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Achievements those who migrated for Pakistan empty handed & what they achieved for dream of Pakistan

Ibn-e-Safi
Fiction writer

Description

Ibn-e-Safi was the pen name of Asrar Ahmad, a best-selling and prolific fiction writer, novelist and poet of Urdu from Pakistan. The word Ibn-e-Safi is an Arabic expression which literally means Son of Safi, where the word Safi means chaste or righteous. Wikipedia

Born: July 26, 1928, Nara, Prayagraj, India
Died: July 26, 1980, Karachi

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FOUNDER OF PAKISTAN'S ELITE COMMANDO UNIT, SPECIAL SERVICES GROUP (SSG) OF PAKISTAN'S ARMY.

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Aboobaker Osman Mitha, popularized as A.O. Mitha, SPk, SQA, was a two-star rank army general who is considered a legend in the Pakistan Army, and a "stay behind" conceptual founder of Special Services Group.
Wikipedia
Born: June 1, 1923, India
Died: 1999, Islamabad, Pakistan
Years of service: 1942–72
Education: Indian Military Academy
Books: Unlikely Beginnings: A Soldier's Life, Fallacies & Realities: An Analysis of Lt. Gen. Gul Hassan's "Memoirs"
Battles and wars: World War II, Burma campaign, MORE
@PanzerKiel
 
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Hakim Said
Researcher

Hakeem Muhammad Saeed was a Pakistani medical researcher, scholar, philanthropist. He also served as governor of Sindh Province from 1993 until 1994. Saeed was one of Pakistan's most prominent medical researchers in the field of Eastern medicines. Wikipedia

Born: January 9, 1920, New Delhi, India
Assassinated: October 17, 1998, Karachi

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Remembering Hakim Saeed: A Pakistani Messiah

News Desk -
October 18, 2018

Hamdard University Karachi organized a three-day book fair from 16th October to 18th October at Hamdard University Library, Karachi to commemorate one of the most influential scholars, thinkers, and philanthropists in Pakistan’s history, Hakim Muhammad Saeed Shaheed. The event was structured around various literary activities including a poetry recital.

Professor Dr. Pirzada Qasim, Chancellor of Ziauddin University and former Vice Chancellor of Karachi University, addressed the poetry recital and said that literary activities and Book fairs are a cultural and creative part of our society and they play a pivotal role in building a social mindset. He further said that every era has its blessings and ours brought us, Hakim Saeed.


Bait-al-Hikmah (the Library) is also a constituent part of Madinat-al-Hikmah. This is one of the biggest and best-stocked libraries in Pakistan.


“Hakim Saeed was a role model and a pharmacist who worked tirelessly for the health sector. He also worked towards the nurturing of the mindset of the society through education and that, only a true thinker and strategist can achieve”. He thanked the Hamdard University’s Chancellor Ms. Sadia Rashid, Professor Dr. Shabib Ul Hassan and Dr. Malahat Sherwani for organizing the event.

The event marked the 21st death anniversary of Hakeem Saeed. He was shot by unknown assailants on his way from a lecture on 17th October 1998. The former Governor of Sindh was a professor, thinker, and a philanthropist. He founded the Hamdard group of industries that have dealt with Eastern Medicinal research and products for the better part of a century.

To understand the force that was Hakim Saeed, here are some of his greatest initiatives and achievements:

Reinforcing Eastern Medicine: Hakim Saeed was the pioneer of Eastern Medicinal research in Pakistan. In Field Marshal Ayub Khan’s Era, Hakim Saeed used his influence to lobby for Eastern Medicine which coerced the Dictator to legalize the development of Eastern Medicine, a move which has served mankind to date.

Alternative Medicine Accepted Globally: Due to the rigorous efforts in his 50 year spanned career, Hakim Saeed was able to get Alternative medicine recognized from the World Health Organization.

Hakeem Saeed has left enough lessons for generations to come and Pakistan will always remember and value his contributions.

Hamdard University: In 1985, Hakim Saeed established the Karachi campus of Hamdard University and served as its first Vice Chancellor.

