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Pakistan
/ History / The Advent of Urdu Language
Apart from
religion, Urdu also enabled the Muslim community during the period
of its ascendancy to preserve its separate identity in the subcontinent.
Muslim Identity
-- The question of Muslim identity, however assumed seriousness
during the decline of Muslim power in South Asia. The first person
to realize its acuteness was the scholar theologian, Shah Waliullah
(1703-62). He laid the foundation of Islamic renaissance in the
subcontinent and became a source of inspiration for almost all
the subsequent social and religious reform movements of the nineteenth,
and twentieth centuries. His immediate successors, inspired by
his teachings, tried to establish a modest Islamic state in the
north-west of India and they, under the leadership of Sayyed Ahmad
Shaheed Barelvi (1786-1831), persevered in this direction. British
Expansionism and Muslim Resistance Meanwhile, starting with the
East India Company, the British had emerged as the dominant force
in South Asia. Their rise to power was gradual extending over
a period of nearly one hundred years. They replaced the Shariah
by what they termed as the Anglo-Muhammadan law whereas Urdu was
replaced by English as the official language. These and other
developments had great social, economic and political impact especially
on the Muslims of South Asia. The uprising of 1857, termed as
the Indian Mutiny by the British and the War of Independence by
the Muslims, was a desperate attempt to reverse the adverse course
of events. Religious Institutions The failure of the 1857 War
of Independence had disastrous consequences for the Muslims as
the British placed all the responsibility for this event on them.
Determined to stop such a recurrence in future, the British followed
deliberately a repressive policy against the Muslims. Properties
and estates of those even remotely associated with the freedom
fighters were confiscated and conscious efforts were made to close
all avenues of honest living for them. The Muslim response to
this situation also aggravated their plight. Their religious leaders,
who had been quite active, withdrew from the mainstream of the
community life and devoted themselves exclusively to imparting
religious education. Although the religious academies especially
those of Deoband, Farangi Mahal and Rai Bareilly, established
by the Ulema, did help the Muslims to preserve their identity,
the training provided in these institutions hardly equipped them
for the new challenges. Educational Reform The Muslims kept themselves
aloof from western education as well as government service. But,
their compatriots, the Hindus, did not do so and accepted the
new rulers without reservation. They acquired western education,
imbibed the new culture and captured positions hitherto filled
in by the Muslims. If this situation had prolonged, it would have
done the Muslims an irreparable damage. The man to realise the
impending peril was Sir Syed Ahmad Khan (1817-1889), a witness
to the tragic events of 1857. He exerted his utmost to harmonize
British Muslim relations. His assessment was that the Muslims'
safety lay in the acquisition of western education and knowledge.
He took several positive steps to achieve this objective. He founded
a college at Aligarh to impart education on western lines. Of
equal importance was the Anglo-Muhammadan Educational Conference,
which he sponsored in 1886, to provide an intellectual forum to
the Muslims for the dissemination of views in support of western
education and social reform. Similar were the objectives of the
Muhammadan Literary Society, founded by Nawab Adbul Latif (1828-93),
active in Bengal, Sir Syed Ahmad Khan's efforts transformed into
a movement, known as the Aligarh Movement, and it left its imprint
on the Muslims of every part of the South-Asian subcontinent.
Under its inspiration, societies were founded throughout the subcontinent
which established educational institutions for imparting education
to the Muslims.
Sir Syed
Ahmad Khan was averse to the idea of participation by the Muslims
in any organized political activity which, he feared, might revive
British hostility towards them. He also disliked Hindu Muslim
collaboration in any joint venture. His disillusionment in this
regard stemmed basically from the Urdu Hindi controversy of the
late 1860s when the Hindu enthusiasts vehemently championed the
cause of Hindi to replace Urdu. He, therefore, opposed the Indian
National Congress when it was founded in 1885 and advised the
Muslims to abstain from its activities. His contemporary and a
great scholar of Islam, Syed Ameer Ali (1849-1928), shared his
views about the Congress, but, he was not opposed to Muslims organizing
themselves politically. In fact, he organised the first significant
political body of the Muslims, the Central National Muhammadan
Association. Although, its membership was limited, it had more
than 50 branches in different parts of the subcontinent and it
accomplished some solid work for the educational and political
advancement of the Muslims. But, its activities waned towards
the end of the nineteenth century. The Muslim League At the dawn
of the twentieth century, a number of factors convinced the Muslims
of the need to have an effective political organization. Therefore,
in October 1906, a deputation comprising 35 Muslim leaders met
the Viceroy of the British at Simla and demanded separate electorates.
Three months later, the All-India Muslim League was founded by
Nawab Salimullah Khan at Dhaka, mainly with the objective of safeguarding
the political rights and interests of the Muslims. The British
conceded separate electorates in the Government of India Act of
1909 which confirmed the Muslim League's position as an All-India
party. Attempt for Hindu Muslim Unity The visible trend of the
two major communities progressing in opposite directions caused
deep concern to leaders of All-India stature. They struggled to
bring the Congress and the Muslim League on one platform. Quaid-i-Azam
Mohammad Ali Jinnah (1876-1948) was the leading figure among them.
After the annulment of the partition of Bengal and the European
Powers' aggressive designs against the Ottoman Empire and North
Africa, the Muslims were receptive to the idea of collaboration
with the Hindus against the British rulers.
The Congress
Muslim League rapprochement was achieved at the Lucknow sessions
of the two parties in 1916 and a joint scheme of reforms was adopted.
In the Lucknow Pact. as the scheme was commonly referred to, the
Congress accepted the principle of separate electorates, and the
Muslims, in return for `weightage' to the Muslims of the Muslim
minority provinces, agreed to surrender their thin majorities
in the Punjab and Bengal. The post Lucknow Pact period witnessed
Hindu Muslim amity and the two parties came to hold their annual
sessions in the same city and passed resolutions of identical
contents.
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