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OF PROMINENT MUSLIMS OF THE TIME Sayyid Ahmad Barelvi (d. 1831)
He was a Muslim military as well as
religious leader who fought against Sikh rule in the
North West of India, and is regarded as mujaddid of
the thirteenth century hijra. It is recorded about
him:
"When he was going forth to
conduct jihad against the Sikhs, a man asked him: `Why do
you go so far to fight jihad against the Sikhs, when the
British are ruling the country and they are deniers of
Islam. Conduct jihad against them in every house and
wrest India from them; millions of people will support
and help you'
"He replied: The British
government may be deniers of Islam, but they are not
oppressing the Muslims, nor preventing them from
religious obligations and worship. For what reason then
can we fight jihad against them, and needlessly shed the
blood of both sides, contrary to the principles of
religion."
(Musalmanon Ka Roshan Mustaqbil,
by Sayyid Tufail Ahmad, 3rd edition, 1940)
Sayyid Muhammad Ismail Shaheed
He was the deputy of Sayyid Ahmad
Barelvi, and died in a battle against the Sikhs. It is
written about him:
[i.]"A man asked, Why do you
not give a pronouncement of jihad against the British? He
replied: In no way is it obligatory to fight jihad
against them. Firstly, we are their subjects. Secondly,
they do not interfere in our performance of our religious
duties. We have every kind of freedom under their rule.
In fact, if someone attacks them, Muslims must fight the
attacker and let not their government be harmed a
whit."
(Hayyat Tayyiba, biography
by Mirza Hairat of Delhi, 1972 edition, published in
Lahore, p. 364)
[ii.]"Maulavi Ismail had
announced that `jihad is not valid against the British
government in the religious sense, nor do we have any
dispute with them; we are only retaliating against the
Sikhs for our brothers.' This was why the British rulers
knew nothing, and did not stop his preparations."
(ibid., p. 201)
[iii.]"This was the reason why
Maulavi Ismail of Delhi, who knew the Quran and Hadith,
and acted upon them, did not fight in his country India
against the British, under whose peace and protection he
lived, nor did he fight the states of this country.
Outside this country, he fought the Sikhs who interfered
in the religious practices of the Muslims, prohibiting
the loud sounding of the Azan."
(Al-Iqtisad fi masa'il al-jihad,
by Maulavi Muhammad Husain Batalvi, published 1876, pp.
49--50)
Maulana Sayyid Nazir Husain of
Delhi (d. 1902)
He was the top-most Ahl-i Hadith
theologian.
[i.]In a fatwa, he wrote:
"Since the criterion of jihad
is absent from this land, to conduct jihad here would be
a means of destruction and a sin."
(Fatawa Naziriyya, vol. iv,
p. 472)
[ii.] t is noted about him:
"In terms of the true meaning
of jihad, Sayyid Nazir Husain of Delhi did not consider
the 1857 rebellion to be Islamic legal jihad. He thought
it to be faithlessness, breach of covenant, and mischief,
and declared it to be a sin to take part or help in
it."
(Magazine Isha`at as-Sunna,
vol. vi, no. 10, October 1883, p. 288)
Maulavi Muhammad Husain Batalvi
He was an Ahl-i Hadith leader and
editor of Isha`at as-Sunna, who opposed Hazrat
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad after his claim to be the Promised
Messiah. In a book on jihad, he wrote:
"Uninformed Muslims should
examine this implication and bear it in mind, and not
consider fighting with every rival faith on account of
its unbelief to be legal jihad. To fight with peaceful or
covenanted people most definitely cannot be legal jihad,
whether national or religious, but is rebellion and
sedition. The Muslims who took part in the 1857 rebellion
were serious sinners, and according to the Quran and
Hadith they were rebels, mischief makers and wicked. Most
of the ordinary people among them were like beasts. Those
known as the prominent and the Ulama were unacquainted
with true faith, or lacking in understanding."
