Zafeeruddin Miftāhi was born on 7 March 1926 (22
Sha'ban 1344
AH) in
Darbhanga. He received his primary education at home and was schooled at Madrasa Mahmudiya, in
Terai,
Nepal. He studied intermediate classes of Arabic and Persian at Madrasa Wāris al-Ulūm in
Chhapra from 1933 to 1940. He graduated from the Jamia Miftahul Uloom where he studied from 1940 to 1944 with
Habib al-Rahman al-'Azmi and Abdul Lateef Nomani. His other teachers include
Hussain Ahmad Madani,
Sulaiman Nadwi,
Minatullah Rahmani,
Abul Hasan Ali Nadwi and
Muhammad Tayyib Qasmi. After his graduation in 1944, Miftāhi taught at the Jamia Miftahul Uloom for one year and then moved to Ma'dan al-Ulūm in
Lucknow where he taught for three years between September 1945 and January 1948. From January 1948 to 1956, he taught at Darul Uloom Muīnia in
Begusarai, with a gap of one year in between; during which he taught at
Jamia Islamia Talimuddin. In
Shawwal 1364
AH, Miftāhi went to study at the
Darul Uloom Nadwatul Ulama in Lucknow at
Sulaiman Nadwi's suggestion and studied there for few months. Miftāhi was first appointed in the
Darul Uloom Deoband to compile
fatawa. Between 1962 and 1972, he compiled the fatawa of
Azizur Rahman Usmani in twelve volumes. In
Safar 1385 AH, the executive council of Deoband seminary appointed him to write the
editorial for
Monthly Darul Uloom, which he continuously wrote for seventeen years. In 1993, he was appointed a Mufti in the Darul Ifta of
Darul Uloom Deoband; a post he served till 21 August 2008. He served in the Deoband seminary for fifty years and wrote one
lakh fatawa. He retired from Deoband on 22 August 2008 at a monthly pension of 2000
INR which he received throughout his life. Miftāhi was a founding figure of the
Islamic Fiqh Academy and became its president after
Mujahidul Islam Qasmi. He was a member of Board of Studies at the Sunni Theology department of
Aligarh Muslim University. Miftāhi died on 31 March 2011. His funeral prayer was led by Saud Alam Qasmi, the former dean of the Faculty of Theology at
Aligarh Muslim University on 1 April 2011. ==Literary works==