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A tribute in memory of the late
Dr. Abdus Salam Sheikh, eldest son of the late Maulana Abdul Haq Vidyarthi
(1933-2011)
In the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful
.......... The HOPE Bulletin ………..
Health, Ongoing Projects, Education
www.aaiil.org
2
INTRODUCTION
Akbar Ibn Abdullah, Editor
Almost everyone I spoke to who knew him said that the late Dr. Abdus Salam Sheikh was a great
philanthropist, always ready to help impoverished patients who were in need of medical treatment. He was
very helpful to the students of the Jama‘at who sought his tutorial assistance in Mathematics and Science.
Our Hazrat Ameer, Dr. Abdul Karim Saeed Pasha Sahib, and Brigadier Mohammad Saeed Sahib are
amongst the students who benefited from Dr. Salam’s tutorial assistance.
I never met him, although I knew his younger brother Abdus Samad, and his late father, Sankrist scholar,
Maulana Abdul Haque Vidyarthi Sahib, who stayed at our home in San Francisco in the early 1960s and
carried out research and tabligh work in the Bay Area of Northern California.
Br Ahmad Nawaz of Hayward, California was a friend of Marhoom’s younger brother, Abdus Samad, and
as a result he used to visit the home of the late Maulana Abdul Haque Vidyarthi Sahib in Muslim Town,
Lahore quite often. Although the Marhoom was his teacher, he also became his good friend; in fact, a
better friend than his younger brother, Abdus Samad.
Ahmad Nawaz related that Marhoom was a kind-hearted person, very social and popular in Muslim Town,
Lahore, so much so that besides the family and other relatives, several hundred mourners attended his
funeral in Lahore. When, as a Demonstrator at Forman Christian College, Lahore, at a salary of Rs. 150 a
month, he used to dole out fees of Rs. 15 for each of the many poor students who could not afford the
tuition. He used to assemble students in his house, Ahmad Nawaz being one of them, who needed tutorial
assistance, free of charge, irrespective of their financial status.
He was very fond of movies, especially English movies, and would treat the students who came to his
home for tutorial help, generally in the last showing in Lahore theatres, that is, from 9 PM to midnight.
Br Nawaz recalls that, assisted by his son Saleem, the Marhoom was a very successful homeopathic doctor
in Muslim Town, Lahore, where long lines of patients would be seen seeking treatment at his clinic. As a
renowned doctor of homeopathic remedies, he had treated Mrs. Salma Faruqui, who had almost lost her
vision, but with skilful treatment, her eyesight was completely restored by the shifa hands of the Marhoom
Sheikh Sahib. Alhamdollillah!
May Allah (swt), with His bountiful mercy and graceful blessings, bestow on the dearly departed soul of
Dr. Abdus Salam Sheikh high places in Jannate-Firdous, which He has promised to all righteous persons.
Aameen.
I also pray that our dear God will grant sabr and fortitude to the surviving members of the family,
especially the Marhoom’s wife and his two sons, Dr. Javed Ahmad Sheikh and HDr. Saleem Ahmad
Sheikh; Dr. Zahid and Shahid Aziz and their beloved mother; and the rest of the Marhoom’s extended
family, to bear the burden of this irreparable personal loss. Aameen.
We have lost a great philanthropist and dedicated brother. May Allah have mercy on him and reward him
for his good deeds. Aameen.
3
OBITUARY ANNOUNCEMENT
Message from Brigadier Mohammad Saeed, Moderator, LahoreAhmadees Members
Forum, AAII Lahore, Pakistan
Assalaam-o-Alaikum Wa Rakhmatullahi Wa Barakaato Hoo.
We are very sad to announce that Dr. Abdus Salaam, son of our most revered elder, the late Maulana
Abdul Haq Vidyarthi Sahib, expired on Eid day, 31 August 2011, while on vacation in Murree with his
family.
Allazeena iza asabat hum museebatun qaloo Inna Lillahi wa inna elaihi raaji oon. Who, when a
misfortune befalls them say: “Surely we are Allah’s and to Him we shall return” (Al Baqarah, 2:156).
The Marhoom was professor of chemistry in Forman Christian College Lahore, and both Hazrat Ameer
and I had the honour of being his students when we were studying there in the early 1960s. He was an
accomplished and hard working teacher and very popular with students because of his great sense of
humour. Because of our special Jama‘at relationship with him, he often invited us to his house for extra
coaching, especially before the board examinations.
He later gave up teaching and took up homeopathy as a profession. Allah Ta’ala blessed his hands with
healing power (shifa’) and he very quickly established himself as one of the leading homeopaths of
Lahore.
