With the passing of Ahmed Faraz, Progressive Urdu poetry in Pakistan arguably finds itself at the same crossroads that its Indian counterpart found itself in May 2002, when the final tributes were being paid to Kaifi Azmi. The last stalwart of a great generation has passed, and while the traditions of the progressive aesthetic continue to be important, there is no one to pass the baton to. And in mourning the loss of this final pearl, it is time to look back appreciatively on the necklace, or the community of troubadours that had acted as the interlocutors of Pakistani society on behalf of the masses, and of the socialists.
To remember Faraz is to invoke the memory of Habib Jalib (d. 1993) and of Faiz Ahmed Faiz (d. 1984). Their stories are stories of hope and exultation, but also stories of exile and incarceration, and of the multiple tragedies that befell the progressive movement in Pakistan over the past five decades.
It began soon enough after the formation of Pakistan when Faiz found himself interred in Lahore’s Montgomery Jail in 1953, accused of treason by a government that was alarmed at the popularity of the socialist movement, and its littérateurs. To the young Faraz, this was an especially impressionable moment, when a staunch patriot was ironically accused the crime of treason. Faiz’s anguished cry became a powerful inspiration to him.