fbpx
Wikipedia

Syed Ahmad Khan

Sir Syed Ahmad Khan KCSI FRAS (17 October 1817 – 27 March 1898; also Sayyid Ahmad Khan) was an Indian Muslim reformer,[1][2] philosopher, and educationist[3] in nineteenth-century British India.[4][5] Though initially espousing Hindu–Muslim unity, he became the pioneer of Muslim nationalism in India and is widely credited as the father of the two-nation theory, which formed the basis of the Pakistan movement.[6][7][8][9] Born into a family with strong debts to the Mughal court, Ahmad studied the Quran and Science within the court. He was awarded an honorary LLD from the University of Edinburgh in 1889.[10][7][5]


Syed Ahmed Khan

Born(1817-10-17)17 October 1817
Died27 March 1898(1898-03-27) (aged 80)
Other namesSir Syed
Notable workThe Mohammadan Commentary on the Holy Quran (tafsir on Quran).
ChildrenSyed Mahmood
RelativesRoss Masood (grandson)
Awards Star of India
Era19th-century
SchoolIslamic and Renaissance philosophy
InstitutionsEast India Company
Indian Judicial Branch
Aligarh Muslim University
Punjab University
Government College University
Main interests
Pragmatism, metaphysics, language, aesthetics, Christianity and Islam
Notable ideas
Two-nation theory, Muslim adoption of Western ideas
Signature

In 1838, Syed Ahmad entered the service of East India Company and went on to become a judge at a Small Causes Court in 1867, retiring from 1876. During the Indian Mutiny of 1857, he remained loyal to the British Raj and was noted for his actions in saving European lives.[1] After the rebellion, he penned the booklet The Causes of the Indian Mutiny – a daring critique, at the time, of various British policies that he blamed for causing the revolt. Believing that the future of Muslims was threatened by the rigidity of their orthodox outlook, Sir Ahmad began promoting Western–style scientific education by founding modern schools and journals and organising Islamic entrepreneurs.

In 1859, Syed established Gulshan School at Muradabad, Victoria School at Ghazipur in 1863, and a scientific society for Muslims in 1863.[11] In 1875, founded the Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College, the first Muslim university in Southern Asia.[12] During his career, Syed repeatedly called upon Muslims to loyally serve the British Raj and promoted the adoption of Urdu as the lingua franca of all Indian Muslims. Syed criticized the Indian National Congress.[13]

Sir Syed maintains a strong legacy in Pakistan and among Indian Muslims. He strongly influenced other Muslim leaders including Allama Iqbal and Muhammad Ali Jinnah. His advocacy of Islam's rationalist tradition, and at broader, radical reinterpretation of the Quran to make it compatible with science and modernity, continues to influence the global Islamic reformation.[14] Many universities and public buildings in Pakistan bear Sir Syed's name.[15]

Aligarh Muslim University celebrated Sir Syed's 200th birth centenary with much enthusiasm on 17 October 2017. Former President of India Pranab Mukherjee was the chief guest.[16][17]

Early life

Do not show the face of Islam to others; instead show your face as the follower of true Islam representing character, knowledge, tolerance and piety.

— Sir Syed Ahmad Khan

Syed Ahmad Taqvi 'Khan Bahadur' was born on 17 October 1817 to Syed Muhammad Muttaqi[18] and Aziz-un-Nisa[19] in Delhi, which was the capital of the Mughal Empire during the reign of Mughal Emperor Akbar II. Many generations of his family had since been highly connected with the administrative position in Mughal Empire. His maternal grandfather Khwaja Fariduddin served as Wazir in the court of Emperor Akbar Shah II.[20] His paternal grandfather Syed Hadi Jawwad bin Imaduddin held a mansab (lit. General)– a high-ranking administrative position and honorary name of "Mir Jawwad Ali Khan" in the court of Emperor Alamgir II. Sir Syed's father, Syed Muhammad Muttaqi, was personally close to Emperor Akbar Shah II and served as his personal adviser.[21] However, Syed Ahmad was born at a time when his father was regional insurrections aided and led by the East India Company, which had replaced the power traditionally held by the Mughal state, reducing its monarch to figurehead.

Syed Ahmad was the youngest of three siblings. With his elder brother Syed Muhammad bin Muttaqi Khan and elder sister Safiyatun Nisa,[22] Sir Syed was raised in the house of his maternal grandfather in a wealthy area of the city.[23] They were raised in strict accordance with Mughal noble traditions and exposed to politics. Their mother Aziz-un-Nisa played a formative role in Sir Syed's early life, raising him with rigid discipline with a strong emphasis on modern education.[24]

Education

Sir Syed's education was initiated by Shah Ghulam Ali, his father's spiritual mentor in 1822.[25] He was taught to read and understand the Qur'an by a female tutor.[26] He received an education traditional to Muslim nobility in Delhi. He attended a maktab run by a learned scholar, Moulvi Hamiduddin, in a house adjacent to his ancestral home and started learning Persian and Arabic.[27] He read the works of Muslim scholars and writers such as Sahbai, Zauq and Ghalib.[28] Other tutors instructed him in mathematics, astronomy and algebra. He also pursued the study of medicine for several years under Hakim Ghulam Haider Khan.[27] Sir Syed was also adept at swimming, shooting and other sports.[29] He took an active part in the Mughal court's cultural activities and attended parties, festivals and recitations.[30]

Syed Ahmad's elder brother launched a weekly, “Syedul Akhbar”, from Delhi, which was one of the earliest Urdu newspaper of North part of India.[31] Until the death of his father in 1838, Sir Syed had lived a life customary for an affluent young Muslim noble. Upon his father's death, he inherited the titles of his grandfather and father and was awarded the title of Arif Jung by the emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar.[32] Financial difficulties put an end to Sir Syed's formal education, although he continued to study in private, using books on a variety of subjects.[30]

Career

 
Nawab Mohsin-ul-Mulk, Sir Syed Ahmad Khan, Justice Syed Mahmood, he was the first Muslim to serve as a High Court judge in the British Raj.

Having recognized the steady decline in Mughal political power, Sir Syed decided to enter the service of the East India Company. He could not enter the colonial civil service because it was only in the 1860s that Indians were admitted. His first appointment was as a Serestadar (lit. Clerk) of the Criminal Department in the Sadr Amin's office in Delhi, responsible for record-keeping and managing court affairs.[32][33] In February 1839, he was transferred to Agra and promoted to the title of Naib Munshi or deputy reader in the office of the Commissioner.[34] In 1841 he was appointed as the Munsif or Sub-Judge of Fatehpur Sikri and later transferred to Delhi in 1846.[34] He remained in Delhi until 1854 except for two short-term postings to Rohtak as officiating Sadr Amin in 1850 and 1853.[35] In 1855 he was promoted to the post of Sadr Amin in Bijnor.[36]

Acquainted with high-ranking British officials, Sir Syed obtained close knowledge about British colonial politics during his service at the courts. At the outbreak of the Indian rebellion, on 10 May 1857, Sir Syed was serving as the chief assessment officer at the court in Bijnor.[36] He stood by the British officers of Bijnor and saved the lives of many officers and their family members from the revolting soldiers.[36] The conflict had left large numbers of civilians dead. Erstwhile centres of Muslim power such as Delhi, Agra, Lucknow and Kanpur were severely affected. He lost several close relatives who died in the violence. Although he succeeded in rescuing his mother from the turmoil, she died in Meerut, owing to the privations she had experienced.[37]

In 1858, he was appointed as Sadarus Sudoor, a high-ranking post at the court in Muradabad, where he began working on his most famous literary work, The Cause of the Indian Revolt.[38] In 1862, he was transferred to Ghazipur, and later to Aligarh in 1864. In 1864 he was sent to Banaras and elevated to the position of a Sub-Judge of Small Causes.[38]

In April 1869, he accompanied his two son Syed Mahmood, who had obtained a scholarship for study in England and Syed Hamid to England.[39]

Sir Syed retired from government service in 1876 and settled in Aligarh.[40] In 1878, he was nominated as an additional member of the Imperial Legislative Council, which he served from July 1878 to July 1880. He got the second term that lasted until 1883.[41] He served the Legislative Council of the Lieutenant Governor of the North- Western Provinces for two terms from 1887 until 1893.[42]

Influences

Sir Syed's early influences were his mother Aziz-un-Nisa and maternal grandfather Khwaja Fariduddin both of whom took special interest in his education.[43] Apart from serving as a Wazir in the Mughal court Khwaja Fariduddin was also a teacher, mathematician and astronomer.[23] He was also disposed towards Sufism, which left its impact on Sir Syed since his early childhood.[44] His maternal uncle Khwaja Zainuddin Ahmad, who was an expert in music and mathematics also influenced him in his early days.[45]

Sir Syed's early theological writings demonstrate the influence of three school of religious though on his outlook - the Naqshbandi tradition of Shah Ghulam Ali Dahlavi, Shah Waliullah Dehlawi and his teachings, and the Mujahidin movement of Syed Ahmad Barelvi and his earliest disciple Shah Ismail Dehlvi.[44][46] While Sir Syed shared the desire for religious forms in India with the Mujahidin movement, he was opposed to the Indian Wahhabi movement.[47]

During his formative years in Delhi he came in contact with Ghalib and Zauq whose exquisite style of prose and poetry influenced Sir Syed's style of writing.[48] He would often visit Imam Baksh Sahbai and Sadruddin Khan Azurda Dehlawi in his learning years.[49] Another influence on him was his teacher and friend in Agra, Nur al Hasan of Kandhala, a teacher in Arabic at Agra College in the early 1840s who encouraged and corrected his early works.[50][51]

He was also influenced by the works of the Tunisian reformer Hayreddin Pasha and adopted his approach of utilising freedom of expression for bringing reforms in the Muslim community.[52]

The western writers who most influenced his political thoughts were the Utilitarians such as John Stuart Mill whose works he often quoted in his own writings.[53] He was also influenced by the essays of Joseph Addison and Richard Steele and modelled his own journals after their Tatler and Spectator.[53]

Literary works

While continuing to work as a junior clerk, Sir Syed began focusing on writing, from the age of 23 (in 1840), on various subjects (from mechanics to educational issues), mainly in Urdu, where he wrote, at least, 6000 pages. He also wrote a well known book on archeology called Athar-ul-Sandeed. He also developed interest in literature as he met a few of India's well known writers.[54][55]

Religious works

 
First issue of the journal Muhammadan Social Reformer dated 24 December 1870, it was a pioneering publication initiated by Sir Syed to promote liberal ideas in Muslim society.

Sir Syed Ahmad Khan's career as an author began when he published a series of treatises in Urdu on religious subjects in 1842. In his early religious writings his religious thoughts are inclined towards the orthodoxy which slowly becomes independent with his increasing contact with the West.[56] His early works show the influence of Sufism and his upbringing in Delhi.[57] The main themes of these works are popularization of the practices of the Islamic prophet Muhammad as the one true path and the desire to reform the lives of Indian Muslims from religious innovations thus endeavouring for the purity of Islamic belief in India.[58][57]

His later religious writings such as his commentary on the Torah and Gospel and his essays on Muhammad were stimulated in response to Christian missionary activities in India and the aggressive view of British historians towards Islam.[52]

Early treatises

His first treatise published in 1842 was a biographical sketch of Muhammad, called Jila al- Qulub bi Zikr al-Mahbub (Delight of the Hearts in Remembering the Beloved)[59] in line with reformist ideas of Shah Waliullah.[60] It was prose for recitation on Mawlid written in idiomatic Urdu.[61] He published his second treatise Tuhfa-i Hasan (The Gift to Hasan) in 1844 on the encouragement of his friend Nur al Hasan.[50] It is an Urdu translation of the tenth and twelfth chapter of Shah Abdul Aziz Dehlavi's Tuhfah-i Ithna Ashariyya (A treatise on the 12 Imams), which was a critique of Shia beliefs.[60][62] The tenth chapter deals and answers the Shia accusations against the Sahabi and Hazrat Aisha and the twelfth deals with the Shia doctrines of tawalli and tabarri.[63]

His third treatise, entitled Kalimat al-Haqq (The True Discourse) was published in 1849.[62] It is a critique of the prevalent Sufi practices around pirmurid relationships.[64] The first part of the work is devoted to the concept of piri in which he argues that Muhammad is the only valid pir while the second part is focused on muridi and the notion of bay'ah.[65] He calls for reforms in the pir-murid relationship and the associated practises.[66] Rah i Sunna dar radd i Bid'a (The Sunna and the Rejection of Innovations), his fourth treatise was published in 1850.[67] In this work he was not in favour of the religious practices and beliefs of his fellow Muslims which he felt was mixed with innovation and deviated from the true Sunnah.[68] In 1852 he published Namiqa dar bayan masala tasawwur-i-Shaikh (A Letter Explaining the Teaching of tasawwur i shaikh) in which he defended tasawwur-i-Shaikh, the Sufi practice of visualizing within, the image of one's spiritual guide.[64][69] In 1853 he translated some passages of al-Ghazali's Kimiya al Sa'ada (The Alchemy of Happiness).[67]

Commentary of the Torah and Gospel

In 1862 while stationed at Ghazipur, Sir Syed started working on a commentary on the Bible and its teaching, with the aim to explain them in terms of Islam, the final of the Abrahamic religions.[70] It was published in Urdu and English in three parts from 1862 to 1865 under the title Tabin al-al-kalam Fi tafsir altawrat Wa ‘I-injil’ala millat al Islam (Elucidation of the World in Commentary of the Torah and Gospel According to the Religion of Islam).[71][72] While the first part deals with the Islamic approach towards biblical writings, the second and third part contains commentary on the Book of Genesis and the Gospel of Matthew respectively.[73]

Essays on the Life of Muhammad

In 1869 he wrote Al-Khutbat al-Ahmadiya fi'l Arab wa'I Sirat al-Muhammadiya (A Series of Essays on the Life of Prophet Muhammad and Subjects Subsidiary Therein) as a rejoinder to William Muir's widely known four-part book, The Life of Mahomet published in 1864.[74] He was deeply distress by Muir's portrayal of Islam and the character of Muhammad. He was concerned that the book might create doubts among the younger generation of Muslims.[75] In order to prepare for the book he accompanied his son to England as he wanted to get a first-hand impression of Western civilisation.[76]

He was also a reader of Darwin and, while not agreeing with all of his ideas, he could be described as a sort of theistic evolutionist like his contemporary Asa Gray, and one of the first in the Islamic world, finding the arguments supporting such view through his own scientific research but also quoting earlier Islamic scholars like Al-Jahiz, Ibn Khaldun and Shah Waliullah.[77]

Tafsir-ul-Quran

Sir Syed started working on a tafsir or commentary on Quran in 1877. It was published as Tafsir ul-Quran in seven volumes; the first volume appeared in 1880 and the last volume was published six years after his death in 1904.[78] In this work, he analysed and interpreted 16 paras and 13 surahs of the Quran.[78] He also included a detailed article Tahrir fi Usool al-Tafsir (The Notes on the Principles of Commentary) in the first volume in which he laid down 15 principles on which he based his commentary.[79]

Historical works

History was Sir Syed's preferred area of study and in 1840, Sir Syed compiled a book of chronological tables about the Timurid rulers of Delhi from Timurlane to Bahadur Shah Zafar at the behest of Robert N. C. Hamilton, his patron. It was later published under the title Jam-i-Jum (Jamshed's Cup).[80] In Silsilat-ul-Mulk he compiled the biographical data of all the ruler of Delhi in history.[81] During his stay in Bijnor, he wrote a history on the city of Bijnor but it was destroyed during the 1857 rebellion.[82] He also wrote critical editions of books like Ziauddin Barani's Tarikh-e-Firoz Shahi published in 1862,[83] and Tuzk-e-Jahangiri published in 1864.[84] However his most important historical works that brought him fame as a scholar are the two editions of Asar-us-Sanadid and that of the Ain-e-Akbari.[85]

Asar-us-Sanadid

In 1847 he published the book Asar-us-Sanadid (The Remnants of Ancient Heroes) documenting antiquities of Delhi dating from the medieval era.[86] The work is divided into four sections describing the buildings outside the city of Delhi, the buildings around the Delhi Fort, the monuments in Shahjahanabad and the last section presenting a brief historical account of the various settlements of Delhi[86] and the prominent inhabitants of Delhi which included Sufis such as Shah Ghulam Ali, Saiyid Ahmad Shahid, physicians, scholars, poets, calligraphers, and prominent musicians of Delhi.[87] It also contained around 130 illustrations drawn by Faiz Ali Khan and Mirza Shahrukh Beg which were the first lithographically produced book illustrations in India.[88] He released the second edition of Ansar-as-sanadid in 1854.[89] However both the editions are radically different with the second edition being abbreviated and more factual.[90] This work brought Sir Syed a wider fame and earned him the reputation of a cultured scholar.[91] In 1861, it was translated into French by Gracin de Tassy in Paris.[86] The book was also presented to the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, London which made him an honorary fellow.[84]

Ain-e-Akbari

 
The court of Akbar, an illustration from a manuscript of the Ain-e-Akbari

In 1855, he finished his scholarly, and illustrated edition of Abul Fazl's Ai'n-e Akbari. The first and the third volume of the work was published in 1855. The second volume sent to the publisher in 1857 was destroyed in the rebellion that took place that year.[92] Having finished the work to his satisfaction, and believing that Mirza Asadullah Khan Ghalib was a person who would appreciate his labours, Syed Ahmad approached the great Ghalib to write a taqriz (in the convention of the times, a laudatory foreword) for it. Ghalib obliged, but what he did produce was a short Persian poem castigating the Ai'n-e Akbari, and by implication, the imperial, sumptuous, literate and learned Mughal culture of which it was a product. The least that could be said against it was that the book had little value even as an antique document. Ghalib practically reprimanded Syed Ahmad Khan for wasting his talents and time on dead things. Worse, he praised sky-high the "sahibs of England" who at that time held all the keys to all the a’ins in this world.[93]

