Hafizur Rahman Wasif Dehlavi (10 February 1910 – 13 March 1987) was an Indian Muslim scholar, jurist, literary critic, and a poet of the Urdu language, who served as the rector of Madrasa Aminia from 1955 to 1979. He participated in the Indian freedom struggle movement and authored books such as Adabī bhūl bhulayyān̲, Urdū Masdar Nāmā and Taz̲kirah-yi Sā'il. He compiled the religious edicts of his father Kifayatullah Dehlawi as Kifāyat al-Mufti in nine volumes.
Wasif was a calligrapher, literary critic, poet and an Islamic jurist.[5][6] Aged 15, he started to write poetry in Persian. His earliest poetry in Urdu was a marsiya about Hakim Ajmal Khan, which appeared in the 22 January 1928 edition of Al-Jamiat.[7] He wrote in the ghazal, nazm, qasida, musaddas and other genres of Urdu poetry.[7] He was a student of Saail Dehlavi and Nooh Narvi in poetry.[8][9]Jameel Mehdi would say that, "Wasif is the only poet after Jigar Moradabadi who has an equal command over calligraphy. If he was not a poet, he would have been a great calligrapher."[6]
Wasif started his career as a teacher of Arabic language and literature in the Government of Delhi's education department.[10] In 1936, his father made him the manager of Kutub Khana Rahimiya.[10] He was appointed the vice-rector of Madrasa Aminia in 1953.[10] He became the rector in September 1955 and resigned in 1979.[11] He also participated in the Indian freedom struggle.[12][13] He died on 13 March 1987 in Delhi.[2]
Literary works
Wasif compiled the religious edicts issued by his father Kifayatullah Dehlawi as Kifāyat al-Mufti in nine volumes.[14] Pakistani historian Abu Salman Shahjahanpuri has regarded this as his major academic, political, religious and living work.[1] Wasif's other works include:[14]
Adabī bhūl bhulayyān̲: zabān-o-qawā'id aur Urdū imlā par tanqīd
Jamī'at-i Ulamā par ek tārīk̲h̲ī tabṣirah (A book discussing the history of Jamiat Ulama-e-Hind and its establishment)
Sih lisānī Masdar Nāmā (Dictionary of Urdu verbs with their Arabic and Persian equivalents)