Abdul Batin Jaunpuri

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Died1973 (aged 7273)
Resting placeMazar Road, Gabtali, Dacca
Parents
Abdul Batin Jaunpuri
Personal life
Born1900 (1900)
Died1973 (aged 7273)
Resting placeMazar Road, Gabtali, Dacca
Parents
OccupationTheologian, author
RelativesKaramat Ali Jaunpuri (grandfather)
Hafiz Ahmad Jaunpuri (uncle)
Rashid Ahmad Jaunpuri (cousin)
Abdur Rab Jaunpuri (cousin)
Religious life
ReligionIslam
DenominationSunni
JurisprudenceHanafi
MovementTaiyuni
Muslim leader
TeacherAbdul Awwal Jaunpuri
Influenced by

ʿAbd al-Bāṭin Jaunpūrī (Urdu: عبد الباطن جونپوری, Bengali: আব্দুল বাতেন জৌনপুরী; 1900–1973), also known as Abdul Baten Siddiqi,[1] was an Indian Muslim scholar, religious preacher, educationist.[2] He authored many of the biographies of the leaders of the Taiyuni movement centred in Bengal.[3][4] He led a peasant movement in Gafargaon, Mymensingh, which eventually led to the establishment of Batinia Madrasa.[5]

Abdul Batin Jaunpuri was born in 1900 to Abdul Awwal Jaunpuri and Fakhira Bibi in the Mulla Tola neighbourhood of Jaunpur located in British India's North-Western Provinces. He belonged to an Indian Muslim family that traced their ancestry to Caliph Abu Bakr and the family often frequented Bengal where they had a large following. His father was a contributor of Islamic literature, authoring 121 books, and founded the Madrasa-i-Hammadia in Armanitola. Jaunpuri's grandfather, Karamat Ali Jaunpuri, had migrated from Jaunpur in North India with the intention of reforming the Muslims of Bengal.[6] His great-grandfather, Abu Ibrahim Shaykh Muhammad Imam Bakhsh was a student of Shah Abdul Aziz and a son of Shaykh Jarullah.[7] Many of his family members were Islamic scholars, for example, his uncle Hafiz Ahmad Jaunpuri and cousins Abdur Rab Jaunpuri and Rashid Ahmad Jaunpuri.[2]

Later life

Death

References

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