Intellectual DIscourse, 21:2 (2013) 197-219 Copyright © IIUM Press ISSN 0128-4878 (Print); ISSN 2289-5639 (Online) Allama Shibli and the early Muslim League: A dissenting voice Arshad Islam* Abstract: The All-India Muslim League (AIML) was formed in 1906, with the primary aim to improve the educational and socioeconomic status of Muslims. Allama Shibli Nu‘mani (1857-1914) put forward an argument in support of Muslims recovering from the political stupor into which they had fallen after the British suppression of the 1857 uprising. He encouraged Muslims to participate in democratic politics in India, departing from the educational focus of his mentor, Sir Saiyid Ahmad Khan (1817-1898). Shibli advanced a strong critique of the Muslim League’s limited ambitions in comparison with the Indian National Congress (INC). His critique, notably in ironic and emotive poetry, significantly contributed to the national discussion pertaining to the Muslim League’s reform and restructure. Based on Shibli’s original writings, this paper analyses his critique of the Muslim League and his efforts to overhaul its structure and policies. It examines the response of the Muslim League to these critiques and studies the extent to which its structure and policies changed. Keywords: Indian National Congress; Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College; Muslim League; Shibli Nu‘mani; Saiyid Ahmad Khan. Abstrak: Liga Seluruh India Muslim (AIML) dibentuk pada tahun 1906, dengan satu tujuan iaitu untuk memperbaiki status pendidikan dan sosioekonomi Muslim. Allama Shibli Nu’mani (1857-1914) mengemukakan bantahan untuk menyokong Muslim bagi pemulihannya daripada masalah politik yang mana mereka telah jatuh selepas penjajahan British semasa 1857 pemberontakan. Beliau menggalakkan Muslim untuk terlibat dalam demokrasi politik di negara * Arshad Islam is an Associate Professor in the Department of History and Civilization, Kulliyyah of Islamic Revealed Knowledge and Human Sciences, International Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM), Malaysia. Email: [email protected]. 198 Intellectual DIscourse, Vol 21, No 2, 2013 India, bertolak daripada fokus pendidikan mentornya, Tuan Saiyid Ahmad Khan (1817-1898). Shibli memberi kritikan yang kuat tehadap Liga Islam yang mempunyai cita-cita yang terhad berbanding Kongres Kebangsaan India (INC). Kritikan beliau, terutamanya dalam puisi ironis dan emosi, lebih menyumbang kepada perbincangan negara mengenai pembaharuan dan menyusun semula Liga Islam. Berdasarkan tulisan-tulisan asal Shibli, kertas ini menganalisis kritikannya terhadap usaha-usaha beliau untuk merombak struktur dan dasar Liga Islam. Ia mengkaji tindak balas Liga Islam terhadap kritikan yang telah diberikan dan turut mengkaji sejauh mana struktur dan dasar-dasarnya telah berubah. Kata kunci: Kongres Nasional India; Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College; Liga Muslim; Shibli Nu’mani; Saiyid Ahmad Khan. Allama Shibli Nu‘mani1 is among the foremost intellectual figures of modern Muslim India. Over the past century, his thought and intellectual contributions have been the subject of much research. However, despite the significant body of literature on Allama Shibli, it would appear that his role in the political awakening of the Muslims and the Muslim League’s reorientation as a mass political organisation, particularly its emergence as a sole representative voice of Muslims in the Indian Subcontinent was overlooked (Zilli, 2006). Shibli’s attitude towards Muslim participation in politics and his critique of the Muslim League was outlined in a revealing but brief paper by Zafarul Islam (1958). Since then, the topic has remained somewhat understudied despite its historical significance. Although Shibli did not personally join any political organisation, including the Muslim League, his socio-cultural and political views carried great weight with Muslim intellectuals, political luminaries, and common Muslims. The main thesis of the present study is to prove that Shibli’s forthright views on Muslim politics forced the Muslim League to re-orientate its politics. This reorientation greatly resonated with the Muslim masses, which ultimately turned the Muslim League into an organised Muslim political party. A biographical overview From the beginning of his career, Shibli was instrumental in defending Islam and the achievements of Muslims through his monograph series “Heroes of Islam”, which emphasised the civilisational impact of Islam and its role in enriching the human heritage. Shibli was also active in the development of both Islamic and modern education for the Muslims ALLAMA SHIBLI AND THE EARLY MUSLIM LEAGUE/ ARSHAD ISLAM 199 of India. He taught in the Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College (MAO College) or Madrasat-ul-Ulum, Aligarh, founded by Sir Saiyid Ahmad Khan (1817-1898) in 1875. With a goal to modernise Islamic education without compromising its foundations, in 1894 Shibli succeeded in founding