Mirsaid Mirshakar

Soviet writer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroSoviet writer
PlacesRussia
isWriter Poet Playwright Children's writer
Work fieldFilm, TV, Stage & Radio Literature
Gender
Male
Birth6 May 1912
Age112 years
Family
Children:Zarrina Mirshakar
The details

Biography

Mirsiad Mirshakar or Mirsaid Mirshakarov (born 6 May 1912 – died 1993) was a Soviet administrator, author, playwright and poet.

Life and career

Mirsaid Mirshakar was the son of a farmer, born in the village of Sindev, Pamir, Russian Empire, now Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Province, Tajikistan. He graduated from the Central Soviet Party School in Dushanbe in 1930, and his works began to appear in print the same year. He became a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1944 and was the People’s Poet of the Tajik Soviet Socialist Republic in 1962.

From 1932–33, Mirshakar served as the editor of the newspaper Sokhtmoni Vakhsh. He wrote narrative poems glorifying historic events in the life of the Tajik people after the 1917 October Revolution. Mirshakar was considered one of the founders of Tajik children’s literature.

Mirshakar served as the executive secretary of the Writers’ Union in Tadzhik from 1940–1943 and from 1946–1959. He also served in a number of administrative positions including Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the Tajik SSR. For his service as a poet, Mirshakar was awarded several state prizes for his works.

Honors and awards

  • Order of Lenin
  • Order of Red Banner of Labor
  • Order of the Badge of Honour
  • Order of the October Revolution
  • Stalin Prize winner
  • Winner of the USSR State Prize

Works

Selected works include:

  • The Golden Kishlak, 1942, State Prize of the USSR, 1950
  • She’rho va poëmaho, Dushanbe, 1945
  • The Turbulent Piandzh, 1949, State Prize of the USSR, 1950
  • She’rho va dostonho, Dushanbe, 1954
  • Lenin in the Pamirs, 1955
  • Kulliyot, parts 1–3, Dushanbe, 1970–73
  • Stikhotvoreniia i poemy, Moscow, 1951
  • Love and Duty, 1962
  • Lenin’s Gaze, 1962
  • Liubov’ i dolg. Poemy, Moscow, 1964
  • Polovod’ia zhizni, Moscow, 1972
Plays
  • Tashbek and Gul’kubran, 1946
  • The Golden Kishlak, 1949
  • My City, 1951

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