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Topic: Mir Muhammad Jamal Khan


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  MUHAMMAD JAMAL KHAN, MIR
Major General, Hilal-e-Pakistan, Hilal-e-Juraet, Ghazi-e-Millat, the President and Personal Representative of the Imam in Central Asia, Muhammad Jamal Khan was the prominent Ismaili ruler of an enchanting valley of Hunza, situated in the remotest northern corner of Pakistan bordering with China and Russia.
Muhammad Jamal, the ruler or the Mir of Hunza was born on September 23, 1912.
The Mir of Hunza lived in a newly built modern styled two-storied palatial castle, known as the “Jamal Palace” situated on a 8000 ft. high mountain peak in the village of Karimabad, the state capital.
ismaili.net /Source/mumtaz/Heroes1/hero077.html   (1089 words)

  
 Science Fair Projects - Mir Muhammad Jamal Khan
Mir Muhammad Jamal Khan (1912-76) was the last ruler or Mir of Hunza of the former princely state, known as Hunza.
After a mass movement in Gojal, Brushal and Shinaki (parts of Hunza) the despotic 950 years’ Mir rule in Hunza came to an end in 1974, when Z. Bhutto, the Prime Minister of Pakistan abolished the state and annexed it to the Northern Areas of Pakistan under the federal government.
Two years after his dismissel from power, Muhammad Jamal Khan expired as a common citizen of Pakistan on March 18, 1976 at his residence in Karim Abad the former capital of Hunza.
www.all-science-fair-projects.com /science_fair_projects_encyclopedia/Mir_Muhammad_Jamal_Khan   (377 words)

  
 Mir (ruler) - Iridis Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Mir is a Persian word, synonymous to emir, and it means leader of a group or tribe.
The ruler of Hunza was known as Mir of Hunza until 1974, when the state was abolished and it became a part of the Northern Areas of Pakistan under the federal government.
The use of the so-called title Mir of Hunza is no more legal in the country, because Hunza is no more a state but a part of the state of Pakistan and there can't be a state within the state.
www.iridis.com /Mir_(ruler)   (166 words)

  
 Mir of Hunza - free-definition   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Mir is a Persian word, which means leader of a group or tribe.
The rulers of Hunza used the word “Mir” with their names during their 950 years of despotic rule.
Mir Muhammad Jamal Khan was the last Mir of Hunza.
www.free-definition.com /Mir-of-Hunza.html   (186 words)

  
 Jamal Effendi and the early spread of the Baha'i Faith in Asia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
‘Abdu'l-Bahá indicates that Sulaymán Khan was brought up "cradled in wealth, bred to ease, reared in the comfortable ways of luxury."[8] In his youth, he was married to the daughter of his maternal uncle Hidáyat Khan.
Among these was Sayyid Mahdí himself, Áqá Muhammad Qásim Shírází, and members of the Kázirúní family (all Shi`is), Mawlaví 'Abdu's-Subhán Qurayshí (originally of Bijnaur in India) and a large number of his relatives and Qádir Khan Hakím (all Sunnís), Madurai Namassavaya Pillay (a Hindu, who took the name Jamálu'l-Haq), and `Alí Bhogah (a Khoja).
Jamál Effendi instructed Rúmí that when Mírzá Muhammad `Alí emerged from the inner rooms, Rúmí should "bow reverently before him and fall prostrate at his holy feet."[31] When Mírzá Muhammad `Alí appeared, however, Rúmí only bowed before him to the extent that good manners dictated and did not prostrate himself.
bahai-library.com /bsr/bsr09/9B2_momen_jamal.htm   (6224 words)

  
 THE BEGINNING AND SPREADING OF WAHHABISM
In 1143 (1730), Muhammad ibn Sa'ud and Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab hand in hand arrived at the conclusion that those who would not accept Wahhabism were disbelievers and polytheists, and that it was halal to kill them and confiscate their possessions, and publicly announced their declaration seven years later.
According to Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab, all the Muslims had died as disbelievers or polytheists since 500 A.H. (1106); the true Islam was revealed to him, and it was not permissible to bury those who became Wahhabis near the graves of polytheists, by which he referred to the real Muslims.
Muhammad 'Ali Pasha, who deemed it a very important duty to clear the blessed cities in Arabia of the bandits, struggled hard to achieve this goal and expended innumerable gold coins for this cause.
www.sufi.it /Islam/wahlast.htm   (19821 words)

