zavia book in urdu

zavia book in urdu

zaide book

Zavia Book In Urdu

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review of another edition marked it as to-read Ata Ur rehman KhaakiUrdu Soft BooksUrdu BookFree PdfDownload FreeAhmad DownloadBook ZaviaE Books IslamicFree IslamicEducation BooksForwardThe Famous Urdu book "Zavia 1st Edition" by Ashfaq Ahmad. Download Free PDF Book or read online this book for free. This Free PDF Book is contained on 3 segments and here you can download the first edition of this Free PDF Book. In the said book you will find very attractive words about every thing experienced by Ashfaq Ahmad. There are many interesting topics discussed by Ashfaq Ahmad. Not to be confused with the Pakistani physicist Ishfaq Ahmad or the Indian football player Ishfaq Ahmed. For other uses, see Ashfaq Ahmed (disambiguation). Ashfaq Ahmed (Urdu: اشفاق احمد‎; 22 August 1925 – 7 September 2004) was a writer, playwright and broadcaster from Pakistan.[3] He authored several books in Urdu. His works included novels, short stories and plays for television and radio




.[4] He was awarded President's Pride of Performance and Sitara-i-Imtiaz for meritorious services in the field of literature and broadcasting
Ahmed was born on 22 August 1925 in Firozpur, Punjab, British India,[6][7] into an ethnic Pashtun family of the Momand tribe.[8] He obtained his early education in his native district of Muktsar][9] Shortly before independence in 1947, he migrated to Pakistan and settled in Lahore, Punjab.[10] He completed his Masters in Urdu literature from Government College Lahore. Bano Qudsia, his wife and companion in Urdu literary circles, was his classmate at the Government College
After Partition, when Ahmed arrived at the Walton refugee camp with millions of other migrants, he used to make announcements of directions on a megaphone around the clock for the refugees. Later, he got a job in 'Radio Azad Kashmir', which was established on a truck that used to drive around in various parts of Kashmir. He then got lectureship at Dayal Singh College, Lahore for two years.




Whereafter, he went to Rome to join 'Radio Rome' as an Urdu newscaster. He also used to teach Urdu at 'Rome University'. During his stay in Europe, he received diplomas in the Italian and French languages from the 'Sapienza University of Rome|University of Rome' and University of Grenoble, France. He also earned a special training diploma in radio broadcasting from New York University
He started writing stories in his childhood, which were published in Phool [Flower] magazine. After returning to Pakistan from Europe, he took out his own monthly literary magazine, Dastaango [Story Teller], and joined Radio Pakistan as a script writer. He was made editor of the popular Urdu weekly, Lail-o-Nahar [Day and Night], in place of famous poet Sufi Ghulam Mustafa Tabassum by the Government of Pakistan
In 1962, Ahmed started his popular radio program, Talqeen Shah [The Preacher] which made him immensely popular among the people in towns and villages.[12] He was appointed director of the Markazi Urdu Board in 1966, which was later renamed as Urdu Science Board, a post he held for 29 years




.[10] He remained with the board until 1979. He also served as adviser in the Education Ministry during Zia-ul-Haq's regime.[2] In the 1960s, he produced a feature film, Dhoop aur Saaei [Shadows and Sunshine], which was not very successful at the box office. Ashfaq Ahmed's Grave in Model Town, Lahore Ahmed, in his later years of life, was greatly inclined towards Sufism.[13] His close association with Qudrat Ullah Shahab and Mumtaz Mufti was also attributed to this tendency. He used to appear in a get together with his fans in PTV program Baithak (The Guest Room) and Zaviya (The Dimension) where he gave swift but satisfying responses to each and every question posed by the youth audience
On 7 September 2004, Ashfaq Ahmed died of pancreatic cancer. He was laid to rest in Model Town, Lahore, Pakistan
^ http://www.ankhmacholi.pk/lectures/zaavia-ashfaq-ahmed-ptv/, Retrieved 13 March 2016 ^ a b http://www.samaa.tv/?s=Ashfaq+Ahmed+, Retrieved 13 March 2016 ^ a b c





