Monday, 30 January 2017

THE LARGEST AND GREATEST COLLECTION OF URDU POETRY ON INTERNET •


THE LARGEST AND GREATEST COLLECTION OF URDU POETRY ON INTERNET • 

URDU POETRY • 0

یارانِ رفتہ آہ بہت دور جا بسے BY SAADI · PUBLISHED JULY 29, 2015· 

UPDATED JULY 23, 2015 یارانِ رفتہ آہ بہت دور جا بسے دل ہم سے رک گیا تھا انہوں کا جدا بسے

کوچے میں تیرے ہاتھ ہزاروں بلند ہیں ایسے کہاں سے آ کے یہ اہلِ دعا بسے . کرتا ہے کوئی زیبِ تن اپنا وہ رشکِ گُل پھولوں میں جب تلک کہ نہ اس کی قبا بسے

 . بلبل کہے ہے جاؤں ہوں، کیا کام ہے مرا میں کون، اس چمن میں نسیم و صبا بسے . جنگل میں جیسے قافلہ آ کر اتر رہے یوں ہیں یہ رہروانِ عدم جا بجا بسے . یا رب ہو واقعہ کوئی ایسا کہ وہ پری گھر اپنا چھوڑ کر کے مرے پاس آ بسے 

 جانے سے تیرے کشورِ دل ہو گیا خراب ویرانہ ہے یہ اب کوئی یاں آ کے کیا بسے . عالم ہے زیرِ خاک بھی گر تجھ کو سوجھ ہو کیا اک طریق ساتھ ہیں اہلِ فنا بسے . بلبل نے آشیانہ چمن سے اٹھا لیا پھر اس چمن میں بوم بسے یا ہُما بسے . حیرت ہے یہ کہ چھوڑ کے آبادیِ عدم اس منزلِ خراب میں ہم کیونکہ آ بسے . ہمسائے مصحفی کے میں گھر لے دیا تو وہ بولے کہ “پاس ایسے کے میری بلا بسے” (غلام ہمدانی مصحفی) ‪#‎Saadi‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬‬ 

Yaran-e-Rafta Aah Bohat Dour Ja Basey Dil Hum Se Ruk Gaya Tha Unhon Ka Judda Basey . 

 Koochy Me Teray Haath Hazaron Buland Hain Aisay Kahan Se Aa Ke Ye Ehal-e-Dua Basey. 

Karta Hai Koi Zaib-e-Tan Apna Wo Rashk-e-Gul Phoolon Me Jab Talak Ke Na Is Ki Quba Basey . 

Bulbul Kahey Hai Jaoun Hon, Kya Kaam Hai Mera Main Kon, Is Chaman Me Naseem-o-Saba Basey . 

Jungle Me Jaisay Qaafla Aa Kar Utar Rahay Yun Hain Ye Raharwan-e-Adam Ja Baja Basey ' Ya Rab Ho Waqea Koi Aisa Ke Wo Pari Ghar Apna Chour Kar Ke Merey Paas Aa Basey. 

Jaane Se Teray Kishwar-e-Dil Ho Gaya Kharab Virana Hai Ye Ab Koi Yaan Aa Ke Kya Basey. 

Aalam Hai Zair-e-Khaak Bhi Gar Tujh Ko Soojh Ho Kya Ik Tareeq Sath Hain Ehal-e-Fanaa Basey. 

 Bulbul Ne Aashiyana Chaman Se Utha Liya Phir Is Chaman Me Boom Basey Ya Huma Basey. 

 Herat Hai Ye Ke Chour Ke Abadi-e-Adam Is Manzil-e-Kharab Me Hum Kyunkay Aa Basey. 

 Hamsaye Mushafi Ke Mein Ghar Le Diya To Wo Bolay Ke “Paas Aisay Ke Meri Balaa Basey”. 

 Bulbul Ne Aashiyana Chaman Se Utha Liya Phir Is Chaman Me Boom Basey Ya Huma Basey Dedicated to Hillary 

 ****

ESSAY – CAN AMERICA STAND ALONE; By Charles Kruthammer (Time, October 22, 1990) https://be4gen.wordpress.com/tag/can-america-stand-alone/ https://be4gen.wordpress.com/2011/06/29/essay-can-america-stand-alone-by-charles-kruthammer-time-october-22-1990-2/ ESSAY – CAN AMERICA STAND ALONE; By Charles Kruthammer (Time, October 22, 1990) 

 ESSAY – CAN AMERICA STAND ALONE; By Charles Kruthammer (Time, October 22, 1990) Posted on June 29, 2011 by be4gen This is an Action Research Forum rendering services for promotion of knowledge. 

 ESSAY – CAN AMERICA STAND ALONE; By Charles Kruthammer (Time, October 22, 1990) (Repeat Posting June 29, 11) Has there ever been a more reluctant superpower than America? Has any great power taken less pleasure in its foreign adventures? I doubt it. As shown yet again in the Persian gulf, the U.S. is the world leader, and Americans hate the job. The idea that the world is an arena of unending conflict repels Americans. It means that superpower’ work in never done. Doesn’t U.S. get time off? Just weeks after winning the cold war, it faces a new war in the gulf. Like those who went off to Korea just five years after V-J day, American to day feel uneasy, disappointed. 

Some feel betrayed. They need to conjure up some conspiracy, some alien force (Jews, imagines the fevered Pat Buchman) dragging us again to war. The reluctant superpower seeks an end to toil. This is why Americans are endlessly resourceful in trying to evade the burdens of history. 

First, there was the isolation of ’20s and 30s’. Then, daring the cold war, the American left counseled abdication, denying either that the cold war existed or that it was anything more than a cozy arrangement to keep the Pentagon and the paranoid right happy. Next, the cold war was won. In the accompanying euphoria, the idea was born that having once again won the war to end all wars, the U.S. could finally lay down its burdens. Calls rang out for cutting the defense budget in half by the end of the decade. The New Yorker, with its unerring instinct for the politically trendy and the politically stupid, suggested (quoting Daniel Ellsberg) doing the 50% cut right now. 

In Congress the rush was for wholesale American demobilization. A reporter complaining at a Feb. 12 White House press conference about “out of sync” defense spending asked the President, “Who’s the enemy?” Well, we know. Saddam Hussain has reminded Americans the world is a nasty place. Americans do not appreciate the reminder. They find hard to accept the fact that as the planet’s only remaining superpower, the U.S. is the one nation that can, and therefore must, face down then the nastiness. Hence the search for another way to avoid the crushing burdens of superpower responsibility. 

The search has borne fruit. The newest panacea for getting America off the hook has been found: the U.N., multilateralism, collective security. Woodrow Wilson’s great dream that the world would respond to aggression by acting collectively rather than having to rely on a policeman (i.e. the US) is finally coming true. What a dream. What is an illusion? What is happening in the gulf is not collective security but a coincidence of interests. And it is hardly collective. Without the U.S leading, prodding, bribing and blackmailing, no one would have stirred. Nothing would have been done: no embargo, no Desert Shield. 

The world would have written off Kuwait the way the last body pledged to collective security, the League of Nations, wrote of Abyssinia. The last week commanders of both Egyptian and Syrian forces in Saudi Arabia declared that they would not take part in any counter invasion of Kuwait. In Kuwait, as in Korea (our most recent exercise in collective security), if war comes it is America that will the carry the fight. When the Iraqis complain that the anti-Iraq collation, the U.N. front the whole multilateral apparatus, is little more than a cover for an assertion of American power, they exaggerate only slightly. Nothing wrong with cover. It is nice to have. It is always good to enter a conflict with lots of people cheering you on and saying how noble your cause. 

It is still nicer to have others standing on the front line with you, even though they are only a token force. Multilateralism is fine. But it carries two dangers. First, that the U.S. will mistake illusion (world opinion, U.N. resolutions, professions solidarity) for the real thing (American power), and assume that if we dispense with the real thing, illusion will get us to where we are going. The second danger is that the multilateralism will become a fetish. The need to nurture it can actually become hindrance to the exercise of real, effective power. These are voices arguing that the U.S. should not do any thing in gulf – undertake military action, for example – that might jeopardize the grand coalition it has put together. This is to confuse means and ends. The coalition is the means to get Iraq out of Kuwait. It is not an end in itself. 

As long as the means serves the end, it is worth having. If there comes a point at which holding the coalition together prevents the U.S. from achieving the objective, then surely the objective takes precedence. The great danger with any collective action is that the more partners you have the less you can do. U.N. resolutions, Security Council support, Soviet backing, allied troops and are all very welcome in this or any other American geopolitical exert on. They are welcome but they can not be made essential. Otherwise, American policy becomes prisoner to its partner’s wishes. 

The more partners, the more wishes. Options becomes constrained, the chances of success diminished. The point of policy, after all, is success. It is not to feel good. It is not international applause. It is not to hold coalition’s for the sake of coalitions. It is to achieve the ends. If coalitions help, fine. Otherwise, they can not be allowed to paralyze policy. President Bush (senior) says it is not America against Iraq but the world against Iraq. 

In fact it is America, with some friends following carefully behind. Collective security is a diplomatic myth: convenient to use, dangerous to believe. History has been severe with America. After reluctantly joining and decisively winning the three great wars of this century (World War I, World War II, and the cold war), America is permitted no rest. It keeps getting stuck with the job not just of protecting itself but of imposing order on a disorderly world. Collective security is only the latest myth seized upon by Americans desperate to believe they have found there well deserved escape from the burdens of history. Unfortunately, and unfairly, they have not.

 ****

CAUSE AND EVENTS – SPATIAL And TEMPORAL RESPECTIVELY


CAUSE AND EVENTS – SPATIAL And TEMPORAL RESPECTIVELY

 https://be4gen.wordpress.com/2012/11/16/cause-and-events-spatial-temporal-respectively/ CAUSE AND EVENTS – SPATIAL And TEMPORAL RESPECTIVELY Posted on November 16, 2012 by be4gen “CAUSE AND EVENTS – SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL RESPECTIVELY; 

Since it is widely taken for granted like believe, that the Divine-intervention was the event initiation of cultivating worldly objects (physical and virtual), on significance intangible human wisdom, in intellectual terms. Its’ cause(s) are tracked by thinkers in trapping relationship (from child to parent – up the tree). Anyway, underlining, query is stipulating the similar context of cause-event natural law; Thus, by above intent the human wisdom is a temporal attribute a consequence of event; Divine-intervention. While the brought forward wisdom (at birth – natural gifted) of a human, if any, is beyond temporality and not manifested any reckoning of human. So the post death wisdom, if any, is beyond temporality, and no reckoning, isn’t it? 

