Golchin Gilani

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dr.

Majdoddin Mirfakhraee
Golchin Gilani.jpg
Native name
مجدالدین میرفخرایی
Born(1910-01-01)1 January 1910
Rasht, Gilan Province, Iran
Died20 December 1972(1972-12-20) (aged 62)
London, England
Resting placeLondon
Pen nameGolchin Gilani
OccupationPoet
LanguagePersian
GenrePoetry
SpouseJalil-al-Sādāt
Irān-doḵt Meḡnāṭ
Šahin Jasuri Tabrizi[1]
RelativesHoushang Ebtehaj (Cousin)[citation needed]

Majd-al-Din Mir-faḵrāʾi (Persian: مجدالدین میرفخرایی‎ January 1, 1910 in Rasht - December 20, 1972 in London) was an Iranian poet, who better known by his pen name Golchin Gilani (Persian: گلچین گیلانی‎).[1]

Biography[]

His father, Sayyed Mahdi Mir-faḵrāʾi, was an Iranian Governor of Sabzevar County and Qom County. Majd-al-Din went to primary school in his birthplace and went to high school in Tehran. After getting his bachelor's degree, he moved to England and earned an MD, and spent the rest of his life in England.

In the 1940s, Gilani worked as a translator for the British Broadcasting Corporation, as well as writing, translating, and recording newsreel narration for Movietone News.[1] Majd-al-Din specialized in Tropical Medicine and Infectious Diseases. He died in London on December 20, 1972, and is buried in Putney Vale Cemetery in Southwest London (Block U, number 28) .

The Rain[]

The Rain (Persian: باران‎, Bārān), published in 1944, is probably his most famous poem.[1] It's a long poem about his adventure in jungles in Rasht when he was ten years old. the first half of poem tells about the nice weather and the clear sky; then in the second-half It suddenly begins to rain : "slowly,the clouds won and it began to rain" and he says about how did he enjoy that weather; too; that becomes the result of the poem. the last lines tell : "so hear this; my kid : for an experienced man, the life, if good, if bad, is nice; is nice; is nice."

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Karimi-Hakkak, Ahmad; Katouzian, Homa (14 February 2012). "GOLČIN GILĀNI". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 28 February 2014.


Retrieved from ""