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Her mother Sajida Nomani (c. 1947 –) and father Mohammad Zafar Alam Nomani (born 1935–), an Indian nutritionist, were both born in colonial India. [ 6 ] [ 8 ] Her father was born in Hyderabad, India where he eared an MSc from the Osmania University , later serving as an assistant professor at the university till 1967.
Its publication in 1939 was a significant addition to the knowledge and history of Islamic literature. By extensive study of the subject, the author Nomani collected and collated facts which were lying buried in unpublished manuscripts in great libraries of Istanbul, Beirut, Alexandria, Paris, Berlin and London. The book inspired an ...
Bahadur Shah, Zafar (1775–1862) Imam Baksh Nasikh, Nasikh (1776–1838) Khwaja Haidar Ali Atish, Atish (1778–1846) Muhammad Ibrahim Khan, Zauq (1789–1854) Mirza Asadullah Khan Ghalib, Ghalib (1797–1869) Chhannu Lal Dilgeer, Ghulam Hussain (1780–1848)
Nomani was born on 4 June 1857 in Bindwal near Azamgarh into a Muslim Rajput family, his ancestor Sheoraj Singh being a Bais who accepted Islam many generations ago, [8] to Habibullah and Moqeema Khatoon. [9] He was named after Abu Bakr al-Shibli who was a Sufi saint and a disciple of Junayd Baghdadi. Later in life, he added "Nomani" to his ...
Abu Zafar Obaidullah, poet and civil servant; Abul Fazal, writer and educationist; Ahmed Sofa, poet, novelist, writer, critic, translator and intellectual; Ahsan Habib, cartoonist, writer and editor of satire magazine Unmad; Akhteruzzaman Elias, novelist and short-story writer; AKM Bazlul Karim, theater personality
Zafar Ahmad Usmani (also known as Zafar Ahmad Thanwi) (Arabic: ظفر أحمد العثماني) (4 October 1892 – 1974), was a 20th Century Sunni Muslim Jurist who became an influential figure of the Hanafi school of Sunni jurisprudence's Deobandi Movement. He also was a prominent Pakistan Movement activist. [1] [2]
The Aligarh movement produced a band of literary enthusiasts who had a far-reaching influence on Urdu literature. The chief among them were Shibli Nomani and Zakaullah Dehlvi who wrote on history, Chiragh Ali, Mohsin-ul-Mulk, and Waqar-ul-Mulk who wrote on literature. [33] Shibli Nomani is regarded as the father of modern history in Urdu. [34]
Mufti Abul Qasim Nomani (born: 14 January 1947) Salman Husaini Nadwi (born: 1954) Muhammad Sufyan Qasmi (born: 26 September 1954) Rawil Gaynetdin (born: 25 August 1959) Husein Kavazović (born: 3 July 1964) Muhammad Saad Kandhlawi (born: 10 May 1965) Shefqet Krasniqi (born: 1966) Mahfuzul Haque (born: 1969) Abu Yusuf Riyadh ul Haq (born: 1971)