Kazi Nazrul Islam (1899-1976) national poet
of Bangladesh, called the 'rebel poet' for his fierce resistance to
all forms of repression. His poetry, with its vibrant rhythms and
iconoclastic themes, forms a striking contrast
to rabindranath
tagore's poetry. Though he respected and
admired the older poet, he wrote outside the sphere of
Rabindranath's influence and paved the way for the modern Bangla
poems of the post-thirties. Through literature, journalism and
political activism, Nazrul fought against foreign rule,
communalism, imperialism, colonialism, fundamentalism and
exploitation. In response, the British colonial government
proscribed his books and newspapers and put him behind bars.
Through his written Rajbandir Jabanbandi (a political
prisoner's deposition) and his 40-day hunger strike, Nazrul
protested against the harassment. In support of him, Rabindranath
dedicated one of his books to him.
Nazrul used subjects and vocabulary never used in
Bangla poetrybefore. He became immensely
popular for portraying in his poems contemporary political and
social phenomenon. Some fundamental conflicts of human civilisation
also formed the themes of his poems. Singularly non-communal,
Nazrul drew upon his mixed Hindu and Muslim cultural traditions. He
used Sanskrit and Arabic metres as easily as he did traditional
Bangla ones. He referred to Persian archetypes with as much ease as
he did ancient Hindu ones. He was aware of history, both ancient
and contemporary, of his own country and of the world
outside.
Nazrul nourished almost all the streams of Bangla songs
and established them on the solid foundation of north Indian
classical music. It was through the originality of his musical
talent that the folk base of Bangla songs was linked to the
subcontinental tradition of classical
music. nazrul
songscan be described as the quintessence of
Bangla songs apart from their being the Bangla edition of north
Indian classical music. Through a wide variety of themes and tunes
Nazrul truly turned Bangla songs into modern
music.
Nazrul was born on 24 May 1899 in the village of
Churulia in Burdwan, west
bengal. His father, Kazi Fakir Ahmed, was
the imamof a mosque and the
caretaker of a mausoleum. After his father's death in 1908, Nazrul
took up his father's job as caretaker and also served as
muazzin of the mosque to support his family. He passed the
lower primary examination from his village
maktab. Through the
Islamic education he received in these early years, he became
acquainted with the fundamentals of islam, reading
the quran, prayers,
fasting, hajjand zakat. In later life he drew upon this
experience to translate Islamic traditions into his Bangla
writings.
Nazrul was attracted to folk theatre, with its mixture
of poetry, song and dance. He left his duties at
the mazarand mosque, and
joined a leto group. This was the beginning of Nazrul's life
as a poet and artiste. He acted with the group and also learnt the
art of composing poems and songs at short notice. Through his
association with the leto group, he began to learn about the
Hindu puranas. The young
adolescent poet composed a number of folk plays for his leto group:
Chasar San, Shakunibadh, Raja Yudhisthirer
San, Data Karna, Akbar Badshah, Kavi
Kalidas, Vidyabhutum, Rajputrer San, Buda
Saliker Ghade Ron and Meghnad Badh.
In 1910 Nazrul returned to school. He studied for some
time at the Raniganj Searsole Raj School and then at Mathrun High
English School (subsequently, Nabinchandra Institution), where the
poet kumudranjan
mallik was headmaster. Unfortunately, Nazrul
again had to leave school for financial reasons. After leaving
Mathrun he is believed to have joined a group of kaviyals.
He then worked as a cook at the house of a Christian railway guard
and later at a tea stall at Asansol. Thus the young Nazrul, aptly
nicknamed 'Dukhu Mia', experienced the harsh realities of
life.
While working at the tea stall, Nazrul became
acquainted with Rafizullah, a police inspector of Asansol, who
succeeded in persuading the young man to return to school. In 1914
Nazrul got admitted to class VII of Darirampur School at Trishal
in mymensingh. A year later he
returned to his own village and in 1915 got admitted to class Vlll
of Raniganj Searsole Raj School. Here he continued his studies up
to class X. However, he did not sit for the pretest that would have
qualified him to sit for the Entrance examination. Instead, towards
the end of 1917, he joined the army. Nevertheless, during these
formative years, he was influenced by at least four of his teachers
at Searsole: Satishchandra Kanjilal in classical music,
Nibaranchandra Ghatak in revolutionary ideas, Hafiz Nurunnabi in
Persian literature and Nagendranath Bannerjee in
literature.
