Abdul Mannan Syed
Abdul Mannan Syed | |
---|---|
Syed in 2009 (Dhaka) | |
Native name | আবদুল মান্নান সৈয়দ |
Born |
Jalalpur, 24 Parganas, Bengal Presidency, British India | 3 August 1943
Died |
5 September 2010 67) Dhaka, Bangladesh | (aged
Nationality | Bangladeshi |
Occupation | Poet, academic, author |
Years active | 1967–2008 |
Abdul Mannan Syed (3 August 1943 – 5 September 2010) was a Bangladeshi poet, author and researcher. He was one of the most prolific Bengali literary personalities of the post-Partition Indian subcontinent. Until his death on 5 September 2010, he was regarded an authority on Bengali literature. Popularly regarded as a poet, he is also notable as a literary critic and an editor. Born as Syed Abdul Mannan, he assumed the pen name Ashoke Syed at the debut in literatur in 1960s. He published more than 150 titles to his credit during his lifetime. His works on poet Jibanananda Das and Kazi Nazrul Islam are not only seminal but also monumental in form, content and quality.[1]
Life
Syed was born on 3 August 1943 in Jalalpur village, on the rivulet Ichamati, in 24 Paragana, in West Bengal of undivided India.[2] In 1946, just before the partition of British Indian, a lethal Hindu-Muslim riot took place and forced many Muslims to leave West Bengal to settle in East Bengal, now Bangladesh. A less discussed but equally fearsome riot took place in 1950 that drove the family of Syed from West Bengal and to settle in Dhaka of then East Pakistan, now Bangladesh. He lost his motherland for ever and always felt like a refugee. They first lived in Gopibagh of Dhaka town. Shortly his father bought a piece of land on the Green Road, formerly called Kuli Road. Since then 51 Green Road has been his address till his sudden death in September 2010.
His father Syed A. M. Badruzzdoza was a public official who served in many places of the then East Pakistan. He was very strict about the formal education of his children. He had six sons and four daughters. Syed was married to his cousin Syra Syed Ranu. His only child was a daughter named Jinan Syed Shampa. In 1958, Syed passed the Matriculate examination from the Nawabpur High School. In 1960, he passed the Intermediate from the Dhaka College. He studied Bengali language and literature in the Dhaka University from where he obtained his B. A and M. A. degrees, respectively, in 1963 and 1964. Most of his life he earned his livelihood as a teacher of Bengali language and literature in government colleges. He started his career as a lecturer in the M. C. College of Sylhet town. He also taught in the Sheikh Borhanuddin College in Faridpur. However he served in the Jagannath College for a long time from where he retired in 1998. He also served as the District Gazetteer for a period of time. Later he was appointed the executive director of the Nazrul Institute (2002–2004).
Works
Syed is best known for his research on Bengali poet Jibanananda Das. Although he is most renowned for literary criticism, he is a versatile writer and poet. He taught as a faculty in the department of Bengali in the Jagannath College, Dhaka. Later he served as Director General of the Nazrul Institute. He was the first Scholar-in-residence in Bangladesh at North South University. For a long time he was associated with the Shilpataru, a monthly literary magazine published from Dhaka by poet Abid Azad.
Death
He had been suffering from diabetes and cardiac troubles for a long time. On 27 August 2010, he fell sick while participating in an event of Channel I. On 5 September 2010, he was having an afternoon sleep when he suffered a massive cardiac arrest and succumbed to death just before Iftaar. On the following day he was buried at the Azimpur Graveyaed after three Salatul Janazas at Green Road Jam-e-Masjid, Bangla Academy and Dhaka University mosque. His death was widely mourned across the country. All national dailies carried obituary on the following day. Next Friday, all dailies carried in the literary essays on his life and works. Electronic media also featured his death in a befitting manner.
