Kim Sung-soo (actor) and Amrita Pritam: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox Writer <!-- for more information see [[:Template:Infobox Writer/doc]] -->
{{Distinguish2|the South Korean film director [[Kim Seong-soo]]}}
| name = Amrita Pritam
'''Kim Sung-soo''' (김성수) is a Korean actor born on [[May 23]], [[1973]]. He first made his debut in a feature film, ''Delicious Love and Sex'', 2003.
| image = Amrita Pritam (1919-2005).jpg
| birthdate = {{birth date|1919|8|31|mf=y}}
| birthplace = [[Gujranwala]], [[British India]]
| deathdate = {{death date and age|2005|10|31|1919|8|31|mf=y}}
| deathplace = [[Delhi]], [[India]]
| occupation = [[Novelist]]
}}


'''Amrita Pritam''' ([[August 31]], [[1919]]–[[October 31]], [[2005]]) ({{lang-pa|ਅਮ੍ਰਿਤਾ ਪ੍ਰੀਤਮ}}, ''{{IAST|amritā prītam}}'', {{lang-hi|अमृता प्रीतम}}, ''{{IAST|amr̥tā prītam}}'') was an [[India]]n [[writer]] and poet, considered the first prominent woman [[Punjab region|Punjabi]] poet, novelist, and essayist, though equally loved on both the sides of the India-Pakistan border <ref name=guar/>. She most remembered for her poignant poem, ''Aaj Aakhaan Waris Shah Nu'' (I ask Waris Shah Today), an expression of her anguish over massacres during the [[partition of India]].
==Featured Films==
*Some like it hot, 2008
*Monopoly, 2006
*The Red Shoes, 2005
*Delicious Love and Sex, 2003


When the former British India was [[Partition of India|partitioned]] into the independent states of India and [[Pakistan]], she migrated to India in 1947.
==Television Series==


==Biography==
* My Love, 2008 KBS
=== Formative Years ===
* [[Bad Love]], 2007 KBS
Amrita Pritam was born in 1919 in [[Gujranwala]], Punjab, now in [[Pakistan]], the only child of a school teacher and a poet. Her father was a ''pracharak'' -- a preacher of the Sikh faith<ref>[http://www.sikhtimes.com/bios_111205a.html Kushwant Singh, "Amrita Pritam: Queen of Punjabi Literature", ''The Sikh Times''] [[The Tribune]], [[November 12]], [[2005]].</ref>, and a schoolteacher, who also wrote poetry <ref name=guar>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2005/nov/04/guardianobituaries.india Amrita Pritam - Obituary]] ''[[The Guardian]]'', [[November 4]], [[2005]].</ref> Amrita's mother died when she was eleven. Soon after, she and her father moved to [[Lahore]]. Confronting adult responsibilities, she began to write at an early age. Her first collection was published when she was only sixteen years old, the year she married Pritam Singh, an editor to whom she was engaged in early childhood.
* [[Sister]], 2006 MBC
* [[Lawyers]], 2005 MBC
*[[Stained Glass (TV series)|Stained Glass]], 2004 SBS
*[[Full House (Korean drama)|Full House]], 2004 KBS
* Tell Me You Love Me, 2004 MBC
* Vectorman, 1998


==External links==
=== Partition ===
Some one million [[Muslim]]s, [[Hindu]]s and [[Sikhs]] died from communal violence that followed the [[partition of India]] in 1947, and left Amrita Pritam, a Punjabi refugee at age 28, when she left [[Lahore]] and moved to [[New Delhi]]. Subsequently in 1948, while she was pregnant with her son, and travelling from [[Dehradun]] to [[Delhi]], she expressed anguish on a piece of paper <ref>[http://www.hindu.com/lr/2005/12/04/stories/2005120400040100.htm An alternative voice of history] Nonica Datta, [[The Hindu]], [[December 04]], [[2005]]. </ref> as the poem, "Aaj Aakhaan Waris Shah Nu" (I ask Waris Shah Today); this poem was to later immortalize her and become the most poignant reminder of the horrors of Partition <ref>[http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/mag/2005/11/13/stories/2005111300030100.htm Juggling two lives] [[The Hindu]], [[November 13]], [[2005]].</ref>. The poem addressed to the Sufi poet [[Waris Shah]], author of the tragic saga of [[Heer Ranjha|Heer and Ranjah]] and with whom she shares her birth place <ref>
* [http://www.sidushq.com/ Total Entertainment SidusHQ]
[http://www.apnaorg.com/poetry/heercomp/ Complete Heer Waris Shah]</ref>, the Punjabi national epic:


<poem>
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kim, Sung-soo}}
'' Aj aakhan Waris Shah nun, kiton kabraan vichchon bol, ''
[[Category:1975 births]]
''Te aj kitab-e-ishq daa koi agla varka phol''
[[Category:Living people]]
''Ik roi si dhi Punjab di, tun likh likh maare vaen, ''
[[Category:South Korean actors]]
''Aj lakhaan dhian rondian, tainun Waris Shah nun kaehn
''Uth dardmandaan dia dardia, uth takk apna Punjab''
''Aj bele lashaan bichhiaan te lahu di bhari Chenab''

Today, I call Waris Shah, “Speak from your grave”
And turn, today, the book of love’s next affectionate page
Once, a daughter of Punjab cried and you wrote a wailing saga
Today, a million daughters, cry to you, Waris Shah
Rise! O’ narrator of the grieving; rise! look at your Punjab
Today, fields are lined with corpses, and blood fills the [[Chenab]] <ref>[http://www.buzzvines.com/amrita-pritham Complete verse with Translation]</ref><ref>[http://www.apnaorg.com/audio/amrita/ Ajj Aakhan Waris Shah Nu- Poetry in Amrita's Own Voice] Academy of the Punjab in North America (APNA).</ref>
</poem>

Amrita Pritam worked until 1961 for [[All India Radio]]. After her divorce in 1960, her work became more clearly feminist. Many of her stories and poems drew on the unhappy experience of her marriage. A number of her works have been translated into [[English language|English]], [[French language|French]], [[Japanese language|Japanese]] and other languages from [[Punjabi language|Punjabi]] and [[Urdu]], including her autobiographical works ''Black Rose'' and ''Revenue Stamp'' (''Raseedi Tikkat'' in Punjabi).

The first of Amrita Pritam's books to be filmed was Dharti Sagar te Sippiyan, as ‘Kadambar’ (1965), followed by ‘Unah Di Kahani’, as ''Daaku'' ([[Dacoit]], 1976), directed by [[Basu Bhattacharya]].<ref>[http://www.sikhtimes.com/news_082702a.html Jeevan Prakash Sharma, "Amrita Pritam's Novel to Be Rendered on Film", ''The Hindustan Times'' (Aug. 27, 2002)]</ref> Her novel ''Pinjar'' (The Skeleton, 1970) was made into an [[Filmfare Best Art Direction|award winning]] [[Pinjar (film)|Hindi movie]] by [[Chandra Prakash Dwivedi]], because of its [[humanism]]: "Amritaji has portrayed the suffering of people of both the countries." ''Pinjar'' was shot in a border region of [[Rajasthan]] and in Punjab. She edited “Nagmani”, a monthly literary magazine in Punjabi for several years, which she ran together with Imroz, for 33 years; though after Partition she wrote prolifically in Hindi as well <ref name=lang/><ref>[http://www.pustak.org/bs/home.php?author_name=Amrita%20Pritam Books of Amrita Pritam]</ref>. In 1990s, she started writing on spiritual themes and dreams, producing works like ''Kaal Chetna'' (Time Consciousness) and ''Agyat Ka Nimantran'' (Call of the Unknown) <ref>[http://www.lifepositive.com/Mind/arts/new-age-fiction/amritapritam.asp Visions of Divinity - Amrita Pritam] ''Life Positive'', April 1996.</ref>, and also published two autobiographies, titled, ''Rasidi Ticket'' and, ''Aksharon kay Saayee'' <ref>[http://www.chowk.com/articles/9116 Amrita Pritam Biography] ''Chowk'', [[May 15]], [[2005]].</ref>

== Acclaim ==
The first woman recipient of the [[Sahitya Akademi Award]] in 1956 for ''Sunehray'' (''Messages''), Amrita Pritam received the [[Jnanpith|Bhartiya Jnanpith]], India's highest literary award, in 1982 for ''Kagaj te Canvas (Paper and Canvas).'' She received the [[Padma Shri]] (1969) and [[Padma Vibhushan]], India's second highest civilian award, in 2004.
She received [[D.Litt.]] honorary degrees, from many universities including, [[Delhi University]] (1973), [[Jabalpur University]] (1973) and [[Vishwa Bharati]] (1987) <ref>[http://www.punjabilok.com/poetry/amrita_pritam.htm Amrita Pritam] ''www.punjabilok.com''.</ref>

She also received International [[Nikola Vaptsarov|Vaptsarov]] Award from the Republic of [[Bulgaria]] (1979) and Degree of Officer dens, [[Ordre des Arts et des Lettres]] (Officier) by the [[French Government]] (1987) <ref name=lang>[http://www.languageinindia.com/dec2005/amritapritamsunwani1.html Amrita Pritam, The Black Rose] by Vijay Kumar Sunwani, Language In India, Volume 5 : 12 December 2005. </ref>. She was nominated as a member of [[Rajya Sabha]] 1986-92. Towards the end of her life, she was awarded by Pakistan's Punjabi Academy, to which she had remarked, ''Bade dino baad mere maike ko meri yaad aayi..''; and also Punjabi poets of Pakistan, sent her a ''chaddars'', from the tombs of [[Waris Shah]], and fellow Sufi mystic poets [[Bulle Shah]] and [[Sultan Bahu]] <ref name=guar/>.