The reckoning is for temporal attributes granted to human life only and not for spatial. When the Divine-intervention has happened; the event of relocating soul/ human (as means) from spatial-to-temporal induced in default the time based attributes to live human, what about temporal-to-spatial transition? As such incumbents’ cognition is time based only. Incidentally, some of our associates argue; ‘many of us ought to pick a society other than what they are in, during spatial-to-temporal transitional state, if they had so, to avoid misfits to ‘heart-impulses’ society for cohesiveness and reckoning on temporal rational perceptions, here and there. 

 ‘DO-NOT-KNOW’ (not measureable) capability is engulfed in the indicated states in logical terms, often faith experts express variant elaborations which contradicts in some form or other and so many similar off shoots of contradictory domains. QUERY: How the faith elaborates these pre-birth and post-death reckoning of human wisdom and its impact on departed soul which is beyond temporality (time relativity). For elaboration of passion quench of modern men, if one can favour right-to-know, for promotion of knowledge of common public wisdom, pl. do?” Opinion Invited. 

 ***********

Friday, 27 January 2017

IS TRUMP MODEL MONOTHEIST (WWII-GOALS) WITH NO CIVILIZATION INTERACTIONS. HELL, VS HEAVEN?


http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-38777437 . . 

Trump signs 'extreme vetting' order to limit immigration 2 hours ago From the section US & Canada Share Media caption President Trump told CBN News Christian refugees will get priority Trump takes office Trump's first week: Well, that was intense . What if Trump tries to bring back torture? Which executive actions will have mo.st impact? . Where Trump stands on key issues US President Donald Trump has announced new vetting measures to "keep radical Islamic terrorists out of the US". . 

He signed a wide-ranging executive order which, among other measures, bans Syrian refugees until further notice. . It also put a cap of 50,000 refugees entering the US in 2017 - less than half the previous upper limit. . In a TV interview broadcast on Friday, the president said Christians would be given priority among Syrians who apply for refugee status in the future. He signed the executive order at the Pentagon after a ceremony to swear in Gen James Mattis as defence secretary. During the ceremony, Mr Trump said: "I'm establishing new vetting measures to keep radical Islamic terrorists out of the United States of America. We only want to admit those into our country who will support our country and love deeply our people." . 

 The text of the order was released several hours after it was signed. Among the measures are: Suspension of the US Refugee Admissions Programme for 120 days A ban on refugees from Syria until "significant changes" are made A 90-day suspension on arrivals from Iraq, Syria, and "areas of concern" - reported to include Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen To prioritise future refugee applications on the basis of religious-based persecution - but only if the person is part of a minority religion in their home country A cap of 50,000 refugees in 2017 - less than half of Mr Obama's upper limit However, a mention of creating "safe zones" within Syria, seen in an earlier draft, was removed from the final order. 

The order also said all immigration programmes should include questions to "evaluate the applicant's likelihood of becoming a positively contributing member of society." Media caption The US city of Lancaster has taken in hundreds of refugees - but that could all end Other measures include a broad review of the information required from all countries to approve a visa; a review of visa schemes between nations to ensure they are "truly reciprocal" for US citizens; and the immediate suspension of the Visa Interview Waiver Programme. 

But the document also says exceptions to most restrictions could be made on a case-by-case basis. Trump's 'extreme vetting' order sows panic How a Syrian refugee gets to the US Syrian refugees in the US, in graphics President Trump also signed an executive order aimed at rebuilding the military by "developing a plan for new planes, new ships, new resources and new tools for our men and women in uniform". 

Last year, the administration of then-President Barack Obama admitted 10,000 Syrian refugees into the US. Neighbouring Canada - whose population is a ninth of that of the US - took in 35,000. During the presidential campaign, Mr Trump suggested a "total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country's representatives can figure out what is going on". But he has made no mention of this since being elected last November. Media caption Trump's 'yuge' first week as president recapped The signing of the executive order has been met with criticism from Democrats and notable figures. Democratic Senator Kamala Harris wrote that the order had been signed on Holocaust Memorial Day. "Make no mistake — this is a Muslim ban," she wrote. "We have opened our doors to those fleeing violence and oppression for decades, by presidents on both sides of the aisle." "During the Holocaust, we failed to let refugees like Anne Frank into our country. We can't let history repeat itself," she said. . 

Malala Yousafzai, the teenage Nobel Peace Laureate who was once shot by the Taliban following her advocacy for women's education in Pakistan, wrote that she was "heartbroken". "Today President Trump is closing the door on children, mothers and fathers fleeing violence and war," she said. Malala Yousafzai photographed holding a bouquet of flowers on the day she was announced as a Nobel Laureate, 2014Image copyright GETTY IMAGES Image caption . 

The world's youngest winner of the Nobel Peace Prize said she was "heartbroken" by the order "America is turning its back on a proud history of welcoming refugees and immigrants - the people who helped build your country, ready to work hard in exchange for a fair chance at a new life," she added. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerburg also posted a lengthy note to his own profile on the site, saying he was "concerned" about the president's executive orders, and noting that he, like many Americans, is the descendant of immigrants. "These issues are personal for me even beyond my family," he wrote. "A few years ago, I taught a class at a local middle school where some of my best students were undocumented. 

They are our future too." If you have any questions about the new vetting measures which President Trump has announced, send them to us and a BBC correspondent will answer the most popular. Use this form to ask your question:

Thursday, 26 January 2017

REITERATE OF BRITISH RAJ – SPIRIT OF SINDH RURAL IMPERIALISM COLONIZING URBAN DOMINION – DEMOCRACY BY DUPE DOGMA?


https://be4gen.wordpress.com/ REITERATE OF BRITISH RAJ – SPIRIT OF SINDH RURAL IMPERIALISM COLONIZING URBAN DOMINION – DEMOCRACY BY DUPE DOGMA? Posted on February 14, 2014 by be4gen and re-posted REITERATE OF BRITISH RAJ – SPIRIT OF SINDH RURAL IMPERIALISM COLONIZING URBAN DOMINION – DEMOCRACY BY DUPE DOGMA? 

 This is for Action Research Forum of Public Wisdom; 

 The Inherited feudal mindset forced on urban inhabitants by Mohanjedero capability or wisdom of silly idiocy of prevailed ground atrocity, demanding people to react like British Raj exile. At the end of the day more corruption, more bribery, more tyranny, more ethnic fundamentalism, more innocent blooding, more egoism, has detoured the urban development by Local Bodies. Because their agenda is urban destructions, like crazy Taliban carnage. These days; urban are dumped in the rustic shoes, employment is only for rural, the Merit is ‘PANGO MAROON’ & BRIBERY. 

The black cat commandos, who could not protect their selves, how Bilawal house could they? All the urban public service jobs are only for rural daffy on fake paper degrees and money. 

So is true for medical, education, governess, administration, judiciary, mega nationalized business entities; PIA, FOBC, STEEL MILLS, PORT QASIM; scrap will vote to scrap – like father like son. The PPP corruption could not even punish the murderers of BUTTO, MURTAZA, BB, but they could configured fake Bhutto, ignoring bloodline talent transfers. HI ZARDARI & CO (*), ONE DAY THE BRUTAL END IN OBVIOUS ALIKE ZIA, COSTING TO MOTHERLAND, LONG LIVE FATIMA BHUTTO’S PATIENCE & WISDOM. (*); Cameleer inheritance threading; Ghan-Towns of Australia and Pakistan vs. Racial Discrimination and Human Trafficking– Conjectural Model: http://yect.com/681 ************

Why MBBS degree holders are called doctors? Posted anonymous 27 May 2015


http://www.indiastudychannel.com/experts/38582-Why-MBBS-degree-holders-are-called-doctors.aspx Why MBBS degree holders are called doctors? Do you want to know why an M.B.B.S degree holder is called a doctor though it is actually a bachelor's degree? Get the expert answers here. MBBS is a bachelors degree only. In all other subjects only a Ph.D. holder (educated up to doctorate level) is called a doctor. Then why an MBBS degree holder which a bachelors degree only, is called a doctor?. Even M.D or M.S is a master's degree only. 

 This is one of the most confusing question for many people. Let me try to solve your confusion. Both the MBBS and ph.D degree holders are addressed as doctor. So lets firstly solve the mystery of ph.D- A person with the degree of Doctor in philosophy has researched so much in a particular field and have stutied that material with such a depth level which was never revealed by anyone brfore. Due to his so much efforts that he put in and gained the vast and full knowledge about thqt subject he is addressed as the doctor of subject. Originally the word Doctor is derived from a latin word docere which means to teach, and if some one wants to be a teacher he needs to be much qualified so he would be able to solve all questions. Now lets understand the same topic in very easy way. A doctor is one who knows everything about all the disease, human body, symptoms , cause and the treatment. For learning all these he had to study alot and learn so many thing. He is an expert of disease and Medicines. This same criteria fits perfectly to a person with ph.D because he has researched and learnt about his topic. When a person completes his ph.D he is addressed as doctor because he had studied in so depth same as a medical doctor does. He can operate the subject and know all even minute and major things of subject. It is the level and field of expertise that make both the MBBS and ph.D to be called as doctor. Smart work with hard work leads to success Vijay Gir Joined: 29/11/2012 Level: Silver *** Though efforts have been put to answer the query but the query is not yet answered fully. I request other learned forum members to offer their point of view on the subject matter. Let us encourage each other in sharing knowledge. Posted By: [Anonymous] **** In India a person who has completed the doctoral level academic research requirements is awarded a doctorate degree (most common Ph.D.) by an university recognized by UGC and become entitled by right to be addressed as 'Doctor' and prefix Dr. to his name. However general practitioners in the field of medicine even though holding a bachelors degree (like MBBS) are called doctors as courtesy to noble profession. Here the word 'doctor' is used as a noun to refer generically to any practitioner of medicine instead of as an adjective to indicate the level of degree obtained by individual practitioner. Even the practitioners of AYUSH system of medicine (Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha, Homeopathy ) are called doctors instead of Vaid, Yogi, Hakim, Siddhar or Homeopath respectively. MBBS is a professional degree (distinguished from a purely academic degree). A professional degree prepares a student for a particular profession by emphasizing skills and practical analysis over theory and research. Most of the professional degrees are awarded in the field of professions that require licensing or accreditation for practice as a professional in the field e.g. MBBS degree holders require registration with Medical Council of India. MBBS is a graduate level degree. Postgraduate level education in the stream leads to postgraduate degrees like MD/MS etc. After post graduate degree in the medical field one can go for doctorate level education in medical field leading to doctorate degree e.g. DM (Doctor of Medicine). After Ph.D. in academic field one can go for higher doctorate level study leading to higher degrees like D.Sc. (Doctor of Science), D.Litt. (Doctor of Letters), LL.D. (Doctor of Laws) etc. Let us encourage each other in sharing know Kailash Kumar COMMENT BY BLOGGER Medicine practitioners use phoneme Doctor but various prefix, MBBS,.. professional Bachelor degree of Medicine & Surgery Doctor of Philosophy degree holders also use phoneme Doctor but various prefix,comononly Ph.D(D for Doctor by awarding body Professionals should care to declare the anomaly is usage. *****

