Abdurrahman Sharafkandi

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This article is about the Kurdish poet. For the feature film Hejar, see Hejar.
Abdurrahman Sharafkandi
Abdurrahman Sharafkandi In the early Republic of Mahabad.jpg
Mamosta Hejar
Born 1920
boukan, Iran
Died February 21, 1991(1991-02-21)
Karaj, Iran
Occupation Writer, poet, philosopher, historian, translator
Nationality Kurdish Iranian

Abdurrahman Sharafkandi or Hazhar or Hajar, (Kurdish: Hejar‎) (Persian: هژار‎‎ Hazhar)(1920 – February 21, 1991), was a renowned Kurdish writer, poet, linguist, and translator, from Iran.

He was also the brother of the late Kurdish politician Dr. Sadeq Sharafkandi (1938–1992). Dr. Sharafkandi was the second General Secretary of the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (PDKI).

Biography

Hejar was born in the city of boukan in north-western Iran. He began religious studies in early childhood, but was forced to abandon it when he lost his father at the age of 17. He started writing poems in Kurdish around 1940.Through his readings, he came under the influence of famous Kurdish poets such as Malaye Jaziri, Ahmad Khani, Wafaei and Haji Qadir Koyi. He was involved in the Kurdish movement led by Qazi Muhammad and was appointed as one of the official poets of the Republic of Mahabad in 1947. After the fall of the republic, he was forced into exile. For about 30 years, he lived in different countries such as Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Egypt. In Iraq, he became involved in the nationalist movement led by Mustafa Barzani, with whom he developed a close friendship. In 1975, after the defeat of the movement, he moved back to Iran, and settled in the city of Karaj, where he lived until his death on February 22, 1990. He is buried in Mahabad.

Works

Hejar was one of the most prolific Kurdish writers. He wrote 24 books and is credited with many works, among which are the editing and commentary of poems of Malaye Jaziri in Sorani Kurdish, a translation of Khani's works into Sorani Kurdish, a translation of Koran into Kurdish, the first Kurdish-Persian dictionary in Iran, and the translation of the poems of Khayyam into Kurdish, with the same rhythm.

Books

  1. Alekok
  2. Vergêra MemoZîn bi soranî ( Translation of Mem û Zîn from Kurmanji into sorani Kurdish )
  3. Translation of Sharafnama from Persian into Sorani Kurdish.
  4. Dîwana helbesta Bu Kurdistan (Collection of Poems: For Kurdistan)
  5. Çarînekanî Xeyam (Translation of Khayyam's Quatrains from Persian into Kurdish)
  6. Henbane Borîne (Kurdish-Kurdish-Persian Dictionary)
  7. Vergêra Quranê bi Kurdî ( Translation of Koran into Kurdish)
  8. Translation of The Canon of Medicine by Avicenna from Arabic into Persian.
  9. Şerha Dîwana Melayê Cizîrî (Editing and Commentary on the Poems of Malaye Jaziri)
  10. Sifra bê biraneve (vergêra pirtûka Şerîetî ) (Translation of One and Zeroes without end by Ali Shariati from Persian into Kurdish)
  11. Çêştî Micêvir( serbihorî ) (Autobiography)

Articles

Keith Hitchins (2003), "HAŽĀR" in Encyclopædia Iranica, Online Edition. [1] (access date April 4, 2011)

  1. Hazhar, Abdul Rahman, Le mer jiyan û beserhatî Hejar bwêjî Kurd (On the life and biography of Hazhar, the Kurdish poet), in Eiiubi & Smirnova, pp. 142–85, 1968.
  2. Hazhar, Abdul Rahman,Kurd û Serbexoî Ziman, Govarî Korî Zaniyarî Kurd (The Journal of the Kurdish Scientific Council), Vol 2., Part 1, pp. 280–320, 1974.

References