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A Life of an ordinary Indian - An exercise in self-importance: 2016: Sonu Sood: I Am No Messiah: 2020 Ranjan Gogoi: Justice for the Judge: 2021 Dagdu Maruti Pawar: Baluta: 1978: Annabhau Sathe: Fakira: 1959: part myth, part autobiography Baburao Bagul: When I concealed my caste - (जेव्हा मी जात चोरली होती ...
In her last days, she completed an English translation of Mirat ul Uroos and an Urdu volume on Kahavat aur Mahavray. In 2005 her collection of women's sayings and idioms in Urdu, called Dilli ki khavatin ki kahavatain aur muhavare, was posthumously published. [1] She also wrote Safarnama, in Urdu. [12]
She said that a rural woman had to suffer more than an urban woman." [11] Ainay Kay Saamnay [12] is an Urdu autobiography of Attiya Dawood. [8] It was earlier published in Hindi in India by the same title by Rajkamal Prakashan, as Attiya wrote the story of her life during a residency at the Sanskriti Kendra in New Delhi.
Karwan-e-Zindagi (Urdu: کاروان زندگی, lit. 'Caravan of Life') is a voluminous autobiography of Abul Hasan Ali Hasani Nadwi in Seven volumes which is a contribution to the history as well as to Urdu literature. Originally, the book was written in Urdu. [1] [2]
Her husband, Nurul Hasan, was a top-ranking civil servant of the Federal Government of India. Ada Jafarey also moved with her husband to Karachi after the independence of Pakistan in 1947. [2] Her husband was a littérateur himself who wrote columns for both English and Urdu newspapers. He also served as the president of the Anjuman-i Taraqqi-i ...
Abadi Bano Begum (Bi Amma) (Urdu: عبادی بانو بیگم) (Born 1850 Died:13 November 1924) was a prominent voice in the Indian independence movement. She was also known as Bi Amma . [ 2 ] She was one of the first Muslim women to actively take part in politics and was part of the movement to free India from the British Raj .
Jeelani Bano was born on 14 July 1936 in Badayun, [1] in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh to Hairat Badayuni, [2] a known Urdu poet. [3] After her schooling, she enrolled for intermediate course when she married Anwar Moazzam, a poet of repute and a former head of the Department of Islamic Studies at the Osmania University and shifted to Hyderabad. [4]
Kishwar Naheed was born in 1940 to a Syed family in Bulandshahr, British India. [2] After the partition, she migrated to Lahore, Pakistan with her family in 1949. [4] Kishwar was a witness to the violence (including rape and abduction of women) associated with the partition of India. [5]