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.Find sources: "Syed Safdar Hussain Najafi" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (July 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Syed Safdar Hussain Najafi
سید صفدر حسین نجفي
Personal
Born1932
Alipur, Pakistan
Died3 December 1989 (aged 57)
Lahore, Pakistan
Resting placeJamea tul Muntazar, H. block, Model town, Lahore, Pakistan.
ReligionUsuli Twelver Shi`a Islam
Other namesArabic/Persian/Urdu:
سید صفدر حسین نقوى نجفی
Senior posting
Based inLahore, Pakistan
Period in office1956–1989
PredecessorPrincipal of Jamea tul Muntazar
PostMuhsin-e-Millat
Syed Safdar Hussain Najafi
TitleMuhsin-e-Millat
Personal
Born1932
Died1989
ReligionIslam
EraModern era
RegionPakistan
JurisprudenceShia Islam
Main interest(s)Tafsir, Hadith, Kalam, Fiqh, Islamic philosophy, Islamic ethics
Muslim leader
Influenced by
Influenced

Syed Safdar Hussain Najafi (مولانا سید صفدر حسین نجفی) was a scholar and religious leader.

Social background

[edit]

Family and childhood

[edit]

Najafi was born in 1932 at Alipur, a tehsil of Muzaffargarh District in the Panjab province of Pakistan.[1] He is the son of Syed Ghulam Sarwar Naqvi from a Naqvi Syed family.[2] He was descended from Syed Jalal-ul-Din Surkhposh Bukhari (and his grandson Jahaniyan Jahangasht is buried in the Uch), who was from a branch of the scions of Imam Ali Naqi.[1]


Education in Pakistan

[edit]

Secondary education

[edit]

Education in Najaf Ashraf

[edit]

On 17 October 1951 he went to Najaf Ashraf.

Higher education

[edit]

His mentors in Najaf Ashraf were

After 5 years in the Holy City in 1956 Allama Syed Safdar Hussain Najafi returned to his homeland Pakistan.

Publications

[edit]

Allama Najafi started a monthly Islamic magazine with the title of Al-Muntazar wrote 40 books on different topics and translated more than 60 books.

Translation into Urdu

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Safdar Bukhari, Muhsin-ul-Millat mukhtasar sawaneh aur karnaame, P. 32 Lahore, Pakistan, December 1990,
  2. ^ Safdar Bukhari, Muhsin-ul-millat mukhtasar sawaneh aur karnaame, P. 32 & 33 Lahore, Pakistan, December 1990,
  3. ^ Safdar Bukhari, Muhsin-ul-Millat mukhtasar sawaneh aur karnaame, P. 34, Lahore, Pakistan, December 1990,
  4. ^ تفسير نمونہ. Tafseer-e-namona.com.
  5. ^ Ziaraat.com – Online Books. Ziyaraat.net.
  6. ^ The Holy Qur'ãn in South Asia, (a bio-bibliographic study of translations of the Holy Qur'ãn in 23 South Asian languages) Author: Mofakhkhar Hussain Khan, P. 551 Publisher: Dhaka : Bibi Akhtar Prakãs?ani, 2001.
  7. ^ Rooznama, Jisarat, Karachi, Pakistan 1979.
  8. ^ The Holy Qur'ãn in South Asia, (a bio-bibliographic study of translations of the Holy Qur'ãn in 23 South Asian languages) Author: Mofakhkhar Hussain Khan, P. 550 Publisher: Dhaka : Bibi Akhtar Prakãs?ani, 2001.
  9. ^ An Introduction to the Book: Nafasal Mahmoom || Imam Reza (A.S.) Network. Imam Reza.
  10. ^ المنتظر لائبريرى- جامعۃ المنتظر- تفصیلی اعداد و شمار. Alibrary.org.
  11. ^ Safdar Bukhari, Muhsin-ul-Millat mukhtasar sawaneh aur karnaame, P. 88 to 92 Lahore, Pakistan, December 1990,

Bibliography

[edit]
[edit]