
Yusuf Ali
‐
Writer and educator who is best known for translating the Qur'an
Other names
Abdullah Yusuf Ali
A. Yusuf Ali
Place of birth
Date of arrival to Britain
Location(s)
AL1 3PF
United Kingdom St John's College, Cambridge
CB2 1TP
United Kingdom Mansel Road
Wimbledon
London
SW19 4AA
United Kingdom
Place of death
London
Date of time spent in Britain
1891–5, 1900, 1905–7, 1912, 1914–20, 1928–36, 1939–53
About
Abdullah Yusuf Ali is best known as translator of the Qur'an. He first went to Britain in 1891 to study law at St John's College, Cambridge. He returned to India in 1895, having graduated from Cambridge, with an Indian Civil Service (ICS) post and was called to the Bar in Lincoln's Inn in 1896 in absentia.
In 1900 Yusuf Ali married Theresa Mary Shalders in England. He returned to England in 1905 on a two-year leave. During this time he gave a number of lectures and was elected to the Royal Society of Arts and Royal Society of Literature.
In 1914 Yusuf Ali resigned from the ICS and settled in Britain. He had divorced his wife in 1912 and gained custody of their four children. He married Gertrude Anne Mawbey in 1920. He became involved in the Woking Mission and the East London Mosque. Seen as an imperial loyalist, Yusuf Ali had been vocally supportive of the Indian contribution to the war effort, and he was awarded a CBE in 1917. In the same year he joined the School of Oriental Studies as a lecturer in Hindustani.
Yusuf Ali wrote for a number of periodicals on political, artistic, literary and religious matters. He attended the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 and was in London at the time of the Round Table Conferences. He often wrote and spoke about Mohammad Iqbal, although they had differing political ideologies. In 1938 Yusuf Ali's translation of the Qur'an was published in Lahore while he was teaching at Islamia College. He died in 1953 in London.
World Congress of Faiths, 1936
Thomas W. Arnold (through School of Oriental Studies), E. J. Beck (through NIA), George Birdwood, Atiya Fyzee, Fazl-i-Husain, Mohammad Iqbal, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, Elizabeth Adelaide Manning (through NIA), Badruddin Tyabji, Francis Younghusband.
Life and Labour of the People of India (London: John Murray, 1907)
Mestrovic and Serbian Sculpture (London: Elkin Mathews, 1916)
India and Europe (London: Drane, 1925)
The Making of India (London: Black, 1925)
Medieval India: Social and Economic Conditions (London: Oxford University Press, 1932)
The Holy Qur'an (Lahore: S. M. Ashraf, 1938)
Sherif, M. A., Searching for Solace: A Biography of Abdullah Yusuf Ali Interpreter of the Qur'an (New Delhi: Adam Publishers, 2004)
Image credit
© Remaking Britain: South Asian Connections and Networks, 1930s – present