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Claim
to Messiahship The task before him was a difficult one. The
Muslims had lost that love and zeal for the spread of
Islam, which led the earlier sons of Islam to the distant
corners of the world. Many people, however, came to him
and took the pledge. While preparing himself and his
followers for the great conquests, he made an
announcement which fell like a bombshell among the Muslim
public - that Jesus Christ was not alive, as was
generally believed by the Muslims, but that he had died
as all other prophets had died, and that his advent among
the Muslims meant the advent of a mujaddid in his
spirit and power; that no Mahdi would come, as generally
thought, to convert unbelievers with the sword, as this
was opposed to the basic teachings of the Quran, but that
the Mahdi's conquests were to be spiritual; and that the
prophecies relating to the advent of a Messiah and a
Mahdi were fulfilled in his own person. It was about
eighteen months after his call to bai'a that this
announcement was made and it changed the whole attitude
of the Muslim community towards him. Those very people
who hailed him in his capacity of mujaddid as the
savior of Islam now called him an impostor, an
arch-heretic and Anti-Christ.
Recluse and
soldier
Hazrat Ahmad based both
his claims, the claim to mujaddidship and the claim to
Messiahship, on Divine revelation, and it is easy to see
that nothing but the fullest conviction that he was
commanded by God could have led him to adopt a course
which, he knew, would bring him from the height of fame
and distinction, to which he had attained, to the depth
of degradation in the eyes of his own community. If
public esteem and fame were the goal of Hazrat Ahmad's
aspirations, he had indeed achieved them. He knew that
his departure from an established popular conception must
injure his reputation and turn his very friends and
admirers into foes; but he cared little for public
opinion and even less for fame. He was then an old man
and the fifty-five years of his earlier life show but one
desire - the desire to see Islam triumphant in the world
- and they point to but one aim - the aim to serve the
cause of Islam.
His father had often
remonstrated with him on account of his neglect of his
worldly concerns and had exhorted him to look after the
family estate, but in vain. He had not shown the least
desire to become a great man in the world; he did not
even care to maintain the position which his family
enjoyed. His love of solitude continued unabated to the
last and the only thing for which he would come in
contact with others was to uphold the dignity of Islam
and to safeguard its honor. He was a recluse all his
life, except when duty called him to fight the battle of
Islam, and then he was a soldier who could wield his
weapon against each and every assailant. The stream of
life, which had flowed consistently and constantly in one
direction, could not suddenly take a turn in the opposite
direction. The hand of God had undoubtedly been preparing
him from early life to champion the cause of Islam, and
he was at this point Divinely directed to remove, by his
claim to Promised Messiahship and Mahdiship, the two
great obstacles, which stood in the way of the
propagation of Islam.
Today any one can see that
Islam and Christianity are the only two religions
contending for the spiritual mastery of the world, all
other religions being limited to one or two countries. At
the time when the Promised Messiah began to work, Islam
seemed to have been utterly vanquished by Christianity,
not only by reason of the temporal ascendancy of
Christianity but also because Christians were complete
masters in the field of propaganda, Muslims being almost
entirely unrepresented. In this helpless state, the
Muslims had, to a very great extent, come under the
influence of the Christian propaganda, which, on the one
hand, impugned the character of the Holy Prophet, and, on
the other, laid stress on the superiority of Jesus Christ
over the Founder of Islam. In support of this latter
allegation were brought forward certain erroneous views
which had taken root among the Muslims; for instance,
that Jesus Christ was alive in the heavens while all the
other prophets had died, and that he would reappear in
the world when Islam would be in great distress, and thus
that he would, in the real sense, be the last Prophet and
the savior of Islam.
To establish the
superiority of Islam and tothe way for its conquest
of the world, it was necessary not only to clear the
character of the Holy Prophet of those false charges but
also to uproot those erroneous doctrines. Thus, when
Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad was commissioned for the great
task of leading Islam to a world-conquest, when the
Divine mantle of mujaddidship fell upon his shoulders and
when he began to enlist, through bai'a, an army of
soldiers to fight the spiritual battle of Islam, God gave
him the knowledge that the prevailing view of the Muslim
world relating to Jesus Christ was erroneous and not
supported by the Holy Quran, that Jesus Christ had died
as had all other prophets and that his prophesied second
advent was to be taken in a metaphorical sense and to
mean the advent of a reformer (mujaddid) with his
spirit and power.
