Shafiq-ur-Rahman (Urdu: شفیق الرحمن) (9 November 1920 – 19 March 2000) was a Pakistani humorist and a short-story essayist of Urdu dialect. He was a standout amongst the most famous authors of the Urdu talking world. Like western Mark Twain and Stephen Leacock, he has given continuing delight to his perusers. He was a medicinal specialist by calling, and served in Pakistan Army. He additionally got Hilal-e-Imtiaz for his military and regular citizen administrations. He has broadly been apprecitated by scholars and faultfinders of Urdu writing. Rahman was conceived in a Panwar Rajput group of Kalanaur, a residential community close Rohtak. He got his instruction in Bahawalpur. He finished his MBBS from King Edward Medical College, Lahore in 1942, and post-graduation in tropical solution and general wellbeing from Edinburgh, in 1952. Rahman started composing entertaining stories amid his school days. His stories were distributed in a scholarly month to month magazine Khayyam. His fir...