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Alipur Ka Ailee / علی پور کا ایلی

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Alipur Ka Ailee is Mumtaz Mufti's autobiography describing the first phase of his life. Initially, this book was considered to be a novel but later it was revealed to be the story of his own life.

علی پور کا ایلی 1961ء میں پہلی بار ایک ناول کی حیثیت سے شائع ہوئی اور آدم جی ادبی ایوارڈ کے حوالے سے اسے کافی شہرت حاصل ہوئی۔ بقول ابن انشا یہ کتاب اس لئے مشہور ہوئی کہ اسے آدم جی ایوارڈ نہ مل سکا لیکن اس کے باوجود اسے ادبی حلقوں میں بہت پذیرائی حاصل ہوئی اور ممتاز مفتی کی ادبی حیثیت پہلے سے کہیں زیادہ مستحکم ہو گئی۔
بعد کے ایڈیشنز میں ممتاز مفتی نے اعتراف کیا کہ یہ بچپن سے 1947 تک ان کی اپنی زندگی کی کہانی ہے اور اس داستان کے بیشتر واقعات حقیقت پر مبنی ہیں۔

1272 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1961

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About the author

Mumtaz Mufti

41 books234 followers
Mumtaz Mufti (Sitara-e-Imtiaz) is a Pakistani short story writer. He started writing Urdu short stories while working as a school teacher before partition. In the beginning he was considered among his contemporaries, a non-conformist writer having liberal views, who appeared influenced by Freud. His transformation from Liberalism to Sufism was due to his inspiration from Qudrat Ullah Shahab (Another well known Pakistani Author). At the same time, he did manage to retain his individual accent and wrote on subjects which were frowned upon by the conservative elements in society.

The two phases of his life are witnessed by his autobiographies, Ali Pur Ka Aeeli and Alakh Nagri. According to forewords mentioned in his later autobiography, Ali Pur Ka Aeeli is an account of a lover who challenged the social taboos of his times, and Alakh Nagri is an account of an acolyte who greatly influenced by the mysticism of Qudrat Ullah Shahab.

Talaash ("Quest") was the last book written by Mumtaz Mufti.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 82 reviews
Profile Image for Samreen.
25 reviews
June 5, 2014
میں نے اسکو پڑھا اور میری حیرانگی قطرہ قطرہ کر کے جھیل کی صورت بنتی گئ۔کویئ کیسے اس حد تک سچا ھو سکتا ھے۔بھت سی کتابوں میں آپ کو زندگی کو سمجھنے اور دیکھنے کےلیے رھنمایئ مل جاےٗ گی پرخود کو سمجھنے اور اپنے آپ کا سامنا کرنا میں نے صرف مفتی صاحب سے سیکھا۔ آپ جب بھی علی پور کا ایلی پڑھیں گے آپ کو لگے گا کے آپ نے صیح وقت پر پڑھا، لوگوں میں خوبصورتی تلاش کرنا اور ان سے سمجھوتہ کرنا یے باتیں معمولی نھیں پر مفتی صاحب میں یے دونوں خوبیاں ایک ھی وقت میں موجود تھیں۔ آپ اس ناول کو صرف پڑھتے نھیں ھیں اپنے ارد گرد پاتے ھیں۔ یہ سفاک بھی ھے اور ایک مھربان استاد بھی۔ اگر آپ سچ بولنا اور سننا چاھتیں ھیں توپھر ضرور پڑھیے اور اگر روایتی رومان کے تڑکے کو اس میں ڈھونڈنا ھےتو بھلے نہ پڑھیہے۔
Profile Image for Muhammad Arqum.
104 reviews72 followers
February 28, 2014
4.5
At this particular moment in time I am quite ecstatically experiencing that wonderful, distinct state of trance mixed with a heavy inexplicable sadness that one experiences on finishing a thoroughly rewarding gem of a book. I will put it exactly how a friend did in his review of this book: "You don't read Alipur ka Aili, You live it!"
One can say so much about this book, all the positives and the negatives. All the implications. But no one can deny the grand,monumental effort that Mumtaz Mufti has put in documenting his life. It is courageous, bold, raw and in the end if read at the right age, would minus a lot of the potential negative implications. But hey, most of the important works in literature happen to be like double edged swords.
Like they say, A MUST READ!!
Profile Image for Rural Soul.
550 reviews88 followers
January 6, 2022
علی پور کا ایلی میں نے بچپن میں پڑھی تھی. بچپن سے پڑھنے کا جنون تھا مگر کچھ عوامل اور مجبوریوں کی وجہ سے کبھی معیاری ادب تک رسائی نہ مل سکی. یہ ان اوّلین معیاری کتب میں سے ہے جو میرے ہاتھ آئی اور اس نے میری شخصیت سازی اور کردار سازی میں بہت اہم کردار ادا کیا۔
میں نے جب بچپن میں پہلی دفعہ یہ کتاب پڑھی تو مجھے ایسا لگا کہ جن جذباتی، ہارمونیائی پریشانیوں اور مایوسیوں سے میں گزر رہا ہوں، مصنف کئی دہائیوں پہلے بھی اسی طرح کے مسائل میں مبتلا تھے. اس کتاب نے بغادت، سرکشی اور بے باک سچائی جیسے عناصر میری شخصیت میں بھرے. اس نے مجھے اپنی کوتاہیاں اور گناہ تسلیم کرنا سکھایا. جذبات کا عقلی کسوٹی پر تشریح کرنا سکھایا. مجھے خوشی ہے کہ یہ کتاب میرے ہاتھ آئی ورنہ میں، وہ نہ ہوتا جو آج ہوں۔
کئی سال بعد جب حالات مجھے دوبارہ اسی جذباتی تخریب تک لےگئے. دوبارہ اس سے بہتر کوئی اور وقت نہیں ہوسکتا تھا جب مجھے اس کتاب کی ضرورت تھی. زندگی کے کچھ موڑ ناگزیر ہوتے ہیں. جب میں نے دوبارہ اس کتاب کو پڑھا تو عورت ذات کا ازسرنو جائزہ لینا ممکن ہوا. جو مرکزی خیال اس کتاب کی تخلیق کا مؤجب ہے وہ اپنی زندگی کا کتھارسس اور گہرائی میں جائزہ ہے. اپنے فیصلوں اور قسمت کے کھیل کو سمجھنا ہے. زندگی ایک لامتناہی تبدیلی ہے. دکھ،غم اور تنہائی زیست کے نشیب ہیں. ہرکوئی ان سے گزر چکا ہے. مجھے خوشی ہے کہ مجھے اس کتاب نے اگلے کئی سالوں کے لیے یاددہانی کرائی۔
اس سے بہتر اور ایمان دارانہ خودنوشت شاید ہی دوبارہ تخلیق ہوسکے۔

