Muhammad Akram Ghanimat Kunjahi (died ) was a Punjabi poet of Persian language and Sufi in the Mughal Empire.
Little is known about his life with certainty, except that he descended from a family of muftis originating from the village of Kunjah, in Gujrat District. He was a disciple of Sayyid Muhammad Salih, himself a favourite disciple of Naushah Ganj Bakhsh, a well known saint associated with QÃÂdiriyya Sufi order. He is reported to have travelled to Kashmir, Kabul and Delhi. The date of death of Kunjahi is not known: but since he praises Farrukhsiyar (enthroned 1713) in his GolzÃÂr-e moḥabbat and his death is mentioned in his nephew Moḥammad MÃÂh á¹¢edÃÂqat-e KonjÃÂhë's á¹®awÃÂqeb al-manÃÂqeb (written 1714), he probably died towards the end of 1713. He is buried in his native village of Kunjah.
Kunjahi wrote in Persian using the sabk-i hindë style, characterized by a fondness for the ghazal form and an interest in realistic and sometimes erotic themes. His works reflected complex imagery, themes, and syntax. Notable works of Kunjahi include a Dëvan consisting of 233 ghazals and 12 robÃÂÿës; GolzÃÂr-e moḥabbat, a mathnawi of 591 lines and the Nayrang-i ÿishḳ ('Talisman of Love'), a sentimental and romantic mathnawë of 1500 lines set in Punjab during Kunjahi's time.
Nayrang-i ÿishḳ was written in 1685, and was highly esteemed in India. The poem starts with the formal praise to the land of Punjab where the story is set. It then tells the tale of love between prince Aziz and a dancer named Shahid. The poem was translated into several languages in the subsequent centuries. Notable translations include that of Abd al-Hamid Mohmand (in Pashto), Bhagwant Rai RÃÂhat (in Urdu) and Mian Muhammad Bakhsh (in Punjabi).
In popular local memory, Kunjahi was remembered as a miracle worker associated with improving mental faculties, curing insanity, and aiding aspiring poets. His tomb was revered for its alleged powers, and it became a site for interring other poets, including Shareef Kunjahi. The Bazm-i-Ghanimat literary organization in Pakistan was named after him.