Punjabi Women Poets: From Tragic Lovers to Political Defiance
Punjabi Women Poets: From Tragic Lovers to Political Defiance

For approximately 550–600 years, the meadows of Punjab have echoed with the legends of Heer, Sahiban, and Sohni—women whose rebellions were appraised by the profundity of their romantic devoutness. However, in the hands of modern Punjabi women poets, these archetypes have been stripped of their tragic ends and refurbished in the accoutrements of political defiance. From Amrita Pritam’s haunting call to Waris Shah in 1947 to Nasreen Anjum Bhatti’s visceral, evocative feminist and progressive themes, the female voice in Punjabi literature has shifted from the walled gardens to the vanguards. From the beloved of folklore, the contemporary Punjabi woman writer has become the main archivist of the state’s non-fulfilments in striking gender and age equity, using her mother tongue to trace the scars of partition, patriarchy, and power. By entwining Sufi egalitarianism with modern feminist indignation, these writers have ensured that the Punjabi language remains what it has always been at its core: the defiant sound of the suppressed.

Amrita Pritam: The Iconic Voice

Amrita Pritam (1919–2005) is the most iconic figure in this category. Her work bypassed polite societal expectations to address the raw trauma of women’s bodies and minds during political upheaval. She challenged the traditional role of women through her bold exploration of female desire and autonomy in novels like Pinjar. Consider the work Ajj Aakhaan Waris Shah Nu (Today I Invoke Waris Shah). Written in the onslaught of the 1947 Partition, this is her most famous poem. It is a serious indictment of violence against women and a call for the legendary 18th-century poet Waris Shah to rise from his grave. Amrita critiques the men of her time by contrasting them with the past; while Waris Shah immortalised the tragedy of one woman (Heer), she calls upon him to witness the organised displacement and slaughter of millions of daughters.

Afzal Tauseef: Political Resistance

Based in Pakistan, Afzal Tauseef (1936–2013) was a powerhouse of political resistance. A leftist intellectual and daughter of the soil, her work often landed her in trouble with various regimes, yet she never faltered. Her defiance was unique, blending feminist consciousness with anti-colonial and anti-feudal politics. She was a vocal advocate for the Punjabi language, viewing its suppression as a form of cultural erasure. In the work Lalli di Chithi (Lalli’s Letter) and Political Aphorisms, she captures the trauma of displaced people and the absurdity of borders defined in blood. During the era of General Zia-ul-Haq, she was an active member of the Movement for the Restoration of Democracy (MRD), and her writing during this time was clear and defiant.

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Nasreen Anjum Bhatti: Revolutionary Voice

Nasreen Anjum Bhatti (1943–2016) was a raw, revolutionary voice in Pakistan whose poetry was deeply rooted in the soil and the struggles of the working class. Writing during eras of dictatorship, her work was a direct challenge to state oppression. She often used the metaphor of the unspoken and blended folk imagery with surrealism and raw revolutionary fervour to represent the proletariat and the marginalised. Through Main Shamlaat Haan (I am the Commons), Bhatti reimagined the female body and folk identity as a site of political dissent. Her work bypasses censors by claiming a basic authority—that she is the land itself, refusing to be tamed.

Sarwat Mohiuddin: Lyrical Resistance

Sarwat Mohiuddin came to be known for her lyrical resistance. Mohiuddin blends Sufi humanism with modern activism. Her work resists the erosion of cultural identity and advocates for peace and human rights. In an environment where the Punjabi language was often associated with the uneducated, her lines are a proud reclamation of class and linguistic identity.

Rakhshanda Naveed: Feminist Voice

Rakhshanda Naveed is a honed feminist voice whose poetry deconstructs the traditional domesticated image of women. She demands intellectual and social autonomy, turning the home into a site of rebellion. Her work captures the moment of defiance when a woman steps outside the Chadar and Chardiwari (the veil and the four walls) and into the public sphere.

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Dr Sughra Sadaf: Scholar and Poet

Dr Sughra Sadaf, as a scholar and poet, resists the loss of folklore by connecting the wisdom of the Bulleh Shah era to modern struggles for equality. Her work focuses on intellectual and spiritual resilience, suggesting that resistance is the quiet, stubborn preservation of truth.

The Shift from Grief to Defiance

The shift from the "Grief of 1947" to the "Defiance of 2026" marks an evolution in how Punjabi women writers engage with power. Below are the pillars of this literary movement: In the Pakistani context, writing in Punjabi is in itself a revolutionary act. Because the language has historically been sidelined in favour of Urdu and English in formal education, these women resist cultural erasure by using their mother tongue to dismantle the polite silence of middle-class society.

