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The Indian Musalmans

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THE INDIAN MUSALMANS.

BY W.W. HUNTER, B.A., LL.D.,

OF HER MAJESTYS BENGAL CIVIL SERVICE; ONE OF THE COUNCIL OF THE ROYAL
ASIATIC SOCIETY; HONORARY OR FOREIGN MEMBER OF THE ROYAL INSTITUTE OF
NETHERLANDS INDIA AT THE HAGUE, OF THE INSTITUTO VASCO UA GAMA OF
PORTUGUESE INDIA, OF THE DUTCH SOCIETY IN JAVA, AND OF THE ETHNOLOGICAL
SOCIETY, LONDON; HONORARY FELLOW OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALCUTTA;
ORDINARY FELLOW OF THE ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY, ETC.

LONDON:
TRUBNER AND COMPANY.
1876.

Reproduced by:

SANI H. PANHAWAR (California 2015)

DEDICATION.
Simla, 23rd June 1871,

MY DEAR HODGSON,

I DEDICATE this little book to you in acknowledgment of the benefit which I


have derived from your labors. You, of all the scholars whom our Service has
produced, have most fully recognised the duty of studying the people. The
greatest wrong that the English can do to their Asiatic subjects is not to understand them. The chronic peril which environs the British Power in India is the
gap between the Rulers and the Ruled. In these pages I have tried to bring out in
clear relief the past history and present requirements of a persistently belligerent
classof a class whom successive Governments have declared to be a source of
permanent danger to the Indian Empire.
I am,

BRIAN HOUGHTON HODGSON, ESQ.,


Alderney Grange, Gloucestershire.

Yours sincerely,
W. W. HUNTER.

PREFACE.

A GREAT public calamity has given most mournful emphasis to these pages.
Five days before the first copies reached Calcutta, a Musalman assassin struck
down the Chief-Justice of Bengal under the portico of his own Court. I put forth
this Second Edition in the hope that it may produce a reaction equally apart from
the popular alarm which has followed that crime, and from the popular apathy
which had for years preceded it. To know the real truth about our position in
India seems to me to be the sole safeguard against chronic torpor on the one
hand, and sudden panics on the other.
A critic, whose article proves that he knows India well, and whose eloquent
appreciation has given me much encouragement, speaks of the work as a demiofficial one. I cannot let the revised sheets go home without guarding against the
misconception to which such a statement might give rise. Government granted
me free access to its Archives on a subject in which it was known I had long
taken a deep interest, and with regard to which it seemed well that the whole
facts should be placed before the public. But it made no attempt to influence my
views, nor is it in any way responsible for my conclusions. All that this book
does is to collect the documents hitherto isolated in the various Departments of
the Government of India, and out of these scattered links to put together a
trustworthy historical narrative.

Simla, 3rd October 1871.

CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
THE STANDING REBEL CAMP ON OUR FRONTIER

..

..

THE CHRONIC CONSPIRACY WITHIN OUR TERRITORY ..

..

23

..

64

CHAPTER II

CHAPTER III.
THE DECISIONS OF THE MUHAMMADAN LAW DOCTORS

CHAPTER IV.
THE WRONGS OF THE MUHAMADANS UNDER BRITISH RULE

87

APPENDIX.
I.

DECISION OF THE MECCA LAW DOCTORS ..

..

..

130

II.

DECISION OF THE LAW DOCTORS OF NORTHERN INDIA

132

III.

DECISION OF THE CALCUTTA MUHAMMADAN SOCIETY

134

THE INDIAN MUSALMANS.


CHAPTER I.
THE STANDING REBEL CAMP ON OUR FRONTIER.
THE Bengal Muhammadans are again in a strange state. For years a Rebel
Colony has threatened our Frontier; from time to time sending forth fanatic
swarms who have attacked our camps, burned our villages, murdered our
subjects, and involved our troops in three costly Wars. Month by month, this
hostile Settlement across the border has been systematically recruited from the
heart of Bengal. Successive State Trials prove that a network of conspiracy has
spread itself over our Provinces, and that the bleak mountains which rise beyond
the Panjab are united by a chain of treason-depots with the tropical swamps
through which the Ganges merges into the sea. They disclose an organization
which systematically levies money and men in the Delta, and forwards them by
regular stages along our high-roads to the Rebel Camp two thousand miles off.
Men of keen intelligence and ample fortune have embarked in the plot, and a
skilful system of remittances has reduced one of the most perilous enterprises of
treason to a safe operation of banking.
While the more fanatical of the Musalmans have thus engaged in overt sedition,
the whole Muhammadan community has been openly deliberating on their
obligation to rebel. During the past nine months, the leading newspapers in
Bengal have filled their columns with discussions as to the duty of the
Muhammadans to wage war against the Queen. The collective wisdom of the
Musalman Law Doctors of Northern India was first promulgated in a formal
Decision (Fatwa). Next the Bengal Muhammadans put forth a pamphlet on the
question; and even the Shiah sect, a comparatively small body in India, have not
been able to restrain themselves from print. For some months the Anglo-Indian
Press was inclined to smile at the pains which the loyal sort of Musalmans were
taking to ascertain whether they could abstain from rebellion without perdition
to their souls. But the universal promulgation of formal Legal Decisions by the
Muhammadan Law Doctors soon convinced our countrymen that the subject
might have a serious as well as a ludicrous aspect. The cumulative papers now
publishedpapers drawn up and issued by the Muhammadans themselves
leave not a shadow of doubt as to the danger through which the Indian Empire is
passing. They will convince every reasonable mind, that while the more reckless

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among the Musalmans have for years been engaged in overt treason, the whole
community has been agitated by the greatest State Question that ever occupied
the thoughts of a people. The duty of rebellion has been formally and publicly
reduced to a nice point of Muhammadan Law. Somehow or other, every
Musalman seems to have found himself called on to declare his faith; to state, in
the face of his co-religionists, whether he will or will not contribute to the
Traitors Camp on our Frontier; and to elect, once and for all, whether he shall
play the part of a devoted follower of Islam, or of a peaceable subject of the
Queen. In order to enable the Muhammadans to decide these points, they have
consulted not only the leading Doctors of their Law in India, but they have gone
as far as Mecca itself. The obligation of the Indian Musalmans to rebel or not
rebel, hung for some months on the deliberations of three priests in the Holy City
of Arabia.
I propose to exhibit this spirit of unrest among our Musalman subjects in the
threefold form which it has assumed. I shall briefly narrate the events which led
to the settlement of a Rebel Colony on our Frontier, and lay before the reader a
few of the chronic disasters in which it has involved the British Power. In my
second chapter I shall explain the treasonable organization by which the Rebel
Camp has drawn unfailing supplies of money and men from the interior Districts
of the Empire. I shall then unfold the legal discussions to which this anomalous
state of things has given rise,discussions which disclose the Muhammadan
masses eagerly drinking in the poisoned teachings of the Apostles of Insurrection,
while a small minority anxiously seeks to get rid of the duty to rebel by
ingenious interpretations of the Sacred Law. But if I were to end here, I should
have only told half the truth. The Musalmans of India are, and have been for
many years, a source of chronic danger to the British Power in India. For some
reason or other they hold aloof from our system, and the changes in which the
more flexible Hindus have cheerfully acquiesced, are regarded by them as deep
personal wrongs. I propose, therefore, in my fourth chapter, to inquire into the
grievances of the Muhammadans under English Rule; to point out their real
wrongs, and the means of remedying them.
The Rebel Camp on the Panjab Frontier owes its origin to Sayyid Ahmad,1 one of
those bold spirits whom our extermination of the Pindari Power scattered over
India half a century ago. He began life as a horse soldier in the service of a
celebrated freebooter, 2 and for many a year harried the rich opium-growing
villages of Malwa. The stern order which the rising power of the Sikhs under
Ranjit Singh imposed on their Musalman neighbours, made the trade of a
1

A native of the British District of Rai Barelf. Born in the sacred month Muharram of 1201 A.RH, or
1786 A.D.
2

Amir Khan Pindari, afterwards Nuwab of Tank.

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Muhammadan bandit a perilous and an unprofitable one. At the same time, their
strict Hinduism fanned the zeal of the Muhammadans of Northern India into a
flame. Sayyid Ahmad wisely suited himself to the times, gave up robbery, and
about 1816 went, to study the Sacred Law under a Doctor of high repute at
Delihi. 3 After a three years noviciate he started forth as a preacher, and by
boldly attacking the abuses which have crept into the Muhammadan faith in
India, obtained a zealous and turbulent following. The first scene of his labors
lay among the descendants of the Rohillas,4 for whose extermination we had
venally lent our troops fifty years before, and whose sad history forms, one of the
ineffaceable blots on Warren Hastings career. Their posterity have during the
past half century, taken an undying revenge, and still recruit the Rebel Colony on
our Frontier with its bravest swordsmen. In the case of the Rohillas, as in many
other instances where we have done wrong in India, we have reaped what we
sowed.
During 1820 the Apostle journeyed slowly south-wards, his disciples rendering
him menial services in acknowledgment of his spiritual dignity, and men of rank
and learning running like common servants, with their shoes off, by the side of
his palanquin. A protracted halt at Patna so swelled the number of his followers
as to require a regular system of Government. He appointed agents to go forth
and collect a tax from the profits of trade in all the large towns which had lain on
his route. He further nominated four Khalifs,5 or Spiritual Vicegerents, and a high
priest, by a formal Deed such as the Muhammadan Emperors used in appointing
governors of provinces. Having thus formed a permanent centre at Patna, he
proceeded towards Calcutta, following the course of the Ganges, making
converts and appointing agents in every important town by the way. In Calcutta
the masses flocked to him in such numbers, that he was unable even to go
through the ceremony of initiation by the separate laying on of hands. Unrolling
his turban, therefore, he declared that all who could touch any part of its ample
length became his disciples. In 1822 he made a religious journey to Mecca; and
having thus completely covered his former character as a robber beneath the
sacred garb of a pilgrim, he returned in October of the following year, by
Bombay. Here his success as a preacher was as great as it had been in Calcutta.
But a more congenial field lay before the freebooter-saint than the peaceful
population of an English Presidency town. On his way back to Northern India,
he enlisted a vast turbulent following6 in his native District of Bareli; and in 1824
3

Shah Abd-ul-aziz, of whom more hereafter.

In the Jagir of Faiz-ullah Khan, towards Rampur in Rohilkhand.

Maulavi Wiliyat Ali; Maulavi Inayat Ali ; Maulavi Murhum (Marhamat?) Ali; and Maulavi Furhat
Husain; besides Shah Muhammad Husain as chief priest.
6

Who had been recruited by his high priest, Shah Muhammad Husain.

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made his appearance among the wild mountaineers of the Peshawar Frontier,
preaching a Holy War against the rich Sikh towns of the Panjab.
The Pathan tribes responded with frantic enthusiasm to his appeal. These most
turbulent and most superstitious of the Muhammadan peoples were only too
delighted to get a chance of plundering their Hindu neighbours under the
sanction of religion. The Sikhs, most aggressive of modern Hindu races, at that
time ruled the Panjab, and the Apostle assured the fanatic Musalman borderers
that those who survived would return laden with booty, while those who fell
would be translated in a moment to Heaven as martyrs of the Faith. He travelled
through Kandahar and Cabul, raising the country as he went, and consolidating
his influence by a skilful coalition7 of the tribes. Their avarice was enlisted by
splendid promises of plunder; their religion, by the assurance that he was
divinely commissioned to extirpate the whole Infidel world, from the Sikhs even
unto the Chinese. To the grave political leaders of the mountains, the worldlyminded heads of tribes, he expatiated on the necessity of checking the rise of the
adjoining Sikh Power, bitterly remembering his early debt of hatred against the
Hindu Ranjit Singh. After thus arranging for the success of a religious manifesto,
he issued, in the name of God, a formal summons to all devout Musalmans to
join the Holy War. The Sikh nation, runs this curious document, have long held
sway in Lahor and other places. Their oppressions have exceeded all bounds.
Thousands of Muhammadans have they unjustly killed, and on thousands they
have heaped disgrace. No longer do they allow the Call to Prayer from the
mosques, and the killing of cows they have entirely prohibited. When at last their
insulting tyranny could no more be endured, Hazrat Sayyid Ahmad (may his
fortunes and blessings ever abide!), having for his single object the protection of
the Faith, took with him a few Musalmans, and, going in the direction of Cabul
and Peshawar, succeeded in rousing Muhammadans from their slumber of
indifference, and nerving their courage for action. Praise be to God, some
thousands of believers became ready at his call to tread the path of Gods service;
and on the 21st December 1826, 8 the Jihad against the Infidel Sikhs begins.
Meanwhile the holy mans emissaries carried the Call to War throughout all the
cities of Northern India where he had made disciples; and the above
proclamation is taken from a tract published in the far inland Province of Oudh.9
A fanatical War, of varying success, against the Sikhs followed. Both sides
massacred without mercy, and the bitter hatred between the Muhammadan
7

The Yusafzais and Barakzais were his staunchest followers. The Chief of Panjtar (Fathi Khan)
afterwards joined him, and the important principality of Swat. He also established himself in the State of
Amb. The Nuwab of Tank, his former leader, always remained a source of supplies both in money and
recruits.
8

The 20th Jumada-s-saiya, 1242 Hijra.

The Targhib-ul-Jihad, an incitement to religious war by a Maulavi of Kanauj. Official Proceedings, 1865.

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Crescentaders and the Hindu Sikhs lives in a hundred local traditions. Itanjit
Singh strengthened his Frontier by several of the skilful generals whom the
breaking up of the Napoleonic armies had cast loose upon the world. The name
of an Italian soldier of fortune, General Avitabili, 10 is still on the lips of the
Peshawar peasantry. The Muhammadans burst down from time to time upon the
plains, burning and murdering wherever they went. On the other hand, the bold
Sikh villagers armed en masse, beat back the hill fanatics into their mountains,
and hunted them down like beasts. The fierce passions of the time have left
behind a land-tenure of a horrible naturea Tenure by Blood. The Hindu
borderers still display with pride a Grant for their village lands on payment of a
hundred heads of the Husainkhail tribe as yearly rent.
In regular engagements the tumultuous Army of the Crescent proved no match
for the disciplined cohorts of the Sikhs. In 1827 the Prophet led his bands against
one of their entrenched Camps, and was repulsed with great slaughter. But the
lowland general dared not follow up his victory. The fanatical bands fell back
across the Indus into the mountains, and so increased their fame by guerilla
successes, that the Sikh chief found himself compelled to buy the alliance of the
very tribes who had been foremost in the raids. In 1829 the lowlanders trembled
for the safety of Peshawar itself, their Frontier Capital, and the Governor11 basely
attempted to put an end to the war by poisoning the Prophet. This rumor
inflamed the zeal of the Muhammadan highlanders to a red heat. They burst
down in fury on the plains, massacred the Infidel Army, and mortally wounded
its general. Peshawar was only saved by a force under Prince Sher Singh and
General Ventura. The Prophets influence had now spread as far as Kashmir, and
troops from every discontented prince of Northern India flocked to his camp.
Ranjit Singh, the head of the great Sikh confederacy, hurried up a force under his
most skilful lieutenants. In spite of a reverse in June 1830,12 the Apostolic Army
occupied the plains in overwhelming force; and before the end of the year,
Peshawar itself, the Western Capital of the Panjab, had fallen.
This marks the culminating point in the Prophets career. He proclaimed himself
Khalif, and struck coins bearing the legend, Ahmad the Just, Defender of the Faith;
the glitter of whose scimitar scatters destruction among the Infidels. But the
dismay caused by the fall of Peshawar brought the matchless diplomacy of Ranjit
Singh into the field. The wily Sikh detached the petty Muhammadan
Principalities from the. Army of the Crescent by separate appeals to their selfinterest, and the Prophet found himself compelled to abandon the city on
10

I give the spelling of his name and his nationality according to local tradition.

11

He was a Muhammadan, but the mere creature of the Sikh Ranjit Singh.

12

By the Sikh Army under General Allard and Hari Singh Nalwa.

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condition of a ransom being paid. The internal dissensions among his followers
soon defied all control. His regular troops consisted of Hindustani fanatics,
Muhammadans from the Indian Provinces, who accepted his fortunes for good
or for evil, and who, in fact, would have found it impossible to desert him. The
Army of the Crescent, however, was swollen with hosts of Frontier Pathans, who,
with all the velour, possessed all the pride and avarice, of mountaineers. On one
occasion, an important tribe of these borderers had deserted on the eve of
battle,13 and the fanatics had afterwards taken a severe retribution. The Prophet
felt the necessity of liberality to the Hindustani followers, on whom he could
always depend. At first he confined himself to levying tithes for their support
from his Frontier adherents. This they bore with little reluctance, as a religious
contribution to the good cause. But after both sides had been inflamed by such
exactions, the Prophet began to lose ground. His talents were rather those of a
fanatical incendiary than of an impartial ruler of a great coalition, and the
wonderful influence which he had acquired over the Frontier tribes soon showed
signs of melting away. As he found his power waning, he had more frequently
recourse to severities, and at length wounded the feelings of the mountaineers in
their most tender point. He entered upon an ill-advised effort to reform the
marriage customs of the highlanders, who practically sold their daughters in
wedlock to the highest bidder; and as his Indian followers had left house and
home, and were without wives, he issued an edict that every girl not married
within twelve days should become the property of his lieutenants. The tribes rose
and massacred his Hindustani retinue, and the Prophet himself narrowly
escaped.14 But his reign was over; and in 1831, while aiding one of his former
lieutenants who had set up for himself, the Prophet was surprised by a Sikh
Army under Prince Sher Singh, and slain.15
The religious character of the movement belongs to a later portion of this Work.
Neither in India nor anywhere else can a religious leader stir the hearts of a
people without a genuine belief in the goodness of his cause. In my next chapter I
shall unfold the nobler aspects of Sayyid Ahmads career. Meanwhile I have
dwelt at some length upon the origin of the Fanatical Settlement, because I
propose very briefly to dismiss its further history, till it emerges in its present
phase as a Rebel Camp on our own Frontier. Among the chief lieutenants of the
13

The Barakzais, at the engagement with the Sikhs near.

14

From Panjtar to the Valley of Pakli.

15

At Baldkot, in May 1831. I have collected the foregoing Account of Sayyid Ahmad from the Records of
the Foreign Office and Home Department, Government of India, along with the evidence that has come out
in the successive State Trials from 1852 to 1870, and from a valuable memorandum by Mr. T. E.
Ravenshaw, late Magistrate of Patna. Several of the details will be found in Captain Cunninghams Work
on the Sikhs. A writer, who has apparently used some of the same materials, has put forth a good account
of the Wahabis in the Calcutta Review, vols. c., ci., and cii.

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Prophet were two brothers, grandsons of a notorious murderer16 who had fled
for his life to the mountains beyond the Indus, and there established himself as a
hermit at Sittana. The refugee ascetic gradually acquired the veneration of the
mountaineers, who made over to him the lands on which his hermitage stood, as
an asylum and a neutral ground,a very convenient provision among tribes
constantly engaged in blood-feuds. One of his grandsons,17 who had served as
Treasurer to the Prophet, succeeded to the Village of Refuge at Sittana, and
invited thither the remnants of the Apostolic Host.
About the same time, the religious head of the Principality of Swat, having taken
alarm at the progress of the British Power, determined to strengthen himself by
establishing a firm regal Government. He accordingly invited the other
grandson18 of the hermit to the Swat valleys, and made him King. By this means
he fortified the natural velour of his subjects, by the assurance that, having now a
hero of the Crescentade at the head of their troops, all who might fall in the
apprehended conflict with the English or Hindu Infidels would enjoy a martyrs
reward. The fears of the Swat tribes were not, however, destined to be realized;
and their King reigned till 1857, when he died, and no successor was elected. His
son,19 now the head of the family, claims the leadership of the Fanatical Host at
Sittana, and asserts a wavering pretension to the realm of Swat.
In this way the fanatics firmly established a twofold power upon the Frontier,
and by their emissaries among the superstitious border tribes, kept alive the
embers of the Holy War. During intervals of many years they sank into the
insignificance of border freebooters, but from time to time fired up into a fierce
Army of the Crescent. They perpetrated endless depredations and massacres
upon their Hindu neighbours before we annexed the Panjab, annually recruiting
their Camp with Muhammadan zealots from the British Districts. We took no
precautions to prevent our subjects flocking to a Fanatical Colony which spent its
fury on the Sikhs,an uncertain coalition of tribes, sometimes our friends and
sometimes our enemies. An English gentleman, who had large Indigo factories in
our North-Western Provinces, tells me that it was customary for all pious
Musalmans in his employ to lay aside a fixed share of their wages for the Sittana
Encampment. The more daring spirits went to serve for longer or shorter periods
under the fanatic leaders. As his Hindu overseers every now and then begged for
a holiday for the annual celebration of their fathers obsequies, so the

16

Zamin Shah, a native of Takhtaband in Bonair.

17

Sayyid Omar Shah.

18

Sayyid Akbar Shah.

19

Sayyid Mubarak Shah.

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Muhammadan bailiffs were wont between 1830 and 1846 to allege the religious
duty of joining the Crescentaders as a ground for a few months leave.
For the remissness which thus permitted our subjects to join the Fanatic Host
against our Sikh neighbours, we were destined to pay dear. The Prophet20 had
established a regular system of Apostolic Successors, both in our territories and
upon the Sikh Frontier. The movement was thus placed beyond the
contingencies of the life or death of any of the individual leaders, and his own
decease had been converted by the zeal of his followers into an apotheosis for the
further spread of, the Faith. Two of the Khalifs or Vicegerents whom he had
appointed at Patna in 1821 made a pilgrimage to the Frontier, and ascertained
that their leaders disappearance was a miracle ; that indeed he was still alive,
and would manifest himself in due time at the head of a Holy Army, and expel
the English Infidels from India. His Deputies continued therefore to levy money
and men, but especially money, in the chief towns along the valley of the Ganges
where the Prophet had preached on his journey to Calcutta in 1820-22. A
perennial stream of malcontents thus flowed from our territory to the Fanatic
Colony. Absconding debtors, escaped convicts, spendthrifts too ruined to be at
peace with social order, traitors too guilty to hope for mercy from the law,all
flocked from the British Plains to this cave of Adullam in the North. There were
also refugees of a nobler sort, and every Muhammadan religionist too zealous to
live quietly under a Christian Government, girded up his loins and made for the
Sittina Camp. Their hand fell heaviest upon the Sikh villages, but they hailed
with fierce delight any chance of inflicting a blow upon the English Infidel. They
sent a great force to help our enemies in the Cabul War, and a thousand of them
remained stedfast against us to, the death. In the fall of Ghazni alone, three
hundred obtained the joys of martyrdom from the points of English bayonets.
On our annexation of the Panja, the fanatic fury, which had formerly spent itself
upon the Sikhs, was transferred to their successors. Hindus and English were
alike Infidels in the eyes of the Sittana Host, and as such, were to be exterminated
by the sword. The disorders which we had connived at, or at least viewed with
indifference, upon the Sikh Frontier, now descended as a bitter inheritance to
ourselves.
The records of the Patna Court show that the Vice-gerents21 early established a
character for themselves on the Frontier as fanatical firebrands. In 1847, Sir
20

By the 'Prophet I invariably mean Sayyid Ahmad. Technically he was an Imam (Leader) from the
political point of view, and a Wali (Favourite of God) from the theological one. Strictly speaking, the line
of the true Prophets ended with Christ and Muhammad.
21

Inayat and Wilayat Alf.

