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Claim
as Mujaddid As
I have already stated, Hazrat Ahmad was not a mere
controversialist. He was a student of religion who had
made a close study of Islam as well as of other religions
and had come to the conclusion that, while other
religions contained only partial truth, Islam contained
the whole truth, and was, on account of this superiority,
destined to be the future religion of the world. To
establish this fact he began to write a book called the Barahin
Ahmadiyya, the full name being Al-Barahin
al Ahmadiyya 'ala haqqiyyat-i-Kitab Allah al-Qur'an
wal-nubuwwat - il-Muhammadiyya, i.e., 'The
Ahmadiyya proofs for the truth of the Book of God, the
Quran, and the prophethood of Muhammad'.
Two years later, i.e., in
the closing year of the thirteenth century of Hijra, he
issued a third part of the same book, in which were
published several revelations which he had received from
God, in one of which he claimed to be the promised
reformer, mujaddid, of the fourteenth century of
Hijra. This revelation, which is published on page 238 of
the book, runs thus:
"The Beneficent
God has taught thee the Qur'an so that thou may warn
a people whose fathers have not been warned, and so
that the erroneous path of the guilty may be seen
manifestly. Say, I have been commanded by God to
deliver his message and I have been commanded by God
to deliver his message and I am the first of
believers."
At the same time he issued
a manifesto stating plainly that he was the Mujaddid of
that century. In this manifesto, he wrote, after speaking
of this book:
"This servant of
Allah has given a manifest proof by the grace of God
the Almighty that many of the true inspirations and
signs and minor miracles and news relating to the
unseen and Divine secrets and the visions and prayers
that have been accepted are a part of the religious
experience of this servant of the faith, the truth of
these being borne witness to by many of the religious
opponents [the Aryas and others]. All these matters
have been related in this book, and the author has
been given the knowledge that he is the Mujaddid of
this time and that spiritually his excellencies
resemble the excellencies of Messiah, the son of
Mary, and that the one of them bears a very strong
resemblance and a close relation to the other."
At that time, the Muslims
highly appreciated the great services which Hazrat Ahmad
had rendered to the cause of Islam, and greatly admired
not only his learning and his powerful refutation of the
opponents of Islam, but also his righteousness and piety,
and, therefore, they hailed these claims as quite
opportune. It was just the commencement of the fourteenth
century of Hijra, and a hadith of the Holy Prophet
promised to them a reformer at the commencement of each
century.
Besides the hadith, the
condition of things in the world of Islam called yet more
loudly for the appearance of a reformer. Islam was at the
time between two fires - disputes and dissensions which
frittered away the whole energy of the Muslim world, and
the most terrible attacks on it from without. Here was a
man who rose far above all internal dissensions, refusing
to take part in them, and who directed his attention
solely to the attacks from without; a soldier of Islam
who championed the cause of Islam most powerfully,
meeting every opponent on his own ground; a learned man
whose exposition of the Holy Qur'an exactly met the need
of the time; the fame of his piety was spread far and
wide; and what more was needed for a reformer? His claim
to be the Mujaddid was, therefore, generally
accepted by the Muslims, laymen as well as theologians.
An epoch-making
book
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Two years later, in 1884,
came out the fourth part of the Barahin Ahmadiyya,
which contained a most powerful exposition of the
truth of Islam. This book may rightly be regarded as
marking a new epoch in the religious literature of Islam,
and it was accorded that position by the greatest 'ulama
of the time. Its real object was to establish the
Truth of Islam by a long series of cogent and irrefutable
reasons and arguments, but by way of comparison dogmas of
other religions were also included and subjected to the
search-light of reason, and thus the beauties of Islam
were manifested all the more clearly. Even such a hostile
critic as Walter admits that "this book was quite
universally acclaimed (in so far as it was read),
throughout the Muhammadan world as a work of power and
originality". (H.
