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・ Zulfiqar Ali Bhatti
・ Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Agricultural College
・ Zulfiqar Ali Bukhari
・ Zulfiqar Ali Khan
・ Zulfiqar Ali Khosa
・ Zulfiqar Ali Shah Jamote
・ Zulfiqar Babar
・ Zulfiqar Gilani
・ Zulfiqar Jan
・ Zulfiqar Khan Nusrat Jung
・ Zulfiqar Mirza
・ Zulfiqar Shah
・ Zulfiqarabad
・ Zulfiqer Russell
・ Zulfiya
Zulfiya (poet)
・ Zulfiya Chinshanlo
・ Zulfiya Zabirova
・ Zulfiyya Khanbabayeva
・ Zulfu Adigozalov
・ Zulfugar Hajibeyov
・ Zulgo-Gemzek language
・ Zulhadi Omar
・ Zulham Zamrun
・ Zulhasnan Rafique
・ Zulhelmi Pisol
・ Zulhijjah Binti Azan
・ Zulia
・ Zulia (disambiguation)
・ Zulia Calatayud


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Zulfiya (poet) : ウィキペディア英語版
Zulfiya (poet)

Zulfiya (in Cyrillic ', full name Zulfiya Isroilova, 1915–1996, Tashkent) was an Uzbek writer. Her name Zulfiya originates from the Persian word ''zulf'' meaning 'a curl of hair' and '(in a mystic sense) the divine mysteries forming the delight of the devotee'.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.namepedia.org/en/firstname/Zulfia/ )
Zulfiya was descended from a family of craftsmen in Tashkent. Her first poem was published 17 July 1931 in the Uzbek newspaper ''Ishchi'' (The Worker). Her first collection of poetry (''Hayot varaqlari'', "Pages of Life") was published in 1932. In the following decades she wrote patriotic works as well as propaganda, pacifist works, and works on nature and women's topics.
From 1938 on, Zulfiya worked for various publishers and was a member of several national and interrepublican organizations. She repeatedly was a leader or chief editor for various media. After the death of her husband Hamid Olimjon in an accident in 1944, she dedicated to him several works. In 1953 she joined the Communist Party and also became the editor of ''Saodat'' magazine. In 1956, she was part of a delegation of Soviet writers led by Konstantin Simonov to the Asian Writers' Conference in Delhi. In 1957 she participated in the Asian-African Solidarity Conference in Cairo.
Zulfiya became the National Poet (1965) and was named a "Hero of Socialist Labor" (1984). In 1976 she won the USSR State Prize in literature and art.
In 1999, the Uzbek National Award for Women was created and named after her.
==References==


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