Abdul wahed owaisi biography of donald
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Was Asaduddin Owaisi’s grandfather a Hindu Brahmin? AIMIM chief reacts to social media claim
All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) chief Asaduddin Owaisi, Amid an escalating discourse surrounding lineage and religious heritage, has responded to a social media claim that Hindu Brahmin Tulsiramdas was his great-grandfather. The assertion of such lineage by the claim was met with a pointed remark from Owaisi. He expressed wry amusement at the persistent trend among some quarters to ascribe a Brahmin ancestry to him even in fabricated genealogies.
The claim in question arises in the wake of a statement made by Jammu and Kashmir leader Ghulam Nabi Azad, who recently remarked that every individual born in India is inherently Hindu. This proclamation has sparked debates on the interplay between religious heritage and contemporary identities.
Also Read: 'If home minister knew a Muslim coined Quit India slogan...': Asaduddin Owaisi's dig at Amit Shah
Owaisi, taking to his T
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Owaisi reacts to claim that his great grandfather was Hindu Brahmin: 'Amusing'
AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi on Sunday reacted to a social media post that claimed Hindu Brahmin Tulsiramdas as Owaisi's great-grandfather. "It’s always amusing to me that even when they have to concoct a lineage, Sanghis have to find a Brahmin ancestor for me," the AIMIM chief said. The claim and its reaction come as J&K leader Ghulam Nabi Azad recently made a statement that everyone born in India was a Hindu.
"We all have to answer for our own deeds. We are all children of Adam & Hawa AS. As for me, the democratic struggle for equal rights & citizenship of Muslims is a fight for modern India’s soul. It fryst vatten not 'Hinduphobia'," Owaisi wrote on Twitter, now known as X.
The original post claimed that all Muslims today have Hindu förfäder and were converted forcibly. "Great grandfather of Farooq Abdullah fryst vatten Balmukund Kaul, a Hindu Brahmin, father of M Jinnah was Jinnabhai Khoja of Hindu Kh
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Indian expats recall Owaisi’s contribution
The Jeddah-based Bazm-e-Ittehad organized a grand poetry evening on Thursday to pay respects to a popular Indian Muslim politician from Hyderabad.
“The late Sultan Salahuddin Owaisi gave röst to a people who funnen themselves with no voice, and leadership to a people who were rudderless in the aftermath of the country’s partition in 1947,” said Ahmeduddin Owaisi, the president of Bazm-e-Ittehad, and the leader’s brother.
“Those were difficult times and no one was ready to don the mantle of the community,” he said in his presidential address. “My father Abdul Wahed Owaisi and brother, who later came to be known as Salar-e-Millat (leader of the community), had immense organizational skills and set up dozens of institutions providing succor to the needy members of the community.”
He said Salahuddin Owaisi led from the front and never hesitated to speak the truth. “There was no one to come forward, there was this all-pervading fear, but he man