A. WaIter, The Ahmadiyya Movement, p. 16.) The book won this recognition in
spite of the fact that it contained all the material
which formed the basis of later differences with the
orthodox Muslims. In this work were published the
author's revelations in which he was addressed as
messenger, prophet and warner. His claim to be inspired
by God was never contested. Thus, Maulvi Muhammad Husain,
the head of the Ahl i Hadith (Wahabi) sect in the
Punjab, wrote a review of the Barahin Ahmadiyya,
and the following paragraph from this review shows
how wide was the acceptance accorded to this book by men
of all shades of opinion, the author being a declared
Hanafi, to which school of thought he adhered to the
last:
"In our opinion,
it is in this time and in the present circumstances,
a book the like of which has not been written up to
this time in Islam, and nothing can be said about the
future; Allah may bring about another affair after
this. Its author, too, has proved himself firm in
helping the cause of Islam, with his property and his
person and his pen and his tongue and his personal
religious experience, to such an extent that an
example of it is rarely met with among the Muslims
who have gone before. If any one looks upon these
words of ours as an Asiatic exaggeration, let him
point out to us at least one such book as has in it
such forceful refutation of all classes of the
opponents of Islam, especially the Arya Samaj and the
Brahmo Samaj, and let him give us the addresses of
two or three persons, the helpers of the cause of
Islam, who, besides helping Islam with their
properties and their persons and their pens and their
tongues, have also come forward with their religious
experience and have proclaimed, as against the
opponents of Islam and the deniers of revelation, the
manly challenge that whoever doubted the truth of
revelation may come to them and witness the truth
thereof, and who have made non-Muslims taste of the
same."
(Isha'at
al-Sunna, vol. vii, June to November,
1884, p. 157.)
Religious
experience
Muslims of the Ahi
Sunna wal-Jama'a sect generally admit the existence
of saints, or auliya Allah, who have been
recipients of the gifts of Divine inspiration, while the Ahl
Hadith, popularly known as Wahabis, are generally
looked upon as denying the continuance of this gift;
nevertheless, here we find the head of the Ahl Hadith sect,
not only admiring the powerful arguments contained in the
Barahin Ahmadiyya against all sorts of
opponents of Islam but also laying special stress on the
fact that the author's religious experience was of such a
high character, in holding communion with God and in
receiving inspiration or revelation from Him, that he had
been successful in giving practical proof of such
revelation to its deniers. This is only one indication of
how Muslim India received Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad's
claim as mujaddid of the fourteenth century of
Hijra. The purpose of his being raised as a mujaddid was
also made clear in the Barahin Ahmadiyya. I
quote Hazrat Ahmad's own words:
"The spiritual
triumph of the religion of Islam which would be
brought about by conclusive arguments and shining
proofs is destined to be accomplished through this
weak mortal, whether it is in his life-time or after
his death. Though the religion of Islam has been
triumphant from the beginning on account of its
truthful arguments, and though from the earliest
times its opponents have met with disgrace and
dishonor, its conquests over the different sects and
nations depended on the coming of a time which, byng the ways of communication, should turn the
whole world into a kind of united states...Thus God
intends, by creating me in this age and by granting
me hundreds of heavenly signs and extraordinary
matters relating to the future, and deep knowledge
and truths, and by giving me knowledge of hundreds of
sure arguments, to spread and propagate knowledge of
the true teachings of the Qur'an among all nations
and in all countries."
(Barahin
Ahmadiyya, pp. 498-502.)
Bai'a to
serve Islam
Matters remained in this
condition for several years during which time Hazrat
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad was generally admitted to be the
religious leader and inspired reformer of the Muslims.
During that time, he maintained a hard struggle against
the onslaughts of the Arya Samaj, which had become very
powerful, and which followed in the footsteps of the
Christian missionaries in abusing the Prophet of Islam.
On the first of December, 1888, he announced that
Almighty God had commanded him to accept bai'a and
to form into a separate class those who came to spiritual
life through him.
"I have been
commanded", he wrote, "'that those who seek
after truth should enter my bai'a, in order
to give up dirty habits and slothful and disloyal ways of
life and in order to imbibe true faith and a truly pure
life that springs from faith and to learn the ways of the
love of God".
Bai'a is, among the
Sufis, the oath of fealty which the disciple takes when
giving his hand into the hand of his spiritual guide, but
the bai'a which Hazrat Ahmad wanted from his
followers was a promise to guard the cause of Islam, to
deliver the message thereof, and to place the service of
Islam above all other considerations. There were ten
conditions which the disciple had to accept, the eighth
of these being:
"That he will
regard religion and the honor of religion and the
sympathy of Islam as dearer to him than his life and
his property and his honor and his children and every
one dear to him."
These ten conditions were
retained after his claim to the Promised Messiahship and
up to the end of his life, but when disciples came in
larger numbers, these were shortened, the following words
taking the place of the eighth condition:
"I will place
religion above the world".
It is easy to see that
this pledge was quite different from the ordinary pledge
which is taken in the Sufi orders, and its object was no
other than to uphold the honor of Islam at all costs, to
guard Islam against all attacks and to carry its message
to the farthest ends of the world. Here was a spiritual
commander who needed a spiritual force to guard the
spiritual territories of Islam and to lead Islam to
further spiritual conquests.
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