Qudrat Hikmat (1925-1968)

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Qudrat Hikmat (1925 - Tashkent - October 1968.10.4, 1957) - children's poet. Graduated from the evening department of the Tashkent Pedagogical Institute (1950). He worked as a literary worker (53-1960) in the newspapers "Lenin's Spark" and "Young Leninist", and as a department head in the publishing house of fiction and art (68-1947). From XNUMX he served as a literary secretary to the son of the famous Islamic poet Nazar.

His first collection of poems was My Homeland (1950). "Happy Children" (1951), "Prosperity" (1953), "Friendship" (1954). "Gift of three friends" (1957), "Love of Nevara", "Child of Chirchik" (1961), "Alisher and the book" (1962), "A fairy tale about a snake and its official bee" (1963), "Hour of the watch" (1964) ), "Turtle Attack" (1965), "The Wind Blows" (1966), "Daydy Boy", "Conversation with My Son" (1970), "Diamond is my heart" (1983), "My heart" (1986) and others The poems, fairy tales and epics included in the collections are dedicated to the Motherland hymn, the image of nature and seasons, children's life and educational problems.

Kudrat Hikmat's national anthem "My Motherland", "Which season is it?", "Mountain landscape", "Morning", "Long live the New Year", "We planted a spruce", folk songs His poems, such as "White Poplar, Blue Poplar?", "Game of Chillak", are characterized by the simplicity of expression, the creation of colorful and vivid landscapes. As a native children's poet, Qudrat Hikmat brought new artistic nuances to Uzbek children's poetry, reforming its weight, busy, rhyming system based on children's psyche.

He translated poems for children by V. Mayakovsky, S. Marshak, S. Mikhalkov, A. Surkov, M. Bajan, A. Barto and others into Uzbek.

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