Works
Poems:
- Janmandho Kobita Guchcha (1967)
- Jyōtsnā raudrēra cikitsā জ্যোত্স্না রৌদ্রের চিকিত্সা [Moonlight, Treatment for the Sun] (1969)
- Matal Manchitro (1970)
- O Shongbedon O Joltorongo (1974)
- Selected Poems (1975) ( Muktodhara publication)
- Kobita Company Pvt Ltd. (1982)
- Porabastab Kobita (1982)
- Park Street e Ek Ratri (1983)
- Mach Series (1984)
- Amar Sonnet (1990)
- Shokal Proshongsha Taar (1993)
- Nirobota Govirota Dui Bon Bole Kotha (1997)
- Selected Poems (2001)(Shomoy publication)
- Kobita Shomaggro (2001)
- Kobitar Boi (2006)
- He Bondhur Bondhu He Priyotomo (2006)
- Premer Kobita (2007)
- Matal Kobita Pagal goddya (2008)
- Ogghraner Nil Din (2008)
Novels
- Poriprekshiter Dasdasi (Slaves of Perspectives (1974)
- Kolkata (1980)
- Poramatir Kaj (Terracotta, 1982)
- A-Te Ajgor (A for Ajogor, 1982)
- He Songsar He Lota (Oh the World, Oh the Creeper, 1982)
- Gavir Gavirtara Asukh (Disease, Deep and Deeper, 1983)
- Prabesh (Entrance, 1994)
- Kshuda Prem Agun (Hunger Love Fire, 1994)
- Shyamali Tomar Mukh (Shyamali Your Face,1997)
Short stories
- Shotter moto bodmash(1968)
- Cholo jai porokkhe(1973)
- Mrittur odhik lal khudha(1977)
- Nirbachito golpo(1987)
- Utshob(1988)
- Nekre hayna ar tin pori(1997)
- Golpo(2004)
- Mach mangsho matshorjer rupkotha(2001)
- Nirbachito golpo(2002)
- Sreshtho golpo(2007)
Editorial works
- Life on Distant Shores, written by Abdur Rouf Choudhury, Bengali novel, published by Pathak Samabesh, Dhaka, 2003
- New Horizon, written by Abdur Rouf Choudhury, Bengali novel, published by Pathak Samabesh, Dhaka, 2005.
- Bangladesher Chhara, jointly edited with Shahabuddin Nagari and Abid Azad by Shilpatoru Prakashani, Dhaka, 1987.
- Bagladesher Kabita, jointly edited with Shahabuddin Nagari and Abid Azad by Shilpatoru Prakashani,Dhaka, 1987.
Awards
- Bangla Academy Award (1981)
- Alaol Literary Award (1981)
- Kabi Jasimuddin Award
- Chattagram Sangskriti Kendro Farrukh Memorial Award (1991)
References
- ↑ "The shadow of Abdul Mannan Syed". The Independent. Dhaka. 2013-09-07. Archived from the original on 4 February 2014. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
- ↑ Islam, Manu (2001). Who's who in Bangladesh 2000. Dhaka: Centre for Bangladesh Culture. OCLC 48517841.
Further reading
- Chowdhury, Kabir (1997). "Of History, Nationalism and Poetry". India International Centre Quarterly. India International Centre. 24 (2/3): 100–111. JSTOR 23005435.
- "Abdul Mannan Syed dead". The New Nation. BSS. 6 September 2010 – via HighBeam Research. (Subscription required (help)).
- "Tribute to Poet Abdul Mannan Syed". The Daily Star. 7 September 2010.
- Akhter, Shamima (2012). "Syed, Abdul Mannan". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
- "Leading light of literature". The Daily Star. 6 September 2013.
- "Abdul Mannan Syed's 3rd Death Anniversary Observed". Dhaka Courier. 15 September 2013 – via HighBeam Research. (Subscription required (help)).
- "Bangla literature through ages". The New Nation. 18 July 2014.
- "Abdul Mannan Syed's 5th death anniversary observed". The Daily Observer. 5 September 2015.
- "Blending Surrealism and Myth: Abdul Mannan Syed's 5th Death Anniv Observed". Dhaka Courier. 10 September 2015.
- Choudhury, Rabbani (8 January 2016). "Bengali novelists and novels". The New Nation.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Abdul Mannan Syed. |
- Three poems by Abdul Mannan Syed in English translation
- An article in Daily Jugantor by Shahabuddin Nagari