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Qadi'ianism: A critical Study
PREFACE:
11, Rabi
al-Awwal, 1378 Shaykh Abul-Hasan Ali An-Nadawi (RA)
Towards the end of
December 1957, and in the beginning of January 1958, an International Islamic
Colloquium was held in Lahore under the auspices of the Punjab University in
which a large- number of distinguished and noted scholars of the Muslim world
and Western countries took part. Quite a few outstanding ulama representing
Middle Eastern countries were there. Despite having received an invitation to
participate the writer was unable to reach Lahore until after the colloquium had
ended. The points that had been raised during the colloquium continued to be
debated by many people.
The scholars who had
come from Egypt, Syria and Iraq to participate in the conference showed
considerable keenness to collect correct information about the fundamental
beliefs and doctrines of Qadianism, the well-known religious movement of India
and Pakistan. This curiosity on their part was justified and natural. For, it
was in this part of the world that Qadianism was born and developed. Hence, from
here alone authentic material and information could be procured. The Pakistani
and Indian friends of these guests felt the existence of a serious lacuna: the
absence of any book on the subject in present-day Arabic, which could be
presented to them. It was owing to this feeling that when the writer reached
Lahore -he was ordered by his spiritual teacher and guide, Hazrat Maulana 'Abdul
Qadir Raipuri, to write a book on this subject in Arabic.
During his trips to the
Middle East and his stay in Egypt and Syria the writer had himself -felt the
need of such a work, but the subject had failed to capture his imagination. The
subject was on the whole, out of tune with his temperament. Despite his repeated
efforts the writer did not succeed in forcing himself to study any of Mirza
Ghulam Ahmad's writings. Hence, when he undertook the task, he had little
familiarity with the subject. Bu t the demand had been made from a personage the
compliance of whose wish was a matter of deepest spiritual satisfaction, to the
writer and this enabled him to devote himself to a. thorough study of Qadianism.
Within a few days the room where the writer was staying at Lahore changed into a
full-fledged library on Qadianism. The work then started in earnest and for one
month the writer remained so deeply immersed in the subject that he lost almost
all touch with the outside world and bad his mind free for no other subject.
The writer's mental
framework being that of a student of history, he launched upon his intellectual
journey from the very beginning of the movement surveying every stage in its
progress and development. The writer's observations, therefore, moved along the
lines through which Qadianism had passed during its course of development. This
approach helped the writer to grasp the real nature of the Qadiani movement, its
gradual evolution, and its motivating factors. This approach uncovered a number
of aspects which might have remained hidden otherwise. The writer delved deep
into the writings of the founder of this movement, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Qadiani
and it is through this first hand source that he has tried to arrive at
unprejudiced conclusions, trying to maintain the detachment of a historian in
respect of the message, the movement, and the practical achievements of
Qadianism. The result of this study has been published in the form of al-Qadiyani
wa al-Qadiyaniyah in Arabic.
After the book had been
prepared Hazrat Maulana 'Abdul Qadir ordered its translation into Urdu. Since
actual excerpts in Urdu were required for the Urdu edition, an entire library of
books available only in Lahore was required once again. Another trip was made,
after which this book was rendered into Urdu. This Urdu edition could better be
regarded as an independent work because a number of valuable additions and
modifications have been made during the process of its preparation. For some
time literature on controversial religious subjects has had a peculiar language
and style, so much so that this language and style have come to be regarded as
part and parcel of religious writings. This writer has not considered himself
bound by this polemical tradition. This book has been written with historical
objectivity rather than the bigoted zeal of a debater. This will perhaps
disappoint those who have been used to polemical writings. For this the writer
offers no apology. The class of people for whom it has been written and the
purpose which actuated its writing did not warrant any other style of
expression.
The writer thanks all those friends and
well-wishers who have been a source of guidance in the study of the subject, who
provided him with the material needed for writing this book and for facilitating
the completion of the work. If this book serves Islam in any way, all such
people share its reward.
The writer wishes to impress on his readers
one thing: wisdom requires that a person-should refrain from risking even as
trivial a thing as one's monetary savings, and one should be careful in choosing
the people to whom these should be entrusted. If wisdom demands such precaution
in worldly affairs, it should not be difficult to guess what a tremendous amount
of precaution should be exercised in the matter of faith on which depends a
person's salvation and his felicity in the eternal life of the Hereafter. It is
evident that in such a matter one should exercise extreme precaution; one should
try to use one's discretion to the utmost, and to divest oneself of all
emotional predilections, worldly attachments and material interests. This book,
through its authentic and systematically arranged information obtained from the
statements and writings of the founder of Qadianism himself and through
authentic historical information about the movement, can prove of help to many a
person to arrive at an intelligent appreciation of Qadianism.
Muslim India in the Nineteenth Century:
The nineteenth century is a period of 'unique importance in modern history. It
is the century in which intellectual unrest and various kinds of conflicts and
tensions found in the Muslim world reached the climax. India was one of the main
centres of this unrest and tension. Here the conflicts and tensions between the
Western and the Eastern cultures, between the old and the new systems of
education, in fact, between the old and the new world-views, and between Islam
and Christianity were mounting. The forces concerned were locked in a fierce
struggle for survival.
The movement began at a time when the well-known struggle of 1857 for the
country's independence had been suppressed. This had shocked the Muslims to the
core; their hearts were bleeding, and their minds paralysed. They were
confronted with the danger of double enslavement political as well as cultural.
On the one hand, the victorious power. The British had launched upon a vigorous
campaign to spread a new culture and civilization, in India. On the other hand,
the Christian missionaries were scattered all over India bent upon active
proselytisation. To be able to shake the confidence of Muslims in their own
beliefs and to make them skeptical as to the bases of the Islamic Shari'ah, even
though they might not be converted to Christianity, was deemed by them an
important enough achievement. The new generations of Muslims, which had not been
thoroughly grounded in Islam, were their main target. The schools and colleges
which were introduced along the foreign pattern were the main fields of their
activity directed at spreading intellectual confusion. The efforts were not
altogether unsuccessful and even, incidents of conversion to Christianity began
to take place in India. But the main danger of that period was not apostasy '(in
the sense of ostensible con- version from Islam to Christianity), but skepticism
and atheism. Religious debates between Muslim 'ulama and Christian missionaries
took place frequently, leading in general to the victory of the ulama of Islam.
This established the intellectual superiority and greater vitality of Islam as
against Christianity. Nevertheless, intellectual unrest, skepticism, and
weakness of faith grew apace.
This was one aspect of the situation: the situation vis-a-vis the external
menace. Looked at internally, the situation was even worse. Mutual disagreements
between Muslim sects had assumed frightful proportions. Each sect was busy
denouncing the other. Sectarian polemics were the order of the day, leading
often to violent clashes, even to bloodshed to litigation over controversial
sectarian issues. The whole of India was in the grip of what might be termed a
sectarian civil war. This too had given birth to mental confusion and created
breaches in the Muslim society and disgust in the people and had consider- ably
damaged the prestige of the Muslim 'ulama and of Islam.
On the other hand, immature sufis and ignorant pretenders of spiritual
excellence had reduced the Sufi orders to a plaything. They gave wide publicity
to their trance-utterances and inspired pronouncements. One found people
everywhere making overly extravagant claims and going about proclaiming their
ability to perform astounding miracles and to receive messages from on High. The
result of all this was that the Muslim masses had developed an uncommon relish
for things esoteric, for miracles' for supernatural performances, for inspired
dreams and prophesies. The more a person had to offer people by way of these
things, the greater was his popularity. Such people used to become the centre of
popular veneration. Hypocritical darvishes and cunning traders of religion took
full advantage of the situation. People had developed such a liking for
esoterics that they were readily prepared to accept every new fantasy, to
support every new movement and to believe in every esoteric claim however
baseless and imaginary. Muslims were generally in the grip-of frustration and
had fallen prey to defeatism. The failure of the struggle of 1857 and of a
number of other recent religious and militant movements was fresh in their
memory. Many of them had despaired, therefore, of bringing about any change and
reform through normal processes and a large number of people had begun to await
the advent of some charismatic personality, some divinely appointed leader. At
places one heard that at the turn of the century the Promised Messiah would make
his appearance. In religious gatherings people commonly referred to the numerous
forms of misguidance and evil which were to appear on the eve of the Doomsday.
Prophesies and esoteric statements such as those of Shah Niamat Ullah Kashmiri
helped people to forget the bitterness of the current situation and strengthened
their morale. Dreams, prophesies and other esoteric pronouncements had magnetic
appeal and kept their spirits high.
The province of Punjab, in particular, was the centre of mental confusion and
unrest, superstitions and religious ignorance. This province bad suffered for
eighty years under the yoke of the Sikh Raj, an overbearing military tyranny.
During this period the religious belief and devotion of Muslims had weakened
considerably. True Islamic education had been almost non-existent for long. The
foundations of Islamic life and Islamic society had been shaken. Their minds
were seriously in the grip of confusion and perplexity. In brief, to borrow the
words of Iqbal:
The Khalsa (Sikhs) took away both the Qur'an and the sword,
In their realm, Islam was just dead.
This situation had paved the ground in the Punjab for the rise of a new
religious - movement based on novel interpretations and esoteric doctrines. The
temperament of a good number of people of the region where this movement arose
has been portrayed by Iqbal in these words:
In religion, he is fond of the latest,
He stays not for long at a place; he keeps on moving;
In learning and research he does not participate,
But to the game of Mentors and Disciples, he readily succumbs;
If the trap of explanation anyone lays,
He walks into it quickly from the branch of his nest.
It was towards the end of the nineteenth century that Mirza Ghulam Ahmad
appeared on the scene with his unique message and movement. For the spread of
his message and for the fulfillment of his ambitions Mirza Ghulam Ahmad found a
fertile ground and a congenial period of time. He had numerous factors to his
advantage-the general unrest in the minds of people, the exotic-loving
temperament of the people, the general despair with regard to the efficacy of
moderate and normal means of reform and revolution, the decline in the prestige
of and confidence in the ulama, the popularity of religious debates which had
vulgarised the religious curiosities and propensities of the people and made
them, to a large extent, free- thinkers. Furthermore, the British rulers (who
had had a bitter experience with Mujahidin movement and felt, therefore,
considerable consternation for the spirit of jihad and the religious enthusiasm
of Muslims), warmly welcomed this new religious movement which pledged loyalty
to the British government and even made this loyalty an article of faith, and
whose founder had had a long and close association with the government. All
these factors provided the congenial atmosphere in which Qadianism came into
existence, won converts and developed into an independent sect and religion.
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Qadiani:
(This chapter purporting to lay down the biographical outlines of the founder's
life is based chiefly on -the statements and writings of the, Mirza himself,
supplemented by the work of his son Mirza Bashir Ahmed, Sirat al-Mahdi and other
standard works of the Qadianis.)
Family Background:
Genealogically Mirza Ghulam Ahmad belonged to the Barlas branch of the Moghuls.
(Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, Kilab al-Bariyah, p. 134 n.) But after some time he came to
know by means of 'inspiration' that he was, in fact, of Persian origin. To quote
his own words:
"The revelation (ilham) about me is that: Were it that faith was hanging from
the Pleiades it would still have been seized by the man from Persia. (This
tradition occurs in the Sihah with a little variation of words. In some reports
there occurs the phrase 'Rijal Min Faras' (men from Persia) instead of Rajul (a
man). The ulama and the mujahiddin interpret this hadith to refer to Salman al-Farisi
and other ulama and holy men of Persia famous for their devotion and service to
the cause of faith including the Imam Abu Hanifa, who was also of Persian
origin. ) And then, there is also a third revelation about me: Verily, those who
disbelieved the man from Persia disproved, their religions. God is thankful for
his endeavour. All these 'revelations' show that our forefathers were Persian.
And the truth is what Allah has made manifest." (Kitab at-Bariyah, p. 135 n.)
In one of his works he writes:
"It should be remembered that apparently the family of this humble one is that
of the Moghuls. No record has been seen in the history of our family, showing
that the family was Persian. What has been seen in certain records is that some
of our grandmothers were of noble and noted Sayyid families. Now it has come to
be known through the word of God that ours is a Persian family. We believe in
this with all our conviction since the reality- in respect of genealogies is
known to none the way it is known to Allah, the Exalted. It is His knowledge
alone which is true and sure and that of all others, doubtful and conjectural."
(Araba'in, Vol. 11, p. 17 n.)
Mirza Gul Mohammad, the great grandfather of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad owned
considerable property. In Punjab he had a good-sized estate. Mirza Ghulam Ahmad
had mentioned in detail the -'aristocratic pomp and splendour of this ancestor
of his, his 'habit to feed a large number of people at his table, and his
religious influence.' (Kitab al-Bariyah, pp. 136-42 n.)
After his death, his estate declined and the Sikhs confiscated the villages of
that estate. This decline continued to such -an extent that no other land
remained in the ownership of his grand- father; Mirza Ata Mohammad, except
Qadian. Later on, the Sikhs occupied even that and drove the Mirza's family out
of Qadian. During the last years of Ranjit Singh's rule Mirza Ghulam Murtaza,
the father of the Mirza, returned to Qadian and the Mirza later received five
villages out of the landed property of his father. (ibid, pp. 142-44 n.)
The Mirza 's family maintained very loyal and cordial relations with the
recently established British power in- the Punjab. Several members of the family
had shown great enthusiasm in consolidating the new government and had come to
its rescue on several critical occasions. To cite the words of the Mirza
himself:
"I come from a family which is out and out loyal to this government. My father,
Murtaza, who was considered its well-wisher, used to be granted a chair in the
Governor's Durbar and has been mentioned by Mr. Griffin in his History of the
Princes of Punjab. In 18517 lie helped the British Government beyond his power,
that is, he procured cavaliers and horses right during the time of Mutiny. He
was considered by the Government to be its loyal supporter and well-wisher.' A
number of testimonials of appreciation received by him from the officers have
unfortunately been lost. Copies of three of them, however, which had been
published a long time ago, are reproduced on the margin. Then, after the death
of my grandfather, my elder brother Mirza Ghulam Qadir continually occupied
himself with service to the Government and when the evil-doers encountered the
forces of the British Government on the highway of Tammun, he participated in
the battle on the side-of the British Government."'
Birth, Education, Upbringing:
The Mirza was born during the last phase of the Sikh rule in the year 1839 or
1840 at Qadian in Gurdaspur District. His own writings show that at the time of
the struggle of Independence in 1857, he was sixteen or seventeen years old." (Kitab
al-Bariyah, p. 146, n. Mirza Bashjruddin Mahmood in his Address to the British
Crown Prince in 1922, has mentioned the year of his birth to be 1837 (p. 35).
According to this, in 1857, his age would be 21. This alteration seems to have
been made in order to vindicate the Mirza's prophecy which has been mentioned by
him as a Divine inspiration in the following words: "We shall cause you to live
a good-life for eighty years or close to that" (vide Arabain, Vol. 111, p. 39).
The Mirza received his education up to the Middle Class at home. He studied
books on Grammar, Logic and Philosophy under the guidance of Maulavi
Fazl-i-Ilahi, Maulavi Fazl-i- Ahmad and Maulavi Gul 'Ali Shah. He studied
Medicine from his father who was an experienced physician. During his student
life, the Mirza was very studious. To quote his own words.
"During those days I was so thoroughly engrossed in books as if I was not
present in the world. My father used to instruct me repeatedly to curtail my
reading, for, out of sympathy for me he feared that this might affect my health.
" This, however, did not continue for long. Under the insistent pressure of his
father, the Mirza had to engage himself in the endeavour to get back his
ancestral landed property which subsequently led to litigation in law courts. He
writes:
"I feel sorry that a lot of my valuable time was spent in these squabbles and at
the same time my respected father made me supervise the affair of landlordship.
I was not a man of this nature and temperament.""
The Mirza later took employment with the Deputy Commissioner of Sialkot for a
small salary. He remained for four years in this service, that is, from 1864 to
1868.1' During this period he also read one or two, books of. English." More-
over, he also took the examination of Mukhtar but flopped-" In 1868 he resigned
this job and came to Qadian and began to look after his landed property. But
most of his time was spent on reflecting on the Holy Qur'an and studying works
of Tafsir and Traditions-"'
Moral Disposition:
From his very-childhood, the Mirza was very simple. He was unaware of worldly
matters and appeared to be a little absent-minded. He did not even know how to
wind a watch." When he had to know time, he took out the watch from his pocket
and began to count, starting from one. And even then, while he counted with his
finger he also kept on counting the figures aloud lest he should forget." He
could not just look at the watch and find out what time it was. Due to
absent-minded- ness, it was difficult for him to differentiate between the shoes
of the left and the right feet. Mirza Bashir Ahmad writes:
"Once some one brought for him gurgabi (a kind of shoes used in Punjab). He put
them on, but could not distinguish between the right and the left. Often he used
to wear them on the wrong feet, and then feel uncomfortable. Sometimes when he
would be hurt by the use of the wrong shoe, he would get irritated and say that
nothing of those people was good. Mother said that she had inscribed signs
indicating right and left on the shoes for the sake of his convenience and yet'
he used to put the shoes on the wrong feet. Hence she later removed the signs."
Due to very frequent micturition the Mirza used to keep earthen-marbles" in his
pockets. He also carried Jumps Of gur for he was excessively fond of sweets.
Mirza's Physical Health:
In his youth, the Mirza was so afflicted with hysteria that sometimes he used to
fall down unconscious as a result of hysteric fits. The Mirza used to interpret
these fits variously as hysteric and melancholia. He also suffered from diabetes
and copious urination. Mentioning at one place that 'I am a permanently sick
person,' he adds:
"Headache and giddiness and insomnia and palpitation of the heart come by fits
and the lingering ailment in the lower part of my body is that of diabetes.
Often I urinate up to a. hundred times during the day or night. And all the
other disorders of debility and exhaustion which, are the natural results of
such excessive urination have also fallen to my lot."
In his youth, the Mirza engaged himself in vigorous spiritual exercises and
courses of rigid self-discipline. He also fasted continuously for long periods
of time. In one of his long spells of spiritual exertion, he fasted continuously
for six months.' In 1886, he passed another period of exclusive worship and
prayer at Hoshiarpur. Later on, due to ill health and debility, he had to give
these up. On March 31, 1891 he wrote to Nuruddin: "Now my health can no longer
bear the rigours of supererogatory devotion and even a little bit of severe
devotion and meditation or contemplation causes illness."
Economic Condition:
The Mirza began his life in ordinary circumstances: a life of hardship and
poverty. But as his mission spread and he became the spiritual head of a
prosperous sect, he grew prosperous and began to lead a comfortable life. He,
too, was conscious of this change in his state: the ostensible difference
between his earlier and later periods of life. - In 1907 he wrote:
"Our living and our well-being had depended solely on the meager income of out
father. Among outsiders, none knew me. I was an unknown person, living in the
desolate village of Qadian, lying in a corner of anonymity., Then, God,
according to His prophecy, turned a whole world towards me and helped us by such
continuous victories that I have no words to express my thanks. Considering my
own position, I did not hope to receive even ten rupees a month. But the Exalted
Allah, who raises the poor from dust and brings the arrogant down to the earth,
helped me to such an extent that up till now I have received about three hundred
thousand rupees or, may be, even more."
In the footnote, he adds:
"Although thousands of rupees have come by means of money orders, yet more have
been passed on to me directly by sincere friends as gifts, or in the shape of
currency notes enclosed with letters. Some sincere people have sent currency
-notes or gold anonymously and I do not even know what their names are."
Marriage and Children:
The Mirza's-first marriage took place in 1852 or 1853 with one of his own
relatives. This wife gave birth to two sons: Mirza Sultan Ahmad and Mirza Fazal
Ahmad. In 1891, he divorced the lady. In 1884 he took another wife, the daughter
of Nawab Nasir of Delhi." The rest of the offsprings of the Mirza were all from
this wife. Three sons were born from her Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmood, Mirza Bashir
Ahmad (author of Sirat al-Mahdi) and Mirza Sharif Ahmad.
Death:
When in 1891 the Mirza declared that he was the Promised Messiah," and later on
in 1910, that he was a prophet of God," the Muslim 'ulama began to refute and
oppose him. Among those prominent in opposing him was Maulana Sana ullah
Amritsari, the editor of Ahl-i-Hadith. On April 5, 1907, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad
issued an announcement in which, while addressing the said Maulana, he wrote:
"If I am such a big -liar and impostor as you portray me in each issue of your
magazine, then I will die in your life-time, for I know that the life-period of
a mischief- maker and liar is not very long and ultimately he dies an
unsuccessful man, during the life of his greatest enemies and in a state of
humiliation and grief. And if I am not a liar and impostor and have been
honoured by God's communication and address to me, and if I am the Promised
Messiah, then I hope that, with the grace of God and in accordance with God's
practice you will not escape the punishment of the rejecters (of Truth). Thus,
if that punishment which is not in man's but in God's hand, that is, fatal
diseases like plague and cholera, do not afflict you during My life-time" 3 then
I am not from God."
One year after the publication of this announcement, on May 25,1908 the Mirza
fell ill, being afflicted with diarrhea at Lahore. Along with loose motions, he
also had vomiting. He was put under treatment at once, but weakness increased
and his condition became critical. The next day, on May 26, he breathed his last
in the forenoon. About his death his father- in-law Mir Nisar Nawab has stated:
"The night on which Hazrat Mirza Sahib fell -ill, I was asleep at my place. When
he felt very uncomfortable, I was awakened. When I went to Hazrat Sahib he
addressed me and said, 'Mir Sahib I am ill with cholera'. After this, in my
opinion, he did not speak a clear word till he died the next day after ten
o'clock." ( Hayat-i-.Nasir, ed. Shaykh Yaqnb Ali Irfani.)
The dead. body was carried to Qadian. On May 27, 1908 the burial took place and
Hakim Nuruddin became his successor, the first Khalifah of the Qadiani movement.
The Qadiani Saint Paul:
Hakim (Hakim means a physician practicing the traditional system of Greek-
Arabian medicine (Translator)). Nuruddin Bhairawl occupies a position of unique
importance in the history of Qadianism, second only to that of its founder. In
fact, some observers are of the view that the said Hakim was the real brain
behind the movement, that the intellectual currents of this -movement sprang
from his mind.
Birth and Early Education:
Hakim Nuruddin was born in. 1258 A.H. (1841 A.D.) in Bhaira, District Sargodha
(Punjab). (These are based on Akbar Shah Khan Najibabidi's Mirqt al-raqzn Hayat
Nuruddin. Najibabadi was a pupil of the Hakim. These biographical details were
related to him by the Hakim himself at the time when Najibabadi was his student
as well as a devout follower.) Thus in 1857 he was 16 years of age, and was
younger than the Mirza by just one or two years. His father, Hafiz Ghulam Rasul,
was an imam in a mosque in Bhaira, and was a Faruqi by lineage.
The Hakim's early education took place in his home-village. He read the books on
Fiqah in Punjabi language under the guidance of his mother. Then he went to
Lahore. He was taught Persian by Munshi Qasim Kashmiri and learnt calligraphy
from Mirza Irhim Dayrawi. But neither of the two attracted him. Both his
teachers were Shias. In 1272 A. H. aka 1855 A. D.) he returned home and remained
for some time studying under Mir Haji Sharfuddin. It is around this time that he
began to learn the Arabic language systematically.
Under the influence of a bookseller who belonged to the movement of Sayyid Ahmad
Shahid, there arose in him the urge to translate the Holy Qur'an, and he
anxiously read Taqwiyatul Iman and Mashziriq-al-Anwar. A little later, he
returned to Lahore and acquired some knowledge of Medicine. While his education
was at, a very advanced stage, he took employment with the Normal School,
Rawalpindi. There he taught Persian and at the same time learned Arithmetic and
Geography from another teacher. After passing a tahsil examination, he became
headmaster in Pindi Dandan Khan and once more resumed the study of Arabic. After
four years, he ceased to remain in service and began to devote all his time to
his own studies. For some time, he studied under Maulavi Ahmaduddin (who was
known as Buggiwale Qazi Sahib). Then, his love for knowledge made him travel to
several parts of India. In Rampur he resumed his studies, studied Mishkat-al-Masbih
under Maulana Hasan Shah, Sharah-i-Wiqayah under Maulavi Azizullah Afgbani, Usul
of al-Shashi and Maibazi under Maulina Irshid Husain; the Diwan of al-Mutanabbi
under Maulavi Sa'dullah; Sadra, etc., under Maulavi 'Abd al-'Ali, and the higher
books on Logic like Mir Zahid Riaalah and Mir Zahid Mulla falal, half-heartedly.
At this time, he enthusiastically supported Isma'il Shahid and sometimes used to
speak to his teachers with great boldness. From Rampur he went to Lucknow and
began to study medicine under a famous physician, Hak-im 'Ali Husain. When 'Ali
Husain went to Rampur on invitation from Nawab Kalb-i-Ali Khan of Rampur
Nuruddin accompanied him. During his stay in Rampur he further studied
literature under Mufti Sa'dullab. On the whole he remained with Hakim 'Ali
Husain for a period of two years and then went to Bhopal in order to complete
his education in Arabic and to study Hadith. Bhopal, in those days, had become a
great centre of learning. The Governmental patronage of knowledge and learning
had attracted a good number of scholars. In Bhopal he stayed with and was
patronised by Munshi jamaluddin Khan, the Chief Minister. During his stay,
Nur'uddin took lessons in Bukhari and Hidayah from Maulina Abdul Qayyum (the son
of Maulana Abdul Hal Burhanwat, who was a Khalifah of Hazrat Sayyid Ahmad Shahid).
From Bhopal he went on a visit to the Holy cities- Mecca and Medina-in order to
complete his education and also in order to attain other-worldly felicity-' ( An
interesting anecdote is related in this connection, which was narrated by
Nuruddin himself. While leaving for the Holy cities, he asked Maulana Abdul
Qayyum to tender him some advice. He said, "Never become God or Prophet." Abdul
Qayyum explained that by 'not becoming God' what he had meant was that if any of
his desires were frustrated, he should not feel greatly dejected, for to be able
to do what one likes is the attribute of God alone ; by 'not becoming the
Prophet' he meant that if people rejected his fatwas, he should not deem them to
be condemned to hell, for it is the disobedience of the Prophet alone which
condemns one to hell (Mirqat al-yaqin, p. 79).
In Mecca, he studied Abu Da'ud under Shaykh Muhammad Khazraji, Sahih Muslim
under Sayyid Husain and began, to study Musallam al-Thuhut under Maulana
Rahmatullah Kayranawl, 'the author of Izhar al-Haqq. Sometimes, he had heated
discussion with his teachers and showed trends towards non- conformity and
exaggerated confidence in the soundness of his own views and intelligence.' (Mirqat
at-laqin p. 95-97.)
At Mecca be finished his study of Abu Daud and Ibn Majah under Shaykh Muhammad
Khazraji. In the meantime Shah 'Abdul Ghani Mujaddidi had arrived in Mecca.
Later on when Shah Mujaddidi returned to Medina, the Hakim joined him and after
taking an oath of allegiance to him remained as his student for six months.
Occupation:
After pilgrimage and, visit to the Holy places, Nuruddin returned to his native
place, Bhaira and stayed there for some time. During his stay be debated with
people - as to whether the current customs and usages conformed to the teachings
embodied, in the collections of Hadith which turned some people against him.
This led him to realise the ignorance and stagnation of the common people and
his own superiority and intellectual excellence. He also went to Delhi during
the Durbar of Lord Lytton and there met Munshi jamaluddin Khan, the Chief
Minister of Bhopal, who brought him to Bhopal. After a short stay at Bhopal,
Nuruddin once more went back to Bhaira and -started practising medicine there.
Soon his reputation as a successful physician spread and, he was invited by the
Maharaja of Jammu to serve him as his personal physician. For a considerable
period of time he served the ruler of Jammu, Poonch and kashmir and gained
considerable influence there by dint of li-is ability as a physician, and his
eloquence, know- ledge and wit. He had become a very close- confidant of the
Maharaja and thus quite powerful.
An Ardent Follower of Mirza:
There were many similarities of character and temperament between Hakim Nuruddin
and Mirza Ghulam Ahmad. It is difficult to say how they came into contact with
each other. Their first meeting, however, took place at Qadian in 1885. When the
Mirza wrote Bardhin-i-Ahmadiya, Nuruddin wrote a book supporting it. His
admiration for the Mirza increased so much so that he took an oath of allegiance
at his hands and accepted him as his spiritual guide, his leader, and pledged to
follow him' The following letter of Nuruddin shows the depth of his Attachment
to the Mirza.
