Abu Salmān Shahjahānpūri (30 January 1940 – 2 February 2021; Urdu: ابو سلمان شاہجہانپوری) was a Pakistani scholar, researcher and historian. He was regarded as an authority in the historical and political movements of the Indian subcontinent. He was an alumnus of Jamia Qasmia Madrasa Shahi, University of Karachi and the University of Sindh. He wrote more than 150 books including Ifādat-e-Azād and Maulānā ʻUbaidullāh Sindhī ke inqilābī manṣūbe.
Shahjahānpūri served as a Professor at Government National College, Karachi and retired in 2002.[5][1] He was regarded as an authority on historical and political movements of the Indian subcontinent.[6] He was associated with Abul Kalam Azad Research Institute in Karachi and visited India during 2014 to present his papers in an International seminar about Abul Kalam Azad organized by Iran Society and Maulana Abul Kalam Azad Institute of Asian Studies in Kolkata.[7] His articles appeared in the Ma'ārif of Shibli Academy, the Burhān of Nadwatul Musannifeen, Madina and the Chattan.[2] In 2010, he had more than one hundred books to his credit.[6] He stopped writing in 2016 due to his weakness and old age.[4]
Shahjahānpūri's house was set on fire during the Qasba Aligarh massacre in 1986. According to a 2019 Express News report, hundreds of works were lost in this incident including rare manuscripts that he possessed.[2]
Shahjahānpūri was regarded as a major "Abul Kalāmi" in Pakistan after Agha Shorish Kashmiri and Ghulam Rasool Mehr.[8] He started writing in 1957, and his first article appeared after the death of Abul Kalam Azad.[9] He codified various articles of Azad and got them published.[8] He wrote explanatory notes to the Urdu translation of Azad's India Wins Freedom.[8] His works on Azad include Maulana Abul Kalam Azad: Ek Siyasi Mutala, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad: Ranchi mai nazarbandi awr uska faizān, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad awr Khwajah Hasan Nizami, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad ke chand buzurg and Abul Kalam Azad awr un ke ma'āsirīn.[10]
Literary works
Shahjahānpūri wrote more than 150 books.[1] Fifty of his books are only about Abul Kalam Azad.[9] His major research work is the compilation of the political diary of Hussain Ahmad Madani, Hussain Ahmad Madani ki siyāsi diary: akhbār-o-afkār ki roshni mai, which spreads over seven thousand pages, in eight different volumes.[4] Shahjahānpūri has the credit of getting Ilm-o-Aagahi, the college magazine of Government National College, Karachi, published as a research magazine.[6] His other works include:[11]
Imām al-Hind, taʻmīr-i afkār
Dīvān-i Āh: Abū al-Naṣr G̲h̲ulām Yāsīn Āh Dihlavī ke Urdū aur Fārsī kalām kā majmūʻah maʻ z̤amīmah kalām-i Ārzū va Ābrū
Taḥrīk-i Pākistān: afkār o masāʼil
Maulānā Muḥammad ʻAlī aur unkī ṣaḥāfat (Muhammad Ali Jauhar and his journalism)
Ashfāqullāh K̲h̲ān̲ Shahīd : ḥayāt o afkār : kākorī kes kā hīro
Maulānā ʻUbaidullāh Sindhī ke inqilābī manṣūbe (Revolutionary mission of Ubaidullah Sindhi)
Akhtarul Wasey and Khaliq Anjum co-authored Maulānā Abūlkalām Āzād ke muḥaqqiq Ḍākṭar Abū Salmān Shāhjahānpūrī: shak̲h̲ṣīyat aur adabī k̲h̲idmāt (The research scholar of Abul Kalam Azad, Abu Salmān Shahjahānpūri: Life and academic works).[13] According to Moinuddin Aqeel, "Shahjahānpūri is the scholar who is a keen observer of the rise and fall of the nationalist and historic movements of Indian subcontinent".[6]
^Javed Ahmad Khurshid (January–June 2019), "Kitābiyāt, Tasānī, maqālat wa dīgar az Dr Abu Salman Shahjahanpuri" [Abu Salmān Shahjahānpūri bibliography], Tehseel (4): 199
^Javed Ahmad Khurshid (January–June 2019), "Kitābiyāt, Tasānīf, maqālat wa dīgar az Dr Abu Salman Shahjahanpuri" [Abu Salmān Shahjahānpūri bibliography], Tehseel (4): 200–206