Noor-ud-Din considered his mother, Noor Bakht, to be his first teacher. He used to say that he was fed the love of the
Quran through his mother's milk. He went to a local school for his early education. His father Hafiz Ghulam Rasul, a devoted Muslim and parent placed great emphasis on his children's education. Noor-ud-Din spoke
Punjabi as his mother tongue, but after hearing a soldier speaking
Urdu, he fell in love with the language and learnt it by reading Urdu literature. His eldest brother, Sultan Ahmad, was a learned person who owned a printing press in
Lahore. Once when Noor-ud-Din was 12 years old, he accompanied his brother to Lahore, where he fell ill and was successfully treated by Hakeem Ghulam Dastgir of Said Mitha. Impressed by his manner and his renown, Noor-ud-Din became eager to study
medicine; but his brother persuaded him to study
Persian and arranged for him to be taught by a famous Persian teacher, Munshi Muhammad Qasim Kashmiri. Noor-ud-Din learnt Persian at Lahore, where he stayed for two years. His brother then taught him basic
Arabic. In 1857, a traveling bookseller came to
Bhera from
Calcutta. He urged Noor-ud-Din to learn the translation of the
Quran and presented him with a printed copy of five of the principal chapters of the Book together with their
Urdu translation. Shortly after, a merchant from
Bombay urged him to read two Urdu books,
Taqviatul Iman and
Mashariqul Anwar, which were commentaries (
Tafsir) on the
Quran. A few years later, he returned to Lahore and started studying medicine with the renowned Hakeem Allah Deen of Gumti Bazaar. This turned out to be a short stay and the study was postponed. Noor-ud-Din was then sent to study at a School in
Rawalpindi where he graduated with a
Diploma at the age of 21 and thereafter, due to his academic abilities, was appointed the
headmaster to a school in
Pind Dadan Khan at the young age of 21. Noor-ud-Din first came into contact with Christian missionaries while he was in Rawalpindi. == Further learning and travels ==