Madinat-al-Hikmah: The Crown Jewel in his collection of national contributions is the establishment of Madinat-al-Hikmah complex in Karachi. The complex, apart from research centers, has Hamdard University with institutes as Hamdard College of Medicine and Dentistry, Hamdard Al-Majeed College of Eastern Medicine, Hafiz Muhammad Ilyas Institute of Herbal Sciences, Hamdard Institute of Education & Social Sciences, Hamdard Institute of Management Sciences, Hamdard Institute of Information Technology, Hamdard School of Law, Faculty of Engineering Science & Technology, Hamdard Public School and Hamdard Village School. Bait-al-Hikmah (the Library) is also a constituent part of Madinat-al-Hikmah. This is one of the biggest and best-stocked libraries in Pakistan.

Literary Contributions: Dr. Hakim Saeed, a scholar in pharmacy, wrote, edited or compiled over 200 books and journals, both in Urdu and English, on Medicine, Health, Education, Pakistan, and Islam. He also edited some journals such as Hamdard Islamicus, Hamdard Medicus, Journal of the Pakistan Historical Society “Historicus” and Hamdard Sehat. For several years he was also the editor of Payami, the Urdu edition of UNESCO’S journal Courier.

Hamdard Naunehal: Hakim Saeed was also the editor of Hamdard Naunehal, a monthly magazine for children that remained one of the most popular Children’s publications in Pakistan. Hamdard Naunehal integrated healthy lifestyle choices with fictional writing for children.

A beacon of knowledge, a product of determination, and a preacher of cultural values and consistency, Hakeem Saeed has left enough lessons for generations to come and Pakistan will always remember and value his contributions.

https://www.globalvillagespace.com/remembering-hakim-saeed-a-pakistani-messiah/
 
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Abdur Rehman Hye

Abdur Rahman full name Abdur Rahman Haye famous as A.R. Hye. He was a Pakistani architect and a pioneer of institutional architectures in Pakistan.

Name: Abdur Rahman Hye
In Urdu: عبد الرحمن حئ
Famous As: A.R. Hye

Nationality: Pakistani
Education: Sir J. J. College of Architecture University of Edinburgh
Religion: Islam
Profession: Architect

Design: Auditorium, Lahore College for Women University Additions to APWA College for Women Minister's Residences, Lahore
Projects: Buildings at Mayo Hospital Buildings at Nishtar Medical College of Multan Mosque, Gazetted Officers Residences (GOR) I, Lahore Minister's Residences, Lahore
Buildings: Generals Combatant Army Headquarters (GHQ) Quaid-e-Azam Medical College Khyber Medical College Gazetted Officers Housing, GOR III Lahore

Born
Date: 17 December 1919
Place: Hyderabad, Hyderabad State (Present-day Andhra Pradesh, India)


Died
Date: 18 September 2008
Rest Place: Islamabad, Pakistan
 
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Dr. A.H. Nayyar in 2011

Born 1945 (age 74–75) India (Present-day, India and Pakistan)
Citizenship Pakistan
Education Karachi University
Imperial College, London

Nayyar was born in India, now part partitioned between India and Pakistan in 1945. He was educated in Karachi, and attended the Karachi University where he graduated with BSc in Physics in 1964, and MSc in Physics from Karachi University in 1966.

Nayyar went to United Kingdom for his doctoral studies, attending the Imperial College in London where he obtained his PhD in condensed matter physics in 1973. His thesis covered studies on magnetic properties of the excited electrons. Upon returning to Pakistan, he joined the Institute of Theoretical Physics (now department of physics) of the Quaid-i-Azam University (QaU) and served on the faculty until 2005.

After leaving QaU in 2005, Nayyar became involved with the public policy issues regarding the education, renewable and fuel cell energy at the Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI) in Islamabad. Since 1998, Nayyar has been a visiting research scholar at the Princeton University in the United States, and has been on the faculty to instruct courses on physics at the Lahore University of Management Sciences in Pakistan.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul_Hameed_Nayyar
 
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Here's one man who literally changed Pakistan's destiny and gave the nation, and our people the ultimate weapon. One of the fathers of Pakistan's nuclear weapons program.
The legendary Dr muhammad raziuddin siddiqui (Allah bless his soul).

