Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Sahir’s handwritte­n notes, poems found at Mumbai scrap shop

- Press Trust of India n letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

A bunch of priceless handwritte­n letters, diaries, nazms, and black and white photograph­s of legendary Urdu poet-lyricist Sahir Ludhianvi were found at a scrap shop in Mumbai, and has been bought by an NGO for just ₹3,000 for preserving it.

Mumbai-based Film Heritage Foundation, a non-government­al organisati­on, found these items recently amid a dump of newspapers and magazines at the scrap shop in Juhu, and now it plans to preserve and exhibit the archives.

“The diaries found have details of his daily routines like where he would be going for song recording and other personal life happenings. Then, there are several poems and notes. The notes are related to his publishing house ‘Parchaian’,” Shivendra Singh Dungarpur, the founding-director of the Film Heritage Foundation said.

“There are letters addressed to him from prominent people like music composer Ravi, his friend and poet Harbans. Some of the letters are in English, and some in Urdu. Rest all work is in Urdu,” he said.

Then, there are photograph­s of Sahir — some individual, some with his sisters and friends and some of his home in Ludhiana. The foundation’s experts are analyzing the poems and finding out which are the ones that have not got published, he said.

“This is reminiscen­t of a scene from Guru Dutt’s ‘Pyaasa’ where the protagonis­t’s poems and writings are found at a scrap shop,” he said.

Sahir had written songs for the 1957 film, now considered a cult classic. Several situations in the film, whose protagonis­t played by Dutt too was a poet, were based on Sahir’s life.

Dungarpur said his foundation had purchased the entire collection of Sahir’s items for ₹3,000, stressing how the invaluable work of the master poet had landed in a quaint scrap shop in a Mumbai bylane.

“Our team is always on the lookout for such film-related works. We once found original film reel of Guru Dutt’s ‘Bharosa’ and actress Sadhna’s items in similar condition and have restored them,” he said.

“Afsos hota in cheezon ko aisi haalat mein dekh ke (it is saddening to find such articles in this condition). But we are happy that we are able to find and preserve them,” he added.

The Film Heritage Foundation now hopes to restore these archival items, digitize the documents and preserve them. “The findings are very significan­t,” said Abdur Rasheed, Urdu professor at Jamia Milia Islamia in New Delhi.

 ?? PTI ?? A Mumbai-based NGO bought the collection for just ₹3,000. It now plans to preserve and exhibit it.
PTI A Mumbai-based NGO bought the collection for just ₹3,000. It now plans to preserve and exhibit it.

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