Intro
He was the son of Maulvi Zulfiqar Ali Khan Gohar (1869-1954).His ancestral village was Najeeb Abad which is located in District Bujnor in U.P. Upon the wish of MGA, Khan Zulfiqar Ali Khan, devoted his son Maulana Abdul Malik sahib before his birth. He was born later in 1911.
His son and grandsons are very famous in the L.A. jamaat (Chino) of Qadiani-Ahmadi’s. His grandson Amjad Khan is the big Harvard lawyer of the jamaat and he wrote about his grandfather in 2015 in a famous Harvard Journal.
In a famous story, Maulana Abdul Malik Khan was sent by his Khalifa to steal a private document from the Saudi Arabian government to the Pakistani government (this seems to be around 1973-1974). In the 1950’s or 1960’s, he was the Ameer of Qadiani’s in Karachi (see the testimony of Maulvi Abdul Basit Shahid.
Maulana Abdul Malik Khan died in a car accident in 1983.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
His Children
—Dr. Nusrat Jahan (born in Karachi in 1951), She passed away on October 11-2016 in London
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
1911
True Servants of Allah: Bashir Ahmad Rafiq and Dr. Nusrat Jehan (alislam.org)
He is born.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
1930’s
After graduating from Madrassah Ahmadiyya, Abdul Malik Khan, completed his Molvi Fazil from Punjab University. After this he got a very attractive job offer. But his father wrote to him, that I didn’t make you educated so that you earn the world, someone should also earn the faith. As soon as he received this letter, Abdul Malik Khan resigned from his job, came back to Qadian and joined the class for Mubaligheen.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
1947
He moved to Pakistan.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
1950’s
In the 1950’s or 1960’s, he was the Ameer of Qadiani’s in Karachi (see the testimony of Maulvi Abdul Basit Shahid.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
1962
HOME | Mysite (jamiatulmubashireen.org)
He seems to have been working in Ghana. In 1962 an experimental missionary training college was established under the instrumentality of the Late Maulana Abdul Malik Khan-then Ashanti Regional Missionary to run a two-year missionary course.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
1983
Maulana Abdul Malik Khan died in a car accident in 1983.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
My Aunt Overcame Pakistan’s Repressive Laws | TIME
My Aunt Overcame Pakistan’s Repressive Laws to Stay True to Her Muslim Faith

Honor and glory be always with thee
God’s blessings shower down on all
Thy beneficiaries, patients and workers
My aunt, Dr. Nusrat Jahan, penned the above lines of poetry in 2003 for the inauguration of the Begum Zubaida Bani gynecology wing of Fazl-e-Omer Hospital in the desert-turned-village of Rabwah, Pakistan. Today, the poem hangs in the wing’s waiting room.
From 1985 until her sudden death a few months ago at the age of 65, Nusrat was a gynecologist at the self-funded hospital that was built in 1958 to serve the indigent in rural Pakistan. She served more than 100,000 women and delivered more than 10,000 babies for free. Many knew Nusrat as an exceptional surgeon who cared deeply about women’s reproductive health. But what really set her apart was her unbridled altruism despite having a perpetual target on her back.
Nusrat was born an Ahmadi Muslim in Karachi in 1951. Granddaughter of Zulfiqar Ali Gohar (brother of Mohammad Ali and Shaukat Ali, two of India’s most revered Muslim nationalists), she was the fourth child of a family and lived in the small quarters of a mosque for most of her adolescent life.
Despite meager means, she earned top marks at Fatima Jinnah Medical College and membership into England’s Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
After her father, Abdul Malik, an Ahmadi Muslim imam, died in a car accident, Nusrat turned down lucrative job offers in England, returned home to Rabwah and dedicated her life to being a surgeon for the poor.
Ahmadi Muslims recite the kalima (a Muslim’s principle creed), pray facing Mecca five times a day and assiduously follow the Quran. However, unlike other Muslims, Ahmadi Muslims also believe that Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, who founded the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in 1889, is the promised Muslim mahdi and messiah the Prophet Muhammad foretold would come to guide Islam back to its true path. That belief is criminal in Pakistan.
Under Pakistan’s constitution and criminal codes, Nusrat was not legally “Muslim” and could never publicly self-identity as such without facing fines, imprisonment or capital punishment. She told me that under Pakistan’s notorious anti-blasphemy laws, she could easily have been arrested for “posing as a Muslim.” Indeed, the same laws that threatened her life keep Abdul Shukoor, an 81-year-old Ahmadi Muslim optician, in prison today.
Today, at least 600,000 Ahmadi Muslims in Pakistan face the same grim risks. In Rabwah, local police have tortured Ahmadi Muslims to death, and extremists have gunned down others, including Nusrat’s colleague, American doctor Mehdi Qamar. Hadhrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad, the global leader of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, who guided and inspired Nusrat’s humanitarian work, was forced to leave Rabwah in 2003 and now lives in exile in England.
Ahmadi Muslims cannot legally vote or obtain passports as “Muslims” without expressly denouncing their founder. Local authorities ordered the word “Muslim” be erased from the tombstone of Pakistan’s first Nobel laureate and Ahmadi Muslim physicist, Dr. Abdus Salam.
Although the Government of Pakistan could try to strip Nusrat of her Muslim identity, it could never strip the Islam in her. Her life’s mission to heal and to provide reproductive care and cancer treatment to Muslim women could never be suppressed. Unfazed by harrowing stories of religious repression, she exhibited courage under fire. Nusrat never refused care to anyone who needed it, including those who would oppress her people.
She spoke about how the wives of high-ranking government officials would travel to her in the night to seek care and would disappear by morning because they did not want to be seen in the company of Ahmadi Muslims. Nusrat would help heal them while also pointing out that the best Muslims were those who liked for their sisters what they liked for themselves. In an era where observance of hijab is under siege, she proudly donned the veil even as she led surgical teams of men and women and undertook complex surgeries.
In 2013, while visiting California, Nusrat toured a state-of-the-art fertility center to glean ideas for a similar center in Rabwah. When she walked in, fully veiled, the hosts did not expect her to end up educating them on the latest fertility techniques. Behind the veil was a woman who was equally comfortable discussing roller coasters as she was discussing Mark Twain and in vitro fertilization.
Nusrat’s grave sits next to her mother’s with the words “Dr. Nusrat Jahan” (literally, “helper of the world”) fittingly blazoned on her epitaph. Her patriotic service for Pakistan against all odds provides a powerful repudiation of Pakistan’s repressive laws.
The final words of Nusrat’s poem for the hospital are her most beautiful: “May the spring kiss laurels and never a fall.” Never a fall indeed, by God’s grace—and never will we forget you either, my dear aunt.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
Links and Related Essay’s
16HHRJ217-Khan.pdf (harvard.edu)
True Servants of Allah: Bashir Ahmad Rafiq and Dr. Nusrat Jehan (alislam.org)
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
Tags
#ahmadiyya #ahmadiyyafactcheckblog #messiahhascome #ahmadiyyat #trueislam #ahmadianswers #ahmadiyyamuslimcommunity #ahmadiyya_creatives #ahmadiyyatthetrueislam #ahmadiyyatzindabad #ahmadiyyatrueislam #ahmadiyyamuslim #mirzaghulamahmad #qadiani #qadianism
2 Pingback