Omar Khalidi


Omar Khalidi, born in Hyderabad, India, was a Muslim scholar, a staff member of MIT in the US, and an author.

Early life and education

Khalidi was born in 1953 in Hyderabad, India. He was of Hadhrami descent.

Career

He is referred to by one commentator as the "Chronicler of Hyderabad and as a champion of minority rights". He was considered an international relations builder.

Scholar

His first scholarly work was The British Residents at the Court of the Nizams of Hyderabad published in 1981. Since then he wrote and edited more than 25 books. The best known is Hyderabad after the fall |Hyderabad: After the Fall published in 1990.

Media contribution

Khalidi served as a regional Vice-President of American Federation of Muslims of Indian Origin, and was an active participant in the various activities of all other Indian Muslim organisations in the USA and Canada. His articles were published regularly in the MetroWest Daily News and he was an active columnist for various other journals, writing for the Economic and Political Weekly, The Outlook, India Abroad, Two Circles and other print and internet media.

Books

Below are the collection of some of his books.
Published YearBook NamePublisher
1981The British Residents at the Court of the Nizams of HyderabadHyderabad Historical Society.
1985Hyderabad State Under the Nizams, 1724–1948: A Bibliography of Monographic and Periodical LiteratureHyderabad Historical Society.
1987Deccan Under the Sultans, 1296–1724: A Bibliography of Monographic and Periodical LiteratureHyderabad Historical Society.
1988African Diaspora in India: The Case of the Habashis of DeccanHamdard National Foundation.
1988Hyderabad After the FallHyderabad Historical Society.
1990Indian Muslims in North AmericaSouth Asia Press.
1991Factors in Muslim Electability to Lok SabhaHarvard University Press.
1991Memoirs of Cyril Jones: People, Society, and Railways in HyderabadManohar Publications.
1992Shama-e-Faroozan: Chand Ilmi Aur Adabi Shakhsiyatoon Ke Halaat-e-Zindagi Aur KarnameAzmi and Sons.
1994Memoirs of Sidney CottonSouth Asia Press.
1995Islamic Literature in the Deccani Languages: Kannada, Marathi, & TeluguHyderabad Historical Society.
1997Hadhrami Role in the Politics and Society of Colonial India, 1750–1950in Freitag and Clearance-Smith: Hadhrami Scholar, Traders and Statesmen of the Indian Ocean, 1750–1960. Brill Publisher, the Netherlands.
1998Subsequent-e-Hyderabad: Chashm Deed Aur Muasir Tahreeron Par Mushtamil Manzar Aur Pesh Manzar All India Majlis Tameer-e-Millat.
1999Romance of the Golconda DiamondsMapin Publishing.
1999Approaches to Mosque Design in North AmericaMIT.
1999The Architecture and Campus Planning of Osmania UniversityMIT.
1999American Architecture of Islamic InspirationMIT.
2003A Guide to Arabic, Persian, Turkish, and Urdu Manuscript Libraries in IndiaMiddle East Librarians Association.
2003Khaki and Ethnic Violence in India: Army, Police, and Paramilitary Forces During Communal RiotsThree Essays Press.
2004Between Muslim Nationalists and Nationalist Muslims: Maududi’s Thoughts on Indian MuslimsInstitute of Objective Studies.
2004The British Residency in Hyderabad: An Outpost of the Raj British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia.
2006An Indian Passage to Europe: The Travels of Fath Nawaz JangOxford University Press.
2006Muslims in the Deccan: A Historical SurveyGlobal Media Publications.
2006Muslims in Indian EconomyThree Essays Collective.
2006Khaki and Ethnic Violence in India-2Three Essays Collective.
2006A Guide to Architecture in Hyderabad, Deccan, IndiaThree Essays Collective.

Death

Khalidi died on 29 November 2010, in a train accident at Kendall Square, MBTA station in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His family published a statement in the Arab News on 30 November 2010: Khalidi drove in his car to the MIT campus and was probably trying to catch a train to buy medicine at the next station. He was diabetic, and it seems his sugar level had reached abnormal levels and he was hit by a train in Boston, United States His funeral prayers were held at the Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center in Roxbury.
He left his wife Nigar Khalidi and his daughter Aliya.