Abu Zafar Mohammad Saleh

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Died13 February 1990(1990-02-13) (aged 74–75)
Resting placeSarsina Darbar Sharif graveyard
Abu Zafar Mohammad Saleh
আবু জাফর মোহাম্মদ সালেহ
Personal life
Born1915
Died13 February 1990(1990-02-13) (aged 74–75)
Resting placeSarsina Darbar Sharif graveyard
ParentNesaruddin Ahmad
EducationDarussunnat Kamil Madrasa
Mazahir Uloom
Darul Uloom Deoband
Religious life
ReligionIslam
DenominationSunni
JurisprudenceHanafi
TeachersNesaruddin Ahmad
Zakariyya al-Kandhlawi
Muslim leader
AwardsIndependence Day Award (1980)
2nd Pir of Sarsina
In office
31 January 1952  13 February 1990
Preceded byNesaruddin Ahmad
Succeeded byShah Muhibbullah
Arabic name
Personal (Ism)Muḥammad Ṣāliḥ
محمد صالح
Patronymic (Nasab)ibn Nithār ad-Dīn Aḥmad ibn Ṣadr ad-Dīn ibn Ẓahīr ad-Dīn
بن نثار الدين أحمد بن صدر الدين بن ظهير الدين
Teknonymic (Kunya)Abū Jaʿfar
أبو جعفر
Epithet (Laqab)Pīr Ṣāḥeb Sārsīna
পীর সাহেব ছারছিনা
Toponymic (Nisba)Ākhūnd
آخوند
al-Barīsālī
البريسالي

Abu Zafar Mohammad Saleh (Bengali: আবু জাফর মোহাম্মদ সালেহ; 1915 – 13 February 1990), popularly known as the Pir of Sarsina, was a Bangladeshi Islamic scholar.[1] He was said to have contributed to the establishment of 3000 educational institutions. Saleh had also pushed for the establishment of the Islamic Arabic University and ibtedayi madrasas in Bangladesh.[2] Despite being a recipient of the Independence Day Award,[3] he has been accused of collaborating with the Pakistan Army and committing war crimes during the Bangladesh Liberation war.[4]

Saleh was born on a Thursday in 1915, to a scholarly Bengali Muslim family of Pirs in the village of Sarsina in Swarupkati (later renamed to Nesarabad), Firozpur, then situated in the Backergunge District of the Bengal Province. His father, Nesaruddin Ahmad, was a khalifah (spiritual successor) of Furfura Sharif's Mohammad Abu Bakr Siddique and the inaugural Pir of Sarsina. His grandfather, Haji Sadruddin Akhand, and great-grandfather, Munshi Zahiruddin Akhand, were also prominent Sufis of the Greater Barisal region.[5]

Education

Saleh began his education under his father. He enrolled at the Darussunnat Kamil Madrasa in Sarsina – one of the most prominent institutions in greater Barisal, founded by his father in 1915. Saleh studied several books there including the Mishkat al-Masabih. He then set off for Hindustan, where he studied at the Mazahir Uloom seminary of Saharanpur. He completed his studies there by reciting the Kutub al-Sittah to his teachers. Among his teachers in Saharanpur were Zakariyya al-Kandhlawi, Abdur Rahman Kamilpuri, Allamah Asadullah and Allamah Siddiq. Saleh was then admitted into Darul Uloom Deoband where he maintained a cordial relationship with Hussain Ahmad Madani.[6]

Career

After his father's death in 1952, Saleh inherited the leadership of Sarsina Darbar Sharif and the chairmanship of the Darussunnat Kamil Madrasa. Saleh supported Abdus Sattar, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party candidate for presidency in 1981.[7] He headed the Bangladesh Jamate Hizbullah Hazrat and Bangladesh Jamate Ulema.[8]

Controversy

Death

References

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