Qazi muhammad isa and quaid e azam
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Qazi Muhammad
Kurdish Islamic separatist leader (1893–1947)
Not to be confused with Qazi Muhammad Isa, the Pakistani statesman and founding father.
Qazi Muhammad (Kurdish: قازی محەممەد, romanized: Qazî Mihemed, Persian: قاضی محمد; 1 May 1893 – 31 March 1947[1]) was an Iranian Kurdishreligious and political leader who founded the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan and headed the short-lived, Soviet-backed Republic of Mahabad. He was hanged by the Iranian government for treason in 1947.[2]
Biography
Qazi Muhammad was born into a noble SunniKurdish family from Mahabad.[3] His father had cooperated with Simko Shikak during his revolt against the Iranian government in the 1920s, and his brother Sadr Qazi was a member of the Iranian parliament.[4] After his father's death, he was nominated as a judge in Mahabad in the 1930s.[5] Qazi Muhammad later became a member of the Komala Zhian I Kurd, a leading Kurdish organization in Iran at the time supported by the Soviets, in April 1945.[6] Soon after he became
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130 years since the birth of Commander Qazi Muhammad, President of the Republic of Kurdistan
ARK News... On Monday, 130 years passed since the birth of the Kurdish leader Qazi Muhammad, President of the Republic of Kurdistan, the republic declared by the Kurds in 1946 in Iranian Kurdistan, and its capital was Mahabad.
About the leader:
Qazi Muhammad was born in the city of Mahabad on May 1, 1893. His father is Qazi Ali bin Qasim bin Mirza Ahmed, and his mother is from the well-known 'Faidhullah Bag' clan in the Mokriyan kingdom.
Qazi Muhammad is considered one of the brightest personalities in Kurdish history, as he enjoyed a wide culture due to his deep understanding of Sharia, Islamic jurisprudence and religion, his mastery of Arabic, Turkish, Persian, and French languages, and his knowledge of English and Russian in addition to his Kurdish mother tongue, in addition to his charming personality that arouses the love and sympathy of all whoever meets him, his humility, courage and deep belief in the rights of his people to life and the need to struggle for the realiz
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Related
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Introduction
Sometime in 1943, Mohammed Ali Jinnah asked one of his close associates within the Muslim League, Qazi Muhammad Isa, to go to Lahore and to evaluate whether or not a house for sale in the city’s cantonment area, owned by a gentleman by the name of Nazir Ahmed, was worth purchasing. The Quaid also handed over a blank cheque to his associate in order to effect the transaction, in the event that the house met with the latter’s approval.
The person in question baulked at the prospect of having to make an independent judgment call about the suitability of the house and potentially incurring the ire of his leader in the event that the house failed to meet his expectations. He expressed this apprehension to the Quaid, but the response he received was that if the house met with the associate’s approval, then it should be assumed that it would also be looked upon favourably by the Quaid himself. With such a blanket authority at his disposal, Qazi Isa journeyed to Lahore and acquired the house in question for his leaderi. Tragically, on 9 May
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