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Mehmed Handžić

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Mehmed Handžić
Mehmed Handžić
Born(1906-12-16)16 December 1906
Died26 July 1944(1944-07-26) (aged 37)
Cause of deathresult of a hernia operation
Occupationprofessor of Higher Islamic Shari'a — Theological School
Known forone of the authors of Resolution of Sarajevo Muslims'

Mehmed Handžić (16 December 1906 – 26 July 1944) was one of the authors of Resolution of Sarajevo Muslims' and chairman of the Committee of National Salvation. He was a leader of Bosnian revivalists who graduated at Al-Azhar University in 1931 and became professor at Gazi Husrev-beg madrasa in Sarajevo and from 1939 professor of Higher Islamic Shari'a — Theological School.[1] At the beginning of the Second World War he transformed from religious leader (who promoted his position that religion and nationalism were incompatible) to one who stated that NDH offered the best protection for Islam religion.[2]

Works

Articles

  • Osnivač Kaira i El-Azhara, Novi behar, 1927–28
  • Hadis i njegova važnost, Narodna uzdanica, 1934
  • Es-Sunne, Hikmet
  • Jedan hadisi šerif, El-Hidaje
  • Jedan prilog povijesti prvih dana širenja islama u Bosni i Hercegovini
  • Glavni uzrok prijelaza Bogumila na Islam
  • Hayat al-anbiya' (in Arabic)
  • Al-kalim al-tayyib (in Arabic)
  • Rad bosanskohercegovackih Muslimana na knjizevnom polju, Glasnik, 1933
  • Ibrahim Zikri
  • Nihadi
  • Vahdeti
  • Kadi Ahmed Čelebi
  • Subhai-sibjan
  • Bejazici
  • Dva vazna izvora za historiju Bosne i Hercegovine za vrijeme osmalijnskog gospodstva
  • Ibrahim ef. Pecevija
  • Ilhamija Zepcak, muslimanski pjesnik iz Bosne
  • Džumhur Osman i njegov arapsko-turski rječnik Dženahus-sibjan
  • Husejn Lemekanii

Books

  • Uvod u tefsirsku i hadisku nauku (in Bosnian), Sarajevo
  • Ilmulkelam (coedit) (in Bosnian), vol. 2, Sarajevo: Vakufska direkcija, 1936
  • Muhammed alejhisselam, Amman: Taiba International, 1995 [1937]
  • Vazovi, Sarajevo: El-Hidaje
  • Islamizacija Bosne i Hercegovine i porijeklo bosanskohercegovackih Muslimana
  • Al Jewhar al asna fi tarajim 'ulama' wa shu'ra' al-Bosna, Cairo, 1930{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

Translations

  • Hasan Kafi Pruščak, Rewda al-jannat fi usul al itiqadat
  • Hasan Kafi Pruščak, Nizam al 'ulema' 'ila hatam al-enbija'
  • Ali-dede Mostarac, Muhadara al-awa'il wa musamera al-awahir
  • Sabit Užičanin, Miradzijja
  • Ibnu Sina, Rasprava o smrti i strahu od nje

References

  1. ^ Xavier Bougarel (2008), "Farewell to the Ottoman Legacy? Islamic Reformism and Revivalism in Inter-war Bosnia-Herzegovina", in Nathalie Clayer; Eric Germain (ed.), Islam in inter-war Europe, New York: Columbia University Press, p. 323, ISBN 978-0-231-70100-6, OCLC 226360267, Their leading figure was Mehmed Handzic (1906—44), a young 'alim (scholar) who, after studying at the Islamic University of al-Azhar in Cairo (1926-31), became a professor at the Gazi Husrev-beg madrasa in Sarajevo... {{citation}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |coauthors=, |nopp=, |month=, |editorn-first=, |editorn=, |doi_inactivedate=, |editorn-last=, and |editorn-link= (help); External link in |chapterurl= (help); Unknown parameter |chapterurl= ignored (|chapter-url= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  2. ^ Greble, Emily (23 February 2011). Sarajevo 1941–1945: Muslims, Christians, and Jews in Hitler's Europe. Cornell University Press. p. 78. ISBN 0-8014-6121-9.

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