Nazrul joined the 49 Bengal Regiment and was posted to
Karachi. His life in the army lasted about two years and a half
from the close of 1917 to March-April 1920. During this time, from
an ordinary soldier he rose to havildar (battalion
quartermaster). During his stay in the army, Nazrul learnt Persian
from the regiment's Punjabi moulvi, practised music with
other musical-minded soldiers to the accompaniment of local and
foreign instruments and at the same time pursued literary
activities in both prose and poetry. Nazrul's stories and poems
written at Karachi cantonment were published in different journals:
his first prose writing 'Baunduler Atmakahini' (saogat, May 1919), first published
poem 'Mukti' (bangiya mussalman sahitya patrika,
July 1919).
During his stay at Karachi, Nazrul subscribed to
various literary journals published from Kolkata: Prabasi,
Bharatbarsa, Bharati, Manasi,
Marmavani, sabujpatra ,Saogat and Bangiya
Mussalman Sahitya Patrika. During his stay at Karachi, Nazrul
had books by Rabindranath and sharat chandra
chattopadhyayas well as writings of the Persian poet
Hafiz. In fact, it was at Karachi cantonment that Nazrul's literary
activities truly began.
At the end of the First World War, Nazrul returned to
Bengal and began the career of a litterateur-journalist in Kolkata.
His first accommodation was at the office of
the bangiya mussalman
sahitya samitiat 32 College
Street, where he roomed with Muzaffar
ahmed, an official of the organisation.
People started becoming aware of a new talent in Bangla when
journals like moslem bharat, Bangiya Mussalman Sahitya Patrika and
Upasana published his novel Bandhan-hara and poems
such as 'Bodhan', 'Shat-il-Arab', 'Badal Prater Sharab', 'Agamani',
'Kheya-parer Tarani', 'Korbani', 'Moharram' and
'Fateha-i-Doazdaham'. In a letter published in Moslem
Bharat, the poet-critic mohitlal
majumderprofusely praised Nazrul's poems
'Kheya-parer Tarani' and 'Badal Prater Sharab' and welcomed him to
the learned society of Bengal. At the office of the Bangia
Mussalman Sahitya Samiti, Nazrul became close to quite a few
contemporary Muslim litterateurs such as mohammad mozammel
huq, Afzalul Huq, kazi abdul
wadudand muhammad
shahidullah. Nazrul also used to attend two
other popular literary addas or talking clubs: 'Gajendar
Adda' and 'Bharatiya Adda'. Here he came in close contact with top
personalities of contemporary Bangla art, literature, music
and theatresuch
as atulprasad
sen, Dinendranath
Thakur, abanindranath
tagore, satyendranath
dutta, Charuchandra Bannerjee, Ustad
Karamatullah Khan, premankur
atarthi, shishir kumar
bhaduri, Hemendrakumar
Roy, sharatchandra
chattopadhyay, Nirmalendu Lahiri
and dhurjatiprasad
mukhopadhyay. In October 1921, Nazrul went
to santiniketanwith Muhammad
Shahidullah and met Rabindranath. For the subsequent two decades,
up to Rabindranath's death in 1941, these two important poets of
Bengal maintained a close association.
Nazrul's life as a journalist began with the
publication of the evening daily nabajug on 12 July 1920.
Though ak fazlul
huq (Sher-e-Bangla) was listed as editor,
the work was mainly done by Nazrul. The political situation was
volatile: the Non-Cooperation and Khilafat movements were in full
swing. In this climate, Nazrul's fiery article, Muhajirin hatyar
janya dayi ke? (Who is responsible for killing the refugees?)
led to the forfeiture of the security deposit of the paper. A
police watch was placed on Nazrul.
