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Shaikh Ayaz SI (Sindhi: شيخ اياز , Urdu: شیخ ایاز) born Mubarak Ali Shaikh (Sindhi: مبارڪ علي شيخ , Urdu: مبارک علی شیخ) (March 1923 – 28 December 1997) was a Sindhi language poet, prose writer and former vice-chancellor of University of Sindh. [2]
Dodo Soomro's Death (Sindhi: دودي سومري جو موت, romanized: Doday Soomray Jo Maut) is a poetic play based on classical sindhi ballad Dodo Chanesar written by Sindhi poet Shiekh Ayaz. Play was written in 1970 and it contains themes of heroism , nationalism and sufism .
Free verse, sonnets and ballads have been written, in addition to classical forms such as kafi, bayt, and geet. Notable Sindh poets are Makhdoom Muhammad Zaman Talib-ul-Mola, Ustad Bukhari, Shaikh Ayaz, Darya Khan Rind, Ameen Faheem, and Imdad Hussaini. Mubarak Ali Lashari is a literary critic and the author of Kuthyas Kawejan. [22]
Urdu translations have been published by Shaikh Ayaz, and Ayaz Husayn Qadiri and Sayyid Vaqar Ahmad Rizvi. The first partial English translation of the Risalo was published by H. T. Sorley in 1940, followed by Elsa Kazi, and Ghulam Ali Allana. Complete translations have been published by Muhammad Yakoob Agha, Amena Khamisani, and others.
Shaikh Ayaz (Sindh, Pakistan) U Shwe Yoe (a Burmese Muslim named U Ba Ga Lay. He was also a cartoonist, actor, comedian and dancer.) Sikdar Aminul Haq (Bangladeshi) Soheib Bencheikh; Stephen Schwartz; Suhaiymah Manzoor-Khan (British spoken word poet, writer, and speaker) Sultan Bahoo (Sufi writer and poet from Punjab, Pakistan) Sufi Barkat Ali ...
Ayaz Gul; Ayaz Jani; Darbadar; Elsa Kazi; G. Allana; Hassan Dars; Ibrahim Munshi; Imdad Hussaini; Khialdas Fani; Makhdoom Muhammad Zaman Talibul Moula; Mir Abdul Hussain Sangi; Mir Abdul Rasool Mir; Mohammad Khan Majeedi; Muhammad Faquir Khatian; Muhammad Mohsin Bekas; Syed Murtaza Dadahi; Sabit Ali Shah; Sufi Budhal Faqeer; Narayan Shyam; Pir ...
This bibliography of Zakariyya Kandhlawi is a selected list of scholarly resources that are generally available. These resources are related to Zakariyya Kandhlawi, a leading hadith scholar who is popularly known as Sheikh al-Hadith and served as an influential ideologue of Tablighi Jamaat during the mid-twentieth century in India. [1]
Noah as the God-man; Why the Súfís who know God are seated in front of kings; Joseph and the guest-friend who could find no suitable gift for him except a mirror; Mohammed and the scribe who wrote down the Qur'anic Revelations; Bal’am son of Bá’úr; Hárút and Márút; The deaf man and his sick neighbour