Tribute

Ahmed Wasi

From Behta Pani to Final Rest

A journey well-traveled from Shehr-e-Sukhan to Shehr-e-Khamoshan, the sudden demise of Ahmed Wasi marked a quiet ending to a singing life

By Abid Azhar | February 2026

وہ کرے بات تو ہر لفظ سے خشبو آئے
ایسی بولی وہی بولے جسے اُردو آئے

(احمد وصی)

At around 10:30 p.m. on January 18, a message from a friend informed that Ahmed Wasi (Bhai Jani) had passed away in Mumbai and that the burial would take place in his ancestral city, Sitapur.

There had been no prior news of illness, which made the shock sudden and deeply unsettling.

Once the initial numbness eased, I wrote to his son, Wasi Aqeel Zair (Nayyar), who lives in Muscat. His reply came the next morning. He had a flight booked for Mumbai on 15 January, unaware that circumstances would force him to travel two days earlier. He said that his father had been well until a fever developed two days earlier. When it worsened, his mother took him to the hospital, where low blood sugar was diagnosed, and he was admitted to the ICU. Within two hours, Ahmed Wasi passed away. A full and vibrant life came quietly to rest.

Nayyar later informed that he was travelling with the body to Lucknow and that burial would take place in Sitapur after Maghrib that evening.

Words failed me. Memories of Bhai Jani—his life, his voice, his presence—began to unfold like scenes from a film. In the days when letters still mattered, we remained in touch through correspondence. Letters, like many of us, have since faded away. In later years, news of him reached mainly through his son.

Bhai Jani was the eldest son of my paternal uncle, Syed Muhammad Athar Zair Sitapuri. Ahmed Wasi was one of eight siblings and, by a strange turn of fate, the last surviving among them. His grandmother had passed away when the children were young, and they were raised by a maternal aunt they affectionately called “Gaga,” who had no children of her own. To honour her late husband Wasi, Athar Zair named all his sons with “Wasi”—Ahmed Wasi, Raza Wasi, Abbas Wasi, Hasan Wasi, and Husain Wasi.

Ahmed Wasi earned a BA and a Law degree from Lucknow University and briefly practised law at his father’s insistence. Law, however, was never his calling. Poetry was. His work had already begun appearing in literary journals, and his dream was to write film lyrics set to O.P. Nayyar’s music. He once recalled watching “Udain Jab Jab Zulfain Teri”, filmed on Dilip Kumar, and telling his friends that one day his own lyrics would appear on screen with Nayyar’s music. They laughed then. Time proved otherwise.

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