The Marhoom is survived by two sons. One is a doctor and worked with his father in Lahore. The other
son is settled in the UK. He was also the maternal uncle of brothers Shahid Aziz and Zahid Aziz of the
UK.
Hazrat Ameer and all members of the Central Anjuman are greatly grieved and pray to Allah Ta’ala to
grant him a high place in Jannat ul Firdaus. May He also grant patience and fortitude to the bereaved
family to bear this irreparable loss.
Janaaza ghaaibana for the departed soul will be offered in Jaamiah Darus Salaam on Friday next. Please
arrange janaaza ghaaibana in your respective mosques/centres as well.
Seeker of your prayers,
Lahore Ahmadees Moderator
Mohammad Saeed
“Those who say, Our Lord is Allah, then continue in the right way, the angels descend
upon them saying: Fear not, nor be grieved, and receive good news of the Garden which
you were promised. We are your friends in this world’s life and in the Hereafter, and you
have therein what your souls desire and you have therein what you ask for. A welcome gift
from the Forgiving, the Merciful” (41:30-32).
4
EULOGY & CONDOLENCE
Hazrat Ameer, Professor Dr Abdul Karim Saeed Pasha Sahib
Farewell Sir, we will miss you.
I pray to Allah that heaven is going to be a blissful place for Sir, as we his students called Professor
Salaam, as he makes his journey to the Heavens to be close to his Maker.
I heard the news of his most unexpected death through Mrs. Fauqia Zahid Aziz, who phoned me to share it
with us. Sir was her husband’s maternal uncle and so also Shahid Aziz’s uncle too. I was shocked to hear
this news and could tell the distress she felt; and could well guess how Zahid and then his mother, who is
very ill, would take it; and how other members of the family would be grieving; and how his wife and son,
who are in the UK would be handling the death of a very loving father; knowing they will never see him
again.
We informed Irfan, my brother-in-law, to go to the house and find out when the Janaza would take place.
The immediate family in Pakistan was in Murree, a hill resort in Pakistan, where they had gone for Eid ul
Fitr celebration along with Sir. Instead of returning with him they arrived back with the body. The
attendants at his house/clinic were unaware of his death and told Irfan that they were sure he was mistaken
and the news was a rumour.
The next day the body was there and Brig. Saeed and I arrived to bid the last farewell to our most revered
teacher, Prof. Abdul Salam, who could teach chemistry and make its complexities sound like simple logic.
He could unravel the problems with skill, knowledge, and he imparted the knowledge so skilfully; the
students thought he was no less than one of Hazrat Suleman’s Jins who could come to a solution before
we blinked our eyes.
Here we stood with his son Saleem near his bed, with mainly women expressing their grief in Silence.
Saleem too was taking it all bravely. I knew personally how his father loved him and now he would be
alone because of this death; alone without his father, his teacher and his colleague in the homeopathic
clinic. He broke into tears and a little louder cry as he saw me as he was aware of his Dad’s love for me
and before that for my father. My two brothers and I were special students for him as we were Khan
Bahadar Saheb’s sons and he was so glad to be our teacher. He wasn’t aware I was now near his bed or
else he would have leapt up from it as he would whenever I visited him and he was seated.
As I embraced Saleem, I remembered the first time Sir came to teach us after his birth and made the
announcement to the class, “Allah has blessed me with a son; true to my love for Chemistry, I have named
him Saleem because SALAM + NASIM (his wife) = SALIM.” I thought God must give him another child,
which He did because the AM and IM still remained to form some distinguished personality. I don’t think
he ever completed the formula though he did have a child. I guess that his mind had drifted onto
Homeopathy, in which he excelled, and then rose to the position of Professor in that field too.
I never failed to benefit from him; if he had helped me with Chemistry, an essential step in an entrance to
a Medical College, he also helped me with his new profession and successfully treated a condition that had
not responded to the Medicines from my own profession. I said to him when I got better, ‘Sir, it takes
great faith for a physician and a Professor of Medicine to accept medicine from a homeopath; I have got
faith in it because I have faith that God must have given you a healing hand as behind you are your
father’s, Vidyarthi Saheb’s prayers’. He said that maybe that is true but you have responded because
5
behind you are Dr. Saeed Saheb’s, your father’s prayers. I am sure both of us were right!
The last time I saw him outside his clinic was at a marriage of Zahida, daughter of Fauqia and Zahid Aziz,
in Lahore. He was seated with his relatives eating the main meal. I being a fast eater finished mine quickly
and it was time for sweets. There is usually a big rush where the sweets are so I decided I will also get an
additional helping for Sir so he doesn’t have to stand in the line.