^ .pk/national/08-Sep-2004/literary-icon-ashfaq-ahmed-laid-to-rest, Retrieved 13 March 2016 ^ /news/398748/islamabad-tributes-paid-to-ashfaq-ahmed, Retrieved 13 March 2016 ^ a b Colours of Loneliness ^ .pk/national/23-Dec-2004/ashfaq-ahmed-paid-tribute, Retrieved 13 March 2016 ^ / website, Retrieved 23 March 201 404 (Page Not Found) Error If you're the site owner, one of two things happened: 1) You entered an incorrect URL into your browser's address bar, or 2) You haven't uploaded content. If you're a visitor and not sure what happened: 1) You entered or copied the URL incorrectly or 2) The link you used to get here is faulty. (It's an excellent idea to let the link owner know.)Trending on RSPKAdvertisement:-Recent Books:- کھیل تماشا از اشفاق احمد Khail Tamasha By Ashfaq Ahmad Read and download Khail Tamasha By Ashfaq AhmadAshfaq Ahmad  View Full Post 4,670 Sponser:- زاویہ ۳ از اشفاق احمد Zavia 3 By Ashfaq Ahmad Read and download Zavia 3 By Ashfaq AhmadAshfaq Ahmad  View Full Post 5,941 Advertisement:- زاویہ ۲ از اشفاق احمد Zavia 2 By Ashfaq Ahmad Read and download Zavia 2 By Ashfaq AhmadAshfaq Ahmad  View Full Post 6,059 زاویہ ۱ از اشفاق




احمد Zavia 1 By Ashfaq Ahmad Read and download Zavia 1 By Ashfaq AhmadAshfaq Ahmad  View Full Post 19,080 حیرت کدہ از اِشفاق احمد Hairat Kadah By Ashfaq Ahmad Read And Download Hairat Kadah By Ashfaq AhmadAshfaq Ahmad  View Full Post 4,352 Aik Muhabbat Sau Afsanay By Ashfaq Ahmad Read and download Aik Muhabbat Sau Afsanay By Ashfaq AhmadAshfaq Ahmad  View Full Post 6,099 Welcome! It's your right to block ads. After all, it's your browser.But it's also our right to protect the integrity of our advertisement to keep website liveClick here to follow steps to disable adblock extension.Click here to follow steps to disable adblock extension.On September 7, 2004, while sitting in my office and doing my routine work, I received a call from a close friend. Without the usual ‘Salam dua’ he exclaimed, “Ashfaq sahib is no more; just got the news.” It was a short sentence, but it had many aspects attached to it. The feeling of a great loss, sweet memories of so many stories, dramas and plays, of colourful travelogues, funny incidents, thought-provoking quotes of Sufis and other baabay (mystics);




nostalgic recollections of a life well spent, and fully lived. So much came to mind and passed like a breeze, leaving me numb and motionless for some time. How do you react to such news? Ashfaq Ahmed was not my relative. I did not know him on a personal level. I had never even met him and yet the feeling of great loss and mind-numbing pain seeped into my soul on hearing about his demise. I did not know why I felt like this, but like many other Pakistani Urdu writers, his words were my link to his soul – his personality. The characters he had created through his works were as real to me as they must have been to him, and through this abstract connection, Ashfaq sahib and I were no longer strangers. While reading his dramas and books, one question always came to my mind; they say that every good writer creates characters as a reflection of himself, and so I always wondered which of his characters were reflections of his own self. Was it Talqeen Shah, one of the most famous radio programme characters in Pakistan?




Or was it the Mohammed Hussain Dakia from the spiritual classic Manchalay Ka Sauda? Or was he simply the ‘greatest husband in the world’ as Bano Qudsia said so many times? Towards his end, I believe he could also have been the famous “Baba” he used to refer to so dearly in almost all his conversations, especially in Baithak and Zavia. I used to phone him from Dubai, especially after reading certain books of his, to tell him how each and every word used by him had a profound and deep impact on my mind. There would always be a sense of embarrassment in me at the end of these calls because he would talk as if it’s the most natural thing to do – receiving calls from fans, making them feel special and interesting. Once, during such a call, I told him: “Sir, your book Manchalay ka Sauda and the drama made on it is just too good to be true.” “That book came before its time. You would see in near future InshaAllah (God willing) that people will benefit from this for generations to come.”

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