Why has this Nobel winner been ignored for 30 years?
But it did, and the reason was because of sectarian hatred unleashed by a 1974 law that declared the Ahmadi community - to which Dr Salam belonged - as non-Muslim.
"The ceremony was organised to honour Dr Salam, and was to be held at QAU`s Department of Physics, which was founded by one of his former students, Dr Riazuddin," says Pervez Hoodbhoy, a well-known Pakistani physicist, academic and security analyst who was among the organisers.
Dr Salam arrived in Islamabad to attend the ceremony, but couldn`t enter the QAU premises due to fierce agitation started by student members of the powerful political and religious wing of the Jamaat-e-Islami party.
"The situation grew extremely tense; I clearly remember, they were threatening that they would break Dr Salam`s legs if he dared enter the university campus; we had to call off the programme," Mr Hoodbhoy recalls.
Move on some 37 years later and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Monday surprised many by approving a plan to rename that same department of the QAU as the Dr Abdus Salam Centre for Physics.
He also approved five annual scholarships for Pakistani students competing for doctoral programmes in physics at overseas universities.
Many have welcomed the decision. Dawn newspaper, in an editorial comment on Wednesday, expressed hope that "a historic wrong is finally on course to being set right".
"That it has taken nearly four decades for this country to honour a globally renowned scientist who was one of its own, is a sad reflection of the priorities that hold sway here... For Dr Salam was an Ahmadi, a persecuted minority in Pakistan, and his faith rather than his towering achievements was the yardstick by which he was judged," Dawn noted.
Religious extremism
Abdus Salam was born to a family of modest means in the Jhang region of central Punjab in 1926. He studied maths at Government College Lahore and earned a scholarship to the University of Cambridge where he completed his doctorate in 1951.
Between 1960 and 1974 he worked as an advisor to the Pakistani president on scientific matters, and is widely credited with laying the foundations of both the country`s space and nuclear programmes.
He left the country in 1974 in protest over the enactment of a constitutional amendment that declared Ahmadis as non-Muslims, but in doing so did not sever links with the scientific community in Pakistan.
During this period, a rising tide of religious extremism backed by powerful quarters in the military establishment led to the creation of a furiously anti-Ahmadi social narrative which has still not run out of steam.
As such, his not an inspirational story in Pakistan, and there is no mention of him in textbooks.
Until recently, any public mention of Dr Salam as a hero invariably provoked a backlash from what many call the "guardians of faith".
So why did Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif take the gamble of honouring him now - so long after his death in Oxford in 1996 at the age of 70?
It appears that the immediate trigger came through a rare TV programme commemorating the 20th anniversary of Dr Salam`s death on 29 November, which the prime minister happened to be watching, according to a credible source.
Soon after the programme, he rang up one of the participants in the programme to recommend naming the National Centre of Physics after Dr Salam.
But more significantly, the prime minister`s decision came in the wake of a similar controversy which followed news that that one of the four candidates for the head of Pakistan`s army, Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa, was married to a woman who had Ahmadi relatives.
Gen Bajwa`s selection by the prime minister despite this campaign, and the fact that the army did not object to it, appears to have silenced the anti-Ahmadi groups for the moment.