Sheikh Sanan (play)

Sheikh Sanan
Azerbaijani: Şeyx Sənan

Poster of the spectacle. 1956-1957. Azerbaijan State Academic Drama Theatre
Written by Huseyn Javid
Characters Sheikh Sanan
Khumar
others
Date premiered 1921
Place premiered Azerbaijan State Academic Drama Theatre
Original language Azerbaijani
Genre Tragedy
Setting 1914

Sheikh Sanan (Azerbaijani: Şeyx Sənan) – is a verse play, tragedy in five acts, written by an Azerbaijani poet and playwright Huseyn Javid about love of a Muslim sheikh - Sanan to a Georgian-Christian girl Khumar. It is based on an old story first made famous by the Persian poet Attar Neyshapuri in The Conference of the Birds. As it was noted, a romantic riot against the anti-humanistic reality of religion is expressed in images of the main heroes of the play – Sanan and Khumar.[1] Sanan, being a true believer Muslim and a notable scientist, dissuades from Islam and rejects its basis, blames all religions for separation of people. Sheikh Sanan opposes the world of love, friendship and humanity to the world of blind faith and dead religious dogmatics. Such anti-clerical thoughts, which had been already said by the poet in numerous lyrical works, were summed up in the play.[2]

The play was written in 1912-1914, during Javid’s lifetime in Tiflis and Nakhchivan. In 1915-1916, the play was published in various newspapers, in Baku. As a book it was published in 1917, by a publishing house of “Achig Soz” newspaper. For the first time it was staged in 1921, on a stage of the State Theatre. It was repeatedly published in 1926, 1958 and 1968.[3]

Plot

Abbas Mirza Sharifzadeh in the role of Sheikh Sanan

Two images – Sanan and Khumar – stand in the center of the play. Sanan - a person of high intellect and moral purity, getting a religious education, penetrates into it with great hesitations. He began to keep away from people who believe in religious tales and looks for the God in himself. Hesitations of Sanan calls the anger of surrounding him fanatics and this anger strengthens after they know about Sanan’s love to the Georgian girl Khumar – a marvelous beauty, whom he had seen in his dream and after long searches found her in reality. He loved the girl in Tiflis and agreed with conditions of the girl’s father that he will burn the holy Quran and become a swineherd.[2]

Neither national, nor religious prejudices couldn’t redeem Sanan’s love to Khumar, in which they saw the highest demonstration of human being and destroyed all barriers standing on their way. In the name of love, Sanan ultimately broke off with surrounding him environment and lapsed from Quran. He made sure that religion is an evil, which saws seeds of discords among nations and separates people. A theme of ideal love is opposed to violence, fanaticism and prejudices in the play. But, finally, Sanan and Khumar gained the victory over surrounding them evil. Persecuting by fanatics, they found their salvation in death.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 Д. Джафаров, Под ред. А. Анастасьева (1966). Азербайджанский театр. 2. История советского драматического театра: Наука. p. 254.
  2. 1 2 Мамед Ариф (1971). История азербайджанской литературы. Баку: Элм. p. 216.
  3. Составитель Туран Джавид, под ред. проф. Акрама Джафара (1982). Һүсејн Ҹавид. Әсәрләри. 2. Баку: Язычы. p. 394.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sheikh Sanan.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.