Sir Syed Ahmad Khan never again wrote a word in praise of the Ai'n-e Akbari and in fact gave up taking an active interest in history and archaeology. He did edit another two historical texts over the next few years, but neither of them was anything like the Ai'n: a vast and triumphalist document on the governance of Akbar.[94]

Political works

During the uprising of 1857, Sir Syed was posted as a chief assessment officer at the court in Bijnor.[95] He recorded the history of the mutiny in Tarikh i Sarkashi-ye Bijnor (History of the Bijnor Rebellion) which was published in 1858.[96] He was deeply worried about the consequences of the mutiny for his fellow Muslims in particular.[95] He wrote a number of articles and pamphlets such as Asbab-e-Baghawat-e-Hind (The Causes of the Indian Revolt), Loyal Muhammadans of India, and Review on Dr Hunter's Indian Musalmans: Are They Bound in Conscience to Rebel Against the Queen? to defend Muslims and Islam and create a cordial relations between the British authorities and the Muslim community.[97]

Causes of the Indian Revolt

Sir Syed supported the East India Company during the 1857 uprising, a role which has been criticised by some nationalists such as Jamaluddin Afghani. In 1859 Sir Syed published the booklet Asbab-e-Baghawat-e-Hind (The Causes of the Indian Revolt) in Urdu in which he studied the causes of the Indian revolt. In this, his most famous work, he rejected the common notion that the conspiracy was planned by Muslim elites, who resented the diminishing influence of Muslim monarchs. He blamed the East India Company for its aggressive expansion as well as the ignorance of British politicians regarding Indian culture. Sir Syed advised the British to appoint Muslims to assist in administration, to prevent what he called ‘haramzadgi’ (a vulgar deed) such as the mutiny.[98]

Maulana Altaf Hussain Hali wrote in the biography of Sir Syed that:

"As soon as Sir Syed reached Muradabad, he began to write the pamphlet entitled The Causes of the Indian Revolt (Asbab-e-Baghawat-e-Hind), in which he did his best to clear the people of India, and especially the Muslims, of the charge of Mutiny. In spite of the obvious danger, he made a courageous and thorough report of the accusations people were making against the Government and refused theory which the British had invented to explain the causes of the Mutiny."[99]

When the work was finished, without waiting for an English translation, Sir Syed sent the Urdu version to be printed at the Mufassilat Gazette Press in Agra. Within a few weeks, he received 500 copies back from the printers. One of his friends warned him not to send the pamphlet to the British Parliament or to the Government of India. Rae Shankar Das, a great friend of Sir Syed, begged him to burn the books rather than put his life in danger.[96] Sir Syed replied that he was bringing these matters to the attention of the British for the good of his own people, of his country, and of the government itself. He said that if he came to any harm while doing something that would greatly benefit the rulers and the subjects of India alike, he would gladly suffer whatever befell him. When Rae Shankar Das saw that Sir Syed's mind was made up and nothing could be done to change it, he wept and remained silent. After performing a supplementary prayer and asking God's blessing, Sir Syed sent almost all the 500 copies of his pamphlet to England, one to the government, and kept the rest himself.

When the government of India had the book translated and presented before the council, Lord Canning, the governor-general, and Sir Bartle Frere accepted it as a sincere and friendly report. The foreign secretary Cecil Beadon, however, severely attacked it, calling it 'an extremely seditious pamphlet'. He wanted a proper inquiry into the matter and said that the author, unless he could give a satisfactory explanation, should be harshly dealt with. Since no other member of the Council agreed with his opinion, his attack did no harm.[100]

Later, Sir Syed was invited to attend Lord Canning's durbar in Farrukhabad and happened to meet the foreign secretary there. He told Sir Syed that he was displeased with the pamphlet and added that if he had really had the government's interests at heart, he would not have made his opinion known in this way throughout the country; he would have communicated it directly to the government. Sir Syed replied that he had only had 500 copies printed, the majority of which he had sent to England, one had been given to the government of India, and the remaining copies were still in his possession. Furthermore, he had the receipt to prove it. He was aware, he added, that the view of the rulers had been distorted by the stress and anxieties of the times, which made it difficult to put even the most straightforward problem in its right perspective. It was for this reason that he had not communicated his thoughts publicly. He promised that for every copy that could be found circulating in India he would personally pay 1,000 rupees. At first, Beadon was not convinced and asked Sir Syed over and over again if he was sure that no other copy had been distributed in India. Sir Syed reassured him on this matter, and Beadon never mentioned it again. Later he became one of Sir Syed's strongest supporters.

Many official translations were made of the Urdu text of The Causes of the Indian Revolt. The one undertaken by the India Office formed the subject of many discussions and debates.[101] The pamphlet was also translated by the government of India and several members of parliament, but no version was offered to the public. A translation which had been started by Auckland Colvin, a government official was finished by Sir Syed's friend, Colonel G.F.I. Graham, and finally published in 1873.[99][102]

Loyal Muhammadans of India

In 1860 Sir Syed wrote a series of bilingual pamphlets called the Risala Khair Khwahan-e Musalmanan-e-Hind (An Account of the Loyal Mohammedans of India) from Meerut containing episodes in the life of those Muslims who stood by the British during the 1857 uprising.[96] It was published in three issues, the first and second issues appeared in 1860, while the third was published in 1861.[103] The first issue highlighted the bravery of those Muslims who stood by the British while the second issue carried an article on jihad in which he makes a clear distinction between jihad and rebellion.[103]

Review on Hunter's Indian Musalmans

In August 1871 William Wilson Hunter, a Scottish historian and member of the Indian Civil Service published Indian Musalmans: Are They Bound in Conscience to Rebel Against the Queen? in which he discussed the Indian Wahabi movement, its role in the rebellion[104] and argued that the Muslims were a threat to the Empire.[105] Hunter links Wahhabism with rebellion and terms them as self-stylised jihadis.[106] His accusations led to the prosecution of Muslims in India especially in the North Western Provinces and those associated with Wahhabism were severely punished.[106] Many Muslims found his arguments one-sided and this prompted Sir Syed to write a rejoinder of the book.[106] He reviewed the book in The Pioneer in a series of articles which were reprinted in Aligarh Institute Gazette from 24 November 1871, to 23 February 1872.[96] They were later collected and published in a book in England by Hafiz Ahmad Hasan, the Vakil of Tonk.[107] Sir Syed based his arguments upon Muhammad's own conduct during holy wars.[108]

Muslim reformer

 
The logo of Aligarh University, whose moto is Taught man that which he knew not. (Qur'an 96:5)

Through the 1850s, Syed Ahmad Khan began developing a strong passion for education. While pursuing studies of different subjects including European jurisprudence, Sir Syed began to realise the advantages of Western-style education, which was being offered at newly established colleges across India. Despite being a devout Muslim, Sir Syed criticised the influence of traditional dogma and religious orthodoxy, which had made most Indian Muslims suspicious of British influences.[109] Sir Syed began feeling increasingly concerned for the future of Muslim communities.[109] A scion of Mughal nobility, Sir Syed had been reared in the finest traditions of Muslim elite culture and was aware of the steady decline of Muslim political power across India. The animosity between the British and Muslims before and after the Indian Rebellion of 1857 threatened to marginalise Muslim communities across India for many generations.[109]

Scientific Society

Sir Syed intensified his work to promote co-operation with British authorities, promoting loyalty to the Empire amongst Indian Muslims. Committed to working for the upliftment of Muslims, Sir Syed founded a modern madrassa in Muradabad in 1859; this was one of the first religious schools to impart scientific education. Sir Syed also worked on social causes, helping to organise relief for the famine-struck people of North-West Province in 1860.[38] While posted in Ghazipur in 1863, he established a madrasa which later became the Victoria High school.[110] He also formed the Scientific Society in Ghazipur to promote educational reforms across the country.[38] He wrote an insightful tract on education titled Iltimas Ba Khidmat-e-Sakinan-e-Hind Dar Bab-e- Taraqqi Taleem in Ahl-e-Hind (Address to the natives of Hindoostan on education).[111]

Upon his transfer to Aligarh in 1864, Sir Syed began working wholeheartedly as an educator. The Scientific Society was transferred from Ghazipur to Aligarh and rechristened as the Scientific Society of Aligarh.[112] Modelling it after the Royal Society and the Royal Asiatic Society,[113] Sir Syed assembled Muslim scholars from different parts of the country. The Society held annual conferences, disbursed funds for educational causes and regularly published a journal on scientific subjects in English and Urdu. Sir Syed felt that the socio-economic future of Muslims was threatened by their orthodox aversions to modern science and technology.[109] He published many writings promoting liberal, rational interpretations of Islamic scriptures, struggling to find rational interpretations for jinn, angels, and miracles of the prophets.[114] One example was the reaction to his argument – which appeared in his tafsir (exegesis) of the Quran – that riba referred to interest charges when lending money to the poor, but not to the rich, nor to borrowers "in trade or in industry", since this finance supported "trade, national welfare and prosperity". While many jurists declared all interest to be riba, (according to Sir Syed) this was based "on their own authority and deduction" rather than the Quran.[115]

Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College

On 1 April 1869 he went, along with his sons Syed Mahmood and Syed Hamed to England, where he was awarded the Order of the Star of India from the British government on 6 August.[116] Travelling across England, he visited its colleges and was inspired by the culture of learning established after the Renaissance. Sir Syed returned to India in the following year determined to build a school modelled on Cambridge and Oxford imparting modern education to Indians.[117] Upon his return, he established the Khwastgaran-i-Taraqqi-i-Talim-i-Musalman (Committee for the Better Diffusion and Advancement of Learning among Muhammadans) on 26 December 1870. By 1872, it was converted into a Fund Committee for the establishment of a school.[118] Sir Syed described his vision of the institution he proposed to establish in an article written sometime in 1872 and re-printed in the Aligarh Institute Gazette of 5 April 1911:

I may appear to be dreaming and talking like Shaikh Chilli, but we aim to turn this MAO College into a University similar to that of Oxford or Cambridge. Like the churches of Oxford and Cambridge, there will be mosques attached to each College... The College will have a dispensary with a Doctor and a compounder, besides a Unani Hakim. It will be mandatory on boys in residence to join the congregational prayers (namaz) at all the five times. Students of other religions will be exempted from this religious observance. Muslim students will have a uniform consisting of a black alpaca, half-sleeved chugha and a red Fez cap... Bad and abusive words which boys generally pick up and get used to, will be strictly prohibited. Even such a word as a "liar" will be treated as an abuse to be prohibited. They will have food either on tables of European style or on chaukis in the manner of the Arabs... Smoking of cigarette or huqqa and the chewing of betels shall be strictly prohibited. No corporal punishment or any such punishment as is likely to injure a student's self-respect will be permissible... It will be strictly enforced that Shia and Sunni boys shall not discuss their religious differences in the College or in the boarding house. At present it is like a day dream. I pray to God that this dream may come true."[citation needed]

 
Signatures of Sir Syed

He began publishing the journal Tehzeeb-ul-Akhlaq (Social Reformer) on 24 December 1870 to spread awareness and knowledge on modern subjects and promote reforms in Muslim society.[119] Sir Syed worked to promote reinterpretation of Muslim ideology in order to reconcile tradition with Western education. He argued in several books on Islam that the Qur'an rested on an appreciation of reason and natural law, making scientific inquiry important to being a good Muslim.

By 1873, the committee under Sir Syed issued proposals for the construction of a college in Aligarh. Maulvi Samiullah Khan was appointed as the secretary of the sub-committee of the proposed school.[118] Members of the committee toured the country in order to raise funds for the school which was finally established on 24 May 1875 in Aligarh as the Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental Collegiate School. Two years later, in 1877, the school was converted into the Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College.[120] He retired from his career as a jurist the following year, concentrating entirely on developing the college and on religious reform.[113] Sir Syed's pioneering work received support from the British.[121] Although intensely criticised by orthodox religious leaders hostile to modern influences, Sir Syed's new institution attracted a large student body, mainly drawn from the Muslim gentry and middle classes.[122][self-published source?] However, MAO College was open to all communities, and had a sizeable number of Hindu students. The first graduate of the college was a Hindu.[123] The curriculum at the college involved scientific and Western subjects, as well as Oriental subjects and religious education.[113] The first chancellor was Sultan Shah Jahan Begum, a prominent Muslim noblewoman, and Sir Syed invited an Englishman, Theodore Beck, to serve as the first college principal.[122] The college was originally affiliated with Calcutta University but was transferred to the Allahabad University in 1885. Near the turn of the 20th century, it began publishing its own magazine and established a law school. In 1920, the college was transformed into Aligarh Muslim University.[123]

Muhammadan Educational Conference

After founding the Anglo-Oriental College, Sir Syed felt the need of a pan-India organisation to propagate the ideas of his movement. To this cause, he established the All India Muhammadan Educational Congress with its headquarters in Aligarh. The first session of the Congress was held at Aligarh in 1886 under the presidency of Maulvi Samiullah Khan.[124] The main objective of the organisation was to promote educational development among Muslims through conferences throughout India and transform the Anglo-Oriental College to the status of university.[125] The name of the organisation was changed to All India Muhammadan Educational Conference to avoid confusion with the Indian National Congress.[125]

Opposition and criticism

Sir Syed's Aligarh Movement and his desire to open institutions for Western education was opposed by the orthodox Indian Muslims. Imdad Ali, the then deputy collector of Kanpur condemned the foundation of Anglo-Oriental College.[126] Several periodicals such as Noor-ul-Afaq, Noor-ul-Anwar, and Taed-ul-Islam were started by his opponents in opposition to Tehzeeb-ul-Akhlaq to dissuade Muslims from joining the Aligarh Movement.[126][127] Many other orthodox Islamic schools condemned him as out of the fold of Islam i.e. kafir.[122] According to J.M.S. Baljon his ideas created "a real hurricane of protests and outbursts of wrath" among the local clerics "in every town and village" in Muslim India, who issued fatawa "declaring him to be a kafir" (unbeliever).[128] He was also accused of having converted to Christianity.[128] Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, the founder of the Ahmadiyya movement criticised some of his writings in a polemic titled Barakat al Dua.[129] Jamal al-Din al-Afghani, the Pan-Islamic ideologue launched a vitriolic attack on him through his periodical calling him a “Naturist”.[130]

Many of his own friends, like Nawab Muhsin ul Mulk, expressed their significant reservations at his religious ideas (many of which were expounded in his commentary of Qur'an).[131] Syed Ahmad Khan's controversial views such as his rejection of miracles, denial of the existence of angels, downplaying the status of prophethood, etc. arose disdain also from orthodox adherents of Waliullahi reform trends, such as Ahl-e Hadith and Deobandis. Ahl-i Hadith were particularly severe in their condemnation of Ahmad Khan; with many of its leaders like Muḥammad Ḥusayn Baṭālvī (d. 1920 C.E/ 1338 A.H) declaring Takfir (excommunication) of Sir Syed as an apostate.[132]

Maulana Qasim Nanautawi, the founder of Darul Uloom Deoband, expressed in a letter to an acquaintance of his and Sir Syed's:

"No doubt, I greatly admire, as per what I've heard, Syed (Ahmad) Sahab's courage (Ūlul Azmi) and concern for the Muslims (Dardmandi e Ahl e Islam). For this if I shall express my affection for him, it will be rightful. However, similar to this (or rather more than this), upon hearing about his disturbed (Fāsid) beliefs, I have deep complains and sorrow for him"[133]

Maulana Qasim Nanautawi wrote directly to Sir Syed as well, explaining him some of his "noteworthy" mistakes. This correspondence was published as "Tasfiyat ul Aqaaid" in 1887 C.E[134]

Sir Syed was not in favour of educating Muslim women. Once he tore up scholar Syed Mumtaz Ali's Urdu manuscript titled Huquq-e-Niswaan (Women’s Rights) which argued in favour of educating Muslim women to help them better know their rights.[135]

Political thoughts and activities

Shan Muhammad in his book Sir Syed Ahmad Khan: a political biography notes that Sir Syed was foremost an educationist and reformer and not an academic thinker and so his political philosophy is related to the circumstances of his times.[136] Important events that shaped his political outlook includes the 1857 Rebellion, the premiership of William Ewart Gladstone in England that started in 1868 and the viceroyalty of Lord Ripon in India.[137]

Sir Syed was deeply religious. His political views were centered on Islam and Islamic viewpoint.[137]

In 1878, Sir Syed was nominated to the Viceroy's Legislative Council.[138] He testified before the education commission to promote the establishment of more colleges and schools across India. At the start of his political career, Sir Syed was an advocate of Hindu–Muslim unity and India's composite culture, wanting to empower all Indians.[6] In the same year, Sir Syed founded the Muhammadan Association to promote political co-operation amongst Indian Muslims from different parts of the country. In 1886, he organised the All India Muhammadan Educational Conference in Aligarh, which promoted his vision of modern education and political unity for Muslims. His works made him the most prominent Muslim politician in 19th century India, often influencing the attitude of Muslims on various national issues.