(Al-Iqtisad fi masa'il al-Jihad,
p. 49)
Nawab Siddiq Hasan Khan of
Bhopal
He was an eminent Ahl-i Hadith
religious scholar as well as political leader. In his
book Tarjuman-i Wahhabiyyat, he wrote:
[i.]"This book has been
written to inform the British government that no Muslim
subject of India and the Indian states bears malice
towards this great power."
(Edition published in Lahore, 1895,
p. 4)
[ii.]"Be concerned about those
people who are ignorant of their religious teachings, in
that they wish to efface the British government, and to
end the current peace and tranquility by disorder under
the name of jihad. This is sheer stupidity and
foolishness." (p. 7)
[iii.]"During the mutiny [of
1857], some rajas and so-called nawabs and men of means
interfered in the peace and calm of India under the name
of jihad, and they fanned the flames of battle till their
disorder and hostility reached such a level that women
and children, who cannot be killed under any law, were
thoughtlessly slaughtered
If anyone lets loose such
mischief today, he would also be the same kind of
trouble-maker, and from beginning to end he would stain
the name of Islam."
(p. 15)
[iv.]"In 1875, Maulavi
Muhammad Husain Batalvi
gave the reply that jihad
and religious war against the British government of
India, against the authority which has granted religious
freedom, is forbidden by and contrary to the law of
Islam, and those people who take up weapons against the
British government of India, or against any sovereign who
has granted religious freedom, and wish to conduct
religious jihad, are all rebels and deservant of
punishment. Then Maulavi Muhammad Husain, in support of
his claim and reply, sent his ruling to all the Ulama of
Punjab and other parts of India, and well-publicised it.
He obtained the seals and signatures of approval of all
the Ulama of Punjab and India in support of the ruling
that the taking up of arms by Indian Muslims, and jihad
against the British government of India, was opposed to
the Sunna and the faith of the monotheists."
(p. 61)
Sultan of Turkish (Ottoman)
empire
The Sultan of the Turkish empire
used to be known as the Khalifa-tul-Muslimeen
(Head of the Muslims), and was recognised as their
titular head by vast numbers of Muslims. A history book
records:
"The Sultan of Turkey, who was
the Khalifa-tul-Muslimeen, thanked this assistance
of the British [during the Crimean war] in this way, that
in 1857 when the independent minded Muslims and Hindus of
India joined forces to launch a war of independence
against British rule, the Khalifa wrote and gave to the
British a fatwa to the effect that the Muslims of
India ought not to fight the British because the latter
had proved to be supporters and well-wishers of the
Islamic Khilafat."
(Tarikh Aqwam `Alam, Parts I
and II, by Murtaza Ahmad Khan, p. 540)
Hunter's The
Indian Musalmans
In 1872 a British scholar and civil
servant in India, W. W. Hunter, published a now historic
book entitled The Indian Musalmans, in which he
gave the views of various sects of Islam on the question
of whether Muslims were duty-bound by their religion to
wage a war-like jihad against the British government of
India. Regarding the Shiah sect, Hunter writes:
"Their present declaration of
the non-obligation to rebel is spontaneous, and it is
well that such a declaration has been put on record. It
comes to us stamped with the highest authority which the
Shias can give to any document, and will be permanently
binding on the whole sect."
(p. 121)
Regarding the Sunni Hanafis, the
majority sect, he then adds:
"I now pass to the Formal
Decisions of the greater sect. The Sunnis, as they are
the most numerous class of Indian Musalmans, so they have
of late been the most conspicious in proclaiming that
they are under no religious obligation to wage war
against the Queen. To that end they have procured two
distinct sets of Legal Decisions, and the Muhammadan
Literary Society of Calcutta has summed up the whole
Sunni view of the question in a forcibly written
pamphlet
"The Law Doctors of Northern
Hindustan set out by tacitly assuming that India is a
Country of the Enemy (Dar-ul-Harb), and deduce
therefrom that religious rebellion is uncalled for. The
Calcutta Doctors declare India to be a Country of Islam (Dar-ul-Islam),
and conclude that religious rebellion is therefore
unlawful."