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Henry Lawrence recorded a proceeding22 to the effect that they were well known
as fighters for religion23 in the Panjab; and as such, they were forwarded under
custody to their homes in Patna. The Magistrate there took security from them,
and from two other of the most wealthy members of their sect, for their future
good conduct. But in 1850 I find them preaching sedition in the Rajshahi District
of Lower Bengal, where they had also to give bonds to keep the peace, and on the
repetition of their offence were twice turned out of the District. 24 In 1851, the
same Vicegerents, 25 or successors of the Prophet, although bound, so far as
parchment bonds and sureties could restrain them, to remain at their homes in
Patna, were found disseminating treason on the Panjab Frontier.26
In 1852 they deemed their plans ripe for execution. Money and men from our
territory had poured into the Sittana Camp, and a treasonable correspondence
with our troops was seized by the Panjab authorities. Their leaders made a skilful
attempt to tamper with the 4th Native Infantry, stationed at Rawal Pindi,
conveniently near to the Fanatic Colony; and one of the first Regiments which,
on their invading our Province, would have been sent to act against them. The
letters distinctly proved that they had established a regular organization for
passing up men and arms from Bengal to the Rebel Camp. At the same time the
Patna Magistrate reported27 that the rebel sect were upon the increase in that city.
Sedition was openly preached by the principal inhabitants of this capital of a
British Province. The police had leagued themselves with the fanatics; and one of
their leaders 28 assembled seven hundred men in his house, and declared his
resolve to resist any further investigation of the Magistrate by force of arms.
The British Government could no longer shut its eyes to the existence of a great
treasonable organization within its territories, for supplying money and men to
the Fanatical Camp on the Frontier. During the autumn of 1852, Lord Dalhousie
recorded two important Minutes on the subject. By the first he directed the
internal organization to be closely watched. The second had to deal with a
proposition for a Frontier War against the border tribes, whose superstitious
22

Magistrates Records, dated 13th April 1847.

23

Ghozat or Mujahiddn. Their title of Wahabi belongs to a later period, and will be explained in Chapter

II.
24

Proceedings of the Magistrate of Rajshahi, dated 23d February 1850.

25

Iniyat and Wilayat Ali.

26

Proceeding of Board of Revenue, dated 12th May 1851.

27

On the 19th of August 1852.

28

Maulavi Ahmad-ullah.

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hatred to the Infidel the Hindustani fanatics had again fanned to a red heat. In
the same year they attacked our ally, the Chief of the Amb State, and necessitated
the dispatch of a British force. In 1853; several of our native soldiers were
convicted of correspondence with the traitors.
I do not propose to trace in detail the insults, raids, and murders which led to the
Frontier War of 1858. Throughout the whole period the fanatics kept the border
tribes in a state of chronic hostility to the British Power. A single fact will speak
volumes. Between 1850 and 1857 the Frontier disorders forced us to send out
sixteen distinct expeditions, aggregating 33,000 Regular Troops; and between
1850 and 1863 the number rose to twenty separate expeditions, aggregating
60,000 Regular Troops, besides Irregular Auxiliaries and Police. During this time
the Sittana Colony, although stirring up a perpetual spirit of fanaticism along the
Frontier, had wisely avoided direct collision with our troops. They might secretly
help the tribes whom they had incited against us, but they did not dare to wage
war on their own account. But- in 1857 they openly formed a coalition against
us, 29 and had the audacity to call on the British authorities to help them in
collecting their Black Mail. Incensed by our refusal, they came boldly down upon
our territory, and made a night attack on the camp of Lieutenant Home, the
Assistant Commissioner, who scarcely escaped with his life. Retaliation could no
longer be delayed, and General Sir Sidney Cotton entered the hills with an Army
of 5000 men.30 As this is only the first of several Wars into which the Fanatic
Camp has plunged our Frontier, I propose to dismiss it briefly and to take the
secondthat of 1863as an illustration of such campaigns. After some
difficulties, our Column burned the villages of the rebel allies, razed or blew up
the two most important forts, and destroyed the Traitor Settlement at Sittana.
The fanatics, however, merely fell back into the fastnesses of the Mahaban
mountain; and so little had we shaken their power, that they immediately
received a new inner Settlement at Malka as a gift from a neighbouring tribe.31
The Fanatic Camp had other enemies, however, besides the British troops. Every
now and then, in an access of religious self-confidence, they tried to levy tithes
from the adjoining highland clans. According to the individual influence of the
preacher who acted as the tax-gatherer, these exactions were submitted to, or
evaded, or refused. A constant source of irritation thus smoldered among the
mountains. We have seen how it alienated the tribes from the Prophet himself,
and led to his desertion and death in 1831. When a clan refused tithes, the Fanatic
Colony descended en masse, cut the crops of the recalcitrants, and carried off the
29

Particularly of the Yusafrai and Panjtar Tribes.

30

Artillery, 219; Cavalry, 551; Infantry, 4107; total, 4877 Regular Troops.

31

The Amazaia.

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harvest. In 1858 the tribal resistance against this religious taxation culminated in
an attack upon Sittana itself, in which the fanatic leader 32 fell. The Rebel
Settlement thus weakened, both by Sir Sidney Cottons campaign and by the
defection of its firmest allies, remained quiet for two years. We made over the
Sittana lands to the tribes33 which had resisted the tithing emissaries and slain
the Fanatic chief. From this, and another adjoining clan,34 we took engagements
that they would never allow the fanatics to re-enter their territory, and that they
would declare war on any third tribe which should endeavor to bring them in.
They also bound themselves to prevent the fanatics or other desperate characters
from passing through their country, on marauding expeditions against the
British Frontier.
But scarcely two years elapsed before the Rebel Colony had regained its
influence among the superstitious highland races. In 1861 they advanced from
Malka the interior retreat upon the Mahaban, into which Sir Sidney Cotton had
driven them in 1858, and fortified themselves35 on a peak just above their old
Settlement of Sittana. From this stronghold they burst down upon our villages;
and the very tribes who had pledged themselves to prevent their ingress, gave
them free passage through their territory on their kidnapping raids. As if to
announce the return of the old state of things with a note of triumph, the fanatics
descended upon our Rawal Pindi District, and murdered two travellers in open
day upon the high road, and almost within sight of a strong Police Station.36
Three weeks later they again came down upon our territory, carried off three
wealthy merchants, and coolly entered into a correspondence with our officers,
demanding a ransom of Rs. 1550 for our captive subjects. Of this sum the fanatic
leader was to receive one half. Another kidnapping inroad took place
immediately after, in April 1861. The Frontier authorities reported that things
had returned to the old disgraceful turbulence of 1858. It was in vain that the
British officers appealed to the faith and to the fears of our allied tribes. Although
several of their villages lay at our mercy, they cast in their lot with their coreligionists, and no course remained but retribution. We accordingly established
a strict blockade of the offending tribes; completely cutting off their
communication from the outside world, and taking prisoner any of them that
ventured across the line. This brought them to reason. They again entered into

32

Sayyid Omar Shah, killed by the Atmanzai tribe.

33

The Atmanzais.

34

The Jadunas.

35

At Siri

36

On the 14th February 1861.

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engagements, and forced the Rebel Colony to retire from the Sittana territory to
its interior fastness at Malka.
Nevertheless our disloyal Hindustani subjects continued to flock to the Traitors
Camp; and in 1862 their numbers had so increased that the Panjab Government
felt compelled to advise another Frontier War. Indeed, things had now reached
such a height, that the Secretary of State declared his belief 37 that the rebels
would have, sooner or later, to be expelled by force of arms, and that they were a
lasting source of danger so long as they remained on our border. It was, however,
impossible to undertake an expedition on the moment, and early in April 1863
we find them murdering and plundering within our territory. In July of that year
they boldly re-occupied their Sittana Settlement, and sent threatening messages
to our feudatory, the Chief of Amb. The neighbouring tribes again sacrificed
their fidelity to their fanaticism, and scattered their engagements with us to the
winds. The Traitor Colony was once more supreme upon the Frontier. On the 7th
September 1863 the Fanatic Host came down upon British territory, and by a
night attack upon the camp of our Guide Corps, gave the signal for open war. A
week later they invaded our Amb Feudatory, destroyed his villages upon the
Black Mountain, and gave battle to his outposts. In the same month they burst
down on our friendly levies of Tanawal, cutting up a native officer with a party
of men. Not content with attacking our allies, they fired on our own pickets upon
the banks of the Indus,38 and in a formal manifesto declared war against the
English Infidels, and summoned all good Musalmans to the Crescentade.
We had therefore arrived at precisely the same state of affairs as that which in
1827-30 ended in the occupation of the Panjab by the Fanatic Host, and the fall of
the Frontier Capital. It became impossible any longer to avoid a War. Frontier
campaigns, however, are little instructive as military performances, and they
shed but small luster upon the stronger Power. The ultimate issue of a conflict
between a vast military Empire like British India, and a coalition of savage tribes,
however brave and however strongly supported by religious zeal, cannot be
doubtful. There is, moreover a sameness about such operations, and a certainty
in the severe retribution in which, sooner or later, they end, almost sickening to a
Christian man. I shall therefore select only one of our expeditions against the
Fanatic Colony for detailed description. It will be found, that as the Traitor Camp
has been for years a cause of disgrace to our Frontier during peace, so it became a
prolific source of disaster to our Armies in time of war. So long as we left it alone,
it steadily sent forth bands to kidnap and murder our subjects and our allies:
when we tried to extirpate it by arms, it baffled our leaders, inflicted severe

37

Dispatch of 7th April 1862.

38

At Nawagiran.

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losses on our troops, and for a time defied the whole Frontier Force of British
India.
It is easy to understand how a Settlement of traitors and refugees, backed by the
seditious and fanatical masses within our Empire, could, in an access of bigoted
hatred, throw down the gauntlet. But it is difficult to comprehend how they
could, even for a time, withstand the combined strategy and weight of a civilized
Army. In order to explain this, it becomes necessary to briefly describe the
country in which their Prophet had fixed the Headquarters of his militant sect.
In the extreme north of the Indus Valley, upon the boundary of the last tribe
which owes allegiance to the British Crown, rises the Sacred Peak of the Hindus.
The Mahaban, literally the Great Forest, that clothed its slopes, seems to have
impressed the early Aryan immigrants more deeply than any other physical
phenomenon which they met with on their primeval southern journey. It gave
the name to the mountain itself; and the cluster of peaks and ranges, which tower
to the height of 7400 feet on the west bank of the Indus, are still known as
Mahabanthe Great Forest. These peaks became to their race what Sinai was to
the Jews. Sanskrit poetry crystallized the veneration of the primitive time, and
for ages the Mahaban has continued a place of pilgrimage among the devout
Hindus. Amid those solemn heights Arjuna fought single-handed with the Great
God, 39 and, although defeated like Jacob of old, won the Irresistible Weapon
from the Deity. Happy was the ancient hermit who could lay his bones beneath
the shadows of the Great Forest, where tradition affirmed that even the lesser
divinities themselves were wont, by fasting and solitude, to cleanse such delicts
as celestial natures may be capable of.40
In this retreat of primitive Hindu piety, a number of violent and superstitious
Muhammadan tribes now dwell. Petty Principalities, not less fierce or less
fanatical, occupy the Black Mountain on the other side of the Indus to the east,
and demand the constant surveillance of an advanced British force at
Abbottabad. The question of tithes, and similar spiritual exactions, prevent any
permanent coalition with the Fanatical Settlement; but the tribes are liable to
bursts of religious excitement, and are always delighted to get a chance of
plundering the rich Hindu villages within our Frontier. The Spiritual Principality,
or, as it may be called, Muhammadan See of Swat, contains alone a population of
96,000, every man of whom is bred up in a hereditary apprehension of a British
invasion, and in a conviction that if he must fight against the Infidels, it is wise to
have a religious leader whose banner will confer the joys of martyrdom on those
39

Mahideva.

40

Here, and in Chapter II., I have made use of an article which I put forth seven years ago in the Calcutta
Quarterly Review.

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who fall. The Campaign of 1863 taught us to our cost that an expedition against
the Fanatical Encampment may mean a war with a coalition of 53,000 fighting
men41 of the bravest races in the world. The inaccessible character of the country
renders the temper and the internal relations of the tribes a matter of uncertainty
with our Frontier officers; and whenever the Rebel Settlement suffers a defeat, it
has merely to fall back deeper into the recesses of the Mahaban.
On the 18th October 1863, a British Army of 7000 men, 42 under General Sir
Neville Chamberlain, moved out with a train of artillery, and a supply at its
command of 4000 mules and other beasts of burden, for which the whole Panjab
had been ransacked. Next evening a Column entered, by a night march, the
defile overgrown with brushwood and overhung by trees, disastrously known as
the Ambeyla Pass. Our base of operations was held by a strong cordon of
troops,43 and behind these were the heavily garrisoned Frontier Stations,44 filled
with Cavalry, Infantry, and Artillery. It was fortunate that the invading force was
thus supported; for on the 20th the General found that the tribes whom he had
considered friendly were wavering, and two days afterwards he telegraphed to
Government that the force had had to come to a halt before getting out of the
Pass. On the 23d the opposition of the tribes declared itself. The Bonairs attacked
a reconnoitering party, and a few days later the Spiritual Head of the Swat
Principality 45 threw in his lot with the enemy. Meanwhile, telegram after
telegram reached the Government from the Frontier, begging for more and yet
41

I give the number of fighting men which each tribe can, without difficulty, turn out: Husainzais,
2000; Akazais, 1000 Chigazais, 6000; Madakhail, 4000; Amazais, 1500; Jaduns, 4000; Khudakhail, 2000;
Bonairs, 12,000; Bajaurs, 3000; Ranizais, 2000; Dher Clan, 6000; Swat tribes, 10,000Total, 53,500. I
have taken these numbers from the Foreign Office Records, verified as far as possible by reference to
Colonel Macgregor, who is engaged in the Frontier Gazetteer. The actual number in the field against us in
1863 rose at one time to 60,000.
42

Infantry, Regulars, 5150; Cavalry, Regulars, 200; Artillery, 280; above 1000 Irregulars under the Civil
Commissioner, and 13 guns.
43

At Darband, 350 European Infantry, 250 Native Infantry, and 3 guns. At Torbela, one squadron of
Native Cavalry, and details of Native Infantry. At Topi, 150 Native Cavalry, 250 Native Infantry, and 2
guns. At Abbottabad, one company of the 93d Highlanders, depots of the 5th Gurkhas and 1st Panjab
Infantry, 50 Native Cavalry, and 3 guns. At Rustam Bazar, 300 Native Cavalry, and details of Native
Infantry. At Mardan, a depot of the Guide Corps.
44

At Peshawar, besides several batteries of Artillery, there were 1 Regiment of Hussars, 1 Regiment of
European Infantry, 2 Regiments of Bengal Cavalry, and 3 Regiments of Native Infantrythe last weak in
effective men, and having to hold outposts, which took up one Regiment. At Rawal Pindi, 1 Regiment of
Native Infantry, out of which 120 men were at Mari; 1 Battery of Artillery, one company of the 93d
Highlanders, and depots of the 51st and 101st. At Kohat, 2 guns, 2 squadrons Native Cavalry, and 2
Regiments Panjab Infantry, but weak. At Bannd, 2 guns, 1 Regiment Panjab Cavalry, and 1 Regiment
Panjab Infantry. At Dera Ismail Khan, 2 guns, 1 Regiment Panjab Cavalry, and 1 Regiment Panjab Infantry.
45

An ascetic chief named Abd-ul-Ghafur, who had long exercised a superstitious ascendency over the
Yusafzai clans, and who is regarded with reverence by the Pathan tribes in general.

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more troops. Our army had got locked up in a perilous defile. A wing of the
Firozpur Regiment was ordered to the Frontier. Another Regiment of Infantry
had to be hurried westwards from Peshawar. The 93d Highlanders advanced by
forced marches from Sialkot, and the 23d and 24th Native Infantry from Lahor.
Before three weeks were over, the Panjab Stations had been so denuded of troops,
that the officer commanding at Mianmir could with difficulty supply a guard of
twenty-four bayonets for the Lieutenant-Governor.
Meanwhile the tribes were closing in upon our little Army. To advance was
impossible; to move backward would have been worse than defeat. Our position
gave every advantage to clans trained from boyhood in mountain war; and the
following extract from the Journal of an officer, gives a fair idea of the disasters
to which our troops were exposed: The 20th, after recalling their outlying parties, re-tired, fighting the whole way
into Camp, which they did not reach till long after dark. The enemy was in some
strength, and tried to force their way into the lines; but by this time every one
was ready for them, and they were met by a sharp file-fire from the Enfield rifles,
and grape from the mountain-train guns. The night attack formed a curious and
picturesque scene; the dark line of the jungle to the front; on the right and left the
two port-fires of the mountain-train shining like stars, whilst between them a
dim line of Infantry stretched across the valley. Suddenly comes a wild shout of
Allah! Allah! The matchlocks flash and crack from the shadows of the trees; there
is a glitter of whirling sword-blades, and a mob of dusky figures rush across the
open space, and charge almost up to the bayonets. Then comes a flash and a roar,
the grape and canister dash up the stones and gravel, and patter amongst the
leaves at close range. The whole line lits up with the fitful flashes of a sharp filefire, and as the smoke clears off, the assailants are nowhere to be seen; feeble
groans from the front, and cries for water in some Pathan patois, alone tell us that
the fire has been effectual. Presently comes another shot or two in a new
direction. A few rolling stones on the hill inform the quick ears of the native
troops that the enemy is attempting to take us in flank, and they push up to meet
them at once : and so the line of fire, and sharp cracking of our rifles, extends
gradually far up the dark and precipitous hill-side ; and the roar of battle,
multiplied a thousand-fold by the echoes of the mountain, fills the long valley
from end to end. Then there is another shout and charge, more grape and
musketry, which end as before. But this time a dark group, which moves slowly
through our line, and carries tenderly some heavy burden, tells us that their
shooting too has told.
Presently from near the centre of the line comes a voice so full of command, that
all stop to listen and prepare to obey. The order is, Cease firing; let them charge
up to the bayonet, and then The rest is lost, but every soldier knows well how

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the sentence ended, and stays his hand, waiting in deep silence, which contrasts
strangely with the previous uproar. High up on a little knoll well to the front we
see the tall form of the General towering above his staff, and looking intently into
the darkness before him. Apparently, however, they had had enough, and but a
few straggling shots from time to time told that an enemy, of whose numbers we
could form no idea, still lay in the jungle before us. Presently these also ceased;
but long afterwards we could hear their footsteps, and the stones rolling on the
hills as they retired, and judged that they must be carrying off their dead and
wounded, or they would have moved more quietly.46
Every days delay encouraged the hopes and strengthened the fanatical zeal of
the enemy. In spite of the reinforcements, our General found it impossible to
advance. The British Army lay for weeks, to all appearance cowed within the
Pass, not daring to emerge into the Chumla Valley. Meanwhile the enemy, now
swollen with the Bajaur tribes, threatened us simultaneously in front; upon our
left flank; and on our rear communications. The Panjab Government anxiously
inquired on the 8th November, if the General, on receiving a reinforcement of
1600 Infantry, would advance to destroy the Fanatic Colony at Malka. On the
12th the answer came that 2000 more Infantry and some guns would be needed
in order to render any forward movement practicable, and with the dispiriting
intimation that the General deprecated any advance on Malka until the
intermediate tribes could be brought to terms.
The whole Frontier was now in a flame. On the 4th November the Panjab
Government had found its military line so dangerously stripped of troops, that it
borrowed a part of the escort belonging to the Viceroys Camp, and hurried
forward the 7th Fusiliers to the Frontier. A strong body of military police, horse
and foot, were also sent to protect the rear communications, which the enemy
had threatened. For the transport equipage, 4200 camels and 2100 mules were
pressed in hot haste, and at an enormous cost, from our Panjab Districts.47 By the
14th November things had assumed a still more serious aspect, and the
Commander-in-Chief of the British Forces in India hurried up to Lahor, and
assumed the direction himself.
The truth is that the Plan of the Campaign had completely failed. The original
idea was, by a sudden march through the Pass to occupy the open Valley
beyond. 48 The Imperial Government had ordered that the whole operations
46

Calcutta Review, vol. lxxix. p. 201.

47

Panjab Government Letter of 18th February 1864, para. 67.

