He was born on 01-07-1946 in Shaweis village, about seven kilometers from Erbil. He became a student of the Qur'an at an early age and was able to learn to read it at an early age. According to his father, he successfully completed his secondary and high school education. He continued his Islamic preaching and Islamic sciences and went to the mosques of the Erbil Citadel. After completing his studies, he became a teacher in agricultural high school.
Jamil began his Islamic preaching in the early 1960s and worked day and night alongside several other teachers. In 1964, Jamil married his cousin Haji Sabiha and lost his sight due to an illness. He had five sons and three daughters, all of whom are in the service of the media (Osama, Bukhari, Mus'ab, Bilal, Suhaib).
Jamil's house has become a platform for Islamic preaching in his youth and hundreds of students have been educated in his house. In early 1980, he started working in the Great Mosque of Azadi and after the uprising, he continued his preaching work with his companion Martyr Fuad Chalabi in the house and mosque of Alaeddin Sajadi. In 1991 and 1993, he won first place in the largest Quran competition in Kurdistan twice.
In 1993, with the help of several teachers, he established a center for teaching the Holy Quran in the White Mosque in Erbil. In this center, they helped teach hundreds of people to read the Qur'an and make them experts in the sciences of the Qur'an and Tajweed. He was appointed as a preacher in 1994 in Aladdin al-Sajadi Mosque in Shorsh neighborhood of Erbil. During these years, hundreds of Friday sermons and lectures have been recorded. On Fridays, the mosque would be so crowded that most of the worshipers would not fit inside the mosque.
He has performed Hajj four times in his life. In addition to his Friday sermons, Jamil was the director of the Holy Quran Wearing Center and presented a weekly live program called “Holy Quran Competition” on Erbil TV. He graduated from the College of Knowledge in Mosul in 2007.
He died on #17-07-2020# due to illness.[1]