Wednesday, 25 January 2017

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION & GLOBAL JOB DEVELOPMENT



What a Trump administration will mean for global development jobs Devex Doing Good Jan 24 at 3:28 PM To sun_education@yahoo.com Message body To view this email as a web page, click here To ensure delivery to your inbox, please add info@devex.com to your address book. Doing Good Devex 

The development community update https://pages.devex.com/2017-dc-career-forum Jan. 24, 2017 WHAT TO KNOW NOW What a Trump administration will mean for global development jobs Kate Warren By Kate Warren @DevexCareers Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on LinkedIn Last week, the United States swore in a new commander-in-chief, leaving the global development community to wonder what it will mean for our work. With any transfer of political power comes uncertainty — but more doubt and ambiguity than ever is swirling around the incoming Trump administration when it concerns development. 

 What a Trump administration will mean for global development jobs PHOTO BY: CHING OETTEL / THE NATIONAL GUARD / CC BY Whenever Devex career and recruitment expert Kate Warren is asked to make hiring trend predictions, her answer is always simple: Follow the money. Predicting the funding priorities of the Trump administration is still guesswork, but there are a few expected trends already, as well as ways to prepare for them. One thing we can count on is to expect — and prepare for — change. Trump has promised to "shake up" Washington, so development professionals should prepare to shake up their work, too. Kate Warren breaks down the immediate impact on development jobs, private sector involvement under the Trump administration, how to be adaptable and rebrand your expertise. + Read more Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on LinkedIn QUOTABLE "Humanity has the talent and ingenuity to do much better. We don't have to accept an economy that doesn't work." Winnie Byanyima By Winnie Byanyima, executive director at Oxfam International Be the first to see and share each week's Quotable by liking Devex on Facebook. Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on LinkedIn @WORK Opinion: What would a UN Feminist Agenda look like? By Laura Turquet, Sarah Douglas @devex Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on LinkedIn Opinion: What would a UN Feminist Agenda look like? PHOTO BY: UNHCR Women and girls continue to suffer from violence, exclusion, and discrimination globally — and the U.N. can and should do much more to walk its own talk on gender equality and women's rights, argue Laura Turquet and Sarah Douglas. 

Here are four ways the new U.N. secretary-general can implement a feminist agenda. + Read more Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on LinkedIn SPOTLIGHT ON Australia's new foreign policy white paper: How to have your say By Lisa Cornish @lisa_cornish Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on LinkedIn Australia's new foreign policy white paper: How to have your say PHOTO BY: CHRISTIAN SCHNETTELKER / CC BY The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade is receiving submissions from organizations and individuals with ideas on the focus and direction of Australia's foreign policy, including the aid program. 

Devex tracks down how you can send your submission, how it will be used, and what impact the public consultations are likely to have. + Read more Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on LinkedIn https://pages.devex.com/global-development-cv-writing-services.html SPONSORED ANNOUNCEMENT New executive program on M&E at Duke University The Duke Center for International Development (DCID) at Duke University is offering a new executive program in summer 2017 on Monitoring and Evaluation of Development Programs. This two-week workshop, offered June 11-23 for managers and planners in the public sector, NGOs and donor agencies, will give participants the analytical tools to design and monitor successful development programs and evaluate their performance. 

 In addition to M&EDP, DCID offers five other executive programs on campus every summer: Project Appraisal and Risk Management (May 14 - June 9) Transfer Pricing: Policy and Practice (June 4-9) Tax Analysis and Revenue Forecasting (June 25 - July 21) Fiscal Decentralization and Local Government Financial Management (July 9-28) Budgeting and Financial Management in the Public Sector (July 23 - Aug. 11) Group discounts are available to organizations sponsoring three or more participants per program. Visit our website to learn more or to access the online application. 

 THE WEEK AHEAD Events preview: This week in development cooperation By Devex Editor Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on LinkedIn The International Meeting on Syrian Settlement is underway in Astana, Kazakhstan, while the election process for the next World Health Organization director-general is happening in Geneva. Check out our preview for more events this week. Events preview: This week in development cooperation PHOTO BY: ERIC BRIDIERS / U.S. MISSION GENEVA / CC BY-ND Below are some of the most noteworthy events for the week starting Jan. 24: + World Health Organization Executive Board Meetings Jan. 23 to Feb. 12. Geneva, Switzerland Initial screening of the six candidates nominated by Member States will be conducted by the Executive Board. 

The Board will then vote to determine a shortlist of five candidates. Read Devex's exclusive look at the stakes behind the vote, and stay tuned to Devex for more coverage and analysis on the election of the next WHO director-general in May 2017. + International Meeting on Syrian Settlement Jan. 23-24. Astana, Kazakhstan + Drones: The Next Game-changer for Development Aid? Jan. 24. London, United Kingdom + Webinar: To achieve the SDGs, we must tackle these 4 barriers to working together Jan. 25. Online + ADB Recruitment Outreach Event Jan. 30. London, United Kingdom + The United Nations Economic and Social Council Youth Forum Jan. 30-31. New York, United States Know of an upcoming event that might be of interest to the international development community? 

Email us at news@devex.com. Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on LinkedIn Doing Good - Development community buzz, innovation & lifestyle. Copyright 2017 Unauthorized commercial reapplication, reproduction or retransmission, in whole or in part, is prohibited. Manage your newsletter subscriptions | Read the latest Devex News | RSS Feed Connect with us Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Devex is the media platform for the global development community. Corporate Headquarters: 1341 Connecticut Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20036 USA Main +1.202.249.9222 | Fax +1.202.318.2456 www.devex.com To ensure delivery to your inbox, please add info@devex.com to your address book. Not interested? Unsubscribe from Devex email notifications here. radimersky on

Friday, 6 January 2017

CORRUPTION ROLE OF ANWER MAJEED HAND IN HAND WITH ZARADRI THE LOOTER




Columns Javed Chaudhary: http://www.awaztoday.pk/singlecolumn/40602/Javed-Chaudhry/Chand-Pas-Parda-Haqaiq.aspx Latest Artilce /

 URDU COLUMNS of Javed Chaudhry Published in Express, 06 January 2017 Chand Pas Parda Haqaiq By Javed Chaudhry (Dated: 06 January 2017) - 

See more at: http://www.awaztoday.pk/singlecolumn/40602/Javed-Chaudhry/Chand-Pas-Parda-Haqaiq.aspx#sthash.RMHpDg0T.dpuf CORRUPTION ROLE OF ANWER MAJEED HAND IN HAND WITH ZARADRI THE LOOTER 




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PORTAL: FAKES OR COUNTERFEITS


PORTAL 

FAKES OR COUNTERFEITS 

https://be4gen.wordpress.com/2013/06/07/fake-degrees-make-their-presence-felt-in-pakistan-1990-by-omar-r-qureshi/ 

https://be4gen.wordpress.com/2013/01/13/fake-degree-make-their-presence-felt-in-pakistan-by-omer-quraishi/

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https://be4gen.wordpress.com/2013/03/28/najam-sethi-got-lottery-what-he-was-draming-for/

https://be4gen.wordpress.com/2013/03/25/hamid-mir-at-dacca-threading-inherited-brokery/ 

FAKE RAJ 

https://be4gen.wordpress.com/2014/02/14/reiterate-of-british-raj-spirit-of-sindh-rural-imperialism-colonizing-urban-dominion-democracy-by-dupe-dogma/ 

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MUHAJIR SOOBA GOOGLE LINKS


https://www.google.com/search?rct=j&q=mahajirsooba 

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Thursday, 5 January 2017

SAYYID Wikipedia- INDIAN MUSLIMS CASTE SYSTEM

Action Research Forum: This is comprehensive summary of Sayyid caste of Muslims in India, need more proning.

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Source: 'SAYYID':  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sayyid 

Sayyid From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Not to be confused with Sa'id. 


For use as a given name, see Sayyid (name). "Descendants of Muhammad" redirects here. It is not to be confused with Descendants of Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab. "Seyd", "Syed", "Saiyid", and "Seyyed" redirect here. 


For the village in Bushehr Province, see Seydi. For the village in Yazd Province, see Seyyedabad, Bafq. For the village in Fars Province, see Qaleh-ye Seyyed, Mohr. It has been suggested that Sayyid of Uttar Pradesh and Sadaat Amroha be merged into this article. (Discuss) Proposed since August 2016. 


 This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. 


Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (November 2012) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Part of a series on Islam Usul al-fiqh Fiqh Taqlid Ijtihad Ijma Madhhab Qiyas Urf Bid‘ah Madrasah Ijazah Istihlal Istihsan Ahkam Thawab Halal Fard Mustahabb Mubah Makruh Gunah Haram Batil Fasiq Theological titles Caliph Ayatollah Shaykh al-Islām Sayyid Sharif Ashraf Ulama Faqīh Grand Imam of al-Azhar Grand Mufti Allamah Hujjat al-Islam Hafiz Hujja Hakim Imam Mullah Khatib Khawaja Marja' (Grand Ayatollah) Mujtahid Mawlānā Mawlawi Mufassir Mufti Murshid Pir Akhoond Muhaddith Mujaddid Qadi Sheikh Marabout Ustad Muhtasib Muezzin Murid Mujahideen Ghazi Shahid v t e In the Ottoman Empire, Muhammad's descendants formed a kind of nobility with the privilege of wearing green turbans. 


Syed Hussain Ali Khan Barha was a leading administrator during the reign of the Mughal Emperor Farrukhsiyar. Sayyid Muhammad Rizvi, a Shia Islamic scholar, wearing a black turban. 

A black turban is worn by Ithna Ashari Shi'ite Sayyid clergymen, whilst a white turban is worn by non-Sayyid Ithna Ashari Shi'ite clergymen. 

