi – 14 January 1994 in Karachi) (Urdu: ‫ )احمد علی‬was a
Pakistani novelist, poet, critic, translator, diplomat and scholar. A pioneer of the modem
Urdu short story, his works include the short story collections: Angarey (Embers), 1932;
Hamari Gali (Our Lane), 1940; Qaid Khana (The Prison-house), 1942; and Maut Se Pehle
(Before Death), 1945. His other writings include Twilight in Delhi (1940), his first novel in the
English language

Biography:
Born in Delhi, British India, Ahmed Ali was educated at Aligarh Muslim University and
Lucknow University; in the latter "having achieved the highest marks in English in the history
of the university. From 1932 to 1946, he taught at the leading Indian universities including
Allahabad University and his alma mater in Lucknow. He also joined the Bengal Senior
Educational Service as professor and head of the English Department at Presidency College,
Calcutta (1944–47) and was the BBC's Representative and Director in India during World War
II, from 1942 to 1945. Following that, he was the British Council Visiting Professor to Nanjing
University, as appointed by the British government of India. In 1948, when he tried to return
home after the Partition, K. P. S. Menon (then India's ambassador to China) would not allow
it because Ali had not indicated his preferences as a government employee; that is, whether
to remain in India or transfer to Pakistan. As a result, he was forced to go to Pakistan.

In 1948, he moved to Karachi. Later, he was appointed Director of Foreign Publicity for the
Pakistani Government. At the behest of Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan, he joined the
Pakistan Foreign Service in 1950. According to custom, files were drawn to determine the
country of assignment. Ali's tile was blank, so he chose China and became Pakistan's first
envoy to the new People's Republic. He established formal diplomatic relations that same
year. He also helped to establish an embassy in Morocco.

Literary career:
Ahmed Ali started his literary career at a young age and became a co-founder of the All-India
Progressive Writers' Movement along with the writer Sajjad Zaheer who had become well
known by the publication of Angaaray (Embers) in 1932. It was a collection of short stories in
the Urdu language and was a bitter critique of middle-class Muslim values in British India. In
addition to Ali, it included stories by three of his friends; Mahmud al-Zafar, Sajjad Zaheer and
Rashid Jahan. This book was later banned by the British Government of India in March 1933.
Shortly afterward, Ali and Zafar announced the formation of a "League of Progressive
Authors", which was later to expand and become the All-India Progressive Writers'
Association. Ali presented his paper "Art Ka Taraqqi-Pasand Nazariya" (A Progressive View of
Art) in its inaugural conference in 1936.

Ali achieved international fame with his first novel written in English Twilight in Delhi, which
was published by the Hogarth Press in London in 1940. This novel, as its title implies,
describes the decline of the Muslim aristocracy with the advance of the British colonialism in
the early 20th century.

Al-Quran, A Contemporary Translation (Princeton University Press, Oxford University Press &
Akrash Publishing) is his most notable contribution in the field of translation. According to
the book's description it is "approved by eminent Islamic scholars", and "it has come to be
recognized as one of the best existing translations of the holy Quran." Other languages he
translated from, apart from Arabic and Urdu, included Indonesian and Chinese.

Awards and recognition


• Elected a Founding Fellow of the Pakistan Academy of Letters in 1979.

• Sitara-i-Imtiaz (Star of Excellence) Award in 1980 by the President of Pakistan.

• Conferred an honourary doctorate degree in 1993 by the University of Karachi.

• On 14 January 2005, Pakistan Post issued a commemorative postage stamp in his


honor in its 'Men of Letters' series.

Works:
Novels:
• Twilight in Delhi (1940)

• Ocean of Night (1964)

• Rats and Diplomats (1986)

Plays:
• The Land of Twilight (1931)

• Break the Chains (1932)


Short stories:
• "When the Funeral Was Crossing the Bridge," in Lucknow University Journal, 1929.

• "Mahavaton Ki Ek Rât," in Humayûn (Lahore), January 1931.

• Angarey (1932). With Rashid Jahan, Mahmuduzzafar and Sajjad Zaheer.

• Sholey (1934)

• "Our Lane," in New Writing (London), 1936.

• Hamari Gali (1940)

• "Morning in Delhi," in New Writing (London), 1940.

• Qaid-khana (1942)

• Maut se Pahle (1945)

• "Before Death," in New Directions 15 (New York), 1956.

• Prima della Morte (1966). Bilingual Italian-Urdu version of Maut se Pahle.

• The Prison-House (1985)

Poetry:
• Purple Gold Mountain (1960)

• First Voices (1965)

• Selected Poems (1988)

Literary criticism:
• "Poetry: A Problem,” in Allahabad University Studies, vol. XI, no. II, 1934.

• Art ka Taraqqî-Pasand Nazariya (1936)

• “Maxim Gorky as a Short-Story Writer," in Lucknow University Journal, 1938.

• Mr. Eliot’s Penny-World of Dreams (1941)

• Failure of an Intellect (1968)


• "Illusion and Reality, the Art and Philosophy of Raja Rao," in Journal of
Commonwealth Literature, July 1968.

• The Problem of Style and Technique in Ghalib (1969)

• Ghalib: Two Essays (1969). With Alessandro Bausani.

• The Golden Tradition: An Anthology of Urdu Poetry (1973)

Translation:
• The Flaming Earth (1949). An anthology of selected Indonesian poems.

• The Falcon and the Hunted Bird (1950)

• The Bulbul and the Rose: An Anthology of Urdu Poetry (1960)

• Ghalib: Selected Poems (1969)

• al-Qur’ân: A Contemporary Translation (1984)

• The Call of the Trumpet (unpublished). An anthology of modern Chinese poetry.

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