Sir Mohammad Abdur Rahman (1888–1962) was a lawyer and judge from Pakistan born in Delhi, India. He served as a representative of the country of India for the United Nations Special Committee on Palestine (UNSCOP) in the summer of 1947.[1][2]
Prior to joining UNSCOP, Rahman began practicing law in Delhi in 1908. He quickly rose in the ranks and became Dean of the Law College (1927–1934) and later became the Vice Chancellor, a position he held until 1938.[1] He was the first Muslim Vice Chancellor of Delhi University.[3][4] He was then appointed judge of the Madras High Court in 1937, and then the High Court at Lahore in February 1943.[3] Just a year later, he became Vice Chancellor of Punjab University in Lahore in addition to his High Court duties.[3][5]
In May 1947 he was appointed to UNSCOP by Indian National Congress President Jawaharlal Nehru.[6] At the end of UNSCOP, Sir Abdur Rahman supported the Minority Plan for a Federal State in Palestine.[7] He also included a Special Note that reflected his desire for either a Federal State or a Unitary state due to his belief in the sanctity of the spirit of the UN Charter.[8]
After UNSCOP, Rahman went home to Lahore, which had become a part of Pakistan due to the Partition of India on August 15, 1947. His family, which fled from Delhi after partition, soon joined him. He was later appointed to the Federal Court of Pakistan, a precursor to the Supreme Court of Pakistan.[9]
One of Sir Abdur Rahman's grandchildren is the award-winning chemist and former Minister of Science and Technology of Pakistan, Atta-ur-Rahman from Pakistan.[4][10][circular reference]. His children included his son M. Fazl ur Rahman who was a Barrister and practised law in Colonial India and in Pakistan until his passing in 1987. His Grandson M. Gibert Naim ur Rahman who is also a barrister and practises law in Pakistan. His Great-Grandson, also named Muhammad Abdur Rahman, is a serving judge of the High Court of Sindh.
P.R. Kumaraswamy (28 July 2010), "India, UNSCOP, and the Partition of Palestine", India's Israel Policy, Columbia University Press (published July 28, 2010), pp. 85–107, ISBN 978-0-231-52548-0
Elad Ben-Dror (2014), "The Success of the Zionist Strategy vis-à-vis UNSCOP", Israel Affairs, 20 (1) (published January 2, 2014): 19–39, doi:10.1080/13537121.2013.863079, ISSN 1743-9086, S2CID 145279029