Mukaghali Makatayev (, Mà «qaÃÂali Maqataev; February 9, 1931 â March 27, 1976) was a Kazakh poet, writer and translator. Muqagali Maqataev is put on a par with such pillars of Kazakh literature as Abai and Mukhtar Auezov. Fame and recognition came to him after his death. Maqataev lived a short but bright life, leaving to his descendants an extraordinary body of poetry full of national color.
Muqagali Suleimenovich Maqataev was born on February 9, 1931, in the village of Karasaz, Narynkol district, Almaty region, Kazakh SSR, at the foot of Khan Tengri. At first, his parents named him Mukhametkali, but then his mother considered that the prophet's name carried a great responsibility and began to call the child Mukagali. The boy's father Suleimen worked on the land. In 1940, he became the chairman of the collective farm, but the war interrupted peaceful life. Suleimen went to the front and died in battle. His mother, Nagiman, doted on her first child. When his father went to the front, the 10-year-old boy remained the main man in the family.
He graduated from school and began his career as a village council secretary, the head of the red yurt, an employee of the Komsomol organs, and a literary employee of the regional newspaper.
In 1952âÂÂ1969, he worked in a high school as a teacher of the Russian language, a speaker on the Kazakh Radio, an executive secretary of The Soviet Border () newspaper, a literary contributor to the newspapers Socialist Kazakhstan (, Sotsñalñstik Qazaqtan) and Culture and Life (, Mádenñet jáne Turmys) and the Star (, Juldyz) magazine. In 1970 he joined the Writers' Union of Kazakhstan. In 1973âÂÂ1974 he studied at the Moscow Institute of Arts and Letters.
Mukaghali Makatayev's poetic works were first published in 1948. He became famous with his poem ëAppassionataû (, 1962). The poems "Lenin" (, Lenñn; 1964) and "The Moor" (, Mavr; 1970) were devoted to Lenin and Marx. Poetry collections Hello Friends (, Armysyà Âdar dostar 1966), You came, my Swallow? (, Qarlyõashym keldià  be?; 1968), Alas, my heart (, Darñõa jurek; 1972), When swans asleep (, Aqqýlar uñyqtaõanda 1974), The warmth of life (, Shýaõym menià Â; 1975), Poem of Life (, ÃÂmir-dastan; 1976), River of Life (, ÃÂmir-ózen; 1978), Heart sings (, Jyrlañdy júrek; 1-2 Books, 1982), Sholpan (, Sholpan; 1984) and others entered the golden fund of the Kazakh national poetry. Prose works were included in the collection titled Two Swallows (, Qos qarlyõash; 1988). Many of Makatayev's poems were turned into songs.
Makatayev translated into the Kazakh language sonnets of William Shakespeare (1970), poems of Walt Whitman (1969), Dante's Divine Comedy (1971), and other literary works.
Mukaghali Makatayev died in Almaty on March 27, 1976, at the age of 45. In 1999 Mukaghali Makatayev was posthumously awarded the State Prize of the Republic of Kazakhstan for the collection of poems under the title ëAmanatû.