48

Letter of the Panjab Government, dated Lahor, 1st February 1864, para. 78. This document is the one
which I have chiefly used for my account of the expedition. I can scarcely hope that the Narrative of so

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should be completed by the 15th November. On the 14th, however, our Army
still found it impossible to get out of the defile; and instead of a series of
operations in an open valley, where the resources of civilized war could come
into play, we had to undertake the defence of a very extended position in the
hills. On the same day the Panjab Government begged that an additional Brigade
of 1500 men might be sent to the Frontier; and on the 19th, a telegram from
General Chamberlain gave rise to most serious apprehensions as to whether the
reinforcements would not arrive too late. On the 18th the enemy had attacked us
in force, taking one of our pickets, and driving us back with a loss of 114 men,
killed and wounded, besides officers. Next day the enemy again captured a
picket, subsequently retaken after a bloody struggle, in which our General was
himself dangerously hit, and 128 men, besides officers, left killed or hors de
combat. On the 20th the sick and wounded, whom it had become absolutely
necessary to send away, amounted to 425. The Generals telegram of the 19th
concluded as follows. The troops have now been hard worked both day and
night for a month, and having to meet fresh enemies with loss is telling. We
much need reinforcements. I find it difficult to meet the enemys attacks and
provide convoys for supplies and wounded sent to the rear. If you can give some
fresh corps to relieve those most reduced in numbers and dash, the relieved
corps can be sent to the plains and used in support. This is urgent.
A great political catastrophe was now dreaded. Our Army, wearied out with
daily attacks, might at any moment be seized with a panic, and driven back pellmell, with immense slaughter, through the Pass. Such a misadventure, although
costing fewer lives than a single great battle, would have ruined our prestige on
the Frontier, and entailed political disasters, the end of which it was impossible
to foretell. The Panjab Government accordingly decided that, if General
Chamberlain found it needful, the whole force should quietly retreat to Permauli.
But the caution of the Panjab Statesmen had underrated the unyielding
persistence of British Troops. On the 22d came a telegram, stating that our Army
was determined to hold its position, and that, although the difficulties were great,
the General was sure of ultimate success.
Next day a wing of the 23d Native Infantry, with some European details, reached
Camp. The enemy had already put forth his utmost strength, and the arrival of
our fresh troops struck the tribes with an undefined terror. They began to realize
what it is to be engaged against the inexhaustible resources of a vast Military
Empire, and the next Friday (the day of the week which the Fanatics generally
chose for battle) passed without an attack. Still we were unable to advance; and
on the 28th November the Panjab Government in vain recorded a Minute,

disastrous a campaign will escape hostile criticism, but I can only say that every statement I make is based
upon the most carefully verified Official Reports.

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deploring the stationary attitude of the force, and urging some forward
movement. As our reinforcements arrived, fresh tribes poured down from the
mountains, one chieftain 49 alone bringing in 3000 men, and a single ascetic 50
contributing 500 Fanatics determined upon martyrdom or victory.
On the 5th December our whole reinforcements had arrived, and an advance was
again strongly urged. We had now 9000 Regular Troops, including several
picked regiments, such as the 93d Highlanders, besides Irregulars; and it seemed
hard to believe that a powerful British Army could thus remain cooped within
the Pass week after week, harassed by the attacks of the enemy, and unable to
strike a blow. But we had altogether underrated the hold which the Fanatical
Colony possessed over the Frontier tribes. Those who joined them for the sake of
the Faith burned with the hopes of plunder or of martyrdom, while the less
bigoted clans were worked upon by the fear of their territory being invaded by
the British or made the seat of the War. The clansmen, fired by zeal and rivalry,
scorned all the efforts of a civilized Army, and an eyewitness thus describes the
Frontier in the second week of December. The excitement was spreading far and
wide. The Mahmands on the Peshawar border were beginning to make hostile
demonstrations at Shabkadr for the first time since their signal defeat near the
same place in 1852 by the late Lord Clyde. Rumors were also reaching me from
Kohat of expected raids by the Waziris and the Atmankhail; emissaries from
Cabul and Jellalabad were with the Akhund (the Spiritual Head of the Swat
tribes), who had also been further reinforced by Ghazan Khan, the Chief of Dher,
and 6000 men. On the 5th December the Mahmands made a raid into our
territory near Shabkadr.51
But a coalition of mountain tribes is always capricious; and what our arms had
failed to accomplish, dissensions and diplomacy began to effect. As early as the
25th November, the Commissioner of Peshawar succeeded in drawing off certain
clans of the Bonairs. Another contingent, to the number of 2000, he induced to
return to their homes, and persuaded the Swat leader to disperse his immediate
followers. Several minor chiefs, scenting the defection, withdrew, leaving the
seeds of mutual distrust among those who remained. By the 10th December this
distrust seemed ready to bear fruit. The great council of the Bonair Tribes
suddenly came in to the Commissioner, but failed to arrange terms. On the 15th
we hastened their deliberations by a night attack on Lalu, the enemy losing 400
men. On the 16th we burned the village of Ambeyla, and left 200 of the clansmen
dead or wounded on the field. Before next day the Bonair tribes had made up
49

Faiztalal Khan of Bajaur.

50

The Hajj, or Pilgrim, of Kunhar.

51

Major James, Commissioner of the Peshawar Division.

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their minds, and presenting themselves before the Commissioner, asked for
orders. This defection proved the death-blow to the Fanatic cause. Every moment,
some clan or another took itself off. The people from Bajaur and Dher fled. The
whole of the Swat troops held themselves in instant readiness to desert. The
coalition dissolved like a mountain mist, and the Bonair tribes, on whom the
Rebel Settlement had chiefly depended, entered into an engagement with us to
burn the Fanatics in their den. In less than a week a strong British brigade,
reinforced and guided by the Bonairs, advanced in perfect safety through the
mountains to the Fanatical Settlement at Malka, and reduced it to ashes. The
force returned to the illfated Ambeyla Pass on the 23d December, and on the 25th
the whole Army once more reached the plains, not a shot being fired on its
homeward march.
Meanwhile we had left the fatal Defile thickly planted with the graves of British
soldiers. Our loss amounted to no less than 847 men killed and wounded, or
close on one-tenth of the total strength of the Army when it was eventually
raised to 9000 Regular Troops. This was in the Pass alone, and irrespective of
men invalided from exposure or who died of disease. The Panjab Government, in
summing up the results of the .Campaign, declared that on no former occasion
has the fighting in the hills been of so severe or sustained a character. That the
Fanatics had affected a formidable combination of tribes, and that in this
coalition their Councils had maintained the ascendency. That these fanatics were
no harmless or powerless religionists; that they are a permanent source of danger
to our Rule in India; and that the Religious War which they have so persistently
preached might have been adopted by all the Frontier tribes. The peril of the
crisis was augmented by the fact that just at that time the Indian Empire was
without a responsible head. The Viceroy, Lord Elgin, lay in a dying state far in
the interior of the hills, cut off from telegraphic communication, and unable to
transact business.
Although the Campaign had cost us dear, it effectually quieted the border for the
next four years. One half of the fanatics had fallen, and the adjacent tribes were
little inclined to view with favour the remnants of a Rebel Colony which had
brought the tempest of war into their mountain valleys. The Traitor Chiefs felt
themselves so unsafe, that in 1866 two of them 52 attempted to open a
communication with our Frontier officers. These efforts were frustrated by a
third leader,53 who now began to revive their zeal. Till the end of 1867, however,
they were too busy with their own quarrels to venture upon depredations on our
territory. But in February 1868 they moved out in a column of 700 fighting men,
52

Muhammad Ishak and Muhammad Yakub through the instrumentality of Sayyid Mahmud, formerly in
our service.
53

Maulavi Abd-ullah.

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and tried to lay the foundation of a coalition of the clans. The remembrance of
the punishment we had inflicted in 1863 made such an operation now more
difficult. Still by degrees the superstitious fanaticism of the tribes began to get the
better of their prudence. They attacked one of our outposts in the Agror Valley,
and the Government recorded that, but for the immediate measures which we
took, we should again have had to deal with a great tribal confederacy. This time,
however, the British authorities were determined to lose not a moment. On the
8th September, the Supreme Government sanctioned the dispatch of a military
force to reduce the tribes. On the 30th October our troops moved out under the
direction of the Commander-in-Chief in India, and the immediate command of
General Wilde, C. B. At the same time we issued proclamations to the clans,
reciting how certain tribes who had in no respect been interfered with or
oppressed, after attacking a British outpost, entered our territory with arms and
flags, burning sundry villages, and rendering retribution imperative; The British
Government, which is a long-suffering one, can bear with you no further, and
calls you to account for the above acts.
I do not propose to detail the events of this campaign. During July, urgent
telegraphic messages had come from the Panjab Government giving notice of the
storm. The warning was so urgent, wrote the Quarter Master-General of the
Army,54 and the call for assistance so imperative, certain detachments of our
troops being in fact beleaguered by the insurgents, that the Government of India
lost no time. Taught by the disasters of 1863, the Commander-in-Chief instead of
weakening the Panjab Military Stations, or drawing detachments from our posts
along the border, brought up regiments from the North-Western Provinces.
Besides the operating column, numbering between 6000 and 7000 Regular
Troops, the whole force on the Frontier was nearly doubled, and the flower of
the British Army in India was concentrated against the fanatical mountain
tribes.55 During the suffocating heat of a tropical August and September, our
soldiers were making forced marches such as have seldom been equaled in the
healthy temperate zone. The Sappers and Miners, for example, covered six
hundred miles in twenty-nine days. The troops poured northward from the
inland Provinces in such bewildering masses as to completely overawe the clans,
54

Letter to Secretary to Government, Military Department, No. 163, dated 5th November 1868, para. 4.

55

The D Battery F Brigade Royal Artillery, the E Battery 19th Brigade RA., and the 2-24th Brigade R.A.;
the 1st Battalions of the 6th and 19th Foot; 2 Companies of the 77th; the 16th Bengal Cavalry, the 2d
Gurkha, Regiment; and the 24th Native Infantry, were at once transferred from Rawal Pindi to Abbottabad,
the Headquarters of the Hazara District. The 20th N.I. were marched from Lahor to Abbottabad; the 38th
Foot from Sialkot to Darband in Hazara, which was also occupied by the 31st N.I. during the Campaign.
The 1st and 4th Gurkhas were moved from the distant hill stations of Bakloh and Dharmssala, and joined
the force under General Wilde. In addition to the above, the 30th, 19th, and 23d NJ., the 9th Bengal
Cavalry, and the 20th Hussars, were marched from their several stations of Cawnpur, Aligarh, Amritsar,
Lahor, and Campbellpur, to Rawal Pindi, and formed the reserve. Troops were also held in readiness at
Peshawar and Naushira to support the Guide Corps at Hot Mardan, opposite the Swat country.

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and to baffle the Fanatics plan for a tribal coalition. At an enormous cost we
placed an Army with Artillery complete on the Black Mountain, but the
borderers did not dare to face it. The spectacle has been seen, wrote the
Quarter-Master- General, of British troops, European and Native, operating over
and among mountains 10,000 feet high, the General in command himself being
without a tent. 56 Nevertheless we failed to reach the heart of the evil. It is
doubtful how far religion was directly and immediately responsible for the rising.
But the Panjab Government, in summing up the results of the Campaign,
recorded its regret that it had come to a close without our having been able either
to drive out the Hindustani fanatics, or to induce them to surrender and to return
to their homes in Hindustan.57
I have now traced the history of the Rebel Camp on our Frontier from its
formation in 1831 to the last Campaign in which it involved us in 1868. To trace
the Wahabi warlike ramifications throughout India would swell this little book
to a great volume. But they were by no means confined to the Panjab. For
example, about thirty years ago, it seemed as if a Fanatic Confederacy had firmly
established itself in the heart of Southern India. Sir Bartle Frere informs me that
the Wahabi organization of that day included a brother of the Nizam, who was
to have been raised to the Haidrabad throne; and had the plan not broken
through, the leaders would have had a great store of newly cast cannon and
munitions of all sorts, with a formidable body of adherents, both among the
semi-independent native Chiefs, and in the Military Courts of the South. The
chronic miseries which it rained down upon the border under the Sikh Rule have
been transmitted as a bitter legacy to ourselves. Besides constantly keeping alive
a fanatical spirit of unrest along the Frontier, it has three times organised great
tribal confederacies, each of which has cost British India a war. One Government
after another has declared it to be a source of permanent danger to our Rule, yet
all our efforts to extirpate it have failed. It still continues the centre towards
which the hopes alike of our disloyal subjects and of our enemies beyond the
Frontier turn. We know not at what moment we may again get involved in the
dynastic struggles which constantly afflict Central Asia, but at present it seems
quite possible that before this year ends we shall find ourselves in another
Afghan War. When such a war arrivesand sooner or later it must come to
passthe Rebel Colony on our borders will be worth to the enemy many
thousands of men. It is not the traitors themselves whom we have to fear, but the
seditious masses in the heart of our Empire, and the superstitious tribes on our
56

Letter from Quarter-Master-General to Secretary to Government, Military Department, No. 168, dated
5th November 1868, Para. 17.
57

Para. 22 of Panjab Governments Letter, No. 258, dated 6th November 1868. In the above brief account
of the Frontier Expedition of 1868, I have followed this letter and the reports from the local officers alluded
to in it; with the Quarter-Master-Generals letter of the 5th November 1868, and the Reports appended, for
the military details.

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Frontier, both of whom the Fanatics have again and again combined in a
Religious War against us. During nine centuries the Indian people have been
accustomed to look for invasion from the north; and no one can predict the
proportions to which this Rebel Camp, backed by the Musalman hordes from the
Westward, might attain, under a leader who knew how to weld together the
nations of Asia in a Crescentade.

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CHAPTER II.
THE CHRONIC CONSPIRACY WITHIN OUR TERRITORY.
THE source from which the Frontier Rebel Camp derived this extraordinary
vitality long remained a mystery. Thrice it was scattered by the Native Power
which preceded us in the Panjab, and thrice it has been crushed beneath masses
of British Troops. Yet it still lives on, and the devout Musalmans find in this
almost miraculous indestructibility a visible augury of ultimate triumph. The
truth is, that while we have been trying to stamp out the Frontier Settlement
beneath the heel of a military force, the fanatical sects among our Muhammadan
subjects have been feeding it with an inexhaustible supply of money and men;
pouring oil upon the embers which we had left for dead, and nursing them again
into a flame.
The preaching of Sayyid Ahmad in 1820-22 passed unheeded by the British
Authorities. He traversed our Provinces with a retinue of devoted disciples,
converted the populace by thousands to his doctrine, and established a regular
system of Ecclesiastical Taxation, Civil Government, and Apostolic Succession.
Meanwhile our officers collected the revenue, administered justice, and paraded
our troops, altogether unsuspicious of the great religious movement which was
surging around them. From this unconsciousness they were in 1831 rudely
awakened. Among the disciples of the Prophet in Calcutta was a certain
professional wrestler and bully, by name Titu Miyan.58 This man had started life
as the son of a respectable husbandman, and bettered his position by marrying
into the family of a small landholder. But his violent and turbulent disposition
threw away these advantages. For some time he earned an ignominious
livelihood as a boxer in Calcutta, and afterwards enlisted in one of the bands of
club-men with which the country gentlemen of Bengal were at that time wont to
adjust their family differences and boundary disputes. This occupation finally
landed him in jail. After his release he made a pilgrimage to Mecca, met Sayyid
Ahmad in the Holy City, and returned to India a powerful preacher of the faith.
He itinerated in the Districts north and east of Calcutta, making multitudes of
converts, and preparing in secret Gods vengeance against the Infidel The
Capture of Peshawar in 1830 by the Fanatic Host emboldened Titu Miyan to

58

Alias Nisar Ali, a native of Chandpur Village, and resident in Barasat. His career is given at some
length in the Calcutta Review, vol. ci., which I have used along with an Official Memorandum by the Patna
Magistrate.

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throw off all disguise; and the petty oppressions 59 to which the Hindu
landholders subjected his followers, placed him at the head of an infuriated
peasant rising.
A series of agrarian outrages followed, ending in the insurgents entrenching
themselves in a fortified Camp, and defying and beating back the English
Authorities with some slaughter. The whole of the country north and east of
Calcutta, including three entire Districts,60 lay at the mercy of insurgent bands
between three and four thousand strong. The sectaries began by sacking a village
in open daylight, because one of the inhabitants refused to accept their divine
mission.61 In another District a second village62 was plundered, and a mosque
burnt down. Meanwhile contributions of money and rice were levied from the
Faithful; and on the 23d October 1831, the insurgents picked out a strongly
situated village for their Headquarters, and erected a bamboo stockade round it.
On the 6th November they marched out to the number of 500 fighting men,
attacked a small town, and after murdering the priest, slaughtered two cows (the
sacred animals of the Hindus), with whose blood they defiled a Hindu temple,
and whose carcasses they scoffingly hung up before the idol. They then
proclaimed the extinction of the English Rule, and the re-establishment of the
Muhammadan Power. Incessant outrages followed, the general proceeding being
to kill a cow in a Hindu village, and, if the people resisted, to murder or expel the
inhabitants, plunder their houses, and burn them down. They were equally bitter,
however, against any Muhammadan who would not join their sect, and on one
occasion, in sacking the house of a wealthy and obdurate Musalman, varied the
proceedings by forcibly marrying his daughter to the head of their band.
After some ineffectual efforts by the District Authorities, a detachment of the
Calcutta Militia was sent out on the 14th November 1831 against the rebels. The
fanatics, however, refused all parley, and the officer in command, being anxious
to save bloodshed, ordered his men to load with blank cartridge. The insurgents
poured out upon us, received a harmless volley, and instantly cut our soldiers to
pieces. All this took place within a couple of hours ride from Calcutta. On the
17th the Magistrate got together some reinforcements, the Europeans being
mounted on elephants. But the insurgents met them, drawn up in battle array a
thousand strong, and chased the party to its boats on the river cutting down
59

For example, Krishna Chandra Rai, a large landholder on the banks of the Ichhamati, levied a capitation
tax of five shillings on each of his peasants who had embraced the new faith. Another proprietor threw one
of his peasants into his private prison for destroying a shrine during the Muharram.
60

The 24 Pargands, Naddea, and Faridpur.

61

In Faridpur District.

62

At Sarfaraziir, in Naddea.

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those who were slowest in the retreat. It now became necessary to deal with the
rebels by means of Regular troops. A body of Native Infantry, with some Horse
Artillery, and a detachment from the Body Guard, hurried out from Calcutta.
The insurgents, disdaining the safety of their stockade, met the troops upon the
open plain, with the mangled remains of a European, who had been killed the
previous day, suspended in front of their line. A stubborn engagement decided
their fate. They were driven back pell-mell into their entrenchment, and the
fortified camp was taken by storm. Titu Miyan, the leader, fell in the action. Of
the survivors (350 in number), 140 were sentenced by the Court to various terms
of imprisonment; and one of them, Titus lieutenant, was condemned to death.
The end of the Reformers seemed to have come. On the Panjab Frontier their
forces had been scattered and their leader slain. The insurrection in Lower
Bengal had met with a similar fate. But the Khalifs, or Apostolic Successors,
whom the Prophet had appointed at Patna, came to the rescue. They produced
eyewitnesses, who declared that in the thick of the battle the Prophet had been
snatched away from mortal sight in a cloud of dust. They assured the multitude
that he had himself foretold his disappearance. The Prophet had indeed prayed
that his grave might be hidden from his disciples, like that of Moses of old, so
that no impious worship might be paid to his bones. They preached that the
Almighty had withdrawn him from a faint-hearted generation; but that when the
Indian Musalmans, with singleness of mind, should join in a Holy War against
the English Infidels, their Prophet would return and lead them to victory. In all
this there was nothing incredible to a Musalman. Such things had happened
before. It was well known that the Prophet Yunis (Jonah) had disappeared for a
time, and lay concealed in the belly of a large fish. Moses, too, became invisible
when he ascended Mount Sinai to receive the Old Testament. Zulkarnain, the
great leader who imprisoned Gog and Magog, disappeared under similar
circumstances. The Prophet Christ had not tasted of death. 63 It was therefore
incumbent on the Faithful to reenter on the Holy War with fresh vigor; and the
Khalifs at Patna appointed a new General of the Faith,64 who moved northwards
with an ever-growing retinue of fanatic swordsmen.
For a time the well-attested miracle of the Prophets Apotheosis overawed
inquiry, and all went well. One of the most devoted of the Lower Bengal
missionaries, who had preached throughout the Eastern Districts, particularly in
Dacca and Sylhet, marched northwards 1800 miles to the Frontier with a
thousand men. But the protracted absence of the Prophet greatly exercised his
faith, and after a short campaign he resolved to penetrate to the distant
mountain-cave in which the Lord had hidden his Apostle. His zeal for the truth
63

Calcutta Review, vol. ci. p. 187.

64

Maulavi Nasr-ud-din.

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surmounted the watchful jealousy of the more interested party leaders; and
having reached the hill sanctuary, he found in it only three figures stuffed with
straw. The disillusioned missionary fled from the accursed den, commanded his
followers to return to their homes, and indited a long indignant letter to his
converts in Calcutta, who still kept forwarding money and men.
Salam alaikum, he wrote, the peace and blessing of God be upon you. Mulla
Kadir prepared an image of the Prophet, but before showing it to any person he
made the people promise that they would never attempt to shake hands with the
Prophet or speak to him; for if they did, then the Prophet would disappear for
fourteen years. The whole people, deeply affected, viewed this lifeless image
from some distance, and made obeisance to it. But to all their supplications never
an answer came, and the people grew desirous of shaking hands with their
Prophet. Then Mulla Kadir tried to allay their suspicions, and said that if any one
should attempt to shake hands with the Prophet without giving previous notice,
the Prophets servant would pistol him. The letter goes on to relate how the
astute Mulla reproached the people with their want of faith; how the image was
removed from public view; and finally, how, after a great deal of entreaty, they
obtained an inspection of it. They examined it, and found that it was a goats skin
stuffed with grass, which, with the help of some pieces of wood and hair, was
made to resemble a man. Your slave inquired of the priest about this. He
answered that it was true, but that the Prophet had performed a miracle and
appeared as a stuffed figure to the people. The errors and falsity of these
impostors are now as clear as noonday, and I have saved my soul from sin.
Again the fanatic cause seemed ruined. But the missionary zeal of the Patna
Khalifs, and the immense pecuniary resources at their command, once more
raised the sacred banner from the dust. They covered India with their emissaries,
and brought about one of the greatest religious revivals that has ever taken place.
The two Khalifs 65 themselves went through Bengal and Southern India. The
minor missionaries were innumerable, and a skilful organization enabled them
to settle in any place where the multitude of converts made it worth their while.
In this way, almost every one of the fanatic Districts had its permanent preacher,
whose zeal was sharpened from time to time by visits of the itinerant
missionaries, and whose influence was consolidated and rendered permanent by
the Central Propaganda at Patna. How great a power for evil these preachers
have now become in Bengal, I shall afterwards show. In Southern India they
65

Wilayat Ali and Iniyat Ali. The former, after a missionary tour through Bengal, took Bombay, the
Nizamat, and Central India as his special field. Iniyat concentrated his efforts on the Middle Districts of the
Lower Provinces, Malda, Bogra, Rajsahahi, Patna, Naddea, and Faridpur. Karamat Ali of Jauapur carried
the movement eastwards from Faridpur into Dacca, Maimansingh, Noakhali, and Barisal. Zain-ul-Abidin,
a native of Haidrabid, who had been converted by Wilayat Ali on his tour through Southern India, selected
Northeastern Bengal as the sphere of his labours, and converted the peasantry of N. Tipperah and Sylhet.
Calcutta Review, vols. c. and ci.