The next time we met was in the clinic where I accompanied a patient to see him. He still, to my
embarrassment, was overwhelmed with my gesture of serving him the sweets at Zahida’s marriage. He
thought it was a great honour that the Ameer of the Ahmadiyya Jamaat served him in such humbleness; I
said the honour was mine and that I was grateful to Allah Who gave me this opportunity.
I am sure this issue will have limited space so I will not carry on and on and on (just three on and on and
ons will do). So the last thing before I finish:
I rang him at every Maulana Vidyarthi Saheb’s anniversary to tell him how I was praying and thinking of
his father, who was so knowledgeable and such a devoted Ahmadi. He would thank me for the respect I
had for his father.
On one of the occasions I said, ‘You know, Sir, with all the modern inventions they should have invented
a telephone through which I could touch your knees to show my respect to you.’
Here I was at the foot end of the bed where he lay but was no more. Saleem cried and mentioned how he
would often quote my conversation on the phone and hope for a new invention where we could show our
respect to teachers by touching their knees through the phone.
I quietly listened to Saleem reminding me of my remark to his Dad. I bent forward, touched Sir’s knees,
prayed and left the room.
Allah, please give patience to all the family and give a high abode to Sir with You; as YOU weigh his
good deeds in them add the ones he earned teaching his students with devotion and love and took passing
of knowledge as Your desire. Amen.
Captain Abdus Salam Khan, Cucamonga, California, USA
The passing away of Dr. Abdus Salam came as a shock. May his soul rest in peace. Amen.
I had the honor of knowing him ever since he was a toddler way back in the thirties. Father had rented the
rear portion of their Muslim Town bungalow so we remained co-sharers of the same residence for a few
years.
Apart from making his mark in the academic and homeopathy field, he was a man of many parts. As a
very popular homeopath, his home, where he maintained his practice, became the hub of all the
surrounding people. Since Muslim Town happened to be the hub of the Lahore film industry, he came to
know most of the film stars personally. His knowledge of the film industry history was extensive.
Muslim Town, the place of his birth and where he lived almost all his life, a place that was host to the elite
of the Muslims in Northern India, needs a special mention here. Initially named Ahmadiyya Basti by its
6
founder, Dr. Muhammad Hussain Shah, it was meant to be a sanctuary for the elders of the Lahore
Ahmadiyya community. But as time passed and many different people came to reside there, the name was
changed to Muslim Town.
I was looking at a list of the Muslim Town managing committee, and what a star-studded list I found it to
be. There was no less a person than Maulana Muhammad Ali, a man of international fame, the founding
member and President of AAIIL, on top of the list. Among other Ahmadi luminaries mention must be
made of Maulana Abdul Haq Vidyarthi, father of Dr. Abdus Salam; Dr. Basharat Ahmad of Mujaddid-e-
Azam fame; Dr. Muhammad Hussain Shah, founding member of AAIIL and founder of Muhammad
Hussain Shah TB Sanatorium at Samli, Murree Hills; Maulana Muhammad Ya’kub Khan, Editor of The
Light and later The Civil & Military Gazette; Maulana Murtaza Khan, a writer; Master Fakirullah Sahib;
Col. Amjad Hussain Shah (father of Mushahid Husssain, the politician); and many more.
Among the non-Ahmadi elite, mention must be made of Maulana Abdul Majeed Salik and Maulana
Ghulam Rasul Meher, the twin editors of the daily Inqilan, who shared a duplex bungalow in Muslim
Town.
Among the artists, there was Ustad Allah Buksh and Santosh Kumar, the famous film star with his wife,
another famous film star, Sabeeha Khanam.
It was here in Muslim Town that the Quaid-e-Azam, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, delivered a speech at a tea
party hosted by Maulana Muhammad Ali at this residence in the early forties, in which the Quaid lauded
the services of the weekly Light, an organ of the AAIIL, to the cause of the Muslims of India.
It may be said that Lahore was the heart of the Pakistan Movement and Muslim town was the heart of
Lahore.
And it was here that Dr. Abdus Salam was born, raised in the shade of these luminaries, lived his life, and
tried to keep the Muslim Townian spirit alive with his medical and social skills and graces.
With his passing away one is reminded of the couplet:
Jo bada-khwar pouranay thay uth-tay jaatay hain
seher qareeb hai Allah ka naam lay saki!
The old-time imbibers are slowly passing away, O Saki,
The dawn is nigh; mention the name of the Lord, O Saki!
Capt. Abdus Salam Khan
Choudry Akhtar Masud, Secretary AAIIL, California, U.S.A.