  
 Life Story of Maulana Muhammad Ali - Part 3: Life at Lahore: 1. Founding of the Ahmadiyya Anjuman Isha`at Islam Lahore
Vice-Presidents: Maulvi Ghulam Hasan Khan of Peshawar, Shaikh Niaz Ahmad of Wazirabad, Khan Ajab Khan of North-West Frontier Province.
Maulana Muhammad Ali was elected as the Head (amir) of the community and President, and the other office bearers retained their positions as mentioned earlier except that in Shaikh Rahmatullah’s place Dr. Syed Muhammad Husain Shah became Financial Secretary.
Maulana Muhammad Ali never publicly referred to any of his revelations, and this is probably the only instance that he directly mentioned a revelation of his in a publication.
www.muslim.org /books/m-kabir/mjk3-1.htm   (6837 words)

  
 Hazrat Mian Mir is a great pir
According to a document that has been said to be correct by the relatives of Hazrat Mian Mir and by trustworthy people and notables in Sehwan and which was shown by the son of his brother Mohammed, he was born in the year 957/1550.
Hazrat Mian Mir transformed him completely within a week and thus he was able to reach a high position in the spiritual domain.
Hazrat Mian Mir experienced the passing a way of shaykh Nattha as a void in his life and he grieved intensely over the death of his favourite mureed.
www.chishti.ru /hazratmianmir.htm   (4473 words)

  
 Mission in Gilgit and Hunza
Later on, Mir Ayesho Khan II assumed the power and married to Shah Khatoon, the daughter of Abdal Khan of Skardu and Baltistan.
Mir Saleem Khan II is reported to have embraced Ismailism by the hands of a certain Ismaili dai of Badakhshan, called Sayed Shah Ardbil.
Mir Ghazanfar Ali Khan died in 1281/1864 and was succeeded by his son, Mir Muhammad Ghazan Khan I, whose successor Mir Safdar Ali Khan had to take refuge in Shagnan during the British invasion in 1308/1891.
ismaili.net /histoire/history08/history804.html   (698 words)

  
 Sayyid Ahmad Khan (1817-1898/1232-1316)
Born in the twilight of the Mughal Era in the Indian subcontinent to a distinguished family, Sayyid Ahmad Khan is the eldest of the five prominent Muslim modernists whose influence on Islamic thought and polity was to shape and define Muslim responses to modernism in the latter half of the nineteenth century.
Ahmad Khan was the secretary of the Society as well as member of the Directing Council and the Executive Council.
Ahmad Khan wanted to establish a “vernacular university” for the N.W. Provinces but he was discouraged by the champions of Hindi who wanted such a university to teach in Hindi, rather than Urdu.
www.cis-ca.org /voices/k/syydkhn-mn.htm   (3389 words)

  
 Muhammad Ahmed Khan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
During the period of operations against India, Flt.Lt. Muhammad Ahmed Khan flew 47 sorties evacuating casualties from the forward areas and airlifting arms and ammunition for the troops in the front line.
Muhammad Ahmed Khan displayed a keen sense of duty and considerable enthusiasm in making his contribution to the war effort.
During the war, he displayed outstanding qualities of courage and keenness to undertake the most arduous missions from the very onset of operations.
www.pafmuseum.com.pk /contents/ga65makhan.htm   (175 words)

  
 General Pervez Musharraf - About Pakistans: National Awards
Muhammad Ziarat Khan who belonged to the Northern Areas was the 1st Leprosy Technician to belong to this region who spent a lifetime serving the people of these areas.
Muhammad Sultan Faroodqui, President, College of Physicians and Surgeons of Pakistan (CPSP) has taken CPSP to new heights and contributed in terms of meeting the human resource challenge in postgraduate medical education in the country.
Khan is the principal architect of the Fiscal Responsibility and Debt Limitation Law, designed to inject financial discipline in the country.
www.presidentofpakistan.gov.pk /NationalAwards.aspx   (11884 words)