Profile Image for Salman Tariq.
85 reviews50 followers
November 25, 2015
ناول اور دیباچہ دونوں مسحور کن تھے...
کچھ سحر کرداں جملے
ایلی نے کئی مرتبہ محبت کی مگر وہ محبت نہ کر سکا.

ظاہر ہے مفتی کے منکروں کے دل بھی مومن ہوں گے مگر دماغ کافر ہیں.

خدا حافظ تمہارا اے دل ربا میں ہوں فدا...

پیٹ کی بھوک آنکھوں سے نہیں بہجتی

مفتی اس خود نویشت میں اپنی تخلیقی صلاحیت کو حد درجہ کمال پر لے گیا ہے ناول تلخیوں سے زہر کی حد تک آلودہ نظر آتا ہے اور محبت کی مٹھاس نے جلتی پر تیل کا کام کیا ہے. جنسی اور رومانوی انداز کو ناول میں پرکھا جائے تو محبت کی حدت کو آسانی سے جزب کیا جاسکتا ہے. ادب کی چاشنی میں آنکھ مٹکا قاری کو اپنے سحر میں لیے رکھتا ہے اور وہ محسوس کرتا ہے کہ وہ ایلی ہے محبت سے نابلد ایلی اور اسکی زندگی میں ایک شہزاد ہے جسے وہ جنس، حرارت، حیوانیت کے ہر پارینہ پر چڑھ کر محبت کی آغوش میں لینا چاہتا ہے اس کے تخیل کی عطا اس کی کامیابی بھی ہے اور اسکی بربادی....
شہزاد کے کردار نے مجھے ایلی سے بھی زیادہ متاثر کیا... انسان کے اندر محبت، حسد، نفرت ، وفا اور رزینٹمنٹ کے جذبات ابھارتی ہے... بزدات خود اس کی کوئی حیثیت نہیں... 
لیکن ایلی کی تخلیق کے عمیق سے عمیق تر پہلو اس کے وجود سے ہیں جو قاری کو مختلف زاویوں سے باور کرواتی ہے کہ وہ ایلی ہے.... اگر شہزاد کی شخصیت کو دیکھا جائے تو مکمل عورت کے معاشرتی کردار سے انصاف کرتی نظر آتی ہے اور جس کے لیے وہ ہر کالک لگوانے کے لیے تیار ہے .... قاتل حسینہ کے طور پر شہزاد کو پرکھنا کافی مشکل کام ہے جس کی جنگ پڑھنے والا آخر تک لڑتا ہے
Author 2 books137 followers
February 8, 2018
This is the story of the first 40 years of Ilyas Aasfi’s life. Ilyas is the son of an affluent Muslim civil servant Ali Ahmed and his homemaker wife Hajra who live in Alipur town / village of Gurdaspur in pre-partition United India. He has an elder sister Farhat. Ali Ahmed is a philanderer / polygamist and Hajra is the long-suffering first wife / servant / enabler. The train of women that Ali Ahmed scorches through in the first quarter of the book is dizzying and insulting and sets the tone for the sexual evolution of his first-born son. There is Safiya, Ali Ahmed’s first-second wife, Shamim is the second-second, Roja is the third, flings with visitors, passerbys and ‘special someones‘ (prostitutes) all occurring under the ever-present relatives, wives and Ali Ahmed’s mother (Ilyas’s beloved ‘daadi’).