Darul Ulum Nadvatul Ulama in Lucknow, India (Azami, 1994; Shibli Nu‘mani, 1992; Shibli Nu‘mani, n.d.; Troll, 1993). Shibli Nu‘mani was born on Wednesday Shawwal 10,1273/June 3, 1857, on the day when freedom fighters broke open gates of Azamgarh district jail, freeing many of its prisoners and capturing the district treasury, setting the scene for the troubled political times Shibli was to live through (Arshad Islam, 2005; Nadvi, 1999). After studying with well-known scholars, Shibli joined MAO College in 1883 and remained there until Sir Saiyid’s death in 1898 (David, 1978; Nadvi, 1999). He was a renowned oriental scholar on the staff of the College, and Sir Saiyid had great respect for his scholarship and academic skills, giving him access to his personal library. Although Shibli had close association with Sir Saiyid, he was at loggerheads with him on political matters and supported the Indian National Congress (INC) from its inception in spite of Sir Saiyid’s hostility. Shibli’s interest in the study of the early history of Islam and the democratic structure of the Pious Caliphate may explain his inclination towards the INC (Engineer, 2009; Nadvi, 1999). In a debate at the Students’ Union of the MAO College in 1892 on the theme “Is democracy a better form of government than autocracy?” Shibli emphatically supported democracy and his forceful advocacy won the majority of students’ support. Shibli argued his case by citing examples from the era of the Rightly Guided Caliphs and dwelt on the selection methods of the early caliphs. In this, Shibli considered the second Caliph, ‘Umar al-Fārūq (634-44), the ideal caliph. His magnum opus, The Biography of the Caliph, Umar al-Fārūq, published in 1898, remains incomparable for the brilliance of its historical narrative and literary style. In this work, Shibli argued that the democratic setup and participatory nature of the governmental institutions during ‘Umar’s rule was remarkable. He considered democracy to be an integral part of the Islamic heritage. Secondly, as a scholar who had a special interest in history, Shibli realised that sovereignty and freedom prosper only in a democratic system, and the Indian Muslim community had been excluded from political influence by the dissuasion of the traditional religious establishment. Shibli held that the Muslims in India could only hope to survive and prosper under a democracy. Sir Saiyid strongly 200 Intellectual DIscourse, Vol 21, No 2, 2013 opposed this idea. Refuting Shibli’s arguments, he wrote an article published in the Institute Gazette on June 28, 1892 entitled Ashiyai Aur Islami Tarz-i-Hukumat (The Asiatic and Islamic system of government) in which he outlined his own vision of the primary importance of education as opposed to democratic rights in obtaining rights for the Muslim community (Azim, 1968; Khan, 1892; Nadvi, 1999). The Indian National Congress and modern education To promote modern education, Shibli founded the National School in Azamgarh on June 20, 1883. Approximately two years after joining the MAO College, Shibli published his most radical Urdu poem Subh-i-ummid (Morning of Hope) at the first session of the All India Muhammadan Educational Conference held at Aligarh on December 27, 1886 (Arshad Islam, 2005; Nadvi, 1999; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2007). It emerged around the same time as the INC was founded in 1885. Shibli was in full accord with the aims of the Aligarh Movement for the advancement of Muslims. In political matters, however, he endorsed the nationalist ideas of the INC. While he never attended INC sessions or joined any political group, he was in total agreement with INC objectives. In a letter to Shakir Meeruti (1880-1956), editor of Al-Asr (The Age), Lucknow, on September 23, 1912, Shibli wrote: I always remained independent in my opinion. I worked with Sir Saiyid for sixteen years but in political matters I constantly disagreed with him and continued to support the [Indian National] Congress. I had many discussions with him on this issue (Nadvi, 1999, pp. 39, 297, 610). With regard to these disagreements, Maulana Habibur Rahman Khan Sherwani (1867-1950) made the following observation: One reason for the displeasure of Shibli with the College was the disagreement on political matters. He was now a supporter of the new political movement [the Indian National Congress] (Nadvi, 1999, p. 298; Qureshi, 1999). It would seem that the nationalist idea was embedded in Shibli’s psyche even before the establishment of the INC. Based on the arguments presented in his The Biography of the Caliph, the study of history appears to have helped shape his view of the current political situation. Shibli named the school that he founded in Azamgarh as the “National School” (Nadvi, 1999; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000). Shibli’s ALLAMA SHIBLI AND THE EARLY MUSLIM LEAGUE/ ARSHAD ISLAM 201 political outlook was contrary to the general atmosphere of Aligarh. Sir Saiyid’s