Honorific Prefix: | Professor |
Afzal Tauseef | |
Native Name Lang: | pa, ur |
Birth Date: | 18 May 1936 |
Birth Place: | Simbli, Hoshiarpur, East Punjab |
Death Place: | Lahore, Pakistan |
Resting Place: | Karim Block cemetery, Iqbal Town, Lahore |
Occupation: | Writer, Columnist |
Language: | Punjabi, Urdu |
Citizenship: | Pakistani |
Education: | English studies MA |
Alma Mater: | Oriental College, Lahore Government College University |
Period: | Ayub Khan regime Operation Fair Play |
Subject: | Politics, social, language arts |
Spouses: | --> |
Awards: | Pride of Performance (2010) |
Years Active: | 19xx–2014 |
Afzal Tauseef (May 18, 1936 – December 30, 2014[1]), also spelled Afzal Tausif, was a Pakistani Punjabi language writer, columnist and journalist.[2] [3] [4]
She criticized military dictatorship in Pakistan and was detained, later displaced several times by the rulers of that time such as Ayub Khan and Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq. Afzal has authored more than thirty books in Punjabi as well as in Urdu. In 2010, she was awarded Pride of Performance by the Government of Pakistan in recognition of her literary contributions. She was also associated with the Pakistan Peoples Party and served as vice president of Punjabi Adabi Board (PAB) for five years. Afzal also wrote a book titled Dekhi Teri Duniya (I have seen your world).[1]
Afzal was born on May 18, 1936, in East Punjab at Simbli village of Hoshiarpur, British India. She was the only surviving child of her parents during the Partition of India, and then she migrated to Pakistan along with her father who was then posted as a police officer after the country was declared a sovereign state. Afzal initially stayed in Balochistan. She did her initial schooling, including matriculation from a government girls school at Quetta, and later moved to Punjab where she attended Oriental College but left midway. Afzal then attended Government College University, Lahore and did a master's degree in English. After completing higher education, she was then appointed as a teacher at the University of Home Economics (formerly a college). Later, she taught English at College of Education until her retirement.[1]
Afzal wrote books and editorial columns. She wrote for newspapers and published thirty books on themes such as politics, social issues, and art and languages.[5]
Her books include:
Some of her books were later transliterated into Gurmukhi and published in India. She wrote a book on the fall of Bangladesh and Baloch cause, leading her to face military trials and detentions.[6] My Beloved Trees, My Children was among the books she wrote about partition.[7] Afzal's main subject was progressive writing.[8]
During her lifetime, Afzal Tauseef received numerous awards for her literary works:
She died in Lahore on December 30, 2014, a day after being admitted to Alshafi Hospital. She is buried in Karim block cemetery in Iqbal Town. Her funeral was attended by Punjabi Adabi Board members and representatives of the Pakistan Academy of Letters including writers Kanwal Feroze, Parveen Malik, Baba Najmi and journalists.[1]
A fellow Indian progressive writer, Amrita Pritam had compiled a book about her in Hindi entitled Doosre Aadam Ki Beti and also called her "Suchi Dhee Punjab Di" (True daughter of the Punjab).[6]