Over dinner sometime last week, conversation turned to an apparent lack of reading culture in Pakistan. Participants questioned if anybody went to the bookstores any more, and why Urdu bazaars in large cities remained largely deserted until the school seasons came (though I was told Lahore now has some nice book stores). All the talk about developing reading habits in children reminded me of one of my favorite authors from childhood: Ishtiaq Ahmed.
Before there were J.R.R.Tolkien, J.K. Rowling, Hardy Boys or even Archies Comics in my life, there was Ishtiaq Ahmed: a brilliant mastermind who authored hundreds, if not thousands, of suspense thriller novels in Urdu for kids during the 1970s, 80’s and into the 1990s. (I am told the actual number is closer to 400).
It is hard not to say that I grew up wanting to be like Mahmood, Farooque aur Farzana, the three main characters in his most famous series: Inspector Jamshed. Many of us will remember owning crates full of Ishtiaq Ahmed books – kids in my mohalla even organized a book club where we loaned our Ishtiaq Ahmed books to each other for 25 paisas per novel.
Ishtiaq Ahmed was one hell of a prolific writer. His books were published at a rate faster than I could save money from my lunch allowance to buy them (hence the need for the Mohalla library!). My mamoon swore by Ibn-e-Safi’s Imran series, but Ishtiaq Ahmed was the one who got me hooked onto reading. I remember reading his Khaas (special) novels with more than 2000-3000 pages until late into the night. He was among the most effective and successful Jasoosi novelists in Pakistan.
Even though his detective teams also included Inspector Kamran and the Shoki brothers, it was the Inspector Jamshed team (and the series built around their escapades to protect world peace) that captured the imagination of several generations in Pakistan. The series featured a detective, inspector Jamshed, who solved crimes with the help of his three children, Mehmood, Farooq & Farzana. Inspector Jameshed hated evil and in his crime-fighting he had not only his children to help, but also a retired army officer, Khan Rehman, and Professor Daod.
If I remember correctly, Mehmood was always the smart one, the trio’s leader with brilliant ideas, Farooque was the street smart, witty one, and Farzana always knew when danger was lurking around the corner. And the evil? Jaral, who appeared in several novels, was the number one enemy. Inspector Jamshed’s enemies were not just after money or power – they were morally corrupt and somehow always had some external forces helping them in their evil plans. It has been said that Ishtiaq Ahmed was not very subtle in disguising his resentment towards states or actors that he deemed anti-Islamic.
Ishtiaq Ahmed created characters that were larger than life – but they were inspirational for young men and women of that age and time. Inspector Jamshed, Mehmood, Farooq and Fazana were heroes, who were smart, witty, brave, and fought for the righteousness. Ishtiaq Ahmed wrote beautifully in a language that many now do not study for its poetry or prose. His contribution to Urdu literature, unfortunately, has not been acclaimed in a deserving manner, but his fans remember him well.
Statements like “Inspector Jamshed kee Uqaabee nigahon ney mauqay kee nazakat ko bhaanp liyaa” are a distant memory, but still a charming one. Maybe my kids will also dig through my stash of Ishtiaq Ahmed novels like I went through my mother collection of Pakeeza digests. They will find lots of incredible stories. And they will learn why I love the Urdu language.
For the uninitiated and the fans, a website advertises that you can buy his novel there. Alternatively, contact Feroze Sons in Lahore.
Dr. Bilal Zuberi is Vice President of Product Development at GEO2 Technologies in Boston (MA), USA. See more at Bilal’s blog: BZNotes.
mr pakistani latest novels have no picture
hi
can any one send me some of Ishtiaq ahmed stories because i am very crazy about his books. I am also addict to read his khas numbers. I would be very thankful to those who can send me some of Ishtiaq ahmed stories on my eamil adress.
My yahoo email id is
pakwaleed@yahoo.com
My Msn email id is
waleed2307_99@hotmail.co.uk
Thanks.
Hi,
For reading these stories have a look at
http://tinyurl.com/25fgxn
or
http://jasoosiduniya.com
Aslam walaikum to all of you,
Just a month ago while going through my stuff for a clean up and shifting, I suddenly stumbled accross a paper saying “adeel library” and a book #
My mind just went back when i was a 12 year old and an addict, die hard fan of urdu stories/novels.
From “Ishtiaq Publication’s” jasoosi novels to Mazher Kaleem M.A’s : Tarzan, Umro ayaaar, Chan changlu, Anglu banglu, Chaloosak Maloosak (weird names ehhh ;) and those Ferozson publications of “Tilsm hoshruba” to 50 paysay 16 page stories, i read them all and collected them ferociously!!
me and some 6 of my friends were very very aggressive collectors of “Ishtiaq Ahmed’s” novels. I still remember we heard that “Sunehri Chattaaan” was going to be his one of his humongous novels, and we all geared up (individually) to get our hands on it. We all tried but all failed, but, yes there is a but here! One of our elder friends (shahrukh bhai) got hold of it. And there was a devastating war of failed and successful attempts to get it. Since that book was in 2 parts, they hopped from friend to another and finally it came to me and rested there for rest of its life :)
Gone are those days but the memories still behold me. I managed to get 5 of his books just a week ago, all others are gone some where. The remaining books are as follows:
-Sunehri chattan (1,2)
-Qatil k baal (Inp. J series)
-Qanooni khel (Inp. J series)
-Qatil program (Inp. J series)
Working as a web marketing consultant and hardly getting time for any thing else, my latest adv would be comb the old books market and get as many as possible of my fav Ishtiaq books which gave me endless sleepless nights :)
Allah hafiz
my urdu web site completely in Urdu Unicode since 2005.
beauti tips, stories, sad, essays, palmistry, keero game of numbers, etc… from: kashif farooq.