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raised such a hurricane of enthusiasm, that even the women cast their jewels into
the common purse. From the North-West Provinces they sent company after
company of recruits to the Fanatic Camp. Everywhere they stirred the
Muhammadan population to its depths; and although the keen intellect of the
Bengali eventually gave its present tone to the movement, the revival burst forth
with equal heat for a time in all the Provinces of India. They have, wrote the
Magistrate of Patna, under the very nose and protection of Government
authorities, openly preached sedition in every village of our most populous
districts, unsettling the minds of the Musalman population, and obtaining an
influence for evil as extraordinary as it is certain.66
The origin of this wonderful influence was, however, by no means based on
unmixed evil. Sayyid Ahmad commenced his apostolic career by reasserting the
two great principles with which all true preachers have workedthe unity of
God and the equality of man. He appealed with an almost inspired confidence to
the religious instinct, long dormant in the souls of his countrymen, and
overgrown by the superstitious accretions with which centuries of contact with
Hinduism had almost stifled Islam. He found the True Faith buried beneath the
ceremonial of idolatry. Bandit as he had been, impostor as he or his immediate
disciples became, I cannot help the conviction that there was an intermediate
time in Sayyid Ahmads life when his whole soul yearned with a great pain for
the salvation of his countrymen, and when his heart turned singly to God. A man
of an intensely nervous temperament, concealed under an outward show of calm,
he fell into religious trances which to Western science would simply suggest
epilepsy, but which the popular belief of Asia reverences as a state of direct
communion with the Almighty. In unearthly ecstasies the Prophets of bygone
ages flitted before his inner vision, and he held a constant mystic intercourse
with the long-dead founders of the two great Religious Orders of India. In 1820,
when he started on his mission, he was about thirty-four years old, a little above
the middle height, and with a long beard falling on his breast. Of a taciturn,
gentle manner unlearned in the law, he preached on the practical life of his
countrymen, and abstained from all doctrinal discussions; either, as his enemies
said, because he was unfit to handle them; or, as his disciples affirmed, because
they were below his high order of piety. Two of his first converts were men of
profound scholarship, brought up at the feet of the Dehli sage, The Sun of India,
under whom the Prophet also passed his novitiate.
These two men67 belonged to the family of the greatest Muhammadan Doctor of
the age, and had been carefully trained by him alike in the sacred language and
in the Sacred Law. Both of them were imbued, although in different degrees,
66

Official Proceedings, 1865.

67

Maulvi Muhammad Ismail, the nephew, and Maulvi Abd-ul-Hai, the son-in-law of Shah Abd-ul-Aziz.

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with the necessity of a reformation of the faith and manners of their countrymen;
and both simultaneously accepted their illiterate co-disciple, the late bandit, as a
man sent by God to accomplish the work. The veneration with which these
learned and polished doctors of the law publicly treated the ignorant horsesoldier, with his late-learned smattering of Arabic, first attracted popular
attention to the future Prophet. Their profound acquaintance with the patristic
literature of Islam enabled them publicly to support the Sayyids title, which they
themselves had acknowledged. Starting with the popular belief that God from
time to time sends Imams, or leaders, to quicken the faith of His children, and to
guide the masses of mankind to salvation, they proved that Sayyid Ahmad had
all the marks of such a divinely commissioned envoy:, He was, in the first place,
lineally descended in the orthodox line from Muhammad himself. In his fits of
religious ecstasy, during which he communed with God and the Apostles; in his
grave, taciturn, and gentle demeanor; even in his person, they declared him to
resemble the great Prophet. Of the twelve Khalifs who will reduce the world to
the True Faith, some of the Indian Muhammadans68 believe that six have already
come and gone, while others only admit four. Sayyid Ahmad was the next in the
sacred line. In dreams, the beloved daughter of Muhammad and her husband
(his lineal ancestors) visited him, saluted him as their son, bathed him in sweet
essences, and arrayed him in royal apparel. What further evidence could the
populace, or indeed even Sayyid Ahmad himself, demand? His own humility
and scruples disappeared before the incessant arguments of his two learned
disciples. So firmly did he at length believe in his title, that at the peril of his life
he assumed all the functions of sovereignty, levied tithes, appointed Khalifs to
continue the Apostolic Succession, and formally proclaimed himself at Peshawar
the Commander of the Faithful.
Until his pilgrimage to Mecca, however, he does not appear to have reduced his
doctrines to any formulated system. His idea of a reformation of religion was a
purely practical one. He told his hearers, that if they were to escape divine wrath,
they must live better lives. One of his disciples has recorded his sayings in a
book,69 now the Kuran of the sect; in which, however, the brief utterances of the
Prophet are believed to have been greatly amplified by the piety of the writer.
But even when thus amplified, his teaching seems to have been almost entirely
one of practical morality. In the Deeds by which he appointed the Patna Khalifs,
the same spirit of the religion of daily life shines out. His single doctrine was to
worship God alone, and God direct, without the interposition of humanly
devised forms and ceremonies.

68

The Sunnis. The Shiahs hold that eleven have already passed away, and that the twelfth is hidden
somewhere beyond our North-Western Frontier. But the Sunnis form 95 percent of the Indian Musalmans.
69

The Sirat-ul-Mustakim, by Muhammad Ismail.

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In the name of the merciful God Be it known to those who seek the way of God
in general, and to those in particular, whether present or absent, who are the
friends of Sayyid Ahmad, that the object of such as become disciples of holy men
by the ceremony of joining hands is to secure the means of pleasing God, and
depends on fulfilling the law of his Prophet.
The law of the Prophet is founded on two things: First, the not attributing to any
creature the attribute of God;70 and second, not inventing forms and practices71
which were not invented in the days of the Prophet, and his successors or Khalifs.
The first consists in disbelieving that angels, spirits, spiritual guides, disciples,
teachers, students, prophets or saints, remove ones difficulties. In abstaining
from having recourse to any of the above creations for the attainment of any
wish or desire. In denying that any of them has the power of granting favour or
removing evils in considering them as helpless and ignorant as ones self in
respect to the power of God. In never making any offering to any prophet, saint,
holy man, or angel for the obtaining of any object, but merely to consider them as
the friends of God. To believe that they have power to rule the accidents of life,
and that they are acquainted with the secret knowledge of God, is downright
infidelity.72
With regard to the second point, true and undefiled religion consists in strongly
adhering to all the devotions and practices in the affairs of life which were
observed in the time of the Prophet. In avoiding all such innovations as marriage
ceremonies, mourning ceremonies, adorning of tombs, erection of large edifices
over graves, lavish expenditure on the anniversaries of the dead, street
processions and the like, and in endeavoring as far as may be practicable to put a
stop to these practices.73
The Prophets visit to Mecca in 1822-23 amplified and formulated this simple
system puritanic belief. He found the Holy City just emerged from a Reformation
devised by a Bedouin of the desert and similar in principles to his own. Its
founder had erected a great religious empire in Western Asia, closely resembling
that which Sayyid Ahmad hoped to establish in India. It becomes necessary,
therefore, to break the narrative of the further development of his creed, by a
brief account of the rise and progress of the Wahabis in Arabia.

70

Shirk.

71

Bidat.

72

Kufr.

73

Calcutta Review, No. c. p. 89.

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About a hundred and fifty years ago, a young Arab pilgrim, by name Abd-ulWahhab,74 the son of a petty Nejd chief, was deeply struck with the profligacy of
his fellow-pilgrims, and with the endless mummeries which profaned the Holy
Cities. For three years he pondered over the corruptions of Muhammadanism in
Damascus, and then stepped forth as their denouncer. He rendered himself
peculiarly hateful to the creatures of the Constantinople Court, accusing the
Turkish Doctors of making the written word of no effect by their traditions
(Sunndt), and the Turkish people of being worse than the Infidels by reason of
their vices. Driven from city to city, he at length took refuge with the chief of
Deraiyeh, Muhammad Ibn Saud, into whom he instilled his religious views and
a sense of his great wrongs. These wrongs he was soon amply to redress. With
the aid of his new convert, who married his daughter, he formed a small Arab
League, and raised the standard of revolt against the Government of
Constantinople, and of protest against her corrupted creed. Victory crowded
upon victory. The Bedouins, who had never adored Muhammad as quite a
divine person, nor accepted the Kuran as an altogether inspired book, flocked to
the Army of the Reformation. The greater part of Nejd was conquered, Abd-ulWahhab being the spiritual chief, while Muhammad Ibn Saud, his son-in-law,
ruled as its temporal monarch. They appointed governors for the vanquished
provinces, and kept them in strict subjection. A great Assembly of the Sayid
Tribe formed the Ministry for legislative and religious affairs during time of
peace, and the Council of War during campaigns.
Before long the new Kingdom boldly attacked the Turkish power. In 1748 the
Pasha of Bagdad, formerly Grand Vizier, had to take active measures against the
movement,a movement which would in the end have thrust out the
degenerate successors of the Khalifs from the Porte, and constructed a new
Muhammadan Empire. Nor were the Reformers less skilful in civil government
than they had been victorious in arms. They bound together the Nomad Arabs,
on whom their power chiefly depended, in a firm confederation. A regular
system of religious taxation was devised. In time of war, four-fifths of the spoil
went to soldiers, and one-fifth to the Royal Treasury. The Land-tax, termed Alms
in the Kuran, was strictly enforced; fields watered naturally by rain or rivers
paying one-tenth of the yearly produce, while land which required artificial
irrigation paid one-twentieth. Traders of all sorts paid one and a half percent of
their capital. Rebellious or schismatic cities and Provinces also yielded a steady
source of Revenue. The punishment for a first defection was general plunder,
one-fifth of which went to the treasury. In case of a second rebellion or apostasy,
the whole land on which the town was built, with the territory immediately
subject to it, became the property of the Wahabi chief. As the Reformers were
essentially a sect militant, and boldly announced the doctrine of conversion by
74

The Servant of Him who gives everything.

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the sword, this proved a valuable source of revenue, and was enforced by two or
three campaigns every year.
The doctrines which they thus engraved in blood were themselves of a noble
type. They insisted first of all upon a practical amendment of morals. The Turks
had infected the Holy City itself with their low sensuality. Not content with
polygamy, they had brought women of the vilest character with them in their
pilgrim trains, and were addicted to practices of an even more filthy nature
among themselves,practices solemnly forbidden by the Kuran. Wine and
opium they had openly used in the Holy Streets, and the Turkish caravan to
Mecca exhibited a scene of the most abominable debauchery. It was against these
practical and visible defilements that Abd-ul-Wahhab first raised his voice. But
by degrees his views grew into a theological system which has been handed
down under the name of Wahabi-ism,75 and which is now substantially the belief
of the Indian sect. It is a system which reduces the religion of Muhammad to a
pure Theism, and consists of seven great doctrines. First, absolute reliance upon
One God. Second, absolute renunciation of any mediatory agent between man
and his Maker, including the rejection of the prayers of the saints, and even of
the semi-divine mediation of Muhammad himself. Third, the right of private
interpretation of the Muhammadan Scriptures, and the rejection of all priestly
glosses on the Holy Writ. Fourth, absolute rejection of all the forms, ceremonies,
and outward observances with which the medieval and modern Muhammadans
have overlaid the pure Faith. Fifth, constant looking for the Prophet (Imam), who
will lead the True Believers to victory over the Infidels. Sixth, constant
recognition both in theory and practice of the obligation to wage war upon all
Infidels. Seventh, implicit obedience to the spiritual guide. The Wahabis form, in
fact, an advanced division of the Sunnisthe Puritans of Islam. The Sunnis are
the sect to which almost all the Muhammadans of Bengal and the North-Western
Provinces belong.76
Abd-ul-Wahhab died in 1787, but bequeathed his conquests to a worthy
successor. In 1791 the Wahabis made a successful campaign against the grand
Sheikh of Mecca. In 1797 they beat back the Pasha of Bagdad with immense
slaughter, and overran the most fertile Provinces of Asiatic Turkey. In 1801 they
75

In Arabic, Wahabi is spelt Wahabbi, but it has now become an Anglo-Indian word. I accent the middle
syllable to show that it is long.
76

They are chiefly Sunnis of the Hanafi persuasion, with, however, a few Shafeis. The Hanafis follow the
order of their great Imam, Abu Hanifa; born about 80 A.H. (699 A.D.); died about 115 A.H. (733 A.D.).
They pray five times daily, and during prayer keep their hands crossed over the navel, bending the body
forward, but not raising the hands above the head. After prayer they utter the word Amen in silence. The
Shafiis also take their name from their Imam, Abu Abd-ullah Shaft; born about 150 A.H. (767 A.D); died
about 204 A.H. (819-820 A.D.). They cross the hands over the breast at prayer, raise them above the head
when they bow, and at the end utter Amen aloud.

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again swept down upon Mecca with more than a hundred thousand men, and in
1803 the Holy City fell into their hands. Next year they captured Medina. In
these two strongholds of Islam, the Reformers massacred the inhabitants who
refused to accept their creed, plundered and defiled the tombs of the
Muhammadan saints, and spared not even the Sacred Mosque itself. During
eleven centuries every devout King and Emperor of Islam had sent thither the
richest oblations which his realm could yield, and the accumulated offerings of
the worlds piety were now swept into the tents of the sectaries of the desert.
The consternation of the Muhammadan world can only be compared to the thrill
which passed through Christendom, when it was told that Bourbons banditti
had bivouacked in the Vatican, and that the Vicar of Christ was a prisoner in
Sant Angelo. The highest temple of the Musalman faith was not only pillaged,
but grossly polluted by armed schismatics; the Prophets own tomb was
mutilated ; and the path of pilgrimage, the Musalmans avenue to salvation, was
closed. From the marble pile of Saint Sophia in Constantinople, to the plastered
wayside mosque on the frontier of China, every Muhammadan house of prayer
was filled with lamentation and weeping. A few of the Shiahs declared it was the
Twelfth Imam made manifest; but to the orthodox believer it seemed clear that
Ad-Dajjal, the lying Prophet foretold by Muhammad, had now descended on the
earth, and that the end was come.
Spite of fasting and supplication, from 1803 to 1809 no great pilgrim caravan
crossed the desert. The Wahabis overran Syria, sustained a War with the British
in the Persian Gulf, and threatened Constantinople itself. It was Mehemet Ali,
Pasha of Egypt, who at last succeeded in crushing the Reformation. In 1812,
Thomas Keith, a Scotchman, under the Pashas son, took Medina by storm.
Mecca fell in 1813 ; and five years later, this vast power, which had so
miraculously sprung up, as miraculously vanished, like a shifting sand mountain
of the desert.
The Wahabis, now a scattered and a homeless sect, profess doctrines hateful to
the well-to-do classes of Muhammadans. In formal divinity they are the
Unitarians of Islam. They refuse divine attributes to Muhammad, forbid prayers
in his name, and denounce supplications to departed saints. It is their earnest,
practical morality however, that contains the secret of their strength. They boldly
insist upon a return to the faith of the primitive Muhammadan Church, to its
simplicity of manners, its purity of life, and its determination to spread the Truth,
at whatever expense of the blood of the Infidel, and at whatever sacrifice of
themselves. Their two great principles are the unity of God and the abnegation of
self. They disdain the compromises by which the rude fanaticism of Muhammad
has been skillfully worked up into a system of civil polity, and adapted alike to
the internal wants and foreign relations of Musalman States. They exact from

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every convert that absolute resignation (Islam) to the will of God which is the
clue to the success of Muhammad. But while, like other reforming sects, they
ceaselessly insist on this fundamental doctrine, they weaken their cause among
the learned by their unitarian divinity, and among the simple by a rude
disregard of established rites and hallowed associations. In the greater part of
Asia, the Wahabi convert must separate himself from the whole believing world.
He must give up his most cherished legends, his most solemn festivals his holiest
beliefs. He must even discontinue the comforting practice of praying at his
fathers tomb.77
The Wahabis of India, however, appeal to a principle in the Muhammadan heart,
whose intensity makes light of all these difficulties. While at Mecca, Sayyid
Ahmad attracted the notice of the authorities by the similarity of his teaching to
that of the Bedouin Sectaries, from whom the Holy City had lately suffered so
much. The priests publicly degraded him, and expelled him from the town. As a
natural result of this persecution, he returned to India no longer a religious
visionary and reformer of idolatrous abuses, but a fanatical disciple of Abd-ulWahhab. Whatever had been dreamy in his nature now gave place to a fiery
ecstasy, in which he beheld himself planting the Crescent throughout every
district of India, and the Cross buried beneath the carcasses of the English
Infidels. Whatever had been indistinct in his teaching, henceforth assumed the
precision of that fierce, formulated theology, by which Abd-ul-Wahhab had
founded a great Kingdom in Arabia, and which Sayyid Ahmad hoped would
enable him to rear a still greater and more lasting Empire in India.
The internal change that took place in the Prophets heart is known only to
himself and to God, but it is certain that his whole outward conduct altered. He
no longer looked upon making converts as his work in life, but only as a
preliminary process to his entering on that work. At Bombay, where he first
landed, not even the multitudes who flocked to his preaching, and begged for
the initiatory rite, could delay him. Wherever he went, his success was even
greater than before his visit to Mecca; but he seemed to view preaching in the
settled Districts with a certain disdainful impatience, and to keep his eye
constantly fixed upon the distant warlike populations of the Frontier. His
subsequent career has been sufficiently described in the foregoing chapter. It
remains briefly to explain the doctrinal system which his followers have evolved
from his teaching; a system by which they affected one of the greatest religious
revivals known to Indian history, and which has kept alive the spirit of revolt
against the British Rule during fifty years.

77

Here and further on I have followed an article which I put forth in the Indian Daily News in 1864.

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The first difficulty that confronted the Indian Wahabis was the disappearance of
their leader. His death had disappointed the hopes of his personally leading the
Faithful to victory, and this untoward event had to be provided for in the new
doctrine of the sect. All Muhammadans believe that the end of the world will be
ushered in by wars and seditious, great social upheavals, the rise of low persons
to high places, by earthquake, by pestilence and famine. In that latter time will
come the Imam Mandi, a descendant of Muhammad, and bearing his name, born
beyond the north-west frontier of the Panjab, hidden from the eyes of men
during a part of his career, but finally the Ruler of Arabia and the conqueror of
Constantinople, which, before then, will again have been subjected to a Christian
King. Then Antichrist shall appear, and wage bitter war against the Imam. In the
end, Christ will descend on earth near a white tower to the east of Damascus,
destroy the legions of the wicked one, and convert the whole world to the True
Faith of Muhammad.
The Indian Wahabis had claimed for Sayyid Ahmad the title of the great Imam,
who should thus precede the final coming of Christ. But the events amid which
his career closed could in no way be reconciled with the popular conception of
this last struggle between good and evil. They therefore boldly attacked the
general belief, and asserted that the true Imam Mandi was to come, not at the
Last Day, but as an intermediate leader half-way between the death of
Muhammad and the end of the world. They showed that he had sail the stigmata,
to borrow an analogy from Christian history, of the appointed Imam. They
brought an immense phalanx. of authorities to prove that the 13th century of
their era (1786-1886 A.D.) was the period in which the Imam Mandi should
appear. Ahmad was born in 1786. Even the Shiah Doctors, hateful as their
doctrines were to the Reformers, were made use of. The Shiahs, indeed, had been
much more exact than the Sunnis, and fixed his advent in 1260 A.H., or A.D. 1844.
Had not Muhammad himself said, When you see the black flags coming from
Khorassan, go forth, for with them is a Khalif; the Envoy of God? The
subversion of India beneath the Christian power, and a hundred other signs of
the times, plainly announced the time of tribulation which was to herald his
advent. Prophecies were forged to give still greater certainty, of which the
following verses, taken from a long poem still sung in Northern India, may serve
as an example :
I see the power of GodI see distress in this world;
On all sides I see great Armies fighting and plundering;
I see low-born people learned in unprofitable learning, wearing the garb of
the priesthood.
I see the decline of virtue, the increase of pride;
I see disputes and wars between the Turks and Persians.

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I see beautiful countries deserted by the pious, and become the abode of the
wicked.
Though I see all this, I do not despair, as I see one the dispeller of Sorrow;
I see that after 1200 years78 have passed, wonderful events will occur;
I see all the Kings of the earth arrayed one against the other;
I see the Hindus in an evil state; I see the Turks oppressed;
Then the Imam will appear and rule over the earth;
I see and read A.H.M.D79. (Ahmad), as the letters showing forth the name
of this ruler.
Another favorite prophecy runs thus :
THE ODE OF NIMAT-ULLAH.80
(May his grave be considered sacred.)
I tell the truth that there will be a King,
By the name of Timur, and he will reign thirty years.
(Here follows a list of his successors down to the last of Shah Jahans
family.) Then there will be another King.
Nadir will invade Hindustan.
His sword will cause the massacre of Dehli.
After this, Ahmad Shah will invade.
And he will destroy the former dynasty.
After the death of this King,
The descendants of the former King will be reinstated.
The Sikh tribe will grow powerful at this time, and commit all sorts of
cruelties.
This will continue till forty years.
Then the Nazarenes will take all Hindustan.
They will reign a hundred years.
There will be great oppression in the world in their reign.
For their destruction there will be a King in the West.
This King will proclaim a war against the Nazarenes.
And in the war a great many people will be killed.
The King of the West will be victorious by the force of the sword in a Holy
War,
And the followers of Jesus will be defeated.
Islam will prevail for forty years.
Then a faithless tribe will come out from Ispahan.
78

The original poem gives 750, which was changed to suit Ahmads death. Calcutta Review, vol. c. p. 100,
from which I extract these verses.
79

The original poem had M.H.M.D. (Muhammad)

80

I select a few verses from the entire ode, given in the Official Record of the Wahabi Trial of 1865.

