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Imad ud-din Lahiz (Urdu: عماد الدین لاہز) (1830–1900) was an Indian writer, preacher and Quranic translator, who converted to Christianity from Islam. Background [ edit ]
Khwaja Kamal-ud-Din was born in Punjab, India in 1870. His grandfather, Abdur Rashid, a poet, was at one time chief Muslim Judge of Lahore during the Sikh period. Kamal-ud-Din was educated at the Forman Christian College, Lahore where he was drawn to Christianity, but he was later exposed to the writings of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, the founder of the Ahmadiyya movement, and experienced a renewed ...
Sadr ud-Din (Urdu: صدر الدین, romanized: Ṣadr ud-Dīn; died 14–15 November 1971 [1]) was a Pakistani cleric who became the first missionary of the Ahmadiyya Anjuman Ishaat-i-Islam Lahore in the Shah Jahan Mosque of Woking in 1922.
An editorial in Pakistan's oldest newspaper Dawn, commenting on a report in The Guardian on Pakistani Textbooks, noted 'By propagating concepts such as jihad, the inferiority of non-Muslims, India's ingrained enmity with Pakistan, etc., the textbook board publications used by all government schools promote a mindset that is bigoted and ...
The first of the 10 volumes this work were published in 1940 by Zia ul Islam Press, Qadian. In the preface to the first volume, explaining need for a modern commentary, Mahmood Ahmad acknowledged the importance of the classical commentators like Ibn Kathir , Zamakhshari , Abu Hayyan etc. and the great service they rendered for the Quran, but ...
Begum Akhtar Riazuddin [b] SI, MA (English) also spelt Riaz-ud-din or Riaz-ud-deen (15 October 1928 – 11 January 2023) was a Pakistani feminist activist who was also the first modern Urdu-travelogue writer. [3] She received many awards in recognition of her efforts.
The U.S. hospice industry has quadrupled in size since 2000. Nearly half of all Medicare patients who die now do so as a hospice patient — twice as many as in 2000, government data shows.
Hakeem Noor-ud-Din was the youngest of seven brothers and two sisters and the 34th direct lineal male descent of Umar Ibn al-Khattab, the second caliph of Islam. [7] [non-primary source needed] The forebears of Maulana Noor-ud-Deen, on migration from Medina settled down in Balkh and became rulers of Kabul and Ghazni.