Ilyas and Farhat are neglected by their father, whose attentions are always focussed on either his work (‘register’), women or smoke (‘huqqa’). In fact Ali Ahmed does not become a real father till he has Naseer, Wazeer and Kabeer - all with third-wife Roja - and Roja’s son from first husband, Sher Ali. By that time, Ali Ahmed has produced plenty of known/legitimate kids (1 other son with Hajra who died in infancy, 2 girls with Shamim). But the one thing that he does manage to get done is Ilyas’ education - he makes sure that Ilyas, who is a below-average student and repeat exam-failure, completes his education (bachelors, technical ed. certificate) and gets an employment (teacher). Farhat, he makes sure, is taken off after class 8 (because girls are not supposed to get more education).

The majority of the book is full of the sexcapades of boys and men - with and without women. The writer also calls every second man mentioned in the book (usually a friend of Ilyas) as ‘a beautiful man’ which is either the way authors wrote in 50s/60s, a homo-erotic fantasy or Ilyas’ way of further undermining himself, because he has low self-esteem and is ugly: Mansar, whom Ilyas loves - is the brother of almost-fiance Saadi, Mehr (‘the most beautiful youngster in college’), Jamal ('what a beautiful man'), Raazi ('thin beautiful boy'), Hai (looked like ‘a beautiful woman’), Zia (a ‘feminine look in his eyes’) and a few others whose ‘way of looking at Ilyas’ makes him uncomfortable /run away. There are also detailed descriptions of men’s bodies (‘beautiful’ body, shoulders, face). There are boys and men who either are overtly or theoretically homosexual: Bala - giving Ilyas first lesson in masturbation or Ilyas dreaming that he does because of shame; Noor, the singing boy.

The book covers a long list of Ilyas’s friends from infancy to adulthood and it gets repetitive on page 865 when you know that the writer will first name and describe a town/ village/ city, Ilyas’s principal / boss and house, his own place of residence, and the friends he makes (one is always ‘beautiful’, the other always average), and their romances/ flirting / flings / marriages - in exactly this order! Either it is laziness or imitation of life where things change and yet remain the same. I flipped the pages and started re-reading on page 945 when The Relationship Saga takes a turn.

That would be the relationship between Ilyas and Shehzad (that’s a woman’s name), a beautiful, erratic, smart, liberal and in-love-with-love young wife of Ilyas’s friend (and relative) Sharif. She is quite possibly illiterate but vivacious, good-mannered and attention-seeking. This is the definitive female relationship of Ilyas’ life, combining the maternal, emotional and sexual/ lustful elements that Ilyas sees in various other important women in his life (his grandmother, the almost-fiance Saadi) and does not want (Hajra, Ali Ahmed's women). It also is a curse and has a hint of Philip Carey and Mildred Rogers dynamic from Maugham’s Of Human Bondage. Shehzad is not a sadist but this is a sadomasochistic affair full of lust, doubts, jealousy, insecurity, frustration, accusations, control-issues, anger, hate, longing, companionship, back to lust etc. etc. Ilyas has plenty of opportunities to get rid of and get away from Shehzad’s influence and grip: Samra, the fiance that his mother Hajra chooses to stop Ali Ahmed from throwing the boy amongst his own relatives (a mother’s paranoia for sure, because Ali Ahmed has no interest in getting his kids married); Tasleem / Neem, married woman and her single sister, from Amritsar; Saadi, the almost-fiance from a great settled wealthy family - a match marred by Begum (Shehzad’s divorced mother) and by Ali Ahmed (whose refusal to fund the marriage ends Ilyas’ hope of being in a respectable family), the prostitute Shaadi and her duplicate Shaadi (technically, I figured, anyone is better than Shehzad!).

