Maulvi Tamizuddin Khan

Pakistani politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Maulvi Tamizuddin Khan

Maulvi Tamizuddin Khan (M. T. Khan; March 1889 – 19 August 1963)[1][2] was the Speaker of Pakistan's Constituent Assembly from 1948 to 1954 and National Assembly of Pakistan between 1962 and 1963.[3]

Quick Facts 2nd & 4th Speaker of the National Assembly, Deputy ...
Maulvi Tamizuddin Khan
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2nd & 4th Speaker of the National Assembly
In office
11 June 1962  19 August 1963
DeputyMohammad Afzal Cheema
Preceded byAbdul Wahab Khan
Succeeded byFazlul Qadir Chaudhry
In office
14 December 1948  24 October 1954
DeputyM.H. Gazder
Preceded byMohammad Ali Jinnah
Succeeded byAbdul Wahab Khan
1st Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly of Pakistan
In office
23 February 1948  13 December 1948
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byMuhammad Hashim Gazdar
Member of the Central Legislative Assembly
In office
1945–1947
Preceded byAbdul Halim Ghaznavi
ConstituencyDacca cum Mymensingh
Personal details
BornMarch 1889
Rajbari, Bengal, British India
Died19 August 1963(1963-08-19) (aged 74)
Dacca, East Pakistan, Pakistan
Political partyMuslim League (1915–1963)
Indian National Congress (1921–1926)
ChildrenRazia Khan (daughter)
RelativesAasha Mehreen Amin (granddaughter)
Alma materPresidency College, Kolkata
Surendranath College
University of Calcutta
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Early life

Khan was born in March 1889 to the Bengali Muslim Khan family of Khankhanapur in Rajbari, then part of the Faridpur district of the Bengal Presidency.[4] His father was a farmer with only three acres of land.[5] After completing his education at the Khankhanapur High School, he got enrolled at the University of Calcutta. He completed his master's in English from the Presidency College, Calcutta in 1913 and LLB in 1915 from Rippon College and started his legal profession in Faridpur.[2] making him the first Muslim from Faridpur district to complete master's degree.[5]

Career

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Moulvi Tamizuddin Khan with President John F.Kennedy

Khan joined non-cooperation movement led by Gandhi when he was a student.[6] Later he joined the Indian National Congress and subsequently joined khilafat movement in 1921 and was arrested and sent to Faridpur jail and later was shifted to Central jail in Dhaka. At that time, he was an ardent follower of Chittaranjan Das.[7]

Khan was elected vice-chairman of Faridpur Municipality. In 1926, he got elected to the Bengal Legislative Assembly from Faridpur.[2] Khan left Congress in 1926 as he thought that the party was biased towards the Hindus He later became the secretary of the Anjuman-i-Islamia and subsequently joined the Muslim League.[2][6]

He competed on a Muslim League ticket in the 1937 election and defeated the Congressional candidate convincingly. Between 1937 and 1947, Khan served twice as Minister of Health, Agriculture, Industry and Education in Bengal.[6][8]

Khan created history when the Constituent Assembly was dismissed by Governor General Ghulam Mohammad in 1954. Khan challenged the dismissal in the court and the case was filed in the morning of 7 November 1954, by Advocate Manzar-e-Alam.[5] Although the High Court agreed and overturned it, the Federal Court under Justice Muhammad Munir upheld the dismissal. He had been president of the Basic Principles Committee set up in 1949.

"Justice A. R. Cornelius was the sole dissenting judge in the landmark judgment handed down by the Supreme Court in the Maulvi Tamizuddin case. That judgment altered the course of politics in Pakistan forever and sealed the fate of democracy. The law had guided him as he had interpreted it and his conscience.".[9]

The decision to uphold the dismissal of the constituent assembly was to mark the beginning of the overt role of Pakistan's military and civil establishment in Pakistani politics.[10]

Personal life

Khan's daughters were Razia Khan and Qulsum Huda Khan.[11][12] Razia was an Ekushey Padak winning writer and poet,[13] and married to Anwarul Amin Makhon, the youngest son of former Prime Minister of Pakistan Nurul Amin.[14] They have a son named Kaiser Tamiz Amin and a daughter named Aasha Mehreen Amin.[15][16] On the other hand, Qulsum was one of the founders and vice-chancellors of Central Women's University.[17]

References

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