Abul Mahasin Muhammad Sajjad

Mawlānā
Abul Mahasin Muhammad Sajjad
Mufakkir-e-Islām
2nd General Secretary of Jamiat Ulama-e-Hind
In office
13 July 1940  23 November 1940
Preceded byAhmad Saeed Dehlavi
Succeeded byAbdul Haleem Siddiqi
Personal life
Born1880
Panhessa, Sheikhpura District now Bihar Province, Colonial India
Died23 November 1940(1940-11-23) (aged 59–60)
NationalityIndian
Notable work(s)Fatwa Tark-e-Mawalat
Alma materMadrasa Subhāniya, Allahabad
Religious life
ReligionIslam
DenominationSunni Islam
Founder ofMuslim Independent Party
JurisprudenceHanafi

Abul Mahasin Muhammad Sajjad (1880 – 23 November 1940) was an Indian Islamic scholar who was one of the most influential ulemas of the 20th century. Sajjad was a founder of Anjuman-Ulama-i-Bihar, Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind, and Imarat-i-Sharia. A leader in the Indian independence movement, Abul Mahasin Muhammad Sajjad participated in the Non-cooperation Movement, Khilafat Movement, and Civil Disobedience Movement; he opposed the partition of India and championed the concept of composite nationalism. He also founded the Muslim Independent Party in 1935 to represent Muslims in Bihar who were disillusioned with Congress and the Muslim League. The Muslim Independent Party formed the government in Bihar in 1937. Yunus, the party president, became the chief minister of Bihar on 1 April 1937.