Nawab Abdul Jabbar

Nawab Abdul Jabbar (24 October 1837 - 30 January 1918) was a British Indian bureaucrat, social worker.[1]


Abdul Jabbar
Born(1837-10-24)24 October 1837
Parhati village, Purba Bardhaman district, Bengal Presidency, Company Raj
Died30 January 1918(1918-01-30) (aged 80)
CitizenshipBritish India
Alma materPresidency College
OccupationGovernment officer
OrganizationCentral National Mohammedan Association,
Mohammedan Literary Society
Home townKasiara village, Purba Bardhaman district, Bengal Presidency, Company Raj
ChildrenKhan Bahadur Abdul Momen
Parent(s)Khan Bahadur Ghulam Asgar (Father)
AwardsKhan Bahadur, C.I.E, Nawab

Early life

Abdul Jabbar was born on 24 October 1837 in his maternal grandfather's house located in Parhati village of Purba Bardhaman district. His family home was in Kashiara Village of Purba Bardhaman. His father Khan Bahadur Golam Asgar was chief Sadar Amin in the judiciary of East India Company government. Abdul Jabbar passed entrance exam from Bardhaman Raj School. Here he was a student of Ramtanu Lahiri. Then he was admitted in Presidency College in BA class. After his father's death in 1857 he left education.[1]

Career

At the beginning of his career he joined as a deputy magistrate. Between 1889 and 1894 he served as presidency magistrate in Calcutta. In 1884, 1886 and 1893 he was nominated member in Bengal Legislative Council. After retirement he was appointed the chief minister of Bhopal and served from 1897 to 1902. There he was honored for his contribution in social welfare work.[1]

In a meeting arranged in Calcutta by Surendranath Banerjee to support Gandhi's anti racism movement in South Africa Abdul Jabbar was the president. Indian National Congress and All India Muslim League was founded during his lifetime but he never showed interest in politics.[1]

Contribution in Muslim society

He was a member of Central National Mohammedan Association, first organization of Indian Muslims. He was also a member of Mohammedan Literary Society and in 1900 elected president of the society. He had close relation with Nawab Abdul Latif. Abdul Jabbar was eager to promote western education among the Muslims. He wrote a book in Bengali titled Muslim Dharma Porichoy (Muslim Religion Introduction) . He did not show much interest in women education. He presented his view on woman education in his two Urdu books.[1]

In Calcutta, Taylor hostel was built for the Muslim students in 1896. Due to its unhealthy environment and inadequate facilities he initiated movement in 1908 to establish new hostel. Eventually Baker Hostel was established for the Muslim students.[1]

Honors

Abdul Jabbar was awarded Khan Bahadur and CIE in 1895. Later he received Nawab title.[1]

Death

Abdul Jabbar died on 30 January 1918.[1]

gollark: I see.
gollark: I don't see what your analogy is analogising then.
gollark: Towns and cities are just human-imposed and very fuzzy categories for groups of buildings and infrastructure and such.
gollark: But this is basically just stating your desired conclusion slightly indirectly. Why not include villages? Or districts of a city? Or individual houses?
gollark: Cities are sort of kind of big towns.

References

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