Ahtar Ul-İman

Ahtar Ul-İman

Screenwriter, director, actor

Biography

Akhtar Ul İman (1915–1996) was a noted Urdu poet and screenwriter in Hindi cinema, who had a major influence on modern Urdu nazm. He won the Filmfare Award for Best Dialogue in 1963 for Dharmputra and 1966 for Waqt. He was awarded the 1962 Sahitya Akademi Award in Urdu, for his Poetry Collection, Yadein (Memories), by Sahitya Akademi, India's National Academy of Letters. Born in Qila, Najibabad, in the Bijnor district of Uttar Pradesh in 1915. He gained his initial education at Bijnor, where he came in contact with poet and scholar Khurshid ul Islam – who taught at Aligarh Muslim University – and developed a long association with Ralph Russell. He graduated from the (Zakir Husain College) in Delhi. He preferred nazm over more popular ghazal as a mean of poetic expression. Akhtar ul Iman's language is "coarse and unpoetic". This quote needs a citation. He uses "coarse" and mundane poetic expressions to make his message effective and realistic. He left behind a substantial legacy for new generation of poets to follow which explores new trends and themes in modern Urdu poetry giving a new direction to the modern and contemporary Urdu nazm with emphasis on philosophical humanism.

For more information press link below:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akhtar_ul_Iman

Filmography
Screenwriter
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