Re: Literary notes: Kanhaiya Lal Kapoor and his satirical writings
According to Kanhaiya Lal Kapoor himself, he was born on June 27, 1910, “or” Nov 1, 1911, in Chak 498, district Lyallpur (now Faisalabad). Kapoor wrote that the village, situated some 12 miles from Kamalia, “was known for three things: local Baloch Muslims, dust and dogs. All three impressed me [Kapoor] much.” Having passed his BA from Lahore, he took admission in MA (English) at the Government College. Here, according to Kapoor “I [Kapoor] learnt, from my teacher Prof Pitras Bukhari, to make fun of every conventional thing and every unmannerly person”. According to Kapoor, “when I was a student of third year, my parents thought I had grown and attained the age of maturity [though I have never done so all my life] and arranged for my marriage”.
After the Independence, Kapoor migrated to Ferozepur, India, and a few months later landed a job at a college at Moga, a small town in Indian Punjab. Here he missed Lahore to the point of being depressed. As he has put it “Lahore and Moga were worlds apart. Lahore was full of life. And in Moga, a semi-desert town, the most worth-seeing sights were reeds and sand dunes”. His works penned in the wake of independence are quite different from the ones written before 1947. The witticism gave way to cynicism and the streak of humour that almost always ran through his writings began to dissipate. After 1947, extemporisation faded and his satire became more pointed. It was perhaps the result of his being uprooted and the massacre that took place during the migration.
K. L. Kapoor’s other works include Sheesha-o-tesha (1944), Chang-o-rabaab (1946), Nok-e-nishter (1949), Baal-o-par (1952), Narm garm (1957), Gard-e-karavan (1960), Daleel-e-sahar, Naazuk khayaliyan and Nae shagoofe. His collected works were published under the title Kulliyaat-e-Kapoor about a decade ago.
Kanhaiya Lal Kapoor died on May 18, 1980, in Poona, Maharashtra, India.
Literary notes: Kanhaiya Lal Kapoor and his satirical writings - Pakistan - DAWN.COM