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Nurul Islam Faruqi (Bengali: নুরুল ইসলাম ফারুকী) was a Bangladeshi Islamic scholar, businessman, politician and preacher. He was killed by unknown assailants in 2014. He was killed by unknown assailants in 2014.
Hamiduddin Farahi (18 November 1863 – 11 November 1930) was an Indian Islamic scholar known for his work on the concept of nazm, or coherence, in the Quran. [2] [3] The modernist Farahi school is named after him.
Written originally in Arabic, the book Izhar ul-Haqq in six volumes was translated later into Urdu, and from Urdu into a summarized English version [12] published by Ta-Ha. The book aims to respond to Christian criticism of Islam. It is the first Muslim book to use Western scholarly works in order to ascertain the errors and contradictions of ...
Sanaullah Amritsari's ancestors hailed from Doru Shahabad, a town in Jammu and Kashmir.He was born in 1868 in Amritsar, where his father had settled permanently. [2] He received his early education at Madrasa Ta'īd al-Islām in Amritsar, [3] and later moved to Wazirabad to study hadith under Abdul Mannan Wazirabadi. [4]
Darul Uloom Deoband. Darul Uloom Deoband is an Islamic seminary (darul uloom) in Deoband, Uttar Pradesh, India, at which the Sunni Deobandi Islamic movement began. Established in 1866 by Muhammad Qasim Nanautavi, Fazlur Rahman Usmani, Sayyid Muhammad Abid and others in 1866, it is one of the most important Islamic seminaries in India and the largest in the world. [1]
Jamiat Ahle Hadith Pakistan [2] (Urdu: جمیعت اہلِ حدیث پاکستان, Arabic: جمعية اهل حديث الباكستان) is a religious organization and political party in Pakistan. It was founded in 1947 by Maulana Dawood Ghaznavi and Muhammad Ibrahim Mir Sialkoti.
Syed Arif Hussain Al Hussaini (Urdu: علامہ عارف حسين الحسينى; 25 November 1946 – 5 August 1988) was an Twelver Shīʿā Muslim scholar, Islamist ideologue, Islamic Jurist, and Islamic Revolutionist Political leader of Shia Muslims in Pakistan.
Mirzā Mazhar Jān-i Jānān (Urdu: مرزا مظہر جانِ جاناں), also known by his laqab Shamsuddīn Habībullāh (13 March 1699 – 6 January 1781), was a renowned Hanafi Maturidi Naqshbandī Sufi poet of Delhi, distinguished as one of the "four pillars of Urdu poetry."