‘The Muslim Buddhist’

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Akhtar Hameed Khan (1914-1999)

The death of Akhtar Hameed Khan came as an ominous portent on the eve of Pakistan's military takeover. While the rest of the country waited anxiously to see how Pakistan would deal with its latest democratic failure, the rural development guru was quietly laid to rest in the arid soil of Orangi, the periurban Karachi settlement where he had tirelessly worked for nearly two decades to instill the spirit of self-help.

Pakistan's policy-makers may have ignored Khan's calls for simplicity, renunciation and self-reliance, but his work has made a difference in the lives of the countless many in Bangladesh and Pakistan and inspired development scholars both in the Subcontinent and the West. (An interview with Akhtar Hameed Khan and a companion article by Tarik Ali Khan on him and his work   in   Orangi   appeared in the August 1998 issue of Himal.)

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