Along with carrying out his journalistic activities,
writing about the socio-political aspects of the national and
international developments, Nazrul was also attending various
political meetings with Muzaffar Ahmed. At the same time, he
participated in cultural activities, attending social gatherings
and rendering songs. He was yet to compose tunes for his songs, but
Mohini Sengupta, a musicologist and member of the Brahma Samaj, set
a few of his songs to music and published the songs with their
notations. Among these songs were 'Hayta tomar paba dekha'
and 'Ore e kon sneha-suradhuni'. Nazrul's song
'Bajao prabhu bajao ghana' was first published in the
Baishakh issue of Saogat in BS 1327 (1920
AD).
April-June 1921 marked an important change in Nazrul's
life. He met the book publisher Ali Akbar Khan at the office of the
Muslim Sahitya Samiti and accompanied him to Comilla. There he
visited the house of Biroja Sundari Devi, where he met Promila, a
young Hindu woman whom he would marry subsequently.
Nazrul accompanied Ali Akbar Khan to his village
Daulatpur and stayed there for some time. Returning to Comilla on
19 June, he stayed there for 17 days. Comilla was in ferment on
account of the non-cooperation movement. Nazrul joined many
processions and meetings and sang his newly composed patriotic
songs that he had set to music himself: E kon pagal pathik
chhute elo bandini mar anginay (Who is this stranger rushing to
the courtyard of the imprisoned mother?), Aji rakta-nishi bhore/
eki e shuni ore/ mukti-kolahal bandi-shrnkhle (On this
blood-stained dawn why this clamour for freedom by prisoners in
shackles?) Thus the amateur composer and singer of Kolkata turned
into a political activist and composer of patriotic
songs.
In November 1921 Nazrul went to Comilla again. An
all-India strike had been called on the day. Nazrul joined the
procession of the non-cooperationists and sang Bhiksa dao!
Bhiksa dao! Phire chao ogo purabasi (Give alms, give alms, look
back O townspeople.) Many Muslims of India, led by Maulana Mohammad
Ali and Maulana Shawkat Ali, had joined in
the khilafat
movementto save Turkey's feudal regime.
Nazrul had no faith in the philosophies of either Mahatma
Gandhi's non-cooperation
movementor the Khilafat movement. Instead he
supported Mustafa Kamal Ataturk's new Turkish movement that had
overthrown the sultanate and believed that only through armed
revolution would India be liberated. Nevertheless, he joined those
movements for the sake of a united anti-imperialist
struggle.
After his return to Kolkata in December 1921, Nazrul
composed two of his most famous revolutionary writings: 'Vidrohi'
and 'Bhangar Gan'. These two compositions totally changed the tenor
of Bangla poetry.
Towards the end of 1921 Nazrul composed another famous
poem: 'Kamal Pasha'. This poem demonstrated Nazrul's sense of
contemporary international history and the hollowness of the Indian
Khilafat movement. Nazrul was most deeply influenced by the
leadership of Mostafa Kamal Pasha, who had overthrown the feudal
sultanate and turned Turkey into a secular and modern republic.
Nazrul was particularly impressed by the way Kamal Pasha had
removed fundamentalism from Turkish society as well as got women to
give up their veils. He wondered why the reforms in Turkey could
not be replicated in India and Bengal.
All his life Nazrul fought against fundamentalism,
superstition and ritualistic social behaviour, especially among
Muslims. The socialist revolution in Russia in 1917 also influenced
Nazrul in many ways. This was borne out by the publication in langal and Ganavani of
'samyabadi' and 'sarbahara' poems and his translation of the
'Communist International' under the title 'Jago Anashana Bandi Utha
Re Yata' (Wake up and rise all the prisoners of
hunger).
Among Nazrul's literary works published in 1922 the
most notable were Byathar Dan, a collection of short
stories, Agni-vina, a collection of poems, and
Yugavani, a collection of essays. Agni-vina, which
included 'Pralayollas', 'Agamani', 'Kheya-parer Tarani',
'Shat-il-Arab', 'Vidrohi' and 'Kamal Pasha', created a stir in
Bangla literature and proved to be a turning point in Bangla
poetry. Its first edition was sold out soon after publication, and
several editions in quick succession had to be
printed.
