URDU, Anjuman Taraqqi-e-Urdu - Karachi

اردو

Anjuman Taraqqi-e-Urdu Pakistan
ISSN (print): 2519-6332
ISSN (online): 2708-1915
Abstract

Qabil Ajmeri celebrated as the “Great Poet of a Young Age,” was a pivotal figure in modern Urdu ghazal. Orphaned early in Ajmer Sharif (India), his literary foundation was built not on formal schooling, but on intense self-study within the rich, informal artistic environment of the Ajmer Dargah. 

His life was dramatically defined by the 1947 Partition, forcing his migration to Karachi in 1948. As a Muhajir (migrant) in Pakistan, Qabil's poetry matured, becoming an eloquent chronicle of displacement (Gham-e-Hijrat) and existential struggle (Gham-e-Rozgar).

Qabil suffered from tuberculosis, and his brief career was plagued by ill-health and intense professional jealousy from peers in Hyderabad, Sindh. Qabil Ajmeri died in 1962 at the age of 33, joining the ranks of literary figures like Keats His work stands as a powerful testament to the anguish and resilience of the post-Partition generation, securing him a high place in the history of Urdu poetry.

 

Author(s):

Lecturer Urdu, Cadet College, Pitaro, Jam Shoro

Pakistan

  • bilal.rauf733@gmail.com
  • 0311-2422216

Details:

Type: Article
Volume: 102
Issue: 1
Language: Urdu
Id: 6a439307c7950
Pages 29 - 48
Discipline: Arts & Humanities
Published June 30, 2026

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