In memory of my friend, the late Professor Dr. Abdus Salam Sheikh
I came to know Professor Dr. Abdus Salam Sheikh in 1949 when I took residence in Muslim Town,
Lahore. Our first meeting was in Masjid-e-Ayesha, in Muslim Town, which was built by the late Dr. Syed
Mohammad Hussain Shah Sahib, founding member of the AAII, Lahore, in memory of his late wife,
Syedah Ayesha Begum. I had gone there for offering Friday prayer where the late Maulana Abdul Haque
Vidyarthi Sahib used to deliver khutba and lead the prayer
7
There I met a group of young Ahmadi boys, Abdus Salam, son of Maulana Abdul Haque Vidyarthi Sahib,
being one of them. He told me that all these teenagers come to masjid five times a day for offering the
prayers and he invited me to do the same, to which I agreed.
The residence of Hazrat Ameer Maulana Muhammad Ali Sahib was located in front of the Masjid across
the street and, except for Friday prayer which he used to lead in Ahmadiyya Building, Lahore, he quite
often used to come for Asr, Maghrib and Isha prayers to this Masjid. Others amongst the elders who
would come to the prayers were the late Maulana Muhammad Yaqub Khan, Maulvi Murtaza Khan
Hassan, and for some period of the year Syed Asadullah Shah Sahib. May Allah rest the souls of all of
them in eternal peace. Ameen.
After the prayer these Elders used to chat for a few minutes before going to their homes. On weather
permitting from October to mid-December, these Elders used to go for a walk by the Canal bank up to the
Jail Road bridge, an approximate distance of two miles, after the Asr prayer and would return to the
Masjid for Maghrib prayer. Abdus Salam and I, with their permission, used to walk behind them. This was
the most enriching spiritual experience of life for us as their conversation during this walk either centered
around the Jama‘at matters, recounting of the past events in their lives, and at times sharing jokes based
upon their student era or early debates with some Christian Padre or Hindu Pundit and non-Ahmadi
Maulvis. They used to walk on the fast pace and at times, being left behind, Abdus Salam and I had to jog
for a few paces to be in a hearing distance to enjoy their talk.
Thus friendly relation between Abdus Salam and me developed. At times we would go to the nearby Tea
Shop for refreshment together. Abdus Salam was about three years younger than I and at that time he was
in the 10th
grade of High School. After High School he entered Forman Christian College, Lahore for his
B.Sc which he obtained from the Punjab University in 1954. He also obtained his M.Sc degree in Science
with Chemistry major from the Punjab University in 1956, and thereafter he was employed by the Forman
Christian College as a lecturer in Chemistry. Along with his teaching job he was engaged in other research
in Chemistry with the Pakistan Scientific Development and Research Laboratories, which was located
next door to Forman Christian College. As a result of his research interest in Chemistry he was selected by
the Government of Pakistan to be sent to Australia for his doctorate studies in Chemistry. Thus on his
return from Australia Abdus Salam was Professor Dr. Abdus Salam.
Abdus Salam was fond of going to the movies and whenever he met me a programme going to certain
movie was a routine matter. I remember an interesting instance of those days. He met me very warmly in
the Masjid and, as usual, after the prayer he suggested going to a movie on the coming Sunday and asked
me to meet him at Capital Cinema, Lahore, at 5:30 PM. He further told me that we will dine together after
the movie.
I reached Capital Cinema at the appointed time, a few minutes before his arrival. I saw him coming
dressed in a suit and wearing a bow tie resting on his neck under the chin. When he came closer I noticed
that under the suit he was not wearing any shirt. On seeing him I started laughing and asked him, “What is
this joke? You are wearing a bow on a white collar without a shirt.” In reply in his casual style, he said,
“Yar sab chalta hai. [All things work.] A collar is there and these people do not know that a shirt too must
be worn under a bow and collar.”
After the movie, he treated me to a dinner from Kabobwala, who was sitting by the roadside on a footpath.
However, he preferred the food in a novel method of mixing the kabob with onion, tomatoes, green chilli,
and two eggs, then fried together; the end result was a delicious dish.
8
After his retirement from his teaching and research jobs, Abdus Salam Sheikh obtained a degree in
Homeopathic medicine and became one of the most renowned Homeopathic Practitioners of Lahore.
After my migration to America, I kept in touch with Abdus Salam via phone. My youngest sister, Nasim
Gul Mohammad, who was suffering from a liver disease, was under his treatment and I used to talk with
him to enquire about her disease. After that, one of my nieces, who most probably was suffering from
breast cancer, remained under his treatment for more than a year.
Dr Abdus Salam was a man who had the nature of a Darvesh. He had no ego and this was his most worthy
quality of character. He was quite jovial and I never saw him in any unhappy mood. Thrusting after
worldly gains was something that never touched him. He used to meet and mix with the poor and common
people as one of them. He had helped hundreds of his students who asked for academic help and never
charged a penny from them. He was a friend of the friends who kept lifelong friendly relations with them.
In him we have lost a gem of mankind.
