Ghulam Muhammad Khan Bhurgri

[3] According to family traditions the services of a religious teacher were hired for teaching Persian and reading of Quran to Ghulam Mohammad during his early age.

Ghulam Mohammad went through such ordeal when he was tied with trunk of a tree by his teacher and flogged mercilessly, which resulted in a life-long scar on his forehead.

[3] Initially started looking after his agricultural property when another incident forced him to go to England to study law, for three years from 1905 to 1908 and was called the bar from Lincoln's Inn.

[4][11] Ghulam Mohammad Bhurgri was among the foremost Muslim leaders of Sindh whose activities had a significant impact on mainstream Indian politics.

This move was strenuously opposed and defeated by the Zamindars and other vested interests who feared the possible dangers of spreading education, especially amongst the Haris and landless -labourers.

[13] His relentless efforts brought in more grants to the local boards, besides more facilities to the cultivators and drastic improvements in the conditions of irrigation canals and roads.

[14] In an interview eminent politician and Jurist Rasul Bux Palejo Said: “If Bhurgri had been alive at the time of independence, Quaid-E- Azam Would have made him the first Prime Minister instead of Liaquat Ali Khan”.

Raees Ghulam Mohammad was among those very few leaders who openly opposed the British rule right from the word go, He was progressive Landlord;[15] He remained a dedicated member of the All India Muslim League all through his life and attended all its annual sessions.

Bhurgri was a Muslim League delegate, under the leadership of Quaid-e-Azam, to give evidence before the Selbourne Committee of British Parliament on India Bill.

He repeatedly urged the Aga Khan who led the Muslim delegation to the Round Table Conferences (1930–32) and Jinnah to get the Sindh separation issue settled favourably during the London confabulations.

His utmost concern was the state of education, health, infrastructure, roads, irrigation and most importantly the highhandedness of colonial masters and bureaucracy.