"My master, my guide, my leader: Assalam-o-Alaykum wa Rahmat ullah,
It is my prayer to be ever present before you and to learn from you all that for
which the Imam of the age has been made the Mujaddid. If it is permitted, I
would resign my job and spend day and night in your exalted service; or if it is
ordered, I would give up my present engagements and go around the whole world,
summoning people towards the true religion and would lay down my life in this
cause. I am a martyr in your cause: whatever I have is not mine; it is yours.
Respected guide and mentor, with utmost sincerity I say that -if all my wealth
and belongings are sacrificed in the cause of religious preaching, I will have
achieved my purpose. If the buyers of Barahin in advance are uneasy at the delay
in the publication of the book, please permit me to render the humbl6 service of
paying them all their dues from my pocket.
"Respected pir and guide: this worthless one, ashamed of himself, says that if
this offer is accepted it would be a pleasure for him. What I mean is that I may
be permitted to bear the entire cost of printing Barahin and that what- ever
proceeds there might be from its sale, should be spent on your needs. My
relationship with you is the same as that of Faruq (with the, Prophet) and I am
prepared to sacrifice all in this path. Please pray that the end of my life be
like that of Siddiqs (the truthful ones)."
Nuruddin's faith in the Mirza was very deep indeed. It so happened that when the
Mirza wrote 'Fath-i-Islam and Tawdih al-Maram someone asked Nuruddih, before he
had seen these books, if any other Prophet could come after the Holy Prophet.
"No", he replied. "And if someone claims to be a Prophet ?" lie was asked. 'Nuruddin
replied that if someone did claim so, it would be seen whether he was truthful
or -not; and that his claim would be accepted if he was truthful. After
narrating this incident, Nuruddin himself adds:
"This was just the case of prophetbood. My faith is that even if the Promised
Messiah were to proclaim himself to be the bearer of, a Shariah and abrogate the
Quranic Shariah, I will not reject that claim. For, when we have accepted him
(i.e. the Mirza) to be truthful and to have been commissioned by God, then
whatever he will say will 'Of necessity be true and we will have to think that
the (Quranic) verse in respect of Khatim at yin (the last of the Prophets) has a
different meaning." (Sirat al-Makd;, pp. 96-99.)
During Disassociation with the Court of Jammu, Nuruddin wrote Fasl-ul-Khitab in
four volumes under the guidance of the Mirza in which he refuted Christianity.
He kept on contributing very magnanimously to the publication of the works of
the Mirza and quite often the Mirza took large sums of money as loans from him'
and praised him for his religious enthusiasm' his readiness -to help the
religious cause and his large-hearted generosity. The famous couplet of the
Mirza about Nuruddin is:
"How good would it be, were every one - in the Ummat a Nuruddin;
That would be so, if the light of faith burnt in the heart of everyone."'
For several reasons, particularly , the intrigues of the courtiers, the
Maharaja's attitude towards Nuruddin subsequently changed. In 1893 or 1894, his
service with the Maharaja was terminated and Nuruddin returned to Bhaira. After
a brief stay and practice of medicine there he moved to Qadian permanently and
dedicated his life to supporting the Mirza and spreading his movement.
Accession to Khilafat:
On the Mirza's death on May 26, 1908, he became his first Khalifah. The
followers of the Mirza paid their allegiance to him and be was proclaimed to be
the "Khalifah of the Promised Messiah", and "Nuruddin the Great." For quite some
time Nuruddin remained hesitant whether he should consider those who did not
believe in the Mirza's prophethood to be unbelievers. Later, he was converted to
the view that they were unbelievers.' There was some controversy about his
nomination as the Khalifah. Some people strongly opposed it. On one such
occasion he said:
" I say by God that it is God Himself who had made me the Khalifah. So, who now
has the power to snatch from me the robe (literally the covering sheet) of this
Caliphate? It was the Will of God Himself, and was in the light of His Own wise
consideration, to make me your Imam and Khalifah. You can attribute to me a
thousand short-comings. They, in fact, will be attributable not to me, but to
God Himself who appointed me the Khatifah." (Review of Religions, Qadian, V61.14
No 6, p. 234"(cited from Ilyas Barni's Qadiyani Mazhab).) On another occasion he
said:
"God has made me the Khalifah. Now, neither can I be dismissed (from Caliphate)
by your biddance nor has anyone the power to remove me. If you force me any
further, bear in mind that I have at my disposal many Khalid bin Walid who will
punish you as (Khalid bin Waild had punished) the apostates. ( Tashkhiz at-Azhan,
Vol. 9 No. 11 cited by Barni. )
Nuruddin remained the Khalifah of the Qadiani movement for six years. In 1914 he
fell from a horse and died on March 13, 1914. A few days before his death, his
tongue had ceased to functional. ( The Daily Al-Fadhl, Qadian, 23 Februlry,
1932, (cited from Qadiani Mazhab),) He nominated Mirza Basbiruddin Mahmood, the
eldest son of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, to be his successor and Khalifah.
Temperament:
A study of Nuruddin's life shows that he possessed a mercurial nature and
remained a prey to mental conflicts during the greater period of his life. From
the very beginning he had a bent towards "free-thinking". First of all, he
freed, himself from the bonds of the four Muslim schools of jurisprudence and
carried his non-conformism to an extreme. Then he came under the influence of
Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan's literature and assimilated his way of thinking. This was
the time when some elementary knowledge of physical sciences was finding its way
to India and the rationalists among Indian Muslims were becoming deeply
impressed by it. Those who had a religious inclination attempted to harmonise
Quranic teachings with scientific knowledge. If this harmonisation presented any
difficulty, they tried to overcome it by offering far-fetched interpretations of
Quranic verse and, the Quranic terminology. Nuruddin's teaching of Tafsir was,
representative of this intellectual trend." ( A good example of his way of
thinking is found in the Tafsir of his pupif Maulavi Muhammad Ali Lahori (His
Tafsir is found in English as well as Urdu). )
In Sirat al-Mahdi, Mirza Bashir Ahmad writes:
"In the beginn ing Hazrat Nuruddin, the first Khalifah, was deeply under the
influence of the way of thinking and the work of Sir Sayyid. But, subsequently,
due to contact with Hazrat Sahib, this influence gradually wore off."(Sirat al-mahdi,
Vol. 1, p. 159.)
But a study of his ideas as well as those of his disciples makes it evident that
either because of the influence of Sir Sayyid's ideas, or because of his own
predilection he remained the same all his life. His mind lead been moulded into
a rigid frame and his mental attitudes had become too hardened to change.
A more careful study of his life reveals that along with his enlightenment and
rationalism, there was a strong superstitious element in his personality.
Despite all his non-conformism and rationalism he attached great importance to
'dreams' and 'inspirations'. It has been observed that not infrequently people
who stand for intellectual freedom, in fact, for intellectual revolt, also have
an inherent trait of superstitiousness. Their frame o f mind is basically
apologetic. Such people keep on raising the banner of revolt all their lives
against certain institutions or personalities, but, at the same time, when they
submit before someone, their power of free-thinking and independent judgement-is
totally paralysed. Man's life is a strange combination of action and reaction;
and his personality a complex -of diver- gent, even mutually conflicting
elements. Nothing is more difficult to, understand and analyse than the driving
urges of a man's personality.
Mirza as Champion of
Islam:
We have covered so far a part of the life of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, his life in his
township in district Gurdaspur where we saw him immersed in the study of
religious books. His works published after 1880 indicate that the main subjects
of his study were different religions, particularly Christianity and Indian
religions such as Sanatan Dharma and Arya Samaj.
This period is known for the religious polemics. The educated people of the
time- had a relish for religious debates and controversies. We have already seen
that Christian missionaries were busy propagating Christianity and refuting
Islam. The British Government, which was officially the defender or the
Christian Faith, patronised these activities, considering India a gift of Jesus
Christ. On the other hand were the preachers of the Arya Samaj movement who were
enthusiastically trying to undermine Islam. The British who were aware of the
dangerous possibility of inter-communal concord in India, a manifestation of
which was the struggle for Indian independence of 1857, found it expedient to
encourage religious controversies. The British political interest was served by
these controversies in so far as they led to mutual hatred, intellectual
bewilderment and moral 'chaos in the country so that the religious communities
of India might be disposed at least to tolerate a government which sought to
protect all of them and under whose shadow all could carry on their holy
debates. In such an atmosphere, anyone why rose to defend Islam and falsify
other religions naturally attracted the attention of All Muslims.
The ambitious and far-sighted Mirza chose this field for his adventures. He
undertook to produce a voluminous work to demonstrate, on the one hand, the
truth of Islam, the Divine origin of the Qur'an, and the Prophethood 6f the
Messenger of Allah by rational arguments, and to refute Christianity, Sangtan
Dharma, Arya Samaj and Brahmo Samaj etc., on the other hand. He named this book
Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah.
The Barghin and the Mirza's Challenge:
The writing of Bardhin started in l879. (Sirat at-Mahd7, Vol. 11, p. 157.) The
author under- took to put forward one hundred arguments in support of Islam. In
this undertaking the Mirza also had correspondence with other learned people
whom he requested to communicate to him their views in order to help, him in
this venture. Those who complied with his request included Maulavi Chirdgh 'All
who was a noted colleague of Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan. The Mirza included some of
his articles and researches in his work. At long last this work, which was
anxiously awaited by hundreds of people, did break into print in four volumes.
Along with this book, its author also published an announcement in Urdu and
English and sent it to rulers and ministers of States, to Christian clergymen
and to Hindu pandits. In this book the Mirza announced for the first time that
he had been appointed by God to demonstrate the truth of Islam and that he was
pre- pared to satisfy the followers of other religions about his religion. The
announcement categorically stated: I
"This humble slave (the author of Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah) has been appointed by the
Glorious Almighty to strive for the reform of God's creatures and to show to the
ignorant the straight path (which leads to true salvation and by following which
the light of heavenly existence And of Divine pleasure and graciousness can be
experienced even in this world) in the manner of the Israelite Prophet of
Nazareth (Messiah) with utmost humility and self-denial, self-abasement and
gentleness. It is for this purpose that Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah has been written, of
which thirty-seven is to be found in parts have been published. Its summary the
announcement enclosed with this letter. But since the publication of the whole
book would require a long time, it has been decided that this letter along with
the English announcement should be published and one copy of each sent to the
honourable priests of Punjab, India -and England and other-countries wherever
possible." (Supplement to Barahn-i-Ahmadiyah, Vol. I by Merajuddin Umar, p. 82)
The Mirza challenged the world to come forward with any book parallel to this
one, and invited the representatives of other religions to prove the truth of
their religions by the same or even lesser number- of arguments than he had put
forward. He wrote: I, the author of this book, Barah-sn-i-Ahmadiyah, make this
announcement with the promise to make a reward of 10,000 rupees to the followers
of all faiths and religions who deny the truth of the Glorious Qur'an and the
Prophethood of Hazrat Muhammad Mustafa (God's benediction and salutation be on
him) and in support of it I commit myself to a formal legal undertaking and a
Sharei pledge that if any of these deniers can show that their scriptures have
as many and as sound arguments as found in the Holy Qur'an and which we have
mentioned herein to demonstrate the truth of the Glorious Message and the
veracity of the Apostleship of the Khatim-al-Ambiya (God's benediction and
salutation be upon him) which have been derived from the Sacred Book (Qur'an)
itself; or if they cannot come forward with an equal number of arguments, then
half, or a third, or a fourth, or fifth of the number of our arguments; or if
they find that impossible, then at least to refute our arguments one by one-
then, in either of these cases, provided three authors accepted by both the
parties, unanimously express the view that the condition has been fulfilled in
the manner it should have been fulfilled-the announcer (of this announcement)
shall hand over to such a respondent without an excuse or hesitation the
occupancy and ownership of his property valued at Rs. 10,000. (Barghzn-f-Ahmadiyah,
Vol. 1, pp. 17-22.)
The Mirza called upon the Muslims to make monetary contributions to this great
service which he wanted to render to the cause of Islam and to participate in it
generously. (See litimis-i-Zarari in Brdhfn, Vol. 1.) It seems that, the
response of Muslims to this call was not as enthusiastic as the Mirza had
expected. In the later volumes of Barahin he has mourned their lack of
enthusiasms. The announcements which formed the preface of the book are
significant. In them we find some indications of the driving forces of the
Mirza's personality. In them we notice his habit of boastfulness and
self-adulation and his confidence in 'heavenly signs' as means of establishing
his claims and persuading people. Along with all that, the statements
unmistakably smack of his commercial mentality. (Arz-i-Zurrarl ba
Halat-i-Majbnri. Brahin, Vol. 1.)
Preaching and Politics:
In the third and fourth volumes of Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah, the Mirza openly praised
the British government and enumerated at length its acts of benevolence towards
Muslims in 'the sections entitled, 'An Important Appeal to Islamic Associations:
The Precarious Condition of Muslims and the English Government.' In this appeal
he, urged all Islamic Associations to prepare a joint memorandum and send it to
the government with signatures from all prominent Muslims. He also reiterated
the services rendered by his family to the British and stressed the
impermissibility of jihad.
Thus we find that even the first work of the Mirza was not free from panegyrics
to the British government, or from political admonitions to the Muslims to
remain loyal to the British.
The Magnunx Opus:
The Mirza worked on this book from 1880 to 1884. After the publication of the
fourth volume there came a long period of gap and the fifth and the last volume
appeared in 1905, that is, full twenty-five years after the commencement of the
work. In the fifth volume the author mentioned that the publication of the last
volume had remained in suspension for twenty-three years. During this period a
large number of people who had paid in advance for all the five volumes but had
received only four volumes had passed away. Several other people who had paid in
advance had expressed their disapproval and resentment at not receiving the
promised volume for which the Mirza apologized in the fifth volume. In this
volume he has also mentioned that previously he had in mind to bring forward 300
arguments to prove the truth of Islam, but later he gave up the idea. In the
same way, instead of fifty, be would bring out only five volumes. The reason for
this change of mind was that the difference between the two figures was merely
that of a zero. in his- own words:
"Earlier I had thought of writing 50 volumes, but now I have confined myself to
writing five since the difference between the figures fifty and five is just
that of one dot (that is zero). Thus the promise has been fulfilled by the
publication of five volumes." (Preface of Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah, Vol. V, P. 7.)
In Sirat al-Mahdi, Mirza Bashir Ahmad writes:
"Now that four volumes of Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah have come out in print, its
preface and notes all relate to the time of publication and it contains very
little of the original work, that is, not more than a few pages. This can be
gauged from the fact that out of the 300 arguments which he had written the
Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah contains only one argument and that too not in a complete
form." (Sirat al-Mahdi, Vol. 1, p.7.)
Anyone who studies Bardhin-i-Ahmadiyah is bound to be impressed by the author's
prolificity, perseverance and diligence. These virtues, at best, could stand him
in good stead as a successful debater and an able writer on religious polemics
with Christians and Arya Samajis. In this huge work, however, one does not find
any worthwhile research. Nor does one find that familiarity with the sources of
Christianity, its ancient literature, its doctrines and history, and that grasp
of its funda- mental concepts as one finds, for example, in the works of Maulana
Rahmatuilah Kayranwi (d. 1309 A.H. / 1891 A.D.), the author of lzhar al-Haqq and
Izalat al-Awham. Nor does one find that sweetness and elegance of expression,
and that origina- lity and brilliance of argument that one finds in works such
as those of Maulana Muhammad Qasim Nanawatwi's (d. 1297 A.H./ 1879 A.D.) Taqrlr
Dilpizir and -Hujjat al-IsiFim.
Inspirations and Bragging:
The reader also frequently encounters in the Mirza's book references to his
Divinely inspired revelations, to miracles and to Divine communications and
prophecies, and last but not the least, his boastfulness. 'All this leaves an
unpleasant taste in the mouth and transforms the book which claims to embody a
sober academic discussion and a dignified religious debate, into a work of
personal bragging-a work in which, again and again, the author stoops to
self-advertisement and self-glorification.
The central theme of the book -is that Divine inspiration had not ceased and
should not cease. This inspiration itself is the most powerful proof of the
validity of, any claim and the truth of religion and faith. Whoever will follow
the Holy Prophet perfectly will be endowed with the external and internal
knowledge which had been granted originally to the Prophets, and the person
will, therefore, become possessed of sure, categorical knowledge. The intuitive
knowledge of such people would resemble the knowledge of the Prophets. It is
these people who have been called Amthat in Hadith and Siddiq in the Qur'an. The
time of their advent would resemble the time of the advent of the Prophets. It
is such people who will establish the truth of Islam and their inspiration will
be of a categorical nature. ( Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah, Vol. 111, 231 and 244.)
In trying to prove the continuity of this inspiration, he cites his own
inspirations and writes:
"We have several examples of this inspiration before us. But in the one which,
took place just now at the time of writing these notes in March 1882 it has been
revealed as a prophecy that through this book and on becoming informed of its
contents, the opponents will ultimately be defeated; that seekers after Truth
will find true guidance; perversion of belief will be uprooted; and people will
help and turn their attention and come around (me) etc., since God will put this
into their hearts and direct them to it. (Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah, Vol. III, p.
238.)
This has been followed by a more recent lengthy inspiration which is 'almost an
entirely incoherent collection of different Quranic verses. This inspiration
embraces about forty lines of the Barahin and contains about fifty-three or
fifty-four Quranic verses, interspersed with a few Traditions of the Prophet.
Besides', there are a few sentences by the Mirza himself which are an example of
what might be termed as poor Indianized Arabic. The last lines of the
inspiration which contain a comparatively smaller proportion of Quranic verses,
read as follows:
"Live in the world like a stranger or traveller. Become one of the righteous and
the truthful. Bid whatever is good and forbid whatever is bad and send your
salutations- to Muhammad and his progeny. Prayer alone brings man up. Verity I
will raise thee towards Myself and I have put love from Me (in the hearts of
people). There is no god but Allah. So, write and let it be -published and sent
to the world. Grasp Unity (of God), Unity (of God), O people of Iran and give
glad tidings to those who believed that they have a standing with their Lord.
And read out to them what has been revealed to thee from thy Lord And do not
swell thy face for the creatures. of God and do not get tired of people. The
people of al-Suffah? And who are the people of al-Suffah? Thou shalt see their
eyes wet with tears and they will send their salutations to thee. O Lord of
ours! We heard a herald calling towards belief, a sumrnon towards Allah, and a
bright lamp. Be of hope! of"(Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah, Vol. 111, p. 242.)
In the same way, an inspiration has been reproduced in the fourth volume of the
same book. This inspiration too is an incoherent conglomeration of Quranic
verses and Quranic expressions. It also contains some very obvious errors of
Arabic language and grammar (which have been indicated by us by question marks):
"And when it is said to them believe as men believed they say: Should we believe
as they believe who are stupid? Beware! it is they who are stupid, but they know
not, and wish that you should compromise with them (?) Say: Un-believers! I
worship not that which you worship. It was said to you: turn to god but you turn
not; and it was said to you, subdue your souls, but you subdue them not. Doest
thou seek of them any reward that feel burdened (in accepting your message). No,
we brought Truth to them (gratuitously) and it is Truth to which they are
averse. God is pure and free from whatever they attribute to Him. Do people
think that they would be left by merely saying: We believed, and they would not
he Put to an trial ? These people love to be praised for deeds I y which they
have not pet-formed, while nothing is hidden from God and nothing is good which
God does not make good and no one can restore him to His favours who has fallen
from His grace." (Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah, Vol. IV, P. 509.)
Apart from these revelations in the Arabic language there are two revelations in
English as well. (Ibid, pp. 554 and 556.)
Mirza's beliefs in the Barahin:
In the four volumes of Barahin (published 1880-1884), the Mirza expressed merely
the view that ilham (Divine inspiration) had not ceased and would not cease, and
that the legacy of the Prophets continues in respect of inspired comprehension o
f things, in respect of the illumination of faith and categorical knowledge. In
this book he has also frequently mentioned that be had been commissioned by God
to reform the world and spread the message of Islam; that he was mujaddid
(renovator) for the present age, and that he bore resemblance to Jesus (peace be
on him)." (Sirat at-Mahdi, Vol. 1, p. 39. ) In this book he also adheres to the
notion of the ascension of Jesus to the heaven and that be would return to the
earth. In the appendix to his book, Nuzul al-Musih, published in 1902, and in
volume V of Barahin, which came out in 1905, the Mirza has admitted that he used
to subscribe to the above view and has even expressed his surprise at his having
believed in the ascension and return of Jesus. In Barahin he had also strongly
rejected the idea of any fresh revelation and of the advent of any new Prophet.
The reason for this belief was that the Qur'an and its teachings were in no
danger of being distorted nor was there any danger of Muslims reverting to
pre-Islamic ignorance and paganism. On the contrary, he admitted that the
attitude of the polytheists, owing to contact with the monotheists is gradually
tending. towards monotheism.' This being the case-that the main dangers which
revelation and prophethood seek to avert were no longer real-there was no need
for any new Shari'ah, or any fresh ilham (inspiration). This also established
the termination of prophethood with the advent of the Holy Prophet:
"Now, since it is rationally impossible and inconceivable that the true
teachings of the Glorious Furqan will be distorded or changed, or the darkness
of polytheism and worship of God's creatures would predominate again it is also
rationally inconceivable that there should be a new Shari'ah, or the sending
down of a new inspiration (ilham), For, that which leads to impossibility is
itself also impossible. Thus, it is proved, that the Holy Prophet was in reality
the last of the prophets (Khalim-I-Rusul). (Bard-hen, V'ol. IV, p. III n.)
Reception of the book:
It seems that the book was enthusiastically welcomed in the religious and
academic circles of the country. Indeed the publication of this work was very
well-timed and the Mirza as well as his friends publicised it With great zest.
The secret of the success of the book seems to lie in the fact that it
challenged other religions and instead of apologising on behalf of Islam it took
the offensive against them. Noted among those who appreciated and
enthusiastically supported this book was Maulana Muhammad Husain Batalawi. In
his magazine Isha at al- Sunnah, he wrote a long review eulogising the book in
six issues of the magazine. (Vol.Vlll 684nos., 6-11. ) In this review the book
was lavishly praised and commended as a great academic achievement of the time,
a masterpiece of research and authorship. Not much later, the Maulana felt
alarmed at the big claims and 'inspiration' of the Mirza and, subsequently,
became one of his staunch opponents. On the other hand, there were many who were
alarmed even by his first book and who began to feel that its author had set
himself on a path which would lead him, in the near future, to claim prophethood
for himself. Among these far-sighted people were the, two sons of the late
Maulana Abdul Qadir Ludbianawi, Maulana Muhammad and Maulana Abdul 'Aziz. The
Ahi-i-Hidith 'ulama of Amritsar and some ulama of the Ghaznawi family opposed
him from the very beginning and denounced his inspirations as fantasies." (Set
isha at al-Sunnah, June, 1884. Vol. Vil, No. 6)
This book brought the Mirza out of obscurity and put him on the stage of public
renown so that countless eyes were turned towards him. In Sirat at-Mahdi, Mirza
Bashir Ahmad has aptly observed how this book brought the Mirza to the
limelight:
"Before writing Barahin, the Promised Messiah spent a life of anonyirnity and in
this isolation his was the life of a darwish. Before Barahin he had become known
to some extent as a result of his having written a series of articles in some
newspapers but all this was very meagre. In fact, it is the announcement of
Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah which, for the first time and for good, placed him before
the country and introduced him to those interested in academic and religious
matters. The eyes of the people began to turn in amazement, towards this
anonymous villager who had promised to write a great book about the truth of
Islam in such a challenging manner and with-the promise of a huge sum of money
as reward (to any one who could refuse his arguments). Thus the sun of guidance
which bad already appeared on the horizon, now began to -rise higher. Later the
publication of Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah created an extraordinary stir in the
religious circles of the country. In general, the Muslims welcomed him as a
great 'Mujaddid'. As for the opponents of Islam, this book came to them as a
bomb- shell and created great turbulence in their camp. (Sirat al-Mohdi, VoL 1,
pp. 103-104. )
The Mirza himself says the following about his life before the publication of
Barahin:
"This was the -time when nobody knew me; when nobody was either in favour of or
opposed to me, for, at that time, I was a non-entity; I was just one among the
people, hidden in the corner of anonymity. (Tatimmah Haqtqat al-Wahy, pp.
27-28.)
He adds:
"All the people of this town (i.e. Qadian) and thousands of other people are
aware that at this period of time I wasp in fact, like a dead body which had
been buried in the grave for centuries and no one even knew whose grave it was.
(lbid, p. 28. )
Debates with Arya Samajis:
In 1886, the Mirza had a debate with Murli Dhar of Arya Samij in Hoshiarpur. He
has written a full-fledged book about this debate, Surmah-i-Chashm-i-Arya (Kohl
for the eye of the Arya). This is the second of his polemics on religions and
religious sects.
The topic of the first day's debate was the rational and historical proof of the
miracle of cleaving the moon. The-Mirza not only strongly affirmed this miracle
but the miracles of other prophets as well. He showed that the occurrence of
miracles and supernatural incidents was rationally possible.. He took the
position that because of the inherent limitations of man's intellect, knowledge
and experience, he bad no right to deny miracles and thus make the claim to
comprehend this vast universe in its entirety. He repeatedly stressed that the
knowledge of man was very limited and the range of possibilities very wide. (Surma-i-Chashm-i-Arva
pp. 557,) (so that the notion that man's knowledge could be comprehensive was
untenable). He also stressed that in religious matters faith in the unseen was
essential and that this was not in conflict with reason, for the latter could
not be all comprehensive in its range. In fact, whatever rational objections the
Mirza pointed out to the belief regarding the ascension of Jesus to the heavens
and his descent in future and his stay in the heaven for several centuries and
the so-called 'rationalist' trend in his later writings can best be refuted by
the arguments that he himself advanced in this book. The personality of the
author in this book is quite different from the one in his later writings.
These two books made the Mirza excessively self-appreciative; he became aware of
his ability as a writer and debater and became confident that he was capable of
initiating a new movement and influencing his environment. It seems that this
discovery proved to be the turning-point in his life. Hence- forth, instead of
debating with Christians and Arya Samajis he turned towards Muslims and began to
challenge them to debate with him.
The Mirza Becomes Messiah:
Influence of Nuruddin We have seen earlier that when Nuruddin was in jammu in
connection with his employment the Mirza was staying in Sialkot, where he was
employed in the District Commissioner's office. The two had a number of things
in common: both relished religious controversies and debates, and both were
ambitious. It seems plausible that each of them was influenced by the other's
personality. Hence, correspondence between them began in 1885. In the collection
of the Mirza's letters, the earliest letter to Nuruddin that we find is dated
March 8,1885. This correspondence continued without break and became so intimate
as to include family and matrimonial problems. In January, 1888, the Mirza
undertook a trip to Kashmir in order to meet Nuruddin and stayed with him for a
month. The Mirza kept Nuruddin in touch with his inspirations, inspired
predictions, and novel pieces of information and research. He even complained to
Nuruddin about the opposition of the 'ulama and the- alleged view of some of
them that he was not a Muslim. In a letter of July 15, 1890 he wrote Ito
Nuruddin : "And I have heard that these people have begun to call me in hushed
tones a kafir. It was known from this that the Exalted Allah wants to show
something great." (Makiiibit-i-Ahmadiyah, Vc)l. V, p. 79.)
Up till then (i.e. 1890), the Mirza had only claimed, that he was a mujaddid and
that he had been commissioned by God, and according to Mirza Bashir Ahmad, he
continued to say that he had been raised to reform the people in the manner of
the Messiah of Nazareth and that he had a certain resemblance to him. (Sirat al-Mahdi,
Vol. I, p. 39. ) In the Barahin he expressed the opinion that the absolute
predominance of Islam which has been promised in the Quranic verse : 'It is He
who has sent His Apostle with Guidance and the Religion of Truth to proclaim it
over all religions' would be fulfilled through the Promised Messiah, whose
return to the world had been mentioned in the Traditions of the Prophet. As for
himself, he merely resembled the Messiah in respect of the first phase of his
life, that is, his life on earth. In his own words:
"This, verse ('It is He who has sent His Apostle') is a prophecy which, in the
physical and political senses refers to the Messiah; and the promise of complete
predominance of the religion of Islam which has been made will be fulfilled
through the triumph of the Messiah. And when Hazrat Masih (upon him be peace)
will come into this world, Islam will spread all over the world, to all lands.