May Allah rest his soul in eternal peace and grant the bereaved family strength to bear this great personal
loss with courage and patience. Ameen.
Choudry Akthar Masud
Nasir Ahmad, United Kingdom
Some thoughts about the late Dr. Abdus Salam
A PH.D. IN CHEMISTRY BECAME A WELL-KNOWN HOMOEOPATH
Bro. Ahmad Nawaz of Hayward, California, USA, a retired Wing-Commander from the Pakistan Air
Force, in his condolence message has given some academic details about the late Dr. Sahib.
It is a well-known proverb that like father, like son. You all know the late Maulana Abdul Haque
Vidyarthi, whose unique book, Muhammad in World Scriptures, will remain an incomparable research
work about the prophecies about the advent of the Holy Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah
be upon him) mentioned in all the previous scriptures. The Maulana was also a very impressive speaker
on the comparative study of religions.
Dr. Abdus Salam was Maulana Abdul Haque Vidyarthi’s eldest son. He did his Masters in Chemistry at
the prestigious educational institution of Lahore, Forman Christian College, Lahore. After doing his
Masters, he became a lecturer in that very institution and worked there for several years. Later, he became
a research scholar at the Pakistan Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, Lahore. He went on to do
his Ph.D. in food technology at the University of South Wales, Sydney, Australia. He came back
successful and worked at the Research Centre till his retirement. While working as a research scholar he
had opportunities of representing the Centre at various international conferences. He addressed two
conferences – one in Delhi in 1992 and the other at the United Nations University Centre in Tokyo.
Sometimes small incidents become a turning point in one’s life. One of Dr Salam’s friends was sent by the
Council to work in Karachi. The friend, out of curiosity, joined a homoeopathic college in Karachi to do
his diploma, but before he could complete it, he was called back. One day, Dr. Sahib went to see him. It
was by chance that he saw a book on homoeopathy lying in a corner of the drawing room. He asked his
9
friend about the book. The latter said that while in Karachi he had joined a homoeopathic college but had
to come back; that was why he had the book, but he had now lost interest in it. Dr. Sahib took the book
from his friend and started reading it. It fascinated him so much that ultimately he himself took admission
at the Pakistan College of Homoeopathy, run by the well-known homeopath, Dr. Masud Qureshi, who was
also called the Father of Homoeopathy in Pakistan. Dr. Salam passed the diploma course with distinction
and was awarded a Gold Medal.
This briefly is the story of how a professor of Chemistry who became a research scholar in food
technology became interested in homoeopathy and earned fame in this field. He started his career as a
Chemistry teacher, but died as a well-known homeopathic doctor. Besides his practice at his residence in
Muslim Town, Lahore, he was also teaching at the Pakistan College of Homoeopathy till he breathed his
last. That shows his attachment and devotion for homeopathy.
As a person, he was very noble, hard-working, studious, kind, and had great regard for elders and the
needy. I understand that whatever he was paid by the Pakistan College of Homoeopathy, he gave to one of
the clerks of the College as financial help. In the same manner, after he became a well-known
homoeopath, there used to be long queues of patients, but he would not charge any fees to his friends and
to needy persons. Being a professor of Chemistry, he had the advantage of knowing the chemical
properties of a medicine and this made his diagnosis more accurate and effective.
Before he became interested in homoeopathy, Dr. Salam used to teach students at his home. He was so
keen that whatever he taught should be thoroughly understood and remembered by the students that in
order to devote full attention to each student he took no more than ten students in a group. Then whatever
he taught at a particular session, he would prepare notes on it. He would then make ten copies of the notes
and distribute them to the ten students so that they could revise the lecture at home and also keep a record
of it for reference. Again, he did not charge any fees to the needy or to his friends’ children. My own son,
Hamad, used to attend Dr. Salam’s Chemistry classes held in the mornings.
As Dr. Salam was the son of one of our most respected scholars, the late Hazrat Maulana Abdul Haque
Vidyarthi, I met him occasionally on special occasions. However, when I was admitted to study for a
diploma in homoeopathy, on my request he agreed to teach me in the afternoons. As he was keen that his
elder son, Saleem Ahmad Sheikh, should also qualify as a homoeopath, we were the two students of his
homoeopathy class. This is how we became close friends. He was also a keen follower of cricket. That is
why when he visited England for the first time in December 2010, he specially went to see the Lord’s
Cricket Ground in London.
He was a very kind and able teacher and a thorough homoeopathic doctor, and I feel proud to have been
his student and friend.
May Allah grant him peace and comfort and shower His blessings on the departed soul. The patients have
lost a very able and kind doctor and his family and friends will miss him very much.
