HOME > AFP-JIJI PRESS NEWS JOURNAL > Article
Fading literature-- Delhi's famed Urdu Bazaar on last legs
In the bustling heart of Old Delhi, Indian bookseller Mohammed Mahfooz Alam sits forlorn in his quiet store, among the last few selling literature in a language beloved by poets for centuries.
Urdu, spoken by many millions today, has a rich past that reflects how cultures melded to forge India's complex history.
But its literature has been subsumed by the cultural domination of Hindi, struggling against false perceptions that its elegant Perso-Arabic script makes it a foreign import and a language of Muslims in the Hindu-majority nation.
There was a time when, in a year, we would see 100 books being published, said 52-year-old Alam, lamenting the loss of the language and its readership.
The narrow streets of Urdu Bazaar, in the shadow of the 400-year-old Jama Masjid mosque, were once the core of the city's Urdu literary community, a centre of printing, publishing and writing.
Today, streets once crowded with Urdu bookstores abuzz with scholars debating literature are now thick with the aroma of sizzling kebabs from the restaurants that have replaced them.
Only half a dozen bookstores are left.
Now, there are no takers, Alam said, waving at the streets outside. It is now a food market.
- Dying 'day by day' -
Urdu, one of the 22 languages enshrined under India's constitution, is the mother tongue of at least 50 million people in the world's most populous country. Millions more speak it, as well as in neighbouring Pakistan.
But while Urdu is largely understood by speakers of India's most popular language Hindi, their scripts are entirely different.
Alam says he can see Urdu literature dying day by day.
The Maktaba Jamia bookshop he manages opened a century ago. Alam took over its running this year driven by his love for the language.
I have been sitting since morning, and barely four people have come, he said gloomily. And even those were college or school-going children who want their study books.
Urdu, sharing Hindi's roots and mingled with words from Persian and Arabic, emerged as a hybrid speech between those who came to India through trade and conquest -- and the people they settled down amongst.
But Urdu has faced challenges in being viewed as connected to Islamic culture, a popular perception that has grown since the Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of Prime Minister Narendra Modi took power in 2014.
Hard-right Hindu nationalists seeking to diminish Islam's place in India's history have opposed its use: in the past decade, protests have ranged from the use of Urdu in clothing advertisements to even graffiti.
Urdu has been associated with Muslims, and that has hit the language too, said Alam.
But it is not true. Everyone speaks Urdu. You go to villages, people speak Urdu. It is a very sweet language. There is peace in it.
- 'Feel the beauty' -
For centuries, Urdu was a key language of governance.
Sellers first set up stores in the Urdu Bazaar in the 1920s, selling stacks of books from literature to religion, politics and history -- as well as texts in Arabic and Persian.
By the 1980s, more lucrative fast-food restaurants slowly moved in, but the trade dropped dramatically in the past decade, with more than a dozen bookshops shutting down.
With the advent of the internet, everything became easily available on the mobile phone, said Sikander Mirza Changezi, who co-founded a library to promote Urdu in Old Delhi in 1993.
People started thinking buying books is useless, and this hit the income of booksellers and publishers, and they switched to other businesses.
The Hazrat Shah Waliullah Public Library, which Changezi helped create, houses thousands of books including rare manuscripts and dictionaries.
It is aimed at promoting the Urdu language.
Student Adeeba Tanveer, 27, who has a masters degree in Urdu, said the library provided a space for those wanting to learn.
The love for Urdu is slowly coming back, Tanveer told AFP, adding that her non-Muslim friends were also keen to learn.
It is such a beautiful language, she said. You feel the beauty when you speak it.
