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  1. Shahab was born in Gilgit on 26 February 1917. His father, Abdullah Sahib, belonged to the Punjabi Arain tribe of Chamkaur Sahib village, district Ambala, and was a student at Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College and a protégé under the supervision of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan.

  2. Not to be confused with Moulvi Syed Qudratullah. Qudrat Ullah Shahab (or Qudratullah Shahab , Urdu : قدرت ﷲ شہاب ; 26 February 1917 – 24 July 1986) was an eminent Urdu writer, civil servant and diplomat from Pakistan .

  3. His father Abdullah Shahab belonged to the Arain tribe of Chimkor Sahib Village, district Ambala and was a student at Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College and a protegé under the supervision of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan. Abdullah Shahab later migrated from Aligarh and settled down in Gilgit.

  4. Shahab died on 24 July 1986 in Islamabad and is buried in H-8 Graveyard, Islamabad, Pakistan. Mumtaz Mufti made him the subject of his autobiography Alakh Nagri and later dedicated another book Labbaik. Bano Qudsia, a veteran Urdu writer, wrote a book Mard-e-Abresham on Shahab's personality.

  5. Not to be confused with Moulvi Syed Qudratullah. Qudrat Ullah Shahab (or Qudratullah Shahab, Urdu: قدرت ﷲ شہاب; 26 February 1917 – 24 July 1986) was an eminent Urdu writer, civil servant and diplomat from Pakistan.

  6. His father Abdullah Shahab belonged to the Arain tribe of Chimkor Sahib Village, district Ambala and was a student at Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College and a protegé under the supervision of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan.

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  8. Shahab Nama is arguably the most influential and significant literary work in Urdu literature. It is an autobiography of Qudrat Ullah Shahab, where he has narrated the details about the events, circumstances, and observations at different stages throughout his life.

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