Snippets by Dr Zahid Aziz, United Kingdom
One of Dr Salam’s main teachers of homeopathy was Dr Abdul Aziz of Peshawar. He was President of
our Lahore Ahmadiyya Jamaat in Peshawar. He had the distinction of being both a medical physician and
homeopathic practitioner.
***
10
Nasir Ahmad Faruqui sahib wrote an article in Paigham Sulh, 1st March 1978, the special issue on the
death of Maulana Abdul Haq Vidyarthi. He related several incidents of the Maulana’s home life, told to
him by the Maulana’s two daughters and Dr Abdus Salam. One is about the birth of Dr Salam as follows:
“The Maulana had two daughters and one son from his first wife. The boy died. For a long time in
the Maulana's family, only one male used to be born [to any father]. So when, on the death of his
first wife, he married again, and daughters were born at first, his relations started saying tauntingly
that in his family only one male is ever born, and that male was born and has died, so no boy will
now be born to him.
One day, as he finished his prayer, this young saint [i.e. the Maulana], said to his wife: I have
heard a voice saying: Abdus Salam. You will have a son, and this is the name you should give him.
That boy, Abdus Salam, is still with us by the grace of Allah, as an evidence of his father being a
recipient of revelation from Allah.”
***
My mother, older than Dr Salam by 8 years, always relates the following incident.
At the age of 2, the baby Abdus Salam fell ill with typhoid. Their mother (Badar-un-Nisa) went to call Dr
Mirza Yaqub Baig, famous physician as well as one of the stalwarts of the Lahore Ahmadiyya Jamaat.
After she had been to his house, his wife said to him: I heard Badar’s voice, what did she want? Dr sahib
said: Her son is ill, and I said to her that I am just going to the wedding function of a friend’s son, but I
will just show my face there and come straight to your house to see your son. Dr sahib’s wife said: No, go
to see her son first; your friend will probably not remember that you didn’t come to the wedding. So the
Dr sahib straightaway hastened to their house. By the time my grandmother Badar reached back home, Dr
Mirza Yaqub Baig was already slowly climbing the steps of her house, with his walking stick in one hand,
and medical bag in the other. A few years earlier the Dr sahib had suffered a stroke, and walked slowly
using a stick.
After examining the baby, Dr sahib re-assured the family that he would recover.
INTROSPECTION
Dr. Abdus Salam Sheikh Sahib’s tribute to the Champion of Mujahid-i-Kabir
[Courtesy Dr. Zahid Aziz, United Kingdom]
Translated from Paigham Sulh, 26 December 1951 (p. 19), special issue on the death of Hazrat Ameer
Maulana Muhammad Ali.
Note: The mosque mentioned in this article was the Lahore Ahmadiyya mosque in the Muslim Town
suburb of Lahore. Maulana Muhammad Ali’s house was just across the road from the mosque, and many
other prominent members of the Jama‘at, such as Maulana Abdul Haq Vidyarthi, also lived close by.
---
11
My Ameer by Abdus Salam, son of Maulana Abdul Haq Vidyarthi
Hazrat Ameer [Maulana Muhammad Ali] was taken from us on that inauspicious day, 13th October 1951.
Being displeased with us, he went away very far from us for ever and ever.
I have seen Hazrat Ameer very closely, not as a religious leader or head of a religious community, but as a
human being. And I saw in him qualities which are very rare in people.
He was very regular in saying prayers. He used to come to the mosque five times every day to say his
prayers. If there were few people in the mosque, he felt regret, and if there were many people he was very
happy. He used to exhort everyone to say prayers.
When I was in the fifth class, I bought an autograph book. The first person I asked to sign in it was Hazrat
Ameer. I showed him the autograph book at maghrib prayers. He took it with a smile and said: Take it
from me tomorrow. So the next day I went with him after the fajr prayer, and he returned the autograph
book to me. In the faint light in the veranda [of his house], I read those words. He had written: “Be regular
in prayer. Never tell a lie. Fulfil your promise.”
I am sorry that I lost that autograph book at a meeting of the Muslim League, but the advices he penned
are still a guiding light for me. This incident shows how much the Hazrat wished that the youngsters of
the community should keep up prayer and acquire the highest moral qualities.
He loved children very much. I and my younger brother used to go to the mosque since childhood.
Whenever he entered the mosque, he would look at us with a smile. Sometimes he would pat us on the
head and ask after us. This made me very joyful. When I go to say prayers now, I still imagine that he
would enter the mosque smiling, stroke me on the head and say: “Tell me, how are you?” I then look
towards the path which leads to the mosque from outside, but I see nothing but disappointment.
He was not irritable of mind, as maulvis usually are. Good humour and wit filled his very nature. When
leaving after the fajr prayers, he would tell a joke or say something interesting. Then, having made others
laugh, and himself smiling, he would enter his house.
