In the 1940s, especially during the Second World War, after the fall of the dictatorship of Reza Shah in South Azerbaijan (1941), new horizons opened up for the literary movement. New struggling young writers, who joined the creative front, began to glorify this socio-political environment with their historical works. Balash Azeroglu's art, mastery, and poetic creativity as a whole became a reliable basis for the expansion of militant poetry, ie political lyricism, which emerged in the South, and for its vitality. People's poet, Balash Allahbakhish oglu Abizadeh, awarded the Order of Glory, was born on November 11, 1921 in Baku. His parents lived in the village of Salim in Ardabil, South Azerbaijan. However, as a result of unemployment in the South, they came to Baku to work.Balash Azeroglu lived for ten years (1938-1947) in the cities of Ardabil and Tabriz in South Azerbaijan, and took an active part in the revolutionary movement of 1941-1946. This played a key role in bringing political lyricism to the forefront of his work. In this revolutionary movement led by S.C. Peshawari, Azeroglu was both an ordinary soldier and an ardent singer and tireless propagandist of revolutionary ideas.