Mufti sadruddin biography sample
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NEW DELHI :
‘Biographical Encyclopedia of Indian Muslim Freedom Fighters’ is an exhaustive work that brings to the fore many unknown facets of the freedom movement beginning with Faraizi Movement to 1857 Mutiny and to later part of the freedom movement.
BE it 1857 Mutiny or the later freedom movements, Muslims have played leading role in all such efforts. British officials and historians have accused Muslims for the 1857 Ghadar. To be true, both British historians and officials have named Muslims as the most important rebels and termed the Mutiny as a sinister plot by Muslim ulema and mujahideen to reclaim their lost powerhouse in India.
Here are excerpts from a chapter on Imam Baksh Sahbai, a great scholar of his time:
Imam Bakhsh Sahbai was one of the most renowned scholars of the 19th century Mughal India. He was among the best scholars of the Persian language and had earned respect as poet and litterateur of the Persian language. At a time when Urdu had almo
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The Most Prominent Six Figures of Deobandi Sunni School of Islam.
1. Muhammad Qasim Al-Nanawtawi
2. Rashid Ahmad Gangohi
3. Mahmud Hasan Deobandi
4. Ashraf Ali Thanawi
5. Anwar Shah Kashmiri
6. Muhammad Tayyib
2. Imam al-Rabbani Rashid Ahmad Gangohi…
One of the most renowned scholars of Hadith and FiqahHanafit, most influential jurist in the arena of Darul Uloom Deoband, teachers of eminent Deobandi Ulama and Spiritual Guide, among his writings is most popular Fatawa E Rashidiyah…
Imam Rabbani Mawlana Rashid Ahmad Gangohi was born on Monday, 6th Ziqa'da, A.H. 1242, at Gangoh, Dist Saharanpur, UP, India. In A. H. 1261, he went to Delhi and became a pupil of Mawlana Mamluk Ali Nanawtawi. It was here that he cultivated attachment with Hujjat al-Islam Imam Mohammad Qasim Al-Nanawtawi, which was maintained till the end. In Delhi he read some books of the rational sciences under the instruction of Mufti Sadruddin Azurdah also. At the end he lived
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Mirza Ghalib and his immortal shers
By : IANS | Updated at : 27 Dec 2017 05:22 PM (IST)
NEW DELHI: His white-bearded and tall fur hat sporting visage is among the those of a handful of global wordsmiths familiar bygd their very appearance - Shakespeare, Pushkin, Tagore, Tolstoy, et al even as he fryst vatten being forgotten in his homeland. This is rather unfortunate for Mirza Ghalib, whose fame was mostly posthumous and appeal transcends the Urdu he wrote in. A preeminent poet of Urdu and the only one along with Iqbal, to have specific sections of study and criticism named after him - Ghalibiyat and Iqbaliyat, Mirza Ghalib, whose 220th birth anniversary falls on Wednesday (December 27) remains an fjärrstyrd figure for most Indians -- especially in the 21st century. This fryst vatten despite a popular bio, TV series, a host of ghazals, and even appearance in at least one Bollywood song ("Ishq par zor nahin Ghalib ne kaha hai.." in "Ek Duje Ke Liye") and the occasional furore over prese