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The traditional clothing of Hyderabad, India has both Muslim and South Asian influences. Men wear sherwani and kurta–paijama and women wear khara dupatta and Halfsaree,silksaree. [1] [2] [3],halfsaree,pattusaree Most Muslim women wear burqa and hijab outdoors. [4] Western-style clothing is increasingly common among younger people. [5]
The Nizam was the Muslim ruler of the vast princely Hyderabad State. The capital city of Hyderabad was primarily Urdu-speaking Muslim until the incorporation of Hyderabad into India and the subsequent rise to dominance of the native Telugu-speaking Hindu people of Telangana. The state's economy was agrarian, and Hyderabad was primarily a ...
Charminar. The culture of Hyderabad, also known as Hyderabadi Tehzeeb (حیدرآبادي تہذیب ) or Dakhini Tehzeeb (دکني تہذیب ), [1] is the traditional cultural lifestyle of the Hyderabadi Muslims, and characterizes distinct linguistic and cultural traditions of North and South India, which meet and mingle in the city and erstwhile kingdom. [2]
Omar Khalidi (1952–2010), authored Hyderabad: After the Fall; migrated to US [9] M. A. Muqtedar Khan (b. 1966), political science professor, Islamic philosopher and Muslim intellectual; Abid Hasan (d. 1986), translated Tagore's Jana Gana Mana into Shubh Sukh Chain [10] Haroon Siddiqui, Indo-Canadian journalist
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Jamiat ul Mominat is an Islamic female seminary marriage counseling center, located in Hyderabad, India.It provides education to girls only. [1] It has a Darul Ifta—(a department of legal ruling under Islamic jurisdiction) or generally collegium of muftis—where the girls are trained to become muftis. [2]
Niloufer for a long time was the President of the Hyderabad Chapter of Indian Women Conference (IWC) a national body founded by Margaret E. Cousins. Padmaja Naidu, daughter of Sarojini Naidu was a great friend of Niloufer in Hyderabad. [6] During the Second World War, she obtained training as a nurse, and helped in relief efforts. [19]
Waheed Akhtar, Urdu poet, writer and one of the leading Muslim scholars and philosophers of the 20th century; Vattikota Alwar Swamy; Fani Badayuni, noted Urdu poet; Rasamayi Balakishan, folk singer, poet and political activist; Chandrabose; Dasarathi (1925–1987), poet and political activist; Gaddar, singer