Opposition to active politics

Sir Syed discouraged the active involvement of Muslims in politics. He regarded the attainment of higher English education as the first priority for the upliftmeant of the Muslim community as opposed to political pursuits.[139] He declined to lend support to the National Muhammadan Association, a political organisation founded by Syed Ameer Ali in 1887 and refused to participate in the Muhammedan National Conference at Lahore which he regarded as a political agitation.[140]

When the Indian National Congress was established in 1885 he did not express any opinion about it but later he became an active critic of the organisation and expressed his active opposition to the Congress.[141]

Sir Syed's opposition received criticism from Maulvi Sharaf-ul-Haqq who criticised his views about the Congress demands in a risala titled Kalam Mufid-al-Anam. Lala Lajpat Rai wrote a series of open letters expressing grief and surprise at his change in attitude towards Congress.[142]

Sir Syed advocated the use of constitutional machinery such as participation in administration for expressing grievances to the British government.[143] He supported the efforts of Indian political leaders Surendranath Banerjee and Dadabhai Naoroji to obtain representation for Indians in the government and civil services. In 1883, he founded the Muhammadan Civil Service Fund Association to encourage and support the entry of Muslim graduates into the Indian Civil Service (ICS).[113][144] In 1883, he established the Muhammedan Association to put forward grievances of the Muslims to the Imperial Legislative Council.[145] He was nominated as a member of the Civil Service Commission in 1887 by Lord Dufferin. In 1888, he along with Raja Shiv Prasad of Benaras established the United Patriotic Association at Aligarh to promote political co-operation with the British and Muslim participation in the British government.

Hindu–Muslim unity

At the start of his career, Syed Ahmad Khan advocated for Hindu–Muslim unity in Colonial India.[6] He stated: "India is a beautiful bride and Hindus and Muslims are her two eyes. If one of them is lost, this beautiful bride will become ugly."[6] Being raised in the diverse city of Delhi, Syed Ahmad Khan was exposed to the festivals of both Hindus and Muslims.[6] He collected Hindu scriptures and "had a commitment to the country's composite culture", being close friends with Swami Vivekanand to Debendranath Tagore.[6] In the 19th century, he opposed cow slaughter, even stopping a fellow Muslim from sacrificing one for Eid al-Adha to promote peace between Muslims and Hindus.[6] Addressing a large gathering in Gurdaspur on 27 January 1884, Sir Syed said:

O Hindus and Muslims! Do you belong to a country other than India? Don't you live on the soil and are you not buried under it or cremated on its ghats? If you live and die on this land, then bear in mind that ‘Hindu’ and ‘Muslim’ is but religious word: all the Hindus, Muslims and Christians who live in this country are one nation.[6]

When he founded Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College, he opened its admissions to Indians of all faiths, with its first principal Henry Siddons being a Christian and one of its patrons Mahendra Singh of Patiala being a Sikh.[6] Shafey Kidwai notes that Sir Syed promoted "advocacy of the empowerment of all Indians".[6]

In his book Causes of the Indian Revolt, which was originally published in Urdu in 1858, he referred to Hindus and Muslims as 'two antagonistic races' when highlighting the British folly of bringing them together in a single unit, thereby endangering the British position.[146]

Advocacy of Urdu

 
Sir Syed Ahmad Khan in Punjab

The onset of the Hindi–Urdu controversy of 1867 saw the emergence of Sir Syed as a champion for cause of the Urdu language. He became a leading Muslim voice opposing the adoption of Hindi as a second official language of the United Provinces (now Uttar Pradesh). Sir Syed perceived Urdu as the lingua franca of the United Provinces which was created as a confluence of Muslim and Hindu contributions in India.[6] Having been developed during the Mughal period, Urdu was used as a secondary language to Persian, the official language of the Mughal court. Since the decline of the Mughal dynasty, Sir Syed promoted the use of Urdu through his own writings. Under Sir Syed, the Scientific Society translated Western works only into Urdu. The schools established by Sir Syed imparted education in the Urdu medium. The demand for Hindi, led largely by Hindus, was to Sir Syed an erosion of the centuries-old Muslim cultural domination of India. Testifying before the British-appointed education commission, Sir Syed controversially exclaimed that "Urdu was the language of gentry and Hindi that of the vulgar."[147] His remarks provoked a hostile response from Hindu leaders, who unified across the nation to demand the recognition of Hindi.

The success of the Hindi movement led Sir Syed to further advocate Urdu as the symbol of Muslim heritage and as the language of all Indian Muslims. His educational and political work grew increasingly centred around and exclusively for Muslim interests. He also sought to persuade the British to give Urdu extensive official use and patronage. His colleagues such as Mohsin-ul-Mulk and Maulvi Abdul Haq developed organisations such as the Urdu Defence Association and the Anjuman Taraqqi-i-Urdu, committed to the perpetuation of Urdu.[citation needed] All these colleagues led efforts that resulted in the adoption of Urdu as the official language of the Hyderabad State and as the medium of instruction in the Osmania University.[citation needed][148] To Muslims in northern and western India, Urdu had become an integral part of political and cultural identity. However, the division over the use of Hindi or Urdu further provoked communal conflict between Muslims and Hindus in India.[citation needed]

Two-nation theory

Sir Syed is considered as the first person to theorize the idea of separate nationhood for Muslims in subcontinent.[149][9] In a speech at Meerut in 1866 he presented on overall scenario of post colonial phase in which he described Muslims and Hindus as two nations.[150] He's regarded as the father of two-nation theory and the pioneer of Muslim nationalism which led to the partition of India.[7][8]

Urdu-Hindi controversy is seen as the transformation of Sir Syed's views towards Muslim nationhood which he expressed in his speeches during later days.[149] While fearful of the loss of Muslim political power owing to the community's backwardness, Sir Syed was also averse to the prospect of democratic self-government, which would give control of government to the Hindu-majority population:[151][152]

"At this time our nation is in a bad state in regards education and wealth, but God has given us the light of religion and the Quran is present for our guidance, which has ordained them and us to be friends. Now God has made them rulers over us. Therefore we should cultivate friendship with them, and should adopt that method by which their rule may remain permanent and firm in India, and may not pass into the hands of the Bengalis... If we join the political movement of the Bengalis our nation will reap a loss, for we do not want to become subjects of the Hindus instead of the subjects of the "people of the Book..."[152]

Later in his life he said:

"Suppose that the English community and the army were to leave India, taking with them all their cannons and their splendid weapons and all else, who then would be the rulers of India?... Is it possible that under these circumstances two nations—the Mohammedans and the Hindus—could sit on the same throne and remain equal in power? Most certainly not. It is necessary that one of them should conquer the other. To hope that both could remain equal is to desire the impossible and the inconceivable. But until one nation has conquered the other and made it obedient, peace cannot reign in the land."[153]

Personal life

 
Tomb of Syed Ahmad Khan

In 1836, he married Parsa Begum, alias Mubarak Begum.[154] They had two sons, Syed Hamid and Syed Mahmood, and a daughter, Ameena, who died at a young age.[155]

Sir Syed Ahmad Khan Bahadur lived the last two decades of his life in Aligarh, regarded widely as the mentor of 19th and 20th century Muslim entrepreneurs. Battling illnesses and old age, Sir Syed died on 27 March 1898.[156] He was buried in Sir Syed Masjid at the campus of Aligarh Muslim University.[156]

Legacy and influence

Syed Ahmad is widely commemorated across South Asia as a great Muslim social reformer and visionary.[113][144] His educational model and progressive thinking inspired Muslim elites who supported the All India Muslim League. He founded the All India Muhammadan Educational Conference in 1886 in order to promote Western education, especially science and literature, among India's Muslims. The conference, in addition to generating funds for Ahmad Khan's Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College, motivated Muslim elites to propose expansion of educational uplift elsewhere, known as the Aligarh Movement. In turn this new awareness of Muslim needs helped stimulate a political consciousness among Muslim elites that went on to form the AIML which led Muslims of India towards formation of Pakistan.[157]

He was an influence on several political leaders, thinkers and writers such as Muhammad Iqbal, Abul Kalam Azad,[158] Sayyid Mumtaz Ali[159] Altaf Hussain Hali, Shibli Nomani, Nawab Mohsin-ul-Mulk, Chiragh Ali, and Nazir Ahmad Dehlvi.[160]

The university he founded remains one of India's most prominent institutions and served as the arsenal of Muslim India. Prominent alumni of Aligarh include Muslim political leaders Maulana Mohammad Ali Jouhar, Abdur Rab Nishtar, Maulana Shaukat Ali and Maulvi Abdul Haq. The first two Prime Ministers of Pakistan, Liaquat Ali Khan and Khawaja Nazimuddin, as well as Indian President Dr. Zakir Hussain, are amongst Aligarh's most famous graduates. His birth anniversary is celebrated as Sir Syed Day every year by the university and its alumni.[161]

Several educational institutions in India and Pakistan such as Sir Syed University of Engineering and Technology, Sir Syed CASE Institute of Technology and Sir Syed College, Taliparamba are named after him.[162][163]

Honours

On 2 June 1869, Syed Ahmad Khan was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Star of India (CSI), for his service as Principal Sadr Amin.[164] He was appointed a fellow of the Calcutta and Allahabad Universities by the Viceroy in the years 1876 and 1887 respectively.[165]

Syed Ahmad was later bestowed with the suffix of 'Khan Bahadur' and was subsequently knighted by the British government in the 1888 New Year Honours as a Knight Commander of the Order of the Star of India (KCSI).[166][13] for his loyalty to the British crown, through his membership of the Imperial Legislative Council[167] and in the following year he received an LL.D. honoris causa from the Edinburgh University.[113][168]

India Post issued commemorative postage stamps in his honour in 1973 and 1998.[169]

Pakistan Postal Services also issued a commemorative postage stamp in his honour in 1990 in its 'Pioneers of Freedom' series.[170]

In 1997 Syed Ahmad Khan was commemorated with an English Heritage blue plaque at 21 Mecklenburgh Square in Bloomsbury, where he lived in 1869–70.[171]

On 2017, commemorative Rs. 50 coin featuring Sir Syed Ahmad Khan was revealed by State Bank of Pakistan on his 200th birth anniversary.[172]

On 14 August 2022 marking the diamond jubilee celebrations of Pakistan's independence, State Bank of Pakistan revealed a commemorative Rs.75 note featuring Syed Ahmed Khan along with other founding fathers signifying their struggle for country's independence.[173]

Bibliography

Legal works

  • Act No. 10 (Stamp Act) 1862.
  • Act No. 14 (Limitation Act )1859–1864.
  • Act No. 16 (Regarding registration documents) – Allyson, 1864.
  • Act No. 18 (Regarding women's rights) 1866.

Religious works

  • Jila al- Qulub bi Zikr al-Mahbub (Delight of the Hearts in Remembering the Beloved), Delhi, 1843.
  • Tuhfa-i Hasan (The Gift to Hasan), 1844
  • Tarjama fawa'id al-afkar fi amal al-farjar, Delhi 1846.
  • Mazumm ba nisbat tanazzul ulum-i-diniya wa Arabiya wa falsafa-i-Yunaniya, Agra, 1857.
  • Risala Tahqiq Lafzi-i-Nassara, 1860.
  • Ahkam Tu'am Ahl-Kitab, Kanpur, 1868.
  • Risala ho wal Mojud, 1880.
  • Kimiya-i-Sa'dat, 2 fasl, 1883.
  • Namiqa fi Bayan Mas'ala Tasawwur al-Shaikh, Aligarh, 1883.
  • Rah-i-Sunnat dar rad-i-bid'at, Aligarh, 1883.
  • Tarqim fi qisa ashab al-kahf wal-Raqim, Agra, 1889.
  • Izalat ul-Chain as Zi'al Qarnain, Agra, 1889.
  • Khulq al-Insan ala ma fi al-Quran, Agra, 1892.
  • Al-Du'a Wa'l Istajaba, Agra, 1892.
  • Tahrir fi Usul al-Tafsir, Agra, 1892.
  • Al-Nazar Fi Ba'z Masa'il Imam Al-Ghazzali, Agra.
  • Risala Ibtal-i-Ghulami, Agra, 1893.
  • Tafsir al-Jinn Wa'l Jan ala ma fi al-Qur'an, Rahmani Press, Lahore, 1893, Agra, 1891.
  • Tabyin-ul-Kalam fi Tafsir-al-turat-wa'l Injil ala Mullat-al-Islam (The Mohomedan Commentary on the Holy Bible).
  • Tafsir-ul-Qura'n
Vol. I Aligarh, 1880,
Vol. II Aligarh, 1882, Agra, 1903.
Vol. III Aligarh, 1885
Vol. IV Aligarh, 1888
Vol. V Aligarh, 1892.
Vol. VI Aligarh, 1895
Vol. VII Agra, 1904.
  • Tafsir-a-Samawat, Agra.
  • Tasfiyad al'Aquid (Being the correspondence between Syed Ahmad Khan and Maulana Muhammad Qasim of Deobund).

Historical works

 
Title page of Commentary of Quran by Sir Syed Ahmed Khan
  • A'in-e-Akbari (Edition with Illustration), Delhi.
  • Asrar-us-Sanadid (i) Syed-ul-Akhbar, 1847, (II) Mata-i-Sultani, 1852.
  • Description des monument de Delhi in 1852, D'a Pre Le Texte Hindostani De Saiyid Ahmad Khan (tr. by M. Garcin De Tassy), Paris, 1861.
  • Jam-i-Jum, Akbarabad, 1940.
  • Silsilat-ul-Muluk, Musaraf ul Mataba', Delhi, 1852.
  • Tarikh-i-Firoz Shahi (Edition), Asiatic Society, Calcutta, 1862.
  • Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri (edition Aligarh, 1864).

Biographical works

  • Al-Khutbat al-Ahmadiya fi'l Arab wa'I Sirat al-Muhammadiya : Aligarh, 1900, English translation, London, 1869–70.
  • Sirat-i-Faridiya, Agra, 1896.

Political works

  • Asbab-i-Baghawat-e-Hind, Urdu 1858 and English edition, Banaras.
  • Lecture Indian National Congress Madras Par, Kanpur, 1887.
  • Lectures on the Act XVI of 1864, delivered on 4 December 1864 for the Scientific Society, Allygurh, 1864.
  • Musalmanon ki qismat ka faisla (Taqarir-e-Syed Ahmad Khan wa Syed Mehdi Ali Khan etc.) Agra, 1894.
  • On Hunter's: Our Indian Mussulmans' London, 1872.
  • Present State of Indian Politics (Consisting of lectures and Speeches) Allahabad, 1888.
  • Sarkashi Zilla Binjor, Agra 1858.

Lectures

  • Iltimas be Khidmat Sakinan-i-Hindustan dar bad tarraqi ta' lim ahl-i.Hind, Ghazipore, 1863.
  • Lecture dar bab targhib wa tahris talim itfal-i-Musalmanan, in 1895, Agra 1896.
  • Lecture Madrasaat ul-Ulum Aligarh Key Tarikhi halat Par, Agra. 1889.
  • Lecture Ijlas Dahum Muhammadan Educational Conference, Agra, 1896.
  • Lecture Muta'liq Ijlas Yazdahum Muhammadan Educational Conference, Agra, 1896.
  • Majmu'a Resolution Haye dah sala (Resolutions passed by the Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental Educational Conference from 1886 to 1895) ed. by Sir Syed Ahmad, Agra, 1896.
  • Report Salana (Annual Report of the Boarding House of Madrasat-ul-Ulum 1879–1880).
  • Khutbat-e-Ahmadia in the reply to "The Life of Mohamed" by William Muir, was penned in 1870.
 
Sir Syed with his son Syed Mahmood, grandson Syed Ross Masood, and some admirers.

Collected works

  • Khutut-i-Sir Syed, ed Ross Masud, 1924.
  • Majuma Lecture Kaye Sir Syed ed. Munshi Sirajuddin, Sadhora 1892.
  • Maqalat-i-Sir-Syed ed. by 'Abdullah Khvesgri, Aligarh, 1952.
  • Maqalat-i-Sir Syed, ed. By Muhammad Ismail, Lahore,
  • Makatib-i-Sir Syed, Mustaq Husain, Delhi, 1960.
  • Maktubat-i-Sir Syed, Muhammad Ismail Panipati, Lahore, 1959.
  • Makummal Majumua Lectures wa speeches. ed. Malik Fazaluddin, Lahore, 1900.
  • Muktubat al-Khullan ed. Mohd. Usman Maqbul, Aligarh 1915.
  • Tasanif-i-Ahmadiya (Collection of Syed Ahmad Khan's works on religions topics) in 8 parts.
  • Stress on Holy Quran.
  • Reformation of Faith.