antagonistic attitude towards the INC may have been due to the influence of British professors, like Sir Thomas Walker Arnold (1864-1930) and Theodore Morison (1863-1936) as well as his own perceptions regarding the needs of the Muslim community at that particular juncture. In this context, Shibli was apprehensive of the prevalent Muslim approach to politics and regretted the Muslim coldness towards the INC (Khan, 1985; Nadvi, 1999; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000). He was a great orator and even attached to the MAO College, he used to express his ideas freely and forcefully. A student during Shibli’s professorship at Aligarh, Khwaja Ghulam Saqlain (1870-1915) wrote on December 17, 1914 in Asr-i-jadid (The New Age), after Shibli’s death: Sir Saiyid Ahmad Khan was quite independent minded in religion but in political matters he was very conservative. This was the cause why Shibli did not agree with his political outlook from the very early days of his professorship (Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000, pp. 138-39; Troll, 1993). Shibli’s students and associates like Maulana Muhammad Ali (1878- 1931), Maulana Zafar Ali Khan (1873-1956), and Maulana Abul Kalam Azad (1888-1958) were influenced by his ideas. His far-reaching views helped shape their future political viewpoints. However, at the time Shibli’s politics was confined to private discussions. In these meetings, the INC manifesto excited Shibli and he lamented over what he believed was the political ignorance of the Muslims (Nadvi, 1999; Parveen, 2011; Robinson, 1993). Critique of the policies and political attitude of the Muslim League It was during his stay at Lucknow that Shibli was said to have started disseminating his ideas on Muslim participation in politics more forcefully and openly. He felt that his political ideas should be made public. To this end, in 1912 Shibli coaxed Saiyid Mir Jan to publish the Muslim Gazette, an independent Muslim newspaper, highlighting Muslim issues under the editorship of Maulvi Wahiduddin Salim (1867- 1928). Shibli wrote articles and notes for this newspaper under his own name and anonymously. So numerous were his contributions that the newspaper became regarded as a vehicle for Shibli’s own views (Muhammad, 1991; Nadvi, 1999). 202 Intellectual DIscourse, Vol 21, No 2, 2013 Among the contentious political issues of the time were the partition of Bengal and its annulment, the Balkan wars (1912 and 1913), the demand for a Muslim university, the tragedy of the Kanpur Mosque (1913), the reform of the Muslim League, and fostering political awareness among Muslims. On all these issues, the newspaper was quite outspoken, and its stance was determined by Shibli. Through this paper Shibli wanted to instil what he called the correct political attitude among Muslims (Hasan, 1991; Nadvi, 1999; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2007). In the Muslim Gazette, he wrote his most stirring article concerning the Indian politics at the time entitled Musalmanon ki Political Karwat (Political Reorientation of the Muslims). He launched the first issue of the magazine on February 12, 1912. It was written at the time of the annulment of the partition of Bengal, an event that highlights the formative period of politics in India. His simple yet forceful articles urging Muslims to participate in politics had a tremendous impact on Muslim politics in India. According to Saiyid Sulaiman Nadvi (1884- 1953), it changed the direction of Muslim politics from Simla to Qibla. The use of the term Qibla for ummatic politics (politics pertaining to the Muslim ummah) outlines the core of Shibli’s legacy in this regard. Here, Simla alludes to the Simla Deputation of 1906 for securing separate representation for the Muslims, which led to the founding of the All India Muslim League on September 30, 1906, in Dhaka (Al- Mujahid, 1990; Noman, 1942; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000). Subsequent to the growing self-awareness of their position in Indian society due to the trend represented by Shibli, in the League circles, it was commonly believed that if: immediate steps were not taken, the Muslims, on account of their growing fear of the majority [community] would ultimately join the [Indian National] Congress, which would, in the end prove fatal to their existence (Noman, 1942, p. 71). Musalmanon ki Political Karwat begins with Shibli’s appraisal of the Muslim League’s policies: If it is a fact that the slap of the [annulment of the] partition of Bengal has re-orientated the Muslim politics, then we [the Muslims] are even willing to sacrifice things dearer than Bengal at this joyful moment. Nonetheless, the noises emanating from the very centre of the politics [Muslim ALLAMA SHIBLI AND THE EARLY MUSLIM LEAGUE/ ARSHAD ISLAM 203 League] are not only misleading but are destined to soon die away (Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000, p. 137). Shibli then quotes an article by a Muslim columnist