Shah Syed Hasnain Baqai, a Sufi Islamic scholar, wearing a chishtiya turban. 

A chishtiya colour turban is mostly worn by Sufi Syed. Sayyid (also spelled Syed, Seyd, Sayed, Sayyad, Sayyed, Saiyid, Seyed, Said and Seyyed) (pronounced [səj.jɪd], Arabic: سيد‎‎; meaning Mister) (plural Sadah Arabic: سادة‎‎, Sāda(h), also spelled Sadat) is an honorific title denoting people (Sayyid for males, Sayyida for females) accepted as descendants of the Islamic prophet Muhammad through his grandsons, Hasan ibn Ali and Husayn ibn Ali, sons of Muhammad's daughter Fatimah and his son-in-law Ali (Ali ibn Abi Talib).

[1]:149 Women sayyids are given the titles Sayyida, Alawiyah, or Sharifa. In some regions of the Islamic world, such as in India, the descendants of Muhammad are given the title Amir or Mir, meaning commander, general, or prince. Children of a Sayyida mother but a non-Sayyid father are referred to as Mirza.


[2] In the Arab world, sayyid is the equivalent of the English word "liege lord" or "master" when referring to a descendant of Muhammad, as in Sayyid Ali Sultan.


[3] The word sidi (from the contracted form sayyidī, 'my liege')[clarification needed] is often used in Arabic.


[4] Although not verified, many Arabic language experts state that it has its roots in the word Al Asad Arabic: الأسد‎‎ meaning lion, probably because of the qualities of valour and leadership.[citation needed] In the early period, the Arabs used the term Sayyid and Sharif to denote descendants from both Hasan and Husayn. However, in the modern era, the term 'Sharif' (Sharifah for females) has been used to denote descendants from Hasan, and the term 'Sayyid' (Sayyidah for females) has been used to denote descendants from Husayn.


[5] Although reliable statistics are unavailable, conservative estimates put the number of Sayyids in the tens of millions.[6] Contents [hide] 1 Indication of descent 1.1 Existence of descendants of Imam Hasan Al-Askari 2 Middle East 2.1 Iraq 2.2 Iran 2.3 Yemen 2.4 Libya 3 South Asia 3.1 India 3.1.1 North India 3.1.2 Middle East and Central Asia 3.1.3 Gujarat 3.1.4 Kerala 3.2 Pakistan 4 History 4.1 Sub-Continent 5 List of Sayyids 5.1 Important Sayyid communities 5.2 Genetic studies of Sayyids of the sub-continent 6 Southeast Asia 7 


Tesayyid 8 Notable Sayyids 9 Ottoman court case (Matrilineal descent) 10 References 11 External links Indication of descent[edit] The Sayyids are by definition a branch of the tribe of Banu Hashim, a clan from the tribe of Quraish that traces its lineage to Adnan and therefore it is directly descended from Ishmael (Ismâ`îl), as well as being collaterally descended from his paternal half brother Isaac (Isha'aq), the sons of Abraham (Ibrahim). 


Sayyids often include the following titles in their names to indicate the figure from whom they trace their descent.


[5][7] The descendants of Ali and his other wives are called Alvi sayyid; they are titled Shah, Sain, or Miya Fakir.[citation needed] See also: Tariqa Ancestor Arabic style Arabic Last Name Persian Last Name Urdu Last Name Hasan ibn Ali al-Hasani الحسني او الهاشمي al-Hasani الحسني al-Hashemi الهاشمي Hashemi, Hasani, or Tabatabaei حسنى Hassani or Hasani حسنی or Hashemi or Hashmi هاشمي Husayn ibn Ali al-Hussaini1 الحُسيني al-Hussaini الحسيني al-Hashemi الهاشمي Hashemi هاشمي Hussaini حسيني Hussaini حسيني Hashemi or Shah Ali ibn Husayn Zayn al-Abidin al-Abidi العابدي al-Abidi العابدي Abedi عابدى Abidi or Abdi عابدی Zayd ibn Ali az-Zaidi الزيدي al-Zaydi الزيدي al-Hashemi الهاشمي Zaydi زيدي Zaidi زيدي Hashemi هاشمي Idris ibn Abdullah al-Idrisi الإدريسي al-Idrisi الإدريسي His descendants are mostly from the Maghreb Same as before Muhammad al-Baqir al-Baqari الباقري al-Baqiri الباقري Baqeri باقرى Baqri باقری Ja'far al-Sadiq al-Ja'fari الجعفري al-Ja'fari or al-Sadiq/Sadegh or al-sherazi الصدق او الجعفري Jafari or Sadeghi جعفرى/ صادقي Jafri, Sherazi, Jafry or Jaffery shamsiشمسی جعفری Musa al-Kadhim al-Moussawi الموسوي او الكاظمي al-Moussawi or al-Kadhimi الموسوي او الكاظمي Moosavi or Kazemi موسوى / کاظمى Kazmi کاظمی Ali al-Ridha ar-Radawi الرضوي al-Ridawi or al-Radawi الرضوي Razavi or Rezavi رضوى Rizvi or Rizavi رضوی Muhammad at-Taqi at-Taqawi التقوي al-Taqawi التقوي Taqawi تقوى Taqvi تقوی Ali al-Hadi an-Naqawi النقوي al-Naqawi النقوي or al-Bukhari البخاري Naghavi نقوى Naqvi نقوی or Bhaakri/Bukhari بھاکری/بخاری Hasan al-Askari[8] al-Askari العسکری al-Bukhari البخاري Naqshbandi نقشبندی or Attar/Atar عطار Sadat سادات Sadat سادات or Bukhari بخاري Note: (For non-Arabic speakers) When transliterating Arabic words into English there are two approaches. 


1. The user may transliterate the word letter for letter, e.g., "الزيدي" becomes "a-l-z-ai-d-i". 


2. The user may transcribe the pronunciation of the word, e.g., "الزيدي" becomes "a-zz-ai-d-i". This is because in Arabic grammar, some consonants (n, r, s, sh, t and z) cancel the l (ل) from the word "the" al (ال) (see sun and moon letters). When the user sees the prefixes an, ar, as, ash, at, az, etc... this means the word is the transcription of the pronunciation. An i, wi (Arabic), or vi (Persian) ending could perhaps be translated by the English suffixes -ite or -ian. The suffix transforms a personal name or place name into the name of a group of people connected by lineage or place of birth. Hence Ahmad al-Hassani could be translated as Ahmad, the descendant of Hassan, and Ahmad al-Manami as Ahmad from the city of Manami. For further explanation, see Arabic names. 


1Also, El-Husseini, Al-Husseini, Husseini, and Hussaini. 


2Those who use the term Sayyid for all descendants of Ali ibn Abi Talib regard Allawis or Alavis as Sayyids. 


However, Allawis are not descendants of Muhammad, as they are descended from the children of Ali and the women he married after the death of Fatima, such as Umm ul-Banin (Fatima bint Hizam). 


Those who limit the term Sayyid to descendants of Muhammad through Fatima, do not consider Allawis/Alavis to be Sayyids. Some Sayyids also claim to be "Najeeb Al Tarfayn", meaning "Noble on both sides", which indicates that both of their parents are Sayyid. But in actuality this term is applied only to those Sayyids who have both Imam Hassan and Imam Hussain in their ancestry. 


These Sayyids, especially in the Arab world, would keep the prefix of Sayyid Alshareef or Shareefayn, or Sayyidayn or Sheikh Assayyid before their names, followed by their father's and grandfather's names and then the clan's and tribe's names followed by AlHasani bil Hussaini or Al Hussaini bil Hasani, depending on which Imam is patrilineal or matrilineal. Many feel proud to attach Al Hashmi bil Quraishi at the end as well. 


Many Sayyids, especially in South Asia and Shia Sayyids, think that only the progeny of both Sayyid parents are called Najeeb Al Tarfayn, but this idea may be attributed to a lack of knowledge in Arabic language and Genealogy. 


The importance of this concept of Najeeb AlTarfayn has its source in the Hadeeth of Muhammad wherein he stated that the Mahdi, or "The Hidden One", would be Najeeb AlTarfayn from his lineage. Hence, Shia and Sunni Sayyids have different interpretations of this concept.


 However, the descendants of many Sufi Saints such as Abdul-Qadir Gilani, Bande Nawaz, and Moinuddin Chishti claim themselves as Najeeb AlTarfayn although this fact is disputed. Existence of descendants of Imam Hasan Al-Askari[edit] The existence of any descendant of Imam Hasan al Askari is disputed by many people. 

However, it is believed by Sunni and Shia followers of the Twelve Imams that Imam Hasan al-Askari had a son called Imam Muhammad al-Mahdi, who will be the redeemer of Islam. 

Genealogy trees of Middle Eastern families, mostly from Persia and Khorasan, show that Imam Hasan al-Askari had also a second son called Sayyid Ali Akbar. It definitely indicates that Imam al-Askari had children and it also substantiates the existence of Imam Muhammad al Mahdi. Whether Imam Al Askari had children or not is still disputed may be because of the political conflicts between the followers of the Imamah and the leadership of the Abbasids and Ghulat Shiites who do not believe in Imam Hasan al-Askaris Imamah. 


Another group of historians studying the pedigrees of some Central Asian saints' "shejere" (genealogy trees), believe that the Twelfth Imam was not the only son of Imam Hasan al-Askari, and that the Eleventh Imam had two sons, Sayyid Muhammad (i.e., Imam Mahdi) and Sayyid Ali Akbar.[9] One descendant of Sayyid Ali Akbar was Saint Ishan (Eshon) Imlo of Bukhara. 


Ishan Imlo[10] is called "saint of the last time" in Bukhara, as it is believed that after him there were no more Saints – Asian Muslims generally revere him as the last of the Saints. According to the source, Ishan Imlo died in 1162 AH (1748–1749); his mausoleum (mazar) is in a cemetery in Bukhara. Notable descendants of Sayyid Ali Akbar are Sufi Saints like Bahauddin Naqshband, descendant after eleven generations,[8] Khwaja Khawand Mahmud known as Hazrat Ishaan, descendant after eighteen generations, and Sayyid ul Sadaat Sayyid Mir Jan, maternal descendant of Imam Hasan al Askari and Hazrat Ishaan.[8] and also qadi Qozi Sayyid Bahodirxon.