But it has been revealed to this humble one that in view of his poverty and
humility, his trust in God and his sacrifice, and in respect of signs and
illuminations, he is an examplar of the first phase of the life of Messiah and
that the natures of this humble one and of the Messiah are extremely alike as if
they were two pieces of the same substance, two fruits of the same tree; and the
similarity goes to such an extent that the distinction is very minor." (Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah,
Vol. IV, p. 495-98.)
Nuruddin's Advice:
In the life of the Mirza as well as in the history of Qadianism, the year, 1891
is very crucial. It is in the beginning of this year that Nuruddin, in one of
his letters, advised the Mirza to proclaim himself to be the Promised Messiah.
(Although in his letter Nuruddin used the expression Replica of the Messiah, the
study of Fath-i-Islam and Izalat,al-Awham shows that Replica of. the Messiah and
Promised Messiah were treated as synonymous terms and were used by the Mirza
interchangeably. To cite an instance:) We have not been able to see this letter
of Nuruddin, but the reply sent by the Mirza refers to this advice of Nuruddin.
This letter of the Mirza is included in the collection of his letters and is
dated January 24, 1891. This letter reveals the intellectual sources, the
behind-the-scene director of the play, the actual author of Qadianism. The
following is an excerpt from this historic letter:
"It has been said by you, Sir, that there is no harm in proclaiming myself to be
the Promised Messiah even independent of the one referred to in the Damascene
Hadith. This humble one has no need of becoming a replica of the Messiah. I
merely- want Allah to include me among His humble and obedient servants. But we
cannot escape from being put to test. The Exalted Allah has made trial the only
way to advancement, as He says: "Do men think they will be left alone on saying
'We believe, that they will not be tested ? (Maktubat-i-Ahmadiyah Vol. V, No. 2,
p. 85.) (xxix, 2)
"This descent does not mean the real descent of the Messiah, the son 6f Mary; it
is only a figurative expression which, informs the coming of the one like the
Messiah which, according to Divine pronouncements and inspirations, is this
humble one."
What were the real motives of this advice ? Was it merely Nuruddin's
farsightedness and ambitious nature, or had it been made on some kind of
encouragement from the powers-that- were? It is difficult now to say what
actually lay behind the advice. As for the latter possibility, it appears nor
far-fetched at all if we bear in mind the historical background of the rise of
this new movement. The -situation was that the British had witnessed the
religious movement of Sayyid Ahmad Shahid and had been put to considerable
difficulty owing to that. In more or less the same period of time, there had
risen another movement in the Sudan, led by the Sudanese Mahdi, and this too had
given the British a very hard time. It is not unlikely that the British should
have hit upon the desirability of the rise of a reliable religious leader of
their choice. If such a leader was able to win the confidence of the Muslims
through his -services to the cause of Islam, and capture, the religious
imagination of people by his religious zeal, he could serve as a good means to
secure the British against the threat of anti-British religious movements. And
since the Muslims already believed in the advent of the Messiah, their
acceptance of such a person as the Messiah could not have been ruled ' out as
impossible. Such a Messiah, if lie preached loyalty to the powers-that-were in
the name of God and Islam ' could be of great service to the cause of the
British. Nothing, however, can be said with complete certainty. Nevertheless the
above cited letter of the Mirza remains a significant document, and might have
the clue to the origin of Qadianism.
What is worth remembering at this point is that so far as the prophets of God
are concerned, their mission does not depend on outside suggestions. They
receive revelation from the heaven and are categorically informed of their
position and mission. Their hearts are full of conviction and from the very
first day they announce and keep on stressing what they believe to be the truth.
Neither their own faith, nor their summons, depends upon someone else's drawing
their attention towards it. From the very first day they keep on saying:
This am I commanded and I am the first of those who bow to His Will. (vi : 163)
Belief about Jesus:
The return of Jesus is an established article of creed in Islam. (The ascension
of Jesus to the heavens and his return to the 'World in the future is one of
those beliefs of Muslims which have their basis in Qur'an and is also proved by
Prophetic Traditions, and in which Muslims have believed consistently. Ibn
Kathir says that the Prophetic Traditions regarding the return of Jesus are
numerous enough to be regarded as one supported by an unbroken chain of
transmission. Ibn Hajar also quotes Abul Husain Abari in Fatah-al-Bari regarding
the lawatur of Traditions on this question. Shawkani has written a treatise just
on this subject entitled Tasdiq fi ma ja fi al-muntazir wa at-Dajjal wa al-Masih.
None of the important religious personalities has been recorded as denying this
belief, not even the Mutazilah. Ibn Hazm,in his renowned work Al-Fisal fi al-Milal
wa al-Nihal writes that this belief is established by the unbroken continuity of
transmission. 'I his question has been discussed in detail in. Anwar Shah
Karhmiri's Aqidat al-Islam. As for the rational aspect of the question, if one
accepts the omnipotence of God and affirms the perfection of His Attributes one
can have no reason to doubt the possibility of statements found in those
traditions whose authenticity and continuity are established. In an age of such
tremendous scientific progress as ours when a number of things which were
considered hitherto impossible are taking place before our own eyes, when
man-made satellites revolve round the world after every few hours, when man has
begun to pace the outer space, the idea that a man should ascend to the heavens
and stay there alive for a certain period of time can hardly be regarded as
inconceivable l'o put forward objections which are based on Greek concepts of
astronomy or on other worn-out notions appears palpably childish in this age of
scientific advancement. Muslims have known this and have believed in it.
Traditions from the Prophet mention it and, moreover, owing to the adversity of
circumstances the Muslims had developed a mood to expect that some great,
divinely inspired personality would appear suddenly and set things right for
them. As the, thirteenth century of hijrah drew close to its termination, this
state of expectancy became even more intense. Nuruddin, therefore, had reasons
to presume that in view of the popularity won by the Mirza by his religious
services his claim to be the Messiah was likely to be accepted by Muslims..
The Mirza accepts the suggestion:
The manner in which the Mirza declined to accept the suggestion made by Nuruddin,
and the spirit of humility' and piety which he evinced in his letter on that
subject are very valuable and add to his prestige. But for anyone who studies
his works in a chronological order it is hard to retain this feeling of respect
for long. For we find him quite soon accepting the suggestion of Nuruddin-which
he had turned down earlier-of proclaiming himself to be 'the Replica of the
Messiah.'
If we survey the works of the Mirza, the can be very easily divided into two
phases. The first phase consists of those works in which he seeks merely to
prove, the validity of Is am and repudiate other religions. In these works there
is no claim of being the Messiah'. This is followed by the phase when he, did
make that claim, and went on making several other claims about himself, each
more boastful and grandiose than the 'previous one. The first book that he wrote
during this phase is Fath-i-Islam, published in 1891, the year which marks a
major turning-point in the career of the Mirza. In this work we find him
claiming to be the Replica of the Messiah and the Promised Messiah. (Mirza
Bashir Ahmad writes in Sirat al-Mahdi: "The Promised Messiah had written Fath-i-Islam
towards the end of 1890. This is the first treatise in which he mentioned
himself to be the Replica of Messiah and that the Messiah of Nazareth had died.
In other words, this was the first proclamation of the claim of being the
Promised Messiah." (Vol. 1, pp. 267-268). This shows that the author too regards
'Replica of Messiah' and 'Promised Messiah' to be synonymous terms.)
(7. See Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah, Surmah-i-Chashm-I-arya and Shahna-i-,Haq. )
"If you are honest, then be thankful and make prostrations of gratitude for
this' is the time for which your noble fore-fathers kept waiting until they
passed away, the time which was awaited by innumerable souls who have journeyed
(to the next world) ; for, verily, you have found that time. Now it is for you
to value it or not, to benefit from it or not. I shall say this again and shall
not cease announcing that I am he who has been sent at the proper time in order
to reform people so as to revive religion afresh in their hearts. I have been
sent in the same way as the one who was sent after Kalim Allah ......... and
whose soul, after great many pains during the rule of Herodius, was raised to
the heavens. So, when the second Kalim Allah, who, indeed, was the first; and
the leader of the Prophets, came for the suppression of other Pharaohs, the one
concerning Whom it has been said -. We -have sent to you (O men) an Apostle, to
be a witness concerning you even as we sent an apostle to Pharaoh; (LXXXXX : 15)
then he too, who - is similar to the first Kalim in respect of his work, and yet
nobler in rank than he was -promised a Replica of the Messiah. And this Replica
of the Messiah, -having been given the power, nature and characteristics of the
Messiah, the son of Mary descended from' the heaven in an age, similar to his
age, and around almost the same time that elapsed' between the first Kalim and
Messiah, son of Mary, i. e, in the fourteenth century. And this descent was
spiritual in the same way as after having risen; perfect people come down in
order to reform people. And he too came down in a, period. similar in every
respect to the period of the descent of the Messiah, the son of Mary, order that
it remain a sign for those Might those who understand.' (Fath-i-Mdm, pp. 6 and
7.)
Even though, this piece of the Mirza's writing is terribly puzzling and
complicated (and perhaps deliberately so) it clearly, shows his new claim that
he is the 'Replica of the Messiah' Three of his works, namely Fath-i-Isram,
Tuwdih-i-Matram, and Izala-i-Awham, all deal with the same subject and
frequently repeat this claim. In Fath-i-lsam at another place the Mirza writes:
So aside from the resemblance 'With other venerable ancestors bestowed on this
humble being, there, is also a special resemblance with the nature of Hazrat
Masih (upon him be peace) and it is because of this resemblance that' this
humble one was sent after the name of the Messiah in order to shatter to pieces
the crucifixional belief. Hence, I have been sent to shatter the cross 'and
exterminate the pigs.. I have come down from the beavens-accornpanied by angels
on my right and left. (Ibid., p. 9 n.)
In his Tawdih-i-Marzam, which is his next book after fath-i-lsam he makes this
explicit statement:
With a certain degree of disagreement Muslims and Christians believe that
Messiah, the son of 'Mary was raised from this elemental existence to the
heavens and that in some other age be will tome down from the heavens. I have
written about the error of this notion in my treatise and have also stated that
this descent does not-mean the actual descent of Messiah, the son of Mary; it is
rather a metaphorical, expression informing of the advent', of Replica of the
Messiah and which on the basis of information and inspiration from God, applies
to this humble one. (Tawdih-i-Mardm,p.2.)
Fanciful interpretations:
Since Nuruddin had a wide knowledge of the Traditions from the Prophet he used
to draw the attention of the Mirza towards the difficulties in justifying his.
claims and also used to help him in solving those difficulties. The, problem as
to how to relate the attributes which had been . mentioned with regard- to the
Messiah required extraordinary intelligence. Here are a few examples of this
intelligence-and of its having run riot.
The Traditions on which the Mirza based, his claim, of Messiahship also mention
a number of details relating to the descent of the Messiah. One of these is that
the Messiah, would descend in Damascus. Now, if the, Mirza was the, promised.
Messiah, how could this be justified in the light of the above- mentioned
tradition? It is obvious that Damascus and Qadian are far away from one another.
Nevertheless, the paradox did not occur to the Mirza. It is Nuruddin who drew
his attention to it. Let us refer once more to the Mirza himself on this
question:
"This humble one had so far not occupied himself with trying to find out the
signification of this (i. e. Damascus), when a friend and trusted lover, Maulavi
Hakim Nuruddin came here to Qadian and he made a request to turn towards God to
reveal the significance of Damascus and the two other ambiguous terms which
occur in the Tradition concerned in Muslim. Since in those days I was sick, and
my mind was incapable of strenuous exertion I was unable to attend to these
matters. Only a little bit of effort I to the explanation of a word that is, the
reality of Damascus was revealed to me. (Izala-i-Awham, pp. 32-33.)
Later, he explains his inspired discovery of the meaning of Damascus in these
terms.
Thus, it should be clear that in the interpretation of the word 'Damascus' it
was revealed to me by God that that town has been called Damascus which is
inhabited by a people who have the nature of Yazid, who follow the practices and
ideas of the filthy Yalzid, in whose hearts-there is no love for God and the
:'Prophet, no veneration for the commandments of God, Who have become wont to
follow their desires, whose enslavement to. the commands of the baser self is
such that even the blood of the pure and the sacred appears to them as easy and
trifling, who do not believe in the Hereafter and for whom the existence of God
is. a complicated problem which eludes their understanding. And since the
physician should come to the sick, it was essential that the. Messiah should.
appear among such people. (Ibid. pp. 33-34n.)
Thus, 'the descent of the Massiah in Damascus' clearly indicates that there is
someone who is a Replica of the Messiah, who also resembles Husain owing_ to the
resemblance between these two venerable personalities (the Messiah and Husain),
and who will, descend in order to warn the Yazidis for they are akin to the
Jews. (Ibid p. 34.)
Later, be writes "Damascus has been used merely in a metaphorical way. (Ibid.,
p. 34.)
He also adds:
"Then He told me that these people had the nature of Yazid and this town (Qadian)
is similar to Damascus. So, the Exalted Allah sent this humble one down to this
Damascus for a great purpose (at the eastern side, next to the. white minaret of
the mosque wherein whosoever entered became safe. Blessed is the One who sent me
down at this place). (Ibid., p. 68.)
Two yellow sheets:
In interpreting the Traditions which mention certain details of the descent of
the Messiah and in applying them to himself, the Mirza indulges in great
extravagance of imagination, puts forward the most far-fetched meanings, and
comes forward with the most ridiculous notions-as if he were sure of the
absolute gullibility of his readers. For instance, his opponents pointed out
that the Traditions on the basis of which he had argued his case and upon which
he had based his claim also stated that at the time of his descent-the Messiah
would be clad in two yellow sheets. Replying to that, he says:
"I am a permanently sick man. And the two yellow sheet s which have been
mentioned in the Traditions as those which would be worn by the Messiah when he
would come down, these two sheets are with me .-and these are, according to the
science of interpretation of dreams, two ailments. Hence, one of these sheets is
on my upper part so that headache and giddiness and insomnia and palpitation of
the heart come to me in the form of fits. The other sheet which is on the lower
part of my body is diabetes which has afflicted me for quite a long time so that
often I have urinated a hundred times during the night and day, and due to this
frequency of urination I am afflicted with all those ailments of debility which
generally result from such a disease. (Appendices of Arbacin, Nos. 3 and 4, p.
4. )
Eastern minaret of Damascus:
Traditions from the Prophet also mention the eastern minaret of Damascus as the
place where the Messiah would descend. Instead of interpreting it in some other
fanciful manner' as was his wont, what he did in this case, was to have a
minaret- constructed in the eastern part of Qadian. He made this decision in
1900, according to Sirat al-Mahdi, and invited people to donate generously. (See
the announcement regarding the'Minaret of Messiah', in Khutba-i- Ilhamiyah, P.
1. )In 1903, he even laid its foundation. (Sirat al-Mahdi, Vol. 11., p. 154.)
Its completion, however, could not take place during his life-time, and was
Accomplished by his son Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmood.
Satire and ridicule:
The three above-mentioned works also crudely reveal the Mirza's bad temper. They
are full of satire and ridicule directed against opponents and contain such
bitter vituperation that these books can hardly be reckoned among the books
befitting the dignity of any serious cause. The style and mode of expression
adopted by the Mirza in these is not even becoming of sober and dignified
writers, not to speak of prophets and religious reformers. The manner in which
he scoffs at belief in the survival and the return of the Messiah to the earth
and at those who subscribe to it reminds one of the type of wit associated with
court-jesters rather than with serious intellectuals. Moreover, the kind of
debating skill and quibbling which he employs had nothing to do with the
prophetic mode of expression. While trying to point out the rational
impossibility of the Messiah's survival in the heavens, he writes:
"Among others, one objection is that even if we were to assume that the Messiah
did reach the heavens, along with his terrestrial body, then it would force us
to admit that that body is bound to be affected in the heavens, by the effects
of time, like all other human and animal bodies and that this passage of time
will inescapably and inevitably lead some day to his death. Thus in such- a
case, it will have to be accepted in respect of the Messiah that after having
completed his course of life, be must have expired in the heavens (In the
Mirza's days neither the, physical sciences had developed to the present extent
nor was man in possession of that 'extent of empirical knowledge about the outer
space and other planets so as to visualise that terrestrial concepts of time and
space are not absolute, and that measurements of time and space beyond the
gravitational sphere of the earth might be quite different. He, therefore, could
neither appreciate the possibility that a thousand years of this world could be
equal to just a moment in some other world" or, that there might be a world
which is quite different from. our own' in respect of change, death, feelings,
requisites for survival, etc. Man seems to have the inalienable weakness of
having blind faith in the knowledge and information of his own time and tends to
deny all that has not been known or experienced till that time. In the words of
the Qur'an 'Nay, they charge with falsehood that whose know ledge they cannot
compass, even before the elucidation thereof hath reached them.' and must have
been buried in the graveyard of the inhabitants of some planet (the possibility
of habitation on which is being accepted in the present times). And even if we
were to assume his being alive, there can be no doubt that he would by now have
become a decrepit old man and will hardly be capable of rendering any religious
service. Under such circumstances, his coming down to the earth seems hardly of
any consequence except an unavailing botheration. (Izala-i-Awham, pp. 25-26.)
At other place, he makes the following comment on that part of the Tradition
which mentions that the Messiah will "kill the swine."
"Will the excellent task that will be undertaken by the Messiah after he comes
down to the earth merely be to go around, accompanied with a pack of hounds,
hunting pigs? If this is true, then Sikhs, Chamars and Sansis and Gandils who
love pig-hunting have, reason to be glad, for they will prosper. (Izala-i-Awham;
p. 21.)
At another place he makes the following observation about the future descent of
the Messiah:
Watch out lest you are deceived by someone who first boards some balloon And
then alights from it in front of you. So, beware! Don't mistake such a person
for the son of Mary because of your established belief. ( Ibid., p. 143. )
At still another place he refers to the same question in the following manner:
Brethren, this question stood on two legs:
"(1) One, the descent of the son of Mary from the heavens with his terrestrial
body, towards the end of time. This leg has been broken by the Glorious Qur'an
and also some Traditions by informing of the death of the Messiah, son of Mary.
"(2) The second leg was the appearance of the promised Dajjal towards the end of
time. Now this leg bas been broken into two pieces by the unanimously agreed
Traditions of Sahih Muslim and Sabih Bukhari which have been reported by
important Companions and- also by calling, Ibn Sab-d to be the promised Dajjal
and, at last, by killing him after making him. join the body of Muslims. Now y
that both the legs of the question ]have been broken, bow and with whose support
can this corpse which lacks both the legs stand up after these thirteen co-untries"?(Ibid.,
pp. 133-34.)
Here is another example of his- writing:
"Can it be proved that there has been a consensus regarding the Traditions that
the Messiah will go around hunting pigs in woods and that Dajjal Will
circumambulate around Kabah and that the son of Mary will perform the obligatory
cicumambulation of the Kabah like a sick man, supported on the shoulders of two
men? Is it not known that the exegetists of these Traditions have been letting
their conjectures loose limitlessly ?" (Izala-i-Awham, p. 214. )
At another place, he bad the following to address to the ,Ahl-i-Sunnah (Lit.
'One of the path'. A term generally applied to the largest sect of Muslims who
belong to one of the four juristic schools of orthodox Islam.) scholars:
"O respected maulavis! While the death of the Messiah is generally proved by the
Noble Qur'an, certain Companions and Exegetists have, from the very beginning,
been continuously killing him (that is, holding that Jesus is dead-Translator).
Then, why do you adopt your attitude of unavailing stubbornness ? 'Let the God
of Christians die. How long will you go on calling him the living one, the
undying ? Is there any limit to this ?" (Izala-i-Awham, p. 235.)
Impact of Modern Knowledge:
The works of the Mirza written during this period also show that he was deeply
impressed with the advancement of natural sciences and -with the scientific know
ledge which was evoking great interest and curiosity in India in his days. The
level of scientific knowledge attained by the West by that time would appear to
be rudimentary when judged by the present level of scientific advancement.
However, the Mirza's acquaintance of the then scientific knowledge was
second-hand and very superficial. - It seems that one of the main preps of his
rejection of the idea of the return of the Messiah was that the idea ran counter
to the accepted facts of modern science. He thought that such a belief would
expose religion to the ridicule of the educated people. He wrote in
Izala-i-Awham:
"In this philosophically-minded age, which has speedily brought with it mental
refinement and intellectual advancement, it is a big error to think that one
would be able to achieve religious success while holding on to this beliefs. (It
is hard to say how and why the Mirza believed in such metaphysical proportions
as revelation, angles, paradise, hell, etc. and how he accepted the demand of
religion. Indeed, the very heart of religion is guided by faith in the realities
beyond the ken of human perception. The above excerpt only illustrates the
extent to which he was mentally over-awed by "modernism", and how he, like other
superficial writers and ill-educated people of the nineteenth century, had
deified modern science without appreciating its actual domain and its inherent
limitations.) If such baseless things were to spread in the deserts of Africa or
among the desert-dwellers of Arabia or in some islands of the sea or among
groups of wild people, they p might spread easily. But we cannot propagate such
teachings which are totally opposed to reason and experience and natural
sciences and philosophy and which also cannot be proved (to have originated)
from our Prophet (upon him be the salutation and peace of God); rather
traditions which are quite opposed to these are being proved among the educated
people. Nor can we present them to the scholastically inclined people of Europe
and America, who are getting rid of the absurdities of their own religion. How
can they (whose minds and hearts have been illuminated by the light of new
sciences) believe in such things which are out and out an insult to God and
constitute an abrogation of the principles of His Book ?" (lzala-i-Awham, p.
135.)
While reading passages such as these, one finds it hard to believe that they
could have been written by the author of Surma- i-Chashm-i-Arya; by the same
writer who had strongly argued in favour of the possibility and actual
occurrence of miracles and had refuted the view that metaphysical notions could
not be denied on the basis of reason of limited human experience.
In this book the Mirza has argued on the basis of the Jummal (The reckoning of
-the alphabets by a system in which the letters have different powers) numerals
and here his mode of argument becomes very close to that of the missionaries of
the Batiniyah sect who used to employ these numerals as evidential arguments
even in. respect of fundamental religious beliefs.
"My attention has been drawn through Kashf (Revelation of any secret, to a
mystic or saint by the grace and power of God) towards the powers of nick
letters of the following name where- in I have been informed of the Messiah who
was to appear at the end of the thirteenth century. (God has told me) that He
had already kept in view the era (of Messiah's appearance) in giving this name
(to me); and that name is, 'Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Qadiani'. The powers of the
letters of this name add up exactly to 1300, and in this township of Qadian
there is none except this humble one whose name is Ghulam Ahmad. In fact, it has
been put in my heart that at this time there is none except this humble one who
has the name 'Ghulam Ahmad Qadiani.' And this has been a favour bestowed by God
to this humble one that He, the Pure One, reveals the mysteries to me through
the powers of alphabetical letters." (lzala-i-Awham, p. 90.)
At another place he writes:
"Now it is proved by this research that, the Qur'an contains the prediction of
the coming of the Messiah, the son of Mary, towards, the end of time. The time
of the appearance of the Messiah, which has been fixed by the Qur'an as 1400
(A.H.) has also been accepted by many saints on the basis of their kaslif. The
Qur'anic verse 'And We certainly are able to drain it off (It should be noted
that this verse refers to- rain, and the whole verse reads thus: "And We send
down water from the sky according to (due) measure and We cause it to soak in
the soil; and We certainly are able to drain it off (with ease,). (XL: 18) ).
has letters which, according to the jummal, make up the figure of 1274 ; and
this points to the moonless nights of the Islamic lunar months containing a
hidden pointer to the rise of a new moon. And this mystery is latent, according
to jummal system, in the letters of Ghulam Ahmad Qadiani." (lzala-i-.Awham.Vol.
11, p. 338. )
In these books, while trying to explain the Traditions from the Holy Prophet and
arguing that they referred to him, the Mirza has been extremely heedless of all
rules of exposition of such texts, giving full rein to his fancy. In fact, it is
hardly conceivable that anyone should take such liberty in explaining even the
writings or compositions of ordinary writers and poets not to say of Traditions
from prophets. To suit his purpose the Mirza has taken the position that the
words of the Traditions are of a figurative or metaphorical nature. Again, in
this respect, he seems to be following in the footsteps of the Batinis who used
to explain religious terms-about whose text as well as meaning there is an
unbroken continuity of agreement-in a far-fetched and ridiculous manner without
any Toxicological or rational basis to support them. And it is thus that they
had opened the flood- gates of atheism and nihilism.
In Izala-i-Awham the Mirza repeatedly asserts that knowledge about the son of
Mary and Dajj had not been completely clear ,to the Holy Prophet and that in
this regard God had endowed him only with some brief hints." (Ibid., Vol, 11, p.
346.)
The Messiah in Kashmir:
The Mirza, kept on "reflecting" about the death of the Messiah till, in the end,
he concluded that his death had taken place in Kashmir and that it was there
that he lay buried. In this connection, according to his wont, he did a lot of
hair-splitting which shows the fertility of his imagination even if the level is
childish. He has tried to prove that the pronunciation of Kashmir in Kashmiri
language is "Kashir", and it appears that this word, in fact, is a compound
Hebrew word, composed of 'K' which is used to denote similarity, resemblance,
etc. and of 'Ashir' which in Hebrew means Syria. Thus the word 'Kashir' in
Hebrew meant 'like Syria'. On this basis, the Mirza went on to add that when
Jesus (peace be upon him) migrated from Palestine to that part of India which
due to the excellence p of weather, agreeableness of its seasons and its
greenery and freshness had close resemblance to Syria, God named it "Kashir" in
order to comfort and gratify him. The excessive use of the word led to the
dropping of 'a' with the result, that it became 'Kashir.' Then, he proved that
the tomb of 'Budhasaf' (popularly known as the "prince") in the Khan Yar
locality of Srinagar was in fact the grave of Jesus. In trying to support this
piece of research, he marshalled all possible far-fetched arguments, with the
result that his writing on the point appears closer to poetry and fiction rather
than what is normally considered to be academic writing. The unbridled
speculations of the Orientalists, who are noted for making the mountain out of a
mole-hill simply pale into insignificance when compared with. the Mirza's
Writing. (See Barahin, p. 228.)
This brings us to a definite milestone in the spiritual experiences and claims
of the Mirza. At this stage he categorically claims to be the -"Promised
Messiah," and tries to prove this by his so-called 'rational' as well as
traditional arguments.
From Messiah to Prophet:
An objective, but critical study of the Mirza's writings gives one the
impression that his claims proceeded along a gradually ascending scale. All this
seems to have been planned very carefully and the Mirza appears to have
exercised great patience and precaution in moving from one stage to the other.
In the beginning be expressed the opinion that inspiration, intuitive experience
and categorical knowledge were an essential concomitant of completely following
the Prophet-a natural stage at which one arrives as a result of losing oneself
am obedience to the Prophet. He does not explicitly claim himself to be a
prophet, but talks about prophetic attributes and characteristics and tries to
prove that these attributes and characteristics are bestowed upon the followers
of the Prophet particularly upon the more perfect ones, by virtue of their
following the Prophet. This logic and its premises were bound to lead the Mirza,
sooner or later, to proclaim himself to be a prophet. It appears that throughout
these years, he remained busy paving the way and trying to create the proper
atmosphere for such a proclamation. He seems to have been trying to assess
whether the devotion of his followers had reached the stage where they would not
mind accepting even this claim, as they had accepted the rest of his claims.
Proclamation of Prophethood:
At last that event did take place. In the year l900, Maulavi 'Aabdul Karlim, the
preacher of the Friday sermon, gave a sermon in which he, used the words Nabi
(Prophet) and Rasul (Messenger) for the Mirza. This caused great irritation to
Maulavi Sayyid Muhammad Ahsan Amrohawi. When Maulavi 'Abdul Karim came to know
of this, he gave another Friday sermon in which be addressed the Mirza,
requesting him to contradict his belief, if he was wrong in considering him to
be a prophet and Messenger of God. After the Friday prayers were over, Maulavi
'Abdul Karim caught hold of the skirt of the Mirza's apparel and requested him
to correct him in his beliefs if they were erroneous. The Mirza turned around
and said that he, too, held the same belief. Meanwhile, Maulavi Muhammad Ahsan
had been greatly agitated by the sermon and in anger was pacing the floor of the
mosque. On Maulavi 'Abdul Karim's return, he began to quarrel with him. When
their voices rose very high, the Mirza came out of his house and recited the
Qur'anic verse: "O ye who believe! Don't raise your Voice above the voice of the
Prophet." (This event is based on the report of a speech of Sayyid Sarwar Shah
Qadiani at an annual conference held in Qadian, and published in al- Fadhl, Vol.
