Jigar Moradabadi
The people’s poet — a voice so magnetic it was said to stop traffic
There is a story, only half-joking, that when Jigar Moradabadi walked through a marketplace, traffic itself seemed to pause and prices quietly shifted in his favour — such was the effect of his presence on people who recognised him. Whether or not the tale is literally true, it captures something real about the man: few Urdu poets of the twentieth century commanded a mushaira audience the way Jigar did, his rendition of his own ghazals so hypnotic that listeners would forget, for the length of a verse, everything else in the room. He never received a single day of formal higher education. He built himself, instead, entirely out of poetry, wine, heartbreak, and — eventually — a hard-won return to faith.
Jigar’s life reads almost like one of his own ghazals: love pursued with reckless intensity, a marriage abandoned and painfully undone, years lost to alcohol, and a late redemption that produced his finest and most awarded work. Along the way, he shaped an entire generation of poets who came after him, most famously Majrooh Sultanpuri, whose lyrics would go on to fill Hindi cinema for decades.
Jigar Moradabadi at a glance
| Birth name | Ali Sikandar (also recorded as Sheikh Ali Sikandar) |
| Born | 6 April 1890, Moradabad, United Provinces |
| Died | 9 September 1960, Gonda |
| Pen name | “Jigar,” meaning “liver” — a classical seat of intense emotion in Urdu poetic idiom |
| Education | Largely self-taught; basic Persian and English to matriculation level only |
| Mentors | His father, Ali Nazar; Hayat Bakhsh Rasa; Daagh Dehlvi; Asghar Gondvi |
| Notable protégé | Majrooh Sultanpuri |
| Major works | Daagh-e-Jigar (1928); Shola-e-Toor (1932); Aatish-e-Gul (1954) |
| Honours | Sahitya Akademi Award (1958); honorary D.Litt., Aligarh Muslim University (second poet ever, after Iqbal) |
Who Was Jigar Moradabadi?
Jigar Moradabadi was an Indian Urdu poet and ghazal writer widely regarded as one of the finest voices of the classical ghazal tradition in the twentieth century — a poet so beloved by ordinary audiences that he is remembered simply as the “People’s Poet.” Where many literary figures of his stature drew their authority from institutional education, Jigar’s entire command of Persian, Arabic, and Urdu poetic craft was self-taught, built through immersion in the tradition rather than through any classroom. Critics now regularly place him in the same breath as Ghalib and Iqbal, and his poetry has become an established subject of academic study in Urdu departments across universities.
His pen name, “Jigar,” meaning “liver” in Urdu, drew on the classical poetic convention of treating that organ as the seat of the deepest, most intense human feeling — a fitting choice for a poet whose entire career was built on the raw material of passionate, often self-destructive emotion transformed into art.
A Poet’s Son, Orphaned Early
Jigar was born Ali Sikandar on 6 April 1890 in Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh, into a family already steeped in poetic tradition — his father, Ali Nazar, was himself a poet and disciple of Khwaja Wazeer Lakhnavi, while his grandfather, Faqeer Muhammad Goya, carried the same literary inheritance a generation further back. Jigar lost his father while still young, a loss that left him without an easy childhood, and his formal education never advanced past a basic grounding in Persian and English at the matriculation level.
What Jigar lacked in institutional schooling, his family more than supplied in poetic apprenticeship. He received his first lessons in verse directly from his father, and later sought guidance from established masters including Hayat Bakhsh Rasa (also recorded as his early ustad, Rasa Rampuri), and, crucially, from Daagh Dehlvi himself — linking Jigar directly into the same great chain of Delhi-school mentorship that had earlier produced poets like Iqbal and Seemab Akbarabadi.
A Spectacles Salesman Finds His Calling
Jigar’s early working life was modest and itinerant: he travelled from town to town as a salesman of spectacles and optical lenses, a trade that left him little financial security but considerable time to absorb the poetic culture of the towns he passed through. It was while still in his teens that he moved to Gonda, near Lucknow — a relocation that would prove the single most consequential turning point of his life.