On August 12 1922 Nazrul published the dhumketu, which played an important
role in reviving the concept of armed revolution after the failure
of the Non-cooperation and Khilafat movements. In a sense the
Dhumketu became the mouthpiece of revolutionaries. The paper
appeared, bearing on its mast these words of blessing from
Rabindranath: Kazi Nazrul Islam kalyaniyesu, ay chale ayre
dhumketu/ andhare bandh agnisetu, durdiner ei durgashire udiye de
tor vijay ketan 'Dear Kazi Nazrul Islam, Come O comet come.
Blaze in darkness the bridge of fire, hoist your flag of victory
atop this fortress in distress'. After Nazrul's veiled political
poem Anandamayir Agamane (on welcoming the arrival of the
goddess Durga) appeared in the Dhumketu on 26 September
1922, the issue was proscribed. Nazrul's book of essays,
Yugavani, was also proscribed on 23 November 1922. The same
day the poet was arrested in Comilla and brought to Kolkata. On 7
January 1923, Nazrul, as an under-trial prisoner, gave a deposition
in self-defence in the court of chief presidency magistrate Swinho.
That deposition, 'Rajbandir Jabanbandi', has been acknowledged as a
piece of literature. In the judgement delivered on January 16,
Nazrul was sentenced to a year's rigorous
imprisonment.
While Nazrul was serving his term in Alipore Central
Jail, Rabindranath dedicated to him his musical play Basanta
(22 January 1923). Nazrul celebrated the news by composing his poem
about the ecstasy of poetic creation: 'Aj Srsti Sukher Ullase' (In
the ecstasy of creation). On 14 April 1923, Nazrul was moved to
Hughli Jail. The same day he began a hunger strike in protest
against the ill treatment of political prisoners. Rabindranath sent
Nazrul a telegram saying: 'Give up hunger-strike, our literature
claims you'. The telegram was not delivered. Meanwhile, under the
pressure of public opinion, the civilian jail inspector, Dr
Abdullah Suhrawardy, visited the jail on 22 May 1923 and at his
persuasion Nazrul broke his 40-day hunger strike. On 18 June,
Nazrul was transferred to Behrampur jail. He was released on
December 15, after suffering imprisonment for a year and three
weeks. While in Hughli Jail Nazrul wrote his famous song, 'Ei
shikal-para chhal moder e shikal-para chhal' (Chains cannot bind
us) and in Behrampur jail he wrote another famous song 'Jater name
bajjati sab jat-jaliyat khelchhe juya' (The communal cheats are
gambling in the name of communities).
The first anthology of Nazrul's poems on love and
nature, Dolan-Chanpa, was published in October 1923. Its
long poem 'Pujarini' reveals Nazrul's multifaceted perception of
romantic love. It was not surprising that Nazrul's thoughts at this
time of political turmoil should have turned to thoughts of love.
His acquaintance with Promila had ripened to love, and, despite the
disapproval of many, Nazrul married Promila in Kolkata on 24 April
1924. Promila was from a Brahmo family and only her mother,
Giribala Devi, accepted the marriage. Nazrul was also detached from
his family. Nazrul and Promila set up home at
Hughli.
Two collections of Nazrul's songs and poems were
published that August: Biser Banshi and Bhangar Gan.
Both the books were proscribed by the government in October and
November. Meanwhile, Nazrul's songs were becoming popular. In 1925,
His Master's Voice (HMV) produced the first gramophone record of
Nazrul's songs. The record contained two of his songs, 'Jater name
bajjati sab jat-jaliyat khelchhe juya' and 'Yak pude yak bidhir
vidhan satya hok' sung by Harendranath Dutta.
Nazrul attended political meetings and functions of
various parties and sang his songs calling upon his fellow
countrymen to rise against foreign rule. In May 1925 at the
Congress session at Faridpur, in the presence of Mahatma Gandhi and
Deshbandhu chitta ranjan
das, Nazrul sang 'Ghor re ghor re amar sadher charka
ghor' (Whirl, O my dear spinning wheel, whirl).
