Suroor Barabankvi (back row right) with Haroon (back row centre), one of the actors in Aakhri Station [The Last Station]. The 1965 film was directed by Barabankvi, who also wrote the lyrics for its songs | Vintage Pakistan
Some critics define poetry in terms of subjectivity and objectivity. To them, subjective poetry is that which stems from the heart, while verse that depicts the objects of the outer world or occurrences of society — perceived through the mind — is called objective. In benchmarking the poetry of tarraqi pasandi (Progressivism) against the poesy of jadeediat (Modernism) — two major movements of 20th century Urdu literature — the above mentioned duality seems to be operative. A few more characteristics have been attached to these two brands of poetry; tarraqi pasand (or objective) poetry is consciously purposive, ideological, political and aberrational, besides its conspicuous tilt towards the marginalised segments of society. In contrast, jadeed (or subjective) poetry prefers to portray an individual’s unconsciousness, dreams, desires, feelings etc, and so embraces an experimental and ambiguous style.
Interestingly, Suroor Barabankvi’s poetry has been judged in terms of both tarraqi pasandi and jadeediat. Some of his critics (the likes of Iftikhar Arif and Mumtaz Hussain) declare him a tarraqi pasand poet, meaning his ghazal and nazms are more and more inundated with socio-political themes. Yet others term his poetry tarraqi pasand and jadeed alike, meaning his themes are Progressive, while the diction he employs in ghazal and nazm is modern and devoid of all sorts of cliché. Moreover, where he touches upon themes of love and feminine beauty with their attending emotions — such as those of communion, separation, fear and anxiety — these critics opine that they have both Progressive and modern significance alike, simply because love and beauty cannot be separated from life, no matter if it is social or personal. In reality, what we call a poetic process occurs on the blurred borders of conscious and unconscious regions. Moreover, the language, the medium of poetry, has to undergo a sort of transformation; common, ordinary, idiomatic use of language is broken up (and afterward gets reformed) at the anvil of poetic imagination. So, instead of representing conscious/political/outer or unconscious/individual/inner worlds, poetry creates a new, imaginary world which has its own rules, customs and its own particular language, too. It is worth keeping in mind that this new world of poetry is not alienated from existing personal or political worlds; rather, it is there to illuminate both worlds. All the best poetry — and the best pieces of Barabankvi’s poetry as well — confirm this assumption.
Suroor Barabankvi’s collected works make clear that the late poet was one who illuminated the personal as much as the socio-political
The poet Barabankvi was born in 1927 in the district of Barabanki in Uttar Pradesh, India. He migrated twice. After Partition, in 1952, he went to Dhaka where, though he witnessed continual political unrest, his days were comfortable in terms of livelihood. First he joined the Dhaka branch of the Anjuman-i-Tarraqi-i-Urdu as secretary and started the Urdu literary magazines Aab-o-Gil and Qalamkar. His efforts were aimed towards promoting Urdu in the metropolis of then East Pakistan, which had belligerently revolted against the decision of making Urdu the single national language.