Uzair Gul Peshawari (1886 – 17 November 1989) was an Islamic scholar and an activist of the Indian freedom struggle against British rule who actively participated in the Silk Letter Movement.
[1] He was a close companion of Mahmud Hasan Deobandi and was imprisoned along with him in Malta for his role in the Silk Letter Movement.
[3] He served as a teacher at Darul Uloom Deoband[4] and before World War II, he was appointed as a head-teacher in Madrasa Rahmania in Roorkee.
[1] In 1945, Gul moved to his native place in Peshawar along with his English wife Beatrice Cooke.
[4][1][5] Gul's second wife Cooke also wrote an English translation of Quran which remains unpublished.