  
 Narrative of Mulla Muhammad Shafi` Nayrizi   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
At the dead of the night, the Khan and his gunmen entered Nayriz and took position at the governor's mansion in the Bazar quarter, which is a fortified stronghold with towers and turrets overlooking the other dwellings, and began to reinforce the walls.
Meanwhile several of the Khan's gunmen, lead by the notorious Mulla Hasan, [son of] Mulla 'Ali-Muhammad, succeeded in gaining and concealing themselves in one of the minarets of that masjid before the arrival of the Army of God and from there opened fire upon the believers.
Three of the men, Mulla Muhammad, Haji Qasim and Husayn, son of Ali-Naqi, proceeded to Tihran [to express their grievances], and during the upheaval after the assassination attempt on the monarch and martyrdom of Sulayman Khan, two of the them were martyred.
bahai-library.com /histories/nayriz.html   (14856 words)

  
 Barak6   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Sardar Muhammad Hassan Khan, third son of her uncle, Sardar Gul Muhammad Khan, by his third wife, Sangeen Bibi.
General H.E. Sardar Muhammad Akbar Khan, eldest son of her uncle, Sardar Gul Muhammad Khan, by his third wife, Sangeen Bibi.
Muhammad Akbar Khan Etemadi, son of H.E. Muhammad Haidar Khan Etemadi, sometime Governor of Kataghan and Dep.
4dw.net /royalark/Afghanistan/barak6.htm   (2457 words)

  
 Barak5   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Mir Ahmad Khan, younger son of her uncle, Said Ahmad Khan.
Muhammad Aziz Khan, second son of her paternal uncle, 'Abdu'l Baqi Khan.
Hajira Begum, elder daughter of Sardar Muhammad Ismail Khan, sometime Afghan Envoy to India, by his wife, Jahan Tab Begum, daughter of H.E. Sardar Aminu'llah Khan, Amin ud-Daula.
4dw.net /royalark/Afghanistan/barak5.htm   (1595 words)

  
 Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative •• Türk Öykürleri Sandığı
The khans themselves adhered to their traditional beliefs, Shamanism and, according to at least one source, of Tengri, the monotheistic pre-Islamic religion of the Turks.
Abul-Ghazi Bahadur Khan (1603-1663), ruler of Khiva, was asked by his Turkmen subjects (which constituted a large portion of the population) to compile the authoritative genealogy of their common lineage from many extant written variants.
Jamal Ad-Din al-Afghani (1839-1897) established the movement in its political form, striving to achieve the political unity of Muslims to fight against colonialism and the colonial powers.
aton.ttu.edu /komatsu.asp   (14672 words)

  
 Jamal Ahmad Khan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
During the Indo-Pakistan War, Squadron Leader Jamal Ahmed Khan flew 29 Air Defence missions and one Photo Mission.
He was one of two pilots who were credited with the shooting down of a Canberra aircraft.
For his exceptional devotion to duty and courage, Squadron Leader Jamal Ahmed Khan was awarded Sitara-i-Juraat.
www.pafmuseum.com.pk /contents/ga65jakhan.htm   (106 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Lantern ANP 4 Iftikhar Ahmad Khan Village and P.O. Jhanda, Tehsil and Distt Swabi NA-13 Swabi-II 1 Asad Qaisar Mafghuz Swabi Bat PTI 2 Iftikhar Ahmad Khan Jhanda,Swabi Tiger PML-N 3 Prof.
Muhammad Khurshid Zaman Zaman House, G.T. Road Gujar Khan, Rawalpindi Tiger PML-N 4 Raja Pervaiz Ashraf Mohri Rajgan Dakhli, Kountrila PO Kountrila Tehsil Gujar Khan, Rawalpindi., Arrow PPPP 5 Ch.
Arrow PPPP NA- 168 VEHARI-II 1 Ishaq Khan Khakwani Chak No.27/WB Tehsil and District Vehari.
www.hrcpelectoralwatch.org /na.txt   (9063 words)

