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Khalifatul Masih I

Hakeem Noor-ud-Din
Caliph of the Messiah
Amir al-Mu'minin
Khalifatul MasihI.jpg
Khalifatul Masih I circa 1878
Reign 27 May 1908 – 13 March 1914
Successor Mirza Basheer-ud-Din Mahmood Ahmad
Born (1841-01-08)8 January 1841
Bhera, Sikh Empire
Died 13 March 1914(1914-03-13) (aged 73)
Qadian, Punjab, British India
Burial Bahishti Maqbara, Qadian, India
Spouses
  • Fatima Sahiba
  • Sughra Begum
Issue 7 children
Full name
Al-Hajj Maulana Hafiz Hakim Noor-ud-Din
Father Haafiz Ghulam Rasool
Mother Noor Bakht
Signature Hakeem Noor-ud-Din's signature
Full name
Al-Hajj Maulana Hafiz Hakim Noor-ud-Din

Hakeem Noor-ud-Din (also spelt: Hakim Nur-ud-Din) (Arabic: حکیم نور الدین‎‎) (c. 1841 – 13 March 1914) was a close companion of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, the founder of the Ahmadiyya Movement, and was chosen as his first successor on 27 May 1908, a day after his death, becoming Khalifatul Masih I (Arabic: خليفة المسيح الأول‎‎, khalīfatul masīh al-awwal), the first caliph and leader of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community. He was a renowned physician, writer, theologian, and an expert in Arabic and Hebrew.

Royal Physician to the Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir for many years, his extensive travels included a long stay in the cities of Mecca and Medina in pursuit of religious learning. Noor-ud-Din was the first person to give bay'ah (pledge of allegiance) to Ghulam Ahmad in 1889 and remained his closest associate and confidant, leaving his home in Bhera and setting up permanent residence at Qadian in 1892. He assisted Ghulam Ahmad throughout the course of his religious vocation, himself authored several volumes of rebuttals in response to criticisms raised by Christian and Hindu polemicists against Islam and was instrumental in arranging some of the public debates between Ghulam Ahmad and his adversaries. After Ghulam Ahmad's death, he was unanimously chosen as his successor. Under Noor-ud-Din's leadership, the Ahmadiyya movement began to organise missionary activity with small groups of Ahmadis emerging in southern India, Bengal and Afghanistan, the first Islamic mission in England was established in 1913, and work began on the English translation of the Quran. His lectures on Quranic exegesis and Hadith were one of the main attractions for visitors to Qadian after Ghulam Ahmad. Many prominent scholars and leaders were his students, including Muhammad Ali and Sher Ali, who were themselves Quranic commentators and among the earliest translators of the Quran into English, and Mirza Bashir-ud-Din Mahmud who succeded him as caliph. Noor-ud-Din's sermons and other discourses have been collected into a four volume exegetical work called Haqaiq al-Furqan.


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