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Diversified
work The
years that followed were years of the greatest
tribulation for Hazrat Ahmad, and, at the same time,
years of the greatest activity in his life. He was
fifty-five years of age, the age at which a man in the
Indian climate is supposed to have exhausted his energy;
but, in Hazrat Ahmad's case, the time of his greatest
activity begins just where it ends for others.
His work became so
diversified that it can hardly be supposed that he could
find time for writing books. He received a large number
of guests and visitors from all parts of India and he
attended to them personally. He had to educate his
disciples, to satisfy inquirers and to meet opponents,
and he passed hours with them at meals, in regular daily
walks and after the five daily prayers. As he was at the
zenith of his reputation when he laid claim to Promised
Messiahship, inquiries were addressed to him in very
large numbers, and his mail bag, although very heavy, was
disposed of by him personally till very late in life. He
had to undertake journeys to meet his opponents in
controversial discussions - Muslims, Christians and Arya
Samajists; and, the most repugnant of all duties, he had
to appear in courts to answer criminal charges and
defamation suits brought against him by his opponents.
Yet in the midst of all
those varied occupations which would hardly seem to leave
any time for serious literary work, he produced, during
that period of seventeen years, over seven thousand
pages, much of which was original research work, of
closely printed matter in Urdu, Arabic and Persian in
book form alone, while, before the age of fifty-five, he
had produced only about eight hundred pages. An
inexhaustible store of energy seems to have been pent-up
within his heart; and all this in spite of the fact that,
from early youth, he was afflicted with two diseases,
syncope and polyuria, which at times weakened him very
much, but, when the attack was over, he was again at the
helm, quite like a young man.
A few facts may be noted
here showing the diversity of hazrat Ahmad's occupations.
His controversies with the orthodox 'ulama, held
at Ludhiana, Delhi and Lahore, in 1891 and 1892, each
lasting for several days, have already been mentioned. In
1893, he was engaged in a very important controversy with
the Christian missionaries at Amritsar, and that occupied
him for over two weeks. It was in that controversy that
he laid down the principle that every claim as to the
truth or falsehood of a religious doctrine, and the
arguments for or against it, should be produced from the
sacred book which a people followed, and he showed with
great vigor that the Holy Quran alone fulfilled that
condition. The proceedings of this controversy are
published in a book entitled Jang Muqaddas, which
means "Holy War".
Guru Nanak's Chola
In 1895, he turned his
attention to Sikhism, another offshoot of Hinduism, which
had gained considerable strength in the Punjab. His
inquiries into the religious scriptures of the Sikhs led
him to the conclusion that the founder of Sikhism had not
only come under the influence of Muslim Sufis, but that
he was in fact a Muslim, though the movement started by
him took a different turn owing to political reasons.
To set a seal on this
conclusion, he undertook a journey to Dera Nanak, a
village in the Gurdaspur District, and one of the sacred
places of Sikhism. A chola (cloak), which is a
relic of Guru Nanak himself, and which is in the custody
of his descendants, is preserved there. It is a long
cloak with short sleeves and is made of brown cloth. A
tradition in the Sakhi of Bhai Bala, more commonly
known as Angad's Sakhi, states that the chola was
sent down to Nanak from heaven and that upon it were
written the words of nature in Arabic, Turkish, Persian,
Hindi and Sanskrit. Upon Nanak's death, the chola passed
to his first successor, Angad, and thus to successive
Gurus, till the time of the fifth Guru, Arjan Das. In his
time, the chola was obtained by Tola Ram, in
recognition of some great service done. After some time,
it fell into the hands of Kabli Mal, a descendant of
Nanak, and, since then, it has remained in the hands of
his descendants at Dera Nanak. On account of the high
repute and sanctity in which the chola was held by
the followers of Nanak, the practice became common at an
early date of offering coverings to protect it from wear
and tear. The mystery, which surrounded the chola, became
deeper by the increased number of coverings, which hid it
altogether from the eye of the worshipper. Only a part of
the sleeve was shown, but, by constant handling, the
letters on that part became quite obscure.
As the founder of the
Ahmadiyya movement had already come to the conclusion
that Guru Nanak was in fact a true Muslim, he also
thought of solving the mystery enshrouding the chola. Accordingly,
on the 30th September, 1895, he started, with some of his
friends, for Dera Nanak. By special arrangements made
with the guardian of the chola, the numerous
coverings, mostly of silk or fine cloth, were taken off
one by one, and the actual writing on the chola was
revealed. This was nothing but verses of the Holy Quran,
and they were at once copied. This wonderful disclosure
of the writing on the chola showed clearly that
Nanak was a Muslim at heart. The result of the
investigation was published in a book, called the Sat
Bachan; and, though the orthodox Sikhs were
greatly excited when it appeared, yet the truth of its
statements concerning the chola has never been
questioned.
Prosecutions
After this, Hazrat Ahmad
had to leave Qadian on several occasions in connection
with certain cases brought against him by his opponents.
In 1897, he had to appear in the court of the District
Magistrate of Gurdaspur to answer the charge of abetment
of murder, brought forward by Dr. Henry Martyn Clarke of
the Church Missionary Society. The allegation was that
Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad had deputed one of his
disciples to murder Dr. Clarke. The orthodox Muslims,
represented by Maulvi Muhammad Husain of Batala, and the
Arya Samajists, represented by Chaudhury Ram Bhaj Dutt,
the President of the Arya Samaj, Lahore, who offered to
conduct the case free of charge, joined hands with Dr
Clarke. The District Magistrate, Capt. M. W. Douglas,
after a thorough inquiry, found that the chief witness in
the case had been schooled in his evidence by certain
Christian missionaries who worked with Dr. Clarke, and he
acquitted Hazrat Ahmad.
In the next year, he had
again to go several times to Gurdaspur and to Pathankot
to answer a charge of breach of the peace, which, it was
alleged by the Police, he had threatened by the
publication of certain prophecies. The other party in
this case was Maulvi Muhammad Husain of Batala. In
January 1903, he had to appear at Jhelum to answer
charges in two cases of defamation brought against him by
Maulvi Karam Din. Both these cases were dismissed at the
first hearing. At Jhelum, he was received with great
enthusiasm by the public, and nearly one thousand persons
entered into his bai'a in a single day. During the
latter part of the year 1903, he had to appear several
times at Gurdaspur in connection with another defamation
case brought by the same complainant who had failed at
Jhelum. On account of the academic discussions to which
it gave rise, the case was protracted for nearly eighteen
months. For about five months, it had a daily hearing,
and, during that time, hazrat Ahmad had to take up his
residence at Gurdaspur. This case also ended in his
acquittal on appeal. Thus, during the eight years, 1897
to 1904, a great part of his time was taken up by the
various cases in which his opponents tried to involve him
criminally, but in all of which they signally failed.
Visits to
important cities
After that, he again paid
visits to certain important towns to remove the
misunderstandings created by false propaganda against
him. He first went to Lahore, in September 1904, and
there delivered a lecture to an audience of over ten
thousand people of all classes and creeds. After that, in
November 1904, he went to Sialkot, where he delivered the
famous lecture in which he explained his mission to the
Hindus, stating that the Hindu prophecies relating to the
advent of a reformer were also fulfilled in his person.
The underlying idea was clearly the unification of all
the great nations of the world. Almost every nation
expected the advent of a reformer in the latter days, and
the fulfillment of the hopes of all nations in one person
was certainly the best means of unifying them.
In October 1905, he went
to Delhi, where, in private gatherings, he spent about
two weeks in explaining his mission. On his way back from
Delhi, he stopped at Ludhiana and Amritsar and delivered
lectures at both places. The lecture at Amritsar had,
however, to be curtailed, owing to the interference of
some fanatics, and the mob outside pelted him and his
companions with stones as they left the lecture-hall. His
last journey was again to Lahore, in the closing days of
his life, in April, 1908. For about a month, he continued
at informal meetings to explain his position to the
gentry of Lahore and to other visitors. The late Mian Sir
Fazl-i-Husain, who was then practising as a barrister in
Lahore, attended one of these meetings and asked him
pointedly, whether he did or did not denounce as kafir
all those Muslims who did not accept his claims, and
he gave a categorical reply in the negative. At several
meetings he explained that he laid no claim to
prophethood, and that in his writings he had used that
word in only a metaphorical sense, to imply one who made
a prophecy, in which sense it had previously been used by
the great Muslim Sufis.
Scope of writings
In the midst of all this
distraction, worry and harassment, and in spite of the
persecution, which sometimes took a very serious form, he
went on wielding his pen with incomparable facility and
added seven thousand pages of very valuable literature to
the eight hundred pages written in his earlier life which
had gained him the reputation of being the greatest
religious writer of his time. The value of this
achievement is, however, immensely enhanced when it is
realized that it deals with almost all the important
religions of the world - with all the offshoots of
Hinduism, such as Arya Samaj, Brahmo Samaj, Sanatan Dharm
and Sikhism; with Buddhism, Judaism and Baha'ism; with
all the prominent sects of Islam such as the orthodox,
the Shi'as, the Kharijites, the AhI Hadith and
others; and last but not least with Christianity, which
was his most important theme. He fought even against
Atheism and Materialism.
The immense variety of the
subjects dealt with is not, moreover, the only
distinguishing feature of Hazrat Ahmad's religious
literature. It is the originality and thoroughness with
which he handles every topic that marks him out as the
greatest religious writer of his time.
Entirely fresh light was
thrown on many Islamic subjects. Islam's outlook on
religion was most liberal, and the Holy Quran laid down
in precise words that prophets had appeared among all
nations; yet the Muslims recognized the Divine origin of
only the Jewish and Christian religions. It was Hazrat
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad who laid stress on the point that
every religion had a Divine source, though its teachings
may have undergone corruption in its later history, and
that, though Islam recognized the termination of
prophethood in the person of the Holy Prophet Muhammad,
it did not mean that God had then ceased to speak to His
righteous servants, because speaking is an attribute of
the Divine Being and it can never cease to function.
Similarly, Hazrat Ahmad
threw new light on the conception of jihad, which
was mistakenly supposed to mean "the killing of an
unbeliever who did not accept Islam". This he showed
to be an entirely mistaken view. Jihad, he showed,
in the first place, conveyed the wider significance of
carrying on a struggle in any field, in the broadest
sense, and the struggle required for carrying to the
whole world the Divine message contained in the Quran was
the greatest of jihads, jihadan kabiran, according
to the Holy Book itself. War against the unbelievers was
only one phase of jihad, and it was allowed, he
further showed, only when it was defensive.
Such abstruse problems as
those relating to the next life, heaven and hell, reward
and punishment, resurrection, the physical, moral and
spiritual conditions of man, and a number of other
similar matters were discussed with a freshness and
originality which drew words of praise from some of the
greatest thinkers of the time. He dealt fully with all
these subjects in a lecture delivered at the Conference
of Religions, held in Lahore in December 1896, to which a
mixed audience of all religions listened with rapt
attention for two days. That lecture was translated in
the Review of Religions, and, when that
paper was sent to Count Tolstoy, he replied that he was
deeply impressed by the originality of the writer. That
lecture has to this day been recognized as the most
powerful exposition of the teachings of Islam.
Universality of
Divine revelation
In his criticism of other
religions, he was equally original and forceful. Take as
an example his discussion of the different offshoots of
Hinduism. To Brahmoism, which denied revelation from God,
he offered his own religious experience, claiming that
not only did God speak to different nations of the world
through their great sages and prophets in the past (which
established the fact that Divine revelation was the
universal experience of all nations of the world), but
also that speaking was an attribute of the Divine Being
and that He spoke even now as He spoke in the past,
Hazrat Ahmad himself being a recipient of Divine
revelation in this age. The idea of the universality of
Divine revelation was, however, carried to its furthest
limit when it was further explained that in its lowest
form - in the form of dreams coming true and of visions -
it was the universal experience of humanity.
Another modern Hindu
reform movement, the Arya Samaj, arose as a revolt
against Hindu idolatry and against its millions of gods,
but it was Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Anmad who pointed out that
polytheism and multiplicity of gods was an idea so
deep-rooted in Hinduism that even the Arya Samaj could
not get rid of it, and that the doctrines of co-eternity
of matter and soul with the Divine Being, and the belief
that they were uncreated and self-existent like God
Himself, were remnants of polytheism.
On Sikhism, a
three-hundred years old Hindu sect, he shed entirely new
light by showing not only that its conception of Divine
Unity and its other fundamental religious ideas were
taken entirely from Islam, but also that its founder,
Nanak, was actually a Muslim.
Death and
crucifixion of Jesus
It was, however, in the
sphere of his controversy with Christianity and in
questions relating to the death and second advent of
Christ, matters over which hung a great pall of mystery,
that Hazrat Ahmad showed masterly originality and
thoroughness.
Muslims and Christians
both believed that Jesus Christ was alive in heaven. The
former held that he was taken up alive just before the
crucifixion and that his semblance was thrown upon
someone else who was taken for Jesus and crucified in his
place. The latter believed that Jesus himself was
crucified but that he was raised to life on the third day
after his crucifixion and then taken up to heaven. Both
further believed that he would come down to earth again
before the Resurrection and destroy the Anti-Christ.
The mystery surrounding
Christ's death was solved by showing that, although he
was nailed to the cross, he did not remain on it for a
sufficiently long time to expire, that he was taken down
alive and placed in a spacious room where his wounds were
attended to, that by the third day he had recovered and
gained sufficient strength to be present at a secret
meeting of the disciples, that he then left for
Afghanistan and Kashmir where the ten lost tribes of
Israel had settled, and that he ultimately died a natural
death, at the age of about a hundred and twenty years, in
Srinagar, where his tomb is still known as the tomb of
Yus Asaf.
This was quite an original
solution of the mystery hanging over the crucifixion and
the post-crucifixion appearances of Jesus Christ. Every
link in this long chain of fresh facts was established on
the basis of the Holy Quran and Hadith, of the historical
elements contained in the Gospels and of other
historical, ethnological and geographical evidence, which
undoubtedly required immense research work.
While the mystery relating
to the crucifixion of Christ was thus solved, and the
central assumption that Jesus took away the sins of the
world by his death on the cross, on which rested the
whole structure of Church Christianity, was thus
demolished at one stroke, and it was shown that the
historical elements in the Gospels belied the religious
doctrines attributed to them.
Advent of Messiah
and Mahdi
A still deeper mystery
hung over the second advent of Jesus. This subject was
rendered the more complicated by its association with
many others, such as those relating to the Anti-Christ,
Gog and Magog, the coming of the Mahdi, the rising of the
sun from the West and so on. Hazrat Ahmad's solution to
this mystery was also original. The second advent of
Jesus Christ was to be taken in exactly the same sense as
was the second advent of Elijah before him, which Christ
himself had explained as signifying the advent of one in
his spirit and power. It was a very simple explanation,
yet it had never occurred to any Christian or Muslim
thinker before him. The explanation of the coming of the
Mahdi was also original. The Mahdi was no other than the
Messiah, an idea which had never previously occurred to
any Muslim in spite of the Prophet's hadith which had
plainly stated that there was no Mahdi but the Messiah.
These matters having been
settled, the Anti-Christ had next to be discovered. In
this case, too, he was original. In the Hadith, the Dajjal
was clearly spoken of as coming forth from a church,
and this gave Hazrat Ahmad the clue to his discovery. The
Church had indeed represented the teaching of Christ as
just the opposite of what it actually was, and,
therefore, the Church was the real Anti-Christ. The
Anti-Christ being identified, there was not much
difficulty in discovering the Gog and Magog. These were
the two great races, the Teutons and the Slavs, who, as
represented in this age by the English and the Russians,
had become predominant in the world. The rising of the
sun from the West meant, in symbolical language, the sun
of Islam, whose shining in the West was bound up with the
second advent of Christ. The West proper had remained
unaffected by the message of Islam; it was through the
Promised Messiah that the Anti-Christ had to be
vanquished and the wayd for the propagation of
Islam in the West.
The Review
of Religions
All these great truths
were not the laborious discoveries of a great scholar
which should have taken years, though a scholar Hazrat
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad undoubtedly was; they blazed in upon
his mind suddenly through Divine inspiration, when he was
required to proclaim that Jesus Christ was dead and that
he himself was the Messiah whose advent was promised in
the latter days. Nor were these just the visions of a
great seer. These were the grand realities the
realization of which was the great aim of Hazrat Ahmad's
life.
Therefore, in the midst of
all those occupations and harassment's to which reference
has been made above, he laid with his own hands the
foundations of the work of carrying the message of Islam
to the West. The Review of Religions, a
monthly magazine in English, was started in January,
1902. It was the first religious magazine in English to
deal with Islamic matters, and it was conducted on
rational lines which appealed equally to enlightened
Muslims and to non-Muslims, and was well-suited for
presenting Islam to the Western mind.
The following judgment of
this paper is from the pen of a very hostile writer, H.
A. Walter:
"One of the
cleverest of Ahmad's followers, Maulvi Muhammad Ali,
M.A., LL.B., was called to the editorship of this
periodical, and at one time he was assisted by Khwaja
Kamalud Din · . . This paper was well named, for it
has given its attention to a remarkably wide range of
religions and to a great variety of subjects.
Orthodox Hinduism, the Arya Samaj, the Brahmo Samaj
and Theosophy; Sikhism, Buddhism, Jainism and
Zoroastrianism; Bahaism, Christian Science and
Christianity have all received attention, as well as
Islam in all its ramifications, both ancient and
modern, such as the Shi'ites, Ahl-i-Hadis,
Kharijites, Sufis and such representative exponents
of modern tendencies as Sir Syed Ahmad Khan and Syed
Amir Ali."
The Review of Religions
had thus become the mouthpiece of the Ahmadiyya
movement both for removing the misconceptions that
prevailed against Islam and for making a comparative
study of religion. It was a preliminary step for carrying
into practice the grander ideas of establishing, in the
West, Muslim missions for the propagation of Islamic
literature, and of translating the Holy Quran into
European languages, ideas to which Hazrat Ahmad himself
had given expression, as early as 1891, when he claimed
to be the Promised Messiah, but which were carried into
effect only after his death. The translation of the Holy
Quran was taken in hand within a year after his death,
while the first Muslim mission in Europe was established
three years afterwards. These were the natural
developments of the lines on which Hazrat Ahmad led the
movement. He had nothing to do with the minor sectarian
differences among the Muslims, and prepared a band of
devoted followers for the spiritual conquest of the West.
The seed was sown, the men were prepared who should take
care of the tender plant, and the time had come for the
master to depart.
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