He had much sympathy for the poor. If a poor person on a journey ever came to the mosque, he would pay
great attention to arranging for his stay and food. There is an old beggar who comes to the mosque for
prayer. He used give him clothes and money.
In the mosque before the prayer, he would often talk about the activities of the Anjuman and the latest
news in the newspapers.
Time passed. Every year in the summer he used to go to the mountains. When the doctors advised him not
to go to the mountains, he started going to Karachi. He went to Karachi last year. This year too he left for
Karachi after meeting us all. We did not know that we would never see this moon again.
Suddenly, news started coming about his illness. But later he recovered and news came that he would
return to Lahore on 16th October. We were all happy. But perhaps it was not to be that we should see him
again. News came suddenly about his illness. And on 13th October at about 4.00 p.m. when I was doing
my college work, someone knocked at the door. I saw from the window that it was Mumtaz Ahmad
Faruqui sahib. I felt a vague fear in my heart that he may have passed away. I informed my father that
Faruqui sahib was here, and I heard him say “Hazrat Ameer has died”. I and my father quickly came
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downstairs.
What Faruqui sahib was saying, I did not want to hear. It was impossible for me to accept the reality of
what he was saying.
The Hazrat was brought to Lahore, but sadly we could not see him for one last time. His frail body was
sealed in a wooden box. I felt like banging my head on the wooden planks of the box. He came and we
could not see him. The funeral procession came to Muslim Town. I too helped in taking this great father
into his house. On my shoulders was that world figure who had laid down his life for the success and
renown of Islam, who worked and exerted himself tirelessly, day and night, to make Islam glorious again.
He worked ceaselessly and continuously, day and night, until the plant he had put in the ground in 1914
grew into a strong tree, but even then he did not give up his work. Without seeking fame, honour or
greatness for himself, he worked for the greatness of Islam, for creating love of Islam in the hearts of
people, for the fame and honour of the Holy Prophet Muhammad, until his weak body could no longer
bear the efforts of his great soul, and he departed from us.
He left displeased with us. If we stick to the paths that he showed us, and we work and labour for the
honour and greatness of Islam, then perhaps he will be pleased with us. He has not died, but is alive. Such
men are immortal. They die but do not perish, and in reality they never leave us!
PAKISTAN
Our beloved Hazrat Ameer, Dr. & Professor Abdul Karim Saeed Pasha Sahib, has written a very touching
and emotional eulogy (reproduced above) in which he shares memories of Marhoom Dr. Abdus Salam
Sheikh.
Both Hazrat Ameer and Brigadier Mohammad Saeed Sahib were Marhoom’s students in college-level
Chemistry. Being the worthy children of a worthy father, the late Dr. Saeed Ahmad Khan, S.K. (may
Allah be pleased with him), and especially being part of a staunch Ahmadi community, the late Dr. Abdus
Salam Sheikh would tutor them pro bono to prepare them for final examinations in Chemistry, set by the
Punjab University of Lahore, Pakistan. – Editor.
ASIA-PACIFIC REGION
Shaukat A. Ali, Coordinator, Asia-Pacific Region
Dear Shahid Bhai and Zahid Bhai
Assalamu Alaikum wa Rahmatullahe wa Barakatuh
We are deeply saddened to learn that your maternal uncle, Dr. Abdus Salam Sahib, has left this world to
meet with our Maker. Inna-lillahe wa Inna Ilaihi rajioon.
We pray that Allah ta’ala grants his soul eternal peace and a place in the highest pedestal of Jannat-ul
Firdous among His chosen ones - aameen.
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We are aware that Marhoom had served the community well and he will be remembered for all the good
works that he did.
O soul that are at rest, return to your Lord, well-pleased (with Him), well-pleasing (Him). So enter among My servants, and enter My Garden! (89:27-30)
We pray that Almighty Allah grant you, your loved ones and the members of your extended families
strength, solace and sabr to bear this sad and irreparable loss at a time of great anguish.
Please convey our heartfelt sympathy and sincere condolences to your loved ones as well.
Allah hafiz,
Shaukat
Jalal Ud Dean, Masjid Noor, Suva, Fiji
Brs Zahid Aziz and Shahid Aziz
Assalaamu'Alaikum Wr Wb.
My sincere expression of sympathy on recent loss of your maternal uncle Dr Abdus Salaam.
Sickness and ill-health are only qualifying excuses to console us humans, so that the loss of a loved one is
cushioned into our hearts:
“Inna Lillahe Wa Inna Ilehi Rajeoon.” We all belong to Almighty Allah and to Him is our final
return.
And for those of us still around:
O my Lord!
Make me one who establishes regular prayer,
and also raise such among my offspring.