==Personal life==
Amrita Pritam lived the last forty years of her life with the renowned artist, Imroz <ref>[http://www.tribuneindia.com/2006/20061105/spectrum/book4.htm Nirupama Dutt, "A Love Legend of Our Times"] ''[[Tribune]]'', [[Nov 5]], [[2006]].</ref>. She died in her sleep on 31st October 2005 at the age of 86 in [[New Delhi]], after a long illness. She survived by her partner Imroz , daughter - Kandlla; son- Navraj; daughter-in-law- Alka and her grandchildren - Taurus, Noor, Aman and Shilpi.

Her story cannot be completed without the name of [[Sahir Ludhianvi]] <ref>[http://www.upperstall.com/people/sahir-ludhianvi Sahir Biography] ''[[Upperstall.com]]''.</ref>. She was involved with him when she asked her husband for divorce. But Sahir then had a new woman in his life. Amrita grew closer to Imroz, whom she had known for many years and they together for the rest of her life. Their life together is also subject of a book, ''Amrita Imroz: A Love Story”.

==Works==
In her career spanning over six decades, she penned 28 novels, 18 anthologies of prose, five short stories and 16 miscellaneous prose volumes.
===Novels===
* ''Pinjar''
* ''Doctor Dev''
* ''Kore Kagaz, Unchas Din''
* ''Sagar aur Seepian''
* ''Rang ka Patta''
* ''Dilli ki Galiyan''
* ''Terahwan Suraj''
* ''Yaatri''
* Jilavatan (1968)
===Autobiography===
* ''Rasidi Ticket'' (1976)
* ''Shadows of Words'' (2004)
===Short stories===
* ''Kahaniyan jo Kahaniyan Nahi''
* ''Kahaniyon ke Angan mein''
* ''A Stench of Kerosene''

===Poetry anthologies===
* Amrit Lehran (1936)
* Jinnda Jian (1939)
* Trel Dhote Phul (1942)
* O Gitan Valia (1942)
* Badlam De Laali (1943)
* Lok Pigr (1944)
* Pagthar Giite (1946)
* Punjabi Di Aawaaz (1952)
* Sunehray (1955)
* Ashoka Cheti (1957)
* Kasturi (1957)
* Nagmani (1964)
* Ik Si Anita (1964)
* Chak Nambar Chatti (1964)
* Uninja Din (1979)
* Kagaz Te Kanvas (1981)---Bharatiya Jnanpith Award
* Chuni Huyee Kavitayen

===Literary Journal===
* ''Nagmani''
===Excerpts===
<poem>
There was a pain
I inhaled it
Quietly
Like a cigarette
Left behind are a few songs
I have flickered off
Like ashes
From the cigarette. <ref>[http://www.tribuneindia.com/2003/20030803/spectrum/main7.htm Living life on her own terms] Kanchan Mehta. [[The Tribune]], [[August 3]], [[2003]].</ref>

</poem>

==Legacy==
An audio album 'Amrita recited by Gulzar' was released by noted lyricist [[Gulzar (lyricist)|Gulzar]], with poems of Amrita Pritam recited by him <ref>[http://www.gulzaronline.com/default.htm 'Amrita recited by Gulzar'] www.gulzaronline.com.</ref>
==Further reading==
* Uma Trilok, ''Amrita Imroz: A Love Story,'' Penguin India (2006) ISBN 0143100440
* Indra Gupta, ''India’s 50 Most Illustrious Women'' ISBN 8188086193
* [http://www.apnaorg.com/articles/amrita-biography/ 1st chapter of ''Revenue Stamp'' by Amrita Pritam]
* [http://www.littlemag.com/bodypolitic/amritapritam.html ''The Cellar'' by Amrita Pritam]
* [http://www.littlemag.com/belonging/amrita.html “Sahiban in Exile” by Amrita Pritam]
* [http://www.thedailystar.net/2004/02/07/d402072101111.htm “The Weed” by Amrita Pritam]
* [http://www.littlemag.com/jan-feb01/amrita.html Wild Flower'' by Amrita Pritam]