X, No. 51, dated january.4,1923.. See also Haqiqat al- Nubuwat, p 124.) (XLIX.2)
Thus the sermon of Maulavi 'Abdul Karim inaugurated a new phase in the career of
the Mirza. This sermon provided him with the much needed assurance that his
followers had such an unquestiong faith in him that they would accept whatever
claims he might make. The Mirza's own, son, Bashiruddin Mahmood has very ably
described this development by pointing out that the Mirza used to claim his self
to be invested with the attributes which could be found in none except a prophet
and yet he used to deny his being a prophet. When he became conscious of this
inconsistency and became aware that these attributes were untenable with his,
denial of prophethood, he proclaimed himself to be a prophet. -He writes:
"In short, since in the beginning the Promised Messiah thought that the
definition of Nabi is the one who brings a new Shari'ah, or abrogates some
injunctions, or is a prophet directly (appointed by God): so, even though all
the attributes and qualities required of a prophet were found in him, he used to
decline from designating himself a prophet. When, later on, lie became aware
that the nature of his claims is that of a prophet and not of a Muhaddath, he
proclaimed himself, to be a prophet." (Haqiqat al-Nubuwat, Vol. 1, p. 124.)
However, whether the Mirza refrained from proclaiming himself to be a prophet
till his misunderstanding was removed and he was commissioned by God. to
proclaim his prophethood, or he had been waiting all this while for an opportune
moment to make this declaration, there is no doubt that he was ultimately led to
making the proclamation of his prophethood which was the logical result of his
earlier claims.
Elucidation and Challenge:
As stated by Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmood, the question was finally decided in 1901
and the Mirza began to write about it explicitly in his writings. The collection
of articles called Arba'in (The Mirza-had promised to write forty treatises on
the. subject but he concluded the series only after the fourth one. See Arba'in,
Vol. IV, P. 14.) is full of declarations and explanations about this new
mission. This frankness increased steadily. In 1902 be wrote a treatise
entitled' Tuhfat al-Nadwah, which was addressed to the 'ulama who were taking
part in the deliberations of the Nadwah Conference held at Amritsar in 1902. In
this treatise he wrote:
"Thus, as I have repeatedly said, what I recite unto you is categorically and
certainly the word of Allah, in the same way as Qur'an and Torah are the words
of Allah, and that I am a Zilli (Reception of the revelation through the grace
of Muhammad (peace be on him) has been called "Zilli nubuwah" by the Mirza. See
Haqfqat al-Wahy p. 28.) and Buruzi (This kind of prophet, according to the Mirza
does not receive it prophet of God, and every Muslim is obliged to obey me in
religious matters. And every one who has received information about me, even
though he be a Muslim, but does not consider me arbiter in his affairs, nor
recognizes me as the Promised Messiah, nor considers my revelations as coming
from God, he is liable to punishment in the heavens for he has rejected what he
bad to accept at its proper time. I do not merely say that I would have courted
(the disaster of) death had I been a liar; I also say that I am true even as
Moses and Jesus and Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be on them) were
true, and that God has shown more than ten thousand signs to uphold my claim.
The Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be on him) has testified
and the earlier prophets had indicated the time of my advent, which is the
present time. The Qur'an has also indicated the time of my debut during the
present times. Both the heavens and the earth have borne testimony in my
support; nor is there a prophet who has not testified in my favour. (Tuhfat al-Nadwah,
p. 4.)In the same vein is what he wrote in Haqiqat al-Wahy:
"So, of all the people of this ummah, I am the only one who has received this
large portion of Divine revelation and knowledge about the Unseen. None of the
saints of this ummah, who have preceded me, was given such a big share of this
bounty. (This is merely a claim, and it is based on lack of religious knowledge
and is. against historical facts. In the ummah of Mohammad (peace be on him)
there have- been so many saints who have been graced by divine inspiration, but
none ever claimed it to be a revelation, nor claimed prophethood on that basis.)
For this reason I alone was chosen to prophethood) for his own self, but for the
majesty of his prophet. It is for this reason he claims, that his name in the
heavens is Muhammad and Ahinad. This means that the Prophet Muhammad's nubiwah
was received ultimately by (another,) Muhammad. although ina bumzi way, and not
by any body else". Ek Ohattr ka Itilah, p. 5. het and none else deserved the
title-"' be appointed a prop Is
All the later writings of the Mirza are full of similar categorical elucidations
of his claim to prophethood. These are too many to be mentioned in this book.
All those interested in a more detailed study of it should study his haqiqat al
-Wahy, and Bashiruddin Mahmood's Haqiqat al-Nubuwat.
Independent Prophethood:
The works of the Mirza also prove that he believed himself to be an independent
prophet and bearer of a Shari'ah. In Arb4aa-SIl he defined the Shari,'
ah-bearing prophet as one whose revelation contains positive commandments and
prohibitions and who makes some regulations even though these commandments and
prohibitions might have been embodied in the scripture of some former prophet.
According to him a Shari'ah-bearing prophet need not bring an altogether new set
of laws. Then he goes on to declare himself to be such an independent Sitari'ah-bearing
prophet. To cite his own words.
"Apart from this, you should know what is Shari'ah. Whosoever laid down some
commandments and prohibitions through his revelation and framed some regulations
for ummah becomes the bearer of a Shari'ah. So, even according to this
definition, our opponents are blameworthy, for my revelations contain
commandments as well as prohibitions. For instance, take the inspiration:
'Say to the believers to lower down their eyes and guard their hidden places
-This is purer for them.' (xxvi.30)
"All this is found in Barhin-i-Ahmadiyah. It contains commandments as well as
prohibitions and the same is the case with my revelations till today - they
contain both commandments and prohibitions. And if you say that by Shari'ah is
meant that which contains new regulations then this is wrong. The Exalted Allah
says: 'And this is in the Books of the earlier Revelations; the Books of Abraham
and
NIOSES;' (LXXXVII, 18-19) which means that the Quranic teachings are also
embodied in Torah. Arba'in, appendix 4, p. 7.
The fact that the Mirza abrogated a number of those important and categorical
injunctions of the Shari'ah which have been'continuously supported by Muslims
also shows that he consi- dered himself to be the bearer of an independent
Shari'ah and regarded himself as one entitled to determine what was religiously
obligatory or prohibited. One of the examples is the attitude he tciak in
respect of the question of jihad. Even though jihad is a textual Quranic
injunction supported by the unbroken belief and practice of the ummah throughout
the fourteen centuries of our history and is supported by the Prophetic
Tradition: 'jihad will continue till the Day of Resurrection,' but the Mirza
prohibited it. In connection with the abrogation of jihad, just one excerpt from
'his writings on the subject will suffice:
Jihad-that is the harshness of religious wars-has gradually been lightened by
God. During -the time of Moses there was such harshness that even, acceptance of
belief could not save a man from being killed, and even suckling babies were put
to death. Then during the time of our Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be
upon him) the killing of the children, the old and women-folk was prohibited.
Then, for certain nations, instead of accepting the faith, payment of jizyah was
accepted as the means of saving them from punishment. Then, in the time of the
Promised Messiah, the injunction of jihad has been absolutely repealed. Arba'in,
Vol. 4, p. 15n. For more detailed statements of the Mirza on the subject see
Section 2 of Chapter III of the book.
Excommunication of the Deniers of
Mirza's Prophethood:
The natural and logical consequence of the claim to be a prophet was that all
those who declined to believe in the. new prophethood should be declared
unbelievers (kafirs). The Mirza himself recognized that only a Shari'ah-bearing
prophet was entitled to declare all those who did not believe in him to be
kafirs. He writes:
"This point is worth remembering that to call those who reject one's claim as
afiis is worthy only of those prophets who bring from God a Shari'ah and new
injunctions. But all others besides the Shai'ah-abearing (prophets), that is,
mulham (Divinely-inspired) and muhaddath (recipients of Divine Communication),
no matter how high their station is in the sight of God and no matter how highly
honoured they-are by God, rejection of their claim does not render anyone an
unbeliever." Tiryaq al- qulub, p. 130n.
Nevertheless, all the subsequent works of the Mirza are replete with
denunciations of those who denied his Prophethood as kafirs. A few examples will
suffice : -
"During these days, the foundation of a new sect will be laid in the heavens and
in order to support this sect, God will blow (His trumpet) "Be" and by the sound
of this "Be", every fortunate one will be drawn towards it except those who are
eternally doomed and have been created to fill up the Hell. Barahin-i-Ahmadayah,
Vol. V, pp. 82-83.
In his inspiration which the Mirza published on May 25, 1900, he said :
"I have received inspiration that whosoever will not follow thee and. will not
enter into thy oath of fealty then such a disobeyer of God and the Prophet will
dwell in Hell. Mi'yar al-Akhar, p. 8 (cited from Qadiani Mazhab).
Take another instance: "God had revealed to me that every one who has received
my call and has not accepted it is not a Muslim." Zikr al-Hakim, No. 2, p. 24,
compiled by Dr. Abdul Hakim, quoted from al-Fadhl January 15,1935.
At another place, the matter has been dealt with in greater detail:
"Kufr denotes two categories (of disbelief): first, that a person denies Islam
itself and does not recognize the Holy Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be
on him) to be the messenger of God. The second (category of) disbelief is, for
instance, that he does not believe in the Promised Messiah and considers him
false in spite of the matter having been made clear and even though God and the
Prophet had emphatically urged that he be recognized as true, and there had been
similar emphatic instruction in the books of the earlier prophets. Thus, since
he is the denier of the command of God and His Prophet, he is a kafir. And if
one were to look at the matter closely, both these categories of kafir are
basically the same; for, the person who does not accept the command of God and
His Prophet despite his having recognized it to be so, he does not believe in
God and the Prophet according, to the explicit texts of. the Qur'an and the
Hadith. Haqiqat al-Wahy, pp. 179-80.
This constitutes an article of the Qadiani creed. Its former head, Mirza
Bashiruddin Mahmood writes:
"All those Muslims who have not been integrated in the oath of fidelity to the
Promised Messiah, regardless of whether they had heard his name or not, they are
kafirs and outside the, fold of Islam. Aina'-i-Sadaqat, p. 35 (cited from
Qaddiani Mazhab).
It is because of this belief that all non-Ahmadis are kafirs, the Islamic legal
ordinances in respect of kafirs have been considered by the Qadiani group to be
applicable to those who are outside the fold of their religion. The Qadiani
have, there- fore, been prohibited from having matrimonial relations with
Muslims. In one of his speeches, Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmood observed - "One of
the ordinances of the Promised Messiah, and an important one too is that no
Ahmadi may give his daughter in marriage to a non-Ahmadi. This ordinance is
mandatory for every Ahmadi. (Barkat-i-Khilifat, Collection of speeches of Mirza
Bashiruddin Mahmood, p. 15, (aited from Qadiani Magzhab). In Anwar-i-Khilafat he
remarks: "A person asked him (i.e. Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Qadiani) again and again
and put forward several pressing diffirulties. Nevertheless, he instructed him
to keep his daugther at home for all her life, but not to give her in marriage
to a non-Ahmadi. When after the Mirza's death the said person married his
daughter to a non-Ahmadi, the first Khalifah, Hakim Nuruddin not only forbade
hire from acting as an Imam of the Ahmadis but also excommunicated him from the
Ahmadi group, and did not accept his repentance during the six years of his
Khilafat despite his repeated apologies and repentance. (pp. 93-94. )
Elaborating on the same theme at another place, he goes on to say:
"The position of non-Ahmadis in relation to us is the same as that fixed for the
ahl-al-kitab(A follower of one of the revealed religions that is, a Jew or a
Christian.) in relation to a belie- ver by the Wise Qur'an, which instructs that
a believing man may marry an ahl-al-kitab woman, but may not give a believing
woman in marriage to an ahl-al-kitab. Likewise, an Ahmadi may bring a non-Ahmadi
woman into the fold of his Marriage; but an Ah'madi woman, according to the
Islamic Shari'at, may not be given in marriage to a non-Ahmadi male. Huzur (the
Mirza) says: There is no harm in accepting a non-Ahmadi woman in marriage, for
marriage with ahl-al-kitab women is permitted. Rather, such a marriage is
useful, because thus one more person receives true guidance, (but) one should
not marry one's daughter to any non-Ahmadi. If you can have (a non-Ahmadi
woman), take her. But to giveaway (an Ahmadi woman in marriage to a non- Ahmadi)
is sinful. (al-Hakam, April It, 1908 (cited in Qadiani Mazhab).
In the same way, to pray behind a non-Ahmadi is not permissible. The Mirza
himself wrote:
"This Divine Message shows that those who declare (the Mirza to be) kafir and
adopt the path of falsification (of the Mirza) are a doomed people. Hence, they
do not deserve that any one of my jama'al (group) pray behind them. Can anybody
offer prayers behind someone who is dead? So, keep in mind that, as God has
informed me, it is prohibited for you, it is absolutely prohibited for you to
pray behind anyone who declares (me to be) kafir or falsifies (me), or is
hesitant (to follow me). (Arba'in, Vol. 111, p. 34n)
Pursuing this logic, participation in the funeral prayers of the Muslims too has
been prohibited for the Qadianis. According to the Qadiani mouthpiece al-Fadhl.
The Mirza did not offer prayer at the funeral of his son (late Fadhl Ahmad)
because he was a non-Ahmadi. (Al-Fadhl, dated 15th December, 1921.). Mian
Bashiruddin Ahmad in a letter published in al-Fadhl even goes so far as to say:
"I believe that it is not permissible to offer prayers at the funeral of those
who pray behind non-Ahmadis, for, such a person, in my view, is not an Ahmadi.
(Al-Fadhl, dated 13th April, 1926 ). He also expressed the view that it is not
permitted to offer prayers at the funeral of even a non-Ahmadi infant. The
argument was that just as prayers could not be offered at the funeral of a
Christian child, even though he was innocent, one could not offer prayers at the
funeral of a non-Ahmadi child. (Al-Fadhl, Vol. 9, No. 72 and Vol. X, No. 32,)
It was in compliance with this injunction, that even though Chowdhry Sir
Zafrullah Khan, then Pakistan's Minister for External Affairs, was present at
the funeral ceremony of Mr. Jinnah, he did not participate in the funeral
prayers,
One of the corollaries of accepting this belief is that whatever religious
duties one had performed prior to entering into the fold of Qadianism, would be
deemed to be all null and void. In reply to a query raised by a Qadiani, he was
informed: "Whosoever performed his obligatory pilgrimage at the time when his (i.
e. the Mirza's) claim had become well- known and the proof of its validity had
been made evident to the people of the country in general, and the Mirza had
interdicted praying behind a non-Ahmadi lmam, then that person's Hajj will not
be reckoned as having been performed by him. (al-Hakam, (Qadian) of May 7,
1934.).
Incarnation and transmigration of soul:
Some of the writings of the Mirza indicate that he also believed in the
doctrines of incarnation and transmigration of souls and that the souls and
essence of the prophets (upon all of them be the peace of Allah) were embodied
in the person of the prophets one after another. In Tiryaqal-Qulub he writes:
"Thus, as has been accepted by the Sufis, the levels' of existence are cyclical.
In this, way, Abraham (upon him be peace) was re-born in respect of nature,
temperament and familiarity of, heart, two thousand and five hundred years after
his death in the house of "Abdullah, the son of 'Abd al-Muttalib and was called
by the name of Mubammad. (Tiryiq al-Qulub, p. 155 n.)
He also writes:
"At this place this point needs to be remembered that during the periods of the
internal degeneration of Islam, the spirituality of our Prophet (upon him be the
peace and benediction of Allah) manifests itself and this incarnation of the
essence of Muhammad shows itself in the form of some perfect follower. As for
what has been reported in the Traditions that al-Mahdi would be born and that
'his name would be my name and his mode of conduct be (like) my mode of
conduct-if these Traditions are correct, then the reference is to the descent of
his spirit as I have mentioned above. (Aina' i-Kamalat-i-lslam, P. 346.)
In another, of his works he wrote:
"It has been made known to me through kashf that when Jesus was informed about
this, sacriligiousness which has spread from the Christian people to the whole
world, his soul moved for spiritual descent. Thereafter, God, according to His
promise, granted him his replica, and in it was infused the Messiah's courage
and character and spirituality, and- the two-that is, the Messiah and his
replica, were firmly integrated as if they were two parts of the same matter.
Thus, in this sense, his being became the being of the Messiah, and the
yearnings of the Messiah descended into him-and it is the descent of these
which, in inspirational terminology, has been described as the descent of the
Messiah. (Ibid., pp. 254-55.)
Two advents of the Prophet:
The Mirza also declared that the Holy Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be
on him) has had two advents. He said :
"And know that our Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be on him), in the same
way as he was sent in the fifth millenium, was also sent towards the end of-the
sixth millenium, in the form of the Promised Messiah.
He even felt that this second advent was stronger, more perfect, and brighter
than the first one
"Rather the truth is that his spirituality (upon him be peace) at the end of the
sixth millenium, that is, in these days, is more vigorous and stronger and 'm'
ore perfect than in those years ; rather, it is like the full moon. (Ibid., p.
181)
Mirza's boastfulness:
The boastfulness of the Mirza in respect to his prophethood and his attainments
is a noteworthy feature of his life. This reflects a particular kind of
psychological complex, and we need not try to analyse it. However, his urge to
express his greatness was so pressing that he proclaimed himself to be of the
same status as all other prophets. To quote one of his couplets :
He who gave the cup to every prophet,
Gave it to me filled to the brim!
Later, he proclaimed himself to be possessed of the virtues of all prophets. To
quote him again:
Although prophets there have been many,
In Divine inspiration I am not less than any. (Khutba-i-Ilhamiya, p. 99)
He, further, went on to claim:
Every prophet became alive when I was raised;
Every Apostle lies hidden beneath my garment. (Ibid., p. 100. )
Not only this; he proclaimed that it was he who had brought about the perfection
of the human race; that without him, this garden of humanity was incomplete:
The garden of Adam which, had been incomplete far,
Has now burst into bloom, complete with leaves and fruits. (Barahin-i-Ahmadiya,
Vol. V, p. 113.)
He also seems to, believe that the attainments of prophet- hood and spirituality
evolve with the passage of time so that these attainments had found their most
perfect form in his own personality. He wrote:
"In the same way, the spirituality of our Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah
be on him) appeared in the fifth millenium-and that time was no t the apex of
its advancement-but the first. step towards the highest point of its perfection.
Then that spirituality radiated itself towards the end of the sixth millenium,
that is, during the present time, in the game way as, Adam was created towards
the end of the sixth day by the command of Allah, the Best Creator. And the
spirituality of our Prophet, the best of the prophets, made its manifestation in
a member of his ummah so that this spirituality might reach the 'perfection of
its manifestation and predominance of its light, as God had promised in, his
Radiant Book. So, I am that promised manifestation; I am the promised Light. (Khutba-i-ilhamiya,
pp. 177-78.)
In Ajaz-i-Ahmadi he even tries to place his miracles and signs above those of
the Holy Prophet. He says: For him the moon was cleaved, but for me both the sun
and the moon were eclipsed So, will they still deny ? (Ajaz-i-Ahmadi, p. 71.)
These boastful claims of the Mirza provided sufficient ground for his staunch
followers and successors to build further on that foundation, as has always
happened in the history of sects and religions. It is no surprise, therefore,
that many of big followers explicitly declare him to be superior to most of the
prophets. Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmood, the son and second successor of the Mirza,
wrote the following:
"Many prophets have passed in the world, but their disciples did not go beyond
the stage a of muhaddath, except for our Prophet (i. e. Muhammad), whose
benediction became so effluent that besides many muhaddath, one achieved even
the status of prophethood. And it is not only that he became a prophet but
having attained perfection by way of reflection of the one whom he followed,
went even ahead of some of the great prophets. (Haqiqat al-Nubuwat, p. 257.)
The enthusiastic followers of Mirza Bashiruddin, however, did not stop even at
that. The mouthpiece of the movement, al-Fadhl, wrote:
"The Promised Messiah was a prophet. His position by virtue of his status, was
that of the disciple and the reflection of the Noble Messenger (upon him be
peace and blessings of Allah). As for other prophets (upon them be peace), he
excelled many of them; may be, he excelled them all. (al-Fadhl, Vol. XIV, No.
85, dated April 29, 1927 (cited in Qadiani Mazhab).)
Some Aspects of Life and Character
Mirza's Life after the Spread of his Message
Early Life:
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad had started his life in poverty. In the
early part of his life the situation was that a big part of his landed property
had already gone and there was no other means of income. In his own words, he
was concerned only with the dinning table and the bread. (Nuzul-al-Masih, Ist
Edition, p. 118.) Prior to the spread of his fame he had spent twenty-five years
of anonymity. To cite own words again: "In fact during this period I was like a
dead body, buried for centuries in such a manner that it was not even known
whose grave it was. (Tattmmah Haqiqat al-Wahy, p. 28.) This state of affairs
lasted until the appearance of the Mirza as an author and champion of Islam.
Then, his fame spread as a preacher and, spiritual leader. He claimed to be the
"Promised Messiah", and, subsequently, an independent messenger of God.. In this
phase, things changed for him' We see him from now on as the spiritual guide and
leader of a nascent religious community and, a prosperous group of people. Gifts
poured in from all- sides and he became the centre of adoration and love of
thousands of people. It is obvious that the Mirza's prosperity in this period of
his life owed itself to his religious movement. It is religious sentiment alone
which led the people to make sacrifices in order to help the Mirza financially.
The, student is bound to feet curious as to the effect of this changed
circumstance upon his life and character. The Mirza had risen in the name of a
great religious cause, and had come forward with the highest possible religious
claims about himself. How far was his life in conformity with the ideals of this
cause and the big claims he made about him- self? Making a comparison between
him and the noble life of the Holy Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) would be
sheer insolence. What can possibly be done is to compare his life and character
with those followers of the Holy Prophet who have championed the religious cause
of Islam and have won popular admiration among Muslims as their true spiritual
leaders.
Character of Religious Reformers:
A study of the history of inspiring religious personalities and dynamic
religious movements in 'Islam makes one thing quite evident. Even while
experiencing fame and the availability of material riches these noted religious
personalities showed tremendous indifference towards worldly ambitions, an
admirable sense of self-contentment and great sacrifice, and an ever- mounting
keenness to strive for nothing except the felicity of the next life. The entire
life of such people was subordinated to the conviction that 'the next life
constitutes the real life. Their motto seems to have been the saying of the
Prophet: "O God there is no life except the life of the Hereafter." They passed
through worldly life the way a traveller passes through the various stages of
his journey, always keeping the following saying of the Holy Prophet before
their eyes:
"What is my concern with the world? My relation to world is similar to that of a
rider who stays (for a while) under the shade of a tree, then gets up and
leaves. (Reported in Ahmad, Tirmidhi and Ibn Majah.)
Their life embodies, to an appreciable degree, the following description of the
life of Hazrat Ali (may Allah be pleased with him), by one of his friends:
"He was weary of the world and its bloom and loved night and its darkness. He
was, by God, profuse in tears, immersed in reflection, wondering at the march of
time, always critically watchful of himself (literally, always addressing his
soul). The dress that pleased him was the rough one; and the food that pleased
him was the coarse and simple one. (Sifat al-,Safwah, Vol. 1. p. 122.)
Not to mention the great personalities of the early period of Islam, nor even 'Umar
ibn 'Abd al-Aziz, who was a rightly guided caliph, we refer here only to
personalities of much lower stature when compared with men of the
above-mentioned genre. Among the humble followers of the Holy Prophet one comes
across, among others, great rulers whose self-denial, detachment, piety and
scrupulousness' absolute indifference to worldly life, its vanities and its
false glories constitute man's pride and have left an indelible ampress on
history. Nuruddin Zangi, Salahuddin Ayyubi, (The biographer of the Sultan and
his close confidant Qadi Ibn Shaddad writes: "The Sultan had left only 47
dirhams As his inheritance! He left no estates, no house, no property, garden,
village or cultivated area. in his burial, not even a cent was spent from his
legacy, all was brought on loan, including even the grassloads for the grave.
The arrangement for burial was made by his Minister Qazi Fadil by some
permissible and legitimate means". And he was the sovereign of Syria, Egypt, the
Sudan, Iraq, Hijaz and almost the whole area that is now known as the Middle
East. (Al-Nawadir-i- Sultania, p.) Nasiruddin Mahmood, Muzaffar Halim and
Aurangzeb Alamgir: the lives of all these are excellent examples of in-
difference to -the world and of self-denial. Even during the life- time of the
Mirza, there were numerous God-loving persons who had no love for wordly riches,
and who distributed every cent of what they received among the poor and the
needy. The more people turned towards these men, and the more they received by
way of gifts from people, the greater was their detachment from these riches. In
the life-time of the Mirza we find such illustrious men of God, as Maulana
Fazlur Rahman Ganj Muradabadi, Maulana Rashid Ahmad Gangohi, Maulana Syed
'Abdullah Ghaznavi, Maulana Muhammad Na'im Frangi Mahli who were admirable
examples of Muslim piety and austerity. (See an account of their lives in Nuzhat
ul-Khawatir,Vol.VIII.)
A Sign of Prophethood:
Thus, a pure, self-denying life, whose character remains unruffled by
vicissitudes of poverty and wealth was not unknown to the Mirza. In fact, he
reckoned it to be a proof of the truth of the Holy Prophet's prophethood. He
wrote:
"And, when after a long time, Islam became supreme he (i.e. the Holy Prophet)
did not accumulate any treasure for self-enrichment and self-glorification; nor
did he erect any building or monument; nor did he devise means for a life of
royal ease or luxury nor did he seize any other opportunity for personal
benefit. Whatever came was all spent on taking care of the orphans and the poor,
on the widows and on those in debt; as for himself, he ate not even once to his
full satisfaction. (Bardhin-i-Ahmadiyah, Vol. 1, p. 117,)
Religious Teacher, or Political Leader:
Now, let us attempt to study the Mirza's life according to the above-mentioned
standard which he himself recognizes as a criterion of piety. What we note in
regard to the Mirza, how- ever, is the marked change in the two phases of his
life, his earlier life of anonymity and poverty and the latter phase, when he
was adored by his followers and received lavish presentations from them. Instead
of finding in his conduct any resemblance to the saintly and angelic lives of
the religious personalities of Islam, we find his life resembling that of
world-seeking political leaders or founders of non-religious movements. In the
last phase of his life (when a man is conscious that the time of his reckoning
and meeting with God is close) we find him rolling in prosperity and luxury in a
manner which reminds us of political careerists rather than of sincere servants
of the cause of God. This question assumed such importance that it caused
uneasiness among his sincere and close followers, some of whom were, in the end,
forced to give vent to their feelings of uneasiness and disgust.
Family Life of the Mirza:
Among the followers, Khwaja Kamluddin was particularly suspicious and
discontented with the luxurious way in which the Mirza's family lived. He
mentioned to his friends that the ladies of his own family who had observed the
luxurious life and the high standard of living of the Mirza's family were not
prepared at all to make sacrifices and remain content with a simple, austere
life in order to save money for the cause of the movement. Once he told Maulavi
Muhammad 'Ali (a former Amir of the jama'at-i-Ahmadiyah, Lahore), and Maulavi
Sarwar Shih Qidiyani, a noted scholar of the Qadiani movement:
"I have a question for which I have no answer. Please provide me with one.
Formerly we us cad to tell our ladies that we should live the lives of the
Companions who ate meager and coarse food, and were rough dress and gave away
whatever they could save to the cause of God. We urged them to do the same. By
means of the admonitions, we used to save some money and send it to Qadian. But
when our ladies themselves went to Qadian and came to know of the actual
situation by living there, they defiantly came to us and told us that we were
liars. They said that they had seen the manner in which the lives of the
Prophets and Companions were being lived in Qadian! Not even a fraction of the
comfort and luxury enjoyed by the women there is available to those outside (Qadian)
although 'their money is of their own earning while the money used by them (i.e.
in Qadian) is that which is for national purposes, and is national money. Hence,
they, said, We were liars who had been deceiving them and that they would never
again be deceived by us' Hence, they refuse to give us any money to be sent to
Qadian.