Theoretical physicist and a renowned mathematician.
MA in Mathematics, under Dr Paul Dirac University of Cambridge.
Studied Quantum mechanics under the great Albert Einstein.
Achieved his doctorate under Albert Einstein.
Worked on the US, British and French nuclear weapons program.
Vice Chancellor of Quaid-e-Azam University.
Nishan-I-Imtiaz recipient.






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Dr. Muhammad Raziuddin Siddiqui was born on 8 January 1908 in Hyderabad, Deccan, India. He was one of the students, who attended the newly established Osmania University. He completed his matriculation from Osmania University in 1921, and earned the BA degree in Mathematics with distinction in 1925. He was one of the graduates of the first batch of Osmania University, in 1925.

Raziuddin was then awarded a scholarship from the Government of State of Hyderabad to pursue higher studies in United Kingdom where he completed his MA in Mathematics, under Paul Dirac from the University of Cambridge in 1928. Then, he proceeded further to work for his PhD at the University of Leipzig in Germany (Weimar Republic).

He studied Mathematics and Quantum mechanics under Albert Einstein in Berlin and Heisenberg at Leipzig. He completed his PhD in Theoretical Physics, writing a brief research thesis on the Theory of relativity and the Nuclear energy. He did his post-doctoral work at the University of Paris, France.

While in Europe, when Dr. Raziuddin Siddique was working on his post-doctoral research at the Paris University, he had the opportunity to meet with the members of ‘The Paris Group’ where he had led the discussions on unsolved problems in physics and in mathematics. During his stay in Great Britain, he studied Quantum mechanics and published scientific papers at the Cavendish Laboratory.

In 1931, Raziuddin Siddiqui returned to Hyderabad, British Indian Empire, and joined Osmania University, Hyderabad, as an Associate Professor of Mathematics. During 1948–49, he served as Vice-Chancellor of Osmania University, appointed by the Governor.



In 1950, at the request of the Government of Pakistan, Dr. Raziuddin Siddiqui, along with his family migrated to Karachi. In Karachi, he joined the Karachi University's teaching faculty and taught as Professor of Applied Mathematics. In 1953, he was simultaneously appointed to the post of Vice-Chancellor of the University of Sindh and the University of Peshawar. Dr. Siddiqui founded the first mathematical society in Pakistan in 1952 by the name of ‘All Pakistan Mathematics Association’ (now known as Pakistan Mathematical Society), and remained its President until 1972. In 1956, Siddiqui helped establish the nuclear power and its expansion in the country by first joining the newly established Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) and then establishing the first science directorate on Mathematical physics.

In 1964, he moved to Islamabad where he joined Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission. There he began his academic research in theoretical physics. In 1965, with the establishment of Quaid-e-Azam University (QAU), Dr. Siddiqui was appointed as its first Vice-Chancellor by the then Foreign Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. He was one of the first professors of Physics at the Quaid-e-Azam University where he also served as the Chairman of the Physics Department. He continued his tenure until 1972, when he re-joined the PAEC at the request of Prime Minister Bhutto.

During the 1960s, he helped convince President Field Marshal Ayub Khan to make a proposed university a research institution. He, at first, established ‘Institute of Physics’ at the QAU, and invited Professor Riazuddin to be its first director and the Dean of the Faculty. Then, Professor Riazuddin, with the help of his mentor Dr. Abdus Salam, convinced the then PAEC chairman Dr. Ishrat Hussain Usmani to send all the theoreticians to Institute of Physics to form a physics group. This established the ‘Theoretical Physics Group’ (TPG), which later designed the nuclear weapons for the country.

With the establishment of TPG, Raziuddin Siddiqui began to work with Dr. Abdus Salam, and on his advice began the research in Theoretical Physics at the PAEC. In 1970, he established the Mathematical Physics Group at the PAEC, where he led academic research in advanced mathematics. He also delegated mathematicians to PAEC to specialise in their fields at the MPG Division of PAEC.