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To drive out these tyrants, Jesus will come down, and the expected Mandi
will appear.
All these will occur at the end of the world.
In 5702 Hijra81 this ode is composed.
In 127082the King of the West will appear.
Nimat-ullah knew the mysteries of God;
His prophecies will be fulfilled to men.
Having established the divine mission of their leader, the Indian Wahabis passed
direct from all minor questions to the great doctrine of Religious War.
Throughout the whole literature of the sect, this obligation shines forth as the
first duty of regenerate man. Their earliest work thus lays down the law: Holy
War is a work of great profit : just as rain does good to mankind, beasts and
plants, so all persons are partakers in the advantages of a War against the Infidel.
The advantages are twofold: general, of which all men, even idolaters and
infidels, animals and vegetables, partake; special, of which only certain classes
are partakers, and partake in different degrees. In connection with the general
advantages, it may be said that the blessings of Heaven,viz. copious showers at
seasonable times, abundant supplies of vegetable produce; good times, so that
people are void of care and free from calamities, whilst their property increases
in value; an increase in the number of learned men, in the justness of judges, in
the conscientiousness of suitors, and in the liberality of the rich,that these
blessings, increased an hundred-fold, are granted when the dignity of the
Muhammadan religion is upheld, and Muhammadan kings possessing powerful
armies become exalted, and promulgate and enforce the Muhammadan law in all
countries. But look at this country (India), as compared with Turkey or Turkistan,
as far as the blessings of Heaven are concerned. Nay, compare the present state
of Hindustan in this year 1233 Hijra (A.D. 1818), when the greater portion of it
has become the Country of the Enemy (dar-ul-Harb), with the state of India some
two or three centuries back, and contrast the blessings of Heaven now
vouchsafed and the number of learned men with those of that period.
Their most popular song breathes the same spirit. The rebels in the Camp on our
Frontier were drilled morning and evening to the sound of its solemn strains,
and the companies of recruits who passed northwards from the heart of our
territory chaunted its stanzas along the British high roads.
First I glorify God, who is beyond all praise;
I laud his Prophet, and write a song on Holy War:
Holy War is a War carried on for religion, without any lust of Power.
81

1174-1175 A.D.

82

1853-1854 A.D.

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In the Sacred Scriptures its glories are related: I mention a few.


War against the Infidel is incumbent on all Musalmans; make provision
for
it before all things.
He who from his heart gives one farthing to the cause, shall hereafter
receive seven hundred fold;
And he who both gives and joins in the fight, shall receive seven thousand
fold from God.
He who shall equip a warrior in this cause of God shall obtain a martyrs
reward;
His children dread not the trouble of the grave; nor the last trump; nor the
Day of Judgment.
Cease to be cowards; join the divine leader, and smite the Infidel.
I give thanks to God that a great leader has been born in the thirteenth
century of the Hijra.83
Oh friend, since you must some time die, is it not better to offer up your
life in the service of the Lord?
Thousands go to war and come back unhurt; thousands remain at home
and die.
You are filled with worldly care, and have forgotten your Maker in
thinking of your wives and children.
How long will you be able to remain with your wives and children? how
long to escape death ?
If you give up this world for the sake of God, you enjoy the pleasures of
Heaven for ever.
Fill the uttermost ends of India with Islam, so that no sounds may be
heard but Allah! Allah! 84
But any attempt at even the briefest epitome of the Wahabi Treatises in prose and
verse on the duty to wage war against the English would fill a volume. The sect
has developed a copious literature filled with prophecies of the downfall of the
British Power, and devoted to the duty of Religious Rebellion. The mere titles of
its favorite works suffice to show their almost uniformly treasonable character. I
give below85 a list of thirteen. Some of them are of so flagrant a character as to
83

A.D. 1786-1886

84

Risala-Jihad, or Wahabi War Song. Calcutta Review, vol. cii. p. 396. et seq

85

1.

Sirat-ul-Mustakim, or the Straight Path, being the sayings of the Prophet Sayyid Ahmad, the
Amir-ul-Mominin (Leader of the Faithful). Written in Persian by Maulavf Muhammad Ismail
of Dehli; translated into Hindustani by Maulavi Abd-ul-Jabbar of Cawnpur.

2.

Kasfda, or Book of Poetry, setting forth the obligation of waging war against the Infidel, and
the rewards of all who partake in it, by Maulavi Karam Ali of Cawnpur.

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require secretly passed from hand to hand in manuscript. Others are widely
circulated. The poison, however, is not confined to their readers alone, but is
carried into every District of Bengal by a swarm of preachers, every one of whom
is carefully nurtured in treason before he goes forth on his proselytizing work.
Many of these works are openly sold in the towns of British India, the most
violent and seditious finding the greatest favour with the multitude. But an
inflammatory literature is only one part of a permanent four-fold organization
which the Wahabi leaders use for spreading the doctrine of Rebellion. Besides it
they have, in the first place, the Central Propaganda at Patna, which for a time
defied the British Authorities in that city, and which, although to a certain extent
broken up by repeated State Trials, still exerts an influence throughout all Bengal.
The Prophet, in appointing Khalifs at Patna in 1821, chose men of indomitable
zeal and strength of will. We have seen how, time after time, when the cause
appeared ruined, they again and again raised the standard of Holy War from the
dust. Indefatigable as missionaries, careless of themselves, blameless in their
lives, supremely devoted to the over-throw of the English Infidels, admirably
3.

Sharh-i-Wakaya, a treatise on War against the Infidel, with full instructions as to those by whom
and with whom the fight is to be made. This work, however, only insists upon a Holy War when
the Infidel oppresses the True Believer.

4.

A Prophetic Poem by Maulavi Nimat-ullah, foretelling the downfall of the British Power, and the
coming of a King from the West who shall deliver the Indian Muhammadans from the English.

5.

Tawarikh Kaisar Rum, or Misbah-us-Sari, being a history of Abd-ul-Wahhab, the Founder of the
sect; his persecutions and wars against the Turkish apostates. MS.

6.

Asir Mahshar, or Signs of the Last Day, by Maulavi Muhammad Ali, printed in 1265 A.H., or
1849 A.D. This book of Poetry has been widely circulated. It foretells a war in the Khyber hills on
the Panjab Frontier, where the English will first vanquish the Faithful, whereupon the
Muhammadans will make search for their true Imam. Then there will be a battle lasting four days,
ending in the complete overthrow of the English, even the very smell of Government being driven
out of their heads and brains. Thereafter the Imam Mandi will appear; and the Muhammadans
being now the rulers of India, will flock to meet him at Mecca. These events will be heralded in
by an eclipse both of the sun and moon in the month of Ramazan.

7.

The Takwiat-ul-Iman, or Strengthening of the Faith, written by Maulavi Muhammad Ismeil of


Dehli.

8.

Tazkfr-ul-Akhawi, or Brotherly Conversation, by the same author.

9.

Nasihat-ul-Muslimin, or Advice to Muhammadans, by Maulavi Karam Ali of Cawnpur.

10.

The Hidayat-ul-Muminin, or Guide to the Faithful, written by Aulad Husain.

11.

Tanwir-ul-Ainain, or Enlightening of the Eyes, an Arabic work.

12.

Tanbih-ul-Ghafilin, or Rebuke of the Negligent, in Urdu.

13.

Chihil Hadis, or the forty traditions of Muhammad regarding Holy War.

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skilful in organizing a permanent system for supplying money and recruits, the
Patna Khalifs stand forth as the types and exemplars of the Sect. Much of their
teaching was faultless, and it has been given to them to stir up thousands of their
countrymen to a purer life, and a truer conception of the Almighty. But a mere
system of morality can never hold together a great sect. The religious element in
the revival soon began to lose its power. Even under the early leaders of the
movement it showed signs of wearing out, and the Khalifs had to appeal more
and more exclusively to their hearers detestation of the Infidel.
The Patna Propaganda clearly perceived this, and suited their teachings to the
new requirements of the times. Instead of trusting to the terrors of an awakened
conscience, they enlisted the more certain and more permanent hatred which the
Indian Muhammadans feel towards the English. They thus transferred the basis
of their teaching from the noblest capabilities of the Musalman heart to the
fanatical fury of the populace. As time went on, they found it necessary
constantly to strengthen the, seditious element in their preaching. They
converted the Patna Propaganda into a Caravanserai for rebels and traitors. They
surrounded it with a labyrinth of walls and outhouses, with one enclosure
leading into another by side-doors, and little secret courts in out-of-the-way
corners. The early Khalifs had threatened to resist the Magistrates warrant by
force of arms, but their successors found a less dangerous defence in a network
of passages, chambers, and outlets. When the Government at length took
proceedings against this nest of conspirators, it found it necessary to procure a
plan of the buildings, just as if it were dealing with a fortified town. The district
missionaries sent up fanatical crowds to the Propaganda. Of these, the greater
part, after having their zeal still further stimulated by the lectures of the Patna
Leaders, were sent off by detachments to the Camp on the Frontier. The more
promising youths were singled out for a longer course of instruction; and after
being thoroughly trained in the doctrine of sedition, were returned as
colporteurs or missionaries to their own Province.
I have been anxious to do full justice to whatever is good in the history of the
Patna Khalifs. Starting with an admirable system of morality, they by degrees
abandoned the spiritual element in their teaching, and strengthened their
declining cause by appealing to the worst passions of the human heart. I shall
afterwards give a sample of the sermons of the Missionaries whom they have
trained. Here is a specimen of the teaching by which that training is affected. The
Propaganda ceaselessly insists that the Indian Muhammadan who would save
himself from hell, has the single alternative of War against the Infidel or Flight 1
from the accursed land. No True Believer can live loyal to our Government
without perdition to his soul. Those who would deter others from Holy War or

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Flight86 are in heart hypocrites. Let all know this. In a country where the ruling
religion is other than Muhammadanism, the religious precepts of Muhammad
cannot be enforced. It is incumbent on Musalmans to join together, and wage
war upon the Infidels. Those who are unable to take part in the fight should
emigrate to a country of the True Faith. At the present time in India, flight is a
stern duty. He, who denies this, let him declare himself a slave to sensuality. He
who having gone away returns again let him know that all his past services are
vain. Should he die in India, he will lose the way of salvation.
In short, Oh Brethren, we ought to weep over our state, for the Messenger of God
is angered with us because of our living in the land of the Infidel. When the
Prophet of God himself is displeased with us, to whom shall we look for shelter?
Those whom God has supplied with the means should resolve upon flight, for a
fire is raging here. If we speak the truth, we shall be hanged; and if we remain
silent, injury is done to our faith.87
Besides their seditious literature, and the Central Propaganda at Patna, the
Wahabis have a permanent machinery throughout the rural districts for
spreading their faith. Dangerous firebrands as the local missionaries sometimes
prove, I find it impossible to speak of them without respect. Most of them start
life as youths of enthusiastic piety; many of them retain their zeal for religion to
the end, with singularly little tincture of the poisonous doctrines in which the
Patna preachers have trained them. The civilized man, cribbed within cities, and
only permitted to move about this world clogged with luggage, and in the
ceaseless society of fellow-travellers, can with difficulty realize the
unencumbered life and isolated wanderings of the Wahabi Missionary. We all
feel that the soul gathers sanctity in solitude, and perhaps the pilgrim on his
lonely foot journey through forest and over mountain thinks purer and fresher
thoughts than the work-a-day in-door world. Certain it is that the Wahibi
Missionary furnishes, so far as my experience goes, the most spiritual and least
selfish type of the sect. Englishmen love to believe that their ancestors, when at
their best, lived more in the open in Merry England than we do now; and
childhood leaves no more refreshing memories to the life-wearied man than
reminiscences of the out-door scenery through which, in the great Christian
allegory, the pilgrim passes from the town of Destruction to the Celestial City.
This Forest of Arden spirit reached its highest development in ancient India,
where the friendliness of nature rendered unnecessary those contrivances which
in colder climates elevate mans shelter into his home. The Sanskrit scheme of life
86

Jihad or Hijra.

87

Jama Tafasir, printed at Dehli, 1867. Calcutta Review, cii. p. 391. The first paragraph is condensed
from idem, p. 393.

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required that each householder sprung from the chosen race should, after
begetting children into the world, leave his kindred and dwell apart in the forest.
Every popular tale introduces us to some venerable eremite beside a running
stream, and the most charming scenes of Sakuntala are those which discover the
maiden surrounded by tame fawns in her forest glade. The Wahabi leaders have
skillfully availed themselves of this national hankering in India after a solitary
life. Even the refuse of great cities, when they have exhausted their fortunes by
dissipation, or wearied out by their crimes the patience of the law, can obtain a
sort of sanctity by joining a religious order, and retiring to the mountains, or
travelling companionless from province to province. Much more does the
blameless, lonely life of the Wahabi Missionary render him an object of interest
to the villagers upon his route. Throughout many months of the year he enters
the door of no human dwelling. He comes from a distant Province, and during
the long journey he admits no companion, save perhaps a faithful disciple, to
interrupt his self-communings. His serenity of demeanor and indifference to
external surroundings make him a visibly different being from ordinary men. It
is not surprising therefore, that the villagers cluster around him, and forget for a
moment their disputes about water-courses, and their long standing boundary
feuds. The preacher does not always inculcate treason, but only those doctrines
which lead their adopters into treason; doctrines which, to use Bacons
impressive aphorism, do dissolve and deface the laws of charity and of human
society, and bring down the spirit of God, instead of in the likeness of a dove, in
the shape of a vulture or raven. Some of the missionaries, indeed, refrain
altogether from poisonous teachings of this sort. In 1870, when travelling
through the fanatical Eastern Districts of Bengal, I heard of such a case; and I
should be very sorry if I were supposed to use the term Wahabi as a synonym for
traitor. A Wahabi preacher had appeared in a lonely village, and forthwith
several thousand Muhammadans gathered around him. The Hindus of the
neighbourhood dreaded one of those outbursts of zeal against the Infidel in
which such conventicles often end, and hurried off messengers to the
Headquarters of the District for help. But the preacher, while fulminating against
the corrupt life and idolatrous practices of his Muhammadan hearers, refused
altogether to touch upon the doctrine of Religious Rebellion. Such mere
moralities were by no means what the people had come out into the wilderness
to hear, and the disappointed multitude melted away. By the time the Hindu
messengers returned, they found the so-called apostle of treason absolutely
deserted by his co-religionists, and dependent upon the Hindu villagers for fire
and a little rice.
Generally speaking, the Wababi Missionary has little to fear from the British
Officers of the Districts through which he passes; and, indeed, his favorite
preaching-ground is the open shady space thronged with suitors outside the
Magistrates Court. The first preacher whose acquaintance I made was encamped

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in the avenue of the Commissioners Circuit House. It was only an old man
talking to a group of Musalmans under a pipal tree. Close by, an undersized
reddish pony, with a large head fixed on a lanky neck, tried to switch off the flies
from a saddle-gall by means of a very ragged tail. The poor beast, his fore-feet
tied together with grass rope, hopped painfully from one tuft of verdure to
another, occasionally turning his head round savagely on some fly beyond the
reach of the ragged tail, but soon relapsing with outs stretched neck into the
listlessness of an animal utterly worn out with travel. The old man had a fresh
complexion and a long white beard. He mumbled his words a little, but not
enough to hide the vigorous North-country inflection with which he delivered
his sentences. He himself seemed very much in earnest, but his eight or ten
hearers listened with stupid eyes, and, saving a slight obeisance when they
departed, came and went with all the freedom of a street preachers congregation
in England. It was the month of May, and the old man vehemently denounced
the follies of the coming festival. By no means careful not to offend, he told his
hearers that they would wear their new clothes on their old hearts; that they
would stun their ears with the lutes and drums of the Bengali unbelievers till
they were deaf to the simple truths of the Kuran; and that the whole festival of
the Muharram, its sham fights, its feigned mourning, its wild feasting, its mock
penitence, were utterly abominable to God and his Prophet.
The Musalmans of a quiet village in Western Bengal are not the best sort of soil
for a Reformer to cast his seed into; and as the group broke up at the close of the
harangue, public opinion, although divided, was mainly against the preacher.
One said: This man would have us let the lamp go out at the tomb of our father.
Another: He forbids the drums and dancing-girls at the marriage of our
daughters. A third was more favorable: Yet he knows the seventy-seven
thousand six hundred and thirty-nine words of the Kuran. He says well too, that
the Book (Al-Kitab) bids us pray only to God. Truly he is a Doctor of the Law.
This view, however, was controverted by a Mulla, or crier from the Mosque, who
authoritatively ended the discussion. This fellow, he said, is a follower of the
false Imam who took the Holy Cities by the sword, closed up the path of
pilgrimage, and wrote on the door of the Pure House, There is no God but one
God, and Saud is his Prophet (La, ilaha illa-llah, Sa'ud Rasul illah)
Altogether the sermon fell rather flat, and the preacher was aware of it. The
crowd, when dispersed, left a residue of two Musalmans in very soiled clothes,
who appeared to be fellow-travellers of the preacher, and who watched his every
motion with reverence. He talked to them in low earnest tones for some time,
and then composed himself to sleep, while his dirty disciples fanned him by
turns. The jaded pony, too, gave up any further search after the parched tufts of
grass, and, forgetful of his daily wrongs, went to sleep standing under an
adjacent tree. In the cool of the evening the party departed as it came, unnoticed;

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the old man on the little pony, and the two soiled followers trudging along on
either side of him.
It must be remembered that the Indian Wahabis are only a small fragment of a
great sect. The unsuccessful preacher is the representative of many thousand
earnest men at this moment wandering over Asia, sometimes acknowledged,
sometimes ignored, at the mosques ; speaking various tongues, but all devoted to
the one great work of purifying the creed of Muhammad, as Hildebrands monks
purged the Church of Rome.
It is one of the misfortunes attendant on the British Rule in India, that this
Reformation should be inseparably linked with hatred against the Infidel
Conquerors. But everywhere, any attempt by the Muhammadans to return to the
first principles of their Faith involves a revolt against the ruling power; for even
the most orthodox Musalman State has had to mould those principles to the
necessities of Civil Government. Mecca itself; the stronghold of Islam, is the place
throughout all the world where the sect is most feared and detested. In the last
few pages I have sketched the Wahabi emissary under his milder aspects; but
many of them are simply men who live by pandering to the fanatical sedition of
the lowest classes of their countrymen. The following is a specimen of the
harangues by which they perpetuate the old Muhammadan hatred against
British Rule. The first duty of a Musalman is Religious Rebellion; and to those
who reply that such Rebellion is impracticable under the British Power, they
answer that the only alternative is flight. The land, and everything that grows on
it, are accursed so long as an Infidel Government rules. I have already given
examples of the Wahabi exhortations to Holy War, in prose and verse. Here are
the arguments by which they persuade the ignorant peasantry of Eastern Bengal,
that as they cannot rise en masse, the only way to escape eternal torment is to
quit their homesteads, and emigrate wholesale from the country of the Infidel:
In the name of God. The merciful and kind God is all goodness. He is the Lord of
the Universe. May divine kindness and safety attend Muhammad His
Messenger and all his descendants and companions. Know ye that all
Muhammadans are bound to leave a country which is governed by the Infidel, in
which acting according to the Muhammadan law is forbidden by the ruling
power: If they do not abandon it, then in the hour of death, when their souls will
be separated from their bodies, they will suffer great torments. When the Angel
of Death will come to separate their souls from their bodies, he will ask them this
question. Was not the kingdom of God spacious enough to enable you to leave
your homes and settle in another country? And saying this, he will subject them
to great pain in separating their souls from their bodies. Afterwards they will
suffer the torments of the grave without intermission, and on the Day of
Judgment they will be cast into hell where they will suffer eternal punishment.

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May God forbid that Muhammadans should die in a country ruled over by the
Infidel.
Make your escape now. Go to a country which is governed by Musalmans, and
live there in the land of the Faithful. If you reach it alive, then all the sins of your
life will be forgiven. Do not trouble yourself about the means of livelihood. God,
who provides for all, will give you food wherever you may be.
In the Holy Traditions it is written how an Israelite who had murdered ninetynine men went to a man of God, confessed his crimes, and asked how he could
obtain forgiveness. The man of God answered: If any person unjustly kills even
one man, he will certainly be damned. Your sins will not be forgiven; you will
certainly go to hell. Hearing this, the Israelite said: I must go to hell that is
certain. I shall therefore kill you in order to make up a hundred murders. He
then killed the holy man, and, going to another holy man, confessed that he had
committed one hundred murders, and asked how he could obtain forgiveness.
This man of God answered: By sincere repentance and the performance of
Flight from the land of the Infidel. As soon as he heard this he repented of his
sins, and leaving his country, set out for a foreign land. On the way death
approached, and both the Angelsviz. the Angel of Mercy and the Angel of
Punishmentappeared to separate his soul from his body. The Angel of Mercy
said that he would separate the mans soul from his body because he had
repented of his sins and performed Flight. The Angel of Punishment admitted
that if the man had succeeded in reaching another kingdom, the office would
have belonged to the Angel of Mercy; but that he claimed the right of performing
the operation, and of subjecting the man to torments, because he had not
succeeded in completing the Flight to a land of the True Believers. Then both
Angels measured the land on which the man was lying, and found that one of his
feet had crossed the boundary, and lay within a kingdom of Islam. On this the
Angel of Mercy, declaring that his right was established, painlessly separated the
soul from his body, and the man was admitted amongst the favored of God. You
have heard how Religious Flight is rewarded in the next world. Therefore pray to
God for grace to enable all of you to perform Flight, and to perform it quickly,
lest you die in an infidel country.88
But besides their teeming literature of treason, their Central Propaganda at Patna,
and their Missionaries wandering throughout the length and breadth of Bengal,
the Wahabis have invented a fourth organization for reaching the seditious
masses. The earlier Khalifs favored the efforts of their emissaries to effect a
permanent settlement wherever the multitude of their converts encouraged their
doing so. A number of Traitor Settlements have thus been established
88

Abbreviated from Calcutta Review, cii. pp. 388-389.

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throughout rural Bengal. These District-Centers of treason keep up a regular


correspondence with the Propaganda at Patna, and each has its own machinery
for raising money and recruits, complete within itself. In 1870 two such DistrictCenters were broken up, and their chief preachers, after impartial trial by the
Courts, sentenced to transportation for life and forfeiture of property. The
evidence which then came out might well appal any alien Government less
confident in its own integrity than that of British India. I shall briefly narrate the
history of one of the prisoners.
About thirty years ago, one of the Khalifs89 came on a missionary tour to Maldah
District in Lower Bengal. The field proving good, he settled for several years in a
village, married one of the daughters of the place, and established himself as a
schoolmaster. The children of the petty proprietors flocked to the learned man,
and in this way he insinuated himself into the landed families of the District. He
preached rebellion with great force and unction, accustomed the people to a
regular system of contributions for the Holy War, and forwarded yearly supplies
of money and men to the Propaganda at Patna, for transmission to the Frontier
Camp. One of his tax-collectors, 90 whom he had raised from the rank of an
ordinary peasant, turned out to be a man of zeal and talent. He received a fourth
of the collections as salary, and gradually became a ruling elder in the village.
For many years he carried on his business undisturbed, but about 1853 the
Magistrates suspicions were aroused. The religious tax-gatherers house was
searched, and letters were found proving the seditious character of his trade, and
his connection with the Holy War which the Frontier Camp had shortly before
tried to stir up in the Panjab.91
The District-Centre was arrested, but, with our usual contempt for petty
conspirators, was shortly afterwards released. His brief imprisonment sufficed,
however, to make it dangerous for him to continue his treasonable levies, and he
resigned his office as religious tax-gatherer to his son.92 His successor proved
himself worthy of the post; and, to use the neutral-tinted and indeed gently
appreciative words of the officer in charge of his case93 from that time up to the
date of his trial, he seems to have honestly exerted himself to the utmost in
sustaining the Religious War by recruits. All this he did wholly undisturbed by
89

Abd-ur-Rahmin, a native of Lucknow, appointed to the Caliphate by one of the original Khalifs,
Wilayat Ali.
90

Rafik Mandal.

