Hakeem Muhammad Akhtar

Hakeem Muhammad Akhtar (1928 – 2 June 2013) was a Pakistani Sunni Muslim scholar, poet, philanthropist and a Sufi mentor. He established the Jamiah Ashraful Madāris in Karachi. He was an alumnus of the State Unani Medical College Allahabad and the Madrasa Bait-ul-Uloom, Sarai Mir. He was an authorized disciple of Abrarul Haq Haqqi. His works include Ma'ārif-e-Masnawi and Faizān-e-Muḥabbat.

Aarif Billah, Mawlāna
Hakeem Muḥammad Akhtar
Personal life
Born1928
Died2 June 2013(2013-06-02) (aged 84–85)
Karachi, Pakistan
Notable work(s)Ma'ārif-e-Masnawi, Faizān-e-Muḥabbat
Alma materState Unani Medical College Allahabad, Madrasa Bait-ul-Uloom
Religious life
ReligionIslam
Founder ofJamiah Ashraful Madāris
Senior posting
Disciple ofAbrarul Haq Haqqi

Biography

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Hakeem Muhammad Akhtar was born in 1928 in Pratapgarh.[1] He was schooled in Pratapgarh and studied Persian with Qāri Muḥammad Siddīq in Sultanpur.[2]He graduated from the State Unani Medical College Allahabad in 1944 where his teacher was Hakim Aḥmad Usmāni, the father of Hakim Hammad Usmani.[2] He was inclined towards studying Islamic sciences, and completed the traditional dars-e-nizami at the Madrasa Bait-ul-Uloom in Sarai Mir in four years.[3]

Akhtar studied the Sihah Sittah with Abdul Ghani Phulpuri, a student of Majid Ali Jaunpuri.[3] He developed interest in Sufism in early days and benefitted from Abdul Ghani Phulpuri, Abrarul Haq Haqqi and Muhammad Ahmad Pratapgarhi.[4] Haqqi authorized him in the Ashrafia, Chistiyyah, Naqshbandiyah, Qadiriyyah and the Suhrawardiyya orders of Sufism.[5]

Akhtar migrated to Pakistan in 1960 with his Sufi mentor Abdul Ghani Phulpuri.[6] In 1980, he started the "Khanqāh Imdādiya Ashrafiya" in Karachi at the wishes of Abrarul Haq Haqqi.[7] His disciples have started branches of it in Bangladesh, India, Kenya, Mauritius, Myanmar, Réunion, South Africa and Turkey.[7]Akhtar established the Jamiah Ashraful Madāris, a famous seminary in Gulistan-e-Johar, Karachi, in 1998.[8][9]

Akhtar died on 2 June 2013 in Karachi.[5][4] His funeral prayer was led by his son Hakeem Muḥammad Mazhar and attended by scholars including Abdul Ghafoor Haideri, Aurangzaib Farooqi, Mufti Muhammad Naeem, Muhammad Rafi Usmani, Saleemullah Khan and Zar Wali Khan.[10] His disciples in Sufism include Abdul Hamid Ishaq, Fazlur Rahman Azmi, Muhammad Ilyas Ghuman, Salman Nadvi and Younus Patel.[11]

Literary works

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Akhtar's works include:[12][6]

  • Ma'ārif-e-Masnawi, a commentary on the Masnavi of Rumi. This major work of Akhtar is hailed by Islamic scholars such as Yousuf Banuri, Muhammad Zakariyya Kandhlawi and Manzoor Nomani.[5] It was rendered in English by the South African scholar Yusuf Karaan.[13]
  • Lessons on the Mathnawi of Moulana Rumi: on love and recognition
  • Tajalliat-E-Jazb: manifestation of Allah's attraction
  • Ma'rifat-e-Ilāhiya
  • Rūh ki bīmāriyān aur unka ilāj
  • Faizān-e-Muḥabbat

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Sayyid Ishrat Jameel Mir, Rashk-e-Awliya, Hayat-e-Akhtar (in Urdu), p. 23
  2. ^ a b Khaliq Dad, "Maulana Shah Hakeem Muhammad Akhtar: Hayāt-o-Khidmāt", Rāhatul Qulūb, 3 (1): 30
  3. ^ a b Khaliq Dad, "Maulana Shah Hakeem Muhammad Akhtar: Hayāt-o-Khidmāt", Rāhatul Qulūb, 3 (1): 31
  4. ^ a b Zahid Ur Rashdi. "Mawlāna Shah Hakeem Muḥammad Akhtar". zahidrashdi.org (in Urdu). Retrieved 16 May 2021.
  5. ^ a b c Mufti Seraj Desai (10 June 2013). "The Passing of a Great Sufi Master: Mawlana Hakeem Muhammad Akhtar". ilmgate.org. Retrieved 16 May 2021.
  6. ^ a b Jaleel Aḥmad Akhoon. Safarnama Harmain Sharifain (in Urdu) (March 2016 ed.). Gulshan Iqbal, Karachi: Khanqah Imdadiya Ashrafiya. p. 30, 35–36.
  7. ^ a b Khaliq Dad, "Maulana Shah Hakeem Muhammad Akhtar: Hayāt-o-Khidmāt", Rāhatul Qulūb, 3 (1): 37
  8. ^ Sayyid Ishrat Jameel Mir, Rashk-e-Awliya, Hayat-e-Akhtar (in Urdu), p. 189
  9. ^ Muḥammad ʻĀmir Rānā (2004). A to Z of Jehadi Organizations in Pakistan (2004 ed.). Mashal Books. p. 517, 541. Retrieved 16 May 2021.
  10. ^ "مولانا حکیم شاہ محمد اختر جامعہ اشرف المدارس میں سپرد خاک" [Mawlāna Hakeem Shah Muḥammad Akhtar buried in Jamia Ashraful Madāris]. Daily Dunya (in Urdu). 4 June 2013. Retrieved 16 May 2021.
  11. ^ Sayyid Ishrat Jameel Mir, Rashk-e-Awliya, Hayat-e-Akhtar (in Urdu), pp. 565–589
  12. ^ "Books of Hakeem Muḥammad Akhtar". worldcat.org. WorldCat. Retrieved 16 May 2021.
  13. ^ "8 Radiant Contributions of Moulana Yusuf Karaan RA". jamiat.org.za. Retrieved 16 May 2021.

Bibliography

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