After the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, Dr. Raziuddin Siddiqui joined the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) at the request of Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Dr. Siddiqui was the first full-time Technical Member of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission and was responsible for the preparation of its charter.

During the 1970s, Dr. Siddiqui worked on problems in theoretical physics with Pakistani theoretical physicists in the integrated atomic bomb project. Previously, he had worked in Europe, including carrying out nuclear research in the British nuclear program, and the French atomic program. At the PAEC, he became a mentor of some of the country's academic scientists. At PAEC, he was the director of the Mathematical Physics Group (MPG) and was tasked with performing mathematical calculations involved in fission and supercomputing. While both MPG and Theoretical Physics Group (TPG) had reported directly to Abdus Salam, Siddiqui co-ordinated each meeting with the scientists of TPG and mathematicians of the MPG. At the PAEC, he directed the mathematical research directly involving the general relativity, and helped establish the quantum computers laboratories at the PAEC.

Since theoretical physics plays a major role in identifying the parameters of nuclear physics, Dr. Siddiqui started the work on special relativity's complex applications, the ‘Relativity of simultaneity’. His Mathematical Physics Group undertook the research and performed calculations on ‘Relativity of simultaneity’ during the process of weapon detonation, where multiple explosive energy rays are bound to release in the same isolate and close medium at the same time interval.

After his work at the PAEC, Dr. Raziuddin Siddiqui again joined Quaid-e-Azam University's Physics Faculty. As professor of Physics, he continued his research at the Institute of Physics, QAU. He helped develop the higher education sector, and placed mainframe policies in the institution. Dr. Raziuddin Siddiqui Memorial Library is named after Dr. Muhammad Raziuddin Siddiqui at the Quaid-i-Azam University.

Dr. Siddiqui remained in Islamabad, and had associated himself with Quaid-e-Azam University. In 1990, he was made Professor Emeritus of Physics and Mathematics there. He died on 8 January 1998, at the age of 90. His biography was written by scientists who had worked with him. In 1960, due to his efforts to expand education, he was awarded the third-highest civilian award of Pakistan, Sitara-i-Imtiaz, from the then-President of Pakistan, Field Marshal Ayub Khan.

In 1981, he was awarded the second highest civilian award, Hilal-i-Imtiaz, from President General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq due to his efforts in Pakistan's atomic programme, and popularising science in Pakistan. In May 1998, the Government of Pakistan awarded him the highest civilian award, Nishan-i-Imtiaz posthumously by the Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif when Pakistan conducted its first successful nuclear tests. Dr. Raziuddin Siddiqui Memorial Library is named after Dr. Muhammad Raziuddin Siddiqui at the Quaid-i-Azam University.

His eldest daughter, Dr. Shirin Tahir-Kheli, is a former Special Assistant to the President of the United States of America, and Senior Adviser for women's empowerment.

Dr Razi Uddin Siddiqui is the reason behind Pakistan's atomic bomb. A genius and a patriot

Pride as a Pakistani with hyderabadi background for me as well
 
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Dr Razi Uddin Siddiqui is the reason behind Pakistan's atomic bomb. A genius and a patriot

Pride as a Pakistani with hyderabadi background for me as well

100% bro, our elder was a genius and would easily be placed in a top 5 list of Pakistanis who changed Pakistan's destiny forever and for the better.
We owe him everything.
I shall make an intention of going to his grave to make Fatiha.

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Dr. Salimuzzaman Siddiqui

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Born 19 October 1897[1]
Subeha, Barabanki district, Lucknow, India[1]
Died 14 April 1994 (aged 96)[1]
Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan

Salimuzzaman Siddiqui, HI, MBE, SI, FPAS, FRS (Urdu: سلیم الزّماں صدّیقی‎ [səˈliːmʊzzəmɑːn sɪˈd̪d̪iːqi]; 19 October 1897 – 14 April 1994) was a Pakistani organic chemist specialising in natural products, and a professor of chemistry at the University of Karachi.

