Dewan received his higher education at Wolfson College, University of Cambridge. Dewan was the Senior Treasurer of the CU (Cambridge University) Friends of the Earth; and active with the CU Greens and CU Mystical Society.[1]
Dewan was later elected a visiting research fellow of Queen Elizabeth House at the University of Oxford. At Cambridge, he won the Jennings Prize for obtaining the highest marks, as well as a distinction, in the Development Studies class.[3] At St. Stephen's he was awarded the L. Raghubir Singh History prize for ranking first in his class.
Career
Civil services
Dewan joined the IAS and was allotted the Jammu and Kashmir cadre.[1]
During his first posting as Sub-Divisional Magistrate in Basohli, he revived its school of miniature painting.[4]
Dewan was the Divisional commissioner of Kashmir from 2001 to 2003.[1] and also chairman of the state co-operative bank between 2002 – 2003. Dewan was also the resident commissioner of Jammu & Kashmir before he took charge as the chairman and managing director of India Tourism Development Corporation in 2006. The company recorded its three highest-ever profits under him, and declared the only three dividends that it has since 1997.[5]
Dewan was the Tourism Secretary of India (2012–14). He helped WoNoBo.com devise virtual walking tours of Indian cities, five in the first place, with almost fifty more to follow, making Incredible India the first national tourism authority anywhere to offer such a useful and entertaining facility.[6]
In October 2014 Dewan asked for and was granted voluntary, premature retirement, in order to concentrate on his career as a writer, especially to work on his South Asian encyclopaedia, Indpaedia.com.
Advisor (minister)
In 2016 Dewan was appointed Jammu and Kashmir's Advisor (i.e. cabinet minister) for twelve departments including Education, Tourism, Public Works, Culture, Health & Medical Education, Consumer Affairs, Information Technology, Youth Services and Sports. (In India ministers are elected politicians. However, sometimes when state governments are between elected governments they appoint career civil servants as ministers and call them Advisors to the Governor.)
Writer
Dewan translated the Hanuman Chalisa into English, written The Names of Allah, and brought out Jesus Christ Superstar in Urdu.[4] He has also converted Habba Khatun's songs into Urdu songs, set to the same tune.
Dewan is also the co-author of Tibet: fifty years after with Siddharth Shrivastava. Dalai Lama has written the foreword to this book. In the foreword, HE the Dalai lama advocates peace for Tibet and China, and states that violence is counter-productive and creates misery.[7] Dewan and Shrivastava visited Tibet after the 2008 failed uprising of Tibetans against the Chinese rule, & documented the population figures and the socio-political situation in the region.[8]
Dewan has researched into various caste and religious groups in India. He has focused on the biased projections that the media has created for minority religious and ethnic groups within the country—and tried to compare them with similar prejudices against internal ethnic groups in Pakistan (Punjabi and Urdu cinema; textbooks), the USA (including US cinema and TV), the UK, Turkey, Indonesia, Europe (French cinema; permission to wear religion-appropriate clothing) and Africa.[9]
Books
Dewan has published twenty books till date,[10] some of which are listed in the table below
S.No.
Year
Title
Publisher
ISBN
01
1987
Hiñdî-Urdû Phrasebook: A language Survival Kit
Lonely Planet, Australia
02
1989
The Civil Services: What they are all about and how to get in
As a college student Dewan was for three years the Campus Correspondent of The Hindustan Times Evening News. During the same period, for Youth Times [a Times of India publication] he reviewed music (mainly Western popular and classical) and did the Hodge Podge column under the pseudonym Ponga Muni.
Parvez Dewan seems to have that rare quality to poke fun at himself. On the author’s profile page of his latest book on Kashmir, this J&K IAS officer has candidly revealed some interesting facts about himself.
“Most of the publications that Parvez has written for have folded up (Youth Times, JS, The Hindustan Times Evening News, The Metropolitan on Saturday, Shama (Urdu) and such sections of The Times of India as he regularly contributed to)”, it mentions. “The venerable Illustrated Weekly of India wrote a long story about how Parvez created the Ladakh Festival in difficult circumstances. That was its last issue,”
it carries on.
At another point, it talks about two of his ‘libretti’ having been recorded as rock operas in Denmark, and a third telecast on Britain’s Channel Four, adding: "And none of the three was ever heard of again."
A fourth pop-opera, Sanober and the Slave has had somewhat better luck. In 2012 it spent more than three months at no. 1 on reverbnation.com's DK charts for Indie (Independent), thanks to the much acclaimed music of Kim Barner, his Danish partner in rhyme. The complete lyrics/ libretto/ book can be read at http://sanoberandtheslave.blogspot.com/; the complete musical with music and vocals can be heard at reverbnation.com/barner
Libretti/ lyrics
Dewan has written some libretti. The status of the pop-operas of which he has written the libretti (lyrics) and which were conceived by him is.[12]
S.No.
Year
Title
Music by
Status
01
1994
Jennifer Merchant
Kim Barner and Neils Holde (both of Denmark)
Romantic comedy, recorded on CD with Koda, Denmark
02
1984
Moscow Streets Are Wet
Not recorded
A paean to Moscow as it then was
03
1989
The Râmâyan (English)
John Robertson (ex- of The Rubettes, a once famous British Top Ten act)
Performed on Channel 4, UK
04
1989
The Râmâyan (Hindi-Urdu)
Not recorded
05
1987
The Mahâbhârat (English)
John Robertson, ex-of the Rubettes
Not recorded
06
1987
The Mahâbhârat (Hindi-Urdu)
Not recorded
07
1987
Narasimh (English only)
John Robertson
Not recorded
08
1987
Atharv
Not recorded
Hindi-Urdu version of Verdi's Otello
09
1995
Pawns
Not recorded
A tribute to the six European and American tourists taken hostage by the Pakistan-based 'Al Faran.'
10
1993
Jesus Christ Superstar
Reverent Hindi-Urdu lyrics set to Andrew Lloyd Webber's music
Not recorded
11
1987
The Odyssey
Kim Barner and Neils Holde
Rock opera version of the Homer classic; performed in Amsterdam
12
1996
Sanober and the Slave
Kim Barner
a fairy—in the old sense—tale
13
2005
Paar sarhad sey aaya hai yaar
Parvez Dewan
(Urdu; an album-length song about two hitherto, but not necessarily, doomed lovers—Dewan's motherland and its western neighbour) Performed at WISCOMP's Indo-Pak workshops in 2005 (with music) and 2012 (recited)
14
1998
Dastan e Habba
Original Kashmiri lyrics and music by Habba Khatoon
Five songs by Habba Khatoon rendered into Urdu and performed at Lady Sri Ram College, Delhi