Two baseless
doctrines
The two matters were so
closely correlated that in the solution of the one lay
the solution of the other. If Jesus was dead, his
personal second advent was impossible, and that prophecy
could be interpreted only in the same way as Jesus
himself interpreted the prophecy of the second advent of
Elijah. The false conception that Jesus was alive in
heaven was, however, so deep-rooted in the Muslim mind
that they would listen to no arguments which militated
against this long-cherished belief, even though they were
based on the absolute authority of the Holy Quran and the
Hadith. They were not in a mood to think that, in the
very fitness of things, this exactly should be the
mission of the mujaddid of this age. Christianity,
practically the only adversary of Islam and the most
formidable, had this one main prop to support its whole
structure of doctrines and dogmas - Jesus sitting with
God in heaven. To pull this main prop down would mean the
crumbling of the whole like a house of cards, and this
work had to be done tothe way for the conquests of
Islam in the West.
Coupled with the wrong
notion that Jesus Christ was alive in heaven and would
come down, there was another equally unfounded
conception, and equally detrimental to the cause of
Islam, namely that the Mahdi would appear just at the
same time and would wage war to enforce Islam at the
point of sword. Already Islam had been misrepresented in
the West as having been established by means of the
sword, and the doctrine of a Mahdi coming to wage war to
establish the superiority of Islam only lent further
support to the misrepresentations of the Christian West,
causing the hatred against Islam to become deeper and
deeper day by day. That false notion also had to be cut
at the very roots. "There is no compulsion in
religion" (2:256), was a clear principle established
by the Holy Quran, and there was not a single instance in
which the Holy Prophet brought the pressure of the sword
to bear on any one individual let alone a whole nation,
to compel the embracing of Islam. "Fight against
those who fight against you" (2:190), was the only
permission that Islam gave in the matter of fighting, and
even the Holy Prophet, to say nothing of the Mahdi, could
not go against the Holy Quran. The Mahdi (lit., the
guided one), was only another name for the Messiah
- such was the announcement made by Hazrat Ahmad, and in
support of this was quoted the Prophet's hadith:
"There is no
Mahdi but the Messiah."
(Ibn
Majah. Ch. Shiddat al-Zaman.)
Storm of
opposition
Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad
had thus, in the very cause of Islam, to combat the idea
that, for its conquests, Islam stood in need either of
Jesus Christ or the sword. He emphasized that men endowed
with great gifts, even men like the Messiah, could rise
among its followers, and that the spiritual power of
Islam was greater than all the swords of the world; but
Mulla mentality was too narrow for these broad views. Led
by Maulvi Muhammad Husain, the Ahl Hadith leader,
who had only six years before acclaimed Hazrat Ahmad as
one of the greatest sons of Islam, and as one who had
rendered unique service to the cause of Islam by his
powerful arguments and by the heavenly signs which he had
shown to his opponents, the 'ulama now declared
him to be an arch-heretic. Some of them even went so far
as to declare that he and his followers could not enter
mosques or be buried in Muslim graveyards, that their
property could be taken away with impunity and that their
marriages were void. The storm of opposition that
followed those fatwas can better be imagined than
described, but all this opposition did not make Hazrat
Ahmad swerve an inch from the position, which he had
taken. The most hostile critics have nothing but praise
for his courage in the face of the bitterest opposition,
even of attempts at physical violence. Thus wrote Dr
Griswold:
"His persistency
in affirming his claims in the face of the most
intense and bitter opposition is magnificent. He is
willing to suffer on behalf of his claims."
(H. A.
Walter. The Ahmadiyya Movement, p. 21.)
Resolution to
carry Islam forward
As I have stated, the
opposition came not from one quarter but from all sides.
