Amina Shah

Amina Shah
Born 31 October 1918 (1918-10-31) (age 93)
Edinburgh, Scotland
Occupation Author, poet, storyteller
Nationality Afghan, British
Subjects Storytelling, travel, exploration, Arab World, cross-cultural studies
Children 0
Relative(s) Shah family

Amina Shah (born 31 October 1918) is a prominent anthologiser of Sufi stories and folk tales,[1] and was for many years the Chairperson of the College of Storytellers. She is the sister of the Sufi writers Idries Shah and Omar Ali-Shah, and the daughter of Sirdar Ikbal Ali Shah[1] and Saira Elizabeth Luiza Shah. Her nephew is the travel writer and documentary filmmaker Tahir Shah; her nieces, the writer and documentary filmmaker Saira Shah and Safia Shah.

Contents

Family origins and life

Shah was born into a distinguished family of Saadat (= Arabic plural of Sayyid) who had their ancestral home at Paghman, not far from Kabul.[2][3] Her paternal grandfather, Sayyid Amjad Ali Shah, was the nawab of Sardhana, in the North-Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.[4] The principality was awarded to his ancestor Jan-Fishan Khan during the British Raj, and had been ruled formerly by the Kashmiri-born warrior-princess, the Begum Samru.[5]

Her career as a folklorist and author has spanned seventy years.[6] In that time she has travelled widely, collecting stories and studying folklore. Her travels have taken her through Africa and the Middle East, through the jungles of Sarawak, across the Australian Outback, Afghanistan, and beyond.

Doris Lessing, who became a student of Idries Shah's Sufism in the 1960s, championed the Shah family's efforts to disseminate such teaching stories in the West, and penned an introduction for Amina Shah's The Tale of the Four Dervishes.[7]

Books

References

  1. ^ a b Smoley, Richard; Kinney, Jay (2004). Hidden Wisdom. Wheaton, IL/Chennai, India: Quest Books. pp. 244. ISBN 0-8356-0844-1. 
  2. ^ Moorhouse, Geoffrey (2003-10-26). "From Kent to Kabul". New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9501E7D9173EF935A15753C1A9659C8B63. Retrieved 2008-09-23. 
  3. ^ Shah, Tahir. In Arabian Nights. ISBN 978-0-553-80523-9. 
  4. ^ Bashir M. Dervish: "Idris Shah: a contemporary promoter of Islamic Ideas in the West" in: Islamic Culture – an English Quarterly Vol. L, no. 4 October 1976. Published by the Islamic Culture Board, Hyderabad India (Osmania University, Hyderabad)
  5. ^ Shah, Saira (2003). The Storyteller's Daughter. New York, NY: Anchor Books. ISBN 1-4000-3147-8. 
  6. ^ First book 1938, most recent due out with I. B. Tauris in 2009
  7. ^ Galin, Müge (1997). Between East and West: Sufism in the Novels of Doris Lessing. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. pp. 20–21, 100. ISBN 0-7914-3383-8. 

External links