(p. 122)
(The Indian Musalmans by W.
W. Hunter, published by Trubner and Co., London, 1872,
second edition)
The two rulings (fatwas)
referred to here are given in English translation in
Appendix II and III of The Indian Musalmans. In
the first fatwa, the following question was asked:
"What is your Decision, O men
of learning and expounders of the law of Islam, in the
following: Whether a Jihad is lawful in India, a country
formerly held by a Muslim ruler, and now held under the
sway of a Christian government, where the said Christian
Ruler does in no way interfere with his Muslim subjects
in the Rites prescribed by their Religion, such as
Praying, Fasting, Pilgrimage, Zakat, Friday Prayer, and
Jama`at, and gives them fullest protection and liberty in
the above respects in the same way as a Muslim Ruler
would do, and where the Muslim subjects have no strength
and means to fight with their rulers; on the contrary,
there is every chance of the war, if waged, ending with a
defeat, and thereby causing an indignity to Islam."
The fatwa given on this
question, dated 17 July 1870, is as follows:
"The Musalmans here are
protected by Christians, and there is no Jihad in a
country where protection is afforded, as the absence of
protection and liberty between Musalmans and Infidels is
essential in a religious war, and that condition does not
exist here. Besides, it is necessary that there should be
a probability of victory to Musalmans and glory to the
Indians. If there be no such probability, the Jihad is
unlawful."
This fatwa bears the seals
of the following: Maulavi Ali Muhammad, Maulavi Abdul
Hai, Maulavi Fazlullah, Muhammad Naim, and Maulavi
Rahmatullah, all of Lucknow, Maulavi Qutb-ud-Din of
Delhi, Maulavi Lutfullah of Rampur, and others. See pages
218--219 of The Indian Musalmans.
In the second fatwa, given
by Maulavi Karamat Ali of the Calcutta Muhammadan
Society, it is first determined that India is Dar-ul-Islam,
and then it is added:
"The second question is,
`Whether it is lawful in this Country to make Jihad
or not.' This has been solved together with the first.
For jihad can by no means be lawfully made in
Dar-ul-Islam. This is so evident that it requires no
argument or authority to support it. Now, if any
misguided wretch, owing to his perverse fortune, were to
wage war against the Ruling Powers of this Country,
British India, such war would be rightly pronounced
rebellion; and rebellion is strictly forbidden by the
Islamic Law. Therefore such war will likewise be
unlawful; and in case any one would wage such war, the
Muslim subjects would be bound to assist their Rulers,
and, in conjunction with their Rulers, to fight with such
rebels."
(ibid., p. 219)
Dr Barbara Daly Metcalf of the
U.S.A. has written a book entitled Islamic Revival in
British India, , published by the Princeton
University Press, Princeton (1982), based on her doctoral
research work. At various places in this book, the views
of famous Muslim theologians and prominent figures of the
last century have been given on the question of jihad in
relation to British rule of India. Some extracts are
given below.
The Deobandis
Regarding the attitude and mode of
conduct of leaders of the Deoband school, it is written
about one of the founders, Rashid Ahmad Gangohi:
"Further, Rashid Ahmad
sanctioned turning to the government for aid in disputes
with Hindus. `Do not fight and die [to reclaim the site
of a mosque from Hindus],' he wrote, `but turn to the
government.' The Deobandis made sure that they conformed
in every way to a posture of loyalty. Rashid Ahmad, for
this reason, refused to accept a grant of 5000 Rupees a
year from the Shah of Afghanistan for fear that a
political link might be suspected. And the school
celebrated ceremonial occasions like coronations with
appropriate pomp, and observed times of crises, like
Queen Victoria's last illness, with fitting prayers and
messages."
