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Saturday, April 18, 2026

Dr Ghayasuddin Siddiqui

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ANNOUNCEMENT

Dear Family and Friends
Assalamu Aleikum

The Janaza (funeral) prayers for our beloved father Ghayasuddin Siddiqui will be tomorrow Sunday 19 April at Chesham Mosque, Bellingdon Road, Chesham, HP5 2NN, following the Zuhr prayers at 2pm. Parking available.

The burial service will follow at Chesham Cemetery opposite the Mosque via Bellingdon Road (HP5 3ET).

After the burial, those wishing to meet the family are welcome to join us at the Mosque for food and remembrance.

We pray that Allah (swt) accepts him in His infinite mercy and grants him a place in the Highest Garden. Ameen.

Faiza, Asim, Uzma and Salman


Dr Ghayasuddin Siddiqui (1939 – 2026)

It is with great grief and sorrow that we announce the death of the highly regarded thinker and activist, Dr Ghayasuddin Siddiqui. He died peacefully at his home in the early hours of the 18th April 2026. 
 
Born in 1939, Dr Siddqui was delivered into a world on the verge of major shifts as the second world war would define the century to come and postcolonial fervour would find his birth nation partitioned into India and the new nation of Pakistan. Since his first arrival in Great Britain in 1963, Dr Siddiqui has positioned himself as a force of activism and a voice for the growing British Muslim community.

During his student days at Sheffield University, his study room was a hub of activism. As the Assistant Secretary of the newly formed Federation of Student Islamic Societies (FOSIS) he would host thought leaders from across the post-colonial world, culminating in organising the visit of Malcolm X to Sheffield in 1964. 
 
Dr Siddiqui was part of the first generation of Muslim migrants who established roots and community institutions in Britain.  Along with fellow pioneer Kalim Siddiqui (no relation, died 1996) he was a founder and trustee of the Muslim Institute, an independent learned society established in 1973. In 2008, he was responsible for kickstarting the reiteration of the Muslim Institute, bringing the organisation to a new vibrant life that shines bright to this day. 
 
As someone who had the foresight to understand that a community needs to develop its own institutions in order to flourish, Dr Siddiqui was an institution builder. From 1992, he helped establish a string of bodies that would inspire and clear a path for a new generation of home grown organisations that would focus on the needs of the growing British Muslim community. These included the Muslim Parliament of Great Britain, the Bait al Mal al Islami (a UK focused welfare fund), the Halal Food Authority, and British Muslims for a Secular Democracy. He was a true multiculturalist, bridging the Muslim communities with other faith-based and ethnic communities who made the UK their home.

He was a passionate campaigner for human rights and liberty, and was actively involved in promoting equality, social justice and gender equality. He balanced the local needs of his neighbours with the concerns of an increasingly globalised world, championing justice in the UK as well as abroad. He actively campaigned against the genocide in Bosnia, the war in Chechnya, and the UK’s involvement in the US wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. He was the first major Muslim leader who called for Muslims to work hand in hand with non-Muslims for common causes at a time when the Muslim community consensus was to march alone. He was a spearhead of the Stop the War Coalition in 2001.
 
Whilst grounded within the community, Dr Siddiqui demonstrated the confidence to hold a mirror up and challenge injustices within the community that others preferred to brush under the carpet. He led campaigns against forced marriages, honour killings and domestic violence, which led to Child Protection in Faith-Based Environment initiative and a radically new model of a Muslim Marriage Contract that would better protect women. 
 
He worked tirelessly so that the community could grow unencumbered alongside and within the British way of life. He was one of the few voices of reason in a confused world left in the wake of the 9/11 attacks and the 7/7 bombings. A regular presence in both newsrooms and at protests, he spoke with clarity and conviction on issues of human welfare and social justice. His voice was a clarion call for the Muslim community.

Dr Siddiqui was one of the essential leaders who paved the way for the Muslim community as we know it in the UK today – a community that is not afraid to speak its mind, that is ethically grounded, politically active, and dedicated to justice for all regardless of our differences. He had a great love for young people and was committed to widening access to professions and mentoring students. He helped young scholars at every opportunity, most often finding grants for students to continue their further education. 
 
He never failed to attend a Muslim Institute event, and was always ready to enter in dialogue and discussions at the Institute’s Winter Gatherings. 
 
Dr Siddiqui will be dearly missed. 
 
