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Pakistani poetry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pakistan’s tradition of poetry includes Urdu poetry, English poetry, Balochi poetry,, Punjabi poetry, Sindhi poetry, Pashto poetry, Saraiki poetry, and Kashmiri poetry. Sufi poetry has a strong tradition in Pakistan[1] and the poetry of popular Sufi poets is often recited and sung.

Urdu poets

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Feminist poets

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  • Fehmida Riaz – Pakistani writer and activist (1946–2018)

Comical poets

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English poets

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Punjabi poets

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  • Pir Naseer-uddin-Naseer – Pakistani Sufi scholar and poet (1949–2009)
  • Bulleh Shah – Punjabi philosopher and poet (1680–1757)
  • Fariduddin Ganjshakar – Punjabi Muslim preacher and mystic (c. 1188 – 1266)
  • Mian Muhammad Bakhsh – Punjabi Sufi poet (c. 1830–1907)
  • Waris Shah – Punjabi Sufi Poet (1722–1798)
  • Sultan Bahu – Punjabi poet, Sufi mystic, and scholar (1630–1691)
  • Khawaja Ghulam Farid – 19th-century Sufi poet (c. 1845–1901)
  • Shah Hussain – Punjabi Sufi poet (1538–1599)
  • Ustad Daman – Pakistani Punjabi-language poet (1911–1984)

Saraiki poets

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  • Khawaja Farid – 19th-century Sufi poet (c. 1845–1901)
  • Qadir Bux Bedil – 19th-century Sindhi writer and Sufi saint
  • Sachal Sarmast – Sindhi sufi mystic and poet (1739–1827)
  • Shakir Shuja Abadi – Pakistani Saraiki poet (born c. 1953)

Sindhi poets

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Pashto poets

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  • Khushal Khan Khattak – Afghan ,Pashtun poet, chief and warrior (1613–1689)
  • Rahman Baba – Pashtun Sufi saint and poet (c. 1653–1711)
  • Ameer Hamza Shinwari – Afghan Pashto Poet (1907–1994)
  • Khan Abdul Ghani Khan – Pashtun poet and philosopher (1914–1996)
  • Ajmal Khattak – Pakistani politician (1925–2010)

Balochi poetry

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References

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  1. ^ Asani, Ali (1988). "Sufi Poetry in the Folk Tradition of Indo-Pakistan". Religion & Literature. 20 (1): 81–94. JSTOR 40059368.

See also

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