published contemporaneously in The Pioneer: It seems that as a result of the weakening of Turkey and Iran, the Muslims would not be able to uphold their exalted position in the politics of the country and therefore they should join the Hindus (Nadvi, 1999, p. 615; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000, p. 137). Taking serious exception to this argument, Shibli maintained that: To join up with the Hindus is a good idea and it has always been good and will remain good and will continue to remain so. But the fresh rationale that the columnist has advanced for this is nothing less than a matter of utter insult to Islam. Should we take shelter with our neighbours since we do not have backing any more? If Turkey and Iran had been strong would they have come to our aid against our Hindu neighbours; and did the British government believe Simla Deputation’s boast that Muslims’ political weight is greater than our neighbours’? (Nadvi, 1999, p. 615; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000, p. 137). Shibli praised Waqarul Mulk’s (1841-1917) serious and fearless article Hindustan Mein Musalmanon ki A’indah Halat (The Future of Muslims in India) in the Aligarh Institute Gazette on the annulment of the partition of Bengal, but disagreed with his view and said that this would have been the voice of a courageous Muslim if it had not been illogical. Mulk argued that the Muslims would be wiped out if they joined the Indian National Congress Party as a river loses its identity when it falls into the ocean. Shibli asked how 100,000 Parsees can maintain their separate identity in the midst of 190 million Hindus and 50 million Muslims. Shibli argued that if Dadabhai Naoroji (1825-1917), a Parsee, became the first Member of Parliament and Gokhale (1866-1915) alone launched the reform movement, there should be no basis for the Muslims to be concerned about their future (Azami, 1994; Muhammad, 1991; Murad, 1996; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000; Zuberi, 1938). During Shibli’s time, Muslims considered politics as deceit and hoax. Representing this attitude, Shibli evoked the imagery that from 204 Intellectual DIscourse, Vol 21, No 2, 2013 birth the politics whispered into the Muslim’ ears was analogous to the Kalimat al-Shahādah (Islamic declaration of faith), enticing them to believe that the time was not yet ripe for Muslims to take a place in Indian politics, and that they should be content to continue in the long slumber that had contributed to the disintegration of Islamic governance in the Subcontinent. In this view, many Muslims believed that they were not prepared for politics, and that education was the only way out of their social and political backwardness. They incorrectly assumed that since they were a minority, they were not suited for governance after the British departure (Murad, 1996; Nadvi, 1999; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000). Shibli argued that the time had come for the Muslims to awaken from their political slumber. The second installment of Musalmanun ki Political Karwat (published on March 4, 1912) outlined what Shibli believe to be the correct political scheme for Muslims by pointing out inconsistencies in the Muslim League’s political stance. This installment underscored the importance of Hindu-Muslim unity. As for Shibli’s idea of correct politics, he argued that the political scheme adopted by the Muslim League was not only incorrect, but detrimental to the community. According to Shibli, Muslims occupied two distinct positions in the current scenario: first, they were subjects of the British Government; and second, they were Muslims. These two ingredients were essential to any scheme of Muslim politics in India. Additionally, the British system of governance was not monarchical, but democratic. In this type of government, people have the right to express their views and are free to criticise the administration. They (the people) are both rulers and the ruled. It is the people who pass the laws that govern their society (Nadvi, 1999; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000). Shibli sarcastically remarked: No one denies the role of the Liberal and the Conservative parties in England, but in India the British system of governance becomes monarchical and autocratic…. Should a good parliamentary system, a good democratic system, and an ideal judicial system be distorted only because it is foisted onto a people who have skin of different pigment? It is farfetched to assume that Indians are unable to shoulder essential duties. Didn’t this soil produce great rulers and intellectuals in the past? (Nadvi, 1999, p. 618; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000, pp. 140-41). ALLAMA SHIBLI AND THE EARLY MUSLIM LEAGUE/ ARSHAD ISLAM 205 Shibli pointed out that despite the difficulty in protecting basic rights; on the whole, Indians were making progress. It was impossible that Muslims alone would remain unaffected by the important