Tag Archives: Yunus Khan

10 trailblazers of Uttar Pradesh reshaping India’s future

UTTAR PRADESH :

New Delhi :

While media spotlight often shines on celebrities and politicians, the real engine of India’s progress runs on the resolve of countless unsung heroes who, away from limelight, quietly transform society.

From national defense to grassroots education, sports, science, and civil service, these individuals from Uttar Pradesh show how courage, compassion, and conviction can drive extraordinary change. Here are 10 such trailblazers whose stories deserve to be heard:

Captain Sariya Abbasi: A Woman in Uniform on the Frontlines

Hailing from a small city of Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh, Captain Sayria Abbasi broke every convention to join the Indian Army. A graduate in Genetic Engineering and with plenty of job offers and career opportunities from big companies was not enough for her to pursue in life. The call of service for the motherland was too strong to be sacrificed.

The world noticed her as a soldier deployed at the Line of Actual Control (LAC), India-China temporary border, manning an Air Gun. Today, Sariya leads drone-killer teams and operates L-70 anti-aircraft guns on the border. Her journey from an academic achiever to a defender of the nation’s borders is not just about military precision; it’s about shattering glass ceilings and reshaping how India imagines women in uniform.

Dr. Faiyaz Ahmad Fyzie: Voice for the Voiceless Pasmanda Community

Dr. Faiyaz Ahmad Fyziean AYUSH physician, is more than a healer—he is a public intellectual, columnist, translator, and relentless advocate for the Pasmanda (socially backward) Muslim community. Raised in modest conditions, his rise to national recognition is built on fearless writing and tireless grassroots work.

When even the Prime Minister refers to Pasmanda voices, Fyzie’s years of advocacy resonate. His pen continues to empower those whose struggles were long silenced. His work is a call to conscience—and a roadmap for inclusive discourse.

Mohammad Luqman Ali: Wrestling His Way to Glory and Degree

Wrestler Mohammad Luqman Ali, a student of Social Work at Jamia Millia Islamia, is balancing body and brain. Born in Amroha’s tiny village of Mohraka Patti, his father worked on the railways, and his mother gave him religious grounding. Despite limited resources, Luqman’s grit has earned him recognition in India’s wrestling circles.

From the mat to the classroom, his dual commitment shows that excellence doesn’t require compromise. It requires discipline, heart—and a family’s belief in you.

Rubina Rashid Ali: Reviving Mughal-Era Art with a Modern Mission

In a sun-drenched corner of Aligarh, Rubina Rashid Ali has quietly built a movement. Her work in floral appliqué embroidery, a legacy of Mughal art, now supports dozens of women in Aligarh and Rampur. What was once an undervalued craft monopolized by middlemen has been transformed by Rubina into a vehicle for women’s economic empowerment.

Her home resonates not only with the sound of needles and threads but also with the hum of independence. “Real artists were reduced to laborers,” she says. Today, she ensures their hands are not just working — but also earning.

Babban Mian: A Gaushala Keeper Inspired by His Mother’s Love

At Madhu Sudan Gaushalla in Bulandshahr, Babban Mian tends to cows not out of ritual, but reverence — inspired by his late mother Hamidunnisa Begum. “She loved cows like her own children,” he recalls. After she passed away in 2015, Babban vowed to preserve her legacy.

Despite being a Muslim in a Hindu-dominated tradition, he runs a government-recognized shelter rooted in compassion, not controversy. For him, animal welfare is a universal value — not a communal issue. His work quietly redefines what shared culture and interfaith harmony look like.

Khushboo Mirza: From Amroha to the Moon with ISRO

 Khushboo Mirza, scientist at ISRO and part of the Chandrayaan-1 and Chandrayaan-2 missions, is a stellar example of perseverance. After her father’s death when she was just seven, her mother raised three children alone, running a petrol pump and defying social norms.

Khushboo earned a Gold Medal in Electronics Engineering from AMU and was the youngest member of the Chandrayaan-1 checkout team. A practicing Muslim and a symbol of India’s scientific aspirations, she turned down corporate offers to reach for the stars—and took a whole generation of girls with her.