(2024/11/22 18:39)
Click Here for Japanese TranslationAFP-JIJI PRESS NEWS JOURNAL
- 11/22 18:39 Fading literature-- Delhi's famed Urdu Bazaar on last legs
- 11/22 18:35 Iran to launch 'advanced centrifuges' in response to IAEA censure
- 11/22 18:33 NFL issues security alert to teams about home burglaries
- 11/22 18:16 Five tourists dead after suspected tainted alcohol poisoning in Laos
- 11/22 18:12 North Korea's Kim says past diplomacy only confirmed US hostility
- 11/22 16:51 NBA legend Yao Ming says 'no way' sports can 'hide' from politics
- 11/21 18:22 One Direction stars attend Liam Payne's funeral in UK
- 11/21 18:20 Barcelona push back Camp Nou return to mid-February
- 11/21 18:19 US House speaker backs bathroom ban for first openly trans member
- 11/21 16:56 US cites new Russian tactics for decision to supply landmines to Ukraine
- 11/21 16:53 Iconic Real Madrid lockers on display in London auction
- 11/21 16:49 US judge sentences migrant to life imprisonment in high-profile murder case
- 11/20 19:04 Japanese, Koreans bottom of global love life survey
- 11/20 19:02 Bodies burned after Haiti police, civilians kill 28 alleged gang members
- 11/20 19:00 Trump ally seeks to block trans lawmaker from women's restrooms
- 11/20 16:53 'I have left a legacy'-- Nadal retires from tennis
- 11/20 16:51 Russia vows response after Ukraine fires long-range US missiles
- 11/20 16:50 Son of Norwegian princess arrested on suspicion of rape
- 11/19 19:07 Parts of Great Barrier Reef suffer highest coral mortality on record
- 11/19 19:05 Russian delegations visit Pyongyang as Ukraine war deepens ties
- 11/19 19:03 Pompeii rejects 'mass tourism' with daily visitor limit
- 11/19 17:12 Team Trump assails Biden decision on missiles for Ukraine
- 11/19 17:01 Law and disorder as Thai police station comes under monkey attack
- 11/19 16:59 Bentancur banned for seven games over alleged racial slur
- 11/18 17:10 End of a love affair-- news media quit X over 'disinformation'
- 11/18 17:09 NATO's largest artillery exercise underway in Finland
- 11/18 17:07 Biden touts climate legacy in landmark Amazon visit
- 11/18 17:05 India's capital shuts schools as smog exceeds 60 times WHO limit
- 11/18 17:04 McDonald's feast undercuts Trump health pledge
- 11/18 17:02 Dinosaur skeleton fetches 6 million euros in Paris sale
- 11/15 21:30 Electrician finds frescoes behind false ceiling in Rome
- 11/15 21:23 UN committee says Israel warfare in Gaza 'consistent with genocide'
- 11/15 21:10 Tyson slaps Paul in final face-off before Netflix bout
- 11/15 19:31 Scientists say world's largest coral found near Solomon Islands
- 11/15 19:28 N. Korean leader orders 'mass production' of attack drones
- 11/15 19:26 Stewards intervene to stop Israel, France football fans clash at Paris match
- 11/14 20:29 Global diabetes rate has doubled in last 30 years-- study
- 11/14 20:27 S.Africa football chief arrested on fraud, theft charges
- 11/14 20:25 South Korea exam sees record number of re-takes after medical reforms
- 11/14 16:55 Mike Tyson, 58, back in ring to face Youtuber Paul
- 11/14 16:53 South Korean president dusts off the golf clubs for Trump
- 11/14 16:52 Mysterious diamond-laden necklace fetches $4.8 mn in Geneva auction
- 11/13 20:05 Toxic smog smothering India's capital smashes WHO limit
- 11/13 20:02 14 dead in Pakistan wedding bus crash, bride survives
- 11/13 20:00 UN condemns 'acts reminiscent of the gravest international crimes' in Gaza
- 11/13 16:37 Taiwan video taken down after reporter calls Trump 'convicted felon'
- 11/13 16:34 South Korea prosecutors indict controversial American streamer
- 11/13 16:31 French footballer Ben Yedder gets suspended jail term for sexual assault