Ilyas is basically a good man, an ordinary man trying to do good, in spite of what the world (and Shehzad) throws at him. And what Shehzad does time and again, is practically unforgivable - her relentless pursuit of Ilyas in spite of producing 6 kids with her own husband; flirting or shacking up with Safdar (a neighborhood guy who is later married to someone else, has kids, is a drunkard but Shehzad keeps up the affair with him); her siding with her manipulative daughter to get her divorced and married to the already-married half-brother of Ilyas; her wilful destruction of Ilyas’ reputation. To me, Shehzad seemed like the female personification of Ilyas’ father Ali Ahmed (selfish, narcissistic, good-looking, indifferent, lustful, manipulative, exploitative, talkative).

It is ultimately Ilyas’ good that wins in the end - he finds strangers who will vouch for his good character in police, office, neighborhood. But Shehzad - the one he had a 16 year affair with, the one he accepted with 6 kids and lived in extreme poverty and lowly prospects because of that - lets him down and yet, he still pines for her. Time and time again I said ‘this woman is too much’ and ‘he is a complete idiot’.

The story is full of memorable characters: Ali Ahmed, Asif and Arjumund (one committed suicide, the other died of tapdiq or TB - sad lonely ends to brilliant hopes), Jamal, Dr. Hashim, Begum, Shehzad and the village oldies / elderly women gossiping loudly.

I had a problem understanding timeline when the period detailing Ilyas’ 3 years from 15 years of age to 18, turn out to be a 10-year period (he fails in college, does FA), then enrolls in BA which he passes because of Ansar’s contacts. How did he turn out to be 25 or 27 when he does technical course?

There’s also a ‘Nazeeraan’ who suddenly appears and gives him overtures when the household servant’s name is something else. The writer was also inconsistent in his portrayal of Farhat-Ilyas and Farhat-Ajmal relationship (barely mentioned). As for Ilyas’ character evolution, there isn’t much of that either - there’s a ping pong, on-off with Shehzad that takes half of the book. I don’t think Ilyas learnt anything from the experience. He doesn’t have a blow-out with Ali Ahmed over his sexual peccadilloes that color his life and only has a face-to-face quarrel over Ali Ahmed’s assertion that Ilyas’s professional success is because of him. His mother, Hajra, also is an invisible part of his life that he only accepts because he has to raise his son by Shehzad, Aali, alone. There is no conversation between Ilyas and his second wife, Bulund Bakht, and she is set aside after a paragraph - her fate described as a ‘wife‘ and not a ‘life partner’. Well, who told you to go for an arranged marriage without looking at the woman?!

It was cool to read about old cinema houses of Lahore (like Empire Cinema on Macleod Road) which still exist.

The book also gives bird’s eye-view of typical Muslim behavior in the subcontinent so much so that Muslim women are all in burqas (which my mom attests too); girls were taken off school in class 8 and below (my mom’s mom was the first woman in her family from Gujrat who studied till class 5 in 1920s, her sister till class eight, my mom’s sister was the first one to complete matric (grade 10) and my mom was the first one to do Masters in '60s and that too from Lahore!); the hypocrisy / bigotry (‘the wife’ versus all the colorful women one can play with); the male advancement and lack of proper guidance, spiritual or otherwise.

Since this is pre-partition subcontinent, there are frequent interactions with non-Muslim people - men and women- Hindus, Sikhs, Christians - all pleasant, few full of bias: for e.g. Ali Ahmed’s mistress / go-to Hindu prostitute Kaur who insists on drinking from the village’s well instead of Ali Ahmed’s home, a Hindu boy who refuses to fetch water for Ilyas saying he will get impure (religiously unclean), the stenographer employment that Muslim Ilyas does not get because Hindus are the government employees making the decision, the ‘Ram Deens’ / Muslims forced by Hindu employers to change their name (or forced religious conversion). Then the hostel-food issue raised by the 4 Muslim students including Ilyas in an Aryan college in Amritsar- that they want to eat meat; the lamentation by an old Hindu woman whose Muslim tonga driver is killed in Hindu-Muslim massacres that erupted just before partition. There’s a dig at Muslim Bengali ‘Babus’ (in an eating contest) and the word ‘Muslay’ (the Muslim equivalent of British ‘Paki’) uttered by Muslims! My only peeve was the one-liner on page 1198 (in ‘Mushumlaat’) which talks of the Pakistan question that is being fought by ‘the Muslim League in Punjab, the U.P. Muslims, and Aligarh University students’. There is no mention of Bengal or Bengali Muslims who were the driving force of the movement before Urdu-speaking community got on the bandwagon and Punjabis got into the fray! Maybe I’m oversensitive to revisionist history. Anyways, it seems like the Pakistan Movement and Partition in the plot came as an after-thought to the writer because they literally rise on page 1198 and meet a thrilling, nerve-wracking, nauseating, macabre end at page 1228.