  
 Middle Eastern Manuscripts
Kitab al-Dar al-Mukhtar fi Sharh Tanivir al-Absar by Muhammad Ala al-Din Usi al-Shaykh Ali (Ibn Timurtash?).
A compendium of Islamic law according to the Hanafi school, by Muhammad bin Muhammad Ida. ff.173.
A story by John Horace Ford which was told by Rustam Ali at the court of the Mogul Muhammad Shah.
vm.arts.unimelb.edu.au /report/mesmlist.htm   (1027 words)

  
 Al Islam - Islamic Books Library
Muhammad in The Bible by Dr. Khalil Ahmad Nasir
Buzurgan-e-Ummat ke Nazdeek Khatam-e-Nubuwwat ki Haqeeqat (Urdu) by Qazi Muhammad Nazir
Hadhrat Sahibzada Syed Muhammad Abdul Latif Shaheed (Urdu) By Syed Mir Masood Ahmad
www.alislam.org /books   (642 words)

  
 Jamal Surname (Last Name)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Common misspellings and typos for the surname Jamal
Jamall, Jaml, Jamaal, Jaaml, Jaamal, Jama, amal, Jammal, Jmaal, aJmal, Jmal, JJamal, Jaal, Jamla.
This page is part of The Names Database at NamesDatabase.com, which is a service that helps people in over two hundred (200) countries find old friends, discover new family, reunite with high school classmates, and more.
static.namesdatabase.com /names2/J/A/Jamal.html   (216 words)

  
 Shi'ite Muslims
Imam Bin Ahmad Ibn Hanbal in his Musnad, Mir Seyyed Ali Hamadani in Mawaddatu’l-Qurba, Ibn Maghazili Shafi’i in Manaqib, and Dailami in Firdaus have quoted the Prophet as saying: "I and Ali were created of the same Divine Light 14,000 years before Adam was created.
Mullah Muhammad Bakir Madjlisi (1627-1698 A.D.) was a 12’er who made a hadith collection.
He said he hoped his works "may give life to the hearts and spirits of the dead-hearted people." In a sense he became the virtual ruler of Iran, and they persecuted Sunnis, Sufis, and Zoroastrians.
www.muslimhope.com /Shiites.htm   (4453 words)

  
 Understanding the Four Madhhabs (with footnotes)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
[7] This decline in Shi'i fortunes was only arrested after the mid-seventh century, once the Mongol hordes under Genghis Khan had invaded and obliterated the central lands of Islam.
The onslaught was unimaginably harsh: we are told, for instance, that out of a hundred thousand former inhabitants of the city of Herat, only forty survivors crept out of the smoking ruins to survey the devastation.
(Muhammad al-Amin al-Muhibbi, Khulasat al-atar fi a`yan al-qarn al-hadi `ashar [Cairo, 1248], I, 48.) And it was not uncommon for scholars to be able to give fatwas in more than one madhhab (such a man was known technically as mufti al-firaq).
www.masud.co.uk /ISLAM/ahm/newmadhh.htm   (10970 words)

  
 [No title]
Khattab, Muhammad Abd al-Aziz and A. Abd al-Wahid.
al-Khuli, Muhammad A. Dictionary of Theoretical Linguistics: English-Arabic with Arabic-English Glossary.
Raghib al-Isfahani, Abu al-Qasim al-Husayn ibn Muhammad, d.
www.columbia.edu /cu/lweb/data/indiv/mideast/cuvlm/AraBib   (1993 words)

  
 islam and nonviolence
*al-Ashmawi, Muhammad Sa‘id. "Shari‘a in the Discussion on Secularism and Democracy." in Christopher Toll and Jakof Skasgaard-Petersen, eds., Law and the Islamic World: Past and Present.
"Mahmud Muhammad Taha and the Crisis in Islamic Law Reform: Implications for Interreligious Relations." Journal of Ecumenical Studies, 25 #1 (Winter 1988) 1—21.
The original work al-Faridah al-Gha’ibah by the Egyptian Muslim activist and engineer Muhammad ‘Abd al-Salam Faraj, characterized military jihad as an ‘unfulfilled duty’ incumbent on all Muslims; it was the manifesto of the group which assassinated Anwar al-Sadat.
www.nonviolenceinternational.net /islambib_001.htm   (11910 words)

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