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Maulana Abdul Kalam Azad

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Title: Maulana Abdul Kalam Azad


1
Maulana Abdul Kalam Azad
  • Media History

2
(No Transcript)
3
  • These two countries India and Pakistan will
    now focus on the military and society will not
    develop, predicted Maulana Abdul Kalam Azad in a
    well-known speech in Delhi.

4
Maulanas Political Ideology
  • Maulana Azads views earned him a contentious
    status in both India and Pakistan.
  • Many Pakistanis consider his ideas of secularism
    and nationalism to be against Islam.
  • In India, he is also criticized by many for not
    doing enough to prevent partition.

5
Maulanas Political Ideology
  • Not only did he criticize partition, he went on
    to condemn all those who played a role in the
    historic events of August 1947.
  • He questioned whether Jinnah could actually be a
    Muslim leader, citing his westernized lifestyle.
  • He ridiculed Gandhis ideals of non-violence.

6
Maulanas Political Ideology
  • He opposed Nehrus biased attitude towards Indian
    Muslims and denounced his relationship with Lady
    Mountbatten.
  • His basic argument against partition is that it
    would be a major loss to Muslims on both sides.
  • On the Indian side, Muslims would lose their
    majaority.

7
Maulanas Political Ideology
  • On Pakistans side, the Muslim population would
    not be able to compete with India nor would it be
    able to solve the issues of Indian Muslims.
  • He believed that partition would give birth to
    two states that would always be in confrontation
    with each other.

8
Maulanas Early Life
  • Maulana Abul Kalam Azad was born in Mecca in 1888
    and lived there till he was about seven.
  • His father Khairuddin, a scholar-sufi and pir
    originally from Calcutta, was persuaded by his
    disciples to return to that city.
  • Under his strict father, Azad continued his
    Islamic studies.

9
Maulanas Early Life
  • Though he resented the restrictive and
    authoritarian manner in which this syllabus was
    taught.
  • Therefore, on his own, Azad furtively cultivated
    a taste for Urdu and Persian literature and even
    learnt to play the sitar.
  • He got an astonishing memory and encyclopedic
    information.

10
Maulanas Early Life
  • He was eager to write biography of Ghazali when
    he was only twelve.
  • Two years later, he began to contribute learned
    articles to Makhzan, the best-known literary
    magazine of the day.
  • When Shams-ul-Ulama Shibli Nomani met him, he was
    so much impressed by his intellectual skills that
    he took Azad to Lucknow

11
Maulanas Early Life
  • He made him prominent in national circles by
    offering him editorship of Al-Nadva.
  • In 1906, he became the editor of a very popular
    biweekly, Vakil of Amritsar.
  • By the time he was thirteen, Azad was
    disillusioned with his Islamic training due to
    modernist writings of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan.

12
Maulanas Early Life
  • He fell into a phase of atheism which, according
    to him, lasted from the age of 14 to 22.
  • During his later teenage years he came into close
    contact with the Hindu revolutionaries of Bengal.
  • A combination of brief travel to the Middle East
    and his Arabic reading also exposed him more
    deeply to the reformist ideas of Sheikh Abduh of
    Egypt and the uncompromising nationalism and
    anti-imperialism of Mustafa Kamil Pasha.

13
Maulanas Career
  • But his faithlessness in religion came to an end
    in 1910 when an emotional/mystical experience
    renewed his faith in religion.
  • Azads career really began to take-off in 1912
    with the appearance of his Urdu journal Al-Hilal.
    Equipped with literary pursuit, breathtaking
    language and auxiliary attractions the journal
    simultaneously meant to preach pure Islam and
    Indian independence.

14
Maulanas Career
  • Through his unique style, Azad sought to bring
    Indian Muslims onto the platform of the freedom
    movement and to work in cooperation with Hindus.
  • Despite his earlier admiration for Sir Syed Ahmad
    Khan, Azad was then a harsh critic of the
    loyalist politics of Aligarh University.
  • Though the journal was ambiguous about specific
    methods of cooperation and post-Independence
    political arrangements.

15
Maulanas Career
  • Maulana had been partial to sentiments of
    Hindu-Muslim unity from the very beginning of his
    life.
  • His journal was viewed as seditious when suddenly
    World War I broke out in Europe.
  • He was expelled from Bengal and interned in
    Ranchi for three and a half years.
  • It was during this period that he wrote his
    well-known commentary on the opening Surah of
    Al-Quran.

