Kaifi Azmi was an Indian lyricist. He was a recipient of the Padma Shri. He is the father of the actress Shabana Azmi.
Uncertain about his date of
birth Azmi Saab however was certain that he was
born in enslaved India, grew old in Independent
India and that he would die in Socialist India.
He was born as Akhtar Husain Rizvi, in a small
hamlet, Majwan, in the district of Azamgarh,
Uttar Pradesh in a family of landlords. His
father Syed Fateh Husain Rizvi, though was a
landlord, but took up employment first in a
small native state, Balharah, as a tahsildar and
later on other areas of Uttar Pradesh. He
decided to send his sons to schools imparting
modern education, including English, against the
stiff opposition of his relatives. However, Azmi
Saab could not get this opportunity because his
elders wanted him to be a theologian. He was
admitted in Sultan-ul-Madaris, a reputed
seminary in Lucknow. However his nonconformist
nature created many problems for the authorities
of the seminary. He formed a Students' Union and
asked all the students to go on strike for
getting their demands fulfilled. The strike
continued for one and half year. Though the
strike was called off, he was expelled from the
seminary. This was the end of his elders' dream
to train him to be a theologian. Azmi Saab could
not seek modern education but he passed various
examinations of Lucknow and Allahabad
Universities that helped him acquire command
over Arabic, Persian and Urdu languages.
During this period the leading progressive
writers of Lucknow noticed him. They were very
much impressed by his leadership qualities. They
also saw in him a budding poet and extended all
possible cooperation and encouragement to him.
Consequently, Azmi Saab began to win great
acclaim as a poet. His initiation into poetry
was most interesting. At the age of eleven he,
somehow, managed to get himself invited to a
Mushaira and over there recited a ghazal, rather
a couplet of the ghazal, which was very much
appreciated by the President of the Mushaira,
Mani Jaisi, but most of the people, including
his father, thought that he recited his elder
brother's ghazal. When his elder brother denied
it, his father and his clerk decided to test his
poetic talent. They gave him one of the lines of
a couplet and asked him to write a ghazal in the
same meter and rhyme. Azmi Saab accepted the
challenge and within no time completed a ghazal.
That particular ghazal was to become a rage in
undivided India sung by none other than the
legendary ghazal singer, Begum Akhtar and went
thus: Itna to Zindagi Mein Kisiki Khalal Pade
Hasne se ho Sukoon Na Rone se Kal Pade. He
however abandoned his studies of Persian and
Urdu during the Quit India agitations of 1942
and shortly thereafter became a full time
Marxist when he accepted membership of the
Communist Party in 1943. He was asked to shift
base to Mumbai and work among the workers and
started party work with lot of zeal and
enthusiasm and at the same time would attend
Mushairas in different parts of India. In 1947,
he reached Hyderabad to participate in a
Mushaira. There he met with Shaukat, fell in
love with her and both got married. Shaukat
Kaifi, later on, became a well known actress of
theatre and film.
Like most of the Urdu poets, Azmi Saab began as
a ghazal writer cramming his poetry with the
oft-repeated themes of love and romance in a
style that was replete with clichés and
metaphors. However, his association with the
Progressive Writers' Movement and Communist
Party made him embark on the path of socially
conscious poetry. In his poems he highlights the
exploitation of the subaltern masses and through
them he conveys a message of the creation of a
just social order by dismantling the existing
one. Yet, his poetry cannot be called plain
propaganda. It has its own merits; intensity of
emotions, in particular, the spirit of sympathy
and compassion towards the disadvantaged section
of society are the hallmarks of his poems. His
poems are also notable for their rich imagery
and in this respect his contribution to Urdu
poetry can hardly be overstated. He published
three anthologies of poetry Aakhir-e-Shab,
Jhankar and Awaara Sajde. Recently Penguin came
out with a translation of his poems in English -
Selected Poems Kaifi Azmi.