Zaheer Farooqui: A People’s Leader with a Vision for Purkazi

In western UP’s PurkaziZaheer Farooqui is rewriting what local leadership means. As Nagar Panchayat Chairperson, he donated land worth ₹1.5 crore for the area’s first Intermediate College and modernized local schools into PM Shri-certified institutions.

His initiatives go beyond classrooms. From India’s first double-storey government-run cow shelter to a gym for Muslim women, and one of the most sophisticated rural CCTV networks in the region — Farooqui’s governance is a blend of tradition and tech, equity and empowerment. His Tiranga Yatra revives local history, reminding citizens that patriotism is inclusive and action-oriented.

Dr. Farah Usmani: From AMU to Global Health Leadership

On a cold morning in New York, Dr. Farah Usmani stood outside an apartment, a folder in hand, her eyes bright with resolve. The daughter of Uttar Pradesh, she is today a formidable presence in global health policy.

n M.D. in Obstetrics & Gynecology from AMU, Farah sought impact beyond hospital walls. Armed with a Master’s in Health Policy from LSE and the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, she’s led transformative health initiatives around the world. Her journey is one of intellect guided by idealism — a doctor who chose not just to heal individuals but to reform systems.

Anjum Ara: Bridging Communities Through Compassionate Policing

Hailing from Azamgarh’s Kamharia village, Anjum Ara, a 2012-batch IPS officer, has redefined the image of policing with a human touch. A computer engineer by training, her journey from Integral University to Senior Superintendent of Police in Shimla has been marked by integrity and reform. Known for her work in cybercrime and her community-focused policing model, Anjum is also a fierce advocate for girls’ education.

Together with her husband, IAS officer Yunus Khan, Anjum adopted the cause of Khushdeep, the daughter of a martyred soldier, pledging to support her upbringing. This act of empathy mirrors her professional ethos, proactive, principled, and deeply people-centered.

Mumtaz Khan: From Vegetable Stall to World Hockey Stage

From the bustling alleys of Lucknow’s Cantt area to the turf fields of South Africa, Mumtaz Khan’s journey is pure grit. Once helping her father at a vegetable stall, a single race at school changed her life when Coach Neelam Siddiqui noticed her speed. That moment set her on a course to become a leading forward in India’s Junior Women’s Hockey Team.

Her standout performance at the 2018 Youth Olympics, where she scored 10 goals, earned her national acclaim. Yet, Mumtaz remains rooted, balancing hope and humility as she eyes the Olympics. She is proof that dreams born in dusty streets can blaze across international arenas.

These ten changemakers hail from Uttar Pradesh, from narrow village lanes to bustling metros, from battlefields to laboratories. But they are united by one thing:  quiet, relentless courage. In their lives, we find the India that persists, uplifts, and transforms—not with headlines, but with hard work.

Tap HERE to watch the video

source: http://www.awazthevoice.in / Awaz, The Voice / Home> The Changemakers / by Vidushi Gaur / May 24th, 2025

Brothers who fought against each other in Indo-Pak battlefield

Rampur, UTTAR PRADESH :

Two brothers Sahibzada Yakub Khan and Yunus Khan

During my childhood, I heard in Deoband that Haji Mastan, a notorious smuggler with the image of Robinhood, had sought permission to shoot a film at Darul Uloom, the famous Islamic educational institution in Uttar Pradesh. The film was based on a touching story of the undivided India and was about a Hindu woman adopting a Muslim child and raising him along with her son.

After the Partition, the Muslim boy migrated to Pakistan. Both boys became pilots in their respective countries’ air forces. They come face to face in the Indo-Pak war of 1965, where their planes collide and both die. The last scene of the film is heart-wrenching—the mother is seen carrying the bodies of both her sons on her shoulders.

I was reminded of this incident when I watched a vlog by retired Pakistani Lieutenant General Amjad Shoaib, in which he shared a true incident.