He is survived by his wife Talat and four children (Faiza, Asim, Uzma, Salman). His legacy will always be honoured and promoted, not just by his children and eleven grandchildren, but also by his numerous friends and Fellows of the Muslim Institute.

https://musliminstitute.org/announcement/

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Friday, April 17, 2026

Weekend Scholarship Roundup

SCHOLARSHIP ROUNDUP On Islamic Law In "Perpetuating Property and Kinship: Matrilineal Family Waqfs in 20th-Century Colonial Malabar, South India" (Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient), Abdulla Niruvan Chalil (Jamia Millia Isl…
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Weekend Scholarship Roundup

April 17, 2026

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SCHOLARSHIP ROUNDUP

On Islamic Law

  • In "Perpetuating Property and Kinship: Matrilineal Family Waqfs in 20th-Century Colonial Malabar, South India" (Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient), Abdulla Niruvan Chalil (Jamia Millia Islamia) "examines family waqf practices among matrilineal families in Malabar during the British colonial period by analysing waqf deeds written in Malayalam" and argues that "family waqfs played a crucial role in preserving matrilineal family lineage and property in Malabar, providing both religious and legal reinforcement for matrilineal kinship in the region." [login required]
  • In "The Unbuilt House: Historical Roots of Muslim Political Division" (Tribal News Network), Zakir Khan (Tribal News Network) argues that the "Ummah exists as a spiritual community—real, enduring, and beyond challenge. But as a political alliance capable of sustained, collective action, it has only existed in fragments and for brief periods, usually through conquest or coercion."

On Islam and AI/Data Science

  • In "Learning Word Embeddings from Glosses: A Multi-Loss Framework for Arabic Reverse Dictionary Tasks" (Proceedings of The Third Arabic Natural Language Processing Conference), Engy Ibrahim (Alexandria University) and others "address the task of reverse dictionary modeling in Arabic, where the goal is to retrieve a target word given its definition. The task comprises two subtasks: (1) generating embeddings for Arabic words based on Arabic glosses, and (2) a cross-lingual setting where the gloss is in English and the target embedding is for the corresponding Arabic word."

FIELD GUIDE TO ISLAMIC LAW ONLINE: RECENT SOURCES

The Field Guide to Islamic Law Online is an ever-growing collection of links to hundreds of primary sources and archival collections around the world, online. We recently added a new resource to this list:

  • Tashkeela-Model is an Natural Language Processing (NLP) diacritization model for the Arabic language that uses "a collection of Arabic vocalized texts, which covers modern and classical Arabic...[and] contains over 75 million of fully vocalized words obtained from 97 books, structured in text and XML files."

UPCOMING EVENTS & OPPORTUNITIES

PIL & Harvard Events: 

  • Workshop: Middle East Beyond Borders—Djelemory Diabate, “Closing the Sufi Age: Authority, Finality, and Political Theology in Umar al-Futi Tal’s Kitab Rimah,” April 20, 2026

PIL & Harvard Opportunities:

  • Award: Alwaleed Bin Talal Undergraduate Thesis Prize, April 17, 2026
  • Award: Alwaleed Bin Talal Doctoral Dissertation Prize, May 15, 2026

Global Events: 

  • Conference: Humanities of AI—Intelligence and Imitation: Mind, Mechanism, Mimesis, Johns Hopkins University, April 24–26, 2026
  • Conference: American Society for Premodern Asia Annual Meeting, Los Angeles, CA, April 24–27, 2026
  • Conference: Middle East History and Theory Conference (MEHAT), University of Chicago, May 1–2, 2026
  • Workshop: The Law and Humanities Workshop for Junior Scholars, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School, June 8–9, 2026
  • Conference: Association for the Study of Law, Culture, and the Humanities Annual Conference, Chicago, June 17–18, 2026
  • Workshop: Association for Gulf and Arabian Peninsula Studies Graduate Student Workshop, July 25–26, 2026
  • Workshop: Archival Abundances and Silences in Islamic Studies, Princeton University, October 2–3, 2026
  • Conference: Middle East Studies Association Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, November 21–24, 2026

Global Opportunities: 

  • Language School: Persian Language Summer School, Armenian School of Languages and Cultures, Yerevan, Armenia, May 1, 2026
  • Summer School: Philology and Manuscripts from the Muslim World, Leiden University, May 4, 2026
  • Call for Participation: Digital Medieval Studies Institute, International Congress on Medieval Studies, Western Michigan University, May 13, 2026
  • Award: Global Dissertation Prize, American Society for Legal History, June 1, 2026
  • Position Opening: Visiting Assistant Professor of Medieval Middle East, Colby College, July 1, 2026 
  • Call for Participation: Digital Medieval Studies Institute, International Medieval Congress, Leeds, UK, July 10, 2026
  • Award: Gwenn Okruhlik Dissertation Award, Association for Gulf and Arabian Peninsula Studies, July 15, 2026
  • Award: Graduate Paper Prize, Association for Gulf and Arabian Peninsula Studies, July 15, 2026
  • Award: Student Travel Award, Association for Gulf and Arabian Peninsula Studies, September 1, 2026
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