developments taking place in the country. Although a few enterprising Muslims in Indian politics such as Badruddin Tyabji and Rahimatullah M. Sayani (1847-1902) from Bombay, Saiyid Muhammad (d.1919) from Madras, and Saiyid Ameer Ali from Calcutta stressed the importance of Muslim involvement in Indian politics, the majority of Muslim intellectuals in the united provinces of Agra, Delhi, and Punjab remained cut off from politics. Ironically, the region had once been a centre of political activities, and Muslims were more advanced in education there than in the other parts of the country, but by the time Shibli was writing, he observed that people were scared to talk about politics. Shibli found it difficult to understand the reason for their political retardation. According to Shibli, this abnormality developed chiefly due to Sir Saiyid’s efforts to discourage the Muslim masses from taking part in the active politics of the day (Nadvi, 1999; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000). In Shibli’s third instalment, he made a passing remark on the wrong policies practiced by the Muslim League. From his criticisms Shibli then proposed what he believed to be the correct practice of politics. Shibli maintained that: To describe the current politics as incorrect is indeed the key to realize the right politics. The germs of the incorrect politics are so deeply implanted in the minds of the Muslim community that they prevent them from looking towards the correct politics. If there is any discussion on politics then a set answer is given that the time has not yet come. We should focus on education and this phrase cascades cold water on the political thought and ambitions. And one returns to the spot where one was standing thirty years ago (Nadvi, 1999, pp. 619-20; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000, pp. 150-51). Shibli claimed that the greatest blunder was the futile ek farzi bekar cheez (a useless and fake entity, i.e. the Muslim League), which masqueraded as a political force before the Muslims but which in fact was a paper tiger. For the past thirty years (since the beginning of the Muslim educational movement), Shibli argued that the community had been mesmerised as if by a conjuror’s show; people believed whatever they were told, to the extent that thousands of well-educated people considered this illusion to 206 Intellectual DIscourse, Vol 21, No 2, 2013 be a fountain of life. He argued that the Muslim League was not politics today and would never be so. The ineffectiveness of the Muslim League according to Shibli caused him to question its formation and purpose. He argued that it had a poor grasp of the meaning of politics and as such failed to function as a political organisation should (Nadvi, 1999; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000). The basis of the formation of the League was the Simla Deputation of 1906, and the spirit of the Simla Deputation continued to haunt it, whatever shape it took. The primary aim of the League was to claim a share for the Muslims in those political privileges, which the Hindus had won through their thirty-year struggle for the civil rights of the people. In Shibli’s view, the Muslim League took up any issue as a routine matter to save face to Muslims, but day and night they raised the slogan of the fear of Hindu supremacy and the need for safeguarding Muslims’ identity against the Hindu assault, and posed as the champion of the Muslim cause. This comprised the main motto of the League, and the rest was mere colouring according to the situation (Engineer, 2009; Nadvi, 1999; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000). Shibli did not deny the importance of the Simla Deputation for securing separate representation for the Muslims, but he considered it to be the biggest tamasha (show) played on the national stage. Subsequently, he enquired whether it was appropriate to call the disagreement between two sections (Muslims and Hindus) of the people “politics”. If that is the case, then daily disputes between Muslims and Hindus would turn into political events. According to him, the point from which politics starts is in the pursuit of meeting the needs of the government and the people, and not of the people’s conflict with the government over their demands from it, in contrast to the League’s position on the Simala Deputation, which was the focus of the Muslim League (Nadvi, 1999; Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000). Based on his independent study of the INC and Muslim League, Shibli performed a comparative analysis of the resolutions passed during 1885-1910 from which he pointed out that there was a clear difference in the aims of the two parties. He observed that from its inception, the INC embarked on a campaign to secure their political rights and achieve Indian autonomy, and he questioned the League’s contrastingly limited aims (Shibli Nu‘mani, 2000; Zafarul Islam 1958).
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