Komil Yashin (
Uzbek: Komil Yashin, Комил Яшин;
Russian: Камиль Яшен, romanized Kamil Yashen; 25 December [
O.S. 12 December] 1909 — 25 September 1997) was a Soviet-Uzbek author,
poet, dramatist,
screenwriter, and celebrity. Ogonyok magazine described him as "the greatest modern Uzbek playwright".
Yashin held many high-level political offices in the Soviet Union and served as a deputy in the
Supreme Soviet of the USSR. He received numerous awards and titles, including the title People's Writer of the
Uzbek SSR in 1959, the
Stalin Prize in 1951, and the title
Hero of Socialist Labor in 1974.
Early life and career
Komil Noʻmonov was born on 25 December [
O.S. 12 December] 1909 in
Andijan to an
Uzbek family.[1] From 1921 to 1925, he attended a Russian secondary school.[2] After graduating high school he started his literary activity, taking on the pen name Yashin in 1925.[3] He entered the Leningrad Forestry Institute that year but was forced to return to Andijan in 1928 due to illness. He taught literature and physics in Andijan from then until 1930. Yashin then became the head of the literary department initially at the Andijan Regional Theater and later the Uzbek State Musical Theater, where he worked until 1936.[4][5]
Yashin became a member of the
Communist Party in 1943.[1] He held many high-level political offices. He served as head of the General Directorate of Arts under the Council of Ministers from 1946 to 1949. From 1958 to 1980, he served as the chairman of the Writers' Union of Uzbekistan. He was also the chairman of the Soviet Liaison Committee for Afro-Asian Writers[6] and served as a deputy in the
Supreme Soviet of the USSR.[1][5] Yashin was also the editor-in-chief of the magazine Oʻzbek tili va adabiyoti from 1969 to 1980.[5]
Yashin was married to
Halima Nosirova, a famous Uzbek opera singer.[7] He died in Tashkent after a long illness on 25 September 1997 at the age of 87.[5][8]
Works
Much of Yashin's work are dramas with political themes. His earliest dramas include Kar quloq, Teng tengi bilan, Lolaxon, and Quyosh.[9] Some of his major works from the 1930s include the plays Oʻrtoqlar, Yondiramiz, and Nomus va muhabbat. The play he wrote originally titled Ichkarida was later reworked into a musical drama under the title Gulsara, with Muzaffar Muhamedov as co-author,[5][10] and in 1934 he reworked the play Ikki kommunist into Tor-mor.[9] In 1940, he wrote the musical Nurxon based on the like of honor killing victim
Nurkhon Yuldashkhojayeva, showing her as a
martyr of women's liberation.[11][12]
In the years leading up to World War II, Yashin wrote librettos for the first national operas in the Uzbek SSR, such as Boʻron[13] and Ulugʻ kanal.[14] He continued to write plays during the war, which included Oʻlim bosqinchilarga (co-authored with Sobir Abdulla),[10]Davron ota (co-authored with Sobir Abdulla),[15]Farod va Shirin and Oftobxon, some of which were focused on themes relating to the struggles against the
Nazi invaders to boost the morale of Soviet troops.[6][16][5]
After the war Yashin wrote the script for the play General Rakhimov (1949) based on the real life of the Uzbek general
Sobir Rakhimov.[17] He authored and co-authored numerous other plays with political and cultural themes including Ravshan va Zulxumor and Inqilob tongi.[18][19][20]
Influence of Hamza Hakim-zade Niyazi
Yashin had been friends with the famous Uzbek writer
Hamza Hakim-zade Niyazi, who was stoned to death in
Shohimardon by religious fanatics in 1929 for alleged blasphemy.[21][22] He dedicated many works to Hamza. In 1960, Yashin wrote a musical about him titled Hamza.[16] He was one of the screenwriters of the TV series Fiery Roads, where Hamza was featured as the main protagonist.[23] Yashin also wrote a two-volume novel about Hamza, with the first volume being published in 1979 and the second in 1980.[24]
Yashin also reworked many original plays by Hamza. In 1939, he created a new version of Hamza's play Boy ila xizmatchi.[25][3] Another play by Hamza he reworked was Paranji sirlaridan bir lavha, which focused on the plight of women in pre-Soviet Uzbekistan.[3][9]
Legacy
Yashin has been widely praised for his contributions to Uzbek literature tradition. The Soviet writer
Nikolai Tikhonov described him as one of the most famous students of Hamza Hakim-zade Niyazi.[6] The Ogonyok magazine described him as "the greatest modern Uzbek playwright".[10] There are streets bearing his name in Tashkent and
Andijan.[26]
^"Указ Президиума Верховного Совета СССР О награждении орденами и медалями работников промышленности, сельского науки, культуры и искусства Узбекской ССР". Pravda Vostoka (in Russian). 29 January 1950. p. 4.
^"Награждение работников литературы и искусства Узбекской ССР". Literaturnaya Gazeta (in Russian). 8 December 1951. p. 1.
^"С наградой вас, люди трудовой доблести!". Pravda Vostoka (in Russian). 3 March 1965. p. 4.
^"О награждении работников Узбекского музыкального театра и Узбекской филармонии — участников декады Узбекского искусства в москве". Pravda (in Russian). 1 June 1937. p. 1.
^"О награждении орденами и медалями работников Узбекского ордена Ленина академического театра драмы имени Хамза". Pravda (in Russian). 25 March 1945. p. 2.
^"О награждении орденами и медалями колхозников, колхозниц, работников сельского хозяйства, промышленности, науки, културы и искусства Узбекской ССР". Vedomosti Verkhovnogo soveta (in Russian). 26 January 1945. p. 3.