16
Maulanas Career
  • A few weeks after his release, for the first time
    he met Mr. Gandhi in Delhi and became the first
    prominent Muslim in India to associate himself
    with Mr. Gandhi and his plan of non-cooperation.
  • In 1920 the Indian Muslims were extremely
    disturbed by the British governments handling of
    the Turkish empire and the Khilafat during the
    War.

17
Maulanas Career
  • In consultation with Azad, Gandhi persuaded the
    Congress to make the demand for the protection of
    the Khilafat a part of the national demand for
    freedom.
  • In 1921 Azad was again arrested. When he was
    released in 1923, the country was passing through
    a strong wave of communal rioting.
  • He became an active member on the Congress stage.
    Though he continued his efforts to bring various
    Muslim organizations in line with Congress.

18
Maulanas Career
  • In 1928 serious differences arose between the
    Congress and organizations like the Muslim League
    and the Khilafat Conference over the Nehru
    report.
  • Azad was forced to break ties with the latter two
    organizations.
  • In 1930, the Congress declared complete
    independence as the goal of the national
    movement, and civil disobedience continued in
    vigor following Gandhis famous Salt March

19
Maulanas Career
  • Azad was imprisoned twice in a row during this
    period, and then released in 1936 along with the
    other Congress leaders.
  • It was during these periods of imprisonment that
    the Maulana was able to complete the first
    edition of his famous Tarjuman al-Quran, his Urdu
    translation and commentary on the Quran.

20
Maulanas Career
  • Maulana Abul Kalam Azad articulated an Islam that
    was hospitable towards other forms of monotheism,
    especially Hinduism, and which placed emphasis on
    commonly held rules of righteous conduct.
  • Though it was a landmark effort to inject a
    liberal ethos into Islam, the Tarjuman al-Quran
    was unable to receive the overwhelming impact he
    hoped it would

21
Maulanas Career
  • in 1939 he was elected President of the Congress.
  • His presidential address at the Ramgarh session
    of the Congress in 1940 occurred just a few days
    before the Muslim Leagues historic Pakistan
    Resolution.
  • It was negation of the two-nation theory and
    articulated his oft-repeated ideology of secular
    nationalism.

22
Maulanas Career
  • Azad was severely criticized by influential
    Muslim political leaders as well as so many
    religious and modern educated classes who earlier
    in his career had adored him and his revivalist
    ideas.
  • Azad was imprisoned for a fifth time in 1940,
    following a limited campaign of civil
    disobedience, and released a year later.

23
Maulanas Career
  • By 1942, and following the more comprehensive
    Quit India Movement, he, along with the other
    Congress leaders, was once again imprisoned.
  • He was released in 1946 and continued to be the
    president of the All India National Congress
    throughout the War years.
  • During his presidency, he tried to persuade the
    Congress to make some concessions and come to
    terms with the Muslim League to avoid division of
    India

24
Maulanas Career
  • The Maulana reluctantly relinquished the Congress
    presidency in 1946, hoping that this would open
    an avenue between the Congress and the League.
  • He kept out of the coalition government formed
    that year, but in 1947, at Gandhis urging he
    became Minister of Education.
  • Though, like Gandhi, he was forced to accept
    Partition, he could never reconcile himself to it
    and was rather heartbroken by the event and its
    bloody aftermath.

25
Maulanas Career
  • After partition, he held the post of Minister of
    Education of India for ten years.
  • Though he was not a particularly effective
    administrator, he did perform some important
    services such as cultivating technical, adult,
    and womens education, and an academy of
    literature, as well as opposing the ejection of
    English as a national language.
  • He was a great literary figure and essentially a
    thinker and the chief exponent of Wahdat-i-deen
    or the essential oneness of all religions

26
Maulanas Career
  • Among his works Ghubar-i-Khatir is considered not
    only his masterpiece but also an illustration of
    great Urdu literature.
  • He died in 1958 of a stroke and was buried in a
    dignified corner near Jamia Masjid in Old Delhi.
  • Towards Pakistan and her leaders, the attitude of
    Maulana Azad remained dignified and
    statesmanlike.
  • Now that it has come into existence, everybodys
    interest lies in its being strong and stable.
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