Noon Meem Danish

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Noor Mohammed, more commonly known as Noon Meem Danish or N.M. Danish (Urdu: ن۔ م۔ دانش; born 1958 in Karachi, Pakistan) is a Pakistani poet of African and Baloch descent. He was raised in a working class family in Lyari, a largely African neighbourhood, which he describes as "Karachi's Harlem". He did his early education at the Okhai Memon School in Kharadar, and began writing poetry in 1974. His African appearance often led people around him to assume he was a foreigner; he describes being asked frequently where he was from and why he spoke Urdu so well. After receiving his master's degree in Urdu from the University of Karachi in 1984, he began teaching at the Urdu College.[1] He invited Indian poet Bashir Badr to recite poetry at Karachi University one time; Badr was delayed, and the students began to become restless; he responded to their complaints about their pre-lunch hunger with the comment to the effect that he would not have arranged for such an eminent poet to come if he had known that "the students of the Urdu Department had their brains in the stomach and not the head."[2]

Bachay, Titli, Phool, Danish's first collection of poems, was published in 1997. He quickly garnered recognition for the anger he expressed through his works, in which he often made reference to his experiences as a member of the African diaspora; his work attracted the attention of leading Urdu critic Shamsur Rahman Farooqi, who had them published in Indian literary journal Shabkhoon.[1] In 2000, he emigrated to the United States; he had remarked to a friend that he would prefer to be "a third class citizen of a first class country than a first class citizen of a third class country," but put off going through the procedures for almost two years due to his ambivalence about leaving his home.[2][3] He first took up residence in the Kew Gardens neighborhood of Queens, New York City; he chose it because of its diversity, which helped him to feel less of a stranger as well as affording him the opportunity to study others' cultures.[3] At first, he could only find job as a security guard, but he eventually joined the faculty of New York University; he later moved to the University of Maryland as a language consultant.[1][2]

Danish cites Urdu poets such as Mustafa Zaidi, Obaidullah Aleem, Noon Meem Rashid, and Sirajuddin Zafar as his major influences; he is also an admirer of Langston Hughes and hopes to translate his works into Urdu.[1][2][3] He is married and has two children.[3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Farrukhi, Asif (2007-12-09), “AUTHOR: A poet in New York”, Dawn (Pakistan: Pakistan Herald Publications), <http://www.dawn.com/weekly/books/books6.htm>. Retrieved on 13 December 2007 
  2. ^ a b c d Poetry and the dreamland”, Dawn, 2006-06-19, <http://www.dawn.com/2006/06/19/fea.htm#3>. Retrieved on 7 March 2008 
  3. ^ a b c d Catafago, Paul (2004), “The Beautiful Mosaic: The life of poetry in Queens”, Urban Folk Magazine (New York: Queens Council of the Arts) (no. 3), <http://www.movementone.org/catafago.html>. Retrieved on 14 December 2007  Includes a translation of one of his Urdu works into English.