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Family
History HAZRAT
MIRZA GHULAM AHMAD, the founder of the Ahmadiyya
movement, was born at Qadian, a village in the Gurdaspur
District, Punjab, in 1836. His father's name was Mirza
Ghulam Murtaza, and the family is descended from the
Barlas tribe of the Moghul family. His ancestors had long
resided In Khurasan, a province of Persia, and were the
dignitaries of the land. In the tenth century of the
Hijra, when Babar ruled India, one of his ancestors,
Mirza Hadi Beg, emigrated from Persia, most probably on
account of some family dissensions, and with his family
and about' two hundred attendants sought refuge in India.
Settling in a vast and fertile sub-Himalayan plain,
called the Majjha, he there built a village, about 70
miles from Lahore in a northeasterly direction, and
called it Islampur. The ruling monarch granted him a vast
tract of land as a jagir with the right to
exercise the powers of a Qadzi (magistrate) or
chief executive authority. Hence, Islampur became known
as Islampur Qadi Majjhi, ultimately shortened to Qadi,
and at last became known as Qadian.
In the latter days of the
Moghul Empire, when it was undergoing the process of
dissolution, the jagir granted to the ancestors of
hazrat Ahmad became an independent state. In the early
days of the Sikh rule, when anarchy and oppression were
the order of the day and Islam and the Muslims were being
persecuted everywhere, Qadian remained for a long time
the centre of peace and prosperity. Mirza Gul Muhammad,
the great-grandfather of hazrat Ahmad*, was then the head
of the family and, after the manner of the good Oriental
chiefs, his purse wasfor the learned and his table
ministered freely to the poor and to the strangers. He
had only eighty-five villages in his possession but, on
account of his great love for piety and learning, many of
the learned men who could not find shelter elsewhere felt
assured of a warm reception at Qadian.
* The shortened name Ahmad is
adopted instead of the full name Hazrat Mirza
Ghulam Ahmad for the sake of brevity. This is the
name which he adopted in taking bai'a (oath of
fealty), though in all his letters and writings
he used his full name. In his revelations, both
the long and the shortened forms occur; the
following reason for this is from his own pen:
"As being
the manifestation of the holy Prophet. I was
called Ahmad, though my name was Ghulam
Ahmad" (Review of Religions.
vol.11. p. 437).
|
After the death of Mirza
Gul Muhammad, his son, Mirza 'Ata Muhammad, became the
chief, but he was soon overpowered by the Sikhs, who
seized village after village until not a single village,
except Qadian, was left in his possession. This place was
strongly fortified, but a body of Sikhs, called Ram
Garhis, made an entry into the town under false pretences
and took possession of the village. Mirza 'Ata Muhammad
and his whole family were made prisoners and deprived of
their possessions. Their houses and the mosques were made
desolate, and the library was burned to the ground. After
inflicting all kinds of torture, the sikhs ordered the
family to leave the village of Qadian. Thus, expelled
from their home, they sought shelter in another state,
where his enemies poisoned Ata Muhammad. In the latter
days of Ranjit Singh's ascendancy, Mirza Ghulam Murtaza
obtained five villages from the jagir of his
ancestors and re-settled at Qadian. Below is reproduced
theng paragraph of Sir Lepel Griffin's account of
the family, published in the Punjab Chiefs:
"1n 1530, the
last year of the Emperor Babar's reign, Hadi Beg, a
Mughal of Samarqand, emigrated to the Punjab and
settled in Gurdaspur District. He was a man of some
learning, and was appointed Kazi or Magistrate over
seventy villages in the neighborhood of Kadian, which
town he is said to have founded, naming it Islampur
Kazi, from which Kadian has by a natural change
arisen. For several generations the family has held
offices of respectability under the imperial
Government, and it was only when the Sikh became
powerful that it fell into poverty."
The Sikh anarchy was, soon
after Hazrat Ahmad's birth, replaced by the peace and
security of the British rule, and the Punjab Muslims once
more breathed freely. The family naturally welcomed the
change, and Mirza Ghulam Murtaza showed his staunch
loyalty to the British rule in the Mutiny of 1857. In
recognition of his services, he received a handsome
pension and was highly esteemed by the officials.
Hazrat Ahmad's own
impressions of the Sikh misrule and the persecution of
Muslims were deep-seated, and he always spoke of the
coming of the British as a blessing and as saving the
Punjab Muslims from slavery and annihilation. It is for
this matter-of-fact statement, which finds frequent
expression in his writings, that he has been criticized
by a certain school of politicians, who, therefore,
regard him as favoring an alien government.