There is also quite another story here, left unexplored: all the women left by their husbands, or whose husbands are working in far-off places, women living with other women, full of lonely lives.

Dr. Mohd. Ahsan Farouqi's 29-page-long critique / review at the end is gibberish, big words, hot air.

The book is 1206 pages long and I am amazed that I finished it.

This is the first ‘classic’ from Urdu literature that I’ve read. It is a well-written and exhaustive study of a boy to man journey, most of the time feels like the author is giving a day-to-day snapshot of Ilyas‘ life, it seems like forward motion but it is also going round and round in circles. I don’t know what kind of stories Manto wrote but they couldn’t be more risque’ than this. It is also famous for being a reject for ‘AdamJee Literary Award’ in 1961 which was at that time in its third year and used to give four cash-awards annually - to 2 Urdu and 2 Bengali authors work. The award went to Jamila Hashmi’s ‘Talaash Bahaaraan’. I wonder what kind of book that was because nobody remembers it.

And lastly, the book is ‘‘Alipur Ka Aili’ not ‘Eli’ (i.e. it is pronounced as ‘Aylee’ or ‘Eelee’, not ‘Eelaa-yay’!)
Profile Image for ahmad  afridi.
139 reviews158 followers
July 18, 2016
was in trance of this story for more than 3 weeks. the way he described his personal life without just selecting only the good looking part . although i am not the shrine visitor type but i would say it was charm of mufti sahab's personality that i went to his grave sit by his side and the events of this book were filmed on my mind screen .
Profile Image for Sundus.
88 reviews52 followers
September 20, 2014
"You are like a Mom; you hate what she thinks, you hate what she says, but you just love her!"-Chootoo

"Ap ye kitaab na parhen, barbaad hojayen gay, khuwar hojayengay."-Aksii Mufti.

"Ik Baghe shakhss ki dastaan.."-Aksii

"Agar ap jantay han k mard batakh ki manind hae, hamesha oper say panio mai terta hae aur machli ki tarha nichlay panio mai nahi jaa sakta tou 'Ali pur ka Aeli' ap k liye bais-e-musarrat hoga"-Maa Je Bano Qudsia.

"Jis nay kai ik mohabbaten ken likin mohabbat na kar saka... sapurdage k azeem jazbay say begana raha.."

"Chalen Pakistan chalen...Pakistan Zindabaad".

Well, it was a book worth my time. Initially, it did shock me, disgusted me, troubled me with the times back then, but then there came a time when i started enjoying it and the only thing which kept me going was that its Mufti jee's life story and what an interesting tale is told here. Full of all kinds of uncertainties, all kinds of emotions, events, likely and unlikely ones, its life...in its originality.

And may i just say, the brilliant details of the men and women's psyche just strengthened my existing understanding of the two; sadly or not i don't know, but Aeli's tale did push the boundaries for me and made me experience the vastness of the psyches which can so drastically shape one's life. Sometimes i found it overwhelming, other times it was too exhausting and shocking too.