O our Lord! Accept Thou my prayer
O Our Lord! Cover us!
With Thy Forgiveness – me, my parents, my siblings
And all Believers on the Day that
The Reckoning will be established
In Sympathy
J. U. Dean
AAII(L)Fiji
“And of men is he who sells himself to seek the pleasure of Allah. And Allah is
Compassionate to the servants” (2:207).
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Abid Raza, President, AAIIL, New Zealand
Br Akbar,
A.A.
Indeed very sorry to learn of the demise of Marhoom Dr Abdus Salaam. Inna Lillahe Wa Inna Ilehi
Rajeoon. May Allah Subhnatalla grant him a high pedestal in the Jannat-al- Firdoss and give sabar to the
family for their loss.
We will offer Salat-e-Janaza Ghaibana this Friday.
Allah Hafiz.
Best Regards
Abid Raz
NORTH AMERICAN REGION
Mohammad & Akela Haroun, Florida, USA Dear Brothers Shahid & Zahid Aziz:
Assalam-o-Alaikum.
We are very sorry for the loss of your uncle who we were told was a very kind, caring and considerate
person for whom he saw fit for his help.
May Allah give him eternal peace and keep him in His care. Our deepest condolences to the rest of the
family, especially his dear sister Mrs. Akthar Aziz who also is not well.
From Allah we came and to Him is our return.
Akela & Mohammad Haroun
Akbar Abdullah, Editor, The HOPE Bulletin
Dear Brothers Dr. Zahid and Shahid Aziz:
Assalam-o-Alaikum wrwb.
Parveen and I are deeply grieved to learn about the very sad and sudden demise of your beloved maternal
uncle, Dr. Abdus Salam, eldest son of the late Maulana Abdul Haque Vidhyarthi Sahib, who returned to
his Maker in Pakistan. “Inna Lillahe Wa Inna Ilehi Rajeoon.”
Please accept our deepest sympathy and condolence. From all we have heard, he was a very sincere and
philanthropic progeny of a very dedicated Ahmadi family of our Jama‘at in Pakistan. May Allah (swt)
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reward him for his many sacrifices and yeomen services rendered to furthering the cause of Islam and love
and care for the impoverished in Pakistan throughout his lifetime. Aameen.
Our thoughts and prayers are that Allah Almighty in His Infinite Mercy and Compassion will grant eternal
peace, solace and happiness to the dearly departed soul of your beloved uncle, and bestow on him an
abode in the highest pedestal of Heaven, Jannate-ul-Firdous, which He has promised to all righteous
persons. Aameen.
We further wish that our Lord God with His Cherished Blessings will grant his surviving family members,
especially your dear mother and the extended family members and relatives, a source of spiritual and
physical strength and comfort in their grief and anguish to bear the burden of this irreparable personal loss.
Aameen.
Allah Hafiz.
Your brother-in-grief,
Akbar Abdullah,
Humble seeker of your prayers
“Whoever does good, whether male or female, and is a believer, We shall certainly make
him live a good life, and We shall certainly give them their reward for the best of what they
did” (16:97).
SOUTH AFRICAN REGION
Imam Ebrahim Mohamed, President, AAIIL, South Africa
Dear Brs. Zahid and Shahid Aziz,
As Salamu Alaikum.
Our thoughts and prayers are with you in this time of grief. May Allah grant Br Salam Mercy and Eternal
Peace. Please pass our condolences to all of the bereaved family.
Was Salaam,
Br Ebrahim, Family and Jamaat,
South Africa
“So he who does an atom’s weight of good will see it” (99:7).
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PHOTOGRAPHIC PRESENTATION
Delivering his talk at the United Nations University Centre in Tokyo
“Dr. Abdus Salam with his grandson Saad. They went up high in the Himalayas and got stuck in a snow storm. I took the
picture. The police had to come and rescue us.” – Shahid Aziz, Co-Editor, The Light, UK edition
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Dr Abdus Salam at his house in Lahore with With his sister, Mrs Akhtar Aziz, in the UK
Dr Zahid Aziz in November 2010
Standing in front of the famous Lord’s Cricket Ground in London, Dec. 2010. He was a keen follower of cricket
[Special thanks to Dr Zahid Aziz, Shahid Aziz, and Selim Ahmad for the photographs used, and Br Nasir
Ahmad for his assistance in producing this publication. – Ed.]
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CONTACT INFORMATION
Akbar Abdullah
Editor, The HOPE Bulletin Mailing Address: P.O. Box 232023
Sacramento, California 95823-0430, U.S.A.
E-mail Address: [email protected]
Telephone Number: (773) 539-6892
“ISLAM” stands for “I SHALL LOVE ALL MANKIND”