Miscellaneous

  • On the Use of the Sector (Urdu), Syed-ul-Akbar, 1846.
  • Qaul-i-Matin dar Ibtal-i-Harkat i Zamin, Delhi, 1848.
  • Tashil fi Jar-a-Saqil, Agra, 1844.
  • Ik Nadan Khuda Parast aur Dana dunyadar Ki Kahani, Badaon, 1910.
  • Kalamat-ul-Haqq, Aligarh

Journals, reports, and proceedings

  • Tehzeeb-ul-Ikhlaq.
  • Aligarh Institute Gazette.
  • Proceedings of the Muhammadens Educational Conference.
  • An Account of the Loyal Muhammadans of India, Parts I, II, III, Moufussel Press, Meerut, 1860.
  • Proceedings of the Scientific Society.
  • By-Laws of the Scientific Society.
  • Addresses and speeches relating to the Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College in Aligarh (1875–1898) ed. Nawab Mohsin-ul-Mulk, Aligarh, 1898.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Cyril Glasse (2001) The New Encyclopedia of Islam, Altamira Press
  2. ^ Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World, Thompson Gale (2004)
  3. ^ "Ahmad Khan, Sayyid – Oxford Islamic Studies Online". www.oxfordislamicstudies.com. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  4. ^ "Misreading Sir Syed". The Indian Express. 17 October 2017. from the original on 7 February 2019. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
  5. ^ a b "Two-nation theory: Aligarh boys remember Sir Syed Ahmed Khan". The Express Tribune (newspaper). 19 October 2011. from the original on 27 March 2019. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Shirali, Aresh (10 August 2017). "The Enigma of Aligarh". Open Magazine.
  7. ^ a b c "Beacon in the dark: Father of the two-nation theory remembered". The Express Tribune (newspaper). 27 October 2014. from the original on 27 March 2019. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
  8. ^ a b Paracha, Nadeem F. (15 August 2016). "The forgotten future: Sir Syed and the birth of Muslim nationalism in South Asia". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
  9. ^ a b "Jinnah's two nation theory". The Nation. 27 February 2020. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
  10. ^ "Sir Syed Ahmad Khan-Man with a Great Vision". www.irfi.org. from the original on 29 October 2016. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  11. ^ Grad, Prospect (26 December 2022). "Aligarh Muslim University". GradProspect.com. Retrieved 23 December 2022.
  12. ^ "Sir Syed Ahmad Khan | The greatest Muslim reformer and statesman of the 19th Century". 1 June 2003. from the original on 12 September 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  13. ^ a b Ikram, S.S. Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan: Muslim Scholar. Encyclopædia Britannica. from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  14. ^ "Why Sir Syed loses and Allama Iqbal wins in Pakistan – The Express Tribune". 8 February 2013. from the original on 1 July 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  15. ^ "'Commercialisation of Sir Syed's name': Court seeks input from city's top managers – The Express Tribune". 1 February 2012. from the original on 11 April 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  16. ^ "Sir Syed Day: Why October 17 Is Important For AMU And Its Alumni". NDTV. 17 October 2017. from the original on 17 October 2017. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
  17. ^ "Mukherjee calls for research at AMU celebration". The New Indian Express. from the original on 28 October 2017. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  18. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 15
  19. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 16
  20. ^ Graham, p. 2
  21. ^ Graham, p. 4
  22. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 18
  23. ^ a b Troll 1978, p. 28
  24. ^ Nizami, p. 21
  25. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 21
  26. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 22
  27. ^ a b Kidwai 2010, p. 28
  28. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 23
  29. ^ Nizami, p. 23
  30. ^ a b Kidwai 2010, p. 29
  31. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 19
  32. ^ a b Graham, p. 5
  33. ^ Hali
  34. ^ a b Graham, p. 6
  35. ^ Nizami, p. 28
  36. ^ a b c Kidwai 2020, p. 33
  37. ^ Nizami, p. 34, 35
  38. ^ a b c d Kidwai 2020, p. 34
  39. ^ Graham, p. 64
  40. ^ Graham, p. 169
  41. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 35
  42. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 36
  43. ^ Troll 1978, p. 29
  44. ^ a b Troll 1978, p. 31
  45. ^ Nizami, p. 16
  46. ^ Troll 1978, p. 34
  47. ^ Troll 1978, p. 57
  48. ^ Shan Muhammad 1969, p. 46
  49. ^ Nizami, p. 24
  50. ^ a b Troll 1978, p. 39
  51. ^ Troll 1978, p. 64
  52. ^ a b Ahmad 1960
  53. ^ a b Shan Muhammad 1969, p. 195
  54. ^ Baljon, p. 13
  55. ^ Wilder 2006, p. 34
  56. ^ Baljon, p. 59
  57. ^ a b Troll 1978, p. 56
  58. ^ Troll 1978, p. 42
  59. ^ Baljon, p. 60
  60. ^ a b Naim 2011
  61. ^ Troll 1978, p. 37
  62. ^ a b Baljon, p. 61
  63. ^ Troll 1978, p. 39, 40
  64. ^ a b Alam 2021, p. 30
  65. ^ Troll 1978, p. 40
  66. ^ Troll 1978, p. 47
  67. ^ a b Baljon, p. 62
  68. ^ Troll 1978, p. 52
  69. ^ Troll 1978, p. 41
  70. ^ Troll 1978, p. 69, 70
  71. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 2
  72. ^ Troll 1978, p. 58
  73. ^ Baljon, p. 103
  74. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 8
  75. ^ Guenther 2002
  76. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 51
  77. ^ Sarah A. Qidwai, "Darwin or Design? Examining Sayyid Ahmad Khan's Views on Human Evolution" in Yasmin Saikia, M. Raisur Rahman (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Sayyid Ahmad Khan, Cambridge University Press, 2019, p. 220
  78. ^ a b Kidwai 2020, p. 3,4
  79. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 4
  80. ^ Naim 2011, p. 670
  81. ^ Nizami, p. 84
  82. ^ Nizami, p. 86
  83. ^ Troll 1978, p. 104
  84. ^ a b Kidwai 2020, p. 42
  85. ^ Troll 1978, p. 36
  86. ^ a b c Troll 1972
  87. ^ Alam 2021, p. 29
  88. ^ Naim 2011, p. 675
  89. ^ Naim 2011, p. 691
  90. ^ Naim 2011, p. 705, 706
  91. ^ Naim 2011, p.707
  92. ^ Malik 1980, p. 76
  93. ^ The word a’in can mean all or any of the following: character, convention, temperament, habit, rule, path, law (ecclesiastical or secular), creed, praxis, quality, intention, organization, management, system, decoration, beauty. (Lughat Nama-e Dehkhoda). There are about eighty meanings in all. These meanings seem to have developed over the centuries. Most were available to Abul Fazl; all were available to Ghalib.
  94. ^ Faruqi, Shamsur Rahman. "From Antiquary to Social Revolutionary: Syed Ahmad Khan and the Colonial Experience" (PDF). Shamsur Rahman Faruqi, work in English. Columbia University. (PDF) from the original on 20 October 2016. Retrieved 12 December 2015.
  95. ^ a b Guha, p. 56
  96. ^ a b c d Sherwani 1944
  97. ^ Fuerst, p. 86
  98. ^ Hoodbhoy, Pervez (9 February 2013). "Why Sir Syed loses and Allama Iqbal wins in Pakistan". The Pakistan Tribune. from the original on 17 July 2015. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  99. ^ a b Hali, pp. 92–95
  100. ^ K̲h̲ān̲, Sir Sayyid Aḥmad (1972). Writings and Speeches of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan. Nachiketa Publications. p. 15.
  101. ^ Masood Ashraf Raja (2010) Constructing Pakistan: Foundational Texts and the Rise of Muslim National Identity, 1857–1947. Oxford. Chapter 2. ISBN 978-0-19-547811-2
  102. ^ Graham, p. 24
  103. ^ a b Kidwai 2020, p. 200
  104. ^ Ali 1980
  105. ^ Fuerst, p. 11
  106. ^ a b c Kidwai 2020, p. 182
  107. ^ Shan Muhammad 1973, p. 65
  108. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 98
  109. ^ a b c d KUMAR, S (2000). Educational Philosophy in Modern India. Anmol Publications Pvt. Ltd. p. 59. ISBN 978-81-261-0431-4.
  110. ^ Nizami, p. 41
  111. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 45
  112. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 46
  113. ^ a b c d e f "Sir Syed Ahmed Khan". Encyclopedia of World Biography (Second ed.). Gale Research. 1997. pp. 17 vols.
  114. ^ "A balanced view on Sir Syed Ahmed khan-Dr Israr's holistic approach". Oracle Opinions. 26 October 2018. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
  115. ^ Tafsir al Quran, v.1 p.3016, translated and quoted in Baljon, pp. 44–45
  116. ^ Graham, p. 64, 65
  117. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 47
  118. ^ a b Hasan 2006, p. 43
  119. ^ A Brief Chronology of Aligarh Movement 15 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine. aligarhmovement.com
  120. ^ Hasan 2006, p. 43, 44
  121. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 48
  122. ^ a b c Nazeer Ahmed (2000). Islam in Global History. Xlibris Corporation. p. 231. ISBN 978-0-7388-5966-8.
  123. ^ a b Kidwai 2020, p. 49
  124. ^ Shan Muhammad 1969, p. 83
  125. ^ a b Shan Muhammad 1969, p. 84
  126. ^ a b Shan Muhammad 1969, p. 69
  127. ^ Baljon, p. 91
  128. ^ a b Baljon, p. 90
  129. ^ Baljon, p. 95
  130. ^ Baljon, p. 98
  131. ^ Panipati, pp. 249–263
  132. ^ Afzal Upal, M. Cusack, Muhammad, Carole (2021). Handbook of Islamic Sects and Movements. Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill. pp. 645–646. ISBN 978-90-04-42525-5.
  133. ^ Panipati, p. 102
  134. ^ Panipati, p. 100
  135. ^ Rahman, A. Faizur (17 February 2023). "The theology behind the Taliban's misogyny". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 19 February 2023.
  136. ^ Shan Muhammad 1969, p. 193
  137. ^ a b Shan Muhammad 1969, p. 193, 194
  138. ^ Graham, p. 289
  139. ^ Shan Muhammad 1973, p. 10
  140. ^ Shan Muhammad 1969, p. 229
  141. ^ Nizami, p. 120
  142. ^ Nizami, p. 121
  143. ^ Shan Muhammad 1969, p. 128
  144. ^ a b RC Majumdar (1969). Struggle for Freedom. Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan. p. 1967. ASIN: B000HXEOUM.
  145. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 50
  146. ^ Deepak, J Sai (2022). India, Bharat and Pakistan: The Constitutional Journey of a Sandwiched Civilisation (1st ed.). India: Bloomsbury. pp. 148–150. ISBN 978-9354354526.
  147. ^ Hindi Nationalism 7 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Alok Rai, Orient Blackswan, 2001
  148. ^ ABBASI, Yusuf (1981). Muslim Politics and Leadership in the South Asian Sub-continent. Institute of Islamic History, Culture and Civilization, Islamic University (Islamabad). p. 90.
  149. ^ a b Şahbaz, Davut (March 2020). "The Two Nations Theory and It's [sic] Role In The Establishment of Pakistan". Academic Journal of History and Idea. 7: 1, 9 – via Dergi Park.
  150. ^ Sir Syed Ahmed on the present state of Indian politics (consisting of speeches and letters). Pioneer Press. 1888. p. 29.
  151. ^ M.R.A. Baig (1974). The Muslim Dilemma in India. Delhi: Vikas Publishing House. pp. 51–2. ISBN 9780706903119.
  152. ^ a b S. Kumar (2000). Educational Philosophy in Modern India. Anmol Publications Pvt. Ltd. p. 60. ISBN 978-81-261-0431-4.
  153. ^ Sir Syed Ahmed Khan (1817–1898), Speech in March 1888, Quoted by Dilip Hiro, "The Longest August: The Unflinching Rivalry Between India and Pakistan"[1] 15 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  154. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 27
  155. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 28
  156. ^ a b Kidwai 2020, p. 52
  157. ^ Rashid Khan 2007
  158. ^ Engineer 2001, p. 31
  159. ^ Nyrop 1975, p. 176
  160. ^ Abdullah, p. 40
  161. ^ "Sir Syed Day: Why October 17 Is Important For AMU And Its Alumni". NDTV.com. Retrieved 15 September 2021.
  162. ^ Newspaper, From the (15 April 2017). "Remembering Sir Syed". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 15 September 2021.
  163. ^ "Sir Syed College". www.sirsyedcollege.ac.in. Retrieved 15 September 2021.
  164. ^ "No. 23504". The London Gazette. 4 June 1869. p. 3181.
  165. ^ Kidwai 2020, p. 43
  166. ^ "No. 25772". The London Gazette. 3 January 1888. p. 14.
  167. ^ Puja Mondal (4 January 2014). "Sir Syed Ahmed Khan and the Aligarh Movement". from the original on 22 September 2017. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  168. ^ C.M. Naim (17 October 2011). "A Musafir To London". from the original on 16 November 2018. Retrieved 29 May 2016.
  169. ^ Syed Ahmad Khan's commemorative postage stamp issued by India Post in 1973 commemorating his 156th birth anniversary 17 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine, indianpost.com
  170. ^ Syed Ahmad Khan's commemorative postage stamp issued by Pakistan Postal Services in 1990 in its 'Pioneers of Freedom' series 5 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 24 August 2019
  171. ^ "Sir Syed Ahmed Khan | Muslim Reformer | Blue Plaques". English Heritage. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
  172. ^ "50 Rupees, Pakistan". en.numista.com. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  173. ^ Soomro, Kumail (14 August 2022). "State Bank unveils Rs75 commemorative banknote". BOL News. Retrieved 14 August 2022.

Cited sources

  • Graham, George Farquhar (1885). The Life and Work of Syed Ahmed Khan. Black wood.
  • Hali, Altaf Husain (1994) [1901]. Hayat-i-Javed (A Biography of Sir Sayyid). New Delhi: Rupa and Company. ISBN 978-9693501865.
  • Abdullah, S. M. (1940). The spirit and substance of Urdu prose under the influence of Sir Sayyid Ahamad Khan. Sh. Muhammad Ashraf, Lahore.
  • Sherwani, H. K. (1944). "The Political Thought Of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan". The Indian Journal of Political Science. 5 (4): 306–328. ISSN 0019-5510. JSTOR 42754317.
  • Ahmad, Aziz (1960). "Sayyid Aḥmad Khān, Jamāl al-dīn al-Afghānī and Muslim India". Studia Islamica (13): 55–78. doi:10.2307/1595240. ISSN 0585-5292. JSTOR 1595240.
  • Baljon, J.M.S. (1964). The Reforms and Religious Ideas of Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan. Lahore: S.M. Ashraf.
  • Nizami, Khaliq Ahmad (1966). Sayyid Ahmad Khan. Public Resource. Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Govt. of India. ISBN 978-8123025131.
  • Shan Muhammad (1969). Sir Syed Ahmad Khan; a political biography. Internet Archive. Meerut, Meenaksi Parkashan.
  • Troll, Christian W. (1972). "A Note on an Early Topographical Work of Sayyid Aḥmad Khān: "Ās̤ār al-Ṣanādīd"". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland (2): 135–146. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00157508. ISSN 0035-869X. JSTOR 25203370. S2CID 163133936.
  • K̲h̲ān̲, Sir Sayyid Aḥmad; Muhammad, Shan (1973). Writings and Speeches of Sir Syed Ahmad Rhan. Nachiketa Publications.
  • Troll, Christian W. (1978). Sayyid Ahmad Khan: A Reinterpretation of Muslim Theology. Vikas Publishing House. ISBN 978-0-7069-0626-4.
  • Ali, M. Mohar (1980). "Hunter's "Indian Musalmans": A Re-Examination of Its Background". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. 112 (1): 30–51. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00135889. ISSN 0035-869X. JSTOR 25211084. S2CID 154830629.
  • Panipati, Muhammad Ismail (1995). Khutoot banaam Sir Syed. Lahore, Pakistan: Majlis Taraqqi e Adab Lahore.
  • Guenther, Alan M. (2002). "Response Of Sayyid Ahmad Khan To Sir William Muir's Evaluation Of Hadit Literature". Oriente Moderno. 21 (82) (1): 219–254. doi:10.1163/22138617-08201015. ISSN 0030-5472. JSTOR 25817822.
  • K̲h̲ān̲, Sir Sayyid Aḥmad; Wilder, John W. (2006). Selected Essays by Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan. Sang-e Meel Publications. ISBN 978-969-35-1805-4.
  • Guha, Ramachandra (2010). Makers of Modern India. Penguin Books India. ISBN 978-0-670-08385-5.
  • Naim, C. M. (2011). "Syed Ahmad and His Two Books Called 'Asar-al-Sanadid'". Modern Asian Studies. 45 (3): 669–708. doi:10.1017/S0026749X10000156. ISSN 0026-749X. JSTOR 25835695. S2CID 145216086.
  • Fuerst, Ilyse R. Morgenstein (14 August 2017). Indian Muslim Minorities and the 1857 Rebellion: Religion, Rebels and Jihad. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78673-237-8.
  • Kidwai, Shafey (3 December 2020). Sir Syed Ahmad Khan: Reason, Religion and Nation. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-000-29773-7.
  • Alam, Muzaffar (1 August 2021). The Mughals and the Sufis: Islam and Political Imagination in India, 1500–1750. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-1-4384-8490-7.
  • Engineer, Asghar Ali (2001). Rational Approach to Islam. Gyan Publishing House. ISBN 978-81-212-0725-6.
  • Nyrop, Richard F. (1975). Area Handbook for Pakistan. U.S. Government Printing Office.
  • Rashid Khan, Abdul (2007). "All India Muhammadan Educational Conference and the Foundation of the All India Muslim League". Journal of the Pakistan Historical Society. 55 (1–2): 65–83.
  • Kidwai, Shafey (2010). Cementing Ethics with Modernism: An Appraisal of Sir Sayyed Ahmed Khan's Writings. Gyan Publishing House. ISBN 978-81-212-1047-8.
  • Malik, Hafeez (1980). Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan and Muslin modernization in India and Pakistan. Internet Archive. New York : Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-04970-2.
  • Hasan, Tariq (2006). The Aligarh Movement and the Making of the Indian Muslim Mind, 1857-2002. Rupa & Company. ISBN 978-81-291-0847-0.