==References==
{{reflist}}

==External links==
* [http://www.sawnet.org/books/authors.php?Pritam+Amrita Info on Amrita Pritam]
* [http://www.razarumi.com/2008/06/09/amrita-pritam-1919-2005/ Amrita Pritam 1919-2005-a tribute by Raza Rumi]
* [http://www.pustak.org/bs/home.php?author_name=Amrita%20Pritam See futher details of her books at Pustak.org]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Pritam, Amrita}}
{{Korea-bio-stub}}
[[Category:1919 births]]
{{Asia-actor-stub}}
[[Category:2005 deaths]]
[[Category:Indian writers]]
[[Category:People from Punjab (India)]]
[[Category:Sahitya Akademi Award recipients]]
[[Category:Jnanpith Award recipients]]
[[Category:Padma Shri recipients]]
[[Category:Padma Vibhushan recipients]]
[[Category:Indian Sikhs]]
[[Category:Indian feminists]]
[[Category:Punjabi-language poets]]
[[Category:Punjabi-language writers]]
[[Category:Hindi-language writers]]
[[Category:Indian women writers]]
[[Category:Nominated Rajya Sabha Members]]
[[Category:People from Delhi]]


[[ko:김성수]]
[[es:Amrita Pritam]]
[[vi:Kim Seung-soo]]
[[eo:Amrita Pritam]]
[[fr:Amrita Pritam]]
[[hi:अमृता प्रीतम]]
[[ml:അമൃതാ പ്രീതം]]
[[mr:अमृता प्रीतम]]
[[sa:अमृता प्रीतम]]
[[ur:امرتا پریتم]]

Revision as of 12:15, 11 October 2008

Amrita Pritam
File:Amrita Pritam (1919-2005).jpg
OccupationNovelist

Amrita Pritam (August 31, 1919October 31, 2005) (Punjabi: ਅਮ੍ਰਿਤਾ ਪ੍ਰੀਤਮ, amritā prītam, Hindi: अमृता प्रीतम, amr̥tā prītam) was an Indian writer and poet, considered the first prominent woman Punjabi poet, novelist, and essayist, though equally loved on both the sides of the India-Pakistan border [1]. She most remembered for her poignant poem, Aaj Aakhaan Waris Shah Nu (I ask Waris Shah Today), an expression of her anguish over massacres during the partition of India.

When the former British India was partitioned into the independent states of India and Pakistan, she migrated to India in 1947.

Biography

Formative Years

Amrita Pritam was born in 1919 in Gujranwala, Punjab, now in Pakistan, the only child of a school teacher and a poet. Her father was a pracharak -- a preacher of the Sikh faith[2], and a schoolteacher, who also wrote poetry [1] Amrita's mother died when she was eleven. Soon after, she and her father moved to Lahore. Confronting adult responsibilities, she began to write at an early age. Her first collection was published when she was only sixteen years old, the year she married Pritam Singh, an editor to whom she was engaged in early childhood.

Partition

Some one million Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs died from communal violence that followed the partition of India in 1947, and left Amrita Pritam, a Punjabi refugee at age 28, when she left Lahore and moved to New Delhi. Subsequently in 1948, while she was pregnant with her son, and travelling from Dehradun to Delhi, she expressed anguish on a piece of paper [3] as the poem, "Aaj Aakhaan Waris Shah Nu" (I ask Waris Shah Today); this poem was to later immortalize her and become the most poignant reminder of the horrors of Partition [4]. The poem addressed to the Sufi poet Waris Shah, author of the tragic saga of Heer and Ranjah and with whom she shares her birth place [5], the Punjabi national epic:

Aj aakhan Waris Shah nun, kiton kabraan vichchon bol,
Te aj kitab-e-ishq daa koi agla varka phol
Ik roi si dhi Punjab di, tun likh likh maare vaen,
Aj lakhaan dhian rondian, tainun Waris Shah nun kaehn
Uth dardmandaan dia dardia, uth takk apna Punjab
Aj bele lashaan bichhiaan te lahu di bhari Chenab

Today, I call Waris Shah, “Speak from your grave”
And turn, today, the book of love’s next affectionate page
Once, a daughter of Punjab cried and you wrote a wailing saga
Today, a million daughters, cry to you, Waris Shah
Rise! O’ narrator of the grieving; rise! look at your Punjab
Today, fields are lined with corpses, and blood fills the Chenab [6][7]

Amrita Pritam worked until 1961 for All India Radio. After her divorce in 1960, her work became more clearly feminist. Many of her stories and poems drew on the unhappy experience of her marriage. A number of her works have been translated into English, French, Japanese and other languages from Punjabi and Urdu, including her autobiographical works Black Rose and Revenue Stamp (Raseedi Tikkat in Punjabi).