91

In 1852, when the 4th Native Infantry were tampered with, and the Patna Magistrate reported the
growth of the sect, and their determination to resist further inquiries in that city by force of arms.
92

Maulavi Amir-ud-din of Maldah.

93

Report filed with the Record of the Maldah Trial of 1870. Official Papers.

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the District Authorities. An English Magistrate in India has the reluctance of a


prefect of the Augustan Empire to intermeddle with the various beliefs or
superstitions of the races over whom he rules. Treason can thus safely walk
about under a religious habit. But the State Trial94 at Patna in 1865 disclosed the
Maldah District-Centres share in the general conspiracy. In spite of this warning,
however, he continued his levies of money and men for the Frontier War; openly
went from village to village preaching rebellion; and in 1868, when he found the
liberality of his people slackening, brought down the son of the Patna Khalif to
assist him in reviving their zeal. His jurisdiction extended over three separate
Districts; 95 and for several days journey down the Ganges the ignorant
Musalman peasantry on both banks, and on the islands which the river has
thrown up in its bed, owned his control. The number of recruits whom he sent to
the Frontier Camp can never be ascertained; but at a single one of the Traitor
outposts on our Frontier, containing 430 fighting men, more than ten percent had
been supplied from his jurisdiction.
His system of pecuniary levies was simple and complete. He grouped together
the villages into fiscal clusters, and to each cluster he appointed a chief taxgatherer. This officer, on his part, appointed a village collector to every hamlet,
checked their collections, and transmitted the proceeds to the District-Centre. As
a rule, each village had one tax-gatherer but in populous villages a larger staff
was employed, consisting of the priest,96 who led the prayers and gathered the
contributions; the general manager97 a or Deacon, who looked after the worldly
affairs of the sect; and an officer98 who supplied messengers for dangerous letters,
and for transmitting the oblations of treason.
These oblations are of four kinds. The first is a tax of two and a half per cent. on
all property held in possession during the lunar year. It bears the name of Legal
Alms,99 and has from the first been devoted to war against the Infidel. This tax,
however, only falls upon property above a certain value, and the Patna Khalif100
94

In the matter of Maulavi Ahmad-ullah, who was convicted of treason, and sentenced by the Sessions
Court to death and forfeiture of property, the capital part of his sentence being afterwards mitigated to
transportation for life.
95

Including the whole of Maldah, and parts of the Districts of Murshidabad and Rajshahi.

96

Din-ke-sardar.

97

Dunya-ke-sardar.

98

Dak-ke-sardar.

99

Zakat.

100

Inayat Ali.

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on his return from the Frontier Camp found its proceeds inadequate to support
the Holy War. He accordingly appropriated the voluntary alms given for
indigent persons at the Mosque, and thus confiscated the patrimony of the poor
to the purpose of rapine and revolt. Such alms are bestowed as a solemn
religious duty on the great Muhammadan festival of the year. To the month of
fasting and humiliation101 succeeds an ecstasy of religious rejoicing.102 But before
entering the Mosque to hear the festival prayers, the devout Musalman believes
that he must distribute of his substance to the poor, or the whole penance of the
past thirty days will be refused by God. It was these offerings103 which the Patna
Khalif swept into the Traitors purse. He also invented a new tax, from which
even the poorest could not escape. He commanded every head of a family to put
aside a handful104 of rice for each member of his household at every meal, and to
deposit it after the Friday prayers with the village collector. In this way stores of
grain were gathered together, and publicly sold on behoof of the Holy War. Such
imposts, however, represented only the minimum which the religious taxgatherers had a right to exact. The provident Khalif took care that ample scope
should be given for the zeal of new converts, or for the sudden impulses
produced by a stirring sermon. He accordingly devised an extraordinary cess, to
be bestowed at intervals as a voluntary donation, over and above the regular
taxes which his collectors demanded as a matter of right. The tax-gatherers-inchief made an annual tour, each through his own group of villages, at the time of
the great festival, and took care that every family had paid up its dues for the
past twelve months in full.
District-Centers of equal ability in levying money and recruits are scattered over
Bengal, and the unfortunate man whom I have selected as an example was only
one of many. His Headquarters lay upon the great thoroughfare from Lower
Bengal to the North-West, and formed a halting-place for every seditious
preacher who travelled up or down. The two Khalifs who testified to the death
on the Frontier105 had partaken of his hospitality. One of the present leaders of
the Rebel Camp106 had also stayed with him en route; and many District-Centers,
together with the heads of the Patna Propaganda, have been his guests. His

101

Ramazan.

102

Id-ul-fitr, or Ramazan-ki-Id.

103

Fitr.

104

Mutthi.

105

Intiyat Ali and Maksud Ali.

106

Fyaz Ali.

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town107 formerly lay on the right bank of the Ganges, at a distance from the
Headquarters of the District, or from any police village belonging to it. Even the
great convulsions of nature which destroyed the town helped to spread the cause.
The Ganges, in one of its huge writhings backwards and forwards across the
country, ate away the land on its right bank, so that not a vestige of the Wahabi
Settlement remains. The inhabitants dispersed, some to a newly-formed island
near the left bank of the river, others to various inland hamlets; and wherever
they went, each little party became a centre of sedition. As the river throws up
new land, a Wahabi colony immediately takes possession, and forms the nucleus
of a new village.
It may well be supposed that so permanent and so widely spread a disaffection
has caused grave anxiety to the Indian Government. During the past seven years,
one traitor after another has been convicted and transported for life. Indeed, each
of the fanatic wars on our Frontier has produced its corresponding State Trial
within our Territory. At this moment a large body of prisoners, drawn from
widely distant Districts are suffering for their common crimes or awaiting their
trial. Since the first edition of this work appeared, a month ago, another band,
five in number have been sentenced by the Sessions Court to transportation for
life. It is difficult to speak of those who have been convicted without prejudice to
the chance of escape of those who have yet to be tried; for the evidence already
on record mixes up the names of both. Yet these State Trials form one of the most
curious phenomena in Indian History; and without using the details furnished
by them, it is impossible to follow the ramifications of the chronic conspiracy in
Bengal. I shall therefore select the one which is furthest removed from the
pending proceedings in point of time, and carefully exclude everything which
might tend to the prejudice of any of the unfortunate men awaiting their trial,
but not yet adjud0 guilty by the law.
The trial of 1864 was the natural outcome of the disastrous fanatic war in 1863.
Unlike the judicial proceedings of previous years, it was no longer a few sepoys
of a Native Regiment, or an isolated preacher of sedition, whose treason had to
be inquired into, but a widely ramified conspiracy spread over distant Provinces,
and furnished with ample machinery for secrecy and self-defence. In July 1864,
Sir Herbert Edwardes, as Sessions Judge at Amballa, delivered judgment in a
State Trial which had occupied the Court during nearly twenty sittings. Eleven
Musalman subjects of the British Crown stood at the bar charged with high
treason. Among them were representatives of every rank of Muhammadan
society priests of the highest family, an army contractor and wholesale butcher, a
scrivener, a soldier, an itinerant preacher, a house-steward, and a husbandman
They had been defended by English Counsel; they had had the full advantage
107

Narayanpur.

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both of technical pleas in bar and of able pleadings on the merits of the case; six
of their countrymen had sat as Assessors with the Judge on the bench ; and the
trial ended in the condemnation of eight of them to transportation for life, and of
the remaining three to the last penalty of the law.
The vast Northern Presidency contains races of many shades of colour, and of
great diversity of dialect; and it would be easier for an Italian to pass as an
Englishman in London, than for a Bengali to play the Panjabi at Peshawar. Our
officers noticed, during the frontier campaign of 1858, that numbers of the enemy
slain in battle had the unmistakable dark, sallow complexion which is imparted
by the steamy swamps of Lower Bengal. The clue, however, could not be
followed up at that time. At the end of the campaign the Irregular Horse were
reduced, and several of the deserving men enrolled in the Mounted Police. One
of them, a Panjabi Musalman,108 soon rose to the rank of sergeant in a District109
near Ambilla. In May 1863, while on his rounds one morning, he descried four
foreigners proceeding along the Great North Road. Their diminutive stature,
dingy complexion, and puny beards, reminded the old soldier of the Bengali
traitors he had seen amid the dead on the battle-field in 1858. He got into
conversation with them, worked himself into their secrets, and at length elicited
that they were Bengali emissaries from Malka, on their way back to their native
province to arrange for the forwarding of fresh supplies of money and men.
The tall Northerner at once arrested the four traitors. They appealed to him as a
brother Muhammadan, and offered him any bribe he would name, to be paid by
a certain scrivener, Jafar Khan, in the neighbouring market town of Thineswar.
But the old soldier proved faithful to his salt, and forthwith sent them before the
Magistrate. There can be little doubt, if that officer had at once committed these
four Bengalis, the whole conspiracy would have been detected; the Fanatics
would not have ventured to attack our Guide Corps; and the British Empire
would have been spared a bloody campaign. But at that time the Empire was in
profound peace; Thaneswar is a quiet inland district; High Treason is a rare
crime; false charges by the Indian Police for the purpose of extorting money are
the commonest occurrences. The Magistrate, in refusing to commit the four
peaceable wayfarers, only acted in the way which, in ninety-nine out of a
hundred cases, would have been consonant with substantial justice.
This, however, happened to be the hundredth case.
The Sergeant of Mounted Police took affront at the release of his prisoners. The
feeling that his report had been doubted preyed upon his high Panjabi spirit, and
108

Guzan Khan by name.

109

Karnal.

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he still felt perfectly certain that a great unseen danger was about to break upon
our Empire.
He devised an enterprise hardly surpassed in the legends of Spartan fortitude or
the annals of Roman fidelity. To abandon his post without leave would have
been desertion; but he had a son in his native village, far in the North, whom he
loved better than anything upon earth, except the family honour. Between his
village and the Frontier lay our outposts, all on the alert to stop any stray
plunderer or absconding traitor. Beyond the Frontier were the Fanatics, on the
eve of their great act of overt hostility to the Crown, and in the last degree
suspicious of any stranger not forwarded in the regular manner by their agents
within our Empire. The father, well knowing that his son, if he escaped being
hanged at our outposts as a traitor on his way to join the Rebel Camp, ran a very
imminent risk of being strangled by the Wahabis as a spy, commanded his boy in
the name of the family honour to go to Malaka and not to return till he could
bring back the names of the conspirators within our territory who were aiding
the Fanatics outside.
The son received the letter, and next day disappeared from the village. What
were his sufferings and hair-breadth escapes, none but his own family knows.
But it came out in evidence that he completely deceived the Wahabis, joined in
their descent upon Sittana, repassed our outposts unscathed, and turning neither
to the left nor to the right, presented himself one evening at his fathers hut,
many hundred miles inland, worn out by travel, want, and disease, but charged
with the secret, that Munshi Jafar of Thineswar, whom men call Khalifs., was the
great man who passed up the Bengalis and their carbines and rifles. Now Jafar
was the scrivener in the market town of Thaneswar, who would have at once
paid the bribe, if the Sergeant had let the four travellers go.
I can recall no more touching picture of prisca fides than that stern Panjabi father,
riding proudly and silently on his daily rounds, brooding over his distrusted
word, and, as the months passed, growing sick and more sick regarding the fate
of the son, whose life he had imperilled to redeem his honour, and to save the
foreign masters who had doubted it. Before such a revenge our cautious English
sense of duty must stand penitent and uncovered. Yet it is some comfort to
remember that, if the Indian Government has at times committed grave mistakes,
it has not forgotten amply to redress them.
The private history of Jafar, scrivener in the market town of Thaneswar, is full of
interest. Born in a very humble rank, he raised himself by force of character to
Headman 110 of his township. One day he chanced to stop and listen to the
110

Lambardar, or Fiscal Representative of the township, in dealing with the officers of Government.

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discourse of an itinerant Wahabi preacher. The religious feelings of the


prosperous townsman were awakened. He pondered upon the corrupted
ceremonial of the mosques, and after passing through a deep spiritual darkness,
not unlike that which John Bunyan experienced, he openly professed himself a
Wahabi, and threw his whole nature into the work of religious reform.
The new convert devoted much time to self-examination, and rigidly kept
account with his soul. He began to write his religious experiences; and these,
under the title of the Counsels of Jafar, form one of the most interesting
documents ever filed in a State Trial.
I commence writing this book on Tuesday, 18th Zulhijja, 1278 Hijra. 111 The
completion is in the hand of God. I have not followed any particular method, but
simply note down the events, both relating to the Faith and to the world, in
which I have from time to time taken part. I further wish to make known that
this world is transitory. Man, genie, angel, beast, tree, whatsoever has had its
origin in it, shall perish each at its appointed time. None but God remains eternal.
Whoever has come into the world, had he lived for 1000 years, has carried
nothing away with him but remorse. My own state is as follows. Up to ten years
of age I received no education. On my fathers death, when I was about ten or
twelve, and my younger brother only six months, I came under the guardianship
of my mother, who was quite uneducated, and whose religious training had been
neglected. As a boy I took no thought of learning, and used to wander about as a
vagabond; but when I got a little sense, I commenced reading.
Associating myself with the Petition-writers in 1856, it came to pass that all the
Pleaders and Petition-writers consulted me as to the Rules, Regulations, and Acts
of the Legislature, and I came to be above them all. Petition-writers were a sort of
unregistered pettifoggers, who wrote out the plaints of suitors in the Magistrates
Court, at a fee varying from sixpence to two shillings. Jafar had a large practice,
but the money thus gained in the Infidels Court seemed to do him no good; on
the contrary, by this profession I obtained great injury to my faith. It is not well
to follow this calling. Had I not adopted it, my religious state would have been
much better. My mode of livelihood has been detrimental to me in regard to the
pleasures of worshipping and of high piety. When I had leisure from the Courts,
even for a couple of days, my state became good. The mere contact with the
Musalman employees of the Unbeliever, which was the drawback attending my
position, acted as poison on my soul.

111

June 1862.

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Jafars legal reputation spread notwithstanding his dislike of the profession, and
he was retained as family adviser by some of the powerful landholders in the
neighbourhood. He seems to have been a singularly sincere man, never allowing
his temporal success to interfere with his eternal interests. Every one who came
near him owned his influence, and, like Muhammad, he began by converting his
own household. One of these, his clerk, remained faithful to his master in his
direst extremity, and stood by his side as a fellow-witness to the Faith in the dock
of the Sessions Court at Amballa.
When the mutiny of 1857 broke out, Jafar chose twelve of his most trustworthy
disciples, and repaired to the Rebel Camp. Even in the unwonted work of
fighting his force of character made him conspicuous, and he gained the
reputation of being a man fit to be trusted with treasonable secrets. Upon the
downfall of the rebel hopes at Dehli, he returned to his attorneys business at
Thanes-war, brooding over the inscrutable decree of Providence which had given
victory to the Unbelievers, and more than ever discontented with what he calls
this exceedingly dirty business of Petition-writing. Open force had failed, and it
remained to be seen what could be effected by secret conspiracy. Jafar soon
became a member of the widespread Wahabi confederacy. His secret duties
threw a religious halo even over his detested profession; for be it known, he
writes at this period, I do this by order of a Certain Person, and for a Hidden
Object.112
This Certain Person was Maulavi Yahya Ali of Patna, Spiritual Director of the
Wahabi sect in India. The Hidden Object was the forwarding of recruits and
munitions of war to the Wahabi colony on the Mahaban, then in open hostilities
against the British Crown.
I have already described the Patna Propaganda, of which Yahya Ali was then the
head. Long before the trial of 1864 the place had been known throughout India as
a hospice of the reformed sect. The buildings lay on the left hand side of the
Sadikpur Lane, with a considerable frontage, and ran back some distance from
the street. Their exteriors had that mournful dilapidated look which the brick
and stucco buildings of India assume after the first wet season, and which
presents such a squalid contrast to our preconceptions of the gorgeous East. The
most important edifice of the group was a very plain mosque, in which public
prayer was offered up each hour of the day, and a khotba or sermon every
Friday. These Friday lectures were vehement harangues, insisting above all on
the duty of War against the Infidel, but also exposing the inefficacy of works
112

Sir Herbert Edwardes, in delivering sentence, thus summed up Jafars character. It is impossible to
exceed the bitter hostility, treasonable activity, and mischievous ability of this prisoner. He is an educated
man and a Headman in his village. There is no doubt of his guilt, and no palliation of it.Record of the
Amballa State Trial in 1864; Official Papers.

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without faith, warning the hearers of their great spiritual danger, and urging
them to cultivate the Inward Life. They contrasted the simple worship of the
Prophet with the cumbrous ritual, the endless mummeries, bowings, and
genuflexions of the mosques, and bitterly inveighed against those who refused to
accept the Wahabi alternative of Insurrection or Flight.
Generally speaking, they inculcated a spiritual standard much higher than
ordinary natures are capable of; and the hearers, although deeply impressed at
the moment, carried away only a permanent recollection of having been
rendered exceedingly uncomfortable. The preachers of some of the other city
mosques, moreover, while forced to acknowledge the learning and eloquence of
the Sadikpur Lane preachers, denounced them as rejecters of holy sacraments
and unitarian schismatics.
Yahya Ali, Chief Priest and Khalif, ruled over the Propaganda with a firm but
gentle hand. The recruits whom the itinerant missionaries sent up in flocks from
the Districts of Lower Bengal he kindly received at the hospice. The better sort of
them he carefully trained up as preachers, while those destined immediately for
the Rebel Camp were handed over to a lay brother, who fanned their zeal for the
conflict without troubling them very much with matters of doctrine. This lay
brother113 was the bursar of the Propaganda, and a most useful man. Not less
expert than Chaucers gentil manciple, he managed the whole temporal affairs of
the hospice, daily harangued the recruits on the high duty of Holy War, and even
delivered occasional prelections on divinity to the theological students, when the
Chief Priest, under whose care they properly fell,, was otherwise engaged. What
he did, he did with perfect sincerity of heart, and at the last stood undaunted by
his masters side in the dock at Amballa.
The Chief Priest, Yahya Ali, had many duties. He corresponded with all the
itinerant preachers as Spiritual Director of the sect in India. He organised and
personally worked a complicated system of drafts in a secret language, by which
he safely transmitted large sums from the centre of the Empire to the Rebel
Camp beyond the Frontier. He conducted the public ministrations in the mosque.
He examined and passed the rifles for the Fanatic Host, delivered a course of
divinity lectures to the students, and by private study acquired an intimate
acquaintance with the Arabic Fathers.
But the most delicate operation of the conspirators was the transmission of
recruits from the Patna Propaganda, or Little Warehouse, as it was called in their
secret language, to the Great Warehouse or Rebel Camp beyond the Frontier. The
Bengali convert was liable to a hundred awkward questions en route. He had to
113

Abd-ul-ghaffir.

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march nearly two thousand miles across the wide provinces of the North-West
and the Panjab, where in every village his physical appearance and language
stamped him as a foreigner. It was in this dangerous work that Yahya Alis
genius for administration most fully developed itself. He organised a system of
Wahabi hospices along the route, and placed each under the charge of a proven
disciple. He thus divided the Great North Road into convenient sections, and the
traitors on their way to the Rebel Camp journeyed in safety through strange
Provinces, in the full assurance that at the end of each stage there were friends
upon the look-out for their arrival. The heads of the wayside hospices were men
of diverse ranks of life, but all devoted to the overthrow of the British Rule, and
each the president of a local committee of conspirators. Yahya Ali showed an
admirable knowledge of character in selecting these men, for neither fear of
detection nor hope of reward induced a single one of them to appear against
their leader in the hour of his fall.
Above all, he was a man of good birth, and kept things smooth with the British
authorities at Patna. One of his family held an honorary post under our
Government, while another led the Fanatic Host in its raids upon our Frontier.
Seldom have more impressive words been uttered in a Court of Justice than
those in which Sir Herbert Edwardes passed sentence of death upon this man :
It is proved, he said, against the prisoner Yahya Ali, that he has been the
mainspring of the great treason which this trial has laid bare. He has been the
religious preacher, spreading from his mosque at Patna, under the most solemn
sanctions, the hateful principles of the Orescentade. He has enlisted subordinate
Agents to collect money and preach the Moslem Jihad (War against the Infidel).
He has deluded hundreds and thousands of his countrymen into treason and
rebellion. He has plunged the Government of British India, by his intrigues, into
a Frontier War, which has cost hundreds of lives. He is a highly educated man,
who can plead no excuse of ignorance. What he has done, he has done with
forethought, resolution, and the bitterest treason. He belongs to a hereditarily
disloyal and fanatical family. Re aspires to the merit of a religious reformer; but
instead of appealing to reason and to conscience, like his Hindu fellowcountrymen in Bengal, of the Brahma Samaj, he seeks his end in political
revolution, and madly plots against the Government, which probably saved the
Muhammadans of India from extinction, and certainly brought in religious
freedom.
Jafar the Scrivener, and Yahya Ali the Chief Priest, have claimed the first place
among the prisoners of 1864, as the two religious heads of the Conspiracy. But
even their talents for treason pale before those of Muhammad Shafi, wholesale
butcher in Dehli, and meat supplier to the British Forces in the Panjab. This man
was the son of one of the great trading houses of Northern India. The origin of
his familys connection with Government takes us back to the wars of Warren

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Hastings and Lord. Cornwallis. Muhammads great-grandfather and grandfather


were humble graziers, who, partly by speculation, partly by rigid economy,
raised themselves considerably in the world. It was a period better fitted for
making fortunes than for keeping them. War prices ruled, and the armies,
constantly in motion, compelled our Commissariat to seek the acquaintance of
the cattle-contractors of Northern India. It is possible that the family fortunes of
the traitor owed their rise to the great famine of 1769, which first awakened the
people of England to their responsibilities in India. During the last decades of the
century, I find the grandfather in a highly responsible position, executing heavy
contracts to the perfect satisfaction of the officers in charge of the Commissariat.
Muhammads father greatly enlarged the scope of these transactions. Besides the
money required for advances to the smaller cattle-breeders, he had a surplus
capital which he lent out on the safest securities, and at the highest interest. His
son succeeded to a vast fortune, but true to the Indian instinct of following his
fathers craft, he devoted himself with energy to the family trades; and it was as a
great banker and wholesale butcher that he carried on the nefarious operations
which landed him in the condemned cell at Amballa.
As the Chief Priest was the head, so this man was the right hand of the
Conspiracy.
He had agencies in all the chief cities of Hindustan, and held the meat contracts
for the seven chief British Cantonments along the Great North Road. Connected
by blood or by commercial ties with the richest .trading houses of the Panjab, he
formed the centre of an ever-widening circle of dependants, spread all over
Upper India; and his business brought him into contact with the shepherd tribes
far beyond our frontier. He yearly received many hundred thousand pounds
from the British Government; in his dealings he was punctual, and obedient to
servility; and he so hoodwinked the Commissariat Officers, that he obtained a
renewal of his meat contracts for the troops, even after he had been charged with
treason to the Queen.
The widespread influence which he thus acquired as our servant, he applied to
our destruction. He was the banker of the Conspiracy, and skillfully used the
conveniences for transferring money, which Government granted to him as an
Army Contractor, to aid and succour the Rebel Camp. He had nothing of the
religious enthusiast about him. He allowed no foolish fanaticism to lead him into
any indiscretion. He was
guilty of no saintly self-sacrifice. He appears throughout the keen, sharp-sighted,
sordid schemer, deliberately entering into the most perilous transactions for a
correspondingly high profit, and trusting to his clear intellect and high position
to guide him safe through the dangers which beset his path.

