LONDON: Friends, family and well-wishers of late Dawn columnist Irfan Husain gathered in Kensington, London, on Wednesday evening to celebrate his life and writing with the publication of a book titled, A Life Lived with Passion: Irfan Husain.

Edited by journalist Ca­­r­men Gonzalez and her hus­­band, former Dawn edi­­tor Abbas Nasir, the book was commissioned by Hus­ain’s wife Charlotte and son Shakir. The book is a compilation of his columns spanning the per­iod from 1992 to 2020, when he passed away, with the editors perusing some 2 million words written by him over nearly three decades.

Born in Amritsar, India, Husain was educated in Karachi, Paris and Ankara. He joined the Pakistani civil service in 1967 but pursued freelance journalism for the majority of his working life. His book Fatal Faultlines: Pakistan, Islam and the West was published by ArcMa­nor in the US and later by Har­perCollins India. It won the first prize for politics and current affairs at the Benjamin Franklin Awards.

The event was well-att­e­nded with a packed venue. There were lots of laughter and cheerful discussions about Husain’s love for life, writing and food as guests enjoyed drinks and canapes. Many recalled that he had a wonderful sense of humour. The book launch took place at the home of the Dufferin family who were friends of Husain and Charlotte, with many marvelling at the artwork by the late Lindy Dufferin who also passed away in 2020. In a speech to introduce the editors, Charlotte said that Husain had launched an earlier book in this house.

In his speech, Abbas Nasir described his friend Husain as “well-read, awe-inspiring, soft spoken and polite to a fault”. He also reminded listeners that Husain was tough to edit, as he “fought for every word he wrote”.

Having been his friend and editor at Dawn, Abbas said Husain “could see right from wrong from miles away”. Gonzalez remarked that it was an “enormous journey” to peruse his work. She described Husain as a “Renaissance man” who wrote about every subject, topic or issue, from “international issues to English tea parties in the countryside”. Gonzalez noted that he wrote profoundly about the conflicted relationship bet­ween India and Pakistan.

Other Dawn columnists and writers Mohammed Hanif, Umber Khairi, Huma Yusuf and Nadir Cheema were also at the event. Hanif remembered Husain as “the first Pakistani columnist who wrote about food in detail and eccentricity”.

Cheema said, “Irfan ins­pired a whole generation of young writers through his writing and as a gracious host”.

Published in Dawn, September 29th, 2023

Opinion

Editorial

Fancy tax scheme
Updated 23 Sep, 2024

Fancy tax scheme

GOVERNMENTS propose, bureaucrats dispose — often relegating ‘plans’ to an existing pile of schemes gathering...
Lebanon on edge
23 Sep, 2024

Lebanon on edge

NOT content with the bloodbath it has unleashed in Gaza, Israel is now on the rampage in Lebanon, routinely ...
Chikungunya threat
23 Sep, 2024

Chikungunya threat

MISERY usually follows every rainy season. If it is not infrastructural degradation, it is disease. And so, the...
TTP’s reach
Updated 22 Sep, 2024

TTP’s reach

The TTP — particularly its activities inside Afghanistan — should be a matter of global concern, specifically for regional states.
Parliamentary ‘coup’
22 Sep, 2024

Parliamentary ‘coup’

SOME have celebrated the recent ‘elimination’ of a major political party from the National Assembly with the...
Fixing the flaws
22 Sep, 2024

Fixing the flaws

THE Pakistan women’s cricket team is heading to next month’s T20 World Cup without winning a series in the...