Further reading

  • The Glowing Legend of Sir Syed – A Centennial Tribute (1998), Ed. Syed Ziaur Rahman, Non-Resident Students' Centre, Aligarh Muslim University (Aligarh)
  • Prof. Iftikhar Alam Khan. Sir Syed aur Faney TameerSir Syed Academy, AMU. Aligarh
  • Prof. Iftikhar Alam Khan. Muslim University ki Kahani, Imarton ki zubani Educational publications, civil Lines, (Aligarh)
  • Prof. Iftikhar Alam Khan. Sir Syed aur Scientific SocietyPub by Sir Syed Academy, AMU.Aligarh.
  • Prof. Iftikhar Alam Khan. Sir Syed tahreek ka siyasi aur samaji pas manzarEducational Publishing house, Dhula Kounan, Delhi
  • Prof. Iftikhar Alam Khan. Sir Syed House ke Mah Wasal (Aligarh)
  • Prof. Iftikhar Alam Khan. Sir Syed Daroon e Khana Educational Publications, Civil Lines. Aligarh
  • Prof. Iftikhar Alam Khan " Sir Syed aur Jadeedyat" Pub. by Educational Publications, Delhi 012.
  • Prof. Iftikhar Alam Khan " Sir Syed aur Hindustani Nizam-e-zaraat " Educational Publishing. Delhi.
  • Prof, Iftikhar Alam Khan "Sir Syed Ka Nazaria-e-Talim". Educational Publishing House, Delhi, 2017.

Prof, Shafey Kidwai"Sawaneh-e-Sirsyed: Ek Bazdeed(2017), Brown Book House, Shmashad Market, Aligarh,202002 Prof.Shafey Kidwai; Aligarh Aligarh Institute Gazette Ek Tajziyati Mutaala,(2019)Brown Book House, Shamshad Market, Aligarh

External links

  • Comprehensive detail about Aligarh Movement
  • "Sir Seyyed Ahmad, Khan Bahadur, L.L.D, K.C.S.I." By Afzal Usmani
  • . official website of Aligarh Muslim University. Archived from the original on 1 May 2012.
  • "Sir Syed Today: A Source of Literary Work of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan".
  • "Sir Syed Ahmad Khan (1817–1898)". Story of Pakistan. June 2003.
  • "Sir Syed Ahmad Khan". Pioneers of Freedom.
  • . Sir Syed University of Engineering & Technology. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007.
  • . Cyber AMU. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007.
  • Upadhyay, R. . South Asia Analysis Group. Archived from the original on 28 February 2005.
  • The Rich Legacy of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan (Gulf News)
  • Sir Syed Ahmed Khan His Life and Contribution (NewAgeIslam)
  • Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan's speech at Meerut, 16 March 1888

