Muhammad Habib Shakir, (1866, Cairo–1939, Cairo) (Arabic: محمد حبيب شاكر) was an Egyptian judge, born in Cairo and a graduate from Al Azhar University.
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Sheikh Mohammed Shakir b. Ahmad b. ‘Abd al-Qadir was born in 1282 Hijri/1866 CE in Jirja, a city in Upper Egypt. He studied and graduated from Al Azhar University. He died in 1358 Hijri/1939 CE in Cairo.
His son, Sheikh Ahmad Muhammad Shakir, wrote his biography in a treatise entitled Mohammed Shakir ‘Alam min A‘lam al-‘Asr
Mohammed Habib Shakir has been stated by many internet sources as "a well known translator of the Qur'an into English." He has been associated with the translator M. H. Shakir of the translation published by Tahrike Tarsile Qur'an [1][2]. However this idea is contradicted by two pieces of evidence that have now come to light:
It is alleged that the translation is directly plagiarized from Maulana Muhammad Ali's English translation of the Qur'an[5][6]. One mistake in his translation is that he translates the word Nass to (He), which is wrong, all those who speak Arabic know that Nass means people, so that means Islam is for all people and not for men alone.