(pp. )
Nawab Siddiq Hasan Khan
His views have been quoted above
from his book Tarjuman al-Wahhabiyya. This book is
described as follows by Dr Metcalf:
"After the Mutiny [of
1857]
some among the British still feared that
Muslims would once again resort towarfare, as they
had done in the 1830s. Those who did saw the Ahl-i Hadith
as the heirs of the jihad tradition and singled out Nawab
Siddiq Hasan Khan as its exponent
But far from
fomenting jihad, he had written Tarjuman-i Wahhabiyyat
to prove that the Ahl-i Hadith were loyal. He quoted
Lord Northbrook's testimonial to Muslim loyalty. He
pointed out that Bhopal had aided the British in the war
in Egypt. He cited, as did all the writers on this
subject, the obligation of Muslims to accept a ruler who
had provided security and with whom one had made an
agreement."
(ibid. p 279)
Deputy Nazir Ahmad
He was a famous literary figure of
the time who also translated the Quran into Urdu. His
attitude is recorded as follows:
"He mocked those who aped
British dress and manners. Still he enthusiastically
embraced British rule, writing at length during the 1870s
to deny the legitimacy of jihad."
(p. 332)
Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan (d.
1898)
He is considered as one of the
greatest Indian Muslim leaders during British rule. About
his views it is written:
"Gradually he became convinced
that British rule was long to stay, and that those
Muslims aligned with it would be both true to their
religion and prosperous. He had to convince his fellow
Muslims of the truth of this position
To the British
he had to show that the Muslims were both loyal and
important to the stability of their rule... His efforts
--- if not his religious thought --- were to be welcomed
by many Muslims of his day."
(p. 319)
ULAMA USE WORD `HARAM'
ABOUT JIHAD
Hazrat Mirza is accused of having
described jihad as haram (forbidden by the
religion). Below are quoted writings of some Ulama in
which they have used the word haram in the same
context.
Maulavi Muhammad Husain Batalvi
[i.]"To fight against this
government [i.e. British rule of India] or to aid those
who fight against it, even though they be one's Muslim
brothers, is clear treachery and haram."
(Al-Iqtisad fi masa'il al-jihad,
p. 49)
[ii.]"It is not permissible
for Muslim subjects to fight, or aid those who fight,
against their government, whatever be the religion of
that government, when they are performing their religious
obligations with freedom under its peace and law. On this
basis, it is haram for the Indian Muslims to
oppose, and to rebel against, the British
government."
(Isha`at as-Sunna, vol. vi,
no. 10, p. 287)
Dr Sir Muhammad Iqbal
"I do not support war, nor can
any Muslim support it bearing in mind the limits imposed
by the Shari`ah. According to Quranic teachings, there
can only be two types of jihad or war: defensive and
corrective. In the first case, it is only under the
condition
that when Muslims are wronged and expelled
from their homes, they are permitted, not ordered, to
raise the sword
For territorial expansion, it is haram
in Islam to conduct war, and it is also haram to
raise the sword for the propagation of the faith."
(Makatib Iqbal, collection
of letters of Iqbal, Part I, p. 203)
Sayyid Abul Ala Maudoodi
"No true reformer can decide
to adopt only one of the sword or the pen for the
execution of his reform work. He needs both of these to
accomplish his task. As long as preaching and exhortation
by the tongue can be effective in teaching people
morality and civilisation, to raise the sword is not only
not permitted, but it is haram."
(Al-Jihad fil-Islam, 3rd
edition, p. 27)
Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad wrote in
precisely the same vein. In a well-known poem, he wrote:
"Drop the idea of jihad at
this time, O friends; To spread the faith by war and qital
(fighting) is haram now.
No coercion is there for you from
an alien nation; it does not forbid you prayer and
fasting.
That Messiah has now come who is
the Imam of the faith; an end has been put to religious
wars.
The Holy Prophet had said; that
Jesus would postpone the wars.
To imagine that a mahdi would come
to shed blood; and expand the faith by killing
unbelievers.
This is all sheer falsehood, O
heedless ones; it is slander, without proof, without
light."
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