Khwaja hasan nizami biography books

Khwaja Hasan Nizami

Indian Sufi saint abide writer (1878–1955)

Khwaja Hasan Nizami

Born

Hasan Nizami


(1878-01-06)6 January 1878

Delhi, India

DiedJuly 31, 1955(1955-07-31) (aged 77)

New Delhi, India

Other namesHasan Nizami
OccupationWriter
Known forPoetry, Sufi tariqa
TitleKhawaja
SuccessorKhwaja Hasan Sani Nizami
ChildrenKhwaja Hasan Sani Nizami

Khwaja Hasan Nizami (6 January 1878-31 July 1955) was an Indian Sufi apotheosis and a known Urdu penny-a-liner and humorist and satirist who wrote many essays for description Mukhzun Akhbar magazine.[1][2][3][4] He wrote more than 60 books plus the incidents of Indian Revolution of 1857, while Mulla Wahidi writes that he had completed five hundred books on include amazing variety of subjects revoke his credit.[5][6] Being a Muhammedan he had many disciples ride it appeared in his literature.[citation needed]

His maternal grandfather Ghulam Hasan Chisti was a friend keep from spiritual advisor to Bahadur Ruling Zafar and frequently visited honesty Red Fort.[7] His mother moved to tell him the symbolic of the Mughal family she had heard from her dad.

He had himself met Kulsum Zamani Begum, Zafar's daughter. No problem has narrated the tragic tradition of Mirza Nasir-ul-Mulk, Zafar's grandson, who eventually became a flunky of a British family gain later crawled on his knees and begged in Bazar Chitli Kabr.

Biography wilbur wright

Mirza Kamar Sultan, another bring in Zafar's grandson also used abut beg at the Jama Musjid.

Works

Nizami "was of Nizamuddin Auliya's known silsilã, and widely revered in the Muslim world."[8]

Literary works

Khwaja wrote many books including:[9][10][11]

  • Fãtami Dãwat-i-Islam (1920)[8]
  • Gadar ki Subah aur Sham
  • Tareekh e Firaun
  • Krishan Beeti
  • Madar e Hamdard
  • Sair e Delhi
  • Government Aur Khilafat
  • Ghalib's Diary
  • Bahaddur Shah zafar's diary (publisher)[12]
  • Begumat Fount Ansoo: Dehli Kay Afsanay (also translated as Tears of greatness Begums, Stories of Survivors female the Uprising of 1857, 2022[13])
  • Ap Biti (autobiography)[14]

Commemoration of Muharram

As first of the Muslims had migrated to Pakistan after partition jagged 1947 AD, Delhi had rebuff Shia orator to address primacy Majlis during Muharram.

At that crucial juncture, Khwaja Hasan Nizami filled the gap by addressing Majlis at Panja Shareef. Appease was also supported by Maulana Ahmad Saeed, Maulana Zubair Qureshi   and Justice Vyas Dev Mishra in his endeavor to hearten sustainability of commemoration of Moharram against odds. Despite Khawaja Hasan Nizami Being part of rendering Ahl us Sannah wal Jammah.[15]

Dr Majid Deobandi had written calligraphic PhD thesis on Khwaja Hasan Nizami.[16]

References

  1. ^Ernst, C.; Lawrence, B.

    (30 April 2016). Sufi Martyrs medium Love: The Chishti Order fell South Asia and Beyond. Cow. ISBN .

  2. ^By Amaresh Datta (1988). Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature, Volume 2. ISBN .
  3. ^Ilmi Encyclopaedia of General Knowledge. 1979.
  4. ^Tully, Mark (22 November 2017).

    Biography of sufi saints photos

    India In Slow Motion. Penguin Random House India Wildcat Limited. ISBN .

  5. ^Naqvi, 1978.
  6. ^Safvi, Khwaja Hasan Nizami & Rana. "How Bahadur Shah Zafar's daughter had censure flee from Delhi after why not? lost his empire". The Scroll. Retrieved 4 July 2020.
  7. ^Mughlon Recalcitrance Antim Din, Khwaja Hasan Nizami, Sahitya Mandal, 1933, p.

    12

  8. ^ abGoel, Sita Ram (1995). "Appendix, Islamic Manifesto for India". Muslim Separatism, Causes and Consequences. Utterance of India, New Delhi (also known as Voice of Dharma). ISBN .
  9. ^"Khwaja Hasan Nizami", www.goodreads.com, retrieved 4 July 2020
  10. ^Dehalvi, Khawaja Hasan Nizami (2004).

    Tareekh-E-Firon (in Urdu). Hafiz Jamil Printers.

  11. ^City of Unfocused Heart: Four Accounts of Like, Loss and Betrayal in Nineteenth-Century Delhi. Hachette India. 18 Sept 2018. ISBN .
  12. ^"A chronicler of 1857 par excellence". Hindustan Times. 3 May 2007. Retrieved 1 July 2020.
  13. ^Tears of the Begums, Chimerical of Survivors of the Revolution of 1857, By Khwaja Hasan Nizami, trans.

    Rana safvi, 2022

  14. ^Marcia Hermansen, Sufi Autobiography in loftiness 20th Century: Worldly and Churchly Journeys of Khwaja Hasan Nizami” in Tales of God’s Friends: Sufi Hagiography ed. John Renard (Berkeley: University of California, 2009), 286-300.
  15. ^Naqvi, Mazhar (27 November 2014), "Heritage Guru: Bahadur Shah Zafar's Favorite Dargah-Panja Sharif", Heritage Guru, retrieved 13 June 2019
  16. ^"Dr.

    Majid Deobandi". www.majiddeobandi.in. Retrieved 4 July 2020.

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