syed, ahmad, khan, kcsi, fras, october, 1817, march, 1898, also, sayyid, ahmad, khan, indian, muslim, reformer, philosopher, educationist, nineteenth, century, british, india, though, initially, espousing, hindu, muslim, unity, became, pioneer, muslim, nationa. Sir Syed Ahmad Khan KCSI FRAS 17 October 1817 27 March 1898 also Sayyid Ahmad Khan was an Indian Muslim reformer 1 2 philosopher and educationist 3 in nineteenth century British India 4 5 Though initially espousing Hindu Muslim unity he became the pioneer of Muslim nationalism in India and is widely credited as the father of the two nation theory which formed the basis of the Pakistan movement 6 7 8 9 Born into a family with strong debts to the Mughal court Ahmad studied the Quran and Science within the court He was awarded an honorary LLD from the University of Edinburgh in 1889 10 7 5 SirSyed Ahmed KhanKCSIBorn 1817 10 17 17 October 1817Delhi Mughal IndiaDied27 March 1898 1898 03 27 aged 80 Aligarh North Western Provinces British IndiaOther namesSir SyedNotable workThe Mohammadan Commentary on the Holy Quran tafsir on Quran ChildrenSyed MahmoodRelativesRoss Masood grandson AwardsStar of IndiaEra19th centurySchoolIslamic and Renaissance philosophyInstitutionsEast India CompanyIndian Judicial BranchAligarh Muslim UniversityPunjab UniversityGovernment College UniversityMain interestsPragmatism metaphysics language aesthetics Christianity and IslamNotable ideasTwo nation theory Muslim adoption of Western ideasInfluences Thomas Walker Arnold John Locke Thomas Paine Gottlieb LeitnerInfluenced Pakistan Movement Aligarh Movement Muslim League Lord Mountbatten of Burma Ziauddin Ahmad Pervez Musharraf and his ideas remain critical in the national politics of PakistanSignatureIn 1838 Syed Ahmad entered the service of East India Company and went on to become a judge at a Small Causes Court in 1867 retiring from 1876 During the Indian Mutiny of 1857 he remained loyal to the British Raj and was noted for his actions in saving European lives 1 After the rebellion he penned the booklet The Causes of the Indian Mutiny a daring critique at the time of various British policies that he blamed for causing the revolt Believing that the future of Muslims was threatened by the rigidity of their orthodox outlook Sir Ahmad began promoting Western style scientific education by founding modern schools and journals and organising Islamic entrepreneurs In 1859 Syed established Gulshan School at Muradabad Victoria School at Ghazipur in 1863 and a scientific society for Muslims in 1863 11 In 1875 founded the Muhammadan Anglo Oriental College the first Muslim university in Southern Asia 12 During his career Syed repeatedly called upon Muslims to loyally serve the British Raj and promoted the adoption of Urdu as the lingua franca of all Indian Muslims Syed criticized the Indian National Congress 13 Sir Syed maintains a strong legacy in Pakistan and among Indian Muslims He strongly influenced other Muslim leaders including Allama Iqbal and Muhammad Ali Jinnah His advocacy of Islam s rationalist tradition and at broader radical reinterpretation of the Quran to make it compatible with science and modernity continues to influence the global Islamic reformation 14 Many universities and public buildings in Pakistan bear Sir Syed s name 15 Aligarh Muslim University celebrated Sir Syed s 200th birth centenary with much enthusiasm on 17 October 2017 Former President of India Pranab Mukherjee was the chief guest 16 17 Contents 1 Early life 2 Education 3 Career 4 Influences 5 Literary works 5 1 Religious works 5 1 1 Early treatises 5 1 2 Commentary of the Torah and Gospel 5 1 3 Essays on the Life of Muhammad 5 1 4 Tafsir ul Quran 5 2 Historical works 5 2 1 Asar us Sanadid 5 2 2 Ain e Akbari 5 3 Political works 5 3 1 Causes of the Indian Revolt 5 3 2 Loyal Muhammadans of India 5 3 3 Review on Hunter s Indian Musalmans 6 Muslim reformer 6 1 Scientific Society 6 2 Muhammadan Anglo Oriental College 6 3 Muhammadan Educational Conference 6 4 Opposition and criticism 7 Political thoughts and activities 7 1 Opposition to active politics 7 2 Hindu Muslim unity 7 3 Advocacy of Urdu 7 4 Two nation theory 8 Personal life 9 Legacy and influence 10 Honours 11 Bibliography 11 1 Legal works 11 2 Religious works 11 3 Historical works 11 4 Biographical works 11 5 Political works 11 6 Lectures 11 7 Collected works 11 8 Miscellaneous 11 9 Journals reports and proceedings 12 See also 13 References 14 Cited sources 15 Further reading 16 External linksEarly life EditDo not show the face of Islam to others instead show your face as the follower of true Islam representing character knowledge tolerance and piety Sir Syed Ahmad Khan Syed Ahmad Taqvi Khan Bahadur was born on 17 October 1817 to Syed Muhammad Muttaqi 18 and Aziz un Nisa 19 in Delhi which was the capital of the Mughal Empire during the reign of Mughal Emperor Akbar II Many generations of his family had since been highly connected with the administrative position in Mughal Empire His maternal grandfather Khwaja Fariduddin served as Wazir in the court of Emperor Akbar Shah II 20 His paternal grandfather Syed Hadi Jawwad bin Imaduddin held a mansab lit General a high ranking administrative position and honorary name of Mir Jawwad Ali Khan in the court of Emperor Alamgir II Sir Syed s father Syed Muhammad Muttaqi was personally close to Emperor Akbar Shah II and served as his personal adviser 21 However Syed Ahmad was born at a time when his father was regional insurrections aided and led by the East India Company which had replaced the power traditionally held by the Mughal state reducing its monarch to figurehead Syed Ahmad was the youngest of three siblings With his elder brother Syed Muhammad bin Muttaqi Khan and elder sister Safiyatun Nisa 22 Sir Syed was raised in the house of his maternal grandfather in a wealthy area of the city 23 They were raised in strict accordance with Mughal noble traditions and exposed to politics Their mother Aziz un Nisa played a formative role in Sir Syed s early life raising him with rigid discipline with a strong emphasis on modern education 24 Education EditSir Syed s education was initiated by Shah Ghulam Ali his father s spiritual mentor in 1822 25 He was taught to read and understand the Qur an by a female tutor 26 He received an education traditional to Muslim nobility in Delhi He attended a maktab run by a learned scholar Moulvi Hamiduddin in a house adjacent to his ancestral home and started learning Persian and Arabic 27 He read the works of Muslim scholars and writers such as Sahbai Zauq and Ghalib 28 Other tutors instructed him in mathematics astronomy and algebra He also pursued the study of medicine for several years under Hakim Ghulam Haider Khan 27 Sir Syed was also adept at swimming shooting and other sports 29 He took an active part in the Mughal court s cultural activities and attended parties festivals and recitations 30 Syed Ahmad s elder brother launched a weekly Syedul Akhbar from Delhi which was one of the earliest Urdu newspaper of North part of India 31 Until the death of his father in 1838 Sir Syed had lived a life customary for an affluent young Muslim noble Upon his father s death he inherited the titles of his grandfather and father and was awarded the title of Arif Jung by the emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar 32 Financial difficulties put an end to Sir Syed s formal education although he continued to study in private using books on a variety of subjects 30 Career Edit Nawab Mohsin ul Mulk Sir Syed Ahmad Khan Justice Syed Mahmood he was the first Muslim to serve as a High Court judge in the British Raj Having recognized the steady decline in Mughal political power Sir Syed decided to enter the service of the East India Company He could not enter the colonial civil service because it was only in the 1860s that Indians were admitted His first appointment was as a Serestadar lit Clerk of the Criminal Department in the Sadr Amin s office in Delhi responsible for record keeping and managing court affairs 32 33 In February 1839 he was transferred to Agra and promoted to the title of Naib Munshi or deputy reader in the office of the Commissioner 34 In 1841 he was appointed as the Munsif or Sub Judge of Fatehpur Sikri and later transferred to Delhi in 1846 34 He remained in Delhi until 1854 except for two short term postings to Rohtak as officiating Sadr Amin in 1850 and 1853 35 In 1855 he was promoted to the post of Sadr Amin in Bijnor 36 Acquainted with high ranking British officials Sir Syed obtained close knowledge about British colonial politics during his service at the courts At the outbreak of the Indian rebellion on 10 May 1857 Sir Syed was serving as the chief assessment officer at the court in Bijnor 36 He stood by the British officers of Bijnor and saved the lives of many officers and their family members from the revolting soldiers 36 The conflict had left large numbers of civilians dead Erstwhile centres of Muslim power such as Delhi Agra Lucknow and Kanpur were severely affected He lost several close relatives who died in the violence Although he succeeded in rescuing his mother from the turmoil she died in Meerut owing to the privations she had experienced 37 In 1858 he was appointed as Sadarus Sudoor a high ranking post at the court in Muradabad where he began working on his most famous literary work The Cause of the Indian Revolt 38 In 1862 he was transferred to Ghazipur and later to Aligarh in 1864 In 1864 he was sent to Banaras and elevated to the position of a Sub Judge of Small Causes 38 In April 1869 he accompanied his two son Syed Mahmood who had obtained a scholarship for study in England and Syed Hamid to England 39 Sir Syed retired from government service in 1876 and settled in Aligarh 40 In 1878 he was nominated as an additional member of the Imperial Legislative Council which he served from July 1878 to July 1880 He got the second term that lasted until 1883 41 He served the Legislative Council of the Lieutenant Governor of the North Western Provinces for two terms from 1887 until 1893 42 Influences EditSir Syed s early influences were his mother Aziz un Nisa and maternal grandfather Khwaja Fariduddin both of whom took special interest in his education 43 Apart from serving as a Wazir in the Mughal court Khwaja Fariduddin was also a teacher mathematician and astronomer 23 He was also disposed towards Sufism which left its impact on Sir Syed since his early childhood 44 His maternal uncle Khwaja Zainuddin Ahmad who was an expert in music and mathematics also influenced him in his early days 45 Sir Syed s early theological writings demonstrate the influence of three school of religious though on his outlook the Naqshbandi tradition of Shah Ghulam Ali Dahlavi Shah Waliullah Dehlawi and his teachings and the Mujahidin movement of Syed Ahmad Barelvi and his earliest disciple Shah Ismail Dehlvi 44 46 While Sir Syed shared the desire for religious forms in India with the Mujahidin movement he was opposed to the Indian Wahhabi movement 47 During his formative years in Delhi he came in contact with Ghalib and Zauq whose exquisite style of prose and poetry influenced Sir Syed s style of writing 48 He would often visit Imam Baksh Sahbai and Sadruddin Khan Azurda Dehlawi in his learning years 49 Another influence on him was his teacher and friend in Agra Nur al Hasan of Kandhala a teacher in Arabic at Agra College in the early 1840s who encouraged and corrected his early works 50 51 He was also influenced by the works of the Tunisian reformer Hayreddin Pasha and adopted his approach of utilising freedom of expression for bringing reforms in the Muslim community 52 The western writers who most influenced his political thoughts were the Utilitarians such as John Stuart Mill whose works he often quoted in his own writings 53 He was also influenced by the essays of Joseph Addison and Richard Steele and modelled his own journals after their Tatler and Spectator 53 Literary works EditWhile continuing to work as a junior clerk Sir Syed began focusing on writing from the age of 23 in 1840 on various subjects from mechanics to educational issues mainly in Urdu where he wrote at least 6000 pages He also wrote a well known book on archeology called Athar ul Sandeed He also developed interest in literature as he met a few of India s well known writers 54 55 Religious works Edit First issue of the journal Muhammadan Social Reformer dated 24 December 1870 it was a pioneering publication initiated by Sir Syed to promote liberal ideas in Muslim society Sir Syed Ahmad Khan s career as an author began when he published a series of treatises in Urdu on religious subjects in 1842 In his early religious writings his religious thoughts are inclined towards the orthodoxy which slowly becomes independent with his increasing contact with the West 56 His early works show the influence of Sufism and his upbringing in Delhi 57 The main themes of these works are popularization of the practices of the Islamic prophet Muhammad as the one true path and the desire to reform the lives of Indian Muslims from religious innovations thus endeavouring for the purity of Islamic belief in India 58 57 His later religious writings such as his commentary on the Torah and Gospel and his essays on Muhammad were stimulated in response to Christian missionary activities in India and the aggressive view of British historians towards Islam 52 Early treatises Edit His first treatise published in 1842 was a biographical sketch of Muhammad called Jila al Qulub bi Zikr al Mahbub Delight of the Hearts in Remembering the Beloved 59 in line with reformist ideas of Shah Waliullah 60 It was prose for recitation on Mawlid written in idiomatic Urdu 61 He published his second treatise Tuhfa i Hasan The Gift to Hasan in 1844 on the encouragement of his friend Nur al Hasan 50 It is an Urdu translation of the tenth and twelfth chapter of Shah Abdul Aziz Dehlavi s Tuhfah i Ithna Ashariyya A treatise on the 12 Imams which was a critique of Shia beliefs 60 62 The tenth chapter deals and answers the Shia accusations against the Sahabi and Hazrat Aisha and the twelfth deals with the Shia doctrines of tawalli and tabarri 63 His third treatise entitled Kalimat al Haqq The True Discourse was published in 1849 62 It is a critique of the prevalent Sufi practices around pir murid relationships 64 The first part of the work is devoted to the concept of piri in which he argues that Muhammad is the only valid pir while the second part is focused on muridi and the notion of bay ah 65 He calls for reforms in the pir murid relationship and the associated practises 66 Rah i Sunna dar radd i Bid a The Sunna and the Rejection of Innovations his fourth treatise was published in 1850 67 In this work he was not in favour of the religious practices and beliefs of his fellow Muslims which he felt was mixed with innovation and deviated from the true Sunnah 68 In 1852 he published Namiqa dar bayan masala tasawwur i Shaikh A Letter Explaining the Teaching of tasawwur i shaikh in which he defended tasawwur i Shaikh the Sufi practice of visualizing within the image of one s spiritual guide 64 69 In 1853 he translated some passages of al Ghazali s Kimiya al Sa ada The Alchemy of Happiness 67 Commentary of the Torah and Gospel Edit In 1862 while stationed at Ghazipur Sir Syed started working on a commentary on the Bible and its teaching with the aim to explain them in terms of Islam the final of the Abrahamic religions 70 It was published in Urdu and English in three parts from 1862 to 1865 under the title Tabin al al kalam Fi tafsir altawrat Wa I injil ala millat al Islam Elucidation of the World in Commentary of the Torah and Gospel According to the Religion of Islam 71 72 While the first part deals with the Islamic approach towards biblical writings the second and third part contains commentary on the Book of Genesis and the Gospel of Matthew respectively 73 Essays on the Life of Muhammad Edit In 1869 he wrote Al Khutbat al Ahmadiya fi l Arab wa I Sirat al Muhammadiya A Series of Essays on the Life of Prophet Muhammad and Subjects Subsidiary Therein as a rejoinder to William Muir s widely known four part book The Life of Mahomet published in 1864 74 He was deeply distress by Muir s portrayal of Islam and the character of Muhammad He was concerned that the book might create doubts among the younger generation of Muslims 75 In order to prepare for the book he accompanied his son to England as he wanted to get a first hand impression of Western civilisation 76 He was also a reader of Darwin and while not agreeing with all of his ideas he could be described as a sort of theistic evolutionist like his contemporary Asa Gray and one of the first in the Islamic world finding the arguments supporting such view through his own scientific research but also quoting earlier Islamic scholars like Al Jahiz Ibn Khaldun and Shah Waliullah 77 Tafsir ul Quran Edit Sir Syed started working on a tafsir or commentary on Quran in 1877 It was published as Tafsir ul Quran in seven volumes the first volume appeared in 1880 and the last volume was published six years after his death in 1904 78 In this work he analysed and interpreted 16 paras and 13 surahs of the Quran 78 He also included a detailed article Tahrir fi Usool al Tafsir The Notes on the Principles of Commentary in the first volume in which he laid down 15 principles on which he based his commentary 79 Historical works Edit History was Sir Syed s preferred area of study and in 1840 Sir Syed compiled a book of chronological tables about the Timurid rulers of Delhi from Timurlane to Bahadur Shah Zafar at the behest of Robert N C Hamilton his patron It was later published under the title Jam i Jum Jamshed s Cup 80 In Silsilat ul Mulk he compiled the biographical data of all the ruler of Delhi in history 81 During his stay in Bijnor he wrote a history on the city of Bijnor but it was destroyed during the 1857 rebellion 82 He also wrote critical editions of books like Ziauddin Barani s Tarikh e Firoz Shahi published in 1862 83 and Tuzk e Jahangiri published in 1864 84 However his most important historical works that brought him fame as a scholar are the two editions of Asar us Sanadid and that of the Ain e Akbari 85 Asar us Sanadid Edit In 1847 he published the book Asar us Sanadid The Remnants of Ancient Heroes documenting antiquities of Delhi dating from the medieval era 86 The work is divided into four sections describing the buildings outside the city of Delhi the buildings around the Delhi Fort the monuments in Shahjahanabad and the last section presenting a brief historical account of the various settlements of Delhi 86 and the prominent inhabitants of Delhi which included Sufis such as Shah Ghulam Ali Saiyid Ahmad Shahid physicians scholars poets calligraphers and prominent musicians of Delhi 87 It also contained around 130 illustrations drawn by Faiz Ali Khan and Mirza Shahrukh Beg which were the first lithographically produced book illustrations in India 88 He released the second edition of Ansar as sanadid in 1854 89 However both the editions are radically different with the second edition being abbreviated and more factual 90 This work brought Sir Syed a wider fame and earned him the reputation of a cultured scholar 91 In 1861 it was translated into French by Gracin de Tassy in Paris 86 The book was also presented to the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland London which made him an honorary fellow 84 Ain e Akbari Edit The court of Akbar an illustration from a manuscript of the Ain e Akbari In 1855 he finished his scholarly and illustrated edition of Abul Fazl s Ai n e Akbari The first and the third volume of the work was published in 1855 The second volume sent to the publisher in 1857 was destroyed in the rebellion that took place that year 92 Having finished the work to his satisfaction and believing that Mirza Asadullah Khan Ghalib was a person who would appreciate his labours Syed Ahmad approached the great Ghalib to write a taqriz in the convention of the times a laudatory foreword for it Ghalib obliged but what he did produce was a short Persian poem castigating the Ai n e Akbari and by implication the imperial sumptuous literate and learned Mughal culture of which it was a product The least that could be said against it was that the book had little value even as an antique document Ghalib practically reprimanded Syed Ahmad Khan for wasting his talents and time on dead things Worse he praised sky high the sahibs of England who at that time held all the keys to all the a ins in this world 93 Sir Syed Ahmad Khan never again wrote a word in praise of the Ai n e Akbari and in fact gave up taking an active interest in history and archaeology He did edit another two historical texts over the next few years but neither of them was anything like the Ai n a vast and triumphalist document on the governance of Akbar 94 Political works Edit During the uprising of 1857 Sir Syed was posted as a chief assessment officer at the court in Bijnor 95 He recorded the history of the mutiny in Tarikh i Sarkashi ye Bijnor History of the Bijnor Rebellion which was published in 1858 96 He was deeply worried about the consequences of the mutiny for his fellow Muslims in particular 95 He wrote a number of articles and pamphlets such as Asbab e Baghawat e Hind The Causes of the Indian Revolt Loyal Muhammadans of India and Review on Dr Hunter s Indian Musalmans Are They Bound in Conscience to Rebel Against the Queen to defend Muslims and Islam and create a cordial relations between the British authorities and the Muslim community 97 Causes of the Indian Revolt Edit Sir Syed supported the East India Company during the 1857 uprising a role which has been criticised by some nationalists such as Jamaluddin Afghani In 1859 Sir Syed published the booklet Asbab e Baghawat e Hind The Causes of the Indian Revolt in Urdu in which he studied the causes of the Indian revolt In this his most famous work he rejected the common notion that the conspiracy was planned by Muslim elites who resented the diminishing influence of Muslim monarchs He blamed the East India Company for its aggressive expansion as well as the ignorance of British politicians regarding Indian culture Sir Syed advised the British to appoint Muslims to assist in administration to prevent what he called haramzadgi a vulgar deed such as the mutiny 98 Maulana Altaf Hussain Hali wrote in the biography of Sir Syed that As soon as Sir Syed reached Muradabad he began to write the pamphlet entitled The Causes of the Indian Revolt Asbab e Baghawat e Hind in which he did his best to clear the people of India and especially the Muslims of the charge of Mutiny In spite of the obvious danger he made a courageous and thorough report of the accusations people were making against the Government and refused theory which the British had invented to explain the causes of the Mutiny 99 When the work was finished without waiting for an English translation Sir Syed sent the Urdu version to be printed at the Mufassilat Gazette Press in Agra Within a few weeks he received 500 copies back from the printers One of his friends warned him not to send the pamphlet to the British Parliament or to the Government of India Rae Shankar Das a great friend of Sir Syed begged him to burn the books rather than put his life in danger 96 Sir Syed replied that he was bringing these matters to the attention of the British for the good of his own people of his country and of the government itself He said that if he came to any harm while doing something that would greatly benefit the rulers and the subjects of India alike he would gladly suffer whatever befell him When Rae Shankar Das saw that Sir Syed s mind was made up and nothing could be done to change it he wept and remained silent After performing a supplementary prayer and asking God s blessing Sir Syed sent almost all the 500 copies of his pamphlet to England one to the government and kept the rest himself When the government of India had the book translated and presented before