Ansari (nesba)

Al-Ansari or Ansari is an Arab community, found predominantly in the Arab and South Asian countries. It originated in Medina since the time of Muhammad. The Islamic prophet himself bestowed it as a title to the tribesmen of the city, for their keen support and dedication towards Islam. This title was later used as a surname by the descendants of these tribes, who then spread across the Middle East, Persian Gulf and the Indian subcontinent with the spread of Islam. The meaning of the word 'Ansari' is supporter, the community are known as Ansari, as well as Momin, Saudagar, Sheikh and Sayyid (mixed with the descendents of Ali and Muhammad).

Ansaris
الأنصار
Regions with significant populations
Arab world, Turkey, South Asia
Languages
Arabic, Turkish, Urdu
Religion
Islam

The Ansaris are Muslims of the Sunni sect. Historically, the community produced the sage, scholars and philosopher. The Ansari are an Urdu-speaking community, although the Ansari clan of Gujarat have Gujarati as their mother tongue.[1]:984

Notable Ansaris

Medieval

Modern

  • Khwaja Muhammad Latif Ansari, scholar and descendant of Khwaja Abdullah Ansari, the descendant of Abu Ayyub al-Ansari
  • Morteza Ansari (1781–1864), Shia jurist from Dezful, Iran
  • Muhammad Mian Mansoor Ansari (1879-1946), Indian freedom fighter, Hero of the Silken Letters Movement-1904-1916, diplomat, jurist, political scientist Deoband-India, Kabul-Afghanistan, Ankara-Turkey.
  • Abidullah Ghazi, (1936-), Indian-American Academician, syllabus developer, author, Chicago, Illinois, USA..
  • Rashid Ahmad Gangohi, (1839-1905). Indian Islamic scholar, jurist, academician, freedom fighter in 1857 War of Independence. Gangoh, Uttar Pradesh, India.
  • Abdulrahman al-Ansary, (1935-), Saudi Arabian archaeologist.

Naats in Islam

  • Tala' al Badru 'Alayna Tala‘ al-Badru ‘Alaynā (Arabic: طلع البدر علينا) is a traditional Islamic song known as nasheed that the Ansar sang to Muhammad upon his arrival at Yathrib after completing the Hijra[2][3] in 622 CE.[4] The naat is currently over 1400 years old, and one of the oldest in the Islam.
gollark: Maybe a snail bank in... Queensland, Australi?
gollark: I should probably come up with a location too.
gollark: So does anyone have stupid business ideas to annoy the scammer with?
gollark: We tried that. It was bad.
gollark: We should probably only allow people who were here before an election was started-ish to vote.

See also

References

  1. K. S. Singh, People of India Uttar Pradesh, Volume XLII Part Two. Manohar Publications
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 22 July 2012. Retrieved 10 March 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. https://www.webcitation.org/5jAB7IvbO?url=http://lifeandtimesblog.wordpress.com/2008/10/30/talaal-badru-alayna/ 2F30%2Ftalaal-badru-alayna%2F&date=2009-08-20
  4. http://www.islamicity.com/mosque/ihame/Sec2.htm

Further reading

  • Ghazi, Muhammad Tariq Al-Ansari. "Tazkar ul Ansar" (ISBN 1-56316-922-3) Biographical Encyclopedia (2018). Iqra Education Foundation, Mumbai, India (www.iqraindia.org).
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