Burhanuddin bin Muhammad Nūr al-Hilmī (born 1911, Kota Bharu, Malaya [now in Malaysia]—died October 25, 1969, Taiping, Malaysia) was a Malay nationalist leader who led the principal opposition party in Malaya in the decades after World War II.
Nūr al-Hilmī attended Islamic schools at home and in Sumatra before going to India in 1928. On his return home, he taught at a madrasah (Muslim school) in Singapore and became a member of the radical Young Malay Union. During the Japanese occupation he was an adviser on Malay custom and culture to the military administration. After the war, however, he emerged as a major national leader when he was elected president of the left-wing Malay Nationalist Party (MNP). Under his leadership the party worked with other left-wing organizations to produce constitutional proposals for an independent and multiracial Malaya. The outbreak of the Communist Emergency in 1948 brought an abrupt end to constitutional politics in Malaya, and Nūr al-Hilmī himself was detained by the British for two years from 1950 for supposed involvement in anti-British riots in Singapore. The MNP having been dissolved, Nūr al-Hilmī was now a politician without an effective party. In 1956 he became president of the Pan-Malayan Islamic Party (PMIP), an organization whose own origins can be traced back to the MNP and associated nationalist groups in the late 1940s. Under his leadership, the PMIP became the principal opposition party in Malaysian politics, winning a substantial share of the Malay vote (Nūr al-Hilmī himself was elected to the parliament in 1959) and mounting a strong agrarian-populist and anticolonialist attack, especially upon the Malay centrist party. Detained again in 1965 for alleged pro-Indonesian activities during that country’s “Confrontation” with Malaysia, he was released in 1966, in poor health and subject to stringent political surveillance. He continued as nominal president of the party until his death.