Naat ( and ) is poetry in praise of the Islamic prophet, Muhammad. The practice is popular in South Asia (Bangladesh, Pakistan and India), commonly in Bengali, Punjabi, or Urdu. People who recite Naat are known as Naat Khawan or sanaa-khuaan. Exclusive "Praise to Allah" and Allah alone is called Hamd, not to be confused with 'Na'at'.
In Arab countries, lyrics and praises said for Muhammad are called madih nabawi.
One early author, Hassan, was known as Shair-e Darbaar-e Risalat. Before converting to Islam he was a poet, and after converting he started writing Na'ats in honor of Muhammad. His poetry defended Muhammad in response to rival poets who attacked him and his religion.
Tala al Badru Alayna is a traditional Islamic poem known as nasheed recited to Muhammad when he moved to Medina in 622 CE.
The tradition of composing naÿat poetry in Urdu has deep historical roots and is nearly as old as Urdu poetry itself. Since praising the Prophet Muhammad has long been regarded as a devotional and literary act, most classical Urdu poets composed at least a few couplets of naÿat, including Mir Taqi Mir, Momin Khan Momin, and Mirza Ghalib included devotional verses in their work. However, it was not until the first half of the nineteenth century that naÿat emerged as a distinct and recognized genre within Urdu poetry. The formal consolidation of naÿat as an independent genre is commonly attributed to Kifayat Ali Kafi, an Islamic scholar from Moradabad who was executed by the British in 1858 for his involvement in the Indian Rebellion of 1857. In the late nineteenth century, Mohsin Kakorvi and Ameer Meenai played a decisive role in refining naÿat poetry. Both poets published complete collections devoted exclusively to naÿat, a significant innovation at the time. Mohsin Kakorvi is often regarded as the first Urdu poet to dedicate his entire poetic output to the genre. Another major contributor to Urdu naÿat poetry was Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi.
The na'at genre initially lacked acceptance within formal literary circles after the 1947 Partition, poets and advocates gradually worked to establish it as a respected genre. Poets such as Hafiz Taib (Abdul Hafeez Minhas) and Muzaffar Warsi are credited with elevating na'at<nowiki/>'s literary stature, to the extend that former Marxist or liberal poets such as Ahmad Nadeem Qasmi, Arif Abdul Mateen and Sarshar Siddiqui often turned or returned to religion through na'at; institutions such as the Kul Pakistan Mehfil-e-Naat and PakistanâÂÂs first Naat College helped foster its practice and appreciation. Syed Riazuddin Soharwardi established PakistanâÂÂs first Naat College in 1980 to formalize training in na'at recitation, an initiative credited with training thousands of practitioners and helping embed na'at in religious events, school assemblies, and cultural activities.
During the era of General Zia-ul-Haq, state patronage played a significant role in promoting Naatia literature, with government support encouraging poets to produce and publish na'at works. Despite this, na'at recitation remained only an occasional practice in Parliament until December 2015, when it became a permanent feature of the National Assembly after Captain (retd) Muhammad Safdar of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz successfully moved a motion to amend parliamentary procedures; the motion was unanimously approved, expanding the opening recitations beyond Quranic verses alone. The practice has crossed ideological boundaries: in January 2021, Syed Ameer Ali Shah of the Pakistan Peoples Party took his oath in the Sindh Assembly by reciting a na'at. Na'at has also appeared in political rallies, notably through performances by Abrar-ul-Haq at events organized by Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf.
Historically, Na'at Khwani was largely associated with the Barelvi school of thought, while other Sunni groups and Shia performers practiced it without formally adopting the identity of Naat Khwan. This began to change with the emergence of Junaid Jamshed, whose na'at albums broadened acceptance of the genre across Sunni factions and even influenced religious seminaries to promote na'at recitation and produce recordings. A similar shift occurred when qawwal Amjad Sabri embraced the Naat Khwan identity, unlike earlier generations such as the Sabri Brothers, who were known exclusively as qawwals. As na'at crossed traditional boundaries and gained commercial and artistic legitimacy, singers and qawwals increasingly adopted the Naat Khwan designation, helping to remove earlier stigmas attached to the genre.
Commonly, the term naýat shareef () is reserved for poetry in the praise of Muhammad. In Arabic, na'at is usually called madih () or nasheed (), although the latter can describe any type of religious poetry.
Naat Valley is a non-commercial digital archive that catalogs approximately 12,000 naÿat compositions in Urdu, performed by over 400 naÿat khawans (reciters). Some famous anthologies include: