شاعر "عشق در پستو" شاملو

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About this app

Ahmad Shamloo (A. Bamdad) was born on December 21, 1304 in Safi Alishah Avenue in Tehran, but his birth was recorded in Rasht.
Ahmad's father was a soldier with a cable background and was always on a mission, so Ahmad spent his childhood in various cities such as Rasht, Samir, Isfahan, Abadeh, Isfahan and Shiraz.
Ahmed's mother was an Iraqi housewife.
 Ahmad studied primary school in Khash, Zahedan and Mashhad and attended high school in Birjand, Mashhad and Tehran. Her father's school job was not completed and her father was sent to Gorgan. Ahmad dropped out of school and after a few years entered Rezaieh (Urmia) school, but was forced to leave the city and return to Tehran because of the Azeri Democratic Party's affair.
Shamlou first married at the age of twenty-two and had three sons and one daughter. Shamlou remarried twice until the end of her life, but had no children.
In 1332, after the August 28 coup, agents raided his house and published a book and he fled. The agents wrote and translated many of his works, and Ahmed's hand was no longer available to them. Shamlou was arrested a few days later and remained in the Qasr prison for more than a year.
In 1338 Shamloo produced his first work for children called "The Golden Tale of the Golden Parrot" and simultaneously entered the cinema and wrote many screenplays and dialogues. He says: "My cinematic career was inevitably eaten by a pen, and in fact in a pay-as-you-go way."
Shamloo has written in various magazines and accepted many of them. According to Najaf Daryabandari in his preface to "Defending Melanosruddin", Shamlou's expertise was in closing open magazines and opening closed magazines.
In 1350 Shamlou was invited to the Persian Academy of Farsi and worked for three years with this Academy. In the mid-1950s, Shamloo was head of research at the University of Bu Ali for two years and remained in the United States in the final year of imperial rule because of the problems the machine had made for him.
After the Iranian people's movement in 1979, Shamloo returned to Iran and became a member of the board of secretaries of the Iranian Writers' Association.
The publication of Shamlou's works was banned in 1362, and it was not abolished until 1993, when his work was restricted.
Shamlou has not left Iran since 1991. He says, "Truth is more burdensome than my ability to endure ..." But the system no longer allowed Shamlou any activity, and his books were still banned.
Shamlou died at 2 am on August 2 in Fardis Karaj, beside Aida, a woman he had fallen in love with, and his body was buried in the cemetery of Imamzadeh Taher Karaj.
Shamlou is a kind of mirror of the Iranian and Iranian souls in the 14th century Solar.
Updated on
Dec 14, 2019

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Ratings and reviews

3.9
14 reviews
Said Abdollah
December 5, 2021
خیلی زیباست برادران دست تون درد نبیند!
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