Lastly, an open recommendation would be that its a must read. Without any second opinion, everyone should give it a read and experience all that which Aeli (Mufti je) has in his life for you all to learn from, its worth the effort.
Profile Image for Hassan Ali.
60 reviews41 followers
March 15, 2018
یہ کتاب، یہ الفاظ آپ پڑھتے نہیں ہیں بلکہ یہ آپ پر بیت جاتے ہیں، وہ سارے محسوسات، احساسات اور لمحات آپ خود جیتے ہیں. مفتی جی شاید واقعی الفاظ پر کچھ پڑھ کر پھونکتے تھے، الفاظ میں اتنا تاثر کہاں سے آ سکتا ہے؟
پڑھتے ہوے آپ زمان و مکاں کی قید سے آزاد ہو کر آصفی محلّے میں پہنچ جاتے ہیں اور شہزاد کھڑکی میں کھڑی ہو کر دیکھنے لگتی ہے. وہ ہر لمحہ آپ پر بیت جاتا ہے. اسکے ماتھے کا تل، اسکے حنا مالیدہ ہاتھ، اسکا بانکپن اور اسکے لہجے کی وہ مٹھاس، یک لخت آپ ایلی بن جاتے ہیں اور شہزاد کی محبّت شدّت سے آپکو دل میں محسوس ہوتی ہے
لوگ شاید اسکو کردار نگاری کہیں لیکن میں اسکو محبّت کا فسوں سمجھتا اور محسوس کرتا ہوں جو زمانے بیت جانے اور لوگوں کے مر جانے کے بعد بھی ویسا ہے پر اثر ہے
:مفتی جی نے محبّت کے جو چار مراحل بیان کے ہیں جس میں آخری مرحلہ ہے کہ
"اور آخر میں محبوب اور محبت سے بے نیاز ہو کر کسی بالاتر حقیقت میں گم ہو جانا"
میں ذاتی طور پر نہیں سمجھتا کہ مفتی جی آج تک مکمّل طور پر اس محبّت سے بے نیاز ہو سکے تھے. ممتاز مفتی شاید کسی اور جہت، کسی اور راستے یا کسی بالا تر حقیقت کی تلاش میں چل نکلا ہو لیکن ایلی ہمیشہ شہزاد سے محبّت کرتا رہا اور وہ مونگیا گٹھری ہمیشہ اپنے تمام تر فسوں کے ساتھ اسکے دل میں جلوہ افروز رہی.
کتاب کے تکنیکی پہلووں کا احاطہ کرنا ارفع لوگوں کا کام ہے میں تو مفتی جی کا وہ دل کی آنکھوں سے پڑھنے والا سادہ قاری ہوں جسکو وہ محبّت کا متلاشی کرنا چاہتے تھے، جس میں وہ کامیاب ہو گئے
پڑھتے ہوے کافی مرتبہ ایسا شدّت سے محسوس ہوا جیسے میں اپنے ارد گرد کے لوگوں، ماحول اور وقت سے لا تعلق ہو گیا ہوں اور وہ مجھ سے اور یہ ان کیفیات میں سے نہیں تھا جو مگن ہونے کی صورت میں ہوتی ہیں، اس کی کوئی وجہ میں جاننے سے قاصر ہوں
Profile Image for Komal Ehsan.
40 reviews2 followers
August 20, 2022
I have completed the novel, ''Ali Pur Ka Aili'' by Mumtaz Mufti, nearly in a week. I felt astonished by the purity, sensuousness, and true spirit of the author. I have read so many classical novels but I have never seen such a fearless power of speaking the truth. I am truly amazed by his true spirit. Mumtaz Mufti, in the novel, has rightly portrayed himself as a tremendous social, romantic, and moral reforming religious hero. He rightly fought against the set norms and taboos of society and gave way to the path of courage, honesty, love, and fearlessness. By and by, I have never seen such a fearless autobiography ever. For me, none other than Mumtaz Mufti was able to share his own life's thick and thins in such a unique way.
(Komal Ehsan..)
Profile Image for Sundus.
123 reviews56 followers
November 11, 2020
جب جب ارردو ادب کا مطالعہ کیا تو دل میں يہ خواہش پیدا ہوئی کہ کوئی تو ايسی کتاب ملے جس سے وہ لطف و مزا آئے جو آگ کا دریا پڑھنے ميں آیا تھا۔ علی پور کا ایلی پڑھ کے یہ خواہش پوری ہو گئی
Profile Image for Athar Ali.
50 reviews4 followers
August 1, 2022
In the start the book is somewhat boring . Mostly book consists of the stories of aili father who was a womanizer and then story shifts to the aili's romance . Book also shows the impact of love on a human nature.
However , ending is very abrupt seems like mufti sab was in a hurry to end this novel.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Ibn Azhar.
10 reviews7 followers
December 11, 2016
ہ کتاب صرف پڑھنے کے لئے نہیں ڈوبنے کے لئے ہے یہ آپ پر منحصر ہے کہ آپ کو " علی پور کا ایلی" کو پڑھ کر شرم میں ڈوب جاتے ہیں یا گہری سوچ میں !.

چھ بچوں کی ما ں سے عشق لڑانا اور پھر اس کو بھگا کار شادی کرلینا کسی سورما کا ہی کام ہو سکتا ہے لیکن جس عورت کے گرد یہ کردار بنا گیا وہ بھی ایک حیرت ناک کردار ہے. خوبصورت ہونا،ایک بات ہے، اس حسن کا احساس دوسری بات لیکن ان سب کے ساتھساتھ بے باک اور نڈر ہونا بوہت کم عورتوں کے حصے میں آتا ہے

