Ahmad Kamal Abdullah


Ahmad Kamal Abdullah is a Malaysian poet, novelist, playwright, literary critic writing in Malay. He is known under the pseudonym Kemala. He is a Malaysian National Laureate.

Brief biography

His father, Abdullah Hj. Daud was an alumnus of the Kuala Kangsar Malay College in which its admission was restricted to children of the elite class, while his paternal father was influential in the village as its main religious teacher and imam. His mother, Rukiah Amir, on the other hand was a well-versed storyteller and poet.
From 1958-1962, Kemala studied at Sultan Idris Teacher's College in Tanjung Malim. He left the field of teaching in 1968 to work as the Chief Editor for the Dewan Bahasa dan Pustakaleading several of its magazine publishings.
In 2000, he defended his thesis on Malay literature and received the title of PhD at the National University of Malaysia. He was a chief initiator of the International Poetic Readings in Kuala Lumpur and played a major role in the founding of the international Malay language writers organization Nusantara Melayu Raya, or NUMERA in 2012.
He is an honorary member of the Nusantara Society since 22 November 2017.

Literary career

He took an active part in the movement of "poetry of social protest" and also known as the author of the philosophical and love lyrics.
He continues the traditions of poetic-philosophical understanding of the world laid by the poet-mystic Hamzah Fansuri, developing them and introducing his own rhythms and colors. His verses, sometimes with a touch of religious mysticism, create an atmosphere of poetic meditation of a man who constantly is in amazement of the mysteries of life.
He is the author of poetic collections Meditasi, Serah Terima, Era, Kaktus-Kaktus, Ayn, Pelabuhan Putih, Titir Zikir, and Ziarah Tanah Kudup. His book Mim absorbed various creative motifs, including reflections on the poet's and his poetry's place and impressions of his trip to the Soviet Union a decade before on October 1989.

Criticism. Evaluation of creativity

Russian literary critic and researcher Anna Pogadaeva comments on the style of Ahmad Kamal's writing, stating that:
"His poems are musical, full of inner rhythm, he perfectly uses all the possibilities of the Malay language, extracting from it sometimes tender and sincere, sometimes ecstatic and explosive sounds, filling each line with movement and turning each verse into a living organism. The combination of feelings and visions permeated with a passionate love for God is the inexhaustible source of the poet's creative inspiration: it is a fusion of sounding image and music, avant-gardism and traditional Sufi motifs, as well as a rhythmic series of folklore forms."

Awards