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  2. Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahmed_Raza_Khan_Barelvi

    According to Hayat-e-Aala Hazrat written by Malik Zafaruddin Bihari, some of his famous teachers included: [11] [12] Syed Shah Aale Rasul Marehrawi (d.1879) Naqi Ali Khan (d. 1880) Ahmad Zayni Dahlan Makki (d. 1881) Abdul Rahman Siraj Makki (d. 1883) Hussain bin Saleh (d. 1884) Abul Hussain Ahmad Al-Nuri (d. 1906) Abdul Ali Rampuri (d. 1885)

  3. Saleh al-Ali - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saleh_Al-Ali

    Saleh al-Ali was born in 1883 to a family of Alawite notables from Al-Shaykh Badr, in the Syrian Coastal Mountain Range in northwest. He reportedly clashed with the Ottomans in 1918 before their withdrawal from Syria, [2] killing two Ottoman soldiers who were harassing a wife of his father.

  4. Ahmed Ali Badarpuri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahmed_Ali_Badarpuri

    Ahmed Ali Badarpuri was born in 1915 into a Sufi family in Badarpur, Assam, then located in the Sylhet district of British India. [1] He was a descendant of Munawwar Khadim Yemeni, who was an attendant of Shah Jalal Mujarrad's authorised disciple, Sikandar Khan Ghazi.

  5. Akhtar Raza Khan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akhtar_Raza_Khan

    A mufti of the Barelvis, he was the great-grandson of Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi who was considered to be a Mujaddid by his followers and was the eponymous founder of the Barelvi movement. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] He had served as the Grand Mufti of India succeeding Mustafa Raza Khan Qadri from 1982 to 2018 and Islamic Chief Justice of India from 2006 to 2018.

  6. Al Malfooz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Malfooz

    Malfuzat-i A'la Hazrat (Urdu: ملفوظات اعلیٰ حضرت, romanized: Malfūẓāt-i Aʿlā Ḥaẓrat) is a 1919 book published by Indian Islamic scholar Mustafa Raza Khan. It is a compilation of his father Ahmad Raza Khan 's questions and answers during his life.

  7. Hashmat Ali Khan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hashmat_Ali_Khan

    At the young age of 14, he was sent to Dar al-Uloom Manzar-e-Islam in Bareilly to study under the tutelage of the scholars of his time. There, he became a disciple of Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi, an Islamic scholar and the founder of Barelvi movement under Sunni Islam. Barelvi paid special attention to the Hashmat Ali. [14] [15] [16]

  8. Amjad Ali Aazmi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amjad_Ali_Aazmi

    Amjad Ali Aazmi (Urdu: أمجد على أعظمى) (November 1882 – 6 September 1948), reverentially known as Sadr al-Sharia (Urdu: صدر الشريعه, Chief of the Islamic Law), Badr al-Tariqa (Shining Moon of the Sufi order) was an Islamic jurist, writer and former Grand Mufti of India. [1]

  9. Ibrahim Raza Khan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibrahim_Raza_Khan

    Muhammad Ibrahim Raza Khan Qadri Razvi (1907–1965), commonly known as Mufassir-e-Azam-e-Hind and Jilani Miyan, was an Indian Islamic scholar, Sufi mystic, orator, author, and leader of Sunni Muslim’s Barelvi movement of Sunni Islam in the Indian subcontinent.