,[11] Sufi saints Tajuddin Muhammad Badruddin and Pir Baba. In her book Pain and Grace: A Study of Two Mystical Writers of Eighteenth-Century Muslim India, Dr. Annemarie Schimmel writes: Khwaja Mir Dard`s family, like many nobles, from Bukhara; led their pedigree back to Baha'uddin Naqshband, after whom the Naqshbandi order is named, and who was a descendent, in the 11th generation of the 11th Shia imam al-Hasan al-Askari.


[12] Although Shiite historians generally reject the claim that Hasan al-Askari fathered children other than Muhammad al-Mahdi, the Shiite hadith book Usul al-Kafi, in Bab Mawlid Abi Muhammad al-Hasan b. 'Ali confirms the Sufi claim that Hasan al-Askari had more than one wife, in addition to slave girls, with whom he had relations. In his Usul, al-Kafi writes: When the caliph got news of Imam Hasan 'Askari's illness, he instructed his agents to keep a constant watch over the house of the Imam...he sent some of these midwives to examine the slave girls of the Imam to determine if they were pregnant. 


If a woman was found pregnant she was detained and imprisoned....[8][13][14][15][16] Middle East[edit] Iraq[edit] The Sayyid families in Iraq are so numerous that there are books written especially to list the families and connect their trees. Some of these families are the Al-Nasrullah, Al-Wahab, Al-Hashimi, Al-Quraishi, Al-Obaidi, Al-Yasiri, Al-Samarai, Al-Zaidi, Al-A'araji, Al-Hasani, Al-Hussaini, Al-Qadri, Tabatabaei, Al-Alawi, Al-Ghawalib (Al-Ghalibi), Al-Musawi, Al-Awadi (not to be confused with the Al-Awadhi Huwala family), Al-Sabzewari, Al-Hayali, and many others.


[17] Iran[edit] Sayyids (in Persian: سید‎‎ seyyed) are found in vast numbers in Iran. The majority of Sayyids migrated to Iran from Arab lands predominantly in the 15th to 17th century during the Safavid era. The Safavids began transforming the religious landscape of Iran by imposing Twelver Shiism on the populace. Since most of the population embraced Sunni Islam, and since an educated version of Shiism was scarce in Iran at the time, Ismail imported a new Shia Ulama corps who predominantly were Sayyids from traditional Shiite centers of the Arabic-speaking lands, such as Jabal Amel (of southern Lebanon), Syria, Bahrain, and southern Iraq in order to create a state clergy. The Safavids offered them land and money in return for loyalty.


[18][19][20][21][22] These scholars taught the doctrine of Twelver Shiism, made it accessible to the population, and energetically encouraged conversion to Shiism.


[19][20][21][22][23] During the reign of Shah Abbas the Great, the Safavids also imported to Iran more Arab Shias, predominantly Sayyids, built religious institutions for them, including many Madrasas (religious schools), and successfully persuaded them to participate in the government, which they had shunned in the past (following the Hidden imam doctrine).


[24] Common Sayyid family surnames in Iran are Husseini, Mousavi, Kazemi, Razavi, Tabatabaei, Hashemi, Hassani Emami, Ladjevardi, Zaidi, and Imamzadeh.[citation needed] Yemen[edit] In Yemen the Sayyids are more generally known as sadah; they are also referred to as Hashemites. In terms of religious practice they are Shia, Sunni, and Sufi. Sayyid families in Yemen include the Rassids, the Qasimids, the Mutawakkilites, the Hamideddins, some Al-Zaidi of Ma'rib, Sana'a, and Sa'dah, the Ba 'Alawi sada families in Hadhramaut, Al-Wazir of Sana'a, Al-Shammam of Sa'dah, the Sufyan of Juban, the Al-Jaylani of Juban, and others.[25][26][27] Libya[edit] Further information: List of Ashraf tribes in Libya The Sayyids in Libya are Sunni, including the former royal family, which is originally Zaidi-Moroccan (also known as the Senussi family).


[28] South Asia[edit] Millions of people in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nepal claim Hashemite descent.


[26] In 1901 the total number of Sayyids in British India was counted as 1,339,734.[29] Recent estimates show that in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nepal there are more than fifteen million Sayyids: eight million in Pakistan, seven million in India, over one million in Bangladesh, and around seventy thousand in Nepal. Sayyids migrated many centuries ago from different parts of the Middle East, Central Asia (Turkestan), during the invasion of the Mongols, and other periods of turmoil such as during the periods of the Ghaznavid dynasty, Delhi Sultanate, and Mughal Empire, encompassing a timespan of roughly until the late 19th century. Sayyids migrated to Sindh in the north and settled there very early. Other early migrant Sayyids moved deep into the south, to the Deccan sultanates located in the Deccan Plateau region in the time of the Bahmani Sultanate, and later the Qutb Shahi kings of Golkonda, Nizam Shahi of Ahmednagar, and other kingdoms of Bijapur, Bidar, and Berar. Several visited India as merchants or escaped from the Abbasid, Umayyad, Safavid, and Ottoman Empires. 


Their names figure in Indian history at the breakup of the Mughal Empire, when the Sayyid Brothers created and dethroned Emperors at their will (1714–1720). The first Muslims appointed to the Council of India and the first appointed to the privy council were both Sayyids.[5][30][31] India[edit] In India, Sayyids of Hadramawt (who originated mainly from the Arabian Peninsula and the Persian Gulf) gained widespread fame. 


There is a big community of Sayyids settled in and around the Nanganallur region in Chennai. They can trace their ancestry directly to the Sayyids of Iraq.[32] The Sayyid population in India is distributed. 


The total population of Sayyids in India is 7,017,000, the largest populations being those of Uttar Pradesh (1,493,000), Maharashtra (1,108,000), Karnataka (766,000), Andhra Pradesh (727,000), Rajasthan (497,000), Bihar (419,000), West Bengal (372,000), Madhya Pradesh (307,000), Gujarat (245,000), and Tamil Nadu (206,000), with 25,000 in Jammu and Kashmir.[30][33] Sayyids are also found in the north-eastern state of Assam, where locally they are also referred to as Dawans.[34][35] North India[edit] Main article: Sayyid of Uttar Pradesh The earliest migration of Sayyids from Afghanistan to North India took place in 1032 AD when Gazi Saiyyed Salar Sahu (general and brother-in-law of Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni) and his son Ghazi Saiyyad Salar Masud established their military headquarters at Satrikh (16 km (9.9 mi) from Zaidpur) in the Barabanki district, Uttar Pradesh. 



They are considered to be the first Muslim settlers in North India. In 1033 AD Ghazi Saiyyad Salar Masud was killed at the battle of Bahraich, the location of his mazr. Ghazi Saiyyad Salar Masud had no children.


Iraqi Sayyids or Iraqi biradri in Eastern Uttar Pradesh are descendants of Sayyid Masud Al Hussaini who was direct descendant of Prophet's grandson Hussain ibn Ali and came to India from Iraq during the reign of Sultan Muhammad bin Tughlaq in 1330 A.D. 


He settled with his seven sons and forty champions in Ghazipur (U.P.). This is because some of them converted to Sunni Islam in the reign of Sultan Ibrahim Lodhi. His Shia descendants are now known as Sayyids of Ghazipur. Syed Ahmed Rizvi Kashmiri and Khan Bahadur Aga Syed Hussain were both Rizvi Sayyids through Aaqa Meer Sayyid Hussain Qomi Rizvi, whose sacred shrine is in the Zainageer Village of Sopore, Kashmir. 


Sayyids of Syed nagli, or Said Nagli, or the Baquari Syeds had migrated from Termez (Present day Uzbekistan)[36] during the Sultanate era. Sikandar Lodi[37] was the ruler of Delhi when Mir Syed Mohammad al Hussain al Hussaini al Termezi Haji al Haramain came to India and settled at Syed Nagli. He was a Baquari Syed who drew his lineage from Imam Mohammad al Baqir A.S Middle East and Central Asia[edit] 

The ancestor of the Bārha Sayyids, Syed Abu'l Farah, left his original home in Wasit, Iraq, with his twelve sons at the end of the 13th century (or the beginning of the 14th century) and migrated to India, where he obtained four villages in Sirhind-Fategarh. By the 16th century Abu'l Farah's descendants had taken over Bārha villages in Muzaffarnagar.


[38] The Sayyids of Bilgram are Hussaini Sayyids, who first migrated from Wasit, Iraq, in the 13th century.


[39] Their ancestor, Syed Mohammad Sughra, a Zaidi Sayyid of Iraq, arrived in India during the rule of Sultan Iltutmish. In 1217–18 the family conquered and settled in Bilgram.


[40] Perhaps the most famous Sufi that belonged to a Sayyid family was Syed Salar Masud, from whom many of the Sayyid families of Awadh claim their descent.


[41] Sayyids of Salon (Raebareli), Jarwal (Bahraich), Kintoor (Barabanki), and Zaidpur (Barabanki) were well known Taluqadars (feudal lords) of Awadh province.


[42] Gujarat[edit] Main article: Sayyid of Gujarat In Gujarat, most of the Sayyid families are descended from individuals invited by the Muslim rulers of Gujarat to serve as advisers and administrators, and granted jagirs.[citation needed] During the period of Sultan Mahmud Begada (1458–1511), the Sayyid of Gothada, Thasra, and Pali, a Zaidi Sayyid – Saadat-e-Bara. Sultan Mahmud Begada provided land to three Sayyid brothers and a grant to settle there after the victory of Pavagadh fort. In 1484 the young Sultan, after laying siege to the fort for twenty months, conquered it on 21 November 1484.


 He then transferred his capital to Champaner, which he completely rebuilt at the foothills of the Pavagadh fort, calling it Muhammadabad. During Mughal rule in Gujarat (1570–1750), they held the majority of the civil and ecclesiastical posts. For example, the Sayyids of Thasra, Kheda district were invited to serve as administrators and judges by the Mughal Emperor, Aurangzeb, and provided land grants to settle there. 


They also provided an important element in the Mughal army, and many are still found in the old Muslim garrison towns such as Ahmedabad. In addition, many of the early Sufi saints that came to Gujarat belonged to Sayyid families. 

Most of these Sayyid families came from Central Asia, Iran, Yemen, Oman, Basra, and Bahrain.


[43][verification needed] Kerala[edit] Kerala has a two-thousand-year-old association with Arabia. In Malayalam, Thangal is an honorific Muslim title almost equivalent to the Arabic term Sayyid, which is given to males believed to be descendants of Muhammad. 