Siddiqui studied philosophy at Aligarh Muslim University and later studied chemistry at Frankfurt University, where he received his PhD in 1927.[1] On return to British India, he worked at the Tibbia College Delhi and the Indian Council for Scientific and Industrial Research. He later moved to Pakistan and worked in the Pakistan Council of Scientific and Industrial Research. He went on to establish the Pakistan National Science Council and was appointed as its first chairman in 1961. In the same year he became a Fellow of the Royal Society. He later co-founded the Pakistan Academy of Sciences, and after retirement from the government, he founded the Hussain Ebrahim Jamal Research Institute of Chemistry.[1]

Siddiqui is credited for pioneering the isolation of unique chemical compounds from the Neem (Azadirachta indica), Rauvolfia, and various other flora. As the founder director of H.E.J. Research Institute of Chemistry, he revolutionised research of the pharmacology of various domestic plants found in South Asia to extract novel chemical substances of medicinal importance.[2][3] During his career, Siddiqui published more than 300 research papers and obtained 40 patents mainly from the field of natural product chemistry. In addition to his scientific talents, Siddiqui was also an avid painter, poet, and a great connoisseur of Western music. His paintings were exhibited in the United States, Germany, India, and Pakistan.[1]

Wikipedia


Sahabzada Yaqub Khan


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Born 23 December 1920
Rampur, Uttar-Pradesh, British Indian Empire
Died 26 January 2016 (aged 95)
Islamabad, Pakistan

Sahabzada Yaqub Ali Khan (Urdu: صاحبزادہ یعقوب خان; born 23 December 1920 – 26 January 2016) SPk,[1] was a Pakistani statesman, diplomat, military figure, pacifist, linguist, and a retired general of Pakistan Army.[2]

Born into an Indian nobility, he was educated in England and at the Indian Military College at Dehradun, then the Indian Military Academy and served during World War II as an officer in the 18th K. E. O. Cavalry Regiment of the British Indian Army. After the Partition of India in 1947, he opted for Pakistan and joined Pakistan Army where he participated in the Indo-Pakistani war of 1965. He was the commander of army's Eastern Command in East Pakistan. He was appointed as Governor of East Pakistan in 1969 and 1971 but recalled to Pakistan after submitting resignation amid civil unrest. In 1973, he joined the Foreign Service and was appointed as Pakistan Ambassador to the United States and later ascended as Foreign Minister, serving under President Zia-ul-Haq in 1982.

Wikipedia


Syed Sadequain Ahmed Naqvi


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Born 30 June 1923
Amroha, British India (Now in Uttar Pradesh, India)
Died 10 February 1987 (aged 63)[2]
Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan

Syed Sadequain Ahmed Naqvi (Urdu: سیّد صادِقَین احمد نقوی ‎), Tamgha-e-Imtiaz, Pride of Performance, Sitara-e-Imtiaz, also often referred to as Sadequain Naqqash, was a Pakistani artist, best known for his skills as a calligrapher and a painter. He is considered as one of the finest painters and calligraphers Pakistan has ever produced. He was also a poet, writing hundreds of rubāʿiyāt in the style of Omar Khayyam and Sarmad Kashani.

Wikipedia



Akhtar Hameed Khan

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Born 15 July 1914
Agra, British India
Died 9 October 1999 (aged 85)
Indianapolis, Indiana, US

Akhter Hameed Khan (Urdu: اختر حمید خان‎, pronounced [ˈəxt̪ər ɦəˈmiːd̪ ˈxaːn]; 15 July 1914 – 9 October 1999) was a Pakistani development practitioner and social scientist. He promoted participatory rural development in Pakistan and other developing countries, and widely advocated community participation in development. His particular contribution was the establishment of a comprehensive project for rural development, the Comilla Model (1959). It earned him the Ramon Magsaysay Award from the Philippines and an honorary Doctorate of law from Michigan State University.

