The Sunday Guardian

Calligraph­ic artist wants to popularise a neglected form

- MOHAMMED SHAFEEQ

Arabic calligraph­y is worship for Muqtar Ahmed, an Indian calligraph­er who has made a mark for himself at the internatio­nal level. Hailing from a remote village in Telangana and currently based in Bengaluru, Muqtar is on a mission to revive this dying art in India.

As beautiful as pearls, his works attract the attention even if one is not familiar with the Arabic language.

According to him, the aesthetics and refinement are the specialiti­es of Islamic art.

“Writing the Quranic verses and Hadith (sayings of the Prophet Mohammad) is worship. These works are sawab-e-jaria (continuous reward),” the calligraph­er, who believes that there is no script more beautiful in the world, told IANS. Muqtar believes his efforts have started yielding results as his disciples are carving a niche for themselves at the global level.

The only Indian to obtain an “Ijazah” (Master›s diploma) from the Istanbul- based Research Centre for Islamic History, Art and Culture (IRCICA) of the Organisati­on of the Islamic Cooperatio­n (OIC), Muqtar is grooming young talent at the Institute of Indo-Islamic Art and Culture (IIIAC) in Bengaluru.

He has so far trained 500 youngsters, including students, profession­als and others coming from varied background­s at the institute. A Japanese girl is among the three foreigners who learnt Arabic calligraph­y under him.

Muqtar, whose calligraph­ic works adorn mosques and even private jets abroad, is happy that the institute is getting global recognitio­n for the high standards set by it in Arabic calligraph­y.

Three of those trained under Muqtar bagged the top prizes at a national-level calligraph­y competitio­n organised in New Delhi last year by Yayasan Restu, a Malaysian organisati­on. Ameerul Islam and Abdul Sattar of Hyderabad won the top honours. They were selected for an 18-month training programme in Malaysia.

About 400 people from calligraph­y institutes across the country participat­ed in the competitio­n. “For the first time, people in India saw what real Arabic calligraph­y is,” said Muqtar, who has participat­ed in many exhibition­s in different parts of the world.

According to him, the art in India has been in continuous decline after the end of Mughal rule. He pointed out that the calligraph­y work in India was never recognised globally as it was nowhere near the internatio­nal standard.

Ameerul Islam and Abdul Sattar are now teaching calligraph­y at the institute›s Hyderabad branch, which was opened recently. The talented youth, who have participat­ed in competitio­ns in various countries, are training more than 20 students.

Muqtar, who plans to open another branch of the institute in Lucknow, believes that with more youngsters evincing interest in Arabic calligraph­y, the art has bright future in the country.

The “ijazah” obtained by Muqtar in 2013 may have fetched him a good job in the Arab world, where Islamic art is greatly valued. But he stayed back to revive the art in India, where it once enjoyed royal patronage. Syed Mohammed Beary, chairman, Bearys Group of Companies, came forward to help him in his mission by setting up IIIAC.

One of the works of 50-yearold Muqtar, settled in Bengaluru for nearly three decades, was purchased by the then governor of Madina in 2011 when he participat­ed in the internatio­nal exhibition in the holy city in Saudi Arabia.

Interested in calligraph­y from his school days, Muqtar migrated from his village in Medak district to Hyderabad to learn the art. He then moved to Bengaluru where he started working for an Urdu daily.

Rendered jobless after the newspaper replaced calligraph­y with computers in the early 1990s, Muqtar started writing wedding cards to make a living. “It was not my goal. I wanted to go deep into the art,” recalled the artist who improved his art under renowned internatio­nal calligraph­ers Mamoun Luthfi Sakkal and Mohammed Zakariya of the US, and refined it further under the guidance of Turkey›s Hassan Chalabi and Dawood Biktash.

Muqtar, who uses special, hand- made pens for his writings, said he achieved precision with perseveran­ce. “Even a small piece of calligraph­y takes several hours. You have to write a letter hundreds of times to achieve accuracy,” he said. IANS

Muqtar, who plans to open another branch of the institute in Lucknow, believes that with more youngsters evincing interest in Arabic calligraph­y, the art has bright future in the country.

 ??  ?? Muqtar Ahmed.
Muqtar Ahmed.

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