Syed Ali Ashraf | |||||||||||
Native Name: | সৈয়দ আলী আশরফ | ||||||||||
Birth Date: | 1924 1, df=yes | ||||||||||
Birth Place: | Dacca, Bengal Presidency | ||||||||||
Alma Mater: | Dacca University Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge | ||||||||||
Death Place: | Dhaka, Bangladesh | ||||||||||
Nationality: | Bangladeshi | ||||||||||
Religion: | Islam | ||||||||||
Denomination: | Sunni | ||||||||||
Relatives: | Syed Ali Ahsan (brother) Syed Sajjad Hussain (cousin) | ||||||||||
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Syed Ali Ashraf (30 January 1924 – 7 August 1998)[1] was a Bangladeshi-born Islamic scholar and academic. He was the Professor of English and Head of the Department of English, Karachi University, and later became Director-General, World Centre for Islamic Education at Jeddah, Saudi Arabia in 1980. He was also the founder and director-general of Islamic Academy, Cambridge. He was also the founder vice-chancellor of Darul Ihsan University from its founding to before his death in 1998 in Bangladesh.[2]
Ashraf was born on 30 January 1924 in Dacca, Bengal Province. He belonged to a Bengali Muslim family of Syeds originally from the village of Alokdia in Magura (formerly under Jessore District), Bengal Province. His father, Syed Ali Hamed, was a school inspector. His mother, Syeda Kamrunnegar Khatun, was the daughter of Syed Mukarram Ali, the Zamindar and Pir of Agla in Nawabganj, Dhaka. His brothers were academic and poet Syed Ali Ahsan, and university professor Syed Ali Naqi. He grew up in an atmosphere steeped in Sufi traditions inherited from both his paternal and maternal ancestors.[3]
He obtained his master's degree in English from the University of Dhaka and his Honours and PhD in English literature from Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge.
He started out teaching at a university in what is now Bangladesh. He went on to hold the following positions:
He was a distinguished author and editor, and has written as well as edited several books and many articles.[4] Some of them include: