Dr Fazlur Rahman Wikipedia Apr 2026

Fazlur Rahman Malik (Urdu: فضل الرحمان ملک; September 21, 1919 – July 26, 1988), commonly known as Fazlur Rahman , was a Pakistani-born Islamic scholar, philosopher, and modernist reformer. He is widely recognized for his pioneering work in Islamic modernism, hermeneutics, and educational reform. Rahman served as a professor of Islamic thought at the University of Chicago and as the chief advisor to the Government of Pakistan on Islamic affairs under President Ayub Khan.

He earned a Master’s degree in Arabic from the University of the Punjab (Lahore) in 1942 and proceeded to the University of Oxford, where he completed a PhD in 1949 on the philosophy of Avicenna (Ibn Sina). His doctoral dissertation, later published as Avicenna’s Psychology , is still regarded as a seminal work in Islamic intellectual history. After teaching at the University of the Punjab and Durham University (UK), Rahman was appointed in 1961 as the Director of the Central Institute of Islamic Research in Karachi, Pakistan. In 1963, he became the chief advisor on Islamic affairs to President Ayub Khan. During this period, he proposed a series of modernist reforms, including reinterpreting sunnah as a living, dynamic tradition rather than a static corpus of reports ( hadith ). His reformist ideas provoked fierce opposition from traditionalist ulama , leading to political controversy and public protests. In 1968, Rahman resigned and left Pakistan. dr fazlur rahman wikipedia

| | September 21, 1919 Hazara, British India (now Pakistan) | | :--- | :--- | | Died | July 26, 1988 (aged 68) Chicago, Illinois, U.S. | | Nationality | Pakistani, American | | Alma mater | University of the Punjab (MA) University of Oxford (PhD) | | Era | 20th-century philosophy | | Region | Islamic philosophy, Modernism | | Main interests | Qur’anic hermeneutics, Islamic law, education, ethics | | Notable ideas | "Double movement" theory, historical-contextual approach to the Qur’an, revival of ijtihad | Biography Early life and education Rahman was born in 1919 in the Hazara region of British India (now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan) into a deeply religious family. His father, Maulana Shihab al-Din, was a renowned scholar of Islamic law and Sufism. Fazlur Rahman memorized the Qur’an at an early age and studied Arabic, Persian, logic, and fiqh under his father. He earned a Master’s degree in Arabic from