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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.
Nurul Islam Farooqi (died 2014) Nurul Islam Jihadi (1948–2021) Nurul Islam Olipuri (born 1955) Obaidul Haque (1934–2008) Obaidullah Hamzah (born 1972) Ruhul Amin (born 1962) Sayed Muhammad Amimul Ehasan Barkati (1911–1974) Syed Najibul Bashar Maizbhandari (born 1959) Syed Rashid Ahmed Jaunpuri (1889–2001) Sajidur Rahman (born 1964)
Nurul Islam Farooqi (1959-2014) Abdur Rahman Chatgami (1920-2015) Muhiuddin Khan (1935-2016) Abdul Jabbar Jahanabadi (1937-2016) Abdul Haq Azmi (1928-30 December 2016) Yunus Jaunpuri (1937-2017) Muhammad Salim Qasmi (8 January 1926-14 April 2018) Akhtar Raza Khan (1943-2018) Tafazzul Haque Habiganji (1938-2020) Saeed Ahmad Palanpuri (1940-19 ...
Shaykh Ul Islam's grandfather was Qazi Sirajuddin II, then Qazi of Kandhar and his grandmother was Fatima [citation needed] [1]. As the name implies, Imam Muhammad Anwaarullah Farooqui is a descendant of the second Caliph of Islam,‘Umar Al Farooq through his ancestors who descend from Shaykh Badruddin Sulaiman, the eldest son of Shaykh Fariduddin Ganjshakar.
Nurul Islam Manzur (1936–2020), Bangladeshi politician and former State Minister of Communication A. B. Muhammad Nurul Islam (1937–2020), Bangladeshi politician Nurul Islam (born 1938), Bangladeshi Minister of Expatriates' Welfare and Overseas Employment (2015–2018)
Nur Qutb Alam was born in the city of Hazrat Pandua to a Bengali Muslim family descended from Khalid ibn al-Walid, an Arab commander and companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, who belonged to the Banu Makhzum clan of Quraysh. [2]
According to James Wise and Hidayet Hosain, Shariatullah came back to Bengal from Arabia as a skilled scholar of Islam and Arabic. [citation needed] Upon his return, he had a long beard and wore a turban at all times. When he first visited his uncle Azim al-Din's house in Shamail, no one was able to identify him for his change in appearance. [7]
Sultan Zauq Nadvi was born in Cox's Bazar, Bengal Presidency, in 1939. [1] He belonged to a Bengali Muslim family from Jagiraghona Mahalla, Maheshkhali, Chittagong District.