Thursday, November 15, 2018

Sir syed of Womens Maulana Abdul Haq Abbas

Maulana Abdul Haq Abaas better known as Aka Jee was a Muslim Scholar who was The Pioneer of Muslim Women  Education in British India.
The Deteriorating condition of Muslim Education in British India.His Father Put Him in a Missionary School.He was a Little Bit Upset the way The Missionaries were Propagating in favor of Christianity,He left the School and Finally decide on self Education .He Learned Urdu Sanskrit Persian Arabic.He later Become an Authority on these Languages.
He was From Basti Danishwaran a Small Village in Jalandhar. He Formally made a School for Girls as Madrasat-ul-Binat
This Become one of the Biggest Institute for Women Empowerment and Education in Pakistan.
This School he started at Home.His Wife Mother-in Law and other Family Members were his First Student,
Sooner the News Spread and women Girls started coming From Other Places..

In November 1926, feeling that his message needed a greater audience, Aqa ji moved Madrasat-ul-Banat, along with his family, to Siraj Gunj area of Jalandhar city, away from his ancestral Basti Danishmandan, in a rented building. At that time the population of Jalandhar was eight hundred and two thousand (802, 000), with only 4% literacy, which mostly comprised of Hindus. Seeing this sad disparity, Aqa Ji also began admitting young boys to the school to help improve the sorry state of Muslims in the city. Still, the number of pupils grew and grew until a new purpose built 26-acre campus was built in 1939 on Kapurthala Road in the suburbs of Jalandhar. The new school had a double story building and was inaugurated by Sir Sikander Hayat Khan, the Chief Minister of Punjab. A hostel was later added to house the students from other cities and villages. Here not only were the girls taught in the ways of Islam, but were also given opportunities to participate in sports and other extracurricular activities.
The vicious Pre-Partition politics took a back seat when Madrasat-ul-Banat was concerned, as the school offered a cause, which was close to all Muslim hearts. Several key 
On hearing about Madrasat-ul-Banat, Quaid-e-Azam Mihammad Ali Jinnah paid a visit to the school in 1942, and compared Aqa ji to Sir Syed Ahmed Khan for his efforts. Deeply impressed, Quaid-e-Azam expressed his desire to see the fledgling school become a women’s university in the near future. But, fate had other plans.











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