Towards the end of 1925, Nazrul joined politics and
attended political meetings at Comilla, Midnapore,
Hughli, faridpur, Bankura and many
other places. Apart from being a member of
the bengal provincial
congress, he played an active role in organising
the Sramik-Praja-Swaraj Dal. On 16 December 1925, Nazrul started
publishing the weekly Langal, with himself as chief editor.
The Langal was the mouthpiece of the Sramik-Praja-Swaraj
Dal, which aimed to eradicate class differences in society. The
manifesto of the party, which was published in the paper, demand
full independence for India. At this time Nazrul published his book
Samyabadi O Sarbahara containing songs for workers and
peasants. Among Nazrul's other publications in 1925 were an
anthology of short stories, Rikter Bedan, and four
anthologies of poems and songs: Chittanama,
Chhayanat, Samyabadi and Puber Hawa.
Chittanama was a collection of songs and poems that Nazrul
had composed on the sudden death on 16 June 1925 of Deshbandhu
Chittaranjan Das, pioneer of the cause of Hindu-Muslim
unity.
In 1926 Nazrul started living at Krishnanagar. In
November 1926, Nazrul contested from East Bengal for a seat in the
upper house of the central legislative council. In this connection
he extensively toured East Bengal, especially Dhaka division. The
knowledge that he had about this region from his early experience
of school-life at Trishal-Darirampur and his marriage now became
deeper. Meanwhile he continued to write songs. His patriotic songs
no longer spoke of independence for India alone, but turned into
songs for the downtrodden masses. In April 1927 Nazrul composed
'Jago Anashan Bandi', 'Raktapatakar Gan' (The song of the red
flag), etc. On 12 August 1927 Ganavani and Langal
were merged.
At Krishnanagar Nazrul also
composed ghazals. Though these
ghazals with their focus on love are very different from the
patriotic songs that Nazrul was writing at this time with their
focus on struggle and revolution, they are in fact two aspects of
youth. atulprasad
senhad earlier composed poems in this
genre, but the Bangla ghazal is mainly the creation of Nazrul.
Nazrul's ghazals are structured like Urdu ghazals and are sung with
or without tal.
It was about this time that Nazrul started publishing
his songs with notations. These songs clearly manifest that it was
though his life at Krishnanagar was one of poverty and hardship,
his musical talent blossomed there. Famous singers and
musicologists such as dilip kumar
royand Shahana Devi presented and popularised Nazrul
songs at different forums.
Nazrul attended the first annual conference
of muslim sahitya
samajat Dhaka on 28 February 1927. He came to
Dhaka again in the second week of February 1928 to attend its
second annual conference. This time he became acquainted
with quazi motahar
husain, who was teaching at Dhaka University,
as well as a number of university students:
buddhadev
bose, Ajit Dutta and Fazilatunnessa. He returned to
Dhaka again in June and met Ranu Soam (Protiva Basu) and Uma Moitra
(Loton) of Sangeet Charcha Kendra. Nazrul's three successive visits
to Dhaka provided him an opportunity to become acquainted with the
city's progressive groups of teachers, students and
artistes.
However, while Nazrul was becoming popular, he was also
becoming the target of conservative Muslims and Hindus. In 1927
Shanibarer chithi began printing parodies of Nazrul's
writings. His writings were also criticised in mohammadi, Islam Darshan and
Moslem Darpan. Progressive journals, however, such as
Kallol and Kalikalam, came forward in defence of the
poet. mohammad
nasiruddin's Saogat also supported
Nazrul. In an article in Saogat, abul kalam shamsuddin described
Nazrul as an epoch-making poet and called him the national poet of
Bengal. Nazrul joined Saogat to run an entertainment
section. This year also saw the publication of an anthology of
Nazrul's poems and songs, Fani-manasa, and an epistolary
novel: Bandhan Hara.