The first of Amrita Pritam's books to be filmed was Dharti Sagar te Sippiyan, as ‘Kadambar’ (1965), followed by ‘Unah Di Kahani’, as Daaku (Dacoit, 1976), directed by Basu Bhattacharya.[8] Her novel Pinjar (The Skeleton, 1970) was made into an award winning Hindi movie by Chandra Prakash Dwivedi, because of its humanism: "Amritaji has portrayed the suffering of people of both the countries." Pinjar was shot in a border region of Rajasthan and in Punjab. She edited “Nagmani”, a monthly literary magazine in Punjabi for several years, which she ran together with Imroz, for 33 years; though after Partition she wrote prolifically in Hindi as well [9][10]. In 1990s, she started writing on spiritual themes and dreams, producing works like Kaal Chetna (Time Consciousness) and Agyat Ka Nimantran (Call of the Unknown) [11], and also published two autobiographies, titled, Rasidi Ticket and, Aksharon kay Saayee [12]

Acclaim

The first woman recipient of the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1956 for Sunehray (Messages), Amrita Pritam received the Bhartiya Jnanpith, India's highest literary award, in 1982 for Kagaj te Canvas (Paper and Canvas). She received the Padma Shri (1969) and Padma Vibhushan, India's second highest civilian award, in 2004. She received D.Litt. honorary degrees, from many universities including, Delhi University (1973), Jabalpur University (1973) and Vishwa Bharati (1987) [13]

She also received International Vaptsarov Award from the Republic of Bulgaria (1979) and Degree of Officer dens, Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (Officier) by the French Government (1987) [9]. She was nominated as a member of Rajya Sabha 1986-92. Towards the end of her life, she was awarded by Pakistan's Punjabi Academy, to which she had remarked, Bade dino baad mere maike ko meri yaad aayi..; and also Punjabi poets of Pakistan, sent her a chaddars, from the tombs of Waris Shah, and fellow Sufi mystic poets Bulle Shah and Sultan Bahu [1].

Personal life

Amrita Pritam lived the last forty years of her life with the renowned artist, Imroz [14]. She died in her sleep on 31st October 2005 at the age of 86 in New Delhi, after a long illness. She survived by her partner Imroz , daughter - Kandlla; son- Navraj; daughter-in-law- Alka and her grandchildren - Taurus, Noor, Aman and Shilpi.

Her story cannot be completed without the name of Sahir Ludhianvi [15]. She was involved with him when she asked her husband for divorce. But Sahir then had a new woman in his life. Amrita grew closer to Imroz, whom she had known for many years and they together for the rest of her life. Their life together is also subject of a book, Amrita Imroz: A Love Story”.

Works

In her career spanning over six decades, she penned 28 novels, 18 anthologies of prose, five short stories and 16 miscellaneous prose volumes.

Novels

  • Pinjar
  • Doctor Dev
  • Kore Kagaz, Unchas Din
  • Sagar aur Seepian
  • Rang ka Patta
  • Dilli ki Galiyan
  • Terahwan Suraj
  • Yaatri
  • Jilavatan (1968)

Autobiography

  • Rasidi Ticket (1976)
  • Shadows of Words (2004)

Short stories

  • Kahaniyan jo Kahaniyan Nahi
  • Kahaniyon ke Angan mein
  • A Stench of Kerosene

Poetry anthologies

  • Amrit Lehran (1936)
  • Jinnda Jian (1939)
  • Trel Dhote Phul (1942)
  • O Gitan Valia (1942)
  • Badlam De Laali (1943)
  • Lok Pigr (1944)
  • Pagthar Giite (1946)
  • Punjabi Di Aawaaz (1952)
  • Sunehray (1955)
  • Ashoka Cheti (1957)
  • Kasturi (1957)
  • Nagmani (1964)
  • Ik Si Anita (1964)
  • Chak Nambar Chatti (1964)
  • Uninja Din (1979)
  • Kagaz Te Kanvas (1981)---Bharatiya Jnanpith Award
  • Chuni Huyee Kavitayen

Literary Journal

  • Nagmani

Excerpts

There was a pain
I inhaled it
Quietly
Like a cigarette
Left behind are a few songs
I have flickered off
Like ashes
From the cigarette. [16]

Legacy

An audio album 'Amrita recited by Gulzar' was released by noted lyricist Gulzar, with poems of Amrita Pritam recited by him [17]

Further reading

References

External links