Khwaji Kamaluddin also added: "There is a favourite reply which you give to the
people. This cannot bold in my case, for I know things personally. (Kashf al-ikhtilaf,
p. 13 cited in Qadiani Mazhab)
Objections relating to Financial
Matters:
It seems that the public kitchen which was in the charge of the Mirza himself
had caused grave doubts in the minds of many of his sincere followers. This
controversy went quite far. Among those who protested the most important was
Khwaja Kamaluddin. Maulavi Muhammad 'Ali supported him. On one occasion the
Khwaja told Maulavi Mohammad 'Ali:
"What a shame. You are aware how arduously the money of the people is collected,
and then this money is not spent for the national purposes for which people
donate it after slashing off their expenditures even on their bare necessities.
Instead, the money is spent to gratify personal desires. And, then, the amount
of money too is quite large. It is so large that only if the money specified for
public kitchen was managed properly, it alone would be sufficient to meet the
requirements of those projects which were started and then have been lying in
suspense for want of funds. (Ibid., p. 15.)
These objections also reached the ears of the Mirza and he felt greatly
incensed. Maulavi Sarwar Shah writes the following:
"I have reliably come to know that the Promised Messiah (upon him be the
salutations and peace of God) has expressed great sorrow that despite his
declaration that it is the desire of God that the management of the public
kitchen remained in his hands, and that if anything else were to happen the
public kitchen would come to an end, yet persons like the Khwaja are such that
they constantly ask him to entrust the management of the kitchen to them and
have invidious doubts about him. (Kashf al-lkhtalaj, p. 14)
Before his death, the Mirza referred with grief to the accusations of
misappropriation of funds. In a letter to Maulavi Hakim Nuruddin, Mirza
Bashiruddin writes:
"The Hazrat (i.e. Mirza Ghulam Ahmad) said shortly before his (fatal) illness
that the Khwaja (Kamaluddin) and Maualvi Muhammad 'Ali, etc., cast aspersions
about him that he had misappropriated national fund. They 'should not do so, (he
said) or else it would not have good consequences for them. He said that the
Khwaja had brought a letter from Maulavi Muhammad 'Ali the same day. He added
that Maulavi Muhammad 'Ali wrote that the expenditure on the kitchen was quite
meagre, and asked what happened to the rest of the thousands of rupees which had
been received. When he came home, he expressed great anger and said : 'These
people consider us to be rnisappropriators. What do these people have to do with
this money? If I were to disassociate myself all income would cease.' Then (on
another occasion) when a deputation had gone to collect funds for construction
works the Khwaja said to Maulavi Muhammad 'Ali: 'The Hazrat (Mirza) himself
lives a life of great comfort and luxury and teaches us to donate by reducing
our expenses.' To this Maulavi Muhammad '-Ali replied that although this could
not be denied, this was an element of human shortcoming -in him; and, now, why
should it be essential for us to follow this element of human shortcoming in the
Prophet. (Letter of Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmood to Maulavi Hakim Nuruddin.)
A novel Sources of Income:
One of the biggest sources of income was the sale of title to burial in the
"heavenly graveyard" at Qadian. This had been instituted by the Mirza himself
who had ingenuously laid down the terms and conditions for buying the title to I
burial there. The high price of this title as well as the temptation-provoking
manner of announcement' (For details see the Mirza's treatise al-Wasiyat, pp.
11-23.) conjures up in one's mind the Memories of the sale of indulgences by the
Catholic Church during -the middle ages. This, however, gave the Qadiani head
quarters a permanent and large source of income. This, in fact, developed into
one of the most important departments of the Qadiani movement. Al-Fadhl, the
official Qadiani mouthpiece has aptly observed: "The 'heavently graveyard' is
such a central point of this movement and an institution or department of such
dimensions that it excels in importance all other departments. (at-Fadhl, Vol.
XXIV, No. 65, dated September i5,1936.)
What has all this led to? Qadian before the partition, and now Rabwah, its
successor in Pakistan, developed into a quasi-religious state. In this state,
the "Prophetic family" of Qadian, and its head, Mirza Bashiruddin Alahmood,
(This was written when Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmood was alive and was head of the
Qadiani movement.) enjoy all the appurtenances of governmental power, all the
authority which is vested in a religious dictator and a despotic ruler and all
those opportunities of self-indulgence which are available to the most wealthy
and-powerful men of today. The inner life of- this "spiritual and religious
centre"- and the, moral character of its head remind-one of Hassan ibn Sabbih
and his Fort of al- Mut, which was a mysterious centre of religious despotism
and licentious self-indulgence in the fifth century of,Hijrah. (For details see
Rahat Malik, Dawr-i-Hazir ka Mahabi Amir.)
the first Khalifah of the Mirza, in Haqiqat-al-lkhtilaf, by Maulavi Muhammad
Ali, p. 50. On this subject we have confined ourselves to the statements of the
closest confidants of the Mirza, otherwise there is & good deal of material
worth studying in such books as al-Zikr al-Hakim by Dr. Abdul Hakim.
Seedling of the British: Great Britain and the Islamic
World:
In the early part of the nineteenth century the onslaught of European powers on
the world of Islam had already started and their authority and influence had
spread to several Muslim countries. In this eastward expansion of European
nations, Britain was in the forefront. She was in the vanguard of the military
advance as well as economic and political predominance over Eastern countries.
India and Egypt were already under her occupation. Ottoman Turkey was one of the
main fields of British diplomatic operations and conspiracies. Her political
ambitions also menaced the Arabian Peninsula.
In India the British domination had virtually been established even before 1857.
The successors of Shahjahan and Aurangzeb had become idle pensioners of the
British, and were paralysed politically. The reins of power in the subcontinent
were in the hands of the British. In 1799, the gallant career of Tipu Sultan
came to an end with his martyrdom and the way was paved for further British
penetration. Being confident of the stability of the British power in India, the
Christian missionaries had launched upon their proselytising endeavours, The
first targets of these missions were, naturally, the Muslims from whom the
British had snatched their political power. The principles of Islam, began to be
ridiculed. The country was led to social breakdown and moral anarchy.
The-Islamic bases of social life were shaken. Western civilization began to make
inroads into the homes of Muslims and into their hearts and minds. Atheism began
to catch the imagination of educated young men and developed almost as a fad.
The reaction against all these led to the. famous Indian struggle for
independence of 1857 which, as it is well known, was led by the Muslims. The
British emerged as t he triumphant power and India became part of the imperial
domains of the British Crown. The infuriated victors took their revenge to the
full upon the rebellious Muslims, who were responsible for the "Mutiny". The
British launched on a policy to systematically humiliate them. They hanged many
members of the aristocracy and quite a few 'ulama. They confiscated their awqaf
(religious endowments), closed on them the avenues of respectable employment and
completely weeded them out of the country's administration. (Details are given
in W. W. Hunter's Our Indian Mussalmans and Sir Sayyid Ahmad's Asbab-i-Baghawat-i-Hind.)
Thus the Muslims ad become members of a humiliated and vanquished nation. Their
situation reflected the eternal reality embodied in this Quranic verse:
"Kings, when they enter a country, despoil it, and make the noblest of it
meanest."
In this country, the position of the British was not merely that of ungodly and
tyrannical rulers. They also represented a culture which became the mainspring
of atheism, moral cynicism and social anarchy in the country. In practice, they
were opposed to all those values, religious and moral standards, on which the
Islamic way of life rests. They were a criminal nation whose history was replete
with wrongs perpetrated against the world of Islam.
The attitude of Prophets:
Now, if we were to consult the records of the prophets and their true successors
and sincere followers, they clearly indicate that they have always opposed and
resisted tyrants and wrongdoers and have abstained from whatever might support
or strengthen such despots. The following statement of Moses (upon him be the
peace of God) found in the Holy Qur'an is significant:
O my Lord ! For that Thou hast bestowed Thy grace on me never shall I be a help
to those who Sin."
The resentment that he had against unbelief and tyranny, and their standard
bearers, is also borne out by the following prayer which he made to God in
respect of Pharaoh and his courtiers:
"Our Lord! Thou hast indeed bestowed on Pharaoh and his chiefs splendour and
wealth in the life of the Present, and so, Our Lord, they mislead (men) from Thy
path. Deface, Our Lord, the features of their wealth, and send hardness to their
hearts, so that they will not Believe until they see the grievous penalty."
God Himself instructs the believers to adopt the following attitude with regard
to tyrants and oppressors :
"And incline not to those who do wrong, or the Fire will seize you ; and ye have
no protectors other than God; nor shall ye be helped."
Then there is a well known Tradition :
"The best (kind of) jihad is (to proclaim) the word of Truth in the face of a
tyrannical ruler."
The Holy Prophet, his noble Companions and his true successors never cooperated
with any power which stood for falsehood and injustice. Their tongues were never
soiled with praises and eulogies of tyrants. The history of Islam is replete
with courageous expressions of protest and revolt against oppressors. There is
no period in Islamic history, and no area of the Muslim world, which has not
witnessed this noble struggle.
Protagonist of the British Imperialism:
But contrary to the illustrious teachings of the, Holy Qur'an and the spirit of
Islam and in violation of the noble example of the Prophets, their companions
and their followers, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, who claimed to be a God-sent messenger,
is full of praise for the greatest force of evil of his age- the British
Government. He never tires of praising that very government which had been the
usurper of Islamic dominions, the greatest rival to the temporal power of Islam,
and a great standard-bearer of atheism and moral degeneration. He praises the
British with a vehemence which casts doubt on the motives of any conscientious
man, not to say of a prophet. From the very beginning he was so greatly
concerned with praising the British that there is hardly any work of his which
has remained immune from flattery. We have already noted that in his first book,
Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah (vol. I) he had lavishly praised the British, had recounted
their benevolent achievements and services, had assured them of Muslim loyalty,
and had expressed his views against the doctrine of jihad. These trends
persisted in his writings right up to the end of his life. He almost produced a
whole library of books on the subject. In these books he returned again and
again to assuring' the British of his unswerving loyalty and recounted the
services of his family to the British along with his own support. At a time when
the feeling of Islamic self-respect was in need of being aroused and the nation
needed the impulse to resist its oppressors, he again and again repeated that
jihad had become out-of-date. Below are a few excerpts from the Mirza's own
writings to illustrate his trend of thought:
"The greater part of my life has been spent supporting and defending the British
Government. And I have written so many books regarding The prohibition of jihad
and obedience to the British that were they to be gathered together, they would
fill fifty book-cases. Such books have been disseminated over all the countries:
Arabia, Egypt, Syria, Kabul and Rum. I have always endeavoured that Muslims
became true well-wishers of this Government and their hearts were purged of
baseless traditions about the bloody Messiah and the bloody Messiah and those
fanatical teachings which corrupt the hearts of the stupid."(Tiryaq al-Qulub, p.
15.)
At another place, he propounds allegiance to the British as one of the two
pillars of faith :
"My religion, which I have been explaining again and again, is that there are
two parts of Islam: one, to obey the exalted Allah, and, second, to obey the
government which has established peace, and has provided its shadow of
protection as against oppression. Such a government is the British Government.
("Ishtihar Government Ki Tawajjuh ke Lai'q" in Shahidat al-Oyr'an, p. 3,)
In a request to the Lieutenant Governor of Punjab on 24th February, 1893 he
wrote:-
"The other thing worth mentioning is that from -my early age till now when I am
about sixty years of age, I have been engaged, with my pen and tongue, in an
important task to turn the hearts of Muslims towards the true love and good-will
and sympathy for the British Government, and to obliterate the idea of jihad
from the hearts of the. less wise among them, since it stands in the way of
cordiality and a sincere mutual relationship. And I notice that, my writings
have had a tremendous influence on the hearts of Muslims and hundreds of t
thousands of people have changed. (Tabigh-i-Risilat, Vol. VII, P. 10.)
At another place he observes:
"I have, written scores of books in Arabic, Persian and Urdu with the view that
jihad against the benevolent government was in no way justified; rather,
wholehearted obedience to it was a religious duty. I had these books published
at great cost and then had them distributed in Islamic countries. And I know
that, these books had a great influence even in this country. The people who owe
allegiance to me are growing into a party whose hearts are filled to the brim
with sincere fid6lity to the Government whose moral condition is excellent; I
'think they will be a boon to this country for they are wholeheartedly ready to
sacrifice themselves for the government. ('Arizah Ba'ali-i-Khidmat Government 'Aliyah
Angrezi min janab Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Qadiani Saheb, cited in Mir Qasim Ali
Qadiani's Tabligh-i- Risalat, Vol. VI, p. 65. )
At yet another place he wrote:
"The service which has been rendered for the sake of the British Government was
that I published and distributed in this country and other Islamic countries
about fifty thousand books, treatises and leaflets, stating that the British
Government is the benefactor of Muslims and therefore it should be the duty of
every Muslim to obey it sincerely and heartily feel grateful to it and to pray
for it. And, I had these books published in different languages, that is, Urdu,
Persian and Arabic, and then distributed them in all the countries of Islam, so
much so that I had them distributed even in the two holy cities of Islam, Mecca
and Medina, and, as far as possible, also, in the capital of Rum-
Constantinople, and Syria, Egypt and Kabul and many other cities of Afghanistan.
The result was that hundreds of thousands of people gave up their fifthly ideas
about jihad which had permeated their hearts due to the teachings of ignorant
mullas. I am proud of this service which I have bee In able to render, and no
Muslim of British India can boast of a parallel record. (Sitara-I-Kaiseriah. p.
3.)
Abrogation of jihad:
The Mirza's main concern was jihad which, indeed, had caused the greatest worry
to the British not only in India but in all Muslim countries (quite a number of
which had already been occupied by the British). The Mirza proclaimed jihad to
have been abrogated for ever, and put forward this as the sign of his being the
Promised Messiah. He proclaimed:
"Thirdly, the clock which will be installed in some part of the wall of this
minaret, would signify that the people should realise that the time for the
opening of the doors of the heavens has arrived. From now on there shall be no
terrestrial jihad and wars shall cease. It has been mentioned earlier in the
Traditions that when the Messiah would come, wars for the sake of religion would
be prohibited. From now on whosoever shall raise the sword for the sake of
religion and slay the infidel's by pro- claiming himself to be a ghazi, he will
be a disobedient rebel of God and His Prophet. Open Sahih al-Bukhari and read
the hadith about the promised Messiah, that is, the one in which there occurs
the expression which means that when the Messiah will come jihad would cease.
Now the Messiah has come and it is he who is speaking to you. (Khutba-i-libamiyah,
Appendix entitied lshtihar Chandah Minaratal Masih )
He regards this abrogation of jihad as the greatest object of his advent :
To cite his own words:
In short, I have not come in order to stimulate war and strife. I have appeared
in order to open, in the manner of the first Messiah, the doors of peace. If the
foundation of peace is not amidst us, then- our whole religious order is
useless, and it is also meaningless to believe in it. (Tiryaqal-Qulub, p. 335, )
At another place, he becomes even more explicit:
"I believe that as my followers increase, the believers in the doctrine of Jihad
will decrease. For, accepting me to be the Messiah and Mahdi itself means the
rejection of the doctrine of jihad. (Tabligh-i-Risalat, Vol, p. 17.)
Citadel of the British Government:
In his Arabic treatise Nurul-Haq he went as far as to say that he m-as the
citadel and amulet for protecting the British Government :
I am entitled to assert that I am unique in respect, of these services. And I am
entitled to say that I -am an amulet and. a citadel to protect it from
afflictions. My Lord has given me glad tidings and has said that He will not
chastise them as long as I am among the 'M. So, the Government has no parallel
and equal to me in supporting and. assisting it and the Government shall know
this if it is capable of knowing people. (Nural-Haq, p. 34. )
Seedling of the British:
In an application submitted to the Lieutenant-governor of Punjab on 24th
February 1898, he wrote:
"I have to submit that in regard to a family which has proven itself to be
loyal; had ever been prepared to make sacrifices for the Government during the
last fifty years; of which the respectable officials of the exalted Government
have borne weighty testimonies in their official letters about its being all
long a well-wisher and servant of the British Government; which is the
self-implanted seedling (of loyalty), the Government should exercise utmost
caution and make all possible efforts to know about it and pay attention to it.
The Government should also instruct its lower officials that they should look
towards me and my group with the eyes of kindness and benevolence in view of the
established -loyalty and sincerity of this family. (Tabligh-i-Risalat,Vol.VII,
p.l9.)
In another application he refers to himself and his group as 'those who had been
brought up as tried and true friends of the British: those who bad earned a good
name with the Government and had enjoyed its merciful kindness.
Cause of opposition to Missionaries:
The Mirza was possessed of such a profound feeling of loyalty for -the British
that he used to adopt numerous measures in order-to assuage the deep hatred and
resentment of Muslims against the British. His enthusiastic opposition to the
Christian missionaries, according to his own view, was also motivated by the
same desire. The efforts of these missionaries to repudiate Islam and to slander
the Holy Prophet, according to the Mirza, had infuriated the Muslim's and was
likely to prove detrimental to the interests of the British Government.' Hence,
he showed great zeal, out of expediency and With deliberation, 'in order that
the popular Muslim fury might abate and they might some- what cairn down He
writes:
I also confess that when some of the writings of priests and Christian
missionaries became extremely severe and 'exceeded moderation' and especially
when very filthy writings began to appear in Nur Afshan, a Christian paper from
Ludhiana, and when these writers used, God forbid, derisive language with regard
to our Prophet (upon him be the peace and benediction of Allah), I feared that
in the hearts of Muslims, who- are -.a' sentimental people,, these words might
have a highly provocative effect. In order to sub- due their, indignation, I
thought that the proper policy would be to write rejoinders to these writings in
a some- what harsh manner so that the towering anger of these easily-
inflammable people, could be suppressed and no breach of peace in the country
might take place. (Tiryaq al-Qulub. Appendix 3, p. 31 entitled "A Humble Request
to the Exalted Government. )
Spies of the British:
The impact of these teachings, propagated with religious sanctions, was that
loyalty to the British and zeal to serve it, became an integral part of the
Qadiani outlook and character. It is not surprising that the British Government
found From among them quite a few who sincerely and loyally served the cause of
the British and did not hesitate even to shed their blood for them. In
Afghanistan, there was an enthusiastic Qadiani preacher by the name of 'Abdul
Latif. The main task that he had undertaken was to purge the Afghans of that
spirit of jihad because of which the Afghans had never tolerated the rule of any
non-Muslim power over their land, and which had always been a source of headache
to the British. It was due to this kind of preaching that the Afghan Government
executed him. Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmood has mentioned this on the authority of
an Italian author. He says :
"The Italian author writes that Sahibzada 'Abdul Latif was martyred because he
preached against jihad and the Afghans had begun to fear that the spirit of
freedom of the Afghans would weaken and the British would predominate. (al-Fadhl,
August 6,1925.)
He adds Had our people in Afghanistan remained silent and refrained from
explaining the Ahmadi view-point in respect of jihad, they would not have been
blameworthy from the view-point o f the Shariat. But they fall victims of the
excessive zeal they had for the British Government, they courted punishment
because of the sympathy for it which they had imbibed at Qadian. (14. lbid,)
In the same way, certain -papers and letters were found with Mulla 'Abdul Hakim
and Mulla Nur 'Ali Qadiani which proved that they were disloyal to the Afghan
government and were agents and spies of the British' Al-Fadhl, the Qadiani
mouth- piece, published this piece of news from Aman-i-Afghan :
"The Minister for Home Affairs of the Afghan Government has published the
following announcement :
"Two persons of Kabul, Mulla 'Abdul Hakim Chahar Asia'i and Mulla Nur 'Ali, a
shopkeeper, had become enamoured of Qadiani beliefs and used to mislead people
from the right path by preaching that creed. The people who were angered at this
filed a suit against them. The result was that these persons having been proved
guilty were transported at the hands of the people to the realm of non-existence
on Thursday, Rajab 11. Against them there bad also been pending a suit for long,
and letters of foreigners of a conspiratorial nature and harmful to the
interests of the Afghan kingdom had been captured which proved, that they had
sold themselves to the enemies of Afghanistan. (Al-Fadhl, March 3,1925. )
In his address of welcome to the Prince of Wales on January 19, 1922, Mirza
Bashiruddin Mahmood proudly mentions all these incidents, making it clear that
all these sacrifices were because of their loyalty to the British. (A Present to
His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, pp. 7-8.)
Miscalculation:
Looking at the power, consolidation and extent of the British Empire, the Mirza
believed that the British power in India would remain for ever. Hence, tying up
their own fate with that of the British Empire, and identifying their own future
with the future of the British, seemed very wise and an act of great political
farsightedness. And, indeed, from someone who is shorn of deep religious and
political insight such a conclusion was not strange. It was impossible for the
Mirza to foresee that not even half a century would pass after his death when
the seemingly unshakable power of the British would be shaken and the power
which he considered, to be "the shadow of God" and "refuge of religion" would
leave India, lock, stock and barrel, and, not only that,. it would collapse the
world over.
'The servile manner in which the Mirza has given expression of his loyalty to
this un-Islamic, indeed, anti-Islamic power, and the zeal he has shown in
preaching_ to the Muslims that they ought to relish their state of political
enslavement as a boon, is unbecoming of the position which he claims for
himself. lqbal has stressed this contradiction in some of his verses which say:
The Sheikh is a murid of the Firangi Lord,
Speaks be, though, from the heights of Badyazid.
He said : Religion's glory lies in slavery;
And life consists of the lack of ego (khudi).
He reckoned the state of- others to be a-blessing;
Danced around the cathedral, and fell down dead .
Prophet as Mud-Slinger:
Softspokenness of the Prophets:
The Prophets of God and their pious followers have always been known for their
graceful and decent mode of expression, patience and calm endurance,
largeheartedness and magnanimity. Benevolent even to their enemies, they
returned good wishes for abuses; benediction for curses; humility for insolence;
and temperance and gracefulness for niggardly meanness. Their tongues were,
never soiled with abusive and filthy language. To sting people by harsh satires
and invidious sarcasms, to Scoff and jeer at the people, to pinch them by vulgar
attacks-all these are far too low to be found in their noble lives. If they were
ever forced to refute or denounce someone, they did so in clear, simple 'terms.
'They never stooped to adopt abject methods such as attacking the opponent's
birth, denigerating his lineage, or ridiculing him in the manner of a
court-jester. Their expressions, whether they were in favour of someone or
against him, bear the mark of the decency and elegance of their natures, and the
nobility of their minds. The Companions have left the following account of the
Holy Prophet Mohammad's discourse:
"The Messenger of Allah-upon him be the peace and blessings of Allah-was neither
brash-tongued by nature nor by will, nor did he ever indulge in undignified talk
in marketplaces, (Tirmizi)
The Prophet himself laid down the norm of speech for the believers:
"The believer is not wont to attacking or cursing people nor does lie use harsh
and filthy expressions. (Tirmizi)
On the, contrary, according to the Prophet, the characteristic of a hypocrite (munafiq)
is that "whenever he quarrels, he resorts to abuses. (Bukhari and Muslim. )
The Mirza himself admits that those who have been endowed with religious and
spiritual leadership ought to be possessed of forbearance and self-control,
forgiveness and patience. He writes:
"Since the Imams encounter all kinds of wicked, lowly and filthy-tongued people,
they have to have a moral calibre of the highest order so that they might not be
stirred by egotistic anger or faitaticism and thus people are not deprived of
their 'blessings. It is a matter of great shame that someone is called "the
friend of God" yet he remains afflicted with base morals, and is incapable of:
bearing obloquy with composure. As for a man who is called the spiritual Icader
of his age (Imam-i-Zaman), if he is so thin-skinned that even the least
provocative remark sends him into a fit of rage, -such a person can in no way be
considered the Imam of his age. (Zururat al-Imam, p. 8. )
But contrary to the expectations raised by these words, the manner in which the
Mirza has dealt with his critics-and these included some of the most respected
religious scholars and spiritual leaders-brings him out as a person who lacked
even the most elementary sense of decency and decorum. "Offsprings of harlots"
seems to have been one of the, favourite nicknames which lie very often gave to
his opponents. (See for example. Apna-I-Kamalat-i-Isalam, p. 547. Nur al-Haq,
Vol. T p 123. Anjam-i-Atham, p. 282, etc.)
The 'best' specimens is of his abuses are round in his Arabic writings-prose as
well as poetry. Here are a few of them.
"Now, since these people abuse me, I have already taken off all their clothes
and have reduced them to irrecognisable carcases. (Anjam-i-,Atham, p. 158.)
"These enemies have become the swines of our wilderness, and their women are
even worse than bitches. (Najm al-Huda, p. 15.)
An Arabic poem indited by the Mirza to denounce one of his opponents, Maulvi.
Sa'ad Ullah of Ludhiana, is much too unseemly to be reproduced here. (Ibid. pp.
281-82, )
For such illustrious religious personages of his time as Maulan Muhammad Husain
Batalawi, Maulana Sayyed Nazir Husain Muhaddith Dehlawi, Maulana 'Abdul Haq
Haqqani, Mufti 'Abdullah Tonkwi, Maulana Ahmad 'Ali Saharanpuri, Maulana a Ahmad
Hasan Amorhi, and Hazrat Maulana Rashid Ahmad Gangohi, he used invectives, such
as, 'wolves and dogs', 'accursed satan',, 'blind devil', 'the gang of
abductors', 'the doomed', and the accursed' etc. (See the long letter of the
Mirza in Arabic in Anjam-i-Atham, pp. 251-52.) In the same way, be composed a
satirical poem about the well known scholar and spiritual leader of his time,
Pir Mihr 'Ali Shah of Golra. A few of its couplets reads:
"So I said : O Land of Golra, upon thee be curse. Thou hast been accursed
because of the accursed ones; and thy abode shall be the place of torment.
"This petty man, like lowly people- has addressed me in abusive terms.. Every
man is tested in the time of hostility. ( Ijaz-i-Ahmadi, pp. 75-76.)
These abuses were often not enough to gratify him. On such occasions be 'would
not merely curse his 'opponents but write the word 'curse' with regard to them a
certain number of times. For instance, with regard to Maulana Thana' Ullah
Amritsari 'he wrote the word 'accurst' ten times consecutively. In regard to
Christians, he wrote this word one thousand times. (See Nur al-Haq, pp. 121-25.)
This, indeed, makes a queer reflection on his nature.
We would close this section by reproducing just a few more examples of the
Mirza's vituperations against his opponents. Addressing the -'ulama he wrote:
"O debased class of Maulavis. How long will you conceal the truth? When will the
time come for you to give up your Jewish habits ? - O tyrant Maulavis, pity be
on you, that you made the cattle-like common folk drink from the same cup of
falsehood of which you bad drunk. (Anam-i-Atham, p. 2i n)
He also wrote:
Of all animals, the filthiest and most repellent is pig. But filthier than pigs
are those who, owing to their base desires, conceal the testimony of truth. O
corpse-eating Maulavis ! O filthy spirits! Pity be on you for you have concealed
the true evidence of Islam out of hostility. O worms of darkness ! How can you
hide the radiant rays of truth ? (Ibid).
"Will these people be prepared to swear ? No, never. For they are liars and are
eating the carcass of falsehood like dogs. (bid., p. 25 n.)
This subject is neither pleasant for the author, nor palatable, for the readers.
We, atherefore, close the chapter leaving it for the readers to guess the bloom
of the Mirza's spring on the basis of the few flowers' of his garden we have
presented here as specimens.
An Unfulfilled Prophecy:
In 1888, when the Mirza was fifty years old, he asked one of his relatives,
Mirza Ahmad Beg for the hand of his young daughter Mubammadi Begum. The Mirza
made it clear that he had been commissioned by God for that task and God bad
promised him, in unequivocal terms, and that this marriage would, therefore,
certainly take place.
In a leaflet which was distributed on July 10, 1888 the Mirza wrote:
"The Omnipotent and Omniscient God has asked me that I should seek the hand of
the elder daughter of this man (Ahmad Beg); should tell him that good conduct
and courtesy to be shown to him would depend on this (i.e. his acceptance of the
marriage proposal) ; her marriage with me would be a source of blessing and a
sign of mercy for her father; and that he would have his share in all those
blessings and mercies which have been laid down in the leaflet dated February
20, 1886 but if he declines to marry her, then the girl would meet an extremely
tragic end. The other person to whom she would be married would die within two
and a half years after the day of wedding,' and so would die the father of the
girl within three years, and her household would be afflicted with discord and
poverty and adversity, and during the intervening period the girl would
encounter several events of unpleasant and grievous nature. ( This announcement
has been reproduced in full by the Mirza in Ai'na-i-Kamalat-i-Islam, pa 286. It
has also been reproduced by Qasim Ali Ahmadi in Tabligh-i-Risalat, Vol. 1, pp. I
I 1-18.)
