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Love for the Holy Quran As he himself says, at the age of forty, a new era thus dawned upon
Hazrat Ahmad, and he began to receive Divine revelations. His father's death brought about
a radical change in his life, and his religious tendencies began to assume a more definite
form. There was no longer any pressure put upon him to give himself up to worldly
pursuits, and the whole of his time was from then onwards devoted to the study of the Holy
Quran and other Islamic literature. He was undoubtedly leading a deeply religious life,
but it had taken a quite different course from that which religious devotion normally
followed in those days. Many schools of the Muslim Sufis require their votaries to undergo
various forms of devotional exercises, of which no indication is found in the practice of
the Holy Prophet. Hazrat Ahmad belonged to none of these schools and he never practised
such innovations. In fact, from his early life, he hated all ascetic practices, which were
opposed to the word and the spirit of the Holy Quran. His only devotional exercise was the
study of the Holy Quran in solitude. For days and months, he would continue studying the
Holy Book, and so great was his love for it that those who saw him were convinced that he
was never tired of reading it. His son, Mirza Sultan Ahmad, who was then a young man of
about twenty-five years, bears witness to this in the following words:
"He had a copy of the Holy Quran which he was
continually reading and marking I can say without exaggeration that he might have
read it ten thousand times."
Divine visions
On one occasion, he saw a vision in which an old man
appeared to him saying that, according to the law of prophethood, fasting was a necessary
preparation for receiving Divine light. On the basis of this vision, he kept fasts for a
period of eight or nine months, reducing his food during that time to two or three
morsels. Nevertheless, he did it privately so as to keep the fact concealed from his
nearest relatives, and made special arrangements for the disposal of the food which he
received regularly. This long fasting, however, had no injurious effect upon his health.
On the other hand, he saw many wonderful visions relating to the future, some of which
were later on published in the Brahmin Ahmadiyya, his first great work The
fulfillment, years afterwards, of the prophecies contained in them showed that they were
actual revelations from God and not the hallucinations of a diseased brain.
Anti-Islamic Christian literature
Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad was, however, no mere visionary.
From his early life, he was a student not only of Islam but also of comparative religion.
He himself says:
"I have been studying Christian literature from the
early age of sixteen or seventeen, and have been pondering over Christian objections. I
collected all those objections which the Christians advance against our Holy Prophet ...
Their number is about three thousand. God is a witness and none greater than He can be
produced as a witness that, as I have just said, I have been studying Christian literature
from the time when I was sixteen or seventeen years old, but not for a moment have those
objections made any impression on me, or created any doubt in my mind, and this is simply
due to the grace of God."
Christianity necessarily attracted his attention first, as
that was the only foe of Islam in his early days.
We have seen that, during his stay at Sialkot, he had
discussions with Christian missionaries about the comparative merits of Islam and
Christianity. Returning to Qadian after four years, he actively refuted the anti-Islamic
propaganda of Christianity, whose centre was Batala. In fact, Christian propaganda against
Islam was most active, and at the same time, most scurrilous, during the latter half of
the nineteenth century. Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, being a devoted student of religion,
closely studied that literature, and his heart ached at the way in which the holiest of
men was being maligned and abused. By producing this abusive literature, the aim of
Christianity was to engender, in Muslim hearts, hatred for the Holy Founder of Islam. In
fact, with its numerous bands of missionaries insinuating themselves into every nook and
corner of the Muslim world, and with heaps of abusive literature distributed freely among
the Muslims, Christianity was challenging the very existence of Islam, and Hazrat Ahmad,
whose heart was full of the deepest conviction of Islamic truth, took up the challenge in
real earnest. He started to write against the aggressiveness of Christianity, and articles
from his pen began to appear in Muslim periodicals. The publication of such articles in
the Manshur Muhammadi, which was issued from Bangalore in Southern India,
shows the keenness with which he was controverting the Christian propaganda.
Comparative study of religion
Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad was not, however, a mere
controversialist. He was a student of religion, and, as early as 1873, while his father
was still alive and he was engaged in law-suits relating to the family estates, he had
determined to make a comparative study of religion and to place the result of his
researches before the public. He had already decided to write a book, and the following
memorandum in his own handwriting shows his deep consciousness of the superiority and the
perfection of the Islamic teachings which it had become his life's aim to establish and
for which he wanted freedom from worldly entanglements:
"In this book, it will be necessary to state that the
law of Mustafa [the Islamic Law ] is perfect and more comprehensive than all other laws.
