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He was the founder of As-Sunnah Trust, a non-profit educational charity organisation. [6] During his time as the Professor of Al-Hadith and Islamic Studies at the Islamic University, Bangladesh, 12 students received PhD and 30 received MPhil. [7] Jahangir authored many books pertaining to Islam in Bengali, English and Arabic. [8]
Azizul Haque (Bengali: আজিজুল হক), also known as by his epithet Shaykh al-Hadith [3] was a Bangladeshi Islamic scholar, politician, writer, and translator. He is the founder of Bangladesh Khelafat Majlis [4] and first Bangali translator of Sahih al-Bukhari. He was vice chancellor of Jamia Rahmania Arabia Dhaka.
Abu Taher Misbah (Bengali: আবু তাহের মিসবাহ; born 6 March 1956), also known as Adib Huzur (Bengali: আদিব হুজুর), is a Bangladeshi Deobandi Islamic scholar, academic and author.
Girish Chandra Sen (c. 1835 – 15 August 1910) was a Bengali religious scholar and translator. He was a Brahmo Samaj missionary and known for being the first publisher of the Qur’an into Bengali language in 1886. [1] He was praised by Islamic scholars in countries such as Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, and Iran for his choice of words.
Abubakar Muhammad Zakaria Mojumder (Bengali: আবু বকর মুহাম্মাদ যাকারিয়া মজুমদার; born 1969) is a Bangladeshi Islamic Islamic scholar, media personality, professor, writer, preacher and Islamic speaker.
Pages in category "Bengali Muslim scholars of Islam" The following 120 pages are in this category, out of 120 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Sharaf ad-Dīn Abū Tawʾamah (Arabic: شرف ٱلدِّيْن أبُو تَوْأَمَة, Bengali: আবু তাওয়ামা) was an Islamic scholar, author and muhaddith based in the subcontinent. [1] [2] He played a large role in disseminating Islam in eastern Bengal, establishing one of the country's first madrasas. [3]
As a result of his methodology, Al Jamia Al Islamia Patiya opened its Department of Bengali Language and Literature in 1952 and its Department of Qira'ah in 1975. [13] In 1934, Abd al-Wahhab started the Islam Prachar, a monthly magazine with Abul Farah as the chief editor. This was the first Deobandi monthly in the Bengali language. [14]