the council Lord Canning the governor general and Sir Bartle Frere accepted it as a sincere and friendly report The foreign secretary Cecil Beadon however severely attacked it calling it an extremely seditious pamphlet He wanted a proper inquiry into the matter and said that the author unless he could give a satisfactory explanation should be harshly dealt with Since no other member of the Council agreed with his opinion his attack did no harm 100 Later Sir Syed was invited to attend Lord Canning s durbar in Farrukhabad and happened to meet the foreign secretary there He told Sir Syed that he was displeased with the pamphlet and added that if he had really had the government s interests at heart he would not have made his opinion known in this way throughout the country he would have communicated it directly to the government Sir Syed replied that he had only had 500 copies printed the majority of which he had sent to England one had been given to the government of India and the remaining copies were still in his possession Furthermore he had the receipt to prove it He was aware he added that the view of the rulers had been distorted by the stress and anxieties of the times which made it difficult to put even the most straightforward problem in its right perspective It was for this reason that he had not communicated his thoughts publicly He promised that for every copy that could be found circulating in India he would personally pay 1 000 rupees At first Beadon was not convinced and asked Sir Syed over and over again if he was sure that no other copy had been distributed in India Sir Syed reassured him on this matter and Beadon never mentioned it again Later he became one of Sir Syed s strongest supporters Many official translations were made of the Urdu text of The Causes of the Indian Revolt The one undertaken by the India Office formed the subject of many discussions and debates 101 The pamphlet was also translated by the government of India and several members of parliament but no version was offered to the public A translation which had been started by Auckland Colvin a government official was finished by Sir Syed s friend Colonel G F I Graham and finally published in 1873 99 102 Loyal Muhammadans of India Edit In 1860 Sir Syed wrote a series of bilingual pamphlets called the Risala Khair Khwahan e Musalmanan e Hind An Account of the Loyal Mohammedans of India from Meerut containing episodes in the life of those Muslims who stood by the British during the 1857 uprising 96 It was published in three issues the first and second issues appeared in 1860 while the third was published in 1861 103 The first issue highlighted the bravery of those Muslims who stood by the British while the second issue carried an article on jihad in which he makes a clear distinction between jihad and rebellion 103 Review on Hunter s Indian Musalmans Edit In August 1871 William Wilson Hunter a Scottish historian and member of the Indian Civil Service published Indian Musalmans Are They Bound in Conscience to Rebel Against the Queen in which he discussed the Indian Wahabi movement its role in the rebellion 104 and argued that the Muslims were a threat to the Empire 105 Hunter links Wahhabism with rebellion and terms them as self stylised jihadis 106 His accusations led to the prosecution of Muslims in India especially in the North Western Provinces and those associated with Wahhabism were severely punished 106 Many Muslims found his arguments one sided and this prompted Sir Syed to write a rejoinder of the book 106 He reviewed the book in The Pioneer in a series of articles which were reprinted in Aligarh Institute Gazette from 24 November 1871 to 23 February 1872 96 They were later collected and published in a book in England by Hafiz Ahmad Hasan the Vakil of Tonk 107 Sir Syed based his arguments upon Muhammad s own conduct during holy wars 108 Muslim reformer EditSee also Aligarh Movement The logo of Aligarh University whose moto is Taught man that which he knew not Qur an 96 5 Through the 1850s Syed Ahmad Khan began developing a strong passion for education While pursuing studies of different subjects including European jurisprudence Sir Syed began to realise the advantages of Western style education which was being offered at newly established colleges across India Despite being a devout Muslim Sir Syed criticised the influence of traditional dogma and religious orthodoxy which had made most Indian Muslims suspicious of British influences 109 Sir Syed began feeling increasingly concerned for the future of Muslim communities 109 A scion of Mughal nobility Sir Syed had been reared in the finest traditions of Muslim elite culture and was aware of the steady decline of Muslim political power across India The animosity between the British and Muslims before and after the Indian Rebellion of 1857 threatened to marginalise Muslim communities across India for many generations 109 Scientific Society Edit Sir Syed intensified his work to promote co operation with British authorities promoting loyalty to the Empire amongst Indian Muslims Committed to working for the upliftment of Muslims Sir Syed founded a modern madrassa in Muradabad in 1859 this was one of the first religious schools to impart scientific education Sir Syed also worked on social causes helping to organise relief for the famine struck people of North West Province in 1860 38 While posted in Ghazipur in 1863 he established a madrasa which later became the Victoria High school 110 He also formed the Scientific Society in Ghazipur to promote educational reforms across the country 38 He wrote an insightful tract on education titled Iltimas Ba Khidmat e Sakinan e Hind Dar Bab e Taraqqi Taleem in Ahl e Hind Address to the natives of Hindoostan on education 111 Upon his transfer to Aligarh in 1864 Sir Syed began working wholeheartedly as an educator The Scientific Society was transferred from Ghazipur to Aligarh and rechristened as the Scientific Society of Aligarh 112 Modelling it after the Royal Society and the Royal Asiatic Society 113 Sir Syed assembled Muslim scholars from different parts of the country The Society held annual conferences disbursed funds for educational causes and regularly published a journal on scientific subjects in English and Urdu Sir Syed felt that the socio economic future of Muslims was threatened by their orthodox aversions to modern science and technology 109 He published many writings promoting liberal rational interpretations of Islamic scriptures struggling to find rational interpretations for jinn angels and miracles of the prophets 114 One example was the reaction to his argument which appeared in his tafsir exegesis of the Quran that riba referred to interest charges when lending money to the poor but not to the rich nor to borrowers in trade or in industry since this finance supported trade national welfare and prosperity While many jurists declared all interest to be riba according to Sir Syed this was based on their own authority and deduction rather than the Quran 115 Muhammadan Anglo Oriental College Edit On 1 April 1869 he went along with his sons Syed Mahmood and Syed Hamed to England where he was awarded the Order of the Star of India from the British government on 6 August 116 Travelling across England he visited its colleges and was inspired by the culture of learning established after the Renaissance Sir Syed returned to India in the following year determined to build a school modelled on Cambridge and Oxford imparting modern education to Indians 117 Upon his return he established the Khwastgaran i Taraqqi i Talim i Musalman Committee for the Better Diffusion and Advancement of Learning among Muhammadans on 26 December 1870 By 1872 it was converted into a Fund Committee for the establishment of a school 118 Sir Syed described his vision of the institution he proposed to establish in an article written sometime in 1872 and re printed in the Aligarh Institute Gazette of 5 April 1911 I may appear to be dreaming and talking like Shaikh Chilli but we aim to turn this MAO College into a University similar to that of Oxford or Cambridge Like the churches of Oxford and Cambridge there will be mosques attached to each College The College will have a dispensary with a Doctor and a compounder besides a Unani Hakim It will be mandatory on boys in residence to join the congregational prayers namaz at all the five times Students of other religions will be exempted from this religious observance Muslim students will have a uniform consisting of a black alpaca half sleeved chugha and a red Fez cap Bad and abusive words which boys generally pick up and get used to will be strictly prohibited Even such a word as a liar will be treated as an abuse to be prohibited They will have food either on tables of European style or on chaukis in the manner of the Arabs Smoking of cigarette or huqqa and the chewing of betels shall be strictly prohibited No corporal punishment or any such punishment as is likely to injure a student s self respect will be permissible It will be strictly enforced that Shia and Sunni boys shall not discuss their religious differences in the College or in the boarding house At present it is like a day dream I pray to God that this dream may come true citation needed Signatures of Sir Syed He began publishing the journal Tehzeeb ul Akhlaq Social Reformer on 24 December 1870 to spread awareness and knowledge on modern subjects and promote reforms in Muslim society 119 Sir Syed worked to promote reinterpretation of Muslim ideology in order to reconcile tradition with Western education He argued in several books on Islam that the Qur an rested on an appreciation of reason and natural law making scientific inquiry important to being a good Muslim By 1873 the committee under Sir Syed issued proposals for the construction of a college in Aligarh Maulvi Samiullah Khan was appointed as the secretary of the sub committee of the proposed school 118 Members of the committee toured the country in order to raise funds for the school which was finally established on 24 May 1875 in Aligarh as the Muhammadan Anglo Oriental Collegiate School Two years later in 1877 the school was converted into the Muhammadan Anglo Oriental College 120 He retired from his career as a jurist the following year concentrating entirely on developing the college and on religious reform 113 Sir Syed s pioneering work received support from the British 121 Although intensely criticised by orthodox religious leaders hostile to modern influences Sir Syed s new institution attracted a large student body mainly drawn from the Muslim gentry and middle classes 122 self published source However MAO College was open to all communities and had a sizeable number of Hindu students The first graduate of the college was a Hindu 123 The curriculum at the college involved scientific and Western subjects as well as Oriental subjects and religious education 113 The first chancellor was Sultan Shah Jahan Begum a prominent Muslim noblewoman and Sir Syed invited an Englishman Theodore Beck to serve as the first college principal 122 The college was originally affiliated with Calcutta University but was transferred to the Allahabad University in 1885 Near the turn of the 20th century it began publishing its own magazine and established a law school In 1920 the college was transformed into Aligarh Muslim University 123 Muhammadan Educational Conference Edit After founding the Anglo Oriental College Sir Syed felt the need of a pan India organisation to propagate the ideas of his movement To this cause he established the All India Muhammadan Educational Congress with its headquarters in Aligarh The first session of the Congress was held at Aligarh in 1886 under the presidency of Maulvi Samiullah Khan 124 The main objective of the organisation was to promote educational development among Muslims through conferences throughout India and transform the Anglo Oriental College to the status of university 125 The name of the organisation was changed to All India Muhammadan Educational Conference to avoid confusion with the Indian National Congress 125 Opposition and criticism Edit Sir Syed s Aligarh Movement and his desire to open institutions for Western education was opposed by the orthodox Indian Muslims Imdad Ali the then deputy collector of Kanpur condemned the foundation of Anglo Oriental College 126 Several periodicals such as Noor ul Afaq Noor ul Anwar and Taed ul Islam were started by his opponents in opposition to Tehzeeb ul Akhlaq to dissuade Muslims from joining the Aligarh Movement 126 127 Many other orthodox Islamic schools condemned him as out of the fold of Islam i e kafir 122 According to J M S Baljon his ideas created a real hurricane of protests and outbursts of wrath among the local clerics in every town and village in Muslim India who issued fatawa declaring him to be a kafir unbeliever 128 He was also accused of having converted to Christianity 128 Mirza Ghulam Ahmad the founder of the Ahmadiyya movement criticised some of his writings in a polemic titled Barakat al Dua 129 Jamal al Din al Afghani the Pan Islamic ideologue launched a vitriolic attack on him through his periodical calling him a Naturist 130 Many of his own friends like Nawab Muhsin ul Mulk expressed their significant reservations at his religious ideas many of which were expounded in his commentary of Qur an 131 Syed Ahmad Khan s controversial views such as his rejection of miracles denial of the existence of angels downplaying the status of prophethood etc arose disdain also from orthodox adherents of Waliullahi reform trends such as Ahl e Hadith and Deobandis Ahl i Hadith were particularly severe in their condemnation of Ahmad Khan with many of its leaders like Muḥammad Ḥusayn Baṭalvi d 1920 C E 1338 A H declaring Takfir excommunication of Sir Syed as an apostate 132 Maulana Qasim Nanautawi the founder of Darul Uloom Deoband expressed in a letter to an acquaintance of his and Sir Syed s No doubt I greatly admire as per what I ve heard Syed Ahmad Sahab s courage ulul Azmi and concern for the Muslims Dardmandi e Ahl e Islam For this if I shall express my affection for him it will be rightful However similar to this or rather more than this upon hearing about his disturbed Fasid beliefs I have deep complains and sorrow for him 133 Maulana Qasim Nanautawi wrote directly to Sir Syed as well explaining him some of his noteworthy mistakes This correspondence was published as Tasfiyat ul Aqaaid in 1887 C E 134 Sir Syed was not in favour of educating Muslim women Once he tore up scholar Syed Mumtaz Ali s Urdu manuscript titled Huquq e Niswaan Women s Rights which argued in favour of educating Muslim women to help them better know their rights 135 Political thoughts and activities EditShan Muhammad in his book Sir Syed Ahmad Khan a political biography notes that Sir Syed was foremost an educationist and reformer and not an academic thinker and so his political philosophy is related to the circumstances of his times 136 Important events that shaped his political outlook includes the 1857 Rebellion the premiership of William Ewart Gladstone in England that started in 1868 and the viceroyalty of Lord Ripon in India 137 Sir Syed was deeply religious His political views were centered on Islam and Islamic viewpoint 137 In 1878 Sir Syed was nominated to the Viceroy s Legislative Council 138 He testified before the education commission to promote the establishment of more colleges and schools across India At the start of his political career Sir Syed was an advocate of Hindu Muslim unity and India s composite culture wanting to empower all Indians 6 In the same year Sir Syed founded the Muhammadan Association to promote political co operation amongst Indian Muslims from different parts of the country In 1886 he organised the All India Muhammadan Educational Conference in Aligarh which promoted his vision of modern education and political unity for Muslims His works made him the most prominent Muslim politician in 19th century India often influencing the attitude of Muslims on various national issues Opposition to active politics Edit Sir Syed discouraged the active involvement of Muslims in politics He regarded the attainment of higher English education as the first priority for the upliftmeant of the Muslim community as opposed to political pursuits 139 He declined to lend support to the National Muhammadan Association a political organisation founded by Syed Ameer Ali in 1887 and refused to participate in the Muhammedan National Conference at Lahore which he regarded as a political agitation 140 When the Indian National Congress was established in 1885 he did not express any opinion about it but later he became an active critic of the organisation and expressed his active opposition to the Congress 141 Sir Syed s opposition received criticism from Maulvi Sharaf ul Haqq who criticised his views about the Congress demands in a risala titled Kalam Mufid al Anam Lala Lajpat Rai wrote a series of open letters expressing grief and surprise at his change in attitude towards Congress 142 Sir Syed advocated the use of constitutional machinery such as participation in administration for expressing grievances to the British government 143 He supported the efforts of Indian political leaders Surendranath Banerjee and Dadabhai Naoroji to obtain representation for Indians in the government and civil services In 1883 he founded the Muhammadan Civil Service Fund Association to encourage and support the entry of Muslim graduates into the Indian Civil Service ICS 113 144 In 1883 he established the Muhammedan Association to put forward grievances of the Muslims to the Imperial Legislative Council 145 He was nominated as a member of the Civil Service Commission in 1887 by Lord Dufferin In 1888 he along with Raja Shiv Prasad of Benaras established the United Patriotic Association at Aligarh to promote political co operation with the British and Muslim participation in the British government Hindu Muslim unity Edit At the start of his career Syed Ahmad Khan advocated for Hindu Muslim unity in Colonial India 6 He stated India is a beautiful bride and Hindus and Muslims are her two eyes If one of them is lost this beautiful bride will become ugly 6 Being raised in the diverse city of Delhi Syed Ahmad Khan was exposed to the festivals of both Hindus and Muslims 6 He collected Hindu scriptures and had a commitment to the country s composite culture being close friends with Swami Vivekanand to Debendranath Tagore 6 In the 19th century he opposed cow slaughter even stopping a fellow Muslim from sacrificing one for Eid al Adha to promote peace between Muslims and Hindus 6 Addressing a large gathering in Gurdaspur on 27 January 1884 Sir Syed said O Hindus and Muslims Do you belong to a country other than India Don t you live on the soil and are you not buried under it or cremated on its ghats If you live and die on this land then bear in mind that Hindu and Muslim is but religious word all the Hindus Muslims and Christians who live in this country are one nation 6 When he founded Muhammadan Anglo Oriental College he opened its admissions to Indians of all faiths with its first principal Henry Siddons being a Christian and one of its patrons Mahendra Singh of Patiala being a Sikh 6 Shafey Kidwai notes that Sir Syed promoted advocacy of the empowerment of all Indians 6 In his book Causes of the Indian Revolt which was originally published in Urdu in 1858 he referred to Hindus and Muslims as two antagonistic races when highlighting the British folly of bringing them together in a single unit thereby endangering the British position 146 Advocacy of Urdu Edit See also Hindi Urdu controversy Sir Syed Ahmad Khan in Punjab The onset of the Hindi Urdu controversy of 1867 saw the emergence of Sir Syed as a champion for cause of the Urdu language He became a leading Muslim voice opposing the adoption of Hindi as a second official language of the United Provinces now Uttar Pradesh Sir Syed perceived Urdu as the lingua franca of the United Provinces which was created as a confluence of Muslim and Hindu contributions in India 6 Having been developed during the Mughal period Urdu was used as a secondary language to Persian the official language of the Mughal court Since the decline of the Mughal dynasty Sir Syed promoted the use of Urdu through his own writings Under Sir Syed the Scientific Society translated Western works only into Urdu The schools established by Sir Syed imparted education in the Urdu medium The demand for Hindi led largely by Hindus was to Sir Syed an erosion of the centuries old Muslim cultural domination of India Testifying before the British appointed education commission Sir Syed controversially exclaimed that Urdu was the language of gentry and Hindi that of the vulgar 147 His remarks provoked a hostile response from Hindu leaders who unified across the nation to demand the recognition of Hindi The success of the Hindi movement led Sir Syed to further advocate Urdu as the symbol of Muslim heritage and as the language of all Indian Muslims His educational and political work grew increasingly centred around and exclusively for Muslim interests He also sought to persuade the British to give Urdu extensive official use and patronage His colleagues such as Mohsin ul Mulk and Maulvi Abdul Haq developed organisations such as the Urdu Defence Association and the Anjuman Taraqqi i Urdu committed to the perpetuation of Urdu citation needed All these colleagues led efforts that resulted in the adoption of Urdu as the official language of the Hyderabad State and as the medium of instruction in the Osmania University citation needed 148 To Muslims in northern and western India Urdu had become an integral part of political and cultural identity However the division over the use of Hindi or Urdu further provoked communal conflict between Muslims and Hindus in India citation needed Two nation theory Edit Sir Syed is considered as the first person to theorize the idea of separate nationhood for Muslims in subcontinent 149 9 In a speech at Meerut in 1866 he presented on overall scenario of post colonial phase in which he described Muslims and Hindus as two nations 150 He s regarded as the father of two nation theory and the pioneer of Muslim nationalism which led to the partition of India 7 8 Urdu Hindi controversy is seen as the transformation of Sir Syed s views towards Muslim nationhood which he expressed in his speeches during later days 149 While fearful of the loss of Muslim political power owing to the community s backwardness Sir Syed was also averse to the prospect of democratic self government which would give control of government to the Hindu majority population 151 152 At this time our nation is in a bad state in regards education and wealth but God has given us the light of religion and the Quran is present for our guidance which has ordained them and us to be friends Now God has made them rulers over us Therefore we should cultivate friendship with them and should adopt that method by which their rule may remain permanent and firm in India and may not pass into the hands of the Bengalis If we join the political movement of the Bengalis our nation will reap a loss for we do not want to become subjects of the Hindus instead of the subjects of the people of the Book 152 Later in his life he said Suppose that the English community and the army were to leave India taking with them all their cannons and their splendid weapons and all else who then would be the rulers of India Is it possible that under these circumstances two nations the Mohammedans and the Hindus could sit on the same throne and remain equal in power Most certainly not It is necessary that one of them should conquer the other To hope that both could remain equal is to desire the impossible and the inconceivable But until one nation has conquered the other and made it obedient peace cannot reign in the land 153 Personal life Edit Tomb of Syed Ahmad Khan In 1836 he married Parsa Begum alias Mubarak Begum 154 They had two