Imam-ud-Din Shahbaz
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1845
(present-day Pakistan)
Padri Imam-ud-Din Shahbaz | |
|---|---|
| Born | Imam-ud-Din 1845 |
| Died | 1921 Bhalwal, Punjab, British India (present-day Pakistan) |
| Years active | 1866–1921 |
| Religion | Christian |
| Church | United Presbyterian Church, Sialkot, First United Presbyterian Church |
| Writings | Psalms in Punjabi language |
Imam-ud-Din Shahbaz (or ID Shahbaz, Urdu: امام الدین شہباز) was a Punjabi evangelist and a poet from the present-day Pakistan.[1][2] His notable work is the first metrical translation of the Psalms in Punjabi known as Punjabi Zabur.[3] He chose Shahbaz, meaning the King of the Falcons, as his takhallus. His contributions to Punjabi literature and evangelism spanned over five decades, from 1866 to 1921. He died in 1921 in the town of Bhalwal, near Sargodha, a city now in Punjab Province in Pakistan.
Shahbaz was born in 1845 in Zafarwal in a Muslim family and converted to Christianity at the age of 10.[4] His early life laid the foundation for his later work as a Punjabi evangelist and poet. He was appointed as a teacher at Church Missionary Society in Amritsar in 1866 where he was baptised by Robert Clark.[5] He worked as a teacher in various missionary schools for nine years.