Ghulam Mohammad Grami (Sindhi: مولانا غلام محمد گرامي) was born on 30 December 1920 in Mehar, Dadu District, Sindh. He belonged to the Laghari Baloch tribe of the Sindh. He was a scholar, journalist and poet.[1] He died on 15 September 1976.[2]

Ghulam Mohammad Grami
Sindhi: مولانا غلام محمد گرامي
BornGhulam Mohammad
(1920-12-30)30 December 1920
Mehar Dadu District, Sindh, Pakistan
Died15 September 1976(1976-09-15) (aged 55)
OccupationPoet, journalist

Early life

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He learned Sindhi, Persian, Urdu and Arabic. In 1943 he traveled to Hyderabad, Sindh in Jamia Arabia Tahreek and stayed in Hyderabad.[3]

Professional career

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Grami was appointed as a Persian teacher in a training college for men. He was affiliated with daily Hilal-e-Pakistan and Ibrat newspapers. He also held the post of editor of Aftab Karachi, a Sindhi-language newspaper, Irfan-e-Letif (Hyderabad), Pasban (Hala), Alzaman (Hala), and Tarjuman (Mirpur Khas). In 1955 he became Managing Editor of Mehran magazine and held the seat for all of his life. He published the poetry and writings of new writers. He collected literature for Mehran. He used to sit in Cafe George in Hyderabad and would edit the articles and write-ups of literary figures.[4]

Publications

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Grami wrote books on different subjects. Such as Allah Jo Wajud (1953) (Sindhi: الله جو وجود), Waya se Weenjhar (1977) (Sindhi: ويا سي وينجھار),[5] ( Rafeeq-e-Hayat (1957) (Sindhi: رفيق هدايت), Kuliyat-e-Bulbul (1969) (Sindhi: ڪليات بلبل),[6] Asan jo Piyaro Deen(1971) (Sindhi: اسان جو پيارو دين) Deeniyat for class VIII etc. Mohammad Shah Rashdi said about him: “The language that has such pen, shall never die”. He wrote on religion, mysticism, philosophy, politics, literature, history and poetry.[7]

Death

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Ghulam Mohammad Grami died on 15 September 1976.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ "Maulana Grami paid tribute". 16 September 2009.
  2. ^ "Bio-bibliography.com - Authors". www.bio-bibliography.com.
  3. ^ Sahito, Abdul Wahab (30 December 2012). "سنڌي شخصيتون: مولانا غلام محمد گرامي - امتياز عادل سومرو".
  4. ^ "BBCUrdu.com". www.bbc.com.
  5. ^ "Sindhi Adabi Board Online Library (سنڌي ادبي بورڊ)". www.sindhiadabiboard.org.
  6. ^ Shamsuddin Bulbul, edited by Asadullah Shah. "Deevane Bulbul Kalam Bulbul by Ghulam Muhammad Girami" – via Internet Archive. {{cite web}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  7. ^ "Sindhi Adabi Board Online Library (Stories)". www.sindhiadabiboard.org.