sons Syed Hamid and Syed Mahmood and a daughter Ameena who died at a young age 155 Sir Syed Ahmad Khan Bahadur lived the last two decades of his life in Aligarh regarded widely as the mentor of 19th and 20th century Muslim entrepreneurs Battling illnesses and old age Sir Syed died on 27 March 1898 156 He was buried in Sir Syed Masjid at the campus of Aligarh Muslim University 156 Legacy and influence EditSyed Ahmad is widely commemorated across South Asia as a great Muslim social reformer and visionary 113 144 His educational model and progressive thinking inspired Muslim elites who supported the All India Muslim League He founded the All India Muhammadan Educational Conference in 1886 in order to promote Western education especially science and literature among India s Muslims The conference in addition to generating funds for Ahmad Khan s Muhammadan Anglo Oriental College motivated Muslim elites to propose expansion of educational uplift elsewhere known as the Aligarh Movement In turn this new awareness of Muslim needs helped stimulate a political consciousness among Muslim elites that went on to form the AIML which led Muslims of India towards formation of Pakistan 157 He was an influence on several political leaders thinkers and writers such as Muhammad Iqbal Abul Kalam Azad 158 Sayyid Mumtaz Ali 159 Altaf Hussain Hali Shibli Nomani Nawab Mohsin ul Mulk Chiragh Ali and Nazir Ahmad Dehlvi 160 The university he founded remains one of India s most prominent institutions and served as the arsenal of Muslim India Prominent alumni of Aligarh include Muslim political leaders Maulana Mohammad Ali Jouhar Abdur Rab Nishtar Maulana Shaukat Ali and Maulvi Abdul Haq The first two Prime Ministers of Pakistan Liaquat Ali Khan and Khawaja Nazimuddin as well as Indian President Dr Zakir Hussain are amongst Aligarh s most famous graduates His birth anniversary is celebrated as Sir Syed Day every year by the university and its alumni 161 Several educational institutions in India and Pakistan such as Sir Syed University of Engineering and Technology Sir Syed CASE Institute of Technology and Sir Syed College Taliparamba are named after him 162 163 Honours EditOn 2 June 1869 Syed Ahmad Khan was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Star of India CSI for his service as Principal Sadr Amin 164 He was appointed a fellow of the Calcutta and Allahabad Universities by the Viceroy in the years 1876 and 1887 respectively 165 Syed Ahmad was later bestowed with the suffix of Khan Bahadur and was subsequently knighted by the British government in the 1888 New Year Honours as a Knight Commander of the Order of the Star of India KCSI 166 13 for his loyalty to the British crown through his membership of the Imperial Legislative Council 167 and in the following year he received an LL D honoris causa from the Edinburgh University 113 168 India Post issued commemorative postage stamps in his honour in 1973 and 1998 169 Pakistan Postal Services also issued a commemorative postage stamp in his honour in 1990 in its Pioneers of Freedom series 170 In 1997 Syed Ahmad Khan was commemorated with an English Heritage blue plaque at 21 Mecklenburgh Square in Bloomsbury where he lived in 1869 70 171 On 2017 commemorative Rs 50 coin featuring Sir Syed Ahmad Khan was revealed by State Bank of Pakistan on his 200th birth anniversary 172 On 14 August 2022 marking the diamond jubilee celebrations of Pakistan s independence State Bank of Pakistan revealed a commemorative Rs 75 note featuring Syed Ahmed Khan along with other founding fathers signifying their struggle for country s independence 173 1973 Indian stamp English Heritage blue plaque dedicated to Sir Syed Sir Syed s house in the university campusBibliography EditLegal works Edit Act No 10 Stamp Act 1862 Act No 14 Limitation Act 1859 1864 Act No 16 Regarding registration documents Allyson 1864 Act No 18 Regarding women s rights 1866 Religious works Edit Jila al Qulub bi Zikr al Mahbub Delight of the Hearts in Remembering the Beloved Delhi 1843 Tuhfa i Hasan The Gift to Hasan 1844 Tarjama fawa id al afkar fi amal al farjar Delhi 1846 Mazumm ba nisbat tanazzul ulum i diniya wa Arabiya wa falsafa i Yunaniya Agra 1857 Risala Tahqiq Lafzi i Nassara 1860 Ahkam Tu am Ahl Kitab Kanpur 1868 Risala ho wal Mojud 1880 Kimiya i Sa dat 2 fasl 1883 Namiqa fi Bayan Mas ala Tasawwur al Shaikh Aligarh 1883 Rah i Sunnat dar rad i bid at Aligarh 1883 Tarqim fi qisa ashab al kahf wal Raqim Agra 1889 Izalat ul Chain as Zi al Qarnain Agra 1889 Khulq al Insan ala ma fi al Quran Agra 1892 Al Du a Wa l Istajaba Agra 1892 Tahrir fi Usul al Tafsir Agra 1892 Al Nazar Fi Ba z Masa il Imam Al Ghazzali Agra Risala Ibtal i Ghulami Agra 1893 Tafsir al Jinn Wa l Jan ala ma fi al Qur an Rahmani Press Lahore 1893 Agra 1891 Tabyin ul Kalam fi Tafsir al turat wa l Injil ala Mullat al Islam The Mohomedan Commentary on the Holy Bible Tafsir ul Qura nVol I Aligarh 1880 Vol II Aligarh 1882 Agra 1903 Vol III Aligarh 1885 Vol IV Aligarh 1888 Vol V Aligarh 1892 Vol VI Aligarh 1895 Vol VII Agra 1904 dd Tafsir a Samawat Agra Tasfiyad al Aquid Being the correspondence between Syed Ahmad Khan and Maulana Muhammad Qasim of Deobund Historical works Edit Title page of Commentary of Quran by Sir Syed Ahmed Khan A in e Akbari Edition with Illustration Delhi Asrar us Sanadid i Syed ul Akhbar 1847 II Mata i Sultani 1852 Description des monument de Delhi in 1852 D a Pre Le Texte Hindostani De Saiyid Ahmad Khan tr by M Garcin De Tassy Paris 1861 Jam i Jum Akbarabad 1940 Silsilat ul Muluk Musaraf ul Mataba Delhi 1852 Tarikh i Firoz Shahi Edition Asiatic Society Calcutta 1862 Tuzuk i Jahangiri edition Aligarh 1864 Biographical works Edit Al Khutbat al Ahmadiya fi l Arab wa I Sirat al Muhammadiya Aligarh 1900 English translation London 1869 70 Sirat i Faridiya Agra 1896 Political works Edit Asbab i Baghawat e Hind Urdu 1858 and English edition Banaras Lecture Indian National Congress Madras Par Kanpur 1887 Lectures on the Act XVI of 1864 delivered on 4 December 1864 for the Scientific Society Allygurh 1864 Musalmanon ki qismat ka faisla Taqarir e Syed Ahmad Khan wa Syed Mehdi Ali Khan etc Agra 1894 On Hunter s Our Indian Mussulmans London 1872 Present State of Indian Politics Consisting of lectures and Speeches Allahabad 1888 Sarkashi Zilla Binjor Agra 1858 Lectures Edit Iltimas be Khidmat Sakinan i Hindustan dar bad tarraqi ta lim ahl i Hind Ghazipore 1863 Lecture dar bab targhib wa tahris talim itfal i Musalmanan in 1895 Agra 1896 Lecture Madrasaat ul Ulum Aligarh Key Tarikhi halat Par Agra 1889 Lecture Ijlas Dahum Muhammadan Educational Conference Agra 1896 Lecture Muta liq Ijlas Yazdahum Muhammadan Educational Conference Agra 1896 Majmu a Resolution Haye dah sala Resolutions passed by the Muhammadan Anglo Oriental Educational Conference from 1886 to 1895 ed by Sir Syed Ahmad Agra 1896 Report Salana Annual Report of the Boarding House of Madrasat ul Ulum 1879 1880 Khutbat e Ahmadia in the reply to The Life of Mohamed by William Muir was penned in 1870 Sir Syed with his son Syed Mahmood grandson Syed Ross Masood and some admirers Collected works Edit Khutut i Sir Syed ed Ross Masud 1924 Majuma Lecture Kaye Sir Syed ed Munshi Sirajuddin Sadhora 1892 Maqalat i Sir Syed ed by Abdullah Khvesgri Aligarh 1952 Maqalat i Sir Syed ed By Muhammad Ismail Lahore Makatib i Sir Syed Mustaq Husain Delhi 1960 Maktubat i Sir Syed Muhammad Ismail Panipati Lahore 1959 Makummal Majumua Lectures wa speeches ed Malik Fazaluddin Lahore 1900 Muktubat al Khullan ed Mohd Usman Maqbul Aligarh 1915 Tasanif i Ahmadiya Collection of Syed Ahmad Khan s works on religions topics in 8 parts Stress on Holy Quran Reformation of Faith Miscellaneous Edit On the Use of the Sector Urdu Syed ul Akbar 1846 Qaul i Matin dar Ibtal i Harkat i Zamin Delhi 1848 Tashil fi Jar a Saqil Agra 1844 Ik Nadan Khuda Parast aur Dana dunyadar Ki Kahani Badaon 1910 Kalamat ul Haqq AligarhJournals reports and proceedings Edit Tehzeeb ul Ikhlaq Aligarh Institute Gazette Proceedings of the Muhammadens Educational Conference An Account of the Loyal Muhammadans of India Parts I II III Moufussel Press Meerut 1860 Proceedings of the Scientific Society By Laws of the Scientific Society Addresses and speeches relating to the Muhammadan Anglo Oriental College in Aligarh 1875 1898 ed Nawab Mohsin ul Mulk Aligarh 1898 See also EditTafazzul Husain Kashmiri Aligarh Muslim University Aligarh Movement All India Muhammadan Educational Conference Two nation theory Muslim nationalism in South Asia All India Muslim League Islamic ModernismReferences Edit a b Cyril Glasse 2001 The New Encyclopedia of Islam Altamira Press Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World Thompson Gale 2004 Ahmad Khan Sayyid Oxford Islamic Studies Online www oxfordislamicstudies com Retrieved 30 January 2021 Misreading Sir Syed The Indian Express 17 October 2017 Archived from the original on 7 February 2019 Retrieved 4 February 2019 a b Two nation theory Aligarh boys remember Sir Syed Ahmed Khan The Express Tribune newspaper 19 October 2011 Archived from the original on 27 March 2019 Retrieved 24 August 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k Shirali Aresh 10 August 2017 The Enigma of Aligarh Open Magazine a b c Beacon in the dark Father of the two nation theory remembered The Express Tribune newspaper 27 October 2014 Archived from the original on 27 March 2019 Retrieved 24 August 2019 a b Paracha Nadeem F 15 August 2016 The forgotten future Sir Syed and the birth of Muslim nationalism in South Asia DAWN COM Retrieved 18 October 2020 a b Jinnah s two nation theory The Nation 27 February 2020 Retrieved 18 October 2020 Sir Syed Ahmad Khan Man with a Great Vision www irfi org Archived from the original on 29 October 2016 Retrieved 13 September 2016 Grad Prospect 26 December 2022 Aligarh Muslim University GradProspect com Retrieved 23 December 2022 Sir Syed Ahmad Khan The greatest Muslim reformer and statesman of the 19th Century 1 June 2003 Archived from the original on 12 September 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 a b Ikram S S Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan Muslim Scholar Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 5 September 2015 Retrieved 30 July 2015 Why Sir Syed loses and Allama Iqbal wins in Pakistan The Express Tribune 8 February 2013 Archived from the original on 1 July 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Commercialisation of Sir Syed s name Court seeks input from city s top managers The Express Tribune 1 February 2012 Archived from the original on 11 April 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Sir Syed Day Why October 17 Is Important For AMU And Its Alumni NDTV 17 October 2017 Archived from the original on 17 October 2017 Retrieved 17 October 2017 Mukherjee calls for research at AMU celebration The New Indian Express Archived from the original on 28 October 2017 Retrieved 27 October 2017 Kidwai 2020 p 15 Kidwai 2020 p 16 Graham p 2 Graham p 4 Kidwai 2020 p 18 a b Troll 1978 p 28 Nizami p 21 Kidwai 2020 p 21 Kidwai 2020 p 22 a b Kidwai 2010 p 28 Kidwai 2020 p 23 Nizami p 23 a b Kidwai 2010 p 29 Kidwai 2020 p 19 a b Graham p 5 Hali a b Graham p 6 Nizami p 28 a b c Kidwai 2020 p 33 Nizami p 34 35 a b c d Kidwai 2020 p 34 Graham p 64 Graham p 169 Kidwai 2020 p 35 Kidwai 2020 p 36 Troll 1978 p 29 a b Troll 1978 p 31 Nizami p 16 Troll 1978 p 34 Troll 1978 p 57 Shan Muhammad 1969 p 46 Nizami p 24 a b Troll 1978 p 39 Troll 1978 p 64 a b Ahmad 1960 a b Shan Muhammad 1969 p 195 Baljon p 13 Wilder 2006 p 34 Baljon p 59 a b Troll 1978 p 56 Troll 1978 p 42 Baljon p 60 a b Naim 2011 Troll 1978 p 37 a b Baljon p 61 Troll 1978 p 39 40 a b Alam 2021 p 30 Troll 1978 p 40 Troll 1978 p 47 a b Baljon p 62 Troll 1978 p 52 Troll 1978 p 41 Troll 1978 p 69 70 Kidwai 2020 p 2 Troll 1978 p 58 Baljon p 103 Kidwai 2020 p 8 Guenther 2002 Kidwai 2020 p 51 Sarah A Qidwai Darwin or Design Examining Sayyid Ahmad Khan s Views on Human Evolution in Yasmin Saikia M Raisur Rahman ed The Cambridge Companion to Sayyid Ahmad Khan Cambridge University Press 2019 p 220 a b Kidwai 2020 p 3 4 Kidwai 2020 p 4 Naim 2011 p 670 Nizami p 84 Nizami p 86 Troll 1978 p 104 a b Kidwai 2020 p 42 Troll 1978 p 36 a b c Troll 1972 Alam 2021 p 29 Naim 2011 p 675 Naim 2011 p 691 Naim 2011 p 705 706 Naim 2011 p 707 Malik 1980 p 76 The word a in can mean all or any of the following character convention temperament habit rule path law ecclesiastical or secular creed praxis quality intention organization management system decoration beauty Lughat Nama e Dehkhoda There are about eighty meanings in all These meanings seem to have developed over the centuries Most were available to Abul Fazl all were available to Ghalib Faruqi Shamsur Rahman From Antiquary to Social Revolutionary Syed Ahmad Khan and the Colonial Experience PDF Shamsur Rahman Faruqi work in English Columbia University Archived PDF from the original on 20 October 2016 Retrieved 12 December 2015 a b Guha p 56 a b c d Sherwani 1944 Fuerst p 86 Hoodbhoy Pervez 9 February 2013 Why Sir Syed loses and Allama Iqbal wins in Pakistan The Pakistan Tribune Archived from the original on 17 July 2015 Retrieved 30 July 2015 a b Hali pp 92 95 K h an Sir Sayyid Aḥmad 1972 Writings and Speeches of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan Nachiketa Publications p 15 Masood Ashraf Raja 2010 Constructing Pakistan Foundational Texts and the Rise of Muslim National Identity 1857 1947 Oxford Chapter 2 ISBN 978 0 19 547811 2 Graham p 24 a b Kidwai 2020 p 200 Ali 1980 Fuerst p 11 a b c Kidwai 2020 p 182 Shan Muhammad 1973 p 65 Kidwai 2020 p 98 a b c d KUMAR S 2000 Educational Philosophy in Modern India Anmol Publications Pvt Ltd p 59 ISBN 978 81 261 0431 4 Nizami p 41 Kidwai 2020 p 45 Kidwai 2020 p 46 a b c d e f Sir Syed Ahmed Khan Encyclopedia of World Biography Second ed Gale Research 1997 pp 17 vols A balanced view on Sir Syed Ahmed khan Dr Israr s holistic approach Oracle Opinions 26 October 2018 Retrieved 3 December 2020 Tafsir al Quran v 1 p 3016 translated and quoted in Baljon pp 44 45 Graham p 64 65 Kidwai 2020 p 47 a b Hasan 2006 p 43 A Brief Chronology of Aligarh Movement Archived 15 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine aligarhmovement com Hasan 2006 p 43 44 Kidwai 2020 p 48 a b c Nazeer Ahmed 2000 Islam in Global History Xlibris Corporation p 231 ISBN 978 0 7388 5966 8 a b Kidwai 2020 p 49 Shan Muhammad 1969 p 83 a b Shan Muhammad 1969 p 84 a b Shan Muhammad 1969 p 69 Baljon p 91 a b Baljon p 90 Baljon p 95 Baljon p 98 Panipati pp 249 263 Afzal Upal M Cusack Muhammad Carole 2021 Handbook of Islamic Sects and Movements Koninklijke Brill NV Leiden The Netherlands Brill pp 645 646 ISBN 978 90 04 42525 5 Panipati p 102 Panipati p 100 Rahman A Faizur 17 February 2023 The theology behind the Taliban s misogyny The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 19 February 2023 Shan Muhammad 1969 p 193 a b Shan Muhammad 1969 p 193 194 Graham p 289 Shan Muhammad 1973 p 10 Shan Muhammad 1969 p 229 Nizami p 120 Nizami p 121 Shan Muhammad 1969 p 128 a b RC Majumdar 1969 Struggle for Freedom Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan p 1967 ASIN B000HXEOUM Kidwai 2020 p 50 Deepak J Sai 2022 India Bharat and Pakistan The Constitutional Journey of a Sandwiched Civilisation 1st ed India Bloomsbury pp 148 150 ISBN 978 9354354526 Hindi Nationalism Archived 7 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Alok Rai Orient Blackswan 2001 ABBASI Yusuf 1981 Muslim Politics and Leadership in the South Asian Sub continent Institute of Islamic History Culture and Civilization Islamic University Islamabad p 90 a b Sahbaz Davut March 2020 The Two Nations Theory and It s sic Role In The Establishment of Pakistan Academic Journal of History and Idea 7 1 9 via Dergi Park Sir Syed Ahmed on the present state of Indian politics consisting of speeches and letters Pioneer Press 1888 p 29 M R A Baig 1974 The Muslim Dilemma in India Delhi Vikas Publishing House pp 51 2 ISBN 9780706903119 a b S Kumar 2000 Educational Philosophy in Modern India Anmol Publications Pvt Ltd p 60 ISBN 978 81 261 0431 4 Sir Syed Ahmed Khan 1817 1898 Speech in March 1888 Quoted by Dilip Hiro The Longest August The Unflinching Rivalry Between India and Pakistan 1 Archived 15 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine Kidwai 2020 p 27 Kidwai 2020 p 28 a b Kidwai 2020 p 52 Rashid Khan 2007 Engineer 2001 p 31 Nyrop 1975 p 176 Abdullah p 40 Sir Syed Day Why October 17 Is Important For AMU And Its Alumni NDTV com Retrieved 15 September 2021 Newspaper From the 15 April 2017 Remembering Sir Syed DAWN COM Retrieved 15 September 2021 Sir Syed College www sirsyedcollege ac in Retrieved 15 September 2021 No 23504 The London Gazette 4 June 1869 p 3181 Kidwai 2020 p 43 No 25772 The London Gazette 3 January 1888 p 14 Puja Mondal 4 January 2014 Sir Syed Ahmed Khan and the Aligarh Movement Archived from the original on 22 September 2017 Retrieved 30 July 2015 C M Naim 17 October 2011 A Musafir To London Archived from the original on 16 November 2018 Retrieved 29 May 2016 Syed Ahmad Khan s commemorative postage stamp issued by India Post in 1973 commemorating his 156th birth anniversary Archived 17 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine indianpost com Syed Ahmad Khan s commemorative postage stamp issued by Pakistan Postal Services in 1990 in its Pioneers of Freedom series Archived 5 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 24 August 2019 Sir Syed Ahmed Khan Muslim Reformer Blue Plaques English Heritage Retrieved 24 December 2020 50 Rupees Pakistan en numista com Retrieved 27 December 2022 Soomro Kumail 14 August 2022 State Bank unveils Rs75 commemorative banknote BOL News Retrieved 14 August 2022 Cited sources EditGraham George Farquhar 1885 The Life and Work of Syed Ahmed Khan Black wood Hali Altaf Husain 1994 1901 Hayat i Javed A Biography of Sir Sayyid New Delhi Rupa and Company ISBN 978 9693501865 Abdullah S M 1940 The spirit and substance of Urdu prose under the influence of Sir Sayyid Ahamad Khan Sh Muhammad Ashraf Lahore Sherwani H K 1944 The Political Thought Of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan The Indian Journal of Political Science 5 4 306 328 ISSN 0019 5510 JSTOR 42754317 Ahmad Aziz 1960 Sayyid Aḥmad Khan Jamal al din al Afghani and Muslim India Studia Islamica 13 55 78 doi 10 2307 1595240 ISSN 0585 5292 JSTOR 1595240 Baljon J M S 1964 The Reforms and Religious Ideas of Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan Lahore S M Ashraf Nizami Khaliq Ahmad 1966 Sayyid Ahmad Khan Public Resource Publications Division Ministry of Information and Broadcasting Govt of India ISBN 978 8123025131 Shan Muhammad 1969 Sir Syed Ahmad Khan a political biography Internet Archive Meerut Meenaksi Parkashan Troll Christian W 1972 A Note on an Early Topographical Work of Sayyid Aḥmad Khan As ar al Ṣanadid Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2 135 146 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00157508 ISSN 0035 869X JSTOR 25203370 S2CID 163133936 K h an Sir Sayyid Aḥmad Muhammad Shan 1973 Writings and Speeches of Sir Syed Ahmad Rhan Nachiketa Publications Troll Christian W 1978 Sayyid Ahmad Khan A Reinterpretation of Muslim Theology Vikas Publishing House ISBN 978 0 7069 0626 4 Ali M Mohar 1980 Hunter s Indian Musalmans A Re Examination of Its Background Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 112 1 30 51 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00135889 ISSN 0035 869X JSTOR 25211084 S2CID 154830629 Panipati Muhammad Ismail 1995 Khutoot banaam Sir Syed Lahore Pakistan Majlis Taraqqi e Adab Lahore Guenther Alan M 2002 Response Of Sayyid Ahmad Khan To Sir William Muir s Evaluation Of Hadit Literature Oriente Moderno 21 82 1 219 254 doi 10 1163 22138617 08201015 ISSN 0030 5472 JSTOR 25817822 K h an Sir Sayyid Aḥmad Wilder John W 2006 Selected Essays by Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan Sang e Meel Publications ISBN 978 969 35 1805 4 Guha Ramachandra 2010 Makers of Modern India Penguin Books India ISBN 978 0 670 08385 5 Naim C M 2011 Syed Ahmad and His Two Books Called Asar al Sanadid Modern Asian Studies 45 3 669 708 doi 10 1017 S0026749X10000156 ISSN 0026 749X JSTOR 25835695 S2CID 145216086 Fuerst Ilyse R Morgenstein 14 August 2017 Indian Muslim Minorities and the 1857 Rebellion Religion Rebels and Jihad Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 78673 237 8 Kidwai Shafey 3 December 2020 Sir Syed Ahmad Khan Reason Religion and Nation Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 000 29773 7 Alam Muzaffar 1 August 2021 The Mughals and the Sufis Islam and Political Imagination in India 1500 1750 SUNY Press ISBN 978 1 4384 8490 7 Engineer Asghar Ali 2001 Rational Approach to Islam Gyan Publishing House ISBN 978 81 212 0725 6 Nyrop Richard F 1975 Area Handbook for Pakistan U S Government Printing Office Rashid Khan Abdul 2007 All India Muhammadan Educational Conference and the Foundation of the All India Muslim League Journal of the Pakistan Historical Society 55 1 2 65 83 Kidwai Shafey 2010 Cementing Ethics with Modernism An Appraisal of Sir Sayyed Ahmed Khan s Writings Gyan Publishing House ISBN 978 81 212 1047 8 Malik Hafeez 1980 Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan and Muslin modernization in India and Pakistan Internet Archive New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 04970 2 Hasan Tariq 2006 The Aligarh Movement and the Making of the Indian Muslim Mind 1857 2002 Rupa amp Company ISBN 978 81 291 0847 0 Further reading EditThe Glowing Legend of Sir Syed A Centennial Tribute 1998 Ed Syed Ziaur Rahman Non Resident Students Centre Aligarh Muslim University Aligarh Prof Iftikhar Alam Khan Sir Syed aur Faney TameerSir Syed Academy AMU Aligarh Prof Iftikhar Alam Khan Muslim University ki Kahani Imarton ki zubani Educational publications civil Lines Aligarh Prof Iftikhar Alam Khan Sir Syed aur Scientific SocietyPub by Sir Syed Academy AMU Aligarh Prof Iftikhar Alam Khan Sir Syed tahreek ka siyasi aur samaji pas manzarEducational Publishing house Dhula Kounan Delhi Prof Iftikhar Alam Khan Sir Syed House ke Mah Wasal Aligarh Prof Iftikhar Alam Khan Sir Syed Daroon e Khana Educational Publications Civil Lines Aligarh Prof Iftikhar Alam Khan Sir Syed aur Jadeedyat Pub by Educational Publications Delhi 012 Prof Iftikhar Alam Khan Sir Syed aur Hindustani Nizam e zaraat Educational Publishing Delhi Prof Iftikhar Alam Khan Sir Syed Ka Nazaria e Talim Educational Publishing House Delhi 2017 Prof Shafey Kidwai Sawaneh e Sirsyed Ek Bazdeed 2017 Brown Book House Shmashad Market Aligarh 202002 Prof Shafey Kidwai Aligarh Aligarh Institute Gazette Ek Tajziyati Mutaala 2019 Brown Book House Shamshad Market Aligarh External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Syed Ahmad Khan Wikimedia Commons has media related to Syed Ahmed Khan Syed Ahmed Khan at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Comprehensive detail about Aligarh Movement Sir Seyyed Ahmad Khan Bahadur L L D K C S I By Afzal Usmani Sir Syed Ahmad Khan short biography official website of Aligarh Muslim University Archived from the original on 1 May 2012 Sir Syed Today A Source of Literary Work of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan Sir Syed Ahmad Khan 1817 1898 Story of Pakistan June 2003 Sir Syed Ahmad Khan Pioneers of Freedom Sir Syed Ahmed Khan Sir Syed University of Engineering amp Technology Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Sir Syed Ahmad Khan Cyber AMU Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Upadhyay R Aligarh Movement South Asia Analysis Group Archived from the original on 28 February 2005 The Rich Legacy of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan Gulf News Sir Syed Ahmed Khan His Life and Contribution NewAgeIslam Pioneers of the Nation Mai Nahi Manta Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan s speech at Meerut 16 March 1888 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Syed Ahmad Khan amp oldid 1143355501, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.