In his work, lzala-i-Awham, he mentions this prophecy in the following manner :
"By way of prophecy the Exalted God revealed it to this humble one that
ultimately the elder daughter of Mirza Ahmad Beg, son of Mirza, Gulam Beg
Hoshiarpuri,!, would be married to me. These people would resort to great
hostility and would place obstacles in the way, but in the end, it would surely
take place. The Exalted God would, by all possible means, bring her to me,
whether as a virgin or a widow, and would remove all impediments, and would, of
necessity, fulfil this task, and none would be able to prevent it. (Izal-i-Awham,
p. 198. )
Significance of the Prophecy:
This problem related to the family life of the Mirza and normally such problems
should be of Little interest to a historian. There are millions of people who
strive for the hand of the girl of their choice. Some of them succeed, others do
not. But the endeavour of the Mirza to marry this particular girl is a case of
uncommon significance, in so far as the Mirza put it forth as the criterion of
judging the veracity of his claim to prophethood. After mentioning his prophecy
that he would ultimately marry the said girl, he said : "This should be clear to
the people that there, can be no better criterion of testing our truth or
falsehood than our prophecy. ( Ai'na-i-Kamalat-i-lslam, p. 288.)
'One might perhaps be inclined to think that misunderstandings in respect of the
messages from the unseen world are possible, for, sometimes people misinterpret
these messages by mixing up the words of inspiration'. In respect of this
prophecy of the Mirza, however, there is no question of any such possibility.
The challenging tone of the prophecy rules out all such possibilities. In his
own words :
"The prophecies which-are presented before opponents for the purpose of
vindicating some claim, contain a peculiar kind of light and guidance since the
inspired ones, who, by concentrating their attention on God, generally succeed
iii having a clear concept of their meaning and nature. (Izala-i-Awham, p. 202.
)
It is also possible that some people might not attach much importance to this
prophecy of the Mirza, because of his habit of making prophecies all too
frequently. It is true that his writings are replete with prophecies. This
particular prophecy, however, has a uniqueness of its own in so far as the Mirza
put if forward as a heavenly sign and as a verdict in his favour. He not only
made this prophecy the criterion of his own truth and falsehood, but also of the
victory or defeat of Islam. On July 10, 1888 he announced
"Then, when I repeatedly meditated in order to seek clarification and
elaboration of the prophecy, it was made known to me that God has predetermined
that the elder daughter of the addressee (i.e. Mirza Ahmad Beg) will ultimately
be married to this humble one (after all irnpediments had been removed) and this
event will make the irreligious people (true) Muslims, and provide guidance to
the misguided. (Ai'na-i-Kamalat- i-Islam, p. 286, and Tabligh-i-Risalal, Vol. 1,
p. a16.)
The original inspiration in Arabic in this connection when translated into
English reads :
"They falsified our signs and they had been laughing at them for long. So, God
will be your helper in dealing with those who are obstructing this task and in
the end they will bring this girl to you. There is none who can put off, the
words of God. Your God is Omnipotent, so that whatever happens, takes place, by
His will. You are with Me, and I am with you; and you shall shortly reach the
stage whereat you shall be praised. This means that even though the stupid and
ignorant people indulge in vilification and utter unbecoming words for you, out
of their inner corruption and invidious understanding, but they will ultimately
feel ashamed after they have witnessed the succour of God and, as a result of
the manifestation of truth, there will be praise for you all round. (Ai'na-I-Kamalta-I-Islam,p.
286; Takligh-l-Risalat, Vol. 1, p. 116.)
It was still possible for people to forget the matter. But the Mirza was so
confident about the fulfilment of this prophecy that he kept on reiterating it
in an increasingly forceful and confident manner. He said :
"Wait for (the fulfillment of) the prophecy mentioned in the announcement of
July 10, 1888, along with which there is also appended the inspiration: Ana they
ask thee if this is true. Say: Yes, by my Lord, it is true and you can- not
prevent it from taking place. We have Ourselves wed thee to her. There is none
to change My words' And on seeing the sign they will turn their faces aside and
will say: This is a thorough deception, and a thorough magic. (Asmani Faisla, p.
40. )
In his letter addressed to the 'ulama and spiritual mentors of India an Arabic,
the Mirza said :
"Predestination is bound to prevail and God has finally decreed it, and so the
time for it (i.e. marriage) will inevitably come. By the One who has sent to us
Muhammad al- Mustafa, and made him the best of messengers and the best of
creatures, verily this is truth and you will see it, and -1 shall make this news
the criterion of my truth and false- hood. Arid I did not say this until I was
informed about it from God. (Anjam-i-Atham, p. 223)
Emphasising the significance of this prophecy and stressing it to be the sign of
God, he said:
"In respect of this (prophecy), some of the fair-minded Arya authors have also
borne witness that if this prophecy were fulfilled, it would indeed be an act of
God. And this prophecy is against a harsh people who, it seems, have drawn the
sword of enmity and spite, and whosoever knows the state they are in, will be
well aware of the great significance of this prophecy. Everyone who will read
the announcement, no matter how prejudiced be is, is bound to agree that the
content of the prophecy is beyond the capacity of man. (Izala-i-Awham, p. 199.)
When lie felt agitated about the realization of this prophecy owing to some
serious illness which caused him the suspicion of being close to death be
received fresh inspiration to reassure him.
He writes :
"Soon after this prophecy was revealed and bad yet to be fulfilled (as it has
not been fulfilled as yet, that is, by April 16, 1891), this humble one
encountered a severe ailment bringing him so close to death that he got even his
will drawn up. At that critical moment the prophecy almost came before his eyes
and it appeared that the last moment had come and that the next day would be his
day of funeral. At that time he thought of this prophecy; that, may be, it had
some other meaning which he had not understood. Then, in that critical
condition, he received the inspiration: This thing is truth from thy Lord. Why
dost thou doubt? (Ibid.)
Thus, the Mirza's marriage with Muhammadi Begum was a settled matter-a matter
which had been decided upon in the heavens and, hence, there was no possibility
of any alteration. He announced that this was not only the criterion of his
veracity, but also of the veracity of the One who had communicated it to him.
And since he considered himself to be the true representative and advocate of
Islam, and his own prestige to be synonymous with the prestige of Islam, he
regarded the matter as one involving the victory of Islam itself.
Mirza Stoops to Conquer:
But as luck would have it, Mirza, Ahmad Beg spurned the proposal and decided to
give his daughter in marriage to another relative of his, Mirza Sultan Muhammad.
The Mirza came to know of it. Owing to his exuberant enthusiasm and his intense
confidence in regard to his ultimate success, the matter had already come to
public knowledge.' It had been mentioned in newspapers and magazines and had
become an interesting topic of conversation. Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims all were
keenly interested in the developments relating to this case. The Mirza's
matrimonial affair had evoked even greater interest than that of the royal
families. The numerous challenges which he had published from time to time had
rendered the matter even more delicate and complex. The members of the girl's
family (who had religious differences with' the Mirza and whose family pride had
been hurt by his public, announcements), categorically rejected the Mirza's
proposal. From the Mirza's point of view, however, the. matter had become so
serious that the establishment of matrimonial relationship had become
inevitable. He had announced the prophecy in such categorical and definite terms
that it was hard for him to back out of that position or to re-interpret the
prophecy to mean something else than what it apparently meant.
Theoretically, however, the Mirza believed that the inspired person should
strive for the fulfillment of his own, prophecies and that there was nothing
incompatible between this effort and his position as the recipient of an
inspired prophecy. (He writes : If Divine revelation makes something known as
prophecy, and if it is possible that a man should fulfil it without fanning up a
fitnah (evil) and resorting to illegitimate means, then making efforts for the
filament of such a prophecy is not only permissible, but also commendable (masnun)
" Haqiqat al-Wahi, p. 191) It was because of this view that he himself had the
eastern minaret constructed at Qadian for, it had been mentioned in the
Tradition concerning the return of Jesus. Following the same principle, he set
out to persuade, by all possible means, the father and other relatives of
Muhammdi Begum to accept his proposal. He resorted to all the means of
inducement and terrorisation which he could possibly employ. In his request as
well as the announcement of July 10, 1888, both these aspects ---inducement and
terrorisation- are quite evident. In the event of the acceptance of the proposal
of marriage he had promised Divine reward; whereas in the case of its rejection,
he had threatened them with ruin.
The Mirza also wrote letters-to the relatives of Muhammadi Begum, to her
father,, Mirza Ahmad Beg, to her uncle, Mirza 'Ali Sher Beg, to her aunt and to
other relatives who could have exerted some influence on the decision about her
marriage. He asked all these people, with great meekness and humility, to use
their good offices in his favour. 'To Mirza Ahmad Beg (the father of the girl),
he wrote :
"If you accept what I say it will be a matter of benevolence and gratification
and kindness towards me and I will pray to the Most Compassionate One for your
long life. I promise you to transfer one third of my property to your daughter
and I say honestly that. I will give you whatever you will ask of me. (Kalmah-i-Fazl-i-Rahmani,
by,Qizi Fazl Ahmad (cited in Qadiani Mazhab). This book is a collection of the
Mirza's letters to the relatives of Muhammadi Begum. The letters are authentic
and even the Mirza did not deny having written them. )
In another letter to Mirza Ahmad Beg he wrote :
"I still make a request to your honour, with humility and respect I have for
you, not to refrain from this (marriage) relationship. For, this will be a means
of great blessing for your daughter and the Exalted Allah will open the doors of
divine grace which you do not even conceive of (Ibid.)
In a letter to Mirza 'All Slier Beg he wrote :
"If the people of your household had joined together and tried to persuade your
brother, why should he not have given his consent? Do I belong to a low caste so
that it would be a shame to marry the girl to me? On the other hand, he kept on
seconding my proposal, but, quite recently, I have been left at the mercy of his
brother and now all have United on the question of the girl's marriage. What do
I have to do with a girl? She might be married to anyone. This was merely a
test: those whom I considered to be my own and from whose daughter I wanted to
have offspring and my heirs are now thirsty of my blood, They are now after my
honour and want me to be put to shame and to have a blackened face. It is up to
God to dishonour whomsoever He wills. But so far as these people are concerned,
they indeed want to hurl me into the fire. (kalma-i-Fazl-i-Rahmani, by Qazi Fazl
Ahmad (cited in Qadiani Mazhab. )
To Mirza Ahmad he also wrote:
"You will perhaps be aware that the prophecy of this humble one has become known
to thousands of people and in my opinion, there would be perhaps more than one
million people who have been informed of this prophecy..... In Lahore I found
out that thousand's of Muslin-is fervently pray in the- mosques after
(congregational) prayers for the fulfillment of this prophecy. (Ibid.)
The Mirza also came to know that 'Izzat Bibi, his own daughter-in-law (wife of
his son, Mirza Fazl Ahmad), and the mother of 'Izzat Bibi, the wife of Mirza Ali
Sher Beg (who was also the aunt of Muhammadi Begum), were opposed to the Mirza's
proposal and favoured the marriage of the girl to Mirza Sultan Muhammad. This
infuriated the Mirza and he wrote the following to 'Ali Sher Beg. (the
father-in-law of his son, Fazl Ahmad) :
"I have already written a letter to her (i. e. to the wife of Mirza Ali Sher
Beg) that if she did not give up (pursuing) her idea and did not prevail upon
her brother (i. e. Mirza Ahmad Beg) to prevent this marriage (with Mirza Sultan
Mohammad), then, as your own intention appears to be, my son Fazl Ahmad too will
not be able to keep your daughter ('Izzat Bibi) in his marriage. Rather, the
very moment the wedding (of Muhammadi Begum) will take place, Fazi Ahmad will
divorce your daughter. And if he does not divorce her, I will declare him to be
no longer regarded as my son, and will disinherit him. 'But if for my sake you
oppose Ahmad Beg and try to prevent him from carrying out his design, then I am
at your disposal on all counts with my heart and soul. Fazl Ahmad is still
obedient to me. I will convince him in every way possible and will endeavour to
rehabilitate your daughter. Then whatever I have shall belong to her. (Kalma-i-Fazl-i-Rahmani.)
The Mirza also prevailed upon 'Izzat Bibi, his daughter- in-law, to write to her
mother that if they did not change their mind the Mirza would have her husband
divorce her and thus ruin her family life.(Ibid)
"After Muhammadi Begum's marriage, Fazl Ahmad did divorce Izzat Bibi. Another
son of the Mirza, Sultan Ahmad, and his mother, were also of the same view as
the members of Muhammadi Begum's family. Hence, consistent with what he had said
earlier, the Mirza declared Sultan Ahmad to be no longer regarded as his son.
Besides, he disinherited him and divorced his mother. (Tabligh-i-Risala, Vol,
Il, p. 9.)
However, even after the marriage of Muhammadi Begum to Mirza Sultan Muhammad (on
April 7, 1892) the Mirza did not despair. He kept on saying that ultimately the
girl would, become his wife. In 1901, he made the following statement under oath
:
"It is true that that woman has not been married to me. But she will certainly
be married to me as has been stated in the prophecy. She has been married to
Sultan Muhammad, I, say truly that in this court (i. e. the world) where people
have laughed at things which were not from me, but from God, a time will come
when the events will take a strange turn and the heads of all will be downcast
with remorse.
"The woman is still alive. She will inevitably come to my wedlock. I expect this
to happen, rather, I have full faith in this. These are divinely-ordained
matters and are bound to-occur. (Al-Hukm, August 10, 1901 (cited in Qadiani
Mazhab and Tahqiq-i-Lathani)
In his, first announcement the Mirza had prophesied that the person to whom
Muhammadi Begum would be married, would die within two and a half years after
the marriage. This period elapsed and Mirza Sultan Muhammad remained alive,
enjoying a happy married life. This forced the Mirza to extend the lease of his
life. In his announcement of September 6, 1896 he wrote:
"The time for divine punishment is conditionally predestined, which can be put
off by fear (of God) and turning (towards God), as the whole of the Qur'an
testifies. But so far as it relates to the prophecy, that is, the marriage of
that woman to this humble one, that is assuredly predestined, and cannot be
waived off, for, in the Divine revelation it is clearly stated that 'My words
will never change'. For, if they were to change, the 'words of God would be
false. Tabigh-i-Risalat, Vol, 111, p. 115.)
In the same announcement, he explains another reason for the postponement of his
prediction :
"The Qur'an tells us that the-duration indicated in such prophecies belongs to
the category of conditional pre- destination. Hence, owing, to the appearance of
factors causing some change or alteration postponement of the 9 stipulated term
and period does take place. This is Divine Law, and the Qur'an is replete with
this. Hence, for every prophecy which is made through inspiration or revelation,
it is essential that its fulfillment should conform to the Divine Law as
embodied in the Books of the Exalted God. And, at the present time, another
benefit aimed at from this is that those aspects of Divine knowledge which have
been lost sight of by the, people should once again be manifested and thus
insight into the Qur'an should be renovated. (Tabligh-i-Risalat, Vol. III, p.
117.)
Thus, the Mirza insisted that his prophecy was true and he had no doubt about
its ultimate fulfillment. He again insisted that :
"I say again and again that the prophecy about the son-in-law of Ahmad Beg (i.
e. Sultan Muhammad), is assuredly predestined. Wait for it. If I am a liar, this
prophecy will not be fulfilled and my death will come. (Anjam-i-Atham, p. 31n.)
Mirza Sultan Muhammad had a long life. He took part in the first world war. He
was wounded during the war but survived, and remained alive long after the Mirza
had died.
As for the Mirza, he died in 1908, and his wedding which according to him had
taken place in the heavens, could not take place on the earth. In the opinion of
his more staunch followers, however, nothing can as yet be said unequivocally;
for, so long as human life is in existence, there is still possibility of the
realisation of this prophecy. Hakim Nuruddin, the successor of the Mirza, has
given a queer explanation of the matter, but very much in tune with Qadiani
casuistry. In the 'Review of Religions', he wrote the following in connection
with the death of the 'Promised Messiah' :
"Now, I would like to remind all the Muslims who have had and still have faith
in the Noble Qur'an that since those addressed in it include also their
offsprings, successors and those like them, then, can this prophecy not include
the daughter, of Ahmad Beg, or the daughter of that daughter ? Does your law of
inheritance not apply the regulations regarding daughters to their daughters ?
And are the offsprings of the Mirza not his agnates ? I had often told dear Mian
Mahmood (Mian Bashiruddin Mahmood, a son of the Mirza and the second head of the
Qadiani movement after Hakim Nuruddin. ) that even if the Mirza were to die and
this girl did hot enter into his wedlock, my adoration of him would remain
unshaken. (Review of Religions, Vol. VII, no. 726, June and July, 1908, p. 279
(cited from Qadiani Mazhab).
A Critical Analysis of the Movement:
Independent Religion and a Parallel Community:
One of the illusions about Qadianism is that its emergence merely signifies the
addition of one more sect to the large number of already existing sects and
schools in Islam, and that the followers of Qadianism are, at the most, a new
sect. Thus, the popular impression is that Qadianism does not represent a unique
phenomenon in the history of Muslim sects and juristic schools.
A careful study of Qadianism is bound to shatter this illusion and to convince
every unbiased student that Qadianism is a religion by itself, and the Qadianism
a separate religious community (ummah), parallel to Islam and the ummah of
Islam. The following statement of the Mirza, which has been cited by the former
head of Qadiani movement, Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmood appears to contain no
exaggeration. He said :
"The words, which came out from the lips of the Promised Messiah, keep on
reverberating in my ears. He said that it was wrong that our disagreement with
others lay merely on the questions f the death of the Messiah or certain other
similar issues. He mentioned in detail that we differed from them in respect of
the Essence of Allah, in respect of the Holy Prophet (upon him be the peace and.
benediction of God), in respect of the Qur'an, of prayers, of fasting, of
pilgrimage, and, in short, in respect of each and every part (of religion). (Khutba
(Sermon) of -Friday, at-Fadhl, July 3, 1931.)
Mirza Mahmood also affirmed that owing to these differences the first caliph of
the Mirza had declared that "their Islam (i.e., the Islam of Muslims) is
different from our Islam. (Khutba (Sermon) of -Friday, at-Fadhl, December 3,
1914.)
In the entire history of Islam, there is one movement alone which appears to
bear some. resemblance to Qadianism in the sense that while it kept its
activities confined to Muslims, it attempted to found a system of beliefs and
practices parallel to that of Islam, and thus endeavoured to build, as if it
were, a state within the state. This was the Batinite or Ismailite movement with
which Qadianism bears a striking resemblance. (See Dr. Zahid Ali : Hamara
Ismai'li Mazhab aur us ka Nizam.)
The Qadiani movement tries to build a new structure of religious beliefs and
practices as distinguished from that of Islam. It tries to give an orientation
of its -own -to all aspects of religious life. It provides its followers with a
new prophet, a new focus of devotion and loyalty, a new religious mission, a new
spiritual centre, and a new set of holy places, new religious rituals, new
leaders and new heroes. It is this feature of Qadianism which marts it out from
all other schools and. sects which exist side by side within the bosom of
I-slam, and raises it to the-level 0"t a full- fledged independent religion. It
definitely tends to lay foundations of a new ummah on the basis of new religious
teachings, and a new mould of religious life. The result is that for those who
enthusiastically choose to join the fold of this movement, the old institutions
and personalities which, claimed their devotion are replaced by new ones, and
thus they develop into an ummah all by themselves, independent of all others and
by virtue. of their peculiar connaturality of emotional predilections, outlook,
and the resultant veneration for the new religious institutions formed around
Qadianism. This tendency towards isolation, this trend to distinguish themselves
from the Muslims has been a part of Qadianism from the very beginning and has
since gone the whole length that the Qadiani have now become wont to compare
Qadiani rituals and holy places With Islamic rituals and holy places, declaring
the former to be parallel and equal to the latter. The companions of the Holy
Prophet, for instance, occupy a central position in the religious system of
Islam. The Qadianis place the companions of the Mirza on the same pedestal as
the 'companions of the Holy Prophet. A responsible Qadiani reflects this trend
of thinking in the following words :
"To make distinction between the two groups, that is, the companions of the Holy
Prophet and those of the Mirza, or to declare either of the two to be superior,
on the whole, to the other, is not right. In fact both these groups are part of
a single group: the difference is one of time alone, They had been trained under
the earlier Prophet while these got instruction at the time of the later
prophetic advent. (Al-Fadhl, May 28, 1918. )
In the same manner, they consider the grave of the Mirza to be similar and
comparable to the resting-place of the Holy Prophet. Al-Fadhl, published on
behalf of the Training Department of Qadian, once deplored the religious
insensitivity of those who came to Qadian to participate in the religious
conference, etc. and yet did not pay a visit to the grave of the Mirza.
"What is the state of the man who comes to Qadian, tile Abode of Security (Darul-Aman),
and does not bother to go a couple of steps further to pay a visit to the
Heavenly Cemetery: in it is that purified grave (Rawdha-i-mutahharah) (It is
significant that the same term is generally used by the Urdu ; peaking Muslims
for the grave of the Holy Prophet.) wherein lies buried the body of that chosen
one of God to whom the most superior of all prophets sent his salams, and with
regard to whom the Khatim al-Nabyin said: "He will be buried beside me in my
grave. Thus, the radiance of the Green Dome of Medina is reflecting itself on
this White Dome where one can partake of the blessings which are peculiar to the
radiant resting-place of the Holy Prophet (upon him be the peace and blessings
of Allah). How unfortunate is the man who, in the Great Pilgrimage (Hajj-i-
Akbar) of Ahmadism, should remain deprived of this blessing. (Al-Fadhl, Vol. X
No. 48. )
Owing to the religious and spiritual importance of the township of Qadian in
Qadianism, being the nursery of a new prophethood and the new centre of 'Islam',
the Qadianism reckon it among the holy places of Islam such as Mecca and Medina,
and never fail to mention it 'along with them. In one of his speeches Mirza
Bashiruddin Mahmood said :
"By venerating Medina we do hot affront the House of Kabah. In the same way,
when we venerate Qadian; we do not affront Mecca or Medina ........... The
Exalted God sanctified all these three place and chose them for the
manifestation of His Light. (Al-Fadhl, September 3, 1935.)
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad had himself drawn a parallel between Qadian and the Holy land
of Mecca. In one of his couplets he said :
The land of Qadian is now a place of veneration. Thanks to the rush of people,
it is now a sacred area. (Durr-i-Thamin, p. 52.)
The Mirza even thought that Qadian has been referred to in the Qur'an itself,
that the far-away Mosque' (Al-Masjid al-Aqsa) mentioned in the Qur'an. (xvII. 1)
refers to the 'Mosque of the Promised Messiah' in Qadian. He wrote :
"In the same way as God had taken the Holy Prophet specialty from the sanctified
Mosque a (in Mecca) to Jerusalem, so He also shifted him temporally from the
time of the Glory of Islam, the time of the Prophet himself, to the time of the
blessings of Islam, the time of the Promised Messiah. Hence from this point of
view, which is the spiritual transportation of the Holy Prophet to the extremity
of the time of Islam, the far-away Mosque (al-Masjid al-Aqsa) means the mosque
of the Promised Messiah which is located in Qadian and in respect of which, in
Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah, God has said : "Blessed, blessed and every blessed thing We
shall make therein." And this word 'mubarak' (blessed) which has been used
nominatively, is in accord with the Quranic verse 'And We blessed that which is
around it.' Therefore, there is not the least doubt that there is reference to
Qadian in the Qur'an. (Tazkirah or,Mujmu'ah-i-Wahy-i-Muqaddas, pp. 345 46. )
The logical consequence of these beliefs was that the followers of the Mirza
developed the practice of making annual pilgrimage to Qadian and they began to
regard this act as sacredotal as the Hajj itself. It is no surprise that the
Qadiani leaders proclaimed visits to Qadian to be a "shadow of the Hajj", and,
for those who are incapable of going to Mecca, they proclaimed it to be Its
substitute. Mirza Bashiruddain Mahmood said :
"Those alone who have resources and are rich can go on pilgrimages. Although in
the beginning divine movements spread and flourished among the poor, only those
who have resources 'and are rich are able to go on pilgrimage. The poor are
exempted by the Shari'ah. Therefore, God fixed a Zilli Hajj so that those' whom
He wants to employ in the progress of Islam, and the poor, that is, the Muslims
of India, should be able to participate in it. (Al-Fadhl, December 1, 1932.)
In this regard the Qadianis went so far as to rate these visits to Qadian even
higher than the pilgrimages to the Mecca. This, too, was a natural corollary of
their belief in Qadiansm as a new religion which has its own centre of gravity
and has undertaken to provide religious sustenance to its followers. It is for
this reason that a Qadiani leader observed :
"In the same way as the former Islam without Ahmadism, that is, without Hazrat
Mirza Sahib, is a dry Islam, so is the Meccan Hajj a dry Hajj without this Hajj,
because in these days the objectives of Hajj are not fulfilled there.
(Paygham-i-Sulh, Vol, XXI, No. 22.)
This trend among the Qadianis to assert their distinct entity and their
consciousness of being the followers of a new religion, and their feeling that
Qadianism had opened a new phase in history reached such a point that they even
introduced a new calendar of their own which has special names of the months.
The twelve months of the Qadiani calendar, according to its official organ,
al-Fadbi, are as given here Salh, Tabligh, Aman, Shahadat, Hijrat, Ihsan, Wafa,
Zuhor, Tabuk, Ikha, ,Nubuwat, Fath.
Indian Islam:
Thanks to this isolationist trend and the belief-in a new prophethood the
spiritual, intellectual and political centre of the Qadianis soon ceased to be
the Arabian peninsula with its holy cities of Mecca and Medina. Then loyalties
began to turn instead towards Qadian, the birth-place of the new religion.. It
was natural that the Qadianis should became increasingly cool towards Arabia.
Hence, those Indian nationalists who felt that the idea of the one nationhood of
India was threatened. by the fact that a great part of the Indian population was
deeply attached to a foreign country, and its religious centre, its spiritual
personalities, its holy places and its most cherished memories of history all
lay outside the boundaries of India, felt greatly relieved in so far as
Qadianism was a purely Indian movement and its spiritual centre lay not outside,
but within India. This appeared to them as a very salutary development: a factor
which could help the development of a common nationhood in the country.
This orientation of Qadianism was for obvious reasons welcomed With great zest
by those nationalists of India who have always complained that Hijaz has been
the real centre of the loyalty qf Muslims and that they are always wont to, look
towards Arabia. To such people this movement appeared as a new ray of hope. A
Hindu writer, Dr. Sbanker Das Mehra, has very ably represented this standpoint.
He has clearly grasped the change in outlook that results from embracing
Qadianism. He has also realised the fact that instead of being an Islamic, sect,
the Qadianis believe in an independent religion and constitute a separate
religious community, and that they are engaged in propagating a new religion and
building a new community. Dr. Mehra writes:
"The most important question that' confronts the country is in what way can
national feeling be inspired among the Indian Muslims. At times pacts and
agreements are concluded with them, at times we bargain with them, and, at
times, attempt is made to persuade them to unite. But nothing proves of any
avail. The Indian Muslims have come to consider themselves a separate nation and
they keep on singing praises of Arabia, day in and day out. Had they the power,
they would christen India as Arabia. In this darkness, in this state of despair,
the Indian nationalists and patriots see only one glimmer of hope. That glimmer
of hope is the movement of Ahmadis. The more Muslims will be attracted towards
Ahmadism, the more they will begin to consider Qadian to be their Mecca and will
become, in the end, lovers of India and true nationalists.
"The progress of Ahmadism among Muslims can alone deal a death-blow to the
Arabic culture and Pan-Islamism. Let us study the Ahmadi movement from the
national point of view. From the land of Punjab there arises a man, Mirza Gulam
Ahmad Qadiani, and summons the Muslims:
"O Muslims! I am the prophet whom God has promised to send in the Qur'an. Come!
Gather under my banner. If you don't come, God will not, forgive you on the day
of judgement and you will abide in hell.
"Without entering into any discussion about the truth or falsehood of this claim
of the Mirza, I would like to point out the change that takes place when a
Muslim becomes a Mirzai". A Mirzai Muslim holds it as his, creed that:
(1) From time to time God sends someone to guide people. Such a person is the
prophet of his time.