The present day Thangals are supposed to be descended from Sayyid families who migrated from the historic city of Tarim, in the Hadhramaut Province, Yemen, during the 17th century in order to propagate Islam on the Malabar Coast. Sayyids selected coastal areas to settle. The royal family of Arakkal in Kerala had Thangal origins.[30]


[44] Pakistan[edit] See also: Arabs in Pakistan There are numerous Sayyids in Pakistan. Some of these Sayyids first migrated to Gardez, Bukhara, and Termez, and then to South Asia. Many settled early in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Sindh, and Punjab. 


There are many sayyids of both Shia and Sunni sects of Islam. Amongst the famous Sayyids who migrated to this region were Shah Yousaf Gardez of Multan, who came to Multan, Punjab, around 1050 AD. His grandfather, Syed Ali Qaswer, a decedent of Hazrat Imam Jafar Sadiq, the grandson of Hazrat Imam Hussain AS, migrated from Bughdad and was settled in Gardez, Afghanistan. 

The Gardezis of Pakistan and the Azad of Jammu and Kashmir are his descendants. Other saints include Syed Ali Shah Tirmizi, Syed Kastir Gul Kaka Sahib of Nowshera, Pir Baba of Buner, Jalaluddin Surkh-Posh Bukhari, and Sayyid Muhammad Al-Makki. Sayyid people of Pakistan are figured as the most prominent and well-established people of the country, with a number of them having become popular and well-known religious icons, political leaders, and professionals. 


Furthermore, Pakistan currently holds the largest Sayyid population in all of South Asia.[4] History[edit] This section does not cite any sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (July 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) The Tirmizis, who settled in Pakistan, are mostly descendants of the great Sufi spiritual saint Syed Ali Shah Tirmizi Pir Baba. [Pir Baba's grave and shrine is in Bacha Killay village in the mountainous Buner District of present Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Pakistan. 


He was also known as "Shāh Kurassan" ("King of Kurassan"). Sub-Continent[edit] This section does not cite any sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (July 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Syeds, wherever they went, were respected by local communities.


 Most of them were assigned religious duties by local leaders. When the Muslim conquest of South Asia began, Islamic forces from Central Asia also brought with them many Syed religious scholars who not only used to perform religious rites in the army but also preached Islam to the local population. 


Among them were the ancestors of modern-day Tirmizi Syeds. During the entire period of Mughal ascendancy in the Indian sub-continent, the Mughals acknowledged Karlughs as the rulers of Pakhli sarkar. In addition, probably due to their common Central Asian origin, Mughals never levied taxes on the state of Pakhli Sarkar. Sultan Maqarrab revolted against his own brother Sultan Mehmud Khurd, but was defeated by the Sultan due to intervention from the Delhi Sultanate under the command of Syed Jalal Tirmizi Baba the grandson of Pir Baba. In honor Sultan Mehmud Khurd marry his daughter with to Syed Jalal Baba in 1701. 


Around 1713 Sultan Mehmud Khurd went to Delhi; in his absence Shamsher Khan, a general of Sultan Khurd, revolted against the Mughals, citing increased interference on the part of the Mughal Empire at the Jhanjal fort of Thakot. 


This revolt was successfully put down after a siege of several months by Syed Jalal Baba, and their allies, the Yousafzais, defeated Shamsher Khan, who was killed in battle and Sultan Khurd imprisoned by Syed Hussain Ali Khan Barha in Delhi until his death. 

Syed Hussain Ali Khan Barha, the cousin of Syed Jalal Baba, who were both powerful Mughal Army generals of the Mughal Empire during the early 18th century. The Sayyid Brothers became highly influential in the Mughal Court after Aurangzeb's death and became kingmakers during the anarchy following the death of Emperor Aurangzeb in 1707. 

They created and dethroned Mughal Emperors at their will during the 1710s. Syed Hassan Ali Khan Barha was fatally poisoned in 1722. Another main fight was fought between the Hindus and Sikhs of Shamdhara and Syed Jalal Baba troops in the Agror Valley (Shamdhara was a great centre of business run by Hindu Baniyas as like Qissa Khawani Bazaar Peshawer and was located on Silk road to China). 


Syed Jalal Baba issued an ultimatum to either accept Islam or be ready for battle. The Hindus and Sikhs chose battle, so Syed Jalal sent his brother, Pir Imam Tirmizi (the grandson of Pir Baba), along with Yosafzai's troops, to capture the Agror Valley. A bloody battle started among Hindus, Sikhs, and Muslims at the place of Shamdhara named "Kundiyan"; this area still exists between Shamdhara (Yousafzai families still live there and are called Khankhel) and Chajjar Syedan (the Tirmizi families still live there). Signs of the ancient battles are easily found: hundred of human skulls can be unearthed after digging just a meter of ground. After a siege of several months, Hindus and Sikhs asked for safe passage to leave Shamdhara. 


After the Karlugh Turks were overthrown (the Turks retained small lands everywhere), the tribes of the Syeds and Yousafzai established their rule on the plains of Pakhli the Chattar, in the mountains of Kaghan, and in the Agror Valley. 


These areas were then divided among the above-mentioned tribes. However, after the fall of Jhanjer Fort and Shamdhara, Syed JalalBaba and his allies gained control of the area, and from that base embarked on military campaigns across the state. Since they met with little resistance, the Syeds and Yousafzai easily entered the Rush area of Hazara. In the 1850s the British captured Pakhli, Kaghan, and the Agror Valley from the Syeds and Yousafzai. 


Many Syeds and Yousafzai were killed and arrested by the British. Some Yousafzai made a truce with British, and now they all are titled as Khan of their areas. 

The majority of Syed and Yousafzai allies moved to the Black Mountain (Tor Ghar) (the location of famous villages Parari Syedan, Tikari, and Tilli Syedan) and in the mountains of Kaghan and Naran (village of Bugarmang). The British built a fort in 1865 (currently the headquarters of the Frontier Constabulary (FC)Oghi District) and deployed a battalion there. They also built a check post on the highest place of Oghi from which they watched and observed their enemies (this check post still exists and is known as "Picket"). 


The Black Mountain (Tor Ghar) tribes (Syeds and Yousafzai) had never been under direct British rule, although it was generally accounted to be part of the 'Frontier Region/Provincial Tribal Areas' from about 1901 onward and nominally attached to the then Hazara district. 


The tribes had been involved in fighting with British for quite some time, and a number of famous 'Black Mountain Expeditions' or 'Campaigns' took place between 1852 and the 1920s. A brief account of the British Expeditions against the Tor Ghar tribes follows: Under Lieutenant Colonel F. Mackeson, 1852–53, against the Hassanzais. 


The occasion was the murder of two British customs officers. A force of 3,800 British troops traversed their country, destroying their villages, grain, and crops. Under Major-General A. T. Wilde, 1868. The occasion was an attack on a British police post at Oghi in the Agror Valley by all three tribes. A force of 12,544 British troops entered the country and the tribes made peace. The First Hazara Expedition 1888. The cause was the constant raids made by the tribes on villages in British territory, culminating in an attack on a small British detachment, in which two English officers were killed. A force of 9,416 British troops traversed the country of the tribes, and severely punished them. 

The Second Hazara Expedition, 1891. The Black Mountain tribes fired on a force within British limits. A force of 7,300 British troops traversed the country. The tribesmen made peace and entered into an agreement with government to preserve the peace of the border. 


Meanwhile, The Islamic State of Swat was established in 1849 under Syed Akbar Shah (the grandson of Pir Baba) with Sharia law remaining in force, but the state was in abeyance from 1878 to 1915. Thereafter, Syedd Abdul-Jabbar Shah, nephew of Syed Akbar Shah, was made ruler by a local Jirga and had trouble exercising power. Syed Abdul-Jabbar Shah become prime minister of the State of Amb in the late 1920s. Syed Jabbar Shah.jpg List of Sayyids[edit] Main article: List of Sayyids Syed Qanbar Ali Shah ~ Father of Pir Baba /Amir-i-Kabir (commander-in-chief). 


Hazrat Syed Ali Shah Tirmizi famously known as Pir Baba. Syed Jamal Shah Tirmizi famously known as Jamal ad-Din al-Afghani Shaykh Syed Mir Mirak Andrabi , Khankah Andrabi , Kashmir . Bloodline of Andrabi Bukhari Syed Syed Akbar Shah Head of state of Swat and famous for battle of Ghalegay Syed Gulam Haider Shah Tirmizi (1890–1977) (Famously known as Hazrat Wallar Baba Jee (RA) Shrine is in Village Chajjar Syedan Tehsil Oghi District Mansehra, Hazara Pakistan. 


Syed Abdul Jabbar Shah Swat, Pakistan Syed Jalal Shah Tirmizi Conqueror of Agror and Pakhli Sarkar, famously known as Syed Jalal Baba Syed Shah Murtaza Tirmizi Conqueror of Hazara, Pakistan Lt. General (R) Salahuddin Tirmizi – Senator (PMLN) Pakistan[45] Syed Qasim Shah – Ex MNA / MPA (kpk)[46] Col. (R) Qabil Shah Tirmizi – Writer/philanthropist[47] Captain Syed Isfandyar Ahmed Bokhari Shaheed – Pakistan Army Officer Syed In Balochistan The syed in Balochistan are present in the Pishine and District Harnai. The Harnai Syed include sub-categories such as Bukhari, Qadree, Pahchi, Maswani, and Miagan. 


The Syed Bukhari is popular in Harnai district because of his religious thoughts. The popular mazar of Syed Bukhari in the districts of Harnai Shaikh Mussa Baba and Shaik Zirak and Mubarak are also populated... The Sayyids of Punjab belong to the Hasani (descendants of Hasan), Husaini (descendants of Husayn), Zaidi (descendants of Zayd ibn Ali, grandson of Husayn), Rizvi, (descendants of Ali al-Ridha), and Naqvi (descendants of Ali al-Hadi).[48] Important Sayyid communities[edit] This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. 


The specific problem is: Copyediting & shortening required (December 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Important Sayyid communities in South Asia include: Hasani syeds of Rudauli District Barabanki Ibraheem al-Ghamar bin Hasan Muthanna had a son named Isma'eel ad-Deebaj. Ad-Deebaj had two sons: Hasan bin Isma'eel ad-Deebaj – he left a large progeny; and Ibraheem bin Isma'eel ad-Deebaj – he came to be known as Tabataba. It is mostly his progeny who have spread across Iran and Iraq who are known as the Tabatabai and use that as their last name. It was the children of Imam Hasan and their children who came to India as the first Muslims in Sind. This was in the time of Hajjaj bin Yusuf. 