Gondvi’s influence on Jigar’s development can hardly be overstated. He made Gonda his permanent home largely because of this friendship, and the town went on to become, thanks to Jigar’s later fame, one of the most storied addresses in twentieth-century Urdu literary history.
A Marriage Undone, and a Friend’s Difficult Kindness
Jigar’s personal life in these years carried real pain. He entered into marriage but, in the grip of his own restlessness and reportedly heavy drinking, abandoned his wife for a long period, leaving her in a prolonged and difficult limbo. It was Asghar Gondvi himself, in an act of what biographers describe as sympathetic intervention on the wife’s behalf, who eventually counselled Jigar toward divorce — and then, in a remarkable gesture of care for a woman left in painful uncertainty, married her himself to give her a settled and secure life.
It is a genuinely unusual episode in literary history: the mentor stepping in not merely to correct a protégé’s poetry but to repair, as best he could, the human damage that protégé’s personal choices had caused. Jigar, for his part, would later marry a sister of Gondvi’s new wife — binding the two poets’ families together twice over, through a tangle of relationships that only deepened their already profound bond.
Wine, Wit, and the Making of a Legend
For much of his adult life, Jigar cultivated — and was widely known for — a reputation as an epicurean, a man of pleasant, highly sociable disposition who acquired something close to a mythic status as a poet who needed to drink in order to summon his muse. His addiction to alcohol was, by every account, lifelong and well known among his contemporaries, as was his endearing absent-mindedness and forgetfulness, which became something of a running feature of the many stories told about him.
Yet it was precisely this larger-than-life persona, combined with a voice of extraordinary musicality, that made Jigar the single most electrifying mushaira performer of his generation. Contemporaries who attended gatherings where both Faiz Ahmad Faiz and Jigar were reciting recalled that Jigar would routinely steal the show, his rendition of his own verses turning a room of listeners, however sophisticated, into something closer to an enraptured crowd. Faiz himself, no small judge of poetic craft, called Jigar a master craftsman of the form.
The Poetry of Love, Made Musical and Plain
Jigar’s ghazals returned, again and again, to the classical stock themes of Urdu poetry — love, longing, wine, the beloved, the ecstasy and agony of romantic feeling — but he handled these familiar materials with a musicality and rhythmic flow distinctly his own. Crucially, he avoided the heavily Persianised, ornate phrasing still common among his contemporaries, choosing instead a simplicity of diction that brought his poetry remarkably close to everyday speech — a choice that made him beloved equally by sophisticated literary audiences and by ordinary listeners with no particular training in classical Urdu.
ये इश्क़ नहीं आसाँ बस इतना समझ लीजे
इक आग का दरिया है और डूब के जाना है
“This love is no easy thing — understand only this much: it is a river of fire, and one must cross it by drowning.”
Jigar Moradabadi
His three principal collections — Daagh-e-Jigar (“The Wound of Jigar,” 1928), Shola-e-Toor (“The Flame of Sinai,” 1932), and finally Aatish-e-Gul (“The Fire of the Rose,” 1954) — trace a poet steadily refining his craft over decades, with the last of these earning him India’s highest literary recognition.
A Turn Toward Faith
Later in life, Jigar underwent a genuine transformation, abandoning the heavy drinking that had defined his earlier reputation and turning instead toward a more religious, disciplined way of living. This shift found its way directly into his mature poetry, which increasingly blended his familiar romantic depth with real spiritual introspection — a synthesis that reached its fullest expression in Aatish-e-Gul, where the “fire” of the title carries both the old meaning of passionate romantic love and a newer, more devotional charge.