He told how Sahibzada Yakub Khan, who later became Pakistan’s foreign minister, was wounded by his elder brother, Yunus Khan, on the battlefield, at the hands of a brother.

Sahibzada Yakub Khan was born in Rampur in a Nawabi family. Before Partition, he and his brother Yunus Khan were officers in the British Army. After Partition, Yakub went to the newly created Pakistan, and Yunus stayed in India.

During the first Indo-Pak war of 1948, the two came face to face at the Kashmir border at the rank of Major. During the firing, Yunus Khan shot at a Pakistani officer—when he realised that the man was none other than his younger brother Yakub, he shouted, “Don’t mourn, Chotey (little one). We are soldiers, and we have done our duty.”

When General Manekshaw, a top officer of the Indian Army at the time, learned about this incident, he praised Yunus Khan’s courage and expressed sympathy for Yakub.

Years later, almost 36 years later, the two brothers met at Yakub’s wedding in Kolkata. They hugged and cried—a tearful reunion of brothers separated by war.

This incident makes it clear that questioning the patriotism of Indian Muslims is not only wrong but also unjust. Time and again history has shown—whether it is Brigadier Usman, Param Vir Chakra winner Abdul Hamid, or the Muslim soldiers martyred in Kargil—Indian Muslims have protected the country by putting their lives at stake.

People with fundamentalist ideologies, be they soft or hard, are unable to understand that Indian Muslims were not ‘internal enemies’ even in 1947 and they are not so even today.

They are spreading poison that neither benefits the country nor religion. After all, who would be foolish enough to think himself safe from the fire in his neighbor’s house?

Partition not only robbed Indian Muslims of their leadership but also deprived them of the educated class and family ties. Even today, there are thousands of families divided across the borders, who have not seen each other for years.

Children of Indian-Pakistani origin born in countries like America and Britain also face visa difficulties to meet their grandparents.

Late MP Syed Shahabuddin rightly said, “Indian Muslims are the real casualties of Partition.”

The story of Major Yunus Khan, who was forced to fire at his brother in battle while performing the duty of a soldier, has become a symbol of the complex identity of Indian Muslims and true patriotism. Hundreds of such Muslims have shed their blood for this soil, and this is our proud history.

source: http://www.awazthevoice.in / Awaz, The Voice / Home> Stories / by M Ghazali Khan / May 01st, 2025

Himachal IAS-IPS couple to ‘adopt’ martyr Paramjit Singh’s daughter

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Kullu DC Yunus Khan with his SP wife Anjum Ara and son
Kullu DC Yunus Khan with his SP wife Anjum Ara and son

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HIGHLIGHTS

  • The couple have offered to bear the child’s expenses from school till marriage, to ensure a good future for her
  • The child will continue to stay with her family and the IAS-IPS couple will meet her from time to time to know about her problems and solve them
  • It is difficult to assuage the pain of the martyr’s family, but they are trying to share the
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Shimla :

A Himachal-based couple has decided to ‘adopt’ the 12-year-old daughter of an Army jawan, who was beheaded by Pakistan in the Poonch district  of Jammu and Kashmir on May 1. They have offered to bear the child’s expenses from school till marriage, to ensure a good future for her.

 
As a tribute to Naib Subedar Paramjit Singh ‘s sacrifice, Kullu deputy commissioner Yunus Khan  and his wife Anjum Ara, an IPS officer, have decided to take care of his daughter, Khushdeep Kaur. “Khushdeep will continue to stay with her family. We will be paying for all her expenses and meeting her from time to time to know about her problems and solve them. If she wants to become an IAS or IPS officer or choose some other career, we are there to help,” said Ara, SP of Solan district.

Yunus said it is difficult to assuage the pain of the martyr’s family, but they are trying to share their grief. “By ensuring good education to his daughter, we are doing our duty as responsible citizens,” he said. Yunus said that it is up to Khushdeep whether she wants to continue studying at her village school or join some other school. “We would be there for her throughout her life to help her in making decisions,” he added.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Shimla News / TNN / May 05th, 2017