Azmi Saab was also an active member of Indian
People's Theatre Association (IPTA) and in later
years its president. His role in theatre was
very important — he ensured that even after the
communist movement started dying, its cultural
component was kept alive. Once or twice he got
young writers to produce plays and perform them
at the Bhulabhai Desai Hall to collect funds for
the Communist Party.
Azmi Saab's stint in film includes working as
lyricist, writer and yes even actor! His early
work as story writer was mainly for Nanubhai
Vakil's films like Yahudi ki Beti (1956), Parvin
(1957), Miss Punjab Mail (1958) and Id ka Chand
(1958). But perhaps his greatest feat as a
writer was Chetan Anand's Heer Ranjha (1970)
wherein the entire dialogue of the film was in
verse. It was a tremendous achievement and one
of the great feats in Hindi Film writing. Azmi
Saab also won great critical accolades for the
script, dialogues and lyrics of M.S. Sathyu's
Garam Hawa (1973), based on a story by Ismat
Chughtai. The film, chronicles the plight of the
minority Muslims in North India and is set in
Agra after the first major partition exodus.
Balraj Sahni played to perfection the central
role of an elderly Muslim shoe manufacturer who
must decide whether to continue living in India
or to migrate to the newly formed state of
Pakistan. Garam Hawa remains today one of the
most poignant films ever to be made on India's
partition. Azmi also wrote the dialogues for
Shyam Benegal's Manthan (1976) and Sathyu's
Kanneshwara Rama (1977). As a lyrics writer
though he wrote for numerous films, he would
always be remembered for Guru Dutt's Kaagaz ke
Phool (1959) and Chetan Anand's Haqeeqat (1964),
India's greatest ever war film. In the former
who can forget Dekhi Zamaane ki Yaari Bichde
Sabi Baari Baari or Waqt ne Kiya Kya Haseen
Situm and Hoke Majboor Mujhe Usne Bhulaya Hoga
or Kar Chale Hum Fida Jaan-o-Tan Saathiyon in
the latter. The last mentioned patriotic song
causes goose pimples even when heard today. Some
other notable films for which he wrote the
lyrics include Uski Kahani (1966), Bawarchi
(1972), Pakeezah (1972), Hanste Zakhm (1973) and
Razia Sultan (1983). He also played a memorable
old man in Naseem (1995),a touching film
centered around the destruction of the Babri
Masjid at Ayodhya. The film is set in
June-December 1992, the days preceding the
demolition of the Masjid on December 6, 1992 by
Hindutva fanatics. Naseem (Mayuri Kango) is a
schoolgirl belonging to a middle class Mumbai
based Muslim family. She enjoys a warm
relationship with her aged ailing grandfather
(Azmi Saab). With increasing horror the family
watches on their TV the news of the build up at
Ayodhya while the grandfather regales her with
stories of life in pre-independence Agra. The
grandfather dies on December 6 coinciding with
the news of the destruction of the mosque. Azmi
Saab's brilliant performance provides not just a
reminder but a literal embodiment of the
cultural traditions at stake those tragic days.
It was a performance his daughter, multiple
National Award winning actress Shabana Azmi, was
proud of.
Kaifi Saab has won various awards and he has
been honoured by various national and
international institutions. These include the
Uttar Pradesh Urdu Academy Award, the Soviet
Land Nehru Award and the Sahitya Academy Award
for his collection, Awaara Sajde, the
Maharashtra State Urdu Academy's Special Award
for his contribution to Urdu literature and the
Afro-Asian Writers' Committee's Lotus Award. He
also won the National Award and Filmfare Award
for the screenplay and dialogue of Garam Hawa.
Azmi Saab was also the subject of a documentary
film Kaifi Azmi (1979) made by Raman Kumar. His
son Baba Azmi is a reputed cinematographer while
son-in-law Javed Akhtar is a well known writer,
lyricist and poet and daughter-in-law Tanvi, a
fine actress in her own right.