شروع میں تو سمجھ نہیں آتا کہ ممتاز مفتی کی ہزارصفحے پر مشتمل کتاب " علی پور کا ایلی " کو آخر کہیں کیا. سوشل میڈیا بلخصوص ٹویٹر اور اختصار پسندی کے اس دور میں اردو ادب کے اس شاہکار کو بقول مفتی صاحب " ڈھیر" کہنے پر دل آمادہ نہیں. اگر اس کو مفتی صاحب کے کہنے پر "آپ بیتی " ماں لیا جائے تو کتاب کا افسانوی اور داستان گوئی کا پہلو نظر انداز کرنا پڑتا ہے.اگر قصہ کہانی سمجھ کر پڑھیں تو کتاب میں جا بجا بکھری حقیتیں واشگاف آواز میں اپنی سچائی کا اعلان کرتی ہیں اور اگر اس کو زندگی کے سفر میں ڈبکیاں کھاتے ھوے ایک منتشر ، آوارہ اور احساس کمتری کے مارے ھوےایک بے چین انسان کا سفر نامہ کہیں تو بھی بات تو بن جاتی ہے مکمل نہیں ہوتی.درحقیقت " علی پور کا ایلی" بقول ابن انشا قلم نہیں بلکہ کمرے کی آنکھ سے لکھا گیا ہے اور غالباً اس شاہکار کی یہی خصوصیت اسے اردو ادب کی ناول نگاری میں اس قدر بلندیعطا کرتی ہے کہ پھر آپ کے سامنے کاغذ پر لکھی ہوئی تحریر ایک پلازما سکرین میں تبدیل ہو جاتی ہے اور آپ اس ہائی ریزولوشن منظر میں زندگی کے اس گرداب میں مصنف کے ساتھ ساتھ غوطے کھاتے چلے جاتے ہیں
Profile Image for Tariq Mahmood.
Author 2 books1,064 followers
February 5, 2015
Great book, bold and courageous autobiography of a very colour full character, set in united India. The author traces his life into a nascent state of Pakistan, detailing his struggles, loves and losses across his years. Every culture needs such ordinary people who are willing to place their very personal lives on a platter for others to judge and justify. I salute Mumtaz Mufti for giving me an insight into his life. I especially liked his descriptions of his birth city Alipur and his relationship with his father. The book promises to tickle interest on almost every page filled with surprises, romance, excitement, adventure, grief and hope. Must read for every reader of Urdu.
Profile Image for Muhammad Ahmed Siddiqui.
163 reviews73 followers
September 10, 2019
This is a character-centric book with not much of a plot. Throughout this book you will encounter tons of characters but you will remember them distinctively because the writer sketches them with craft. Looking at the size of the book it's not dragging at all. The pace is well managed and each passage keeps you hungry for more. It's not about the destination but the journey with this book. As someone correctly puts it "You don't read Alipur ka Ailee, You live it". Clearly one of my favorites. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
Profile Image for Naveed Nawaz.
2 reviews7 followers
July 7, 2013
Raw and superb. One of the best novels you will ever come across. You don't read this book, you live it. It's a crown jewel of urdu literature this book.
Profile Image for Ayesha Amin.
13 reviews25 followers
May 6, 2015
ufffff Allah Mufti Jee!
Right now i am mix with so many emotions...
if ur reading it as a novel dan i cannot think how hard it would be for a writer to create such a story with so beautifully detailed characters. but after knowing that it is a biography dan ur amazed 'so amazed that how a man can write his story with such courage n truth.
no body else dan Mufti sahab can write such courageous thing. It is so hard to accept all those dark parts of ur life~Not only accept but write those horifiying and dark facts...
A man can be this much spontaneous i can't believe dat. dat was so amusing Mufti sahab i guess inherit only this gud thing frm his father.And the way they love was so indefinable . Shahzad and aaili and their relation and love and the way shahzad treated aaili in the case if her daughter. ufff that was so hurting but still aailix love was there till end.
hats off to the love and to the book.
Profile Image for Aatiqa Nisar.
11 reviews1 follower
December 28, 2024
Finishing this nauseating autobiography with mixed feelings, it sure is going to leave an everlasting dent on the back of my mind.
A book that will take you close to reality, so close that things will begin to lose their shape and meaning.
A book not for those who are always in the argument about right vs wrong. A book for those who may not show it but deep down they are afraid of losing their religion ( and sanity) at any suitable moment of disbelief. A book for the confused ones and not for those who speak as if they are certain about nature of almost everything.
A book for those fall in love often yet are clueless about what love is. Not for those who declare it much carefully after they have found their "best match."
A book for outcasts, hopeless romantics and existentialists.
A masterpiece 🖤
Profile Image for Ubaid Talpur.
184 reviews
August 17, 2015
A very nice book one must read once in life , every line in this book has two meanings some time thrice one can understand with his /her mental level . It teaches us the truth & love for all mankind .
Profile Image for Ahsen Ali.
89 reviews1 follower
September 15, 2014
I am too emotional to leave a comment. I wanted to know more....especially about Saadi.....I wish Mr. Mufti was alive so I could meet him. He has revived my interest in Urdu literature. Thank you sir for writing this masterpiece.
Profile Image for Syed.
100 reviews5 followers
October 19, 2013
A very different style of Biography,considering the area he belongs from. He broke lot of taboos.

