Shamim Hashimi (
Urdu/
Persian/
Arabic: شمیم ہاشمی;
Hindi: शमीम हाशिमी; born Syed Muhammad Shamimuddin on 14 August 1947) is an
Urdu and
Persian poet.[4][3][5][6] He is basically a poet of
Ghazal. He has also written poems of other forms of poetry in different meters.[2]
Hashimi began writing poems at the age of 9.[11] His poems and prose were published in national magazines of Urdu literature like Funoon,
Shair, Aaj kal and subh-e-naw-patna etc.[12][13][14] He has written many books in Urdu, Persian and English, including collections of his Urdu and Persian Ghazals.[14][15] His major literary work was published in the 1970s.[10] One of his best books Toot tay patton ka dukh was published in 2005 which has widely been appreciated.[16][17][18] He has also received Sahitya Bhushan and Bihar Urdu academy award.[4][14]
Shabab Lalit: "...Shamim Hashimi is the narrator of the joy of grief. He is a reflector of his pain along with the grief of the universe and agony of the present. On the broad canvas of human life Shamim Hashimi has deeply felt and spiritually experienced the agony of present, unevenness of time and atrocities..."[2] Nadim Balkhi: "...the main subject of the poems of Shamim Hashimi is Nostalgia which symbolises the complete inner and outer human world..."[2] Shamsur Rahman Faruqi: "...You have the tradition of intellect from the family of your mother and from that of your father as well and these two qualities are reflected in your poetry at a lot of places..."[2]
^
abcde
HUSSAIN, IQBAL (2012).
Sukhanwaran-e-Jharkhand. Vol. 1. Directorate of Public Libraries, Govt. of Tamil Nadu, Anna University Chennai: Rang Publications. pp. 443–444. Archived from
the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2013.
^
Ghazipuri, Zaheer (2009). Worldcat.org, Jhārkhanḍ aur Bihār ke aham ahl-i qalam. Nirali Dunya Publishers. pp. 184–192.
OCLC664261279.
^Akram, Seraj, ed. (28 August 2013).
"Bakhabar". Monthly Magazine (Journal). Vol. 6, no. 8.
Patna: Biharanjuman. p. 5.
ISSN2319-4049. Archived from the original on 27 August 2013. Retrieved 28 August 2013.{{
cite magazine}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (
link)
^Rahmani, Abrar, ed. (June 2013).
"Monthly Urdu Ajkal". Ajkal (Urdu) (Journal) (in Urdu). 71 (11). journals unit, east block 4, level 7, R K Puram, New Delhi-66: AGD, Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Govt. of India: 26.
ISSN0971-846X. RNI 948/57. Archived from the original on 27 July 2013. Retrieved 5 August 2013.{{
cite journal}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (
link) CS1 maint: location (
link)
^Kanwar, Rakesh, ed. (April–June 2012), Jadeed fikr-o-fan (Quarterly) (Quarterly Journal) (in Urdu), vol. 25, Director, Languages and Culture Deptt. Himachal Pradesh, Block 39, SDA complex, Shimla-171009.: Languages and Culture Deptt., Govt. of Himachal Pradesh, p. 38,
OCLC26479831, RN No. 46606/87{{
citation}}: CS1 maint: location (
link)
^Taneem, Qaumi (6 February 2006).
"Leading Urdu Daily, Qaumi Tanzeem". Qaumi Tanzeem Patna (in Urdu). Qaumi Tanzeem Lane Sabzibagh, Patna −800004 Bihar. Archived from
the original on 28 February 2016. Retrieved 24 July 2013.{{
cite journal}}: CS1 maint: location (
link)