Education
In his childhood, Hazrat
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad received his education at home. He
learned the Holy Quran and some Persian books from a
tutor named Fazl Ilahi, and later on some books on Arabic
grammar from another tutor, named Fazl Ahmad. When he was
seventeen or eighteen years old, a third tutor, Gul Ali
Shah, was employed to teach him the ordinary Arabic
textbooks of those days. He also studied some works on
medicine from his father, who was a famous physician in
his time.
Righteous and
God-fearing
From his early days,
Hazrat Ahmad had studious habits and he loved to remain
in seclusion with his books. His father was, on that
account, very anxious about him and repeatedly asked him
to leave his seclusion and books for the more practical
business of life, by which he meant that he should assist
him in carrying out the plans which he was conceiving for
the recovery of his lost jagir. Such worldly
occupations were hateful to Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad,
and he cared nothing for the restoration of the lost
dignity and honor of the family. In obedience to his
father's wishes, however, he did whatever was required of
him. At one time he was compelled to accept Government
service at Sialkot, where he passed four years of his
life, . His experience in this line of life
made upon his heart a deep impression of the degeneracy
of those with whom he came in contact in that sphere of
action, and therefore he did not mix with them. When his
day's work was finished, he would go straight to his
residence and bury himself in the pages of his books.
Only those who were interested in religion, whether
Muslims or non-Muslims, sought his company. It was there
that he came in contact with some Christian missionaries,
with whom he had conversations on religious topics.
Speaking of those days,
Maulvi Sirajuddin, the father of Maulvi Zafar Ali Khan,
who is one of the greatest opponents of the Ahmadiyya
movement wrote in his paper, the Zamindar:
"Mirza Ghulam
Ahmad was a clerk in Sialkot about the year 1860 or
1861*. His age was then about 22 to 24 years. We can
say as an eyewitness that, even in the prime of
youth, he was a very righteous and God-fearing man.
After finishing his official work, he spent the whole
of his time in the study of religious works. He
mingled very little with others".
| * The date is incorrect.
He joined the service in 1864. |
So deep was the impression
made upon Maulvi Zafar Ali's father by Hazrat Ahmad's
piety and learning that he paid him a visit at Qadian,
later in 1877. His impression then, to which, as editor
of the Zamindar, he subsequently gave
expression was still the same:
"In 1877, we had
the honor of passing one night as his [Hazrat Ahmad's
] guest. In those days, too, he was so deeply devoted
to Divine worship and religious study that he did not
talk much even with his guests."
At last, his father
recalled him from Government service, and he was, for a
time, again required to carry on the lawsuits relating to
his father's estate, but the task was extremely repugnant
to him. Even while thus obeying the orders of his father,
he devoted a part of his time to the refutation of
Christian attacks on Islam.
The town of Batala, about
eleven miles from Qadian, was an important Christian
missionary centre. He frequented the place in connection
with the affairs of the estate, and it pained him to see
how Christian propaganda, unrefuted as it was, misled
ignorant Muslims. The Batala Muslims, when hard-pressed
by Christian missionaries, would come to Qadian to seek
his help, and he sent them back well armed to meet the
situation.
Father's death
Mirza Ghulam Murtaza died
in June 1876. The following account of his death is from
his son's pen:
"I was told in a
vision that the time of my father's death had drawn
nigh. At the time that I saw this vision, I was at
Lahore. I made haste to reach Qadian and found him
very ill, but I never thought that he would die so
soon, for the disease had abated to an appreciable
degree. The next day we were all sitting by his
bedside when, at noon, he told me to rest for a
while, for it was the month of June and the heat was
excessive. When I lay down for rest, I received the
following revelation: 'By heaven and by the accident,
which shall befall after sunset'. I was given to
understand that this revelation was a kind of
condolence from the Almighty, and that the accident
which was to befall was no other than the death of my
father . . . When I received this revelation
foretelling the death of my father, human weakness
made me think that, since some of the sources of the
income of our family would cease with my father's
death, we might be put in trouble. No sooner had the
idea passed Into my mind than I received a second
revelation saying: 'Is God not sufficient for His
servant?' This revelation brought tranquility and
satisfaction to my mind, and went into my heart like
a nail of iron. I call the Lord to witness that He
wrought the fulfillment of the joyful news contained
in this revelation in a wonderful manner . . . My
father died that very day after sunset, and it was
the first day in my life that I saw such a sign of
mercy from God*... Thus I passed about forty years of
my life under my father. His passing away from this
life marked the dawn of a new era for me, and I began
to receive Divine revelations incessantly. I cannot
say what deed of mine drew this grace of God to me,
but I feel that my mind had a natural attraction for
faithfulness to God which no power in the world could
alienate."
| *This refers
to the consoling revelation which he had
received |
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