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Profile of Wajida Tabassum
Born : 16 Mar 1935 | Amravati, Maharashtra
Died : 07 Dec 2011 | Mumbai, Maharashtra
uTh ke mahfil se mat chale jaanā
tum se raushan ye konā konā hai
uTh ke mahfil se mat chale jaana
tum se raushan ye kona kona hai
Identity: A bold and fearless Urdu short story writer, novelist, and a perceptive chronicler of the declining feudal culture of Hyderabad Deccan.
Wajida Tabassum was born on 16 March 1935 in Amravati, Maharashtra. Having lost both her parents at an early age, she experienced the hardships of orphanhood, poverty, and deprivation from childhood.
In the aftermath of the communal riots and the Partition of India in 1947, her family migrated from Amravati to Hyderabad Deccan. These traumatic experiences and the upheaval of displacement played a crucial role in shaping her personality and literary vision.
She received her higher education in Urdu literature from Osmania University, Hyderabad. Her inclination toward creative writing emerged during her student years.
In 1960, she married her cousin Ashfaq Ahmad, who was employed with the Indian Railways. Following her marriage, she settled in Mumbai.
Her stories first appeared in the renowned literary magazine Biswin Sadi (Twentieth Century), and she soon became a prominent figure in Urdu literary circles.
Wajida Tabassum is regarded as one of the few Urdu fiction writers after Ismat Chughtai who established a truly distinctive literary style. Her language is marked by Deccani idioms, a feminine voice, satire, wit, and a rich cultural texture.
She focused on the declining aristocracy of Hyderabad, the extravagant lifestyles of nawabs, the lives of begums and maidservants, class divisions, economic hardships, women’s psychology, and sexual exploitation.
Following the tradition of Ismat Chughtai and Saadat Hasan Manto, she addressed taboo subjects and sexual realities with literary dignity and remarkable candor. Her bold treatment of such themes invited criticism and controversy, yet she never compromised her creative vision.
Her major short-story collections include Shahr-e-Mamnu (1960), her first and highly acclaimed collection, Tauba Tauba, Tehkhana, Aaya Basant Sakhi (1974), and Utran (1977). She also wrote novels such as Shole, Saatwan Phera, and Nath Ki Izzat.
Her story Utran is considered one of the most celebrated works of Urdu fiction and was later adapted into a successful television serial and films.
Among her notable stories are Teen Janaze, Gulistan Se Qabristan Tak, Kale Badal, Suhagan, Nagin, Eidi, Aag Mein Phool, Zara hor Upar, Nath Ka Ghurur, Nath Ka Bojh, and Nath Utarwai.
In the later years of her life, she suffered from severe arthritis and gradually withdrew into seclusion. Nevertheless, her literary reputation and influence remained intact.
Her contribution to literature received international recognition, and some of her stories were included in the curricula of American universities, particularly the University of Chicago.
Death: Wajida Tabassum passed away on 7 December 2011 in Mumbai, India.
USEFUL LINKS : | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wajida_Tabassum
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