Qazi Imdadul Haq (1882–1926) was a Bengali writer.[1]
Qazi Imdadul Haq | |
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Born | 1882 Godaipur, Khulna District, Bengal Presidency, British India (now in Bangladesh) |
Died | 1926 (aged 43–44) Calcutta, British India (now in India) |
Occupation | Writer |
Language | Bengali |
Citizenship | British Indian |
Education | Presidency College of Calcutta |
Notable works | Abdullah (1932) |
Notable awards |
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Children | Qazi Anwarul Haq |
Haq joined the Calcutta Madrasa (now Aliah University) as a temporary teacher in 1904.[citation needed] In 1906, he worked briefly in the Education Department in Shillong, Assam.[citation needed] The next year he joined the Dhaka Madrasa as a teacher. In 1911, he became a professor of Geography at the Dhaka Teachers' Training College, in 1914, Assistant School Inspector of Muslim Education for the Dhaka Division, and headmaster of the Calcutta Training School in 1917. In 1921, he became superintendent of the newly founded Dhaka Education Board and continued there until his death.[citation needed]
In recognition of his services, the British Government awarded him the titles Khan Sahib in 1919 and Khan Bahadur in 1926.[citation needed]
Haq was involved with M. Hedayetullah, Syed Emdad Ali and M. Asad Ali to publish monthly Nabanur (1903–06) and was president of the Publication Committee of the Bangiya Mussalman Sahitya Patrika, a Bengali literary quarterly established on 4 September 1911 in Calcutta.[2]
In May 1920, Haq became an editor of Shiksak, an educational monthly magazine and remained with this magazine for three years. He was also a writer and earned considerable fame for his poems, novels, essays, and children's literature.[1]
Haq was the father of Kazi Anwarul Haque, a bureaucrat, technocrat adviser-minister and writer of Bangladesh.[3]
Haq died on 20 March 1926 in Kolkata.[citation needed]
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