Khalil bin Abd al-Rahman al-Qari (1939 - 3 September 2018) was the Sheikh of the Imams of the Two Holy Mosques, and is considered one of the founders of the modern QurâÂÂanic renaissance.
Khalil Al-Qari was born in Muzaffarabad in 1940, and studied under Sheikh Muhammad Suleiman in Lahore, and under the reciter Anwar Al-Haq. He memorized the QurâÂÂan from Sheikh Fadl Karim, then he studied the QiraâÂÂat on the QuraâÂÂa of Pakistan. In Pakistan he worked as a radio presenter in the Muzaffarabad region.
In 1963 he immigrated to Mecca, and studied at the Bin Laden Mosque and the Masjid al-Haram. He taught at the Grand Mosque, and the Al-Arqam Bin Abi Al-Arqam Institute in Al-Safa. Then he moved to Madinah, and was appointed a teacher at the Madinah Institute of the Imam Muhammad Ibn Saud Islamic University, where he settled and devoted himself to teaching the QurâÂÂan.
He was called the "Sheikh of the Imams of the Two Holy Mosques"; In reference to the fact that six of his former students served as Imams of the Great Mosque of Mecca, along with other well-known students, including Sheikh Muhammad Ayyub and Sheikh Ali Abdullah Jaber.
He is considered the pioneer of the Hijazi school in reciting the QurâÂÂan, and one of the founders who participated in the establishment of charitable societies for the memorization of the QurâÂÂan in Saudi Arabia. He is the father of Muhammad and Mahmoud, the Imams of the Prophet's Mosque.
Khalil al-Qari's students included a number of Quran<nowiki/>reciters, some of whom later served as Imams in the two holy mosques and became recognized scholars of recitation. Among them were:
He died on Monday 23 Dhu al-Hijjah 1439 AH (corresponding to September 3, 2018), in Medina, at the age of 78, and was buried in Al-Baqi Cemetery.