The dawn of October 1st 2003 took
away from us Khalid Masud, a man whose life epitomized sincerity,
devotion and hard work. He was one of the most prominent pupils of the
profound
Qur’anic scholar Amin Ahsan Islahi (d: 1997). He
may no longer be with us, but his fond memories will continue to inspire
all those who knew him and all those who read his works.
His mortal remains now rest in the
same village near the Pakistani city of Jhelum where he was born
in 1935. He graduated from the Islamiyyah College, Lahore and then
did his masters in Chemistry from the Punjab University. He then proceeded
to UK for further studies in this discipline. On his return, he joined
the Industries Department and then served in the Quaid-i-Azam Library
Lahore till his retirement in 1995.
In 1960, he came under the tutelage
of Islahi with whom he remained for more than three decades. During this
period he studied Arabic language, Arabic literature, the Qur’an and
Hadith
with him. He also assisted Islahi in the editorial affairs of the monthly
‘Misaq’. During this time, he also translated many works of Islahi’s
mentor, the great Hamidu’l-Din Farahi. In 1980, when Islahi
established the ‘Idara Tadabbur-i-Quran-u-Hadith’,
Khalid
Masud was entrusted with the responsibility of running its affairs.
He was also appointed the editor of a quarterly research journal ‘Tadabbur’
which served as an organ of this institute. He diligently discharged both
these responsibilities till his death.
One of his primary works is a summarized
one volume version of Islahi’s magnum opus ‘Tadabbur-i-Qur’an’.
This work attempts to acquaint the reader to the sublimities of one of
the most unique commentaries of the Qur’an. A few months before
his death appeared his last and perhaps most important work ‘Hayat i
Rasul i Ummi’, a biography of the Prophet (sws). This thoroughly researched
book is perhaps the first of its kind as it critically examines in the
light of the Qur’an the material available on the life of the Prophet
(sws) in the Hadith sources. Besides authoring the above two books
and translating a number of articles of Farahi from Arabic to Urdu,
he also edited and compiled the transcribed lectures and discourses of
Islahi
on the Sahih of Imam Bukhari and the Mu’atta of
Imam Malik.
Khalid Masud was not only a
man of erudition and scholarship, but he was also a very pious Muslim.
In fact, it would be difficult for one to judge whether his scholarship
outdid his piety or his piety outshone his scholarship. All those who knew
him admired his sincerity and commitment. He was not a celebrity. Fame
he shunned; glamour he evaded. He did not need the approval of this world,
for he was like a silent soldier who toiled relentlessly and selflessly
to win the approval of the Creator of the heavens and the earth. He knew
full well:
Only the actions of the just
Smell sweet and blossom in their dust May the Almighty forgive him and may
his soul rest in peace.
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