Abdul Khaliq Madrasi (born 10 March 1953) is an Indian Islamic scholar. He is a professor of Hadith and deputy vice chancellor of Darul Uloom Deoband.[1][2] He has also been doing teaching, administrative, and construction services there for almost half a century.
He received his primary education in the Holy Quran, Urdu, mathematics, and theology at Madrasa Imdad al-Muslimeen, Jadwal, and English, mathematics, geography, and other modern sciences at Lillah Madrasa, Virinchipuram, Tamil Nadu.[5]
After that, he studied Persian in 1961 at Madrasa Baqiyat Salihat,[4] and in 1963 he started his Arabic studies at Darul Uloom Sabīl al Rashad, Bangalore.[6][4] In Darul Uloom Sabīl al-Rashad, he also studied seven and ten qira'ates from Azhar Hasan Amrohvi.[7]
After graduation, he completed Arabic literature in 1970, logic in 1971, and graduated from there in 1972–73.[4] From 1970 until 1974, he worked hard and practiced with Wahiduzzaman Kairanawi in Arabic literature.[12]
Since 1987, he has been the director of the construction department of Darul Uloom Deoband.[9] His architectural prowess and creative flair can be seen in the stunning Mosque Jami' Rashid at Darul Uloom, the tall Sheikh-ul-Hind Library, and other contemporary structures.[9][15][6]
Since 1997 (1418 AH), he has been serving as the Deputy Vice-Chancellor of Dar Uloom Deoband.[16]
Views
Yoga
Madrasi believes that Muslims who practice yoga are getting a good form of exercise. If some words, which are supposed to be chanted while performing them, have religious connotations, then Muslims need not utter those. They can instead recite verses from the Quran, praise Allah, or remain silent.[17][18]
Homosexuality
Madrasi considers homosexuality an offense under Shari‘a law, and thus haram [prohibited] in Islam.[19][20] He criticised the Delhi High Court decision of de-criminalising homosexuality and observed that it would corrupt Indian boys and girls.[21][22]
Politics
Madrasi issued a statement on behalf of Darul Uloom Deoband regarding the harm done to places of worship as a result of roads or construction, stating that if any place of worship, regardless of religion, is disturbed, Darul Uloom will take the problem seriously.[23]
In his perspective, the Uniform Civil Code will be divisive and cause societal upheaval. It violates the spirit of the Constitution, which guarantees every citizen the right to exercise his or her religion.[24]
^ abcdBurney, Khalilur Rahman (2016). Qafla-e-Ilmo-o-Kamāl (in Urdu). Bangalore: Idara-e-Ilmi Markaz. pp. 404–407.
^Azmi, Abul Hasan (November 2004). Maulana Abdul Khaliq Madrasi: Ek Dil-Āwez Shakhsiyyat [Maulana Abdul Khaliq Madrasi: A charming personality] (in Urdu) (1st ed.). Deoband: Maktaba Saut-ul-Quran. pp. 7–10.
^ abcMubarakpuri, Arif Jameel (2021). Mausoo'a Ulama-u- Deoband [The Encyclopedia of Deobandi Scholars] (in Arabic) (1st ed.). Deoband: Shaikhul Hind Academy. pp. 183–184.