All sects of Islam denounced him, just as they had all
praised him before, while the Christians and the Arya
Samajists, against whom he had been fighting in the cause
of Islam for so long a time, were only too glad to join
hands with the Muslims. In spite of all, Hazrat Ahmad
stood adamant. No abuse, no denunciation, no persecution,
no threat of murder disturbed for a single moment the
equilibrium of his mind or caused him to entertain for an
instant the idea of relinquishing in despair the cause
which he had so long upheld. Nay, in the midst of a
widespread and bitter opposition on all sides, he
reaffirmed with still greater force his resolution to
carry the message of Islam to the farthest ends of the
world, and his conviction that Islam would triumph became
greater. It is the unique spectacle of a soldier carrying
on the fight single-handed while the powerful forces of
opposition were arrayed before his face, and the very
people for whom he was fighting was hitting him in the
back. The claim to Promised Messiahship was advanced in
three books, which appeared one after another at short
intervals. In the first of these he writes:
"Do not wonder
that Almighty God has in this time of need and in the
days of this deep darkness sent down a heavenly light
and, having chosen a servant of His for the good of
mankind in general, He has sent him to make uppermost
the religion of Islam and to spread the light brought
by the best of His creatures [ This refers to the
Holy Prophet Mohammad] and to strengthen the
cause of the Muslims and to purify their internal
condition."
(Fath
lslam p. 7.)
And again:
"And the truth
will win and the freshness and light of Islam which
characterized it in the earlier days will be restored
and that sun will rise again as it arose first in the
full resplendence of its light. But it is necessary
that heaven should withhold its rising till our
hearts bleed with labor and hard work and we
sacrifice all comforts for its appearance and submit
ourselves to all kinds of disgrace for the honor of
Islam. The life of Islam demands a sacrifice from us,
and what is that? That we die in this way."
(Fath
Islam, p.16. )
Significance
underlying claim
Apart from the
narrow-minded Mulla who could not grasp the significance
underlying Hazrat Ahmad's claim to Promised Messiahship,
even the educated Muslim thinks that this claim brought
nothing but schism in the house of Islam. It is true that
much of Hazrat Ahmad's time was taken up, after 1891,
with controversy against the orthodox, and it became
bitter too at times, but the internal struggle never made
him lose sight of his real objective, which had indeed
become more marked and definite. As to internal
dissensions, they were already there; in fact, the
Muslims had lost all objectives except fighting amongst
themselves on the minutest points of difference.
Therefore, they had no eye for the higher issues involved
in Hazrat Ahmad's claim, but spent their whole force in
carrying on a struggle about minor differences.
Moreover, the great cause
of Islam - its onward march in the world - had nothing to
lose from the claim to Promised Messiahship; Jesus' death
added only one more to the numerous prophets who,
including the Holy Prophet Muhammad, had all died; but to
Christianity it meant the death of its central figure,
with whose death collapsed the whole structure of its
dogmas. Nay, the cause of Islam gained immeasurable
strength therefrom; for, as long as the Muslim believed
that Jesus was alive in heaven and that he would make his
descent at some future time to bring about the triumph of
Islam, his mentality remained one of fond dreams never to
be realized, and that was largely the reason why the
Muslim had lost the zeal and energy of the earlier days
for carrying forward the message of Islam. Islam's
triumph was, he believed, bound up with the coming of
Jesus Christ and of Imam Mahdi, and he had nothing to do
but to wait and see. Such was the hidden process of
thought, which made him quite inactive. That the Messiah
who was to come had already appeared was an idea which
shifted the responsibility to his own shoulders; nay, it
brought back to him the zeal to carry forward the message
of Islam. If the Messiah had come, the time had also
arrived for the world conquest of Islam. This was the
great mental revolution achieved among those who accepted
Hazrat Ahmad as the Messiah; a mere handful of men, but
carrying the message of Islam to the farthest ends of the
world, while the millions of the orthodox are either idle
or occupied with their internal dissensions.
From defence to
attack
In Hazrat Mirza Ghulam
Ahmad's own work, two changes are clearly witnessed with
his claim to Promised Messiahship. The first is that, as
far as the contest with Christianity was concerned, he
had hitherto been carrying on a defensive war -clearing
the Holy Prophet of the false charges brought against him
by the Christian missionaries; but his new claim involved
an aggressive line of action - the destruction of the
very foundations on which the Church, as distinguished
from the Christianity preached by Christ, was built.
