BookRags.com Literature Guides Literature
Guides
Criticism & Essays Criticism &
Essays
Questions & Answers Questions &
Answers
Lesson Plans Lesson
Plans
My Bibliography Periodic Table U.S. Presidents Shakespeare Sonnet Shake-Up
Research Anything:        
History | Encyclopedias | Films | News | Create a Bibliography | More... Login | Register | Help
Not What You Meant?  There are 39 definitions for Ghulam.

Ghulam Ahmed Pervez

Print-Friendly
About 3 pages (958 words)

Bookmark and Share Know this topic well? Help others and get FREE products!

Allama Ghulam Ahmad Parwez (also transliterated in different ways- Parvez, Perwaiz, Parvaiz, etc.) (1903-1986) was a leading scholar of Islam. He is today most known for denying the authority and authenticity of some of the fabricated Hadiths which go against Quran and initiating the Tolu-e-Islam movement. He is also considered as a leading activist in the Pakistan movemnet.

Contents

Biography

Ghulam Ahmed Parwez was born in a Sunni (Hanafi) family of Batala, Dist. Gurdaspur, on the 9 July, 1903. Batala, a town now in the Indian part of Punjab, was at that time a very prominent seat of Islamic learning, philosophy and culture where his grandfather Hakim Maulvi Raheem Bakhsh enjoyed the status of a celebrated scholar and eminent Sufi of the Chishtia Nizamia discipline of mysticism. According to his own writings, from a very early age he possessed an inquisitive nature and never let any thought pass unquestioned. As he grew, he often questioned that if the Islamic beliefs and practices are true and correct, then why do these not produce the results the Qur'an promises? He joined the Central Secretariat of the Government of India in 1927 and worked in the Home Dept, Establishment Division. He is also supposed to have come in contact with Allama Muhammad Iqbal whom he became inspired of. In 1938 Parwez started publishing monthly Tolu-e-Islam where he propagated his interpretation of the Qur'an. After the independence of Pakistan in 1947 he worked the Central Government and was also a counselor to Muhammed Ali Jinnah. Pervez took pre-mature retirement as assistant secretary in 1955 to focus more on the religious work. His work and research produced many books on Qur'anic teachings, the most well known of them being Lughat-ul-Qur'an in four volumes, Mafhoom-ul-Qur'an in three volumes, Tabweeb-ul-Qur'an in three volumes, Nizam-e-Rabubiyyat, Islam A Challenge to Religion, Insaan Ne Kiya Socha (History of Human Thought), Tasawwaf Ki Haqiqat, Saleem Ke Naam in three volumes, Tahira Ke Naam, Qur'ani Faislay in five volumes and Shahkar-e-Risalat (the biography of the second Caliph Hazrat Omar). He delivered many lectures on Iqbal’s viewpoint of implementing the Qur'anic injunctions, which were later compiled and published as a presentation on Iqbal’s philosophy under the title "Iqbal aur Qur'an". He also gave weekly lectures on exposition of the Qur'an at Karachi which he continued (even after shifting to Lahore in 1958) till October 1984 when he was taken ill and expired subsequently on 24 February 1986. This was in addition to his lectures on the Qur'anic teachings to college and university students, scholars and general public at various occasions. He organized a country-wide network of spreading his ideas of the Qur'anic teachings called Bazm-e-Tolu-e-Islam. Such organizations have now been formed in a number of foreign countries as well. He left behind a widow and a brother (both now deceased) and a sister. He had no children. His works are being continued through Idara-Tolu-e-Islam, The Tolu-e-Islam Trust, The Qur'anic Research Centre, the Qur'anic Education Society, the Parwez Memorial Library and his audio and video recordings.

Parwez's legacy

Allama Ghulam Ahmed Parwez was one of the most controversial religious figures of the sub-continent in the last century. He alongside Sir Syed Ahmad Khan are accused by the mainstream Islamic scholars for bringing in heterodoxical freethinking in to the fold of Islam in the sub-continent. He had a critical view of the hadiths and for example denied the existence of jinns and angels in the traditional context and also had different views on the miracles described in the Qur'an. For his openness towards full re-interpretation of all Qur'anic verses and his controverisal ideas many traditional Muslim ulema declared him a kafir (infidel).

Major Publications

  • Matalibul Furqaan (7 vol)
  • Lughat-ul-Quran (4 vols.)
  • Mafhoom-ul-Quran (3 vols)
  • Tabweeb-ul-Quran (3 vols.)
  • Nizam-e-Rabubiyyat
  • Islam A Challenge to Religion
  • Insaan Ne Kiya Socha (History of human thought)
  • Tasawwaf Ki Haqiqat
  • Saleem Ke Naam (3 vols.)
  • Tahira Ke Naam
  • Qurani Faislay (5 vols.)
  • Meraj-e-Insaaniat
  • Shahkar-e-Risalat
  • Iblis u Adam

See also

See also: Liberal movements within Islam

External links

Sources

Biography compiled by: Sh. Allah Ditta and Late Mohammad Omar Draz and Published by Tolu-e-Islam Trust, 25-B, Gulberg-2, Lahore-11, Pakistan (http://www.pakistanvoice.org/GA_pervez.htm) Tolu-e-Islam homepage (http://www.tolueislam.com/)

View More Summaries on Ghulam Ahmed Pervez
 
Ask any question on Ghulam Ahmed Pervez and get it answered FAST!
Answer questions in BookRags Q&A and earn points toward
discounted or even FREE Study Guides and other BookRags products!
Learn more about BookRags Q&A
Copyrights
Ghulam Ahmed Pervez from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

Article Navigation
Join BookRagslearn moreJoin BookRags




About BookRags | Customer Service | Report an Error | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy