Mikayil Mushfig (
Azerbaijani: Mikayıl Müşfiq, born Mikayil Ismayilzade) (5 June 1908,
Baku – 6 January 1938, Baku) was an
Azerbaijani poet of the 1930s.[1][2] Mikayil Mushfig is considered one of the founders of the new Azerbaijani poetic style.
Most of his poetry is about romance, nature, feelings.[3] Despite this, he soon became one of the slandered and criticized poets in the
Union of Soviet Azerbaijani Writers, and soon afterwards, Mushfig was arrested and executed by Soviet authorities at the age of 30 during the
Stalinist purges in the
USSR. In 1956, he was exonerated posthumously.
Nikita Khrushchev era of
de-stalinization has resulted in Mushfig's poetry being famous in
Azerbaijani society.[2][4]
Mikayil Mushfig was born in the city of
Baku of
Baku Governorate in 1908. His father
Mirza Abdulgadir Ismayilzade was a teacher and a poet. He lost his parents in early childhood, so was brought up by the relatives. He received his elementary education at
Russian-language School in Baku. After the establishment of the
Soviet regime in Azerbaijan in 1920, he studied at Baku Teacher's School and in 1931, he graduated from the Department of Language and Literature of the
Baku State University. Mushfig married Dilber Akhundzade in 1933.[4][5][6]
Mikayil started his professional career as a school teacher. While being involved in teaching, he started writing poems. His first poem Bir Gün ("The Day") was published in the Ganj fahla newspaper in
Baku in 1926.[2][4][7] At about this time, he adopted the pen name Mushfig (
Perso-Arabic for "tender-hearted"). Along with
Samad Vurgun and
Rasul Rza, Mikayil Mushfig became one of the founders of the new Azerbaijani Soviet poetic style in the 1930s. He translated a number of poems from Armenian and Russian as well.[2][4][8] Mikayil Mushfig actively promoted traditional
Azerbaijani musical instruments, which had been forbidden at that time.[9]
In his poetry, Mushfig glorified the work of industrial workers and peasants and lauded the construction of industrial enterprises in Baku and other cities. According to Mushfig's wife, Dilbar Akhundzadeh, Mikayil welcomed the transition from the
Perso-Arabic script to the
Latin script that took place in Azerbaijan in 1927. His excitement was expressed in the following verse:[10]
And at parting,
My soul wants to tell you:
"Goodbye! Your last day has come,
Wretched old alphabet!"
When Stalin and
Mir Jafar Baghirov decreed that traditional Azerbaijani musical instruments, including
the tar, were to be banned, Mushfig wrote a poem in response titled "Sing
Tar, Sing". The popularity of his poem with the public convinced the authorities to rescind the tar ban.[11]
In the late 1930s, as confessed by writer
Mehdi Huseyn in one of the
Ilyas Afandiyev's memories, it was very common among poets and writers to slander each other and accuse each other of
nationalism or spreading religious propaganda. The reasons of such slanders were generally connected with personal problems and bitter rivalries between certain poets and writers.[12] Mushfig himself came under the barrage of criticism in the
Azerbaijani Writers' Union along with some other literary figures of the era such as
Huseyn Javid,
Ahmed Javad and
Yusif Vazir Chamanzaminli. Literary figures who were serving the interests of Stalin's regime in the
USSR branded Mushfig as a "chauvinist" and a "petit-bourgeois poet".[1] He was arrested in 1937, charged with treason as "the enemy of the state", and executed in 1939 in the
Bayil prison near Baku.[1][4] He was later officially exonerated. Even though Mushfig wrote poems about
Joseph Stalin, during the
de-Stalinization policy of the USSR he was portrayed as an "anti-Stalinist" poet.
In October 2018, a working group consisting of the members of
National Academy of Sciences, the ministries of
Health and
Culture, and other relevant authorities was set up under the instruction of the President
Ilham Aliyev in order to investigate the most recent information about the unearthed remains of the poet.[13]
Stamp dedicated to the 100th anniversary of poet Mikayil Mushfig
Published works
Küləklər ("The Winds"), 1930
Günün Səsləri ("The Voices of the Day"), 1932
Collection of Poems, 1934
Selected works (2 volumes), 1960
Duyğu Yarpaqları ("The Leaves of a Feeling"), 1966
Poems (2 volumes), 1968 and 1973
Yenə O Bağ Olaydı ("I wish it was that garden again"), 1976
Ədəbiyyat Nəğməsi ("The Song of literature"), 1978
In 1968, Mushfig's wife Dilber Akhundzade published the memorial book, “My days with Mushfiq”, telling the story of Mushfig and Dilber's life after they met in 1931, as well as Dilber's life after Mushfig's arrest and execution.[1] The book has been published several times, the latest was in 2014.
In 1970, a statue of Mushfig made by the sculptor Munevver Rzayeva and the architect Shafiga Rzayeva was unveiled at the intersection of Inshaatchilar avenue and N.Narimanov street in
Yasamal district of
Baku.[7]
In 1977, “Mikayil Mushfig” dry cargo vessel was released into water by Caspian Shipping Company.[7]
In 1988, a new settlement –
Mushfigabad named after M.Mushfig was established under the instruction of Supreme Soviet of Azerbaijan.[14]
In 1988, “The place of Mikayil Mushfig” was established at the house of Mushfig's father in Sayadlar village of
Khizi raion by the initiative of Tofig Novruzov,
Jabir Novruz, Aydın Zeynalov and
Nabi Khazri.[4]
In 1988, a secondary school named after the poet was founded in Sumgayit[15] and the bust of Mushfig was placed in front of the school building.
In 1989, the bust of the poet made by Munevver Rzayeva was laid in Sayadlar village of Khizi by the initiative of the philanthropist Abulhasan Ahmedov.[7]
In 1989, a memorial board was erected on the wall of the building where Mushfig lived in Baku (S.Rahimov street, 108).[7]
In 1993, a statue of Mikayil Mushfig was opened in
Mushfigabad.[7]
In 2004, “The place of Mikayil Mushfig” was transformed into the memorial house museum of M.Mushfig according to the decision of the Ministry of Culture of Azerbaijan.[4]
In 2008, the 100th anniversary of the birth of Mikayil Mushfig was solemnly celebrated. In this regard, the Azerpocht Association of the
Ministry of Communications of Azerbaijan issued a stamp dedicated to M.Mushfig.[7]
In 2008, the tar-shaped monument in 8 m length was installed at the foothills of the mountain across the memorial house museum of M.Mushfig in
Khizi.[16]
In 2018, the President
Ilham Aliyev issued a decree on marking the 110th anniversary of the birth of the prominent poet M.Mushfig.[7][17]
School No.18 in
Baku, No.14 in
Ganja, No.34 in
Sumgait, secondary school in Gilazi settlement in
Khizi are named after Mikayil Mushfig.[18][19][20][21]
^"Poet Mikayil Mushfig (1908-1939)". Azerbaijan International. Retrieved 4 August 2014. Mushfig's wife writes: "The famous tar player Gurban Primov visited us, expressing his grave concern. 'Yes, yes, I've heard about it,' Mushfig told him. 'I can't believe it...To deprive the nation of its favorite national instrument means to deprive it of joy and condemn it to eternal sorrow.'"