Note: All Books in Public Domain, and where applicable distributed with kind permission of Omphaloskepsis, refer to Proof here. Shams-e Parandeh (Shams the Bird): Forty-Eight Ghazals from the Divan of Shams of Tabriz. Hayy Ibn Yaqdhan حي بن يقظان Or “Alive, Son of Awake“, Arabic’s first Novel. Urdu Translation of Maulana Jalaluddin’s Masnavi Maanvi. Nawai Rumi: Maulana Rumi Masnavi Maanvi Urdu Translation.Noorani Qaida – First books in Arabic/Urdu to introduce children in Pakistan to Quran Sharif and phonetics. Al-Quran translations in World languages Ĭomplete Holy Quran – Published by Zia Publications – Digitized by مصحف الشريف المدينة القرآن الكريم كامل.Saif-ul-Malook: Punjabi Sufiana Kalam by Hazrat Mian Muhammad Bakhsh The Reconstruction of Religious thought in Islam Balram Shukla, who teaches Sanskrit at the Delhi University and has made a name for himself as a Sanskrit poet, has ably selected and translated one hundred ghazals of Rumi. Allama Muhammad Iqbal (محمد اقبال)Īllama Iqbal Stray Reflections (Diary of Iqbal) eBook.Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam (English translation by Fitzgerald) Tadhkirat al Awliya- Biographies of Muslim Sufi Saints (English translation by A.J. Rumi is believed to have begun composing ghazals soon after meeting Shams-i Tabriz in 1244 (when Rumi was 37, at the least Shams is believed to have been in his 60s at the time). Ihya Uloomuddin (Revival of Religious Sciences) The Odes, or ghazals ghazaliyât, are the major poetic format of Rumis Divan (collected works of poetry). The form has roots in seventh-century Arabia, and gained prominence in the thirteenth- and fourteenth-century thanks to such Persian poets as Rumi and Hafiz. Kashf Al Mahjoob, Book Synopsis ( English ) More about the Ghazal Form Traditionally invoking melancholy, love, longing, and metaphysical questions, ghazals are often sung by Iranian, Indian, and Pakistani musicians.
Syed Ali Hajvairi (Abul Hassan Ali Hajvery علی بن عثمان الجلابی الهجویری aka Daata Sahib of Lahore).Hafiz of Shiraz (Hafez Shirazi) محمد حافظ شیرازیĭivan-e-Hafiz (in Farsi/Persian).