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Jafar the Scrivener, and Yahya Ali the Priest, made no pretensions to loyalty,
and sought nothing at our hands. Earnest, conscientious men, they pricked
themselves with the poisoned weapons which a false religion had put into their
hands; and now that, Laertes-like, they have paid the price of their treachery,
history may dwell with emotions almost akin to pity on their fate. But for
Muhammad SUE there can be no such feeling. He licked our hand in order to
bite it. He took usury from his fellow-conspirators, and conducted with a safe
margin of profit an underwriting business in treasonable risks. He stands out
from the band of religionists and minor traitors whom the State Trial of 1864
brought together in the Amballa dock, as one of those gigantic villains whom the
downfall of the Roman Republic produced, and whom the orations of Cicero
have handed down. He combined the heartlessness of Oppianicus with the
caution of Lentulus; and his one fatal step was in not deserting the pirates before
the man-of-war hove in sight.
I have now sketched the four chief figures114 in the group of traitors who, day
after day, stood together in the Amballa Court. I shall briefly dismiss the other
eight with the words in which the Judge passed sentence upon them:
It is proved against the prisoner Rahim, that at his house these treasons have been
carried on. In his premises the Bengali Crescentaders gathered and were lodged. It
was his servant who kept the treasure, fed the recruits, and remitted the
subscriptions to the Fanatics; and it was his brother-in-law, Yahya Ali, who
preached treason at the door of his zenana. His ability is inferior to Yahya Alis,
and he is not so conspicuous but he has done what in him lay against the State.
It is proved against Ilahi Baksh, that he has been the channel through which the
Patna Maulavis forwarded the funds they collected up-country to Jafar at
Thanes-war, to be passed on to Malka and Sittana.
It is proved against Husaini of Patna, that he is a servant of Ilahi Baksh; that he
has been employed by him in effecting remittances for treasonable purposes; that a
large sum of gold muhars was received by him from Abd-ul-Ghaffar, under order
from Yahya Ali; that he sewed them up in a jacket, and so brought them
upcountry from Patna to Dehli, where he delivered them, as he had been ordered,
to the prisoner Jafar. It is also proved that he carried up money orders for Rs.
6000, and that he thoroughly understood the treasonable nature of the service on
which he was engaged.

114

Yahya Ali, the Chief Priest; Abd-ul-Ghaffar, the bursar of the Propaganda at Patna; Jafar, the
scrivener of Thaneswar, who forwarded the recruits through the Panjab; and Muhammad Shifi, the meat
supplier to the British Forces, who cashed the treasonable remittances, and used his position as an Army
Contractor to give information as to the movements of our troops.

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It is proved against Kazi Miyan Jan, that he preached and recruited for the
Crescentade in Bengal, and that he has been an active agent for the Patna
conspirators and the fanatics in the hills, collecting and remitting funds,
forwarding letters, etc. The most treasonable correspondence has been found in his
house, from both Patna and Malka, showing also that he had three or four aliases.
It is proved against Abd-ul-Karim that he was the confidential agent of
Muhammad Shafi (the meat supplier) in cashing the Patna money orders for
treasonable purposes, and that he was in communication with Yahya Ali
concerning these purposes.
It is proved against the prisoner Husaini of Thanes-war that he was a confidential
agent and go-between of the prisoners Muhammad Jafar and Muhammad Shafi
in these treasons, and that he was seized in the act of conveying 290 pieces of
gold115 from Jafar to Muhammad Shafi for remittance to the Queens enemies.
It is proved against Abd-ul-Ghaffar, No. 2,116 that he was a disciple of Yahya Ali
at Patna; that Yahya All deputed him to be the assistant of the prisoner Jafar in
the rebel recruiting depot at Thaneswar; that he did so assist, and that he
corresponded with the prisoner Yahya Ali on treasonable matters.117
The three most conspicuous features of the conspiracy which the trial disclosed,
were the admirable sagacity with which so widely spread a treason had been
organised; the secrecy with which its complicated operations were conducted;
and the absolute fidelity to one another which its members maintained. Its
success depended to some extent upon an ingenious system of aliases, and upon
the secret language of which I give a specimen below.118 But it is impossible to
resist the conviction that the conspirators, with the exception of the army
contractor, were actuated by a conscientious zeal for what they believed to be the
cause of God, and by a firm resolve to abide steadfast to the death. The British
authorities took the wise revenge of denying even to the most treasonable of
them the glory of martyrdom. The highest Court of the Province, after a patient
hearing in appeal, confirmed Sir Herbert Edwardes finding as to their guilt, but
115

Gold Muhars.

116

This was another man of the same name as the Abd-ul-Ghaffar already mentioned.

117

In this account of the Trial of 1864, I have in some places used an article which I put forth at the time,
1864. All the statements are based upon the Certified Record of the Case, upon Letters from the Local
Authorities, or upon Official Reports.
118

A battle is called a lawsuit; God, the Law Agent; Gold Muhars are called large red rubies, large Dehli
gold-embroidered shoes, or large red birds; remittances in Gold Muhars are spoken of as rosaries of red
beads, and remittances in money as the price of books and merchandise; drafts or money orders are called
white stones, the amount being intimated by the number of white beads as on a rosary. Official Papers.

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modified the capital sentence even in the three most flagrant cases to
transportation for life.119
The State Trial of 1864 proved as little effective as the retributive campaign of
1863 to check the zeal of the traitors. Their internal dissensions kept them quiet
for a few years on the Frontier, but meanwhile they vigorously preached the
Holy War within our territory. In Eastern Bengal, every District was tainted with
the treason; and the Muhammadan peasantry down the whole course of the
Ganges, from Patna to the sea, laid apart weekly offerings in aid of the Rebel
Camp. What proportion of these oblations actually reached the Frontier is
doubtful and as the difficulties of transmission increased, the preachers seem to
have felt justified in helping themselves more liberally than their earlier zeal
would have permitted. The fanatical Musalmans of the Delta bear the name not
of Wahabis, but of Faraizis,120 or rejecters of all glosses and non-essential parts of
Islam. They call themselves the New Musalmans, and muster in vast numbers in
the Districts east of Calcutta. We have already seen how, in 1831, a merely local
leader got together between three and four thousand men, beat back a
detachment of the Calcutta Militia, and was only put down by regular troops. In
1843 the sect had attained such dangerous proportions as to form a subject of
special inquiry by Government. The head of the Bengal Police reported that a
single one of their preachers had gathered together some eighty thousand
followers, who asserted complete equality among themselves, looked upon the
cause of each as that of the whole sect, and considered nothing criminal if done
in behalf of a brother in distress. 121 The later Khalifs, especially Yahya Ali,
amalgamated the Faraizis of Lower Bengal with the Wahabis of Northern India
and during the past thirteen years they have been found side by side alike
among the dead on the field of battle, and in the dock of our Courts of Justice.
From 1864 to 1868 the levies of money and men went on as before, and a special
establishment had to be organised to deal with the conspiracy. At this moment
the cost of watching the Wahabis, and keeping them within bounds, amounts in
119

Paras. 182-184 of the Judgment in Appeal by the Judicial Commissioner of the Panjab, dated 24th
August 1864.
120

Faraizis (from the Arabic Farizah, plural Fardiz, the same as Farz) are those who admit the obligation
of only the first two of the five Muhammadan duties, and reject the other three as not based upon the Kuran
or the Hadis. These five sorts of religious commands are: (1st) Farz (hence Faraizi), the rejection of which
makes a man an infidel; (2d) Wajib, the rejection of which makes a man a sinful Musalman; (3d) Sunnat,
which, if not performed, bring down Gods anger or threat (itab); (4th) Mustahabb, the non-fulfillment of
which involves no punishment, but which if performed produce religious merit and reward, e.g. vows; (5th)
Mubah, the performance of which is indifferent. The Faraizis now claim as their founder, not Titu Miyin,
but Sharkat-ullah, who preached in Dacca in 1828.
121

Letters, No. 1001, dated 13th May 1843, and No. 50 of 1847, from the Commissioner of Police for
Bengal, etc.

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a single Province to as much as would suffice for the Administration, Judicial


and Criminal, of a British District containing one-third of the whole population
of Scotland. The evil had so widely diffused itself, that it was difficult to know
where to begin. Each District-Centre spreads disaffection through thousands of
families; but the only possible witnesses against him are his own converts, who
would prefer death to the betrayal of their master.
In 1868, notwithstanding the exertions of the Police within our territory, and of
the military outposts on the Frontier, the fanatic intrigues again involved the
Empire in a costly campaign. In the same year the Maldah Head-Centre
fearlessly brought down the son of the Patna Khalif to preach treason in the heart
of Bengal. The ordinary action of the Courts proved altogether inadequate to the
crisis, and the Government had to have recourse to the special procedure which
had been entrusted to it to meet such cases. As far back as 1818, the Legislature
formally recognised the perils to which a Government, composed like our own of
a small body of foreigners, is perpetually subject from the overwhelming masses
of the conquered population. It accordingly vested the Executive with the power
of arrest in times of conspiracy. A national peril of this sort would be met in
England by a suspension of the Habeas Corpus Act, but such a suspension in
India would be a calamity little less terrible than making over the country to
Martial Law. In the present instance, for example, it is only a single sect of the
Musalmans who are to blame; and the Musalman community, although very
numerous in Eastern Bengal, forms but one-tenth of the population of India. If
any Act corresponding to a general suspension s, of the Habeas Corpus Act were
passed, the Hindus would justly complain that they, the real natives of the
country, were made to suffer for the disloyalty of their deadliest enemies, the
Muhammadans. Indeed, even among the Musalmans themselves, there would be
indignant protests by the Sunni and Shiah sects against being placed under a
common ban with the Wahabi schismatics.
The injustice would be intensified by an influence, happily unknown in England,
but rampant in India. They Bengali, whether rich or poor, wreaks his malice on a
rival, and seeks his revenge against an enemy, not by inconsiderate violence, but
by due course of law. He uses the Courts for the same purpose for which an
Englishman employs a horse-whip, or a Californian his bowie-knife. A criminal
prosecution is the correct form for inflicting personal chastisement, and a general
suspension of in India, what corresponds to the Habeas Corpus Act would place
every man at the mercy of his enemies. The Police Returns in India disclose an
overwhelming proportion of false complaints to true ones, and the Bengali has
reduced the rather perilous business of making out a prima facie Case to an exact
science. A formal interference with the right of Habeas Corpus would give the
signal for a paroxysm of perjury. The innocent would live in constant fear of

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being thrown into prison, and kept there on false charges of treason; the
revengeful and malicious would enjoy a perpetual triumph.
Yet, without a power of arrest in time of sedition, similar to that with which the
suspension of the Habeas Corpus arms the Queens Ministers in England, the
British Rule in India would not be safe a month. The Legislature has therefore
entrusted a modified power of this sort to the Executive as one of its permanent
prerogatives, but has carefully fenced it round so as to prevent the chance of
abuse. Only the Supreme Government can exercise it at all, and the Supreme
Government only by a formal act of the Governor-General in Council. The
preamble further limits its application to purely political cases, affecting the due
maintenance of the Alliances formed by the British Government with foreign
powers, the preservation of tranquility in the territories of native princes entitled
to its protection, and the security of the British Dominions from foreign hostility
and from internal commotion. 122 Special provision is made for the good
treatment of such prisoners. The law carefully demarcates their status from that
of convicted persons, and terms their confinement not imprisonment, but
personal restraint. They enjoy an allowance from the Government. They have
liberty to forward any representation or petition to the Governor-General in
Council direct.123 The officer in charge of such a State prisoner is bound to report
to the head of the Government, whether the degree of confinement is such as
might injure his health, and whether his allowance is adequate to support
himself and his family, according to their rank in life.124 His property generally
remains in his own hands or those of his family. But if Government finds it
necessary to take charge of his estates, they are exempted from sale, whether in
satisfaction of the demands of the land revenue or of the decrees of the Civil
Court. They receive, in fact, all the protection accorded to property under the
Court of Wards. The law takes ample precaution to prevent anything like an
unnecessarily prolonged restraint. Every officer in charge of a State prisoner
arrested by the Executive must report twice a year to the Head of the
Government direct, on the conduct, the health, and the comfort of such State
prisoner, in order that the Governor-General in Council may determine whether
the orders for his detention shall continue in force, or shall be modified.125
There can be little doubt that, had this Act been applied to the confederacy which
the Campaign of 1858 and the subsequent inquiries disclosed, British India
122

Regulation III. of 1818, Clause I.

123

ldem, Clause V.

124

Idem, Clause VI.

125

Regulation III. of 1818, Clause III.

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would have been spared the disastrous Frontier War of 1863. A few well-aimed
arrests would have saved us nearly a thousand soldiers killed or wounded in the
Ambeyla Pass, and many hundred thousand pounds. Even after that calamitous
war, if the conspiracy which the State Trial of 1864 brought to light had been
broken up by a vigorous use of the power of arrest by the Executive, we should
in all probability have been spared the Campaign on the Black Mountain in 1868.
But for reasons which I have dwelt on elsewhere126 the Indian Government is
traditionally loath to recognize the political dangers which environ it and which
from time to time have imperiled its rule. The enormous stake which England
has in India, and the millions sterling which British Capitalists have annually
invested in railways, canals, and other reproductive works since the country
passed under the Crown, would now render even a temporary displacement of
our authority an appalling calamity Costly wars on our Frontier, severe judicial
sentences within our territory, had alike failed to put down the fanatical
confederacy ; and in 1868 the Government at length resolved to vigorously
enforce its power of arresting the offenders.
This measure could be carried out without risk of injury to the innocent, and
without popular agitation of any sort. Lists of the leading traitors in each District
had for several years been in the hands of the authorities, and the Hindu
population looked on their arrest as a thing sooner or later to be expected. The
most conspicuous preachers of sedition were apprehended; the spell which they
had exerted on their followers was broken; and by degrees a phalanx of
testimony was gathered together against those more secret and meaner, although
richer, traitors who managed the remittances, and who, like the Army Contractor
in the Trial of 1864, carried on a profitable business as underwriters of
treasonable risks.
The last seven years have brought forth five great State Trials in Districts many
hundreds of miles apart, but all connected with the self-same conspiracy. Indeed,
each case seems inevitably to give rise to a whole crop of others, and it is
impossible to unearth a traitor in one Province without coming on subterraneous
passages leading to half a dozen nests of treason in distant parts of the country.
The evidence recorded in the Amballa Trial of 1864, rendered necessary the
Patna Trial of 1865; and the cumulative facts then disclosed led to a host of new
arrests, with the Maldah Trial of September 1870, the Itajmahal Trial in October
of the same year, and the great Trial which has just now condemned another
batch of Fanatics to transportation for life (1871). I do not wish to stir up popular
indignation either against the convicted traitors, or against the numerous
unhappy men under surveillance or restraint who have not yet been tried. Such
cases are best left to the calm action of the law, and inflammatory incidents taken
126

Annals of Rural Bengal, vol. i. p. 241, 4th ed.

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from the late Trials could do no good. But in order that the reader may
understand what a Wahabi Trial means, how obstinately it is fought out by
highly paid English barristers who catch at every quibble or legal straw, and how
costly it is to the State, I shall give a few bare facts touching the last one. The
preliminary investigation employed the Magistrates Court about two months.
The subsequent trial before the Sessions Judge occupied a month and three
weeks, during which the Court sat thirty-eight days, examined 159 witnesses,
and went over a vast mass of documentary evidence written in many languages.
From the Sessions Judge it has now come to the High Court in Calcutta; and
when it will end, or how much more it will cost, no prudent man would venture
to predict.
It may well be imagined how such a Trial, dragging its weary length for close on
a whole year, in the midst of a fanatical populace, stirs up the hatred of zealots
against our rule. Just before it was coming on in the High Court, a Musalman
assassin stabbed the Chief Justice of Bengal on the steps of his own Tribunal. As I
write these lines, the passions, both of English and Musalmans, have reached a
heat such as has happily been unknown since the Mutinies. Indian society has
again grown electric, and it will require no small wisdom and firmness to
prevent an explosion. I cannot, however, let this second edition go forth without
bearing testimony against anything like an alarmist or sensational mode of
dealing with the evil. The Courts of British India are perfectly strong enough to
put down the crimes of British India. It may perhaps be deemed expedient to
strengthen the powers of arrest already in the hands of the Executive; but this is a
question for calm deliberation by the Legislature, not for rash resolve by an
indignant community, still within the shadow of its great and sudden loss.
Meanwhile these arrests, and the judicial proceedings which followed, have at
length aroused the Muhammadans to the danger which the Fanatic Sect is
bringing upon their whole community. They have determined to separate
themselves from the schismatical conspiracy by a formal public act. Each section
of them has accordingly published the authoritative Decisions 127 of its Law
Doctors on Holy War, and proclaimed its disapproval of the Wahabi sedition.
These curious documents form the subject of the next Chapter. The Fanatical
Conspiracy itself gives signs of at last breaking down. The most active of its
heads are under restraint, and the remainders know that the same fate awaits
them if they again make themselves conspicuous. But the armed Colony,
although insignificant in itself, still survives on the Frontier, and may at any time
become the nucleus of a great religious coalition. This very morning,128 on which
127

Fatwas.

128

Simla, June 14, 1871. (First edition.)

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I finish the present Chapter, an Indian Newspaper generally most trustworthy in


its statements announces another raid upon the Black Mountain. On the 4th June
a tribe came down in force, and burnt three villages, in spite of a stubborn
defence by the inhabitants.129 Within four hours of the news of the outrage, the
3d Panjab Infantry and a detachment from the 4th Panjab Cavalry were on the
march from our nearest military station, with what result is not reported. Nor
have the causes, whether fanatical or otherwise, yet been ascertained. Only this is
known, that for weeks the whole Press of British India has been discussing the
probabilities of another Afghan War and should any such trial be in store for us,
it will be no small danger averted if the Wahabi conspiracy within our territory
can be first stamped out.

129

Pioneer, June 12, reached Simla, June 14.

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CHAPTER III.
THE DECISIONS OF THE MUHAMMADAN LAW DOCTORS.

THE Wahabis have not been allowed to spread their network of treason over
Bengal without some opposition from their countrymen. Besides the odium
theologicum which rages between the Muhammadan Sects almost as fiercely as if
they were Christians, the presence of Wahabis in a district is a standing menace
to all classes, whether Musalman or Hindu, possessed of property or vested
rights. Revolutionists alike in politics and in religion, they go about their work
not as reformers of the Luther or Cromwell type, but as destroyers in the spirit of
Robespierre or Tanchelin130 of Antwerp. As the Utrecht clergy raised a cry of
terror when the last-named scourge appeared, so every Musalman priest with a
dozen acres attached to his mosque or wayside shrine 131 has been shrieking
against the Wahabis during the past half century. Between 1813 and 1830 no
Wahabi could walk the streets of Mecca without danger to his life, nor indeed,
up to the present hour, without risk of insult and violence.
In India, as elsewhere, the landed and clerical interests are bound up by a
common dread of change. The Muhammadan landholders maintain the cause of
the Mosque, precisely as English landholders defend the Established Church.
Any form of Dissent, whether religious or political, is perilous to vested rights.
Now the Indian Wahabis are extreme Dissenters in both respects; Anabaptists,
Fifth Monarchy men, so to speak, touching matters of faith; Communists and
Red Republicans in politics. From the first their hand has fallen heavily on any
Muhammadan so criminal as to differ from their views. In 1827-30, it was against
an obdurate Musalman Governor of Peshawar, quite as much as against the
Hindu Sikhs, that their divine Leader turned his arms. In the peasant rising
around Calcutta in 1831, they broke into the houses of Musalman and Hindu
landholders with perfect impartiality. Indeed, the Muhammadan proprietors had
rather the worst of it, as the banditti sometimes gave salvation to the daughter of
an erring co-religionist by forcibly carrying her off, and appropriating her to one
of the robber chiefs. The official description of the Sect, fifteen years

130

His sect was the one true Church. He was encircled by a body-guard of three thousand armed men; he
was worshipped by the people as an angel, or something higher; they drank the water in which he had
bathed.Milmans History of Latin Christianity, vol. v. p. 389, ed. 1867.
131

Generally a tomb with a little land, or a mango grove, left in pios usus.

