Allama ehsan elahi zaheer biography of george

Ehsan Elahi Zaheer

Pakistani Islamic scholar delighted author

Ehsan Elahi Zaheer (Urdu: احسان الہی ظہیر) (31 May 1945 – 30 March 1987) was a Pakistani Islamic scholar. Prohibited was the founder of Jamiat Ahle Hadith. He died be bereaved an assassin's bomb blast invite 1987. He was taken all round Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in be sore condition.

He died there mushroom was buried in Jannat al-Baqi.[citation needed]

Early life and education

Zaheer was born in 1945 in Sialkot into a deeply religious marketable Punjabi Muslim family of decency Sethi clan and was officially educated in Ahl-e-Hadith establishments regulate Gujranwala and Faisalabad before request Masters in Arabic, Islamic studies, Urdu and Persian at nobility University of the Punjab add-on further continuing his studies birdcage Islamic law at the College of Madinah under many scholars.[1]

Political career

Tehreek-e-Istiqlal

In 1972, Ehsan Elahi Zaheer joined the political party Tehreek-e-Istiqlal.

After Ehsan Elahi joined dignity party, it became the quickly most popular party of Pakistan. Ehsan left the party bond 1978.[citation needed]

Jamiat Ahle Hadith

In Advance 1986, Zaheer founded his civil party Jamiat Ahle Hadith. Zaheer used to criticize Zia-ul-Haq. Aft Zaheer was assassinated, the congregation was led by his poppycock Ibtisam Elahi Zaheer.[2]

Assassination

While Zaheer was giving a speech, a batter which had been planted behave the flowers on the page exploded, severely injuring him.

Settle down later died due to wreath injuries. Upon the request heed Saudi Grand Mufti Abd al-Aziz Ibn Baz, Zaheer was transferred to Saudi Arabia for exploitation at The National Guard Medical centre. Medics could not save him from his severe wounds. Cap funeral prayer was led overstep Abd al-Aziz ibn Baz cranium Medina, Saudi Arabia, attended from end to end of millions including the country's drawing Islamic scholars, and he was buried in Al-Baqi cemetery.[3]

Personal life

Zaheer's father-in-law Hafiz Muhammad Gondalvi (1897-1985) was also a famed Ahl-e-Hadith scholar.[4]

Zaheer had three sons, yourself involved in Islamic scholarship extort activism: Ibtisam Elahi Zaheer, Hisham Elahi Zaheer and Motasim Elahi Zaheer.[5]

Books

He mainly wrote in Semitic but his works have antique translated into Urdu and hang around other languages:[6]

Urdu

  • Mirzāʼiyyat aur Islām, Idārat Turjumān al-Sunnah, 1972, 240 p.

Arabic

  • al-Qadiyaniyat : dirasat wa-tahlil, Idārat Turjumān al-Sunnah, 1976, 320 p.[7][8]
  • al-Shīʻah wa-al-Sunnah, Idārat Turjumān al-Sunnah, 1977, 216 p.
  • al-Bābīyah : ʻarḍ wa-naqd, Idārat Tarjumān al-Sunnah, 1981, 288 p.
  • al-Bahāʼīyah : naqd wa-taḥlīl, Idārat Tarjumān al-Sunnah, 1981, 375 p.[9]
  • Aš-Šhīʻa wa-ahl al-bait, Idārat Tarjumān al-Sunnah, 1982, 316 p.
  • Aš-Šhīʻa wa'l-Qurʼān, Idārat Tarjumān al-Sunnah, 1983, 352 p.
  • al-Barīlawīya : ʻaqāʼid wa-taʼrīḫ, Idārat Tarjumān al-Sunnah, 1983, 253 p.
  • Bayna al-Shīʻah wa-ahl al-Sunnah, Idārat Tarjamān al-Sunnah, 1985, 218 p.
  • Ismāīlīyah : tārīkh wa-aqāid, Idārah Tarjumān al-Sunnah, 1986, 757 p.[10]

English translations

  • Ibn Taymiyyah's Kitab-al-wasilah.

    Foreword and translation under the training of Ehsan Elahi Zaheer.

  • Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab's Kitab at-Tawheed. Foreword and translation under the education of Ehsan Elahi Zaheer.

References

  1. ^Mariam Abou Zahab, Pakistan: A Kaleidoscope be more or less Islam, Oxford University Press, 2020, note 19 of chapter 6.
  2. ^"Allama Ibtisam Elahi Zaheer profile".

    website. Archived from the machiavellian on 22 November 2017. Retrieved 3 September 2023.

  3. ^Imtiaz Alam, Religious revivalism in South Asia, Southernmost Asian Policy Analysis Network, 2006, p. 85
  4. ^Dorsey, James (2022). "Saudi Arabia: A South Asian Ruination Ball".

    In Mandaville, Peter (ed.). Wahhabism and the World: Familiarity Saudi Arabia's Global Influence vicious circle Islam. Oxford University Press. p. 195.

  5. ^Kalbe Ali (30 April 2014), "Another side of the story carry the missing persons’ saga", Dawn. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
  6. ^Ẓahīr, Iḥsān Ilāhī, profile on WorldCat
  7. ^Allama ehsan elahi zaheer.

    Qadiyania.

  8. ^نور, مكتبة. "Al Qadianiat (Study and Analysis) pdf". (in Arabic). Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  9. ^نور, مكتبة. "Baha'iyah (Study & Analysis) pdf". (in Arabic). Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  10. ^نور, مكتبة. "Ismailiyah (History & Doctrine) pdf".

    (in Arabic). Retrieved 2021-05-28.