A.K. Brohi
Allah Bukhsh Karim Bukhsh Brohi | |
---|---|
Born |
1916 Sindh, British India |
Died |
September 1987 London, England |
Other names | A K Brohi |
Spouse(s) | Khulsoom Brohi |
Relatives | there daughters |
Allah Bukhsh Karim Bukhsh Brohi (Urdu: الله بخش کریم بخش بروہی; Sindhi: الھ بخش ڪريم بخش بروھي known as A.K. Brohi) was a prominent Pakistani politician and lawyer. Originating from Shikarpur in Sindh, his sister Husn Afroze was married to veteran politician Qaim Ali Shah, but died of breast cancer in 1971.[1] He is the first partner, and mentor of famous Indian lawyer Ram Jethmalani as acknowledged in his authorized biography. He also served as the High Commissioner of Pakistan in India from 1 February 1960 to 31 March 1961.
Brohi has written a long "preface" (13 pp.) of the book of brigadier general S. K. Malik (i. e. Malik ul-Khan) The Quranic Concept of War (1979), a manual of the brigadier's impression of military tactics from early Islamic times, which has been reprinted in Pakistan and India.[2]
He was a scholar and author affiliated with the Traditionalist School of metaphysics (more precisely René Guénon, Frithjof Schuon and Martin Lings).[3]
His younger brother Ali Ahmad Brohi, who passed away in 2003, was also a writer and scholar, more particularly on Sindhi culture.
See also
- A R Faridi
- A. R. Cornelius
- Ahmed Hussain A Kazi
- Allama I I Kazi
- Dorab F Patel
- Zaib-un-Nissa Hamidullah
- Faiz Ali Chishti
- Fakhruddin G. Ebrahim
- Ghulam Ishaq Khan
- Hakeem Mohammad Saeed
- Hatim A Alavi
- M R Kayani
- Manzur Qadir
- Mian Mahmud Ali Kasuri
- Muhammad Ali Bogra
- Munir Ahmed Khan
- Mustafa Gokal
- Syed Hashim Raza
- Syed Sharifuddin Pirzada
- Tufail Ali Abdul Rehman
- Kamal Azfar
References
- ↑ "Forever Qaim". The Express Tribune. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
- ↑ The quranic concept of war
- ↑ Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Knowledge and the Sacred : Revisioning Academic Accountability, SUNY Press (1989), p. 126