(2) During the time when moral confusion prevailed in Arabia God sent Hazrat
Muhammad (peace and blessings of God be on him) as His Prophet to that country.
(3) God felt the need of a prophet again and so He sent the Mirza in order that
he should guide the Muslims.
"My nationalist brethren will ask : What have these beliefs to do with
nationalism ? The reply is that when a Hindu becomes a Muslim, his loyalty and
devotion are transferred to the land of Arabia; similarly, when a Muslim becomes
an Ahmadi, his angle of vision changes. His devotion to Hazrat Muhammad (peace
and blessings of Allah be on him) begins to decrease. Besides, if his caliphate
had been in the past in Arabia and the land of the Turks, now it comes to Qadian.
Mecca and Medina then remain holy places for him 'merely in a traditional sense.
"An Ahmadi, whether he is in Arabia, Turkistan, Iran or in any corner of the
world, turns towards Qadian for spiritual salvation. The land of Qadian is the
land of salvation for him and therein lies the secret of the superiority of
India.
"Every Ahmadi will have love for India for Qadian is in India. The Mirza, too
was an Indian and his Caliphs who are leading this sect till now are all
Indians."
He adds:
"This is the one reason why Muslims look at the Ahmadi movement with suspicion.
They know that Ahmadism is hostile to Arabic culture and Islam. In the Khilafat
movement too Ahmadis did not join hands with Muslims. For, instead of Turkey or
Arabia, they want to establish the Khilafat at Qadian. This fact, no matter how
disappointing to the common Muslims who are always dreaming of Pan-Islamism and
Pan-Arab solidarity, is a matter of great joy for a nationalist.(Dr. Shankar Das
Mehra's article in Bande Matram, April 22, 1932, (cited in Qadiani Mazhab, by
Prof. Iyas Barni).
Revolt against Muhammad's Prophethood:
The belief that religion has now been perfected, that Muhammad (peace be on him)
is the last messenger of God, and that Islam, is the last message of God to
mankind and the most perfect way of life is a Divine gift and an bonour
conferred exclusively on this a ummah. It is for this reason that a Jewish
scholar had said to Hazrat Umar (may God be pleased with him) that there was
averse in the Qur'an Which the Muslims recite. Had that verse been found in the
Jewish Scripture, they would have regarded the day of its revelation as a day of
national rejoicing and celebration. This Jewish scholar was referring to the
Quranic verse which proclaims the termination of prophethood and the perfection
of Divine benediction:
This clay have I perfected your religion for you, completed, My Favour upon you,
and have chosen for you Islam as your religion.
'Umar did not dispute the majestic glory of this Divine proclamation. He only
said that the Muslims needed no new 'celebration for the verse had been revealed
on a day which is a day of great devotion and congregation in Islam. -The day on
which this verse had been revealed was the day of two Ids: the Day of Arafah and
Friday.
Security Against Intellectual Chaos:
This creed has stood as a great barrier against the disintegrating movements
which arose from time to time in the wide expanse of the world of Islam. It is
this creed which prevented Islam from becoming, a plaything of false pretenders
to prophethood and hypocrites. This creed has been like a fortress wherein this
ummah took refuge from the inroads of imposters and adventurers who tried to
demolish the entire structure of Islam and to replace it by a new structure. It
is, again, this very creed which maintained the religious and ideological unity
of this ummah to an extent no other prophet's ummah has been able to do in the
past. Had this creed not been there, Muslims would have disintegrated into
numerous ummahs, each of which would be having a separate centre of spiritual
inspiration, a distinct heritage of cultural traditions and history, and a
different set of heroes.
Implications of the Termination of Prophethood:
The belief that prophethood has been terminated is a matter of great honour and
distinction for, mankind. This, in effect, proclaims that mankind has reached
the age of maturity and attained the capacity to respond to the last message of
God. It means that human beings no longer require any fresh revelation, an;
further heavenly communication. This belief inspires self- confidence. For man
knows that religion has assumed its perfect and final form, and man need no
longer look backwards; that humanity need no longer look towards the heavens for
fresh revelation; rather, it should now direct-its efforts to make good use of
the resources created by God. And in trying to fashion its life according to the
fundaments of religion and morality, it has to look now only towards the earth,
and towards its own self. This creed directs the vision of, man to the future.
It provides an incentive for the creative utilization of man's capabilities. It
fixes for man the right goal, and points to the direction in which man should
proceed for the achievement of that goal. Without this creed, man would be in a
state of doubt, diffidence and hesitation. He would always be looking towards
the heavens, instead of looking towards the earth. He would always feel uneasy
about his future. Every now and then some pretender would rise to tell him that
"the garden of humanity had remained incomplete" and that it was his advent
which had given it its full bloom; leaving man to remain diffident that if it
had remained imperfect so far, what was the guarantee for the future! Thus,
instead of striving to water that garden, he would always remain waiting for
some gardener to come out from above and do the needful.
Qadiani Insolence:
Among the different anti-Islamic movements which have arisen in our history,
Qadianism is unique. For, if other movements bad been directed against Islam as
a whole, Qadianism is a conspiracy which is specifically directed against the
prophet- hood of Muhammad (peace be on him), and challenges the finality of
Islam and the unity of Muslims. By repudiating, the finality of prophethood,
Qadianism obliterated the very borderlines which distinguish this ummah from all
others. Dr. Sir Muhammad Iqbal has clearly brought out the innovation impudently
set afloat by Qadianism.
"Islam is essentially a religious order which has defined limits, that is,
belief in the Unity and Omnipotence of God, faith in the prophets and
termination of prophethood on the advent of His last Messenger, Muhammad (peace
be upon him). Faith in the last mentioned creed is, in reality, the
distinguishing feature between a Muslim and a non-Muslim and a determinant
whether a certain individual or group forms part. of the Muslim community or
not. Take, for example, Brahmo Samaj which has faith in God and acknowledges
Muhammad as a Prophet of God, but its votaries cannot be treated as-Muslims,
for, like the Qadianis, they believe in the continuance of revelation and do not
regard the. Prophet of Islam as the Last Prophet. As far as I am aware, no sect
of Islam has ever tried to go beyond this line of demarcation. In Iran, the
Bahaites denied this essential creed but they also confessed that they
constituted a distinct religious order and were not a sect of the Muslims. We
believe that Islam, as a religion, has been revealed by God; but, Islam as a
social order owes its existence to the person of the Blessed Prophet. The
Qadianis have, in my opinion, only two ways open to them. They should either
follow the Bahaites or accept the creed in regard to finality of Muhammad's
prophethood in toto, with its fill implications, and give up those far-fetched
interpretations which are designed to let them remain within the fold of Islam
with a view to enjoying political benefits. (Iqbal : Haf-I-Iqbal, pp. 136-37. )
In another article on the subject, Sir Muhammad Iqbal wrote:
"Muslims are unusually sensitive in regard to those movements which pose a
danger to their unity. Therefore, every religious group which deems itself
historically associated with Islam' but has its bases in a new prophethood, and,
treats every Muslim not having faith in its revelations as a non-believer, would
be regarded by the Muslims as a danger to the unity of Islam. This is because
the sense of Islamic unity springs from the belief in the finality of Muhammad's
prophethood."
He adds in the same article that: "It is obvious that Islam which claims to
unite its different sects on the basis of a uniform creed for all, cannot show
any sympathy to a movement which presently endangers its own solidarity and is
fraught with the danger of further dissension to humanity in future. (Ibid. pp.
122-23)
Proliferation of Prophets:
The natural outcome of the Mirza's preaching against the idea of the finality of
prophethood was that the halo of sanctity and veneration, honour and dignity
around the office of prophethood, was gone. The eloquence he waxed on stressing
that the process of prophethood had not stopped, the importance be attached to
"inspiration", enhancing it to be considered the basis of prophethood, was bound
to reduce prophethood to a child's play, even though his argument supporting the
continuity of prophethood was, confined merely to his own case and - he
considered himself to be the, last prophet. To borrow the remarks of Iqbal:
"The founder's own argument, quite worthy 6f a medieval theologian, is that the
spirituality of the Holy Prophet of Islam must be regarded as imperfect, if it
is not creative of another prophet. He claims his own prophethood to be an
evidence of the prophet-rearing power of the spirituality of the Holy Prophet of
Islam. But if you further ask him whether the spirituality of Muhammad is
capable of rearing more prophets than one, his answer is "No". This virtually
amounts to saying, "Muhammad is not the last Prophet, I am the last." Far from
understanding the cultural value of the Islamic idea of finality in the history,
of mankind generally and of Asia especially, he -thinks that finality, in the
sense that no follower of Muhammad can ever reach the status of Prophethood, is
a mark of imperfection in Muhammad's Prophethood. As I read the psychology of
his mind he seems to be interested only in his own claim to Prophethood; for he
avails himself of what he describes as -the creative spirituality of the Holy
Prophet of Islam but, at the same time, limits this spiritual creative capacity
to the rearing of only one prophet, i.e., the founder of the Ahmadiyya movement.
In this way the new prophet quietly steals away the finality of one whom he
claims to be his spiritual progenitor. (Speeches and Writings of Iqbal, pp.
150-51.)
What eludes the grasp of people of normal intelligence-is the confinement of
Muhammad's prophet-rearing spirituality to one person alone, and that it should
have produced no-results during the last thirteen hundred years before the
advent of the Mirza nor is it capable of producing any other prophet in the
future all the find of time it is this logic of things which has made Mirza
Bashiruddin Mahmood to make the following observation.
"The Exalted God says about the unbelievers that they did not form a true
estimate of Allah and have come to think that the treasures of God have become
exhausted and hence He mould not now give anything to anybody. In the same way,
(such people) say that no matter bow much a man advances in righteousness and
piety, and even if he goes ahead of several prophets in divine gnosis and
spirituality, God will never, never make him a prophet. This concept is owing to
a mis-estimation of God, otherwise I say that not one but thousands of prophets
will be born. (Anwar-i-Khalafat, p. 62.)
This trend of denying the finality of prophethood emboldened several people to
lay claim to prophethood. So far as we know about the history of Muslim India,
there had been none except Akbar who has had the cheek to deny the finality of
prophethood and try to promote a new religion. However, even Akbar had not done
all that with the outspokenness and vehemence of the Qadianis. The door of
prophethood flung open by the Mirza attracted 'Many an adventurer and pretender.
In 1355/1936 Professor Ilyas Barni mentioned seven such pretenders. However,
were one to undertake a thorough census of the pretenders in the province of.
Punjab alone even their number would be much more than seven. This sudden
proliferation of 'prophets' caused concern even to the Qadianis and, Mirza
Bashiruddin Mahmood remarked :
"Look at the number of claimants to prophethood who have arisen from the ranks
of our own party. Of these, but for one, I believe that none of these is
consciously lying. The fact is that in the beginning they received inspirations,
and it would be no surprise if they receive them even now. But the mishap was
that they erred in the interpretation of their inspirations. I personally know
some of these people and I can testify that they possessed sincerity and fear of
God. The Exalted God alone knows how far this opinion is correct, but in the
beginning they were sincere. A part of their, inspirations was from God, but the
mistake was that they did not grasp the wisdom of the inspirations and
foundered. (Al-Fadhl, January 1, 1935. )
Dissension Among Muslims:
The very idea of the extent to which Muslims will become divided among
themselves, and the tragic disintegration that will follow as a result of the
rise of these new prophets makes a. Muslim tremble with fear. Secular trends of
thought have made people disinclined to make claims of divinity and prophethood.
What would happen, however, if the writings of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad and the
preachings of his followers awaken this idea and there is a proliferation of
'prophets' all over the Muslim world; and each 'prophet' begins to denounce all
those who do not come tinder his banner as Kafirs. What a colossal intellectual,
and religious chaos would follow ? The world of Islam would become divided into
different hostile religious camps and who knows if Muslims too will not
experience the religious wars which devastated Europe a few centuries ago. Thus,
the ummah which had been raised in order to weld the whole of humanity into one
fraternity would itself become divided against itself. This danger was realized-
by one of the followers of the Mirza, Maulavi Muhammad Ali, Muhammad 'Ali did
not realise, however, that the door to this danger had been opened by his
leader, the Mirza himself. For, in the history of Islam the Mirza is the only
person who initiated a full-fledged movement to prove the unceasing continuity
of prophethood. Anyhow, the views of Muhammad' Ali are noteworthy :
"Reflect, for the sake of God, that if the belief of Mian Sahib (That is, Mirza
Bashiruddin Mahmood. In fairness, however, it should be noted that Mahmood was
not the proponent of this idea; he merely reiterated the views of his leader and
father. Mirza Ghulam Ahmad.) is accepted that the prophets will continue to come
and that thousands of prophets will come, as he has written explicitly in Anwar-i-Khilafat,
will not these thousands of groups denounce one another as Kafir ? And so, what
will happen to Islamic unity? Let us assume that all those prophets will be
confined to the Ahmadi group alone. Then, how many factions will there be in the
Ahmadi group? After all you are aware of what happened in the past, how one of
these groups became favourable to and another opposed to the Prophet after his
advent. Then, will that very God who has expressed the will to unify all the
peoples of the world at the hands of Muhammad (peace and blessings of God. be on
him), will He now divide Muslims into numerous factions, each one of them
calling the other Kafir, having no Islamic relationship and unity among
themselves. Remember that if the 'promise to make Islam predominant over all
religions, in the future is true, then that tragic day when thousands of
prophets Will go about with their own separate factions, when there will be
thousands of separate exclusive mosques, each with its own group of mentors of
true belief and salvation, denouncing all other Muslims as infidels, will never
dawn in the history of Islam. (Ridd-i-Takfir-I-Ahl-i-Qiblah, pp. 49-50.)
A Dangerous Hypothesis:
A hypothesis of the Mirza which causes unrest in a Muslim's mind and opens the
door of chaos and anarchy in Muslim society is his view that "Divine revelations
and communications" are essential for the validity of a religion and a natural
outcome of obedience to God and earnest endeavour in His way. In his view the
religion in which "Divine revelations and communications" do not continue
unceasingly is a dead and false religion; rather it is a Satanic religion which
leads towards the hell. If the followers of a religion who apply themselves to
the practice of austerities and devotion remain deprived of the honour Divine
illumination despite hard efforts and sacrifices in the way of God, they are
misguided, unfortunate and blind. In Barahin-i-Ahmadiyah (Vol. V), he wrote :
"What honour, what position, what influence and what Divine strength does that
prophet possess, whose followers are merely blind, sightless people, whose eyes
have not been opened by Divine communication? How stupid and false is it to
believe that after the Holy Prophet (peace and blessing of Allah be on him), the
door of Divine revelation has been closed for ever; and in the future, till the
Day of judgement, there is no hope of it being opened again. Keep on worshipping
mere fables and stories! Can such a religion, in which there is no direct
relationship with God, be a religion in the real sense of the term. What then
remains in such a religion except paying devotion to mere fables. Even if a
person were to sacrifice his life in His way, even if he were to lose himself
completely in striving to gratify Him and prefer Him to everything, even then He
does not open the door of His knowledge and does not honour him with
communication! I swear in the name of Exalted God that there would be none in
this age who would be more averse. to such a religion than I. I call such a
religion Satanic, and not a Divine one, and believe that such a religion leads
to hell. (Brahin-i-Ahmadiyah, Vol. V, p. 183,)
Logical Consequences:
Assuming "Divine communication" as essential for knowledge and salvation, and
holding it up as the criterion for the truth and veracity of a religion, the
Mirza turned religion into a highly complicated and an immensely straitened
affair even y though God had made it simple and practicable. God says :
"God intends every facility for you. He does not want to put you to
difficulties."
"And bas imposed no difficulties on you in religion. (XXII. 78)
'On no soul doth God place a burden greater than it can bear." (II. 286),
But if Divine communication is essential for knowledge and salvation there can
be nothing more difficult than religion. For, by nature, an overwhelming
majority of people are not disposed to that kind of communication. No matter bow
hard they try, the door of Divine communication will always remain closed for
them. Then, there are those who do have a natural predilection for this, and
others there are who do not have the leisure or the Divine help to undertake the
vigorous striving essential for such a spiritual achievement. The universal
religion which has been designed for the salvation of the whole of mankind and
summons all towards God cannot possibly impose such impossible conditions for
obtaining the knowledge of God, His propinquity and blessings and salvation.
If one were to study the Holy Qur'an from one end to the other, one could never
find direct communication from God mentioned as an attribute of the believers or
of those who merit salvation. Instead, one finds verses which mention
characteristics such as those given in the following verses.
"The Believers must (eventually) win through: those who humble themselves in
their prayers)," (xxIII : 1-2)
"And the servants of the Merciful (God) are those who walk on the earth in
humility." (xxv: 63).
Or one might even turn the first page of the Qur'an to find these verses:
"Alif, Lam, Mim. 'This is the Book; in it is guidance, sure, without doubt, to
those who fear God; who believe in the Unseen, are steadfast in prayer, and
spend out of what We have provided for them:" (xI, 1-3).
Nowhere does one find Divine communication mentioned in the Qur'an as essential
for being rightly guided or for achieving salvation ? On the contrary, the
stress is primarily on faith in the Unseen. And faith in the Unseen means a
man's acceptance of facts relating to supra-physical matters which can- not be
grasped by reason or senses alone, an acceptance based on faith in God's prophet
(who had been chosen by God for His revelations). Now, if one were to accept the
Mirza's view that Divine communication is essential for true knowledge and
salvation, the need for faith in the Unseen becomes superfluous and the
persistent Quranic stress on it difficult to comprehend. Furthermore, we have
before us the lives of the illustrious companions of the Holy Prophet. One might
ask: how many of them were honoured by Divine communication ? How many can be
proved by history or Hadith (Traditions) to have enjoyed that privilege ? Nobody
who knows the history of those times and understands the temperaments and the
circumstances of those people--in fact, no- one who gi-asps human psychology and
human nature can say that these companions of the Prophet of God-and their
number exceeds the figure of one hundred thousand-had enjoyed Divine
communication. When such is the case in respect of the companions, what can be
said of those who came after them ?
Repudiation of Prophethood:
The concept of Divine communication as mentioned above was, in fact, a hidden
conspiracy, a clandestine revolt against prophethood as such. If this process
were to be considered a widespread one and one of unceasing continuity, prophets
would no longer remain necessary at all. The Qur'an and other scriptures link
true guidance, knowledge of God, of His Attributes, of His will and all matters
relating to the Unseen world, with prophethood. The Qur'an mentions, in the
words of the truly-guided believers:
"Praise be to God who hath guided us to this (felicity) : Never could we have
found guidance, had it not been for the guidance of God. Indeed, it was the
truth that t e Apostles of our Lord brought unto us."(VII : 43)
At another place, while refuting polytheistic and pagan notions, God says :
"Glory to thy Lord, The Lord of Honour and Power ; (He is free) from what' they
ascribe (to Him). And peace be on the Apostles. And Praise be to God, the Lord
and Cherisher of the Worlds!" (xxxvii.: 180: 82)
The Qur'an also explains the purpose of the advent of prophets as follows:-
"That mankind after (the coming of) the Apostles, should have no plea against
God." (iv : 165)
If one were to examine carefully the concepts preached by the Mirza regarding
the continuity of Divine communication, and takes note of his view that it was
essential for one's salvation, it would reveal not only a spirit of revolt
against the finality of prophethood, but would reveal symptoms against the very
idea of prophethood. In fact, if these concepts were to be taken seriously,
religious faith would become something akin to the spiritual feats such as
occultism which are becoming popular in the present times.
Source of Divine communication:
Then, what is the criterion of these communications ? And what is the guarantee
that these communications did not reflect either the inner being of the person
himself, or his environment, or his peculiar upbringing, or his sub-conscious
desires or else the complex of factors related to his heredity ? Those who have
studied the ancient collections of these communications know that the bulk of
them consists of completely erroneous hypotheses and concepts which had their
origin in ancient mythology. Look at the spiritual 'experiences and Divine
communications of the neo-Platonists of Egypt. Were they not merely geared to
the support of the idolatrous mythology and philosophical hypo- theses of the
time ? Even during the Islamic period some of the people who had a deep faith in
things such as Divine communication and craved for gnosis mention having met
Aristotle and having talked to him, which reflects the peculiar mental outlook
of ancient philosophy, or Greek mythology. And if one studies the Divine
communications which the Mirza claims to have received one finds in them
incontrovertible reflections of the time and environment of his life, his
upbringing, his subconscious urges; on the whole a reflection of the degenerate
and decadent society in which lie had been reared and, wherein he preached his
message. -In fact, these communications contain far enough evidence to force
anyone who knows the political history of modern India to the conclusion that
the real source of the Mirza's inspiration was the political authority ruling
over the country. ' Iqbal, who was a man of rare insight and had also studied
the Qadiani movement thoroughly, has made the following observation :
"I dare say the founder of the Ahmadiyya movement did hear a voice, but whether
the voice came from the God of Life and Power or arose out of the spiritual
impoverishment of the people must depend upon the nature of the movement which
it has created and the kind of thought and emotion which it has given to those
who have listened to it. The reader must not think that I am using metaphorical
language. The life-history of nations shows that when the tide of a people
begins to ebb, decadence itself becomes a source of inspiration; inspiring
poets, philosophers, saints and statesmen and turning them into a class of
apostles whose sole ministry is to glorify, by the force for a seductive art or
logic, all that is ignoble and ugly in the life of their people. These apostles
unconsciously clothe despair in the glaring garments of hope, undermine the
traditional values of conduct and thus destroy the spiritual virility of those
who happen to be their victims. One can only imagine the rotten state of a
people's will who are, on the basis of Divine authority, made to accept their
political environment as final. Thus the actors who participated in the drama of
Ahmadism were, I think, only innocent instruments in the hands of decadence. (Iqbal
Speeches and Writings, pp. 157-58.)
The Lahori Branch:
The branch of Qadianism which has had its headquarters until recently at Qadian,
and was later transferred to Rabwah under the second Khalifah and the Mirza's
own son, Bashiruddin Mahmood, has made the Mirza's prophethood its fundamental
article of faith. With great frankness and courage this group adheres to this
belief. No matter how objectionable this creed might be from the Islamic view
point, this group deserves the credit for having adopted a clear and categorical
standpoint and showing moral courage. It is al so beyond doubt that this group
faithfully represents the teachings of the Mirza, in so far as he had claimed
prophethood for himself in clear and vigorous terms.
But the standpoint of the Lahore branch, whose leader until a few years ago was
Maulavi Mohammad 'Ali (d.1952), is enigmatic to the core. Anyone who has studied
the writings of the Mirza knows that he explicitly claims prophethood and
regards all those who disbelieve in his prophethood to be Kafirs. If the
meanings of words are fixed, and they have to be taken in the sense in which the
speakers of that language understand them, and if Mirza had written his books in
order to convey his message to his compatriots, then there can be no doubt that
he did say that he was a prophet, that he had received revelation, that he was
entitled to prescribe divine ordinances and injunctions, that he was the bearer
of shariah (Divine Law), and that the one who rejected him was a Kafir and
doomed to hell-fire. But Maulavi Muhammad 'All seems to have had greater
sympathy with the Mirza than he had for himself or his offsprings have for him.
It appears that Maulavi Muhammad "All is keen to protect the greatness of the
Mirza and his religious services and perhaps is trying, both consciously as well
as sub-consciously, to keep his own deep attachment to, and veneration of, the
Mirza intact and, at the same time, to spare his soul and his religious
conscience the torment caused by the Mirza's shocking claim to be a prophet and
the consequent ex-communication of the Muslims, who rejected him, as Kafirs.
Muhammad 'All tries to show that the Mirza never claimed prophethood in the
technical sense of the word. Wherever the Mirza used terms like prophethood
(nabuwah) revelation (Wahi) and disbelief (Kufr), in Muhammad 'Ali's opinion he
used them in a mystical (Sufi) sense, that is, these words have an allegorical
and metaphorical import. It is obvious that if well-known and commonly used
religious terms were to be taken as sufistic mysteries, or as allegories and
metaphors, then the writings and statements of any person can be interpreted. in
all possible ways and no connotation can be fixed for any piece of writing.
Maulavi Muhammad 'Ali considers the Mirza to be the greatest Mujaddid and
reformer of the fourteenth century (of Hijrah), and above all that, the Promised
Messiah. It is at this point that the two branches of Qadianism meet. Even in
his commentary of the Holy Qur'an, there are indications that he considered the
Mirza to be the Promised Messiah. For instance, at one place in his Urdu
commentary of the Holy Qur'an he writes:
Muhammad (peace and blessings of God be on him) was sent to all mankind and his
time extends to the Day of judgement. And, hence to consider oneself to be in
need of some other messenger or prophet is ingratitude to this great benefactor.
Thus, the prophecy about the advent of the son of Mary in the Hadith can
only-mean that someone of this ummah Will come bearing resemblance Ito the son
of Mary. This corresponds to the prophecy of the second advent of Elijah (Ilyis)
which was fulfilled by the coming of John (Yahya) in the manner of Elijah. This
statement of the Noble Qur'an prevents Jesus from coming back personally to the
Muhammadan ummah. (Tafsir, Buyan al-Qur'an, Vol. 1, p. 317.)
In his works, too, he generally refers to Mirza as "the Promised Messiah". (See
for instance, his al-Nabuwah fi al-Islam and also Radd-i-Takfir ahl-i- Qiblah.)
However, here we would confine ourselves to a glance at his commentary of the
Holy Qur'an in order to find out his religious attitudes and tendencies.
A study of his Commentary of the Holy Qur'an shows that Muhammad 'Ali's mind had
almost completely assimilated Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan's mode of thinking as well
as his method of interpreting the Qur'an. H is close contact with Hakim Nuruddin
and his lessons in exegesis (Tafsir) of the Qur'an from the latter further
reinforced the tendencies he had imbibed from Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan. Infact,
Mohammad 'Ali is a typical example of the kind of people found among the Muslims
today. He is keen to present Qur'an before the modern world and before those
educated in the modern tradition. At the same time, his own mental framework and
his intellectual upbringing prevent him from accepting facts relating to the
Unseen World and the facts not comprehended by limited human intellect. He
represents, therefore, the attitudes of those Muslims who have accepted all the
results of modern scientific researches, or to be more accurate, they have
accepted the well-known concepts of science-as distinguished from scientific
facts-as axiomatic and have set them up as the criterion for the acceptance or
rejection of everything, including the teachings of religion and the contents of
heavenly scriptures. Such people have a frame of mind which is, on the whole
averse to belief in the Unseen World and in miracles. At the same time, they
also have a religious inclination which makes them disincline d to repudiate the
clear texts of the Qur'an. Hence-, they try to strike a middle path. They
interpret the Quranic texts relating to the Unseen World and miracles in such a
manner as would not go counter to the concepts and ideas in vogue in the present
times. In short, it is an attempt to make Islam palatable to the modern mind. To
achieve this end, Muhammad Ali interprets Quranic verses in a highly arbitrary
and exotic manner. He goes to a ridiculous length of casuistry in order to
support his interpretation on the basis of the feeblest of evidences. In these
explanations he sets aside all that might stand in the way of making Qur'an
conform to the whims and inclinations of the modern man. The accepted principles
of Tafsir, the rules of language and literature, the known usages of terms, the
understanding of these terms on the part of the companions of the Prophet and
Arabic-speaking people, the exegesis of the earlier scholars, all these are
rejected out of hand to show that Quranic verses have nothing which can be
regarded as 'out of fashion' in the present age. In this his comments are very
similar to those of Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan. Below are a few examples which will
show Muhammad 'Ali's adventures in the realm of Quranic exegesis:
In the Second Chapter of Qur'an it has been said that when Moses (peace of God
be on him) prayed to God (for water for his people in a wilderness), be was
asked to' strike with his staff. This made twelve springs gush forth and the
twelve tribes of the Israelites drank to their full. The Quranic verses read :
"And when Moses prayed for water for his people, We said: Strike the rock with
thy staff. So there flowed from it twelve springs. Each tribe knew its drinking
place."
