Imdad Ali Imam Ali Kazi | |
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I. I. Kazi
|
|
Born |
Village Paat (now Dadu District), Bombay Presidency, British India |
18 April 1886
Died | 13 April 1968 Hyderabad, Pakistan (buried at Jamshoro) |
(aged 81)
Spouse(s) |
Elsa Kazi (m. 1910 – wid. 1967) her death |
Imdad Ali Imam Ali Kazi (Sindhi: علامه آء آء قاضي) (b. 1886 – d.1968), also known as Imdad Ali Kazi, the son of Kazi Imam Ali Ansari, was a scholar, philosopher, jurist, and educationist. He is considered to be a founding father of the University of Sindh at its present location at Jamshoro. He published works of Sindhi art, literature, mysticism, education and history. Along with his wife Elsa, he wrote a book on comparative religion, The Adventures of the Brown Girl in her Search for God, which was published by Arthur H Stockwell Ltd., England, in 1933. They also worked on a translation of the verses of Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai.
Kazi was the second son of the second wife of Kazi Imam Ali Ansari, the District Magistrate of Hyderabad, and was born on 18 April 1886, at Hyderabad.
The British offered the young barrister the post of Civil Judge of Tando Mohammad Khan.
Several books and articles and have been written on Kazi and tributes are paid to him annually on the anniversary of his death
Allama I.I. Kazi Central Library at University of Sindh was named in honour of Kazi.