The Deobandi school of Islam.
SSP breakaway Deobandi organization.
Many Deobandi schools in Pakistan teach Wahhabi principles.
The first Deobandi madrasa in South Africa,
This contrasts with the Deobandi view that Muhammad,
old Deobandi madarsa of Dabhel village near Surat,
Maulana Mahmood Hasan Deobandi, a freedom fighter stalwart,
was an Indian Deobandi Islamic scholar,
About 20% of the Indian Muslims identify as Deobandi.
The Deobandi movement in Pakistan was a major recipient
was a Deobandi Sunni Muslim scholar who was active
Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam(JUL) is a Deobandi organization, part of the Deobandi movement.
The Deobandi movement developed as a reaction to the British colonialism
The Deobandi movement sees itself as a scholastic tradition, situated within Sunni Islam.
was a conservative Deobandi political party in the Indian subcontinent during the British
The schooling involves indoctrination of students with the fundamental tenets of the Deobandi ideology.
Although its beginnings were from the Deobandi movement, no particular interpretation of Islam has
training of Islamic scholars are controlled by the Deobandi, the largest single Islamic group.
Ubaidullah Sindhi the Minister for India, another Deobandi leader Moulavi Bashir its War Minister,
Tablighi Jamaat, a
non political Muslim missionary organisation, began as an offshoot of the Deobandi movement.
close to Kantharia where one of the largest Deobandi madarsas in the state is located.
revealed that he had studied at the Deobandi Akewada Madarsa near Bhavnagar in Gujarat between 1996
English textbooks from this madrasa are used in English-medium Deobandi madrasas in the West to teach the Dars-e-Nizami curriculum.
Darul Ulum Newcastle, Newcastle, KwaZulu-Natal- The first Deobandi madrasa in South Africa,
it was founded in 1971 by Cassim Mohammed Sema.
He remained at Kabul, where he began a programme teaching and
translating Tafsir Shiek Mahmudul Hassan Deobandi known as Kabuli Tafseer.
In a Deobandi madrasa, the position of Shaykh al-Hadith,
or the resident professor of Sahih Bukhari, is held in much reverence.
Since Qasim Nanautavi is buried there, the place is known as Qabrastan-e-Qasimi,
where countless Deobandi scholars, students, and others are buried.
Although its beginnings were from the Deobandi movement, no particular interpretation of Islam has
been endorsed since the beginning of the movement.
The founders of the Deobandi movement, Rashid Ahmad Gangohi and Muhammad Qasim Nanotvi,
studied Sufism at the feet of Haji Imdadullah Muhajir Makki.
Mahmud al-Hasan(Maḥmūdu'l-Ḥasan) also known as Mahmud Hasan(1851- 30 November 1920)
was a Deobandi Sunni Muslim scholar who was active
against British rule in India.