Molana jafar qureshi new bayan
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Jamāluddīn Afg̲h̲ānī : yaʻnī itiḥād-i Islāmī ke muharrik-i aʻzīm, Misr, Ṭarkī, Īrān aur Hindūstān ke z̲arīʻah ʻalim-i Islām man̲, biography of the Muslim reformer and independence fighter Jamāl al-Dīn al-Afghānī.Lat̤āʼifuladab, on the relation between literature and Islam.Taqārīr-i Maulānā Ẓafar ʻAlī K̲h̲ān̲, speeches of the author, especially in regard with the Khilafat movement.G̲h̲albah-yi Rūm : ek tārīk̲h̲ī tafsīr, historical commentary of Sūrat ar-Rūm on the victory of Romans over the Persians and the Muslims over the Meccan polytheists as predicted by Koran in AD 615.K̲h̲amistān-i Ḥijāz, poetry about Muhammad.Nashīd-i Shīrāz, collection of Persian poems and articles published in different periodicals.Some of his notable publications include:
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Pakistan Post issued a commemorative postage stamp in his honor in its 'Pioneers of Freedom' series. A public degree college in Wazirabad is named after him as Government Molana Zafar Ali Khan Degree College. "he was the father of Urdu journalism, … the Zamindar newspaper, when Zafar Ali Khan was the proprietor and editor, was the Urdu newspaper for the Muslims." Recognising Zafar Ali Khan's contributions to the Pakistan Movement, the Punjab government in Pakistan established a 'Maulana Zafar Ali Khan Trust' that initiated the 'Zafar Ali Khan Award' for outstanding journalists to be awarded every year. He served the Pakistan Movement and is acknowledged as the father of Urdu language journalism. It is used for football and cricket games. Sahiwal Stadium, а multi-purpose stadium in Sahiwal, Punjab, was renamed as Zafar Ali Stadium in his honour. His funeral prayer was led by his companion Mohammad Abdul Ghafoor Hazarvi. He died on 27 November 1956, Wazirabad, Punjab.
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His other works are Marka-e-Mazhab-o-Science, Ghalba-e-Rum, Sayr-e-Zulmet and an opera Jang-e-Roos-o-Japan. His poetical output includes Baharistan, Nigaristan, and Chamanistan. He was specially versed in impromptu compositions. His poems have religious and political sentiment. Khan's interest in poetry began in his childhood. He chose to write in Urdu, instead of his mother tongue Punjabi. Close to the time of death there was still some social interaction and amicability as the second Ahmadi Khalifa, Mirza Bashir ud din Mahmood, personally paid for his medical care until his passing in 1956. However, in the 1930s he published Anti Ahmadi vitrol in the Zamindar, and even wrote some anti Ahmadi poetry. He worked on multiple collaborative projects with Ahmadis such as Khwaja Kamaluddin and even praised the movement. His maternal uncle Maulana Hassan Khan and his cousins were also prominet Lahori Ahmadis. His father had been an ardent admirer of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad and other leading Ahmadis such as Maulana Hakeem Noor-ud-Din. Zafar Ali Khan's relationship with the Ahmadiyya movement was complex. He returned from Hyderabad and launched his daily Zamindar newspaper from Lahore which was founded by his father Maulvi Sirajuddin Ahmad. Then he worked for some time as a translator in Hyderabad, Deccan, rising to the post of Secretary, Home Department. Career Īfter graduation, Khan was appointed secretary to a Muslim political leader Mohsin-ul-Mulk, then in Bombay. He rejoined Aligarh College and gained his BA degree from there. Next, he worked in the postal department of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, the same place where his father worked, but resigned over a row with his seniors. He received his early education at Mission High School, Wazirabad, Gujranwala District., matriculated (10th grade) from Patiala, and passed his intermediate (12th grade) from the Aligarh College. Zafar was born into a Punjabi Janjua family in Sialkot, British India.