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      • Despite spending more than five years in prison, he mobilized his own wealth and that of his family's to make the voices of the Muslims of the Indian subcontinent heard. He faced financial difficulties and endured prison torture, but did not stop the struggle for freedom and aid to the Turks.
      iupress.istanbul.edu.tr/en/journal/jos/article/mevlana-zafer-ali-hanin-ozgurluk-mucadelesi-ve-hapishane-gunleri
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  2. After the British took the city, massacring many of its inhabitants, the last Mughal was put on show trial in the ruins of his old palace and sentenced to be exiled. He left his beloved Delhi on a bullock cart, and with his departure the court culture he had nourished and exemplified collapsed.

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  3. Zafar Ali Khan (1873 – 27 November 1956) (Punjabi: ظفرؔ علی خان – Ẓafar ʿAlī Xān), also known as Maulana Zafar Ali Khan, was a Pakistani writer, poet, translator and a journalist [1] who played an important role in the Pakistan Movement against the British rule.

  4. Despite spending more than five years in prison, he mobilized his own wealth and that of his family's to make the voices of the Muslims of the Indian subcontinent heard. He faced financial difficulties and endured prison torture, but did not stop the struggle for freedom and aid to the Turks.

    • Muhsin İşsever
    • 2019
  5. Jun 18, 2013 · Zafar was first incarcerated in his wife Zeenat Mahal’s Lal Kuan haveli. But he wasn’t kept there for long and moved to Red Fort. TNN. NEW DELHI: Frail and gaunt, Emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar gave himself up to the British at Humayun’s Tomb at the end of a tense day on September 21, 1857.

  6. On the evening of the following day, soldiers of the Bengal regiments (3rd Light Cavalry, 11th and 20th Infantry) rebelled, releasing the imprisoned troopers and killing their British officers and many British civilians in their cantonment.

    • 8 June-21 September 1857
    • British-EIC victory
    • Delhi, Mughal Empire
  7. An ardent supporter of Khilafat Movement, he also had to serve a term of five years in prison for his role in the freedom movement. Poetry was a mode of socio-political resistance for Zafar Ali Khan. He engaged with the issues that impacted his times. Most of what he wrote represents contemporary history in literary terms.

  8. Zafar Ali Khan (1873 – 27 November 1956) ( Punjabi: ظفرؔ علی خان – Ẓafar ʿAlī Xān ), also known as Maulana Zafar Ali Khan, was a Pakistani writer, poet, translator and a journalist who played an important role in the Pakistan Movement against the British rule.