Later many of them moved from Sind to other parts of India. Hasani Syeds populate a town named Rudawlee near Lucknow, in Punjab and in other areas of the sub-continent. Rizvi Sayyids of Zaidpur, Barabanki, Uttar Pradesh Naqvi syed, sadat e dokoha, jaladhar, Punjab, India now setteled in saman abad Lahore, Pakistan after the partition of sub-continent. Sadat-e-dokoha migrated from Tirmiz Iran during the reign of Ibrahim lodhi Sadaate Kichaucha or Ashrafi Saadat These Sayyids are the direct descendants of the Sufi saint Syed Sheikh Abdul Qadir jeelani who was a hasni, and also Indirect descendants of Syed Ashraf Jahangir Semnani who himself was a descendant of Husayn Sadaate Safipur or Baqai Sadaat These Sayyids are the descendants of hazrat Syed Baqaullah Shah, the descendants of imam Husayn. Sadaat Nasirabad One of the earliest settlements of Naqvis is reported from Nasirabad, Raibareli in North India.Naqvi Sadats migrated from Sabzevar, Iran and arrived in Nasirabad around 410 Hijri (around 1027 AD) and settled there. After some time adjacent Patakpur (Nasirabad), was also inhabited by Mu'mins and rechristened as Nasirabad after the name of Syed Naseerudin companion and sipahsalar of Hazrath Shah Jalal (Rh:).


 Nasirabad is the earliest known Naqvi Sadats of India. Naseerabad is the native land of Khandan e Ijtihad and a multitude of very high-ranking scholars have come from there. The first Mujtahid from India, Dildar Ali Naseerabadi was from here and later his family came to be called "Khandan e Ijtihad" due to the heavy presence of high-ranking scholars. Some famous and known religious scholars from this lineage include Syedul Ulema Ayatullah Syed Ali Naqi Naqvi 'Naqqan', Jannat Ma'ab Ayatullah Syed Mohammad Naqvi, Ayatullah Aqa Hasan Sb, Ayatullah Syed Kalbe Hussain Naqvi, Hujjatul Islam Syed Kalbe Abid Naqvi, Hujjatul Islam Syed Kalbe Jawwad Naqvi, Hujjatul Islam Syed Hasan Zafar Naqvi (based in Karachi), Allama Syed Razi Jafar, Allama Nasir Ijtehadi, Dr Kalbe Sadiq, Hujjatul Islam Syed Ali Mohammad Naqvi. Sadaat Amroha The Sadaat Amroha or Amrohi Syed are a community of Sayyids, historically settled in the town of Amroha, in Uttar Pradesh, India. Many members of the Sadaat Amroha community have migrated to Pakistan after independence and have settled in Karachi, Sindh. 


Sadaat Bukhari of Pargana Chail of Allahabad The Sadaat Bukhari of pargana Chail are Naqvi Syeds and being descended from syed Hussam aldin Bukhari ibn Sadruddin Rajju Qattal (brother of Jalaluddin Surkh-Posh Bukhari) ibn Syed Ahmed Kabir ibn Syed Jalaluddin Bukhari. Saadat-e-Bara Sadat-e-Bara (Urdu: ہسادات بار), sometimes pronounced Sadaat-e-Barha, are a community of Sayyids, originally from a group of twelve villages situated in the Muzaffarnagar district of Uttar Pradesh in India. 

This community had considerable influence during the latter days of the Mughal Empire. They were also found in the Karnal district and Haryana in India. Many members of this community have migrated to Pakistan after independence and have settled in Karachi, Khairpur State in Sind and Lahore. Zaidi Sadat Of Kandipur, Ambedkar Nagar, Uttar Pradesh Zaidi Sayyed migrated from Jansath to the eastern part of Uttar Pradesh namely Sikanderpur, Kandipur in the Ambedkar Nagar district. These Sayyeds are descendants of Abul Farah Wasti who came to India from Wasit, Iraq in the late 13th century along with his four sons. Gardēzī Sadaat The Gardēzī Sadaat is a Sadaat Muslim family of Sayyid from Gardez, Afghanistan; consequently known as ‘Gardēzī Sadaat’ in South Asia. 


Nishapuri Sada'at of Kintoor, Barabanki Kintoor or Kintur is a village about 10 mi (16 km) north-east of Badosarai in the Barabanki district, famous for the battle of Kintoor of 1858 during the Indian Rebellion of 1857. Sayyids of Hallaur Hallaur or Hallor (Urdu, Persian and Arabic: هلور, Hindi: हल्लौर, Bhojpuri: हलूर) is a town or a big village in the north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, situated near the banks of the West Rapti River. Residents of Hallaur are referred as Hallauri. Sayyids of Wasa Dargah Wasa Dargah is a village in the eastern part of Uttar Paradesh. Situated 12 km (7.5 mi) from Domariaganj. Sayyid of Gujarat Sayyid of Uttar Pradesh Genetic studies of Sayyids of the sub-continent[edit] Classical multidimensional scaling based on RST genetic distances showing the genetic affinities of the Syeds with their non IHL neighbours from India and Pakistan (both in bold characters) and with various other Arab populations A study of Y chromosomes of self-identified Syeds from the Indian subcontinent by Elise M. S. Belle, Saima Shah, Tudor Parfitt and Mark G. Thomas showed that "self-identified Syeds had no less genetic diversity than those non-Syeds from the same regions, suggesting that there is no biological basis to the belief that self-identified Syeds in this part of the world share a recent common ancestry. 

However, self-identified men belonging to the ‘Islamic honorific lineages’ (Syeds, Hashemites, Quraysh and Ansari) show a greater genetic affinity to Arab populations—despite the geographic distance – than do their neighbouring populations from India and Pakistan."[49] In Northern India, 29 percent of the Shia Muslim belong to Haplogroup J. There are 18 percent belonging mainly to Haplogroup J2 and another 11 percent belong to Haplogroup J1, which both represent Middle Eastern lineages. But Haplogroup J2 reflects presence from the neolithic period in the subcontinent.[50] J2 occurs among 11 percent of Austro-Asiatic tribals. 

