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Amtul Hafeez Begum, daughter of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad. She laid the foundation stone for the Mahmud Mosque, the first mosque in the country. On her right is Mushtaq Ahmad Bajwa, a missionary. The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community of Switzerland was founded in the year 1946, following the Second World War.
Qamar Ajnalvi was married to Begum Amtul Hafeez on 31 December 1944. They had 3 sons together. Works. He also wrote several Pakistani Urdu movie scripts which include: Maan Baap, Laila Majnoo, Buzdil, Dillan wich Rab wasda, and Mein Ney Kia Jurm Kia. He also wrote dialogue for the movie Anarkali and several others.
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad [a] (13 February 1835 – 26 May 1908) was an Indian religious leader and the founder of the Ahmadiyya movement in Islam.He claimed to have been divinely appointed as the promised Messiah and Mahdī—which is the metaphorical second-coming of Jesus (mathīl-iʿIsā), in fulfillment of the Islamic prophecies regarding the end times, as well as the Mujaddid (centennial ...
Sayyeda Nusrat Jahan Begum (1865–1952), [1] and Hazrat Amman Jan ‘Beloved Mother' within the Ahmadiyya Community, was the second wife of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad and the daughter of Mir Nasir Nawab of Delhi.
Amin al-Hafiz was born in 1921 in a Sunni Arab family, the son of a police officer from the city of Aleppo.When he was young, like other students, he threw stones at the French colonial authorities during the French mandate of Syria.
The countries in which the French Wikipedia is the most popular language version of Wikipedia are shown in dark blue. Page views by country over time on the French Wikipedia. The audience measurement company Médiamétrie questioned a sample of 8,500 users residing in France with access to Internet at home or at their place of work.
Abdul Hafeez Mirza (2 October 1939 – 17 November 2021) was a Pakistani tourism worker, cultural activist and educationist. He worked as general manager at Tourism Development Corporation Punjab (TDCP), [ 1 ] and served as a consultant for Tourism Corporation Khyber Pakhtunkwha (TCKP), known at the time as Sarhad Tourism Development Corporation.
Mahmood Ahmad married seven times, never having more than four wives at a time in accordance with Islamic teachings. He had a total of twenty-eight children from these wives, five of whom died in infancy. Through his marriage with Amtul Hai in 1914, he also became the son-in-law of Hakim Noor-ud-Din, the first caliph of the Ahmadiyya movement. [66]