Azmi was appointed professor at the Islamic University of Madinah and was later awarded Saudi Arabian citizenship.[9] He died on 30 July 2020.[2]
Books
Azmi authored al-Jaami’ ul-kamil fi al-hadith al-sahih al-shamil, also known as Jami ul Kamil, a collection of all sound hadith narrations as per his claim.[10][11] According to Islamic scholar Muhammad Ishaq Bhatti, "this is such a work that no one has done before."[12]
Azmi collected and compiled all the available traditions from Abu Hurairah after an Egyptian hadith rejector Muhammad Aburiyah wrote Abū Hurayrah wa marwīyatih following in the footsteps of Goldziher. Azmi named the compilation as ''Abū Hurayrah wa marwīyatih and wrote several detailed discourses in it defending the hadith.[13] He gained access to rare manuscripts of Aqḍiyat Rasūl Allāh, a work by Andalusian Maliki scholar, Muḥammad ibn Faraj Ibn al-Ṭallā, who lived between 404 AH and 497 AH.[14] Azmi studied these manuscripts and gave the general Islamic academia its access.[14] His works include:[15]
Bhatti, Muhammad Ishaq (2012). "Dr. Ziaur Rahman Azmi". Barr-e-Sagheer mai Ahle Hadees ki Awwaliyaat (in Urdu). Gujranwala: Dar Abi al-Tayyib. pp. 74–76.
Bhatti, Muhammad Ishaq (2015). Chamnistan-e-Hadees [The Garden of Hadith]. Lahore: Maktaba Quddoosia. pp. 585–594.
Nadwi, Razi ul Islam (30 July 2020). "اسلام کا بیٹا : ضیاء الرحمن" [The Son of Islam: Ziya ur Rahman]. Millat Times (in Urdu). Retrieved 27 December 2021.
Azmi, Muhammad Khalid (September 2020). گنگا سے زم زم تک کا روحانی و علمی سفر [The Spiritual and Academic Journey from the Ganges to the Zamzam] (in Urdu). New Delhi: Al-Manar Publishing House.
Siddiqi, Irfan (September 2020). "بلریاگنج سے جنت البقیع تک" [From Bilariaganj to the Jannat al-Baqi']. Urdu Digest (in Urdu). 60 (9). Lahore: 41–53. Retrieved 27 December 2021.