Haidari_Wujodi

Haidari Wujodi

Haidari Wujodi

Afghan poet and scholar (1939–2020)


Ghulam Haidar (1939 – 10 June 2020), known by his pen name as Haidari Wujodi, was an Afghan poet and scholar[2][3] who primarily wrote mystical and Sufi poetry in Persian language throughout his life. He wrote numerous books, of which fourteen to fifteen were published. He also used to write columns for domestic newspapers aimed at literature.[4][5]

Quick Facts Native name, Born ...

He was born in Panjshir Province of Afghanistan. He did his fifth and sixth grade education from a school in his hometown. He had one son, two daughters and four siblings.[6][7]

Biography

At fifteen, Haidari went to Kabul, the capital city of Afghanistan where he established his literary associations with Sufi Ashqari at his bookbinding shop. Ashqari later introduced him to a group of poets who used to exchange verses while gathering in his shop. Later, he subsequently joined a public library and started working for earning purposes. During the early 1990s, the Islamic government following the Afghan Soviet withdrawal, offered him a job at an educational foundation where he used to work at periodicals section every day for one hour.[8]

Prior to start writing poetry, he served a six-year military career with the Afghan Army before starting administrative work for the government in 1964? and remained associated with military service for six years, and later was appointed head of the Kabul Library where he served until 2020. After he retired from the literary service at public library, he wrote a letter to former Afghan president Hamid Karzai, requesting to construct doors and walls at a literary workplace and wished to work there for free. The president, however, accepted the offer and also issued a decree granting him permanent pay and retention.[9]

Death

Haidari died of COVID-19 on 10 June 2020, in Kabul, Afghanistan.[6]

Literary work

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References

  1. Sirat, Sohrab (11 June 2020). "عشق و شور حیدری وجودی؛ 'ای دل پاک گناه تو خوشم می‌آید‌'" [Heidari's existential love and passion; 'O pure heart, I like your sin']. BBC News (in Persian). Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  2. ولی‌پور, ندا (10 June 2020). "حیدری وجودی شاعر افغان درگذشت". ایسنا (in Persian). Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  3. Mashal, Mujib (25 October 2019). "In a Quiet Corner, an Old Afghan Poet Polishes 'the Heart's Mirror'". The New York Times.
  4. "حیدری وجودی شاعر نامدار افغانستان در گذشت". BBC News فارسی (in Persian). 10 June 2020. Retrieved 26 June 2020.

Notes

  1. The translation may not be accurate, as it was done from the google translate
  2. (in Hinglish translation

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