His Sufi-inflected poem “Yeh Hai Maikada” (“This Is the Tavern”) — using the traditional Sufi image of the tavern as a place of spiritual, rather than literal, intoxication — has been performed by numerous celebrated Sufi singers, including the Sabri Brothers, Aziz Mian, Munni Begum, and Attaullah Khan Esakhelvi, carrying Jigar’s late spiritual voice to audiences well beyond literary Urdu circles.
National Recognition, and a Voice for the Nation
Jigar’s stature was formally recognised in 1958, when Aatish-e-Gul won him the Sahitya Akademi Award for Urdu poetry — one of India’s highest literary honours. Aligarh Muslim University subsequently awarded him an honorary D.Litt., making him only the second poet in the university’s history to receive that distinction, after Allama Iqbal himself — a pairing that speaks plainly to how highly his contemporaries had come to regard him.
Jigar’s engagement with his historical moment extended beyond romantic verse. His poem “Gandhi-ji Ki Yaad Mein” (“In Memory of Gandhi-ji”) expressed direct solidarity with the independence struggle, casting the oppressed nation itself as a beloved figure and urging resistance to imperial rule — proof that even a poet primarily known for love and wine could turn the same lyrical fire toward the political urgencies of his age.
Final Years and Death
Jigar’s later years brought declining health, a series of ailments that increasingly limited his public appearances after the mid-1950s, and — according to some accounts — real financial hardship in his final period. He died in Gonda on 9 September 1960, at the age of seventy, succumbing to prolonged illness compounded by respiratory complications. He was buried in Gonda, the town that had shaped nearly his entire adult life, and his grave, the Mazar-e-Jigar Moradabadi, remains in the Topkhana area of the city. A residential colony, Jigar Ganj, and an intermediate college bearing his name stand nearby, close to his original home.
Legacy: The Master Who Taught a Master
Jigar Moradabadi’s most visible living legacy runs through the poets he shaped directly. His most celebrated protégé, Majrooh Sultanpuri, absorbed Jigar’s musical, emotionally direct style and carried it into Hindi cinema, where it touched millions of listeners who never knew Jigar’s name. Other poets, including Moin Ahsan Jazbi, Jan Nisar Akhtar, and Majaz, also drew on his influence, making Jigar something close to a hinge figure between the older classical ghazal tradition and the poets who would carry Urdu verse into the modern, film-influenced twentieth century.
Scholars now widely regard Jigar as marking something like the closing chapter of purely classical Urdu ghazal writing, standing at the threshold before the arrival of the high modernists like N. M. Rashid and Meeraji. Sixty-five years after his death, tribute events and literary festivals in his honour — including a three-day “Jigar Fest” held in Moradabad — continue to draw major contemporary poets, a testament to how completely the traffic-stopping performer of his own legend has settled, permanently, into the canon he once merely electrified.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is Jigar Moradabadi called the “People’s Poet”?
His simple, musical diction and mesmerising mushaira recitation style made his ghazals beloved by both sophisticated literary audiences and ordinary listeners alike, earning him a mass popularity unusual for a classical ghazal poet.
What role did Asghar Gondvi play in Jigar’s life?
Gondvi was Jigar’s mentor and closest friend in Gonda, guiding his poetry and eventually becoming family. When Jigar’s first marriage broke down, Gondvi counselled him toward divorce and then married the woman himself to secure her future, and Jigar later married a sister of Gondvi’s wife.
What award did Jigar Moradabadi win for Aatish-e-Gul?
He received the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1958 for Aatish-e-Gul (1954), one of India’s highest literary honours, and was subsequently given an honorary D.Litt. by Aligarh Muslim University, the second poet after Allama Iqbal to receive that distinction.
Who did Jigar Moradabadi mentor?
His most famous protégé was Majrooh Sultanpuri, who went on to become a leading Hindi film lyricist. Other poets influenced by Jigar include Jazbi, Jan Nisar Akhtar, and Majaz.
How did Jigar Moradabadi die?
He died in Gonda on 9 September 1960, at the age of seventy, after a period of declining health and respiratory complications in his final years.
