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Parwaaz (پرواذ) | Col Shafiq ur Rehman | PDF eBook Social Novel Free

Shafiq-ur-Rahman (Urdu: شفیق الرحمن‎) (9 November 1920 – 19 March 2000) was a Pakistani humorist and a short-story essayist of Urdu dialect. He was a standout amongst the most famous authors of the Urdu talking world. Like western Mark Twain and Stephen Leacock, he has given continuing delight to his perusers. He was a medicinal specialist by calling, and served in Pakistan Army. He additionally got Hilal-e-Imtiaz for his military and regular citizen administrations. He has broadly been apprecitated by scholars and faultfinders of Urdu writing. Rahman was conceived in a Panwar Rajput group of Kalanaur, a residential community close Rohtak. He got his instruction in Bahawalpur. He finished his MBBS from King Edward Medical College, Lahore in 1942, and post-graduation in tropical solution and general wellbeing from Edinburgh, in 1952. Rahman started composing entertaining stories amid his school days. His stories were distributed in a scholarly month to month magazine Khayyam. His first book Kirneyn was finished before he joined the therapeutic school and was distributed in 1938, while he was as yet a medicinal understudy. His extraordinary characters incorporate Razia, Shaitaan, Hukoomat Aapa, Maqsood Ghora, Buddy, Judge Sahab, Nannha and numerous different young ladies including Sarwat, Kishwer, Sa'da, Azra Aapa, Nasreen, Akhtar, Ainak etc.Rahman had three children, Attique, Kahlique and Ameen. He passed on 19 March 2000 in Rawalpindi. Rahman joined the Indian Army Medical Corps and served at various war fronts amid the Second World War. After the autonomy of Pakistan in 1947, he joined the Pakistan Army and inevitably rose to the rank of general. He additionally filled in as executive of the Academy of Letters of Pakistan from 1980 to 1985. Amid his residency, the Academy of Letters gained another measurement as a noticeable scholarly organization of Pakistan. He kept on composing till his passing in March 2000. Rahman's work added another measurement to humor in Urdu writing. He made a world that was genuine with all its delights, torments and anguish. It was a confirmation of life and of human esteems: sympathy, empathy and regard. Indeed, even the apparently pointless and minor circumstances had concealed implications that tested profound into the human mind. His dialect was straightforward, unconstrained and expressive. He was granted the Hilal-e-Imtiaz for his military and non military personnel benefits after his demise on 23 March 2001.

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