This has been termed as an "image that projects the confluence of pious traditionalism and media savvy prosperity". During her television shows, she appears on air covered with an Islamic veil and niqab while giving her lectures from her laptop. More recently her lectures have been broadcast as standalone episodes. She continued to give lectures on exegesis of the Quran on Geo in the show Fahm ul Quran. She also appeared in the programme The Quran & You on Aag TV. Hashmi began her career as a television preacher on Geo TV, where she hosted the programme Shahru Ramadan during the month of Ramadhan. Academic studies have shown that the innovative techniques of teaching introduced by Hashmi are one of the reasons for the institute's popularity. She utilizes modern methods of teaching in her lectures and is multilingual in Urdu, Arabic and English, so her female students a large of whom come from educated, urban families, are able to relate with her. Hashmi has been noted for her nontraditional style of teaching and original lectures which focus on feminism. The establishment of a progressive school purely for women, by a female Islamic scholar was seen by some as a direct response to large seminaries, which women had come to view as being regressive and highly politicised. Upon returning to Pakistan she launched Al-Huda International a non-government welfare trust which seeks to educate women as to how they can interpret and then employ Islamic principles in their daily lives. While teaching at the International Islamic University, Hashmi had started informal religious classes for women. During this time, they both travelled to Turkey, Jordan, Syria, Egypt and Saudi Arabia. Soon after they moved to Scotland where they enrolled in the doctorate programme of Islamic studies. She married a fellow scholar of Hadith Muhammad Idrees Zubair and the couple took up posts of lecturers at the International Islamic University (IIU), Islamabad. Her religious education occurred at her home where she was taught the tenets of Islam by her father. She was educated at a local school then studied at the Government College for women Sargodha and ultimately completed her Master's degree in Arabic Language from the University of Punjab, Lahore. Her father, Abdur Rehman Hashmi, was a Muslim scholar, and the local leader of the Jamaat-e-Islami Pakistan. įarhat Hashmi was born in Sargodha, Punjab, on December 22, 1957. In contrast to rigid and confrontational styles of proselytising, Hashmi has emphasized the need for her students to engage in voluntarily educating others through their examples. She has stated that her mission is to bring a renewal in Islam, through better understanding of the core scriptures. Most followers come from liberal, literate and modern backgrounds and most are women. She has gained popularity as a feminist scholar both in Pakistan and abroad, as evidenced by crowds of up to ten thousand that attend her religious lessons, called dars : the number of women who got a diploma or certificate are estimated to be around 15 000 while those who followed her courses without formally enrolling are even more numerous. This institute offers courses on exegesis of the Quran and Hadith and attracts students from a number of foreign countries such as Australia. In 2004, the foundation established the Al-Huda Institute in Mississauga (Toronto area), Ontario, Canada. The foundation now runs a network of schools, seminaries and social welfare projects. The foundation started a number of schools to teach the Quran and Hadith to women in order to "help women become better observant muslims by helping them understand the Quran". Hashmi founded Al-Huda International Welfare Foundation in 1994. She holds a PhD degree in Islamic studies from the University of Glasgow, Scotland and was formerly a lecturer and assistant professor at the Faculty of Usul-al-Din at International Islamic University, Islamabad.
Farhat Naseem Hashmi ( Urdu: فرحت ہاشمی born December 22, 1957) is a Pakistani Canadian ultraconservative Islamic scholar, Muslim television preacher, and the founder of Al-Huda Institute.