Right at the beginning of Fath Islam, his
first pamphlet making the new announcement, he wrote
clearly:
"I . . . bear a
strong resemblance to the nature of the Messiah, and
it is owing to this natural resemblance that I have
been sent in the name of the Messiah, so that the
doctrine of the cross may be shattered to pieces.
Therefore, I have been sent to break the cross and to
kill the swine" (p. 17).
Thus the contest between
Christianity and Islam was no longer to be limited to the
defence of Islam; the spiritual forces of Islam had to be
gathered together to attack Christianity itself.
Dajjal and Gog and
Magog
The other change which
resulted from the claim to Promised Messiahship was that
it gave a definite direction to the mission which Hazrat
Ahmad believed had been entrusted to him, namely to bring
about the triumph of Islam and to lead it on to a
world-conquest. Henceforth, Europe or the Western world
became his special objective, and that new idea was born
as a twin to the idea that he was the Promised Messiah.
Both ideas - the idea that
he was the Promised Messiah and the idea that his mission
was to carry the message of Islam to the Western world -
took their birth at one and the same time. It was not a
casual coincidence; the two ideas were closely
interrelated. The advent of the Promised Messiah did not
stand alone in eschatological prophecy; it was
essentially combined with the idea of the appearance of
the Anti-Christ (Dajjal) and of Gog and Magog (Ya'juj
wa Ma'juj). In fact, the Promised Messiah's first and
foremost work was to be to put an end to the influence of
the Dajjal and of Gog and Magog. Now the prevalent
idea among the Muslims was that the Dajjal was a
one-eyed man who would make his appearance in the latter
days with the treasures of the world at his command, that
he would lay claim to Godhead, carrying even paradise and
hell with him, and that he would traverse the whole earth
in forty days, visiting every habitation of men, inviting
them to accept his divinity and enriching those who
followed him, and that Gog and Magog would be an
extraordinary creation of God, who would spread over the
whole earth. The truth, which had remained hidden for
thirteen centuries after the Holy Prophet Muhammad,
flashed upon Hazrat Ahmad's mind at the very time when he
was raised to the dignity of Messiahship.
This truth was that the Dajjal
and Gog and Magog of the prophecies were no other
than the Christian nations of Europe and America. In
their religious attitude, in contradicting the teachings
of Christ and the teachings of all the prophets of God,
they represented Gog and Magog. Thus, when announcing his
claim to Promised Messiahship, after discussing at length
the prophecies relating to their appearance, he wrote in Izala
Auham, his first great work on the subject,
under the caption, 'It was necessary that the Anti-Christ
should come forth from the Church':
"Now this
question deserves to be solved that, as the advent of
the Messiah, the son of Mary, is meant for the Dajjal,
if I have come in the spirit of the Messiah, who
is the Dajjal against me? In the first place,
it must be remembered that literally Dajjal means
an association of liars who mix up truth with
falsehood and who use deceit and underhand means to
lead astray the creation of God . . . If we
ponder over... the condition of all those people who
have done the work of Dajjal since the
creation of Adam, we do not find another people who
have manifested that characteristic to the extent to
which the Christian missionaries have done. They have
before their eyes an imaginary Messiah who, they
allege, is still living and who claimed to be God;
but the Messiah, son of Mary, never claimed to be
God; it is they who are claiming Divinity on his
behalf, and to make this claim successful, they have
resorted to all kinds of alterations and have made
use of all means of deceit. With the exception of
Makka and Madina, there is no place to which they
have not gone . . . They are so rich that the
treasures of the world go along with them wherever
they go . . . And they carry along with them a kind
of paradise and hell. So, whoever is willing to
accept their religion, that paradise is shown to him,
and whoever becomes a severe opponent of them, he is
threatened with hell . . . There is not one sign of
the Dajjal that is not met with in
them...Hence those people represent the Dajjal who
has come forth from the Church.
"Now doubts are
raised that the Dajjal must be one-eyed, being
blind in the right eye, that Gog and Magog must
appear at the same time . . . and that the sun must
arise from the west at the same time . .
