Rahman Abbas | |
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Born | 30 January 1972 |
Alma mater | University of Mumbai |
Notable works |
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Notable awards | Sahitya Akademi Award |
Rahman Abbas (born 30 January 1972) is an Indian fiction writer and the recipient of the India's highest literary Award Sahitya Akademi Award for his fourth novel Rohzin in 2018. [1] [2] [3] He is also the recipient of the two State Academy Awards for his third and fourth novels respectively i.e. Hide and Seek in the Shadow of God (2011) and the Rohzin in 2017. [4] [5] He is the only Indian novelist whose work in German has received a LitProm Grant funded by the German Federal Foreign Office and the Swiss-South Cultural Fund. [6] [7] He writes in Urdu and in English. [8] His novels deal with themes of forbidden politics and love. [9]
The largest online reading portal Rekhta has stated that Rahman Abbas is one of the most read Urdu novelists. [10] Penguin Random House has published Rohzin in English in May 2022. [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] Rohzin has been longlisted for JCB Prize 2022, the richest literary prize in India. [16] [17] [18]
Abbas has master's degrees in Urdu and English literature from University of Mumbai. [19]
Rahman Abbas is author of ten books including six novels: Nakhalistan Ki Talash (The Search of an Oasis-2004), Ek Mamnua Muhabbat Ki Kahani (A Forbidden Love Story-2009), Khuda Ke Saaye Mein Ankh Micholi (Hide and Seek in the Shadow of God-2011), Rohzin (The Melancholy of the Soul-2016). and Zindeeq (Heretic). and Ek Tarha Ka Pagalpan [20] (A Sort of Madness) [21] [22] [23] [24]
Rahman's first novel is Nakhalistan Ki Talash (Search of an Oasis) published in 2004. The fundamentalists had alleged that the novel is an obscene book. He was arrested and had to spend a few days at Arthur Road Jail. However, he was subsequently acquitted by the court in 2016. In an interview, he stated about this painful experience- "After a decade, the trial ended, but for all those years, I had to go to the court and stand in front of the judge, like Josef K. in Franz Kafka's The Trial, not knowing what his crime was. [25] [26] [27] Nakhlistan Ki Talash had created a storm in the conservative Urdu literary circles, and Rahman resigned from his post as lecturer in a junior college in Mumbai. [28] The novel tells the story of a young educated Muslim man whose increasing alienation in a post-1992 Mumbai leads him to a Kashmiri militant organization. He finds his cultural identity blurred during the rise of the right-wing and hate-filled politics in India at the turn of the century. He tries to demonstrate his identity and historic self, ultimately leading to his tragic and mysterious end. [29]
He won the state Sahitya Akademi Award in 2011 for his third didactic novel Khuda Ke Saaye Mein Ankh Micholi. He returned the award in 2015 when major Indian writers and artists had protested against the 'wave of intolerance in Indian society' triggered by the right-wing politics'. [30] [31] [32]
Pakistani author Mustansar Hussain Tarar stated that Rahman's latest novel Rohzin is a fearless creative narration. Professor Gopichand Narang, former president of Sahitya Academy, called Rohzin a turning point in the history of Urdu novels. [21] [33] [34] [35] [36]
A trilogy of his early writing, entitled Teen Novels ( ISBN 978-93-81029-29-9), was published in 2013 by Arshia Publication.
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