The frequency of J2 is higher in South Indian castes (19%) than in North Indian castes (11%) or Pakistan (12%).[51] J2 appears at 20 percent among the Yadavas of South India while among the Lodhas of West Bengal it is 32 percent. In the Maldives, 22 percent of the Maldivian population were found to be haplogroup J2 positive.[52][53] Overall, the presence of J1 and J2 markers in Indian populations is thought to be at least 3000–4000 years old. However, the YDNA has already suggested that the decedent of the Hashemite should belong to J1 M267. J1 is believed to be the haplogroup of the sons of Prophet Ibrahim. J1 include both, the son's of Ismael and son's of Jacob. Therefore, J2 are likely not Sayeds. There is some studies to confirm the SNP of the descendants of Ali Ibni Abi Talib. It is believed that it should be L-859, however, that is not confirmed yet.[citation needed] Currently, the genetic marker Haplogroup J1c3d is a strong contender for being the genetic signatures of the Sayyids, due to the haplogroup being predominantly found among people with the Y-chromosomal Aaron (Cohen Modal Haplotype CMH), who are people with patrilineal Jewish priestly caste known as Kohanim, which is passed down paternally from father to son. Currently research is ongoing on this topic at Family Tree DNA.[54][55] Southeast Asia[edit] Most of the Alawi Sayyids who moved to Southeast Asia were descendants of Ali ibn Husayn Zayn al-Abidin, especially of Ba 'Alawi sada, majority descendants of migrants from Hadhramaut. Even though they are alleged descendants of Imam Husain, it is uncommon for the female Sayyids to be called Sayyidah, they are more commonly called Sharifah. Most of them live in Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Moro Province in Philippines, and Pattani.[56][57][58][59] Some common surnames of these Sayyids are al-Saqqaf, Shihab (or Shahab), al-Aidaroos, al-Habsyi (or al-Habshi), al-Kaff, al-Aththos, al-Haddad, al-Jufri (or al-Jifri), al-Muhdhar, al-Shaikh Abubakar, al-Qadri, al-Munawwar (see Ba 'Alawi sada for a more complete list). Tesayyid[edit] In the Ottoman Empire, tax breaks for "the People of the House" encouraged many people to buy certificates of descent or forge genealogies; the phenomenon of teseyyüd – falsely claiming noble ancestry – spread across ethnic, class, and religious boundaries. In the 17th century, an Ottoman bureaucrat estimated that there were 300,000 impostors. In 18th-century Anatolia, nearly all upper-class urban people claimed descent from Muhammad.[60] Notable Sayyids[edit] Mohammed Abdullah Hassan was the leader of the dervish state in Somalia and Ogaden of Ethiopia. He established the Dervish State in Somalia that fought the 20-year Somaliland Campaign against British, Italian and Ethiopian forces, but was ultimately defeated. Abdul-Qadir Gilani, Sufi saint Bahauddin Naqshband, (Persian: بهاءالدین محمد نقشبند بخاری‎‎) (1318–1389) was the founder of what would become one of the largest and most influential Sufi Muslim orders, the Naqshbandi. Tajuddin Muhammad Badruddin, Sufi saint Syed Riyaz Ahmad Naqshbandi, Sufi Saint Pir Baba, Sufi saint Qozi Sayyid Bahodirxon, Sunni qadi. Abdullah Shah Ghazi, Sufi saint Ahmed al-Rifa'i – was the founder of the Rifa'i Sufi order. Sayyid ul Sadaat Sayyid Mir Jan, Sufi saint Khwaja Khawand Mahmud, Sufi saint Bulleh Shah, Sufi saint of Punjab Mirza Sayyed Mohammad Tabatabai (1842–1920) – one of the leaders of the Iranian Constitutional Revolution who played an important role in the establishment of democracy and rule of law in Iran Abu al-Qasim al-Khoei (1899–1992) – Shia marja' Sa'id Akhtar Rizvi the founder of Bilal Muslim Mission and a great Shi'a scholar Syed Ali Akhtar Rizvi(1948-2002) was a Twelver Shī'ah Scholar, Speaker, Author, Historian and Poet. Syed Hakeem Mufti Muhammad Aziz Hashmi , Hakeem, Mufti Govt. of Pakistan, khateeb, Former Chairman of Usher Zakaat committee. Sargodha,Pakistan. Agha Hasan Abedi (1922–1995) – Pakistani banker and founder of Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI) Muntadhar al-Zaidi (b. 1979) – Iraqi broadcast journalist who served as a correspondent for Iraqi-owned, Egyptian-based Al-Baghdadia TV Ali Haider Tabatabai (1854–1933) – translated Thomas Gray's Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard from English to Urdu. He was head of the Translation Department of Osmania University, could speak, write, and understand English, German, French, Persian and Arabic. Abbas al-Musawi (c.1952–1992) – Lebanese Muslim cleric and leader of Hezbollah Hossein Kazemeyni Boroujerdi (b. 1958) – Iranian Twelver Shia Muslim cleric who advocates the separation of religion and government and has been imprisoned several times by the Iranian government Seyed Mehdi Hosseini Bami, (b. 1979) – Iranian composer of contemporary classical music. Ibrahim al-Jaafari (b. 1947) – former Prime Minister of Iraq Idries Shah, Sufi writer Syed Ahmed Rizvi Kashmiri (1901–1964) was a Shia Ayatollah in Kashmir Aga Syed Hussain (1876–1944) was a Governor of Kashmir, later the first Muslim Minister in Maharaja Rule in Kashmir Shah Syed Hasnain Baqai - a Sunni, Sufi orator, Islamic scholar, thinker, reformer of Uttar Pradesh Intezar Ahmed Abidi – former minister of Uttar Pradesh Irfan Abidi (1950–1997) – was a noted Pakistani scholar, religious leader, public speaker and poet Muhammad Rizvi a Shi'a scholar Meher Ali Shah, Sufi Saint of Pakistan Mir-Hossein Mousavi (b. 1942) – is an Iranian reformist politician, artist and architect who served as the seventy-ninth and last Prime Minister of Iran from 1981 to 1989. He was a reformist candidate for the 2009 presidential election and eventually the leader of the opposition in the post-election unrest Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah (1935–2010) – foremost marja' of Lebanese Shia Muslims Muhammad Ahmad Al Mahdi (b. 1845–1885) – Ruler of Nubia and Sudan Mohammad Khatami (b. 1943) – reformist Iranian politician and former President of Iran Mohammad Kazem Shariatmadari (1905–1986) – an Iranian Grand Ayatollah of Iranian Azerbaijani origin Mohammad Mohammad Sadeq al-Sadr (1943–1999) – Shia marja' Sayed Ammar Nakshawani (b. 1981) – British-Iraqi Islamic historian, lecturer, and author Muhsin al-Hakim (1889–1970) – Shia marja' in the early 1960s Tuanku Syed Sirajuddin ibni Tuanku Syed Putra Jamalullail (b. 17 May 1943) – His Majesty was elected as the 12th Yang di-Pertuan Agong (Supreme Head / King) of Malaysia on 13 December 2001 until 2004. Syed Hamid Albar ( b. 15 January 1944) – was a senior Malaysian government minister in the 1990s and 2000s. He was the Minister for Home Affairs (2008–2009), Minister for Foreign Affairs (1999–2008), Minister for Defence (1995–1999) and Minister for Justice (1990–1995). He was a member of the Parliament of Malaysia from 1990 to 2013. Syed Muhammad Naquib al-Attas (b. 5 September 1931) – prominent contemporary Muslim philosopher and thinker from Malaysia. He is the author of twenty-seven authoritative works on various aspects of Islamic thought and civilisation, particularly on Sufism, cosmology, metaphysics, philosophy and Malay language and literature. Syed Mohammad Izhar Ashraf (1934–2012) was the Chief Patron of the All Indian Ulama, and Mashaikh Board (AIUMB) as well as a renowned Sufi scholar. He was the son of the great Sufi Shaikh Syed Muhammad Mukhtar Ashraf, also called "Sarkar e Kalaan". Both father and son's graves are in Kachauch Sharif, Uttar Pradesh, India. Their lineage has headed the Ashrafi Sufi Order for the last 600 years, since its founding by Sufi Shaikh, Syed Ashraf Jehangir, who used to be King of Semnan (a province in Iran) before dedicating himself to Islamic propagation and spiritual welfare of the masses. Hazrat Syed Muhammad Hussain Shah Nilve Al-Wasti (1922–2006) was native of Sargodha city from the province of Punjab (Pakistan). He was the most popular Sunni Scholar. He wrote more than 165 books in different languages i.e. Tafseer-ul-Quran, Tahreerat-e-Hadith and Comparative Religions. He taught Dora-e-Tafseer Ul Quran for 55 years consistently. He also belonged to Hasht-e-Salasal a famous sect of Sunni Sufism(Mysticism), i.e., Naqshbandi, Qadri, Qubervi etc. Karim Aga Khan hereditary Imam of the Shia Imami Nizari Ismaili Muslims. Ottoman court case (Matrilineal descent)[edit] However, in 1632 when an Ottoman court challenged a man wearing a sayyid's green turban, he established that he was a sayyid on his mother's side, and this was accepted by the court.[61]:130 Family tree[clarification needed] Quraysh tribe Abd Manaf ibn Qusai Ātikah bint Murrah ‘Abd Shams Barra Muṭṭalib Hala Hashim Salma bint Amr Umayya ibn Abd Shams ‘Abd al-Muttalib Harb Abu al-'As ʿĀminah ʿAbd Allāh Abî Ṭâlib Hamza Al-‘Abbas ʾAbī Sufyān ibn Harb Al-Hakam Affan ibn Abi al-'As MUHAMMAD (Family tree) Khadija bint Khuwaylid `Alî al-Mûrtdhā Khawlah bint Ja'far ʿAbd Allâh Muʿāwiyah Marwan I Uthman ibn Affan Ruqayyah Fatima Zahra Muhammad ibn al-Hanafiyyah ʿAli bin ʿAbd Allâh Umayyad Caliphate Uthman ibn Abu-al-Aas Hasan al-Mûjtabâ Husayn bin Ali (Family tree) Abd-Allah ibn Muhammad ibn al-Hanafiyyah (Abu Hashim) Muhammad "al-Imâm" (Abbasids) References[edit] Jump up ^ Ho, Engseng (2006). 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Chap. 124, Birth of Abi Muhammad al-Hasan ibn 'Ali, p.705 Jump up ^ Dr.Annemarie Schimmels book "Pain and Grace: A Study of Two Mystical Writers of Eighteenth-Century Muslim India" BRILL, 1976, p.32 Jump up ^ Template:Cite web = https://www.ziaislamic.com/interface/Gulzar auliya/5.html Jump up ^ Frederic P. Miller, Agnes F. Vandome, John McBrewster "Baha-ud-Din Naqshband Bukhari" 2011, ISBN 978-6-1341-5642-4 Jump up ^ Reclaiming Iraq: The 1920 Revolution and the Founding of the Modern State By Abbas Kadhim Jump up ^ Floor, Willem; Herzig, Edmund (2015). Iran and the World in the Safavid Age. I.B.Tauris. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-78076-990-5. In fact, at the start of the Safavid period Twelver Shi'ism was imported into Iran largely from Syria and Mount Lebanon (...) ^ Jump up to: a b The failure of political Islam, by Olivier Roy, Carol Volk, pg.170 ^ Jump up to: a b The Cambridge illustrated history of the Islamic world, by Francis Robinson, pg.72 ^ Jump up to: a b The Middle East and Islamic world reader, by Marvin E. Gettleman, Stuart Schaar, pg.42 ^ Jump up to: a b The Encyclopedia of world history: ancient, medieval, and modern … by Peter N. Stearns, William Leonard Langer, pg.360 Jump up ^ Shaery-Eisenlohr, Roschanack (1 January 2008). "Shiʻite Lebanon: Transnational Religion and the Making of National Identities". 


Columbia University Press. pp. 12–13 – via Google Books. Jump up ^ Deen, Sayyed M. (1 January 2007). "Science Under Islam: Rise, Decline and Revival". Lulu.com. p. 37 – via Google Books. Jump up ^ A Tribal Order: Politics And Law in the Mountains of Yemen By Shelagh Weir ^ Jump up to: a b "sayyid – Arabic title". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Jump up ^ From Religious Leaders to Ordinary Citizens The Changing Role of "Sadah" in Yemen By Mohammed Al-Asadi Jump up ^ The Senussi family Archived 26 December 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Jump up ^ "Sayyid.", Sarwat Elahi, Encyclopedia of World Cultures. 1996. ^ Jump up to: a b c Descendants of Prophet Muhammad in India Archived 1 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine. By K D L Khan, Published on: 14 January 2012 Jump up ^ Elahi, Sarwat S. "Countries and Their Cultures, South Asia, Sayyid". Advameg, Inc. Jump up ^ Early Modern India: Sayyids of Hadhramaut in Early Modern India Author: Omar Khalidi, Source: Asian Journal of Social Science, Volume 32, Issue 3, pages 329 – 352, Subjects: Social Sciences, Publication Year : 2004, DOI: 10.1163/1568531043584872, ISSN 1568-4849, E-ISSN 1568-5314 Jump up ^ "Sayyid in India". Joshua Project, a ministry of Frontier Ventures. Jump up ^ Stratification, hierarchy, and ethnicity in North-east India, Ranjit K. Bhadra, Sekh Rahim Mondal, Daya Pub. House, 1991 Jump up ^ The Eastern Anthropologist, Volume 41, Ethnographic and Folk Culture Society, 1988 Jump up ^ Morimoto, Kazuo (1 January 2012). "Sayyids and Sharifs in Muslim Societies: The Living Links to the Prophet". Routledge – via Google Books. Jump up ^ Welsford, Thomas (9 November 2012). "Four Types of Loyalty in Early Modern Central Asia: The T?q?y-T?m?rid Takeover of Greater M? War? Al-Nahr, 1598–1605". 


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Jump up ^ Sayyids and Sharifs in Muslim Society: The Living Links to the Prophet By Kazuo Morimoto Jump up ^ Southeast Asia (3 Volumes): A Historical Encyclopedia from Angkor Wat to East Timor By Keat Gin Ooi Jump up ^ Canbakal, Hülya (2009). 


"The Ottoman State and Descendants of the Prophet in Anatolia and the Balkans (c. 1500–1700)". Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. 52: 542–578. doi:10.1163/156852009X458241. Jump up ^ Sayyids and Sharifs in Muslim Societies: The Living Links to the Prophet, ed. Kazuo Morimoto, pub. Routledge, 2012 ISBN 978-0-415-51917-5 External links[edit] India portal Pakistan portal Wikisource-logo.svg Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Sayad". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. Authority control GND: 7864474-4 Categories: Arabic words and phrases Fatimah Hashemite people Islamic terminology Islamic honorifics Muhajir communities Muhammad Muslim communities of India Punjabi tribes Pakistani people of Arab descent Sindhi tribes Social groups of Pakistan