In January 1929 Nazrul visited Chittagong, where he
stayed with habibullah bahar
chowdhuryand his
sister shamsunnahar
mahmud. He also visited
sandwip, the birthplace of
his friend, Muzaffar Ahmed. Anthologies of Nazrul's poems and songs
published in 1928-29 include Sindhu-Hindol (1928),
Sanchita (1928), Bulbul (1928), Jinjir (1928)
and Chakravak (1929). In 1929 the poet's third son
Sabyasachi was born and in May that same year his four-year-old son
Bulbul died of smallpox. Nazrul was terribly shocked by this death
and in the view of many this marked a turning point in his life.
Gradually he became an introvert and turned towards spiritualism.
At Bulbul's sickbed Nazrul translated Hafiz's Rubaiyat. It
was published as Rubaiyat-i-Hafiz.
Meanwhile, Nazrul had also become associated with HMV
Gramophone Company. This association lasted from 1928 to 1932. The
earliest of his songs produced as records from HMV were 'Bhuli
kemane' and 'Eta jal o kajal chokhe', sung by Angurbala under his
guidance. HMV also recorded Nazrul's recitation of his poem 'Nari'.
Nazrul's first radio programme was broadcast from the Calcutta
station of All India Radio in the evening of 12 November 1929.
Nazrul also started composing songs for plays. In 1929 he composed
songs and set them to music for sachindranath
sengupta's play Raktakamal staged at
Manomohan Theatre in Kolkata. Sachindranath dedicated the play to
Nazrul. Nazrul also composed eight songs for
manmatha
roy's sensational play Karagar, staged in
1930. After running for 18 consecutive nights, the play was banned
by the government. The banning did not lessen Nazrul's
popularity.
On 10 December 1929 Nazrul Islam was accorded a
reception at Albert Hall, Kolkata, on behalf of the people of
Bengal. It was presided over by Acharya prafulla chandra
ray, the felicitation was read by barrister
S Wazed Ali, and addresses of good wishes were given
by subhas chandra
bose and Rai Bahadur
jaladhar
sen. The poet was presented a set of golden pen and
inkpot. At the reception Prafulla Chandra Ray said, Amar
bishvas, Narul Islamer kavita pathe amader bhabi bangshadharera ek
ekti ati manuse parinata habe (It is my belief, by reading the
poems of Nazrul Islam that each of our future children will become
a superman.) Subhas Chandra Bose said, Amra yakhan yuddhaksetre
yab takhan sekhane Nazruler yuddher gan gaoya habe! (When we go
to war we shall sing Nazrul's war songs. When we go to prison, we
shall still sing his songs.)
The books published in 1930 include a political novel,
Mrttuksudha, an anthology of songs, Nazrul-Gitika, a
play, Jhilimili, and two anthologies of poems and songs:
Pralay-shikha and Chandravindu. Chandravindu was
proscribed, and a case was instituted against Nazrul for
Pralay-shikha. Nazrul was arrested. On 16 December 1930, he
was found guilty and awarded six months' rigorous imprisonment.
Nazrul petitioned the High Court and was set free on bail.
Meanwhile, under the Gandhi-Irwin Pact, the case against Nazrul was
dismissed and he did not have to suffer
imprisonment.
Nazrul visited Darjeeling from the second week of June
to the middle of July, 1931. Rabindranath was also then visiting
Darjeeling and the two met. During this year, Nazrul's novel,
Kuhelika, an anthology of short stories, Shiulimala,
an anthology of his songs with notations, Nazrul-Swaralipi,
and a musical play, Aleya, were published. Aleya was
first staged at Natyaniketan, Kolkata (3 Paus 1338/ Dec 1931). It
had 28 songs. That year Nazrul also composed the music for several
plays, among them the dramatised version of Jotindramohan Singh's
novel, Dhruvatara, Manmatha Roy's stage play,
Savitri, and radio play, Mahuya, broadcast from
Kolkata radio station in 1932.
In November 1932 Nazrul attended the Bangiya Mussalman
Tarun Sammelan at sirajganj. On December 25
and 26, he attended the Bangiya Mussalman Sahitya Sammelan at
Albert Hall, Kolkata, where he was garlanded by its president, the
poet Kaikobad. Nazrul's publications in 1932 were anthologies of
songs, such as Sur-Saki, Zulfikar and
Bana-giti.