"These doubts
would vanish when it is seen that one-eyed does
not mean physically blind in one eye. God says in the
Holy Quran: 'Whoever is blind in this life shall be
blind in the hereafter'. Does 'the blind' here carry
the significance of physical blindness? Nay, it means
spiritual blindness. And the meaning is that the Dajjal
shall be devoid of spiritual wisdom, and that,
though he will make great inventions and show great
wonders as if he were claiming Godhead, yet he will
have no spiritual eye, just as we find today is the
case with the people of Europe and America that they
have gone to the utmost extent in worldly scheming.
"As regards Gog
and Magog, it is unquestionable that these are two
prosperous nations of the world, one of them being
the English (Teuton) and the other the Russians
(Slavs). Both these nations are directing their
attacks from a height towards what is beneath their
feet, i.e., they are becoming victorious with their
God-given powers...Both these nations are also
mentioned in the Bible.
"As regards the
rising of the sun from the West, we do believe in it;
but what has been shown to me in a vision is this -
that the rising of the sun from the West signifies
that the Western world which has been involved of old
in the darkness of unbelief and error shall be made
to shine with the sun of Truth, and those people
shall have their share of Islam. I saw that I was
standing on a pulpit in the city of London and
explaining the truth of Islam in a
strongly-argumented speech in the English language;
and, after this, I caught a large number of birds
that were sitting on small trees, and in color they
were white, and their size was probably the size of
the partridge. So I interpreted this dream as meaning
that, though I may not personally go there, yet my
writings would spread among those people and many
righteous Englishmen would accept the truth. In
reality, the Western countries have, up to this time,
shown very little aptitude for religious truths, as
if spiritual wisdom had in its entirety been granted
to Asia, and material wisdom to Europe and America
now Almighty God intends to cast on them the look of
mercy."
(Izala
Auham, pp. 478--516.)
Islamization of
Europe
One wonders when one finds
that a man who lived in a village, far removed from all
centres of activity, who did not know a word of English,
whose knowledge of Europe was almost negligible, has
visions that he is delivering a speech in English in
London and explaining the truths of Islam to Europeans,
and that the people of Europe will accept Islam. The
history of Islam shows how such visions have materialized
before. The great saint of Ajmer, Khwaja Mu'in al-Din
Chishti, saw in a dream, while in Madina, that he was
preaching Islam in India, and the saint of Qadian sees in
a vision that he is spreading Islam in Europe. India has
fulfilled the dream of the saint of Ajmer, and Europe is
undoubtedly on its way to fulfil the vision of the saint
of Qadian.
Amidst all the persecution
to which he was subjected, Hazrat Ahmad's heart throbbed
with but one desire - the desire to spread Islam in the
West - and that was the message with which he came as the
Promised Messiah. Europe was identical with Dajjal, and
the Messiah must overcome the Dajjal. Flames of
the fire of opposition rose high on all sides, but he had
an eye on the goal and he proposed to sit down calmly in
the midst of this fire and write books disclosing the
beauties of Islam and meeting the objections not only of
Christian missionaries but also of those whom materialism
was bringing in its train:
"Then so far as
it lies in my power I intend to broadcast, in all the
countries of Europe and Asia, the knowledge and
blessings which the Holy Spirit of God has granted me
. . . It is undoubtedly true that Europe and America
have a large collection of objections against Islam,
inculcated through those engaged in mission work, and
that their philosophy and natural sciences give rise
to another sort of criticism. My inquiries have led
me to the conclusion that there are nearly three
thousand points, which have been raised as objections
against Islam . . To meet these objections, a chosen
man is needed who should have a river of knowledge
flowing in his vast breast and whose knowledge should
have been specially broadened and deepened by Divine
inspiration . . . So my advice is that . . . writings
of a good type should be sent into these countries.
If my people help me heart and soul I wish to prepare
a commentary of the Holy Quran which should be sent
to them after it has been rendered into the English
language. I cannot refrain from stating clearly that
this is my work, and that no one else can do it as
well as I or he who is an offshoot of mine and thus
is included in me."
(Izala
Auham, pp. 771-773.)
"In this critical
time, a man has been raised up by God and he desires
that he may show the beautiful face of Islam to the
whole world andits ways to the Western
countries."
(Op cit.
p. 769.)
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