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・ Hassan Al-Janabi
・ Hassan Al-Jundi
・ Hassan al-Laqqis
・ Hassan al-Nouri
・ Hassan Al-Otaibi
・ Hassan Al-Qazwini
・ Hassan Al-Raheb
・ Hassan al-Roueini
・ Hassan al-Saffar
・ Hassan al-Sari
・ Hassan Al-Sayed
・ Hassan al-Turabi
・ Hassan Alaa Eddin
・ Hassan Alavikia
・ Hassan Ali Bin Ali
Hassan Ali Effendi
・ Hassan Ali Mansur
・ Hassan Ali Mire
・ Hassan Ali Mirza
・ Hassan Ali Qazi
・ Hassan Allam
・ Hassan Allam Sons
・ Hassan Almrei
・ Hassan Aly
・ Hassan Ameli
・ Hassan Amin
・ Hassan Amin (footballer)
・ Hassan and Marcus
・ Hassan and Nayima
・ Hassan Anvar


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Hassan Ali Effendi : ウィキペディア英語版
Hassan Ali Effendi

Hassan Ali Effendi ( (シンド語:حسن علي آفندي); b. 14 August 1830 - 20 August 1895) was an educationist in South Asia who is credited as the founder of one of the first Muslim schools in British India: the Sindh Madrasatul Islam (established in 1885), located in Karachi in modern-day Pakistan.〔Soomro, Faiz Mohammad (1977). Cultural history of Sind. Karachi: National Book Foundation. p. 2. OCLC 5147200.〕 Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, became among the school's famous graduates. Other notable graduates of the school include Shahnawaz Bhutto, Abdullah Haroon, Ghulam Hussain Hidayatullah and Allama I.I. Kazi.〔(SMIU’s 127th Foundation Day ), The News〕
==Background==
Effendi belonged to a respectable family of Akhunds from Hyderabad, Sindh; he had Turkish ancestry.〔Shaikh, Muhammad Ali (1995). Sindh Madressah: a journey through times. Sindh Madressatul Islam. p. 22. OCLC 35861879.〕
While still very young, he lost his father and was brought up by his elder brother Umed Ali Akhund. As according to the tradition of the Akhund family, he was enrolled in a local madrassa to read and study the Qur'an and learn the basics of the Persian language.
Upon the completion of this traditional education, Ali found work as a clerk in the office of the Deputy Collector of Naushahro. One of his Christian colleagues there persuaded him to learn English, a language that was at the time avoided by Muslims in the Indian subcontinent. Nevertheless, he devoted all his leisure hours to the pursuit of learning English and soon acquired reasonable proficiency in reading, writing and speaking the language.
Later, Effendi started to work for the Indus flotilla, a shipping company. In the mid-1860s, while he still worked for the company, a British judge from Karachi by the name of Middleton, happened to cross the Indus river by ferry, spending the night on the ferry boat in order to cross the following morning. Middleton found Hassan Ali Effendi reading an English book by the dim light of an oil lamp. Surprised to discover that the man was a Muslim, he was impressed enough to offer him a role as a translator in the District Court of Karachi on the magnificent salary of sixty rupees a month. Hassan Ali Effendi accepted the offer and moved to Karachi to assume his new responsibilities. Impressed by his performance, Judge Middleton allowed him to practice law before the court without passing any formal degree in law. This was the turning point in Hassan Ali Effendi's life. At that time, there was not a single Muslim advocate apart from him in the entire province; the lawyers tended to be either English or Hindus. Soon he was appointed as the Public Prosecutor, the first non-European in Sindh to be in charge of that post, which he would retain for 14 years.
His family includes Wajid Shamsul Hasan High Commissioner of Pakistan to the United Kingdom and the President of Pakistan, Asif Ali Zardari, is Effendi's great grandson through his mother's family.〔

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