During 1932-33, Nazrul left HMV for the Megaphone
Record Company. The first two Nazrul songs recorded here were 'Jay
Vani Vidyadayini' and 'Laksmi Ma Tui', sung by Dhiren Das. In 1933
Nazrul returned to HMV as their exclusive composer. This was when
many of his songs were recorded. In 1933 Nazrul completed three
valuable translation works: Rubaiyat-i-Hafiz,
Rubaiyat-i-Omar Khayyam and Kavya Ampara.
In 1934 Nazrul became associated with motion pictures.
The first picture for which he worked was based
on girish chandra
ghosh's story Bhakta Dhruva (1934).
Nazrul acted in the role of Narada, directed the film, composed
songs for it, set them to music and directed them. He also did
playback singing for four of Narada's songs. Of the 18 songs of the
picture, Nazrul composed 17. He was also associated with other
motion pictures such as Patalpuri (1935), Graher Pher
(1937), Vidyapati (Bangla and Hindi, 1938), Gora
(1938), Nandini (1945) and Abhinay Nay (1945). Nearly
50 Nazrul songs were used for different pictures up to 1945. During
1929 to 1941 Nazrul was associated with 20 stage plays in Kolkata
including his own plays, Aleya and Madhumala. Some of
the other plays were Raktakamal, Mahuya,
Jahangir, Karagar, Sabitri, Aleya,
Sarbahara, Sati, Sirajaddaula,
Devidurga, Madhumala, Annapurna,
Nandini, Haraparvati, Arjunvijay and
Blackout. Altogether, these plays used 182 of Nazrul's
songs.
All of Nazrul's publications during 1934 were related
to songs, for instance, the song anthologies, Giti-Shatadal
and Ganer Mala, and collections of notations,
Suralipi and Suramukur.
Nazrul became formally associated with Kolkata radio
station in October 1939. Many significant music programmes were
broadcast under his direction, among them, 'Haramani', 'Mel-Milan',
and 'Navaragamalika'. From 1939 to 1942, Nazrul, in association
with the music maestro, Sureshchandra Chakravarty, broadcast from
Kolkata station many raga-based music programmes of exceptional
quality. This was regarded as the most significant phase of
Nazrul's music life. Meanwhile, in addition to HMV and Megaphone,
other gramophone companies, such as Twin, Colombia, Hindustan,
Senola, Pioneer and Viellophone, were recording his songs. By 1950,
HMV had issued 567 Nazrul records, Twin 280, Megaphone 91, Colombia
44, Hindustan 15, Senola 13, Pioneer 2, Viellophone 2 and Regan 1.
In all, of the two thousand odd songs that Nazrul had composed,
these companies produced over a thousand records.
On 7 August 1941, Rabindranath died. Nazrul
spontaneously composed two poems-'Rabihara' (Without Rabi) and
'Salam Astarabi' (Farewell, Setting Sun) -and an elegy, 'Ghumaite
Dao Shranta Rabire (Let the Tired Rabi Sleep). Nazrul himself
recorded 'Rabihara' and recited it on radio.
Within a year of Rabindranath's death, Nazrul himself
fell ill and gradually lost his voice and his memory. His treatment
at home and abroad produced no results. For 34 long years, from
July 1942 to August 1976, the poet suffered this unbearable life of
silence.
With consent of the Indian government, Nazrul and his
family were brought to independent Bangladesh on 24 May 1972. In
recognition of his contribution to Bangla literature and culture,
Dhaka University awarded the poet the honorary degree of DLitt at a
special convocation on 9 December 1974. In January 1976, the
Bangladesh government granted him citizenship of Bangladesh and on
February 21 awarded him the 'Ekushey Padak'. On 29 August 1976 the
poet died at the Institute of Post Graduate Medicine and Research
(now BSMM University) in Dhaka.
The national poet of Bangladesh, Kazi Nazrul Islam was
buried with state honour on Dhaka University campus, on the
northern side of Dhaka University mosque.
Source: www.Banglapedia.org