In the 1980s he started a bottom-up community development initiative of Orangi Pilot Project, based in the outskirts of Karachi, which became a model of participatory development initiatives. He also directed many programmes, from microcredit to self-finance and from housing provision to family planning, for rural communities and urban slums. It earned him international recognition and high honours in Pakistan. Khan was fluent in at least seven languages and dialects. Apart from many scholarly books and articles, he also published a collection of poems and travelogues in Urdu.

Wikipedia
 
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Dr. Israr Ahmad

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Born 26 April 1932
Hisar, British India
(now in Haryana, India)

Died
14 April 2010 (aged 77)
Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan


His father was a civil servant in the British Government[6] who relocated his family from Hisar to Montgomery, now Sahiwal, Punjab Province of Pakistan.[4][6]

After graduating from a local high school, Ahmed moved to Lahore to attend the King Edward Medical University in 1950.[2] He received his MBBS degree from King Edward Medical University in 1954 and began practising medicine. In addition, he obtained his Masters in Islamic Studies from the University of Karachi in 1965.[2]

Ahmed worked briefly for Muslim Student's Federation in the Independence Movement and, following the creation of Pakistan in 1947, for the Islami Jami`yat-e-Talaba and then in 1950 joined Jamaat-e-Islami led by Abul Ala Maududi, but left the party when the latter opted for participating in electoral politics in 1957. Ahmed resigned from the Jamaat-e-Islami in April 1957 because of its involvement in national politics, which he believed was irreconcilable with the revolutionary methodology adopted by the Jama'at in the pre-1947 period. His interest in Islam and philosophy grew further and he subsequently moved to Karachi, Sindh Province in the 1960s. where he enrolled in Karachi University.[2]

Sitara-i-Imtiaz (Star of Excellence) Award by the President of Pakistan in 1981 for his services in the field of religious instruction.

Along with his work to revive "the Qur'an-centered Islamic perennial philosophy and world-view" Israr Ahmed aimed with his party to "reform the society in a practical way with the ultimate objective of establishing a true Islamic State, or the System of Khilafah"

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israr_Ahmed

Although Dr. Israr Ahmad considered himself Punjabi and not a Muhajir. I included him because he was born in current Haryana
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Maulana Shabbir Ahmad Usmani

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Born
11 October, 1887
Bijnor, Bijnor District, now Moradabad division, Uttar Pradesh, India

Died 13 December, 1949 (aged 62)
Bahawalpur, Bahawalpur (princely state), now Bahawalpur District, Punjab, Pakistan

An Islamic scholar who supported the Pakistan Movement in the 1940s. He was a religious scholar, writer, orator, politician, and expert in tafsir and Hadith.

He was educated at Darul Ulum Deoband, where he became a disciple of Mahmud ul Hasan,[2] and graduated in 1908. After his graduation, he was appointed as a teacher at Darul Uloom Deoband.[2]

Shabbir Ahmad Usmani was one of the founding members of Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi as he was a member of the Foundation Committee of the Jamia (University) that met on Friday, 29 October 1920. In 1944, he became a member of the All-India Muslim League and led a small group of Deobandis who supported the creation of Pakistan.[1][2]

As a leader of this pro-Pakistan faction of Deobandis of the old Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Hind party, which was originally founded in Deoband in 1919, he went ahead and founded a new and separate political party called the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam in 1945, along with other like-minded pro-Pakistan religious leaders. He joined Muslim League in 1944 at a critical juncture of Pakistan movement when most of the feudals of N.W.F.P. and Punjab came under the influence of the Congress. Shabbir Ahmad Usmani with a team of 500 Ulema eliminated the influence of these corrupt feudals from these regions and converted the sentiments of common people toward Pakistan movement. The importance of Maulana Usmani is also conspicuous from the fact that the Quaid-i-Azam consulted him on all important matters after independence. He served JUI as its first president until his death in 1949. Usmani, with a team of approximately 500 other religious leaders, actively campaigned to convert the sentiments of common Muslim people in favor of the Pakistan movement. He played a key role in steering people away from some of the corrupt feudal lords and tribal chiefs in Punjab, British India and N.W.F.P. who were previously supporting All India National Congress in those regions. In fact, he became a close consultant of Jinnah after the independence of Pakistan in 1947. He is also notable for having led the funeral prayer of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan in September 1948.[4][1][2]

When Pakistan became independent, its first flag hoisting was also done (in West Pakistan) by him in the presence of Muhammad Ali Jinnah and Liaqat Ali Khan (while in East Pakistan, his fellow, Allama Zafar Ahamd Usmani, did the flag hoisting in the presence of Khwaja Nazimuddin). [5].

