Birth Date: | 1890 |
Birth Place: | Maltabar, Akmolinsk Oblast, Russian Empire |
Death Place: | Almaty, Kazakh SSR, Soviet Union |
Office1: | Qadi of Qadiyat of Kazakh SSR |
Term Start1: | 1952 |
Term End1: | 1972 |
Ethnicity: | Bashkir |
Religion: | Islam |
Denomination: | Sunni |
Jurisprudence: | Hanafi |
Resting Place: | Kensai Cemetery |
Main Interests: | Islamic theology, poetry |
Sadwaqas (Saken, Sadvakas) Ghylmani (Gilmanov, Gelmanov) (Kazakh: Сәдуақас Ғылмани, Säduaqas Ğylmani; 1890 – April 24, 1972) was a long-serving qadi of Kazakhstan (Kazakh SSR),[1] [2] imam-khatib and member of the Muslim Council for Central Asia and Kazakhstan.[3]
Sadwaqas Ghylmani was born in 1890 in Maltabar village (aul) (Akmolinsk Oblast of Russian Empire) in Bashkir-origin family. His grandfather Salmen Muhamediyarovich Gazin (1856–1939) and great-grandfather Muhamediyar Mukhtarovich Gazin (1807–1870) were mullahs.
From 1929 to 1946 he was persecuted by Soviet authorities. In 1946 he became a mullah (imam) in a mosque in Akmolinsk (modern Astana, capital of Kazakhstan). In 1952, qadi (Kazakh: қазы) of Kazakhstani Qadiyat (Kazakh: Қазият) Abd al-Ghaffar Shamsutdinov appointed him as his successor. Sadwaqas Ghylmani held this position until his death on April 24, 1972. He is buried at the Kensai cemetery in Almaty.