Tag Archives: Professor Asloob Ahmad Ansari

Asloob Ahmad Ansari obituary

NEW DELHI / Aligarh, UTTAR PRADESH  :

 Asloob Ahmad Ansari knew Urdu and Persian, and learned Arabic in later years
Asloob Ahmad Ansari knew Urdu and Persian, and learned Arabic in later years

My former teacher Asloob Ahmad Ansari, who has died aged 91, was a professor of English at Aligarh Muslim University, northern India, and a distinguished literary critic and editor.

Born in Delhi and brought up in Saharanpur, a city in Uttar Pradesh, Asloob was the son of Sana Ahmad, a member of a land-owning family who worked in a post office, and his wife, Zarifa Khatoon; his four siblings were all to migrate to Pakistan after partition in 1947.

Asloob was educated at a government school in Delhi, and then at Aligarh Muslim University, where he joined the English department as a lecturer in 1946. He retired in 1985, having headed the department for some 20 years. Asloob also obtained a BA from Oxford University (1956-58), where he began a lifelong friendship with his tutor, FW Bateson.

Shakespeare and William Blake were Asloob’s lifelong passions: he regularly attended the World Shakespeare Conference at Stratford-upon-Avon, and launched and edited two journals in English specialising in Shakespeare and Blake scholarship. He persuaded critics including FR Leavis, Wilson Knight, Kenneth Muir and Laurence Lerner to write for the Aligarh Journal of English Studies, which he started in 1976. He continued his editorial work even after retirement, in 1987, when he launched the Aligarh Critical Miscellany.

Asloob knew Urdu and Persian and edited Naqd-o–Nazar, a journal in Urdu that paid special attention to the poets Ghalib and Iqbal. He won many prizes for his contribution to Urdu literature, including the Sahitya Akademi award from India’s National Academy of Letters, the President of Pakistan award, the Ghalib award and the Mir Taqi Mir award.

Asloob always spoke very softly in the classroom, but was disciplined and hard-working, and never very keen on socialising. A diabetic for most of his life, he followed a strict diet and walked many miles each morning and evening. He also played badminton to keep fit.

A devout Muslim, he recited the Qur’an daily and rarely missed his prayers. To understand the Qur’an better, he learnt Arabic in his old age by hiring a private tutor.

In 1951, Asloob married Talat Ara. She survives him, together with their two daughters, Iffat and Roshan, and three grandchildren.

source: http://www.theguardian.com / The Guardian / Home> Education> Other Lives> India / by Mohammad Asim Siddiqui / July 07th, 2016

Retired AMU professor dies after brief illness

Aligarh, UTTAR PRADESH :

Aligarh , (PTI) :

Sahitya Academy Award winner and noted scholar Asloob Ahmad Ansari died here after brief illness at the age of 91.

Ansari, a former head of the Department of English at Aligarh Muslim University, died last night following brief illness and was laid to rest this afternoon at the university graveyard, family sources said.

Senior officials of the University and former members of the teaching faculty were present during his last rites.

Ansari, who is survived by two daughters, had the unique distinction of contributing both to English and Urdu literature.

He was conferred the Sahitya Academy Award in 1980 for his work in Urdu, Iqbal Ki Terah Nazmen.

Ansari was also recipient of UP Urdu Academy Award, Ghalib Award and Bahadur Shah Zafar Award for his textual criticism of the works of Urdu poet Mohammad Iqbal.

He studied at AMU and later graduated in English from the University of Oxford.

PTI COR SAB SUK SK SUK

source: http://www.indiatoday.intoday.in / IndiaToday.in / Home> News> PTI Feed / PTI / May 05th, 2016