Its like a master piece in Urdu literature.

25 reviews1 follower
October 12, 2020
علی پور کا ایلی، آپ کو اپنا اپنا سا لگے گا۔
Profile Image for فیصل مجید.
187 reviews9 followers
December 17, 2022
زندگی اور کچھ بھی نہیں، تیری میری کہانی ہے

ایسا لگتا ہے ایک ہزار صفحات پر پھیلی داستان میں سوائے ایلی (ٹین کا سپاہی) اور شہزاد (ربڑ کی گڑیا) کے سوا کچھ نظر نہیں آتا۔ اور نہ ہی ان دونوں کو ایک دوسرے کے سوا کچھ نظر آتا ہے۔ اور فقط زیب داستان کے لئے اس ناول کو طوالت عطا کی گئی ہے۔
بتایا گیا ہے کہ اس کتاب کا موضوع عورت کی ذات کا مشاہدہ ہے۔ لیکن میرے خیال سے صرف چند عورتوں کا مشاہدہ/نفسیاتی تجزیہ ہے بالخصوص شہزاد کا۔ اگر شمع ہر رنگ میں جلی ہے تو پروانہ بھی پل پل جیتا مرتا رہا ہے۔ مرد و زن کے باہمی تعلقات سے جنم لینے والا ڈرامہ کو پڑھتے ہوئے چیخوف، لارنس، اور موپساں بے ساختہ یاد آتے ہیں۔ ضمنی کردار میں احمد علی کا کردار ہے جسکی جستجو ستاروں سے آگے جہاں دیکھنے کی خواہش رکھتی ہے۔ ہر نئی عورت صرف ایک سنگ میل ثابت ہوتی ہے۔ اور منزل کی تلاش میں سفر رواں دواں ہے۔ لیکن اس سفر میں دیگر افراد نظر انداز ہوتے ریے۔ جسکی احمد علی نے کبھی پرواہ بھی نہیں کی۔
مصنف کے کردار زندگی کے قریب لیکن نفسیاتی خبط/الجھنوں کے ساتھ ہیں۔ زبان رواں ہے اور مکالمے نہایت دلچسپ، جاندار اور WIT کو ساتھ لئے ہوئے۔
یہ سوانح جس دور میں لکھی ہے اس دور میں تفریح کے ذرائع نہایت کم تھے۔ شائد اس وجہ سے اتنی ضخیم کتب کے قارئین با آسانی میسر تھے۔ آج اتنی ضخیم کتب کو پڑھنا بھی مشکل ہے اور چھاپنا اور بھی زیادہ۔
عام طور پر سوانح نگار ہیرو ہوتا ہے لیکن یہ بالکل مختلف ہے۔ بین السطور سمجھنے کی ضرورت ہے کہ کیا بتایا گیا ہے اور کیا چھپایا گیا ہے۔ بلونت گارگی اپنی آپ بیتی میں زیادہ ڈائریکٹ تھا اور مصنف انڈائریکٹ۔
یہ کتاب اگر ہاتھی ہے تو میں اندھا ہوں۔ یہ کثیر الجہت ہے لیکن میں نے جس زاویئے سے پڑھی ہے وہ آپ کے سامنے ہے۔ آپ خود پڑھیں اور فیصلہ کریں۔

از Faisal Majeed
Profile Image for Shuja.
19 reviews
September 11, 2014
Vow ! The mystical , nostalgic setting of pre partition. And the writer is bold. Bold enough to include the most intimate, embarrassing events/info relating to himself and his family..and many others..Most of Urdu writers that I have read usually hide themselves behind pretty poetic words and connotations.. the 'takhliyas'. Mumtaz Mufti does not. He is straight, bold and makes no bones about it. Immense observation this writer has..Immense..
Profile Image for Zojaja Aswad.
2 reviews2 followers
June 22, 2015
It's True daring anyone has made by telling Truth in front of whole world to show them the path of belive, commitment, relationship and simplicity more than that to speak truth in any circumstances ... thumbs up!
Profile Image for Wordaholic.
168 reviews1 follower
March 7, 2015
An awesome must read book. It needs certain developed taste to enjoy it and patience to see it unfolding bit by bit into something wonderful, that it pains to take your hands off in the end.
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