Safia Hayat: Language Advocate

Safia Hayat is a vocal advocate for the language itself. For Safia Hayat, the act of writing in Punjabi is a form of resistance against the cultural erasure of the Punjabi identity in institutional spaces.

Parveen Malik: Keeping Journals Alive

Parveen Malik is instrumental in keeping Punjabi journals alive, focusing on the common woman in fields and factories. The movement has moved away from portraying women as silent victims. Modern writers reinterpret traditional tragic romances (Heer-Ranjha, Sohni-Mahiwal) to highlight the female protagonist’s agency.

Harleen Singh: Researching Lost Narratives

Harleen Singh is researching The Lost Heer to unearth forgotten narratives of women from colonial Punjab. Dr Sughra Sadaf connects classical Sufi aesthetics with modern egalitarianism.

State Censorship and Resistance

Many of these women faced state censorship for their leanings towards socialist and democratic ideals. Farkhanda Lodhi is a master storyteller who exposed the exploitation of the peasantry and feudal double standards. As a master storyteller, Lodhi’s resistance lay in exposing the exploitation of the peasantry and the double standards of the feudal elite. She viewed the struggle for women's rights as inseparable from the struggle of the worker.

Shahida Dilawar Shah: Challenging Status Quo

Shahida Dilawar Shah uses her pen to challenge the status quo and socio-political rights of the people of Punjab and the structural inequalities that define their lives.

Bushra Ejaz: Double Colonisation

Bushra Ejaz addresses the double colonisation of women—by the state and by the men within their homes. Bushra Ejaz is known for her raw, defiant tone. She frequently addresses how women are colonised twice: first by the political state and second by the patriarchal structures within their own homes.

Existential and Psychological Resistance

The new resistance is existential and psychological, exploring madness, desire, and the stifling nature of domesticity. Samina Asma explores themes of sexual awakening and the weight of silence in urban Lahore. Samina Asma represents the sophisticated, modern edge of Punjabi fiction. Her work resists the polite silence of middle-class society by addressing female desire and the stifling nature of domesticity.

Manjit Tiwana and Daljeet Tiwana

Manjit Tiwana is known for bold, avant-garde poetry that deconstructs the ideal feminine image. Daljeet Tiwana portrays the resilience of women surviving in harsh, feudal agrarian societies.

The Latest Generation (2010s–2020s)

The latest generation (2010s–2020s) tackles intersectional battles, including Eco-Feminism and Dalit Consciousness. Nirupama Dutt champions the marginalised, specifically Dalit women and the urban poor. Ayesha Aslam highlights the systemic cruelty faced by women in feudal structures using a stream-of-consciousness style that captures century-old aches.

Hina Kalair: Digital Landscape

Hina Kalair explores the intersection of identity and the modern digital landscape under surveillance.

Forms of Resistance

Forms of resistance include: Linguistic writing in Punjabi to protest its exclusion from schools and offices. Using poetry to criticise military regimes, extremism, and class divides. Reclaiming folk heroines (like Heer) as symbols of autonomy. Connecting the degradation of the soil/water with the exploitation of women.

Continuing Legacy

Through the works of these women—from the trailblazing Amrita Pritam to modern guardians like Hajweri Bhatti—this legacy continues. Hajweri Bhatti is a scholar and poet whose work is characterised by its deep connection to the classical Punjabi Kafi and Sufi traditions. She uses the dignity and spiritual authority of that tradition to critique modern social injustice and inequality. Her resistance lies in the reclamation of the sacred. By using the language of the Sufis to address modern suffering, she suggests that the struggle for social justice is a spiritual imperative. She resists the modern erasure of roots, arguing that a society that forgets its language loses its moral compass.

Iffat Alvi: Modern Nazms

Iffat Alvi is known for her modern Nazms (poems) that explore the internal world of the contemporary woman. Her work is a resistance against the standardisation of the feminine experience. She writes about the woman navigating a rapidly changing, often hostile urban world, where the pressure to conform is both external (society) and internal (the digital landscape). Alvi’s resistance is existential. She explores the psychological chardivari—the mental four walls—that remain even after the physical ones have been breached. Her work is a refusal to be simplified or translated into a version of womanhood that is convenient for others.

The Punjabi language remains what it was born to be: the language of the heart, the language of survival, and the defiant shriek of the soil. Their verses march in the streets, a refusal to be silenced, and an enduring archive of the feminine spirit. From the communal grief of Amrita Pritam to the political underground of Nasreen Anjum Bhatti, and finally to the intellectual resilience of Hajweri Bhatti and Iffat Alvi, these women have ensured that the Punjabi language lives on.