Hafiz Barkhurdar (c. 1650–1710 CE, in the Deccan region, present-day Hyderabad, India). Review 1. Purpose & Audience: The book is exactly what its name suggests: a "gift" for the common people ( Awam ). Unlike heavy Arabic legal texts, this work was designed for Muslims in South Asia who did not speak Arabic or Persian. It covers basic religious obligations (prayer, fasting, zakat, pilgrimage) and daily life rules (cleanliness, marriage, food).
It seems you are asking for a of a work titled "Tohfa tul Awam" (تحفۃ العوام), but you want the title written in Roman English (Urdu/Hindi words using the English alphabet). tohfa tul awam in roman english
Written in Old Urdu (Dakhini), it uses a simple, unpretentious style. The review of its language is positive: it avoids complex metaphors and focuses on clarity. For the modern reader, the Roman English transliteration would be phonetic (e.g., "Namaz parhne ka tareeqa" ). Hafiz Barkhurdar (c
Tohfa tul Awam