Majrooh Sultanpuri(1919-2000)
- Music Department
- Actor
- Writer
Majrooh Sultanpuri's reputation as a poet was ironically overshadowed
by his being a lyricist for popular Bollywood films. It has happened
very frequently that the real merit of a person is pushed into the
background by some lesser work that is done for a medium with a bigger
outreach or for some popular event. Though Majrooh was a very
successful lyricist and his "geets" were hummed by millions of people
in continents where Indian cinema is the rage, yet it would be unfair
to judge him based solely on this lesser work. He was a serious poet
who made significant contributions to the development of a sensibility
and an idiom, that was truly inspired by the Progressive Writers
Movement. In the early years after partition the poets felt hugely
hemmed in by the their lack of reaching out to the people they were
supposed to be addressing. Though they had a steady audience, it was
very tiny compared to that enjoyed by popular media including that of
the cinema. It was decided by a few poets and literary organisations to
ride on the back of a popular medium to exploit the greater outreach of
the cinema, and as it were, to spread the message. Pardeep, Sahir Ludhianvi,
Qamar Jalalabadi, Raja Mehdi Ali Khan, Shakeel Badayuni, Saghar Nizami, Rajinder Krishen
and Majrooh Sultanpuri, were all sucked into the insatiable vortex of the film
world with Sahir having remained the most outstanding but Majrooh
Sultanpuri being a close second. It may be said that when these poets
agreed to write for the films the quality of poetry in the context of
the film lyrics showed a vast improvement. If it was a loss to urdu
poetry it was surely a gain for the "filmi" song text and the vast
divide of serious writing and popular writing was narrowed a little by
the Bombay films. Majrooh had earlier fought the hardest battle of his
life as a ghazalgo. It was an article of faith with the early
progressive poets that the stylised form of ghazal with its well
wrought references and associated inferences was not suitable for the
new sensibility which needed a new form. The same rationale was also
behind the movement known as the naturi shairi of the mid nineteenth
century but it was sponsored from the top by the establishment. Like
all movements the Progressive Writers too took an extreme position and
denounced much in the name of being a product of feudalism. Literature
and the arts were seen in the framework of a one to one relationship
and the entire effort seemed to be based on exclusion rather than
incorporation. But Majrooh did not tow the line and held the position
that ghazal could retain its glory through its ability to say new
things for the new age. He was himself an outstanding ghazal poet and
introduced new imagery and new diction into the heavily stylised
format. He was able to maintain the lyrical quality of the ghazal which
is its real spirit and test without losing on the vigour that was
supposed to be an integral part of this new poetic idiom. The awareness
of where the exploitation has taken the ordinary man and a whipping up
of emotions for greater activism was the twin aim of these poets.
Majrooh was not alone in this struggle. He had support from a
contemporary, Faiz Ahmed Faiz, who too was not keen on losing the rich
referential and allusive matrix of the traditional ghazal while talking
about the main contradiction of the class divide that cut across board.
It was the awareness that the rejection of the ghazal would be a
turning away from our tradition that made its acceptance and currency
possible again by the fifties. When Majrooh appeared on the scene
Faiz's Naqsh e Faryadi, Majaz's Aahang, Ali Sardar Jaffery's Parwaz,
Jazbi's Ferozaan and Makhdoom's Surkh Sawera had already been published
with leading critics like Ehtesham Hussain and Doctor Alim, being the
real opponents of the ghazal, wanting to do away with this archaic form
as a critical canon. Faiz and Majrooh gradually introduced the themes
generally associated with the Progressive Movement, and transformed the
ghazal without losing on its strength. During the fifties ghazal was
gradually and grudgingly accepted as a legitimate form of poetry even
by Ehtesham Hussain who wrote about it then. Poetry thus disengaged
itself from being a mere slogan, and moved towards the lyrical and
melodic richness generally associated with ghazal. It abandoned the
harsh declamatory style meant to exhort the listener to take up arms
against the sea of troubles for a more introspective mood where
awareness became part of a larger collective consciousness. The Urdu
poets found themselves being edged out in the new socio-cultural
environment of India and saw their language shrink and the literate
audience dwindle. Amidst the growing demand of Hinduising Urdu Majrooh
stood his ground and fought for the rightful place of his language with
a rich heritage. Perhaps history will judge Majrooh as a poet who
partially frittered away his talent by writing for the films. The
limited opportunity and the constraints of the situation do not let the
poet grow and prosper in the same manner when he is just writing poetry
as a an autonomous form. But Majrooh's contribution in giving a new
meaning to the ghazal will keep the torch of his name burning for quite
some time.