Book
On Firaq Today Is An Oasis In A Parched Land
Saeed Naqvi
In my current pre occupations with the
depressing state of world affairs, the arrival of a book, “Firaq Gorakhpuri”
for review, provided relief. The author, Ajai Mansingh claimed to be a relative
of Firaq. This was intriguing. Raghupati Sahai Firaq, was a straightforward
Kayastha from a distinguished family of Urdu poets. It turns out that Mansingh
claims descent from one of Firaq’s sisters.
Oddly, Mansingh has lived in Canada for
over decade teaching subjects unrelated to poetry. He then settled down in
Jamaica which I associate with Rastafarians, Ocho Rios and fast bowler Michael
Holding, not Firaq.
All information is not necessarily
knowledge. Mansingh’s painstaking compilation of the great poet’s family and
relatives does not shed even a shaft of light on a genius who spent his life in
poetic gatherings, mushairas, intellectuals, artists, students and teachers of
Allahabad University.
The book has triggered a procession of
personal memories.
Once when I was visiting my cousin
Mushtaq Naqvi in Allahabad, the great Urdu critic, Saiyyid Ehtesham Hussain
dropped by. He had to meet Firaq Sahib and asked me to accompany him. Firaq
Sahib held forth on a book by Prof. Aijaz Hussain, Head of the Urdu department
and Firaq’s regular companion. Ehtesham Sahib, a man of few words, was
mesmerized. Returning home, Ehtesham Sahib muttered mostly to himself about
Firaq’s “incisive” mind, how he had shed light on aspects of the book only a
genius can discover. This admission was significant because Ehtesham’s critique
of the book had created waves in literary circles. Firaq’s observations were
novel and fresh. Throughout the journey back home, Ehtesham kept shaking his
head in silent admiration.
My cousin Mushtaq was close to Firaq on
two counts. Firaq’s youngest brother, Yadhupati Sahai, was the head of
department, English literature at Allahabad University where Mushtaq was a
lecturer. Also, Musthaq’s maternal grandfather, Mir Wajid Ali, had been a much
respected senior in Naini jail where Firaq too had spent a term during the
freedom movement.
The day after Ehtesham Sahib’s visit,
Mushtaq visited Firaq.
“Ehtesham Sahib was terribly excited
about your fresh insights into Prof. Aijaz Hussain’s book.”
“Which book?” Firaq rolled his eyes
mischievously. “I know Aijaz so well, I don’t need to read his book.”
This was just one example of Firaq’s
perceptive, razor sharp mind. He had sent away the greatest critic in the land
deeply impressed by his insights into a scholarly book he had not read. He had
anticipated his friend Aijaz’s mind with stunning accuracy.
In his book Ajai Mansingh expresses
unhappiness with the way Firaq has been projected. Most of the writings on
Friaq, he alleges, were based on gossip.
At the very outset the Author, lists
four generations of Firaq’s family as sources for the book. In this list the
Mansinghs are prominently inserted. Firaq would have torn his hair. He was not
a family man at all. One of the unhappiest events of his life was his marriage.
The language he sometimes used to describe his wife is almost unprintable.
Firaq was one of Urdu’s greatest poets,
but he was not what you would call a nice man. He says so himself.
“Munh se hum pane bura to naheen kehte
ki Firaq,
Hai tera dost, magar aadmi achcha bhi
Naheen”
(I will not call him names because Firaq
is your friend. But let me warn you, he is not a good man.)
He could be self centered and insincere.
Many flattering stories about himself were half truths. Firaq passed the ICS
examination. Not true. He got into the provincial civil service but, under the
spell of the Nehru family, joined the national movement. He was a professor in
the English Department. Incorrect. He spent his life as a lecturer. Yes, he was
one of the most popular teachers the university ever had.
He had all the contradictions great men
are sometimes endowed with. In full flight of his imagination, he could, in one
moment be with the stars, clouds, the milky way. In the next moment he touches
deep emotions with rare delicacy. He is probably the most sensuous poet since
Meer Taqi Meer.
Shabe wisaal ke baad aayina to
dekh I dost
Tere jamal ki dosheezgi nikhar
aayee
(Look at the mirror after a night of
love
You look more chaste and maidenly)
Or
Woh tamam rooe nigar hai
Woh tamam bos o kanar hai
Woh hai ghuncha, ghuncha jo dekhiye
Woh hai choomiye to dahan, dahan.
(She is all beauty to behold
She is all entangled arms and lips
She is a rose bud for eyes to dwell on
In a kiss she is all mouth.)
Did Firaq dominate the literary scene
even though contemporaries like Josh Malihabadi, Jigar Moradabadi and Yaas
Yagana Changezi were also on the stage? Such an assertion would be fiercely
challenged by partisans. Josh was unparalleled in the boom and vigour of his
diction; Jigar in his unsurpassed lyricism; Yagana in the startling novelty of
ideas.
Firaq derives his sensuousness from
Behari as well as Keats. As a teacher of English literature, he had allowed the
Romantic movement to influence him greatly. He was to that extent much more
cosmopolitan than his contemporaries. A few decades down the line Faiz Ahmad
Faiz emerged as a poet with a mind truly in the modern idiom. His personal
friendships extended from Edward Said to Louis MacNeice.
Faiz was quite considerably helped by
the fact that he lived in Lahore, the liveliest cultural centre until 1947. Lucknow
and Delhi never quite recovered their élan after 1857. Majaz possibly the
finest talent of the century, languished in Lucknow’s decadence. His dozen or
so ghazals and long poem, Awara, rank with the best in Urdu poetry.
It is in this galaxy that Firaq shines
incomparably. He courted controversies, including the one which caused Oscar
Wilde to be jailed by Victorian England. Like Wilde, Firaq was a scintillating
conversationalist, whose company was sought by all ages.
Ajai Mansingh’s plaint is that most of
the Firaq stories were “unethical, mischievous and libelous,” as they were
based on “gossip”. He says all the writings were based on Firaq’s “last twenty
five or thirty years when he had become mentally deranged and morally
bankrupt.”
Here is a clear case of libeling the
dead. Firaq attended Mushairas until the 70s. He died in 1982.
What a genius like Firaq needed was a
Boswell, to record the public record of his wit and erudition, not a tedious
compilation of relationships the great poet would have had difficulty
recognizing.
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