After the Partition of India, Usmani became a member of the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan, and remained a member until his death in 1949.[6]

He is best remembered for having spearheaded the Qarardad-i-Maqasid Objectives Resolution for Pakistan, which was passed by the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan on March 12, 1949.[2][6][7]

Usmani died at Baghdadul Jadid in Bahawalpur State on 13 December 1949, and was buried at Islamia Science College (Karachi) the next day.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shabbir_Ahmad_Usmani
 
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Dr. Fareeduddin Baqai

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Born 22 May 1935
Delhi, British India
Died 10 July 2017
Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan

Dr. Fareeduddin Baqai, MBBS, FRCS, FCPS, FICS, was born on 22nd May, 1935 in Delhi and did his MBBS in 1958 from Dow Medical College, Karachi. He started his career in ophthalmology at the Spencer Eye Hospital. He later moved to Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre where he worked with a renowned teacher of surgery, Prof. Col. Saeed Ahmed. He then went to England where he obtained his FRCS from Edinburgh and FICS in 1965. He was elected a Fellow of the Pakistan College of Physicians and Surgeons (FCPS) in 1993. He served the Pakistan Navy from 1965 to 1969 as Surgeon Commander and at the Combined Military Hospital Rawalpindi during the war in 1971.

In 1969 he established the Baqai Hospital in Karachi, and in 1987 he founded the Baqai Medical Complex, just outside the city. It now consists of Baqai Medical College, Baqai Dental College, Baqai Institute of Health Sciences, Institute of Postgraduate Studies, Institute of Hematology, Baqai Institute of Medical Technology, Baqai Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Baqai Institute of Physical Therapy & Rehabilitation Medicine and College of Nursing.

Profile on Pulse Pakistan
 
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Zubaida Tariq was born on 4 April 1945 in Hyderabad Deccan, British India. Her family migrated to Pakistan in 1947. They settled in Karachi, PIB Colony, where she lived with her five older sisters and 4 brothers. In 1953, her father died. After the death of father, three of her sisters took responsibility for running the house. In 1966, Zubaida wed a first cousin, Tariq Maqsood, whom she first met in 1954. They had two children. She died on 4 January 2018 at 72, after a long ailment. The death was confirmed by her brother, Anwar Maqsood on his Twitter handle. The funeral was held the very next day at Sultan Mosque in the city's Defence following Friday prayers.

Zubaida Tariq Ilyas (Urdu: زبیدہ طارق الیاس‎; 4 April 1945 – 4 January 2018), also commonly known as Zubaida Aapa, was a Pakistani chef, herbalist, and cooking expert. She was the first celebrity cook of Pakistan, appearing on numerous TV shows, and was also known for her totkas (housekeeping advice).

Tariq first started cooking when she and her husband hosted dinner parties at their home, and it was at one of these parties where she was offered a job at a food advisory service by a guest who was impressed with her cooking skills. Tariq went on to become popular in the 1990s when she became part of the cooking show Dalda ka Dastarkhawan.

She starred in her own cooking show Handi on Hum Masala and appeared on several other TV shows as a guest. Tariq worked with and appeared on ARY Digital, Sajid Hussain, Nadia, Kiran, FM 107, Kitchen Magic and Aaj Ke Bhao. Tariq was also well known for her home remedies or totkas, and ran a restaurant with her son Hussain Tariq.

Zubaida Tariq was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, which had an effect on many parts of her life. She died on 4 January 2018, aged 72, from heart failure.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zubaida_Tariq#Medical_health
 
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