To prove this, a law shall be taken for example from the Torah in the first place, then
from the Gospels, and after that from the Holy Quran, so that when the reader compares the
three laws, it will be evident to him which of the three laws is the best and the
excellent."
This note is signed thus: "Ghulam Ahmad, 17th Oct.
1873, Friday, Qadian."
The Arya Samaj
He was preparing himself for this great work by studying
not only the Islamic literature, the Holy Quran, Hadith and commentaries, but also the
literature of other religions, in his spare time. His father's death, in 1876, hadd
the way for him to realize the great dream of his life - to establish the superiority of
Islam over all other religions. While he was thus fighting single-handed against the vast
forces of Christianity, another foe of Islam had appeared in the field, in the form of the
Arya Samaj. The founder of this new offshoot of Hinduism was born in distant Kathiawar,
Gujerat, in the Bombay Presidency, in the year 1824. At an early age he fled from his
home, and after visiting various centres of Hindu learning and formally starting his
mission in l875, at Bombay. He gave final shape to it two years later, at Lahore, the
capital of the Punjab, and the Arya Samaj of today rests on the principles enunciated
there. Originally, this movement was directed against the idol-worship of Hinduism, but,
as Western education wasng the Hindu mind for the acceptance of Christianity and
Islam, the Arya Samaj, from its inception, came into conflict with these two religions.
The Punjab proved to be a fertile land for the Arya Samaj,
and, by the end of the year 1878, branches of the organization were established all over
the Punjab, one being established at Qadian itself. It was through this local branch that
Hazrat Ahmad was drawn into a controversy with the Arya Samaj. The local discussion soon
assumed importance and found its way into the columns of both Hindu and Muslim papers of
Lahore and Amritsar. The Hindu Bandhu of Lahore, which was edited by Pandit
Shiv Narain Agni Hotri, who later became the founder of another Hindu sect, called the Dev
Samaj,d its columns to articles for and against the Arya Samaj.
The following note from a Hindu editor's pen shows how
powerfully Hazrat Ahmad was carrying the fight against the Arya Samaj:
"Our readers will remember that the final paper of
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad sahib which we published in our issue for February, 1879, could not be
produced in its entirety in the said number, and was therefore completed in the two
following numbers. In that article, the Mirza sahib also made an announcement in which he
addressed Swami Dayanand, the founder of the Arya Samaj, as well as some of his followers
(whose names were given in the said number for February, 1879, on p.39) We very gladly
gave room to that article in our periodical and we entertained the hope that, if the
arguments given by the Mirza sahib, which were very clear and based on logical
principles, were appreciated by the above mentioned gentlemen, they would,
according to their declared principle that one should always be ready to accept the truth
and to give up untruth, publicly andy declare their faith in the falsity of the
transmigration of souls, and thus establish an example of their willingness to accept the
truth."
(emphasis is mine)
The Brahmo Samaj
It has elsewhere been shown that Hazrat Ahmad had studied
the Bible. His controversies with the Arya Samajists show that he had also studied the
Vedas, from such translations as were available, and he repeatedly called upon his
opponents to judge the merits of the Holy Quran as compared with other sacred books. Not
only was he a student of comparative religion, but he also claimed to have the religious
experience which makes men attain communion with God. Therefore it was that he had to
devote much of his attention to the Brahmo Samaj, an earlier Hindu reform movement,
started by Ram Mohan Roy in 1828. It is a well-established fact that the founder of the
Brahmo Samaj was mainly influenced by the Muslim Sufi ideals. It was thus a very liberal
movement, based on the principle that all religions are true. Yet, strangely enough, it
denied the possibility of revelation, and it was this aspect of the Brahmo Samaj, which
attracted the attention of Hazrat Ahmad. Pandit Shiv Narain Agni Hotri, the great Brahmo
leader at Lahore, himself carried on this controversy, but, after some time, he deserted
the Brahmo Samaj and laid the foundation of a new sect, called the Dev Samaj.
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