If one were to interpret this verse in the light of the words in which this
incident has been conveyed and in the way it has been understood by all since
the day it was revealed to the Prophets one would be forced to the conclusion
that this was a supernatural event brought about in a manner contrary to the
natural law of causation. However, such an occurrence is, obviously, contrary to
normal human experience and runs counter to our understanding of physical and
geological laws. This forced Muhammad 'Ali to inter ret it in. quite a novel
way. Let us reproduce what he hag to say on the point :
"The words idrib bi asa ka-l-hajara may be translated in two ways, strike the
rock with thy staff, or march on or go forth or hasten, to the rock with thy
staff. Darb means striking, smiting, marching on, going from place to place,
setting forth a parable, and carries a number of other significances. In fact,
darb is used to indicate all kinds of actions except a few (Taj al-" Arus). When
arda (land or earth) is its object, it carries the significance of going about
or seeking a way. Thus daraba-l-ard or darab fi-l-ardhi, both signify he
journeyed in the land or went forth o in the land (Arabic-English Lexicon by
Lane). The object, of idrib here is al-hajar which means a rock or a mountain to
which there is no access. 'Asa ordinarily means staff or rod, but its primary
significance is a state of combination (Taj al-I'Arus and Lane's Lexicon), and
the word is metapborically used to speak of a community. Thus, of the Khawarij,
a Muslim sect, it is said Shaqqa asa-l-Muslimina (lit. they broke the staff of
the Muslims which means that they made a schism in the state of combination and
union, or in the community of the Muslims-Lisan al-'Arab). Hence, the words may
mean strike the rock with thy staff, or march on to the mountain with thy staff
or thy community. What the words of the Qur'an signify is either that Moses was
commanded by God to smite a particular rock with his staff from which water
'flowed, forth miraculously, or to march on to a mountain from which springs
flowed, (Muhammad (Ali's English Commentary, p. 29.) What is significant about
this interpretation of the verse put forth by Muhammad 'Ali is that the latter
alternative has been preferred by him because affirmation of miracles appears
old- fashioned and "unscientific".
(2) Another instance is his explanation of the following verse :
"And when you killed a man, then you disagreed about it. And Allah was to bring
forth what you were hiding. So, We said: Smite him with a part of it. Thus Allah
brings the dead to life, and He shows you His signs that you may understand."
Now, the general Muslim interpretation of the incident is that an Israelite had
been killed and the Israelites were not succeeding in tracing out the murderer.
The successors of the dead asked Moses to find out from God who the murderer
was. Earlier, the Israelites had been asked to slaughter a cow which they had
done after considerable hesitation and with a feeling of remorse. In order to
show the wisdom and reward of their compliance with Divine commandment, God
ordered them to smite the dead man with some part of slaughtered cow which would
make the dead man tell the name of the murderer. This was a very effective means
of teaching the Jews the blessings of honouring and obeying God's commandments.
In fact, anyone who goes through these Qur'anic verses without any preconceived
notion is bound to interpret it in no 'other manner. But since this involved a
categorical affirmation of miracle, Mohammad 'Ali explains- the verses quite
differently:
"The story generally narrated by the commentators to explain this passage is not
based on any saying. of the Holy Prophet, nor is it met with in the Bible. The
very indefiniteness of the incident is an indication that it refers to some
well-known event in history, and as almost all incidents of the stubbornness of
the Jewish nation prior to the time of Jesus have been mentioned, it becomes
almost certain that this incident refers to Jesus himself, as it was with
respect to his death that -disagreement took place and 'pa many doubted his
death. This reference becomes stronger when We compare the incidents narrated
here with the same incidents as narrated in the fourth Chapter vv. 153-57, when
after enumerating almost all the incidents narrated here in the three previous
sections, the Qur'an goes on to accuse the Jews in the following words "And they
are saying: Surely we have killed the Messiah, Jesus, son of Mary, the messenger
of Allah : and they killed him not nor did they crucify him, but he was made to
appear to them as such, and those who differ therein are surely in doubt about
it; they have no knowledge representing. it, -but only f6llow a conjecture" (4:
157). The part quoted answers exactly vv. 72 and 73, only the 'name is omitted
here. The comparison makes it clear that it is the apparent killing of Jesus
that is referred to here, The words that you killed (Arabic : qataltum) are
used, because in. the first place the Jews asserted that they had killed him,
and, secondly, because metaphorically a man may be said to have been killed when
he is made to appear as if he were dead . (Muhammad Ali's English Commentary, p.
34.) As for the part of the verse which mentions the order to smite the dead
body, he explains the phrase "a part of it", as follows :
The construction of the phrase idritrbuhu bi ba'di-ha is rather difficult, but a
comparison with 4: 157 makes the meaning clear. Darb ......... conveys a number
of significations. It means striking as well as likening, and as an instance of
the latter significance we find in the Qur'an itself, where it is said
Yadribu-Ilahu-l-Haqq wa-l-Batila, 'Allah compares truth and falsehood."
"'In ba'di-ha (lit, a part of it) the personal pronoun ha i.e. it refers to the
act of murder. The act of murder was not completed in the case of Jesus, as the
Gospels show,- for after he was taken down from the cross his legs were not
broken as in the case of the thieves. The meaning of the sentence is therefore
according to the signification of darb that we adopt: strike him with partial
death, or liken his condition to that of the partially dead m. an, and thus he
was made to appear as a dead man, as stated in 4 : 157. There is no other case
of murder or an attempted murder in Jewish history of which the whole nation
could be said to have been guilty, and which might answer to the description of
these two Verges. (Ibid., p. 35)
This type of reasoning is fairly illustrative of the mentality we have spoken of
above. In order to avoid affirming a miracle all kinds of involved reasoning is
employed, including the contention (see the above citation) that the feminine
pronoun was used as masculine, and the incident of Jesus (peace be on him) was
tagged on to these verses, without there being for it any contextual relevance
whatsoever.
(3) The Quran repeatedly mentions that to provide evidence of his prophethood,
Jesus made from clay the form of a bird' and then he breathed into the model
which sprang into life and flew into the air like a real bird.
"And I made for you from clay the form of a bird, then I breathe into it and it
came a bird with Allah's permission."
The verse obviously suggests a miracle. In order to avoid that, Muhammad 'Ali
gives an out-and- out figurative interpretation of the verse. His interpretation
of the verse is novel since he assigns an altogether novel signification to the
four terms used in the verse : Khalq, tin, nafkh, and tair. Khalq according to
him, here means the determining of a thing. As for tin and nafkh, he says "Man
is spoken of as being created from tin or dust, which stands for his humble
origin, but the nafkh or breathing into him makes him deserving of respect by
the angels." Then comes the word tair which, says Muhammad 'Ali, means a bird
just as the word asad (lit, a lion) is figuratively used for a brave man. In a
parable it is quite unobjectionable, says Muhammad 'Ali, to take the word fair
'as signifying one who soars into the higher spiritual regions and is not bent
low upon earth or earthy things. In the light of these novel significations
given to the words, Muhammad Ali considers the verse to mean :
"So that is meant here is that-Jesus, by breathing a spirit into mortals, will
make them rise above those who are bent upon the earth, and the apostles of
Jesus, who were all' men of humble origin (which is referred to in the word dust
in the parable), whose thoughts had never risen higher than their own humble
cares, left everything for the master's sake and went into the world by the
command of the, master, preaching truth. Here was, no doubt, mere dust having
the form of a bird, which the messenger of God converted into high-soaring birds
by breathing the truth into them. (Muhammad 'Ali's English Commentary, p. 144.)
(4) The Qur'an mentions Solomon enumerating the favours of God unto him. He said
:
"On man, we have been taught the speech of birds, and we have been granted of
all things."
Since knowledge of "speech of birds" is contrary to normal human experience,
Muhammad 'All considers the knowledge of speech of birds to mean. Solomon's use
of birds for conveying messages. Iii his own words: -
"Solomon's understanding of the speech of birds may imply that he made use of
birds to convey messages from one place to another, these messages being
metaphorically called the speech of birds." (Ibid)
The following verse reads:
"Till when they came to the valley of the ants, the she- ant said: "O ants,
enter your abodes."
Here again Muhammad, Ali gives a free rein to his imagination. According to him,
Wad al-Naml does not mean, as it apparently does and as it has been interpreted
by exegetists, the 'valley of ants', but the valley of an Arab tribe called Banu
Namlah, and the word namlah (she-ant) mentioned in the verse has been explained
by him as follows:
('It is the name of a tribe.….... The name Namlah used also to be given to a
child in whose hand an ant was placed at its birth, because it was said that
such a child would be wise and intelligent. (Ibid., p. 731.)
(5) In the Quranic chapter entitled Saba it has, been mentioned about Solomon:
"But when We decreed death for him, naught showed them (the jinn) his death
except a creature of the earth who ate away his staff." (xxxxv: 14)
The Muslim exegetists in explaining this verse point out that Solomon was having
his temple constructed by jinn. When he came to know that the time of his death
had arrived, he explained the plan of construction to the jinn, shut himself up
in a house of glass; and devoted himself to the worship of God. In this state,
the angel took the breath of life out of him. His corpse kept standing by the
support of a wooden staff. The jinn kept on working for long. None sensed that
Solomon had died. When the construction was completed, the staff which had
supported his corpse fell down because of its having been eaten up by a motif.
It was then that his death became known. The jinn also realised the limitations
of their knowledge of the Unseen. Their human followers too came to realise that
bad -the jinn become aware of Solomon's death by virtue of their capacity to
know the Unseen, they would have got rid of the humiliation they had been
enduring so long.
Now, since all this could be accepted only if supernormal things are affirmed,
Muhammad 'Ali again comes forward with a strange explanation. This is what he
has to say on the question:
"The reference in the creature of the earth that ate away, His staff is to his
son's weak rule, under whom the kingdom of Solomon went to pieces. It appears
that Solomon's successor, Rehoboarm, led a life of luxury and case, and instead
of acting on the advice of older men, be yielded to the pleasure-seeking wishes
of his companions (Kings: 12:13), and, it is to his luxurious habits and easy
mode of life that the Holy Qur'an refers when it calls him a creature of the
earth. The eating away of his staff signifies the disruption of the Kingdom. The
jinn, as already remarked, mean the rebellious tribes who had been reduced to
subjection by Solomon, and who remained in subjection to the Israelites for a
time, until the Kingdom was shattered.(Muhammad Ali's English Commentary, p.
825.)
(6) Another example of the same trend is his explanation of the following verse
:
"And he reviewed the birds, then said: How is it I see not hudhad, or is it that
he is one of the absentees." (27:20)
The word hudhud has been understood as signifying a particular species of birds
(hoopoe). The same view is corroborated by the context because a little earlier
there is a mention of Solomon's knowledge of the speech of birds arid, again,
since it is the birds that he is reviewing. But since it is not normal that a
human being should converse with birds and call it to account, and the bird
should explain its conduct before him, Muhammad 'Ali let his imagination loose
and interpreted hudhud as the chief officer of Solomon's Department of
Intelligence. He wrote:
"By Hudhud is not to be understood lapwing, but a person of that name. In many
languages many of the pro- per names given to men will be found to be identical
with the names of animals. The Arab writers speak of a king of Himyar as Hudad
(Lisan al-'Arab), which is almost identical with Hudhud mentioned in the Qur'an
..….. The verses that follow show clearly that Solomon was speaking of one of
his own officers .............. "
In his Urdu Tafsir be elaborates the situation, pointing out that Hudhud was an
intelligence officer and that when Solomon reviewed the birds who- were used to
carry on intelligence work, he found the officer of the intelligence department,
Hudhud, absent. (See his Tafsir at-Bayan, VOL. 111, (P. 1413)
(7) The Qur'an mentions the existence of a distinct species called jinn, inter
alia, in the following verse :
"Say: It has been revealed to me that a party of the jinn listened, so they
said: Surely we have heard a wonderful Qur'an. (LXXII: 1) (Muhammad Ali's
English Commentary, pp. 731-32,)
'The testimonies of Qur'an and Hadith, the continuity of Muslim belief, as well
as human observations, are too overwhelming on the question to warrant the
denial of existence of a separate species of ethereal beings. Muhammad 'Ali too
could not explicitly reject this belief as erroneous. He merely seems to evade
the question. He tries, therefore, to give other meanings of the term, depending
upon the contexts in which the term occurs. At one place he considers the word
jinn to signify "great potentates or powerful leaders who, through their
importance and detachment from the masses, do not mix freely with them, so they
remain distant or "hidden" from their eyes. (Muhammad Ali's English Commentary,
pp. 306,) "No less strange is his feat of imagination in trying to explain that
the term in the Quranic verse mentioned above refers to Christians. (Ibid., p.
1107) He regards the opening verses of this chapter as prophetical, "speaking of
some future time when Christian nations forming the bulk of mankind-such being
one of the significances of the word jinn (Lane's Lexicon)-will accept the truth
of the message brought by the Prophet. (Ibid., p. 1107)
These are just a few examples. The huge Commetary of Muhammad 'Ali is replete
with such distortions under the immature impression that modern science was,
opposed to, belief in miracles or in the occurrence of an event which is of a
supernatural order.
At this point a sound thinking person is bound to ask himself the question: did
the Companions of the Holy Prophet, who were the first addressees of the Qur'an,
and in whose mother-tongue the Qur'an was revealed and who had the honour of
having been instructed b the Holy Prophet himself, also understood the same
import of the verses as has been explained by this new-fanged exegetist? Did
they also think that "strike the staff on the rock' meant 'march on to the
mountain with thy community'? Did they also think that 'And strike him with part
of' it' meant 'kill him only partially'? Did they also think that the claim of
Jesus of 'Creating birds out of clay' meant 'infusing the spirit to rise above
earthly concerns'? Did they also think that 'the speech of birds' meant
'message-carrying birds', that the 'creature, of the earth' referred to
Solomon's son, Rehoboam, and that 'jinn' meant the 'Christian nations of
Europe'? In the same way, did any of the followers of these companions, or any
Arab linguists, or scholars and exegetists understand something similar to what
Muhammad 'Ali understood from them? It would be bard to say 'Yes' for we have
before us the entire treasure of Tafsir literature arid it testifies to the
originality of Mohammad Ali's brain. None of the profound scholars of Arabic and
its literature can even imagine that these verses could, by any stretch of
imagination, mean what this non-Arab scholar thinks they mean, almost for the
first time after more than thirteen hundred years.
This being the case, one is left wondering about the significance of the Quranic
claim of being a 'clear book' which has been revealed in 'clear Arabic.' The
Qur'an itself makes the claim in these words:
"And surely this is a revelation from the Lord of the Worlds' The faithful
spirit has brought it on thy heart so that thou mayst be a Warner in plain
Arabic language." (XXVI: 192-95)
"These Are the verses of the Book that makes manifest.
Surely we have revealed it-an Arabic Qur'an-that you may understand." (XII:
1-2).
Another verse says :
"And certainly We have made the Qur'an easy to understand. Now, is there any one
who will ponder"? (LIV: 17)
If Muhammad Ali's approach were to be considered sound, it would mean that for
more than thirteen hundred years the Qur'an remained an incomprehensible
mystery, an unsolved puzzle, To disregard the obvious meaning of Quranic verses,
to set aside the well-known rules of Arabic language and grammar, to neglect the
interpretations of Qur'an made by the companions of the Prophet, to overlook the
context of relevant Prophetic Traditions-all this means subjecting the Qur'an to
distortion and reducing it to a plaything. This is a great danger and portends
ill for Muslims if people promoting this kind of approach find an encouraging
response from them. Long ago Mirza Ghulam Ahmad made a very apt remark About the
Tafsir of Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan. Nothing could apply more adequately to the
Tafsir of Muhammad 'Ali. He said:
"These interpretations of the Holy Qur'an which were neither in the knowledge of
God's Prophet, nor in the knowledge of his companions, nor in the knowledge of
saints and aqtab and ghawth and abdal, nor have any direct or indirect textual
evidence, have caught the imagination of Sir Sayyid."
Contribution of Qadianism to the Muslim
World:
Now that we have studied the life of the founder of Qadianism, traced the
evolution of its doctrines, and noted its doctrinal emphasis, etc., we are in a
position to attempt historical evaluation of Qadianism and see what achievements
go to its credit in the history of the reformist movements in Islam? What has it
given to the present generation of Muslims ? What has been the practical
outcomes of this religious hullabaloo which has been going on for about three
quarters of a century? The founder of the movement has bequeathed a whole
library of his works on, all kinds of religious subject, particularly
controversial matters, and they have been under discussion for over seventy
years, What is the essence of these works and what ate they really driving at?
What is the message of Qadianism for the present age?
To answer these questions, we should cast a glance at the Muslim world itself
wherein the movement arose. We should also have a look at the state of the
Muslim world during the second half of the nineteenth century, and its problems
and difficulties.
The most important event which took place during this period of time which can
be ignored neither by a historian nor a reformer is the aggression of Europe on
-the Muslim world, particularly India. The educational system that came in its
train was devoid of the spirit of god-consciousness, and the culture which
sprang from this new world-view was permeated with ungodliness and sensuality.
The world of Islam fell an easy prey to this nascent but militarily
well-equipped European power because it had become impoverished in all respects:
in respect of faith, of knowledge, and of material resources. This was the time
when a conflict of colossal importance took place the conflict between religion
(and Islam alone was in the field to represent religion) and the ungodly and
materialistic culture of Europe. This conflict gave birth to a large number of
political, cultural, intellectual and social problems-problems which could have
been solved only through strong and unshakable faith, profound and extensive
knowledge and extraordinary self- confidence and perseverance. To encounter this
situation, the Muslim world needed a great spiritual and intellectual
personality who could infuse the spirit of jihad (struggle) in the Muslim world,
unite the Muslims, be able to withstand the least distortion of Islamic
teachings, bring about a rapprochement between the eternal message of Islam and
the restless spirit of the present age by dint of his strength of faith;
intellectual acumen, and meet squarely the challenge of the zestful and buoyant
West.
This was one aspect of the problems faced by the Muslim world of that time. The
other aspect of the Muslim world was that it appeared to be infested with
religious and moral ailments, the most gruesome of which was the rise of
doctrines and practices which bore the imprint of polytheistic influences.
Tazids and graves were worshipped. People swore in the names of others than God.
Innovations in religion were popular every-where & Superstitions and meaningless
beliefs were rampant. This situation called for a reformer of tremendous
dimensions: a reformer who could rage the Islamic society of anti-Islamic
influences, remind the Muslims of the true doctrine of Tawhid, and stress the
obligation of adhering to the Sunnah of the Prophet; in short, one who could
thoroughly purify the religious life of Muslims.
Besides this, the contact with foreign nations and a materialistic culture had
begun to corrode the Muslims socially and degenerate them morally. Moral
degeneration had gone to the extent of unabashed sinfulness; love of extravagant
and luxurious living to the extent of licentious self-indulgence; docile
obedience to their rulers to the extent of intellectual subservience and loss of
self-respect ; and, the tendency to imitate the Western culture and the way of
life of their British masters to the extent of the repudiation of the teachings
of Islam. The situation obviously demanded the rise of a great crusader against
these degenerating tendencies, a crusader who would put a stop to the tidal
waves of moral and intellectual decline and counteract the harmful effects of
political slavery and its offshoot of ihental bondage.
Again, there was the problem in of ignorance: the ignorance of even the
rudiments of. Islam on the part of a great majority of Nftislims. As for the
people educated along modern lines, they were unaware of Islam") of the
normative principles of the Muslim way of life, of the history of Islam, and of
the greatness of their own past, and were, on the whole, pessimistic about its
future. Islamic religious sciences were in a state of decay, and the old centres
of learning appeared to be on the verge of collapse, All this meant that a new,
vigorous educational movement was needed, a movement to set up new schools and
madrasas, as well as to produce forceful books in order to improve the knowledge
of Muslims about their religion, awaken their religious consciousness and create
in them a deep faith in the teachings of Islam.
Even more important than all these was another crying need of the Muslim world:
the need to summon the Muslims in the manner of the prophets, to live a truly
Islamic life characterised by strong faith and righteous action. It is this
alone which entitles the Muslims to the help of God, to their predominance over
the enemies, and to their salvation in this world as well as in the next and
every kind of felicity and honour. The fact is that the real need of the Muslim
world has never been, nor will it ever be a fresh religion: all that it has
needed is a fresh and deeper faith in Islam. Never has the world of Islam needed
a new religion, or a new prophet. It has meroy extent of unabashed sinfulness;
love of extravagant and luxurious living to the extent of licentious
self-indulgence; docile obedience to their rulers to the extent of intellectual
subservience and loss of self-respect ; and, the tendency to imitate the Western
culture and the way of life of their British masters to the extent of the
repudiation of the teachings of Islam. The situation obviously demanded the rise
of a great crusader against these degenerating tendencies, a crusader who would
put a stop to the tidal waves of moral and intellectual decline and counteract
the harmful effects of political slavery and its offshoot of ihental bondage.
Again, there was the problem in of ignorance: the ignorance of even the
rudiments of. Islam on the part of a great majority of Nftislims. As for the
people educated along modern lines, they were unaware of Islam") of the
normative principles of the Muslim way of life, of the history of Islam, and of
the greatness of their own past, and were, on the whole, pessimistic about its
future. Islamic religious sciences were in a state of decay, and the old centres
of learning appeared to be on the verge of collapse, All this meant that a new,
vigorous educational movement was needed, a movement to set up new schools and
madrasas, as well as to produce forceful books in order to improve the knowledge
of Muslims about their religion, awaken their religious consciousness and create
in them a deep faith in the teachings of Islam.
Even more important than all these was another crying need of the Muslim world:
the need to summon the Muslims in the manner of the prophets, to live a truly
Islamic life characterised by strong faith and righteous action. It is this
alone which entitles the Muslims to the help of God, to their predominance over
the enemies, and to their salvation in this world as well as in the next and
every kind of felicity and honour. The fact is that the real need of the Muslim
world has never been, nor will it ever be a fresh religion: all that it has
needed is a fresh and deeper faith in Islam. Never has the world of Islam needed
a new religion, or a new prophet. It has meroy been in need of a, fresh faith
in, and fresh enthusiasm for, the eternal truths: the beliefs and the teachings
last of all the prophets, Muhammad (peace be on him). This faith is adequate
enough to encounter the evil tendencies that might arise in any age and resist
the new temptations that the changing time brings along with it.
In response to the crying needs of the Muslim world mentioned by us there arose
numerous personalities and movements in the Muslim world. They made no big
claims, nor did they try to create a new ummah. All they did was to fulfil these
important needs as best as they could, and in so doing they inspired a great
number of Muslims. They neither tried to promote a new religion, nor invited
people to rall around some new prophet, nor did they create anarchy in Muslim
ranks. They wasted none of their capabilities in futile tasks. Such
personalities and movements proved to be an unmixed blessing to the Muslim
world, their mission was free from all possibilities of harm, and their work,
commendable beyond any shadow, of doubt. Without having lost anything, the
Muslims benefited from them and to them they owe a heavy debt of gratitude.
At such a critical movement, in the most crucial area of the Muslim world,
India, which was the main scene of intellectual and political conflicts, they
also arose Mirza Ghulam Ahmad to initiate a new movement. What is noteworthy
about him is that he totally disregarded some of the most important problems
which were confronting the Muslim world in his days and focused all his
attention on one question alone. Now, what was it?' The question of the death of
Messiah and. the claim on his own part to be the Promised Messiah. Whatever time
and energy was left after concentrating on this issue was spent on propagating
that jihad bad become prohibited and that loyalty to the British Government was
a religious imperative. For about a quarter of a century these very questions
continued to be debated by him at great length. If the writings of the Mirza on
the question of Messiah were to be expunged from his works, hardly anything of
significance will be left in them.
Moreover, it is also to be noted that the Mirza raised the standard of his
prophethood and declared all those who did not accept his claim as kafirs in a
Muslim world which was already torn by dissensions. By so doing, however, the
Mirza raised an iron wall between himself and the Muslims. On the one side of
this wall there are a few thousand followers of the Mirza, and on the other
-side is the rest of the Muslim world which stretches from Morocco to China and
has great personalities, virtuous movements of reform, and valuable
institutions. - They stand isolated from and opposed to the whole of this world.
Thus he unnecessarily added to the difficulties of Muslims, further aggravated
their disunity and added a new complication to the problems facing them.
The Mirza has made no worthwhile contribution to the intellectual and religious
heritage of Muslims which would call for his recognition and because of which he
might deserve the gratitude of the present generation of Muslims. Nor did he
initiate a broad-based movement for the revival of Islam which could profit the
Muslims as a whole, nor help Muslims to solve any of the major problems facing
them, nor did his movement contain any message for the contemporary civilization
which is in the grips of a major crisis and is interlocked in a life and death
struggle. Nor can he even be credited with any significant achievement vis-a-vis
the expansion of Islam either in India or Europe. His message remained addressed
to the Muslims and of necessity could only lead to mental confusion and
unnecessary religious squabbles within the Muslim community. If the Mirza can be
considered successful, it is only in so far as he bequeathed to his family the
legacy of spiritual leadership and worldly prosperity, the legacy of a kind of
theocracy in which respect he is comparable to the Agha Khan and his ancestors.
The fact is that it is merely a set of favourable circumstances and not any
inner vitality which accounts for the survival of Zadianism for several decades.
It owes a good deal to the intellectual bewilderment found in India, and
particularly in Punjab in his time. Qadianism is also indebted to the dominance
of the British in India which had weakened the bases of Islamic life so that the
rising generation of Muslims had become profoundly ignorant of the teachings of
Islam and the characteristics and attributes of prophethood and true spiritual
leader- ship. It owes a debt of gratitude to the encouragement and patronage it
received from, the British rulers. Had it not been these factors, Qadianism
which bases itself mainly on inspirations, dreams, fantastic interpretations of
religious texts and dry, and lifeless theological quibbling, which have no moral
and spiritual message for the present age, nor any imaginative solution for the
problems of our time, could never have remained alive as long as it has managed
to do in this degenerate and confused generation. It seems to me that we have
been punished by God for the ingratitude that Muslims have shown to Him in the
past by deviating from the teachings of Islam, and the crimes we have committed
by not fully recognizing the true 'Servants of the cause of Islam who rose
amidst us. For all these crimes we have received what we unfortunately
deserved-this intellectual plague and the rising up of this man amidst us who
has sown the seeds of periapt discord and Disunity.
A few years ago while lecturing at. the University of Damascus on the movements
of reform and revival of true Islam ,in the past I 'made the following
observation about Bitinite movement which appears worth reproducing in the
context of Qadianism When I read the histories of Baatinite movement, of in
India, a Ikhawan at-saj"a, of Bahgism in Iran and Qadianism it seems to me that
when the founders of these movements read the history of Islam and the life of
the Prophet it struck them that a man, All by himself stood up with a mission in
Arabia, without any- money to back him, -or any army to support him; he summoned
people towards a creed, towards a religion And not after very long there came
into existence a new ummah, a new state, and a new future. They also noticed
that single-handed be changed the direction of human history, and forced events
to flow into a different channel. The ambitious natures of these men then
whispered to them: "Why not try?" These people knew that they had intelligence,
remarkable mental capabilities and organising ability. They thought, therefore,
that- history might repeat itself in their case, following the natural pattern
of cause and effect. These people had expected the same kind of miraculous
success to crown their efforts, as had crowned the efforts of the unlettered
Prophet of Arabia in the sixth century, for, they thought that human nature
remained always-the same, and if it had responded to Muhammad in the past, there
was no reason who it should not respond to them now.
"These persons did have a glimpse of the greatness of Muhammad (peace be on
him), who carried his movement to a successful end, but could not seethe Divine
support which was his real strength, nor the Divine. Will of which be was an
instrument.
"The result was that for a very short period of time, the efforts of these,
ambitious people did bear some fruit. There gathered behind them a following,
sometimes of several hundred thousand people. Some of them, (e.g. Bitinites)
even succeeded in establishing a state of their own (the Fatimide State) which
for some time covered a fairly wide area from Sudan to Morocco. But all this
remained only as long as they were able to maintain their organisational
efficiency, their wizardry and their secret administrative network. But when
these things were gone, all their power and glory also became a poignant Memory
of the past. With the loss of worldly power, the religious movement shrank and
obscured and lost all significance for human life. Against this, is the true
Islam preached by the last messenger of Allah (peace be on him). It constitutes
today, as it constituted yesterday : a great spiritual force in the world, the
guiding star and inspiration of a great ummah. It still possesses a distinctive
culture which sprang from the spirit of its teachings. It is still the religion
of a number of states and peoples. The sun of Muhammad's prophethood is still
shining brilliantly in the sky. Never in history has it suffered an eclipse and
it never will."
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Article
taken (with Thanks) from As-Sidq
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