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afterwards,132 as a gathering of eighty thousand men asserting complete equality


among themselves, and drawn from the lower classes, would make any landed
gentry in the world indignantly uncomfortable.
Nor, indeed, would a religious Jacquerie of this sort find favour with the fund
holding community, or with any section of the comfortable classes. In Bengal,
however, one entire trade (and a very rich and powerful one) has been steadily
on their side. The skinner and leather-worker ranks at the very bottom of the
Hindu community. He lays impious hands on the carcase of the sacred animal,
the cow, and profits by its death. He is a man unclean from his birth, an outcast
from decent society, whom no wealth or success in his detested vocation can
raise to respectability. This degraded position he accepts like a true Hindu, with
an untroubled mind. No exertions can raise him in the social scale; so he never
makes the attempt. No honesty or sobriety could win for him the regard of his
neighbours; so he lives quite happy without it. If the cows belonging to the
village die in adequate numbers to supply him with leather, good and welt. If
they show a reluctance to mortality, he stimulates the too tardy death-rate with a
little arsenic. A man of this hopeless sort never rises above petty retail dealings,
and the wholesale hide trade (one of the great Indian staples) has thus fallen into
the hands of Musalman merchants. The Muhammadan knows nothing of the
scruples which so powerfully influence the Hindu with regard to trafficking in
the skin of the sacred animal. The Musalman hide-merchants have therefore the
monopoly of the export trade, and compose one of the richest classes of the
native mercantile community. But they are looked upon with hatred and
abhorrence by the Hindus. This detestation they pay back in kind. They well
know that if the Brahman ever gets the upper hand for a moment, they will be
the first spoil of the Infidel. They accordingly regard the Infidel Hindu as a fair
spoil for themselves, and form the wealthiest and most powerful contributors to
the Wahabi sect, whose very raison dtre is to wage war upon the Unbeliever.
But it is not to any single class, however rich or powerful, that the Wahabis owe
their strength. They appeal boldly to the masses; and their system, whether of
religion or of politics is eminently adapted to the hopes and fears of a restless
populace. Among them, as I have already stated, and again cheerfully declare,
are thousands of sincerely pious men, who look upon self-abnegation as the first
duty of life. This element leavens the whole lump, and gives a respectability and
almost a sanctity, to the worldly-Minded majority. The Wahabi of the nobler sort
knows no fear for himself and no pity for others. His path in life is clear, and
neither warnings nor punishments can turn him to the right hand or the left.
There is at present in one of the Bengal jails a venerable white-haired Musalman,
of blameless life in all respects, with the exception of his being a bitterly
132

By Mr. Dampier, Commissioner of Police for Bengal, in letters already cited.

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persistent traitor. For nearly thirty years his treason has been known to the
authorities, and he himself has been perfectly aware that his practices were thus
known. He was formally warned in 1849, again in 1853, again in 1857, and in
1864 he was publicly called up in Court before the Magistrate to receive a final
admonition. To all such counsels he turned a deaf ear, and in 1869 he had to be
placed under personal restraint. Such a case is very difficult to deal with.
Government naturally shrinks from proceeding to extremities against a man
really conscientious and devout according to his lights; and perhaps all that can
be done is to prevent his injuring others by a mild personal restraint.
The Wahabi vocation is by no means a smooth or an easy calling. In the first
place, all who profess the new faith must yearly part with a good deal of money
in support of it. For those who take a more active part and join the Camp on the
Frontier, a worse fate remains. I have never read anything more piteous than the
evidence given by such recruits during the late trials. The summing up of the
Judges shows that the Wahabi preachers have drafted away to certain slaughter
batch after batch of deluded youths, generally under twenty, and often without
the consent of their parents, from nearly every District of Eastern Bengal. That
they have introduced misery and bereavement into thousands of peasant
families and created a feeling of chronic anxiety throughout the whole rural
population with regard to their most promising young men. No Wahabi father
who has a boy of more than usual parts or piety can tell the moment at which his
son may not suddenly disappear from the hamlet. Of the youths thus spirited
away, by far the greater portion perish by pestilence, famine, or the sword. The
few who return, bring back a firm conviction that they have been used as tools
and cast aside when they were no longer required. Here is the story of one of
those who suffered least:I am a disciple of the Patna Khalif. When I was ten or
twelve years of age, I went to Rampur Bauleah (a town in Lower Bengal, not far
from the native village of the witness) to study under him. The masters were
planning a Holy War, and arranging for sending money and men to support it.
When about fifteen years old, I also was sent to join the Holy War. We went by
Patna and Dehli (a distance of about two thousand miles to the Frontier Camp). I
stayed with the Khalif at Patna for one night. At Dehli my companions went on,
but I remained there to study under a religious teacher for a year and a half.
Thereafter, a detachment passing through Dehli to join the Frontier Camp, I went
with them as far as Gujrat. Some time after, another detachment having arrived, I
went with them to the mountains, where I had been assured that the Imam
Sayyid Ahmad had reappeared. I there found between eight and nine thousand
men assembled, the leader being the master with whom I had studied as a boy of
twelve (and who had now succeeded to the Patna Caliphate). Here I discovered
that no Divine Leader had appeared, and that all was a sham. I and others were
angry, and returned to Dehli. Afterwards an Arab came to Dehli, who assured us
that the Divine Leader had appeared at Sittana, and persuaded me again to go

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and join the Holy War. When I arrived, I asked about the appearance of the
Divine Leader, but could get no answer. I soon discovered that we had been
again deceived; and on some British Troops coming to attack us, I escaped to
Dehli. Afterwards I returned to my own home.133
This is the story of a well-cared-for recruit, who in the end came off unhurt. Into
the more miserable narratives of those who fell victims to pestilence, exposure,
or poverty by the way, I do not propose to enter. A single returned Crescentader
from the Frontier does more to ruin the Wahabi cause in a District than a State
Trial. His presence acts as a perpetual disillusionment to the fanatical youths
who press forward for enlistment, and many even of the really sincere Wahabis
have become willing to listen to any interpretation of the law which frees them
from the obligation to rebel.
Such interpretations have fallen on Bengal thick as Autumn leaves during the
past few years. The Wahabi preachers, not content with swaying the fanatical
masses, attempted to bind the burden of Holy War upon the shoulders of all
ranks of their countrymen. Now it is a very trying position for a man in easy
circumstances to be compelled either to join in a dangerous conspiracy or to be
denounced as an Apostate. For a time it was possible to contribute without much
personal danger; but since the enforcement of the power of arrest by the
Executive, abetment of rebellion has become a perilous game, of which only the
more bigoted consent to take the risks. Subscriptions from wealthy widows have
come in more sparingly, and men with a stake in the country shirk giving money
for the Holy War at the Mosques. On the other hand, the more fanatical of the
sect have blazed up in denunciations against those who, from fear of an Infidel
Government, have abandoned the cause of the Faith. They stigmatize the
deserters as cowardly and self-seeking, and indignantly reject the Laodicman
casuistry by which the comfortable classes strive to serve both God and the
World.
For a time the well-to-do Muhammadans bore these reproaches in silence. But
they had the whole vested interests of the Musalman clergy to back them, and by
degrees drew out a learned array to defend their position. They began to contest
the Wahabi doctrine of Holy War on first principles, and to deny that they were
under any obligation to wage war against the Queen. During the past few years,
whole phalanxes of Fatwas or Authoritative Decisions have appeared on this
side. Even the three great High Priests134 at Mecca have been enlisted to liberate
133

Abridged from the evidence of Muhammad Abbas Ali before the Judge of Dinajpur, 15th August 1870.
I have avoided as much as possible the use of proper names.
134

The Mufti of the Hanafi sect, the Mufti of the Shafii sect, and the Mufti of the Maliki sect. The fourth
orthodox sect, the Hanbali, are few in number in Mecca, and have no Mufti there.

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the Indian Musalmans from the dangerous duty of rebelling against an English
Queen.
To arrive at this satisfactory result demanded no small amount of lawyer-like
acumen. The plain meaning of the Kuran is that the followers of Islam shall
reduce the whole earth to obedience, giving to the conquered the choice of
conversion, of a submission almost amounting to slavery, or of death. The Kuran
was written, however, to suit, not the exigencies of a modern nation, but the local
necessities of a warring Arabian tribe in its successive vicissitudes as a
persecuted, an aggressive, and a triumphant sect. The rugged hostility and
fanaticism of the Kuran have been smoothed down by many generations of
scholiasts and interpreters; and from its one-sided, passionate bigotry, a not
unsymmetrical system of civil polity has been evolved. Many of the Prophets
precepts on Holy War have, however, found their way unaltered into the
formulated Muhammadan Law. The great Indian text-book, the Hidayah,
devotes a special chapter to the duty and incidents of waging war against the
Infidel, and this necessity has been strongly insisted upon by the chief Indian
Doctors of Muhammadan Law. But in the discussions which have lately agitated
the Musalmans, very little has been said about the Kuran; and all parties have by
tacit consent removed the question from the text of the sacred book to the
jurisdiction of the Canon Law, which has been based upon it.
It is a matter of congratulation, both for the Musalmans and ourselves that these
Decisions have been on the side of peace and loyalty. It is scarcely possible to
exaggerate the dangers which might have resulted had these Fatwas been in
favour of rebellion. The mere fact of the question having been raised at all,
reveals the perilous ground upon which our supremacy in India is based for it
should never be forgotten that such decisions, when opposed to the Government,
have given rise to some of the most obstinate and bloody revolts that the world
has seen. Even Akbar was nearly hurled from the height of his power by a
Decision of the Jaunpur lawyers declaring that rebellion against him was lawful.
The great military revolt in Bengal followed, and from that time several of the
landholders in the Lower Provinces had to be treated as feudatories rather than
as subjects. During the Mutinies of 1857, the first act of a Musalman rebel, when
he proclaimed the Dehli Rule in a city, was to call on some Muhammadan local
saint for a Fatwa declaring Holy War against the English. In Europe, whenever
the Porte wished to hurl its hordes against Bulgaria or other of the Christian
Provinces lying on the Austrian Frontier, it heated the fanaticism of its troops to
the proper warmth by a Decision of the Law Doctors on the duty and rewards of
War against the Infidel. We Christians did much the same thing, and the flagging
zeal of the Holy Roman Empire was lashed into activity by a very similar set of
stimulants during the later Crusades. In Muhammadan countries, such religious
declarations in favour of exterminating those who differ in faith occupy the rank

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of high Legal Decisions, and collections of them were easily procurable in


Constantinople when I was there in 1867. In more recent times, both the Pasha of
Egypt and the Sultan of Turkey himself have been forced into disastrous
hostilities against religious insurgents who believed that the Commander of the
Faithful had departed from the sacred law, and that it was their duty to destroy
the apostate and his armies. It is an auspicious circumstance, therefore, that the
very District 135 which leveled the Fatwa of rebellion against the greatest
Musalman monarch whom India produced, has also furnished the Law Doctor
whose Decision is most strongly opposed to waging war against the British
Power.136
I propose briefly to state the various solutions of the question at which the two
recognised Musalman Sects, the Shias and Sunnis, have within the past few
months arrived.
The Shias take up a ground of their own touching the duty of the Faithful to
wage war against the Queen, as they do on all other points. It is the view of a sect
who have never been very numerous in India, and who have been accustomed to
persecutions under the orthodox Muhammadan Governments such as no British
ruler would sanction. The little Persian Pamphlet137 which they put forth some
time ago on the subject of Holy War would carry no weight with the Sunnis, who
form nine-tenths of the Muhammadans in India. But as the authoritative
declaration of a distinguished Doctor of the Shiah Law, in consultation with the
chief authorities among his sect, including a great spiritual functionary of the exKing of Oudh, it deserves a notice. The Shias, although not a numerous body,
have contributed some of the greatest names to the history of India; and in the
discussion regarding the duty of rebellion which has been going on in every
District during the last four years, they have made themselves distinctly heard.
The keynote to the Shiah faith is the belief in the twelve Imams, an inspired
Apostolic descent from the Prophet of God. One Imam yet remains to complete
the august line, but is at present hidden away from sinful mortals. Till his
appearance the world travaileth and goeth in pain, and the Faithful suffer
tribulation at the hands of heretical Sunnis, Christians, and others. But there will
come a great Epiphany or shining forth of the Promised One, when all wrongs
shall be righted, and all men converted to the true knowledge of God. Till then,
the Shiah tract argues that it would be vain to attempt by mortal efforts, or
135

Jaunpur.

136

Maulavi Karamat Ali, in a Lecture delivered before the Muhammadan Literary Society of Calcutta,
23d November 1870.
137

On the word Jihdd as it is understood and believed by the Shiah Sect, by Munshi Amir Ali Khali
Bahadur. Calcutta, 1871.

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rebellions, or wars, to bring about that great consummation. It denounces as


schismatics all who disagree with this view. Now-a-days, such of the depraved
and seditious as are ignorant of the precepts of Muhammad138 and strangers to
truth, with vain desires improperly indulge in foolish talk about the meaning
and duty of Holy War. In this country, Hindustan, only two sects among the
followers of Islam have proved orthodoxthe Shim and Sunnis. The remaining
tribes of Musalmans, whether they belong to the sect of Wahabis or to the sect of
those who are styled Faraizis, etc., are such as have wandered from the right
path, and cannot be trusted. After explaining the three meanings of the word
Jihad, 139 the pamphlet lays down seven conditions which must be fulfilled in
order that Jihad, in its meaning of Holy War against the Infidel, may become
lawful. First, when the rightful Imam is present, and grants his permission.
Second, when arms and ammunition of war and experienced warriors are ready.
Third, when the Jihad is one against mutineers and enemies of God.140 Fourth,
when he who makes Holy War is in possession of his reason, when he is not a
lunatic or a man of impaired senses, and when he is neither sick, nor blind, nor
lame. Fifth, when he has secured the permission of his parents. Sixth, when he is
not in debt. Seventh, when he has sufficient money to meet the expenses of his
journey and of the inns by the way, and to pay for the maintenance of his family.
Putting aside the expediency of waging war against the Queen, and without any
reference to the chances of its failure or success, the great Shiah condition
required for a Holy War is the presence of the Imam. Now, hitherto this Divine
Leader has withheld his face from mortal men. He has, not yet condescended to
appear and lead the armies of the Faithful. Till his shining forth, any attempt at
Holy War is presumptuous and sinful. When that innocent Apostle, says the
Pamphlet, shall appear, is known only to the all-knowing God, and to no one else.
To commit bloodshed, except under the leadership of that Imam in person, is
strictly forbidden by the Shiah law. Those are the rebels and sinful ones who
would revolt without the Divine sanction of the Apostle. The last sentence is a hit
at the Sunnis, who have again and again declared Holy War without the Rightful
Leader, and with whom the Shias have a long account of persecution and
martyrdom to settle. The arrow is barbed by a very innocent, and on the surface
a very charitable, reference to the ultimate conversion of the whole world to
Islam, but a reference which would give great pain to the rival sect. The Indian
Sunnis and Shias alike believe in the eventual triumph of the True Faith. But with
138

Shura.

139

(1.) Jihdd fi-llah, diligence in the adoration of God, who is glorious. (2.) Jihad ba Nafs-i-Ammara, the
conquering of inordinate appetites, and bringing them under the control of reason, so as to make them yield
to acts of devotion, deter them from unlawful pursuits, and keep a watch over the misspending of time. (3.)
Jihdd fi-d-din, or Holy War against the Infidel, as authorised by Muhammadan Law.
140

Harb-i-Kafir.

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a difference. The Sunnis hold that in the latter days they will carry out the
injunction of the Prophet in its entirety, and subdue the whole world to Islam.
The Shias, on the other hand, maintain that when that triumph comes, it will be
achieved by an amalgamation (although a one-sided one) of the two great
religions, Christianity and Islam. This dream of a universal fraternization in the
last days is common to all religions of the nobler type. The Hindus have a Book
of the Future141 which foretells a time when all men shall be of one religion and
of one caste. Even the Vishnu Purana, compiled142 amid the triumph of Hindu
bigotry over Buddhism, admits that in the last Iron Age to which we have now
come, men shall obtain the liberation of their souls, not in virtue of their religion
or their race, but by purity of life and rectitude of action. The Shiah Musalmans
have also their millennium, and it is to be reached in association With the
Christians, who will all become Shias, and probably through the blood of the
Sunni heretics, who at first will refuse to accept the final Apostle. It is distinctly
laid down in our Muhammadan Law, the Pamphlet proceeds to say, that at the
time when the above-named Imam shall appear, Jesus Christ (may safety attend
him!) shall descend from the Fourth Heaven, and friendship, not enmity, shall
exist between these two Great Ones.
It is satisfactory to learn, therefore, that at least one small sect of our
Muhammadan fellow-subjects are not bound by the first principles of their
religion to rebel against the Queen. Whatever other Musalmans may do, the
handful of Shias in India declare that they will not compel us by force of arms to
the disgraceful alternative of circumcision or slavery. But welcome as such an
assurance may be, I cannot forget that the Shias admit a principle of religious
compromise,143 which rather weakens the strength of any engagement they may
make with us infidels. All over the world, except in Persia, they have been a
persecuted people; and, like other hunted sects, have developed a system of
casuistry to save their bodies by what seems to strangers something very like a
denial of their faith. Thus a Shiah pilgrim may pass himself off as a Sunni at
Mecca, without peril to his soul. When put to straits by their persecutors, they
smooth over or deny the peculiarities of their belief. In extreme peril, as lately in
Syria, and from time to time in India, this Law of Pious Fraud has allowed them
to denounce their most cherished tenets, and even to curse the Twelve Imams.
But under the British Power they have been protected from persecution, and
from the temptation to insincerity to which persecution gives rise. Their present
declaration of the non-obligation to rebel is spontaneous, and it is well that such
a declaration has been put on record. It comes to us stamped-with the highest
141

Bhavishya Puritna.

142

Circ. A.D. 1050.

143

Takfyah, literally guarding oneself, pious fraud.

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authority which the Shias can give to any document, and will be permanently
binding on the whole sect. Even without a formal pledge of this sort, they are
naturally loyal; for they know that if either the Hindus or the Sunni
Muhammadans ever get the upper hand in India, the days of tribulation for the
Shias will begin. Nor would the Sunnis, in their hour of victory, forget that the
Legal Decision, which declares that the ultimate triumph of Islam is to be shared
by Muhammadans and Christians alike, issued from the palace of the ex-King of
Oudh. His late Majestys loyalty, and that of the party which he represents, will
henceforth shine with redoubled lustre, when they remember the darts which
this Shiah pamphlet has left rankling in the hearts alike of their Wahabi and of
their Sunni countrymen.
I now pass to the Formal Decisions of the greater sect. The Sunnis, as they are the
most numerous class of Indian Musalmans, so they have of late been the most
conspicuous in proclaiming that they are under no religious obligation to wage
war against the Queen. To that end they have procured two distinct sets of Legal
Decisions, and the Muhammadan Literary Society of Calcutta has summed up
the whole Sunni view of the question in a forcibly written pamphlet. I would
commend this little work to those who doubt the intellectual acumen of the
Bengali Musalmans, or their capacity for judicial posts under our Government. It
is a triumph of legal subtlety, for it contains two separate sets of syllogisms
starting from contradictory premises, yet arriving at the same desirable
conclusion. The Law Doctors of Northern Hindustan set out by tacitly assuming
that India is a Country of the Enemy 144 and deduce therefrom that religious
rebellion is uncalled for. The Calcutta Doctors declare India to be a Country of
Islam145 and conclude that religious rebellion is therefore unlawful. This result
must be accepted as alike satisfactory to the well-to-do Muhammadans, whom it
saves from the peril of contributing to the Fanatic Camp on our Frontier, and
gratifying to ourselves, as proving that the Law and the Prophets can be utilized
on the side of loyalty as well as on the side of sedition.146
Unfortunately, however, it is not the well-to-do Musalmans, but the fanatical
masses, who stand in need of such Decisions. The powers of arrest granted by
Regulation III. of 1818, to enable the Executive to deal with widely spread
treason, such as has during the past twenty years been smoldering in Bengal, and
from time to time bursting out in conflagrations on our Panjab Border, have at
144

Ddr-ul-Harb, literally House of Strife.

145

Ddr-ul-Islam.

146

The Pamphlet is entitled, Abstract of Proceedings of the Muhammadan Literary Society of Calcutta, on
Wednesday, 23d November 1870. Being a Lecture by Maulavi Karamat Ali of Jaunpur on a question of
Muhammadan Law, involving the Duty of Muhammadans in British India towards the Ruling Power,
Calcutta, 1871.

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length rendered any dabbling in rebellion a most perilous pastime. The


comfortable classes, even among the conspirators, are now glad of a pretext to
wash their hands of the business. Such men will welcome the Legal Decisions as
a door of escape out of a serious difficulty. They will not inquire too closely into
their strict validity, but will accept them as an emollient salve for tender
consciences, and refrain from troublesome questionings as to the composition of
the agreeable medicament. From this point of view the Muhammadan Society of
Calcutta has deserved well of its countrymen and of ourselves; and Maulavi
Abd-ul-Latif Khan Bahadur, its Secretary, merits especial thanks. Whatever view
a Sunni Musalman may take as to the religious status of India under our Rule, he
will find that according to that view he is not compelled to rebel against our
Government. Does he hold that India is still a Country of Islam? Let him turn to
page 6, and he will learn that to wage war against the Queen is therefore
unlawful. Does he hold that India has become a Country of the Enemy? Let him
turn to the long footnote on page 11, and he will find that for that very reason
rebellion is uncalled for.147
In the following remarks, therefore, I would disclaim any intention of
underrating the service which Maulavi Abd-ul-Latif has done by the publication
of this Tract. But it would be a political blunder for us to accept without inquiry
the views of the Muhammadan Literary Society of Calcutta as those of the Indian
Musalmans. Extreme zealots of the Wahabi sect cannot be expected to listen to
reason of any sort, yet there is a vast body of pious Muhammadans, who would
be guided by a really authoritative exposition of their Sacred Law.
Between a mans convictions and his actions there generally stretches a wide gap,
especially when giving full effect to his views leads him into the perils of treason.
But with good men there is a constant struggle to abridge this distance, and to
make practice conterminous with belief. Hitherto such men, without being
fanatical Wandbis, have simply accepted the obligation of Holy War as an
unpleasant duty. It is they who have proved the mainstay of the Frontier Camp
in money matters, and whom it is specially desirable to win over to the side of
peace and loyalty. I propose, therefore, to scrutinize the Sunni Decisions with a
view to ascertaining the effect which they will have on the more zealous
Muhammadans ; men with whom the sense of religious duty is the rule of life,
and whose minds are uninfluenced either by fear of danger or by habits of
prosperous ease. For it is no use shutting our eyes to the fact that a large
proportion of our Muhammadan subjects belong to this class. During a third of a
century they have kept on foot a rebel army, first against Ranjit Singh, and
147

Here and elsewhere throughout this Chapter, I have made use of some articles which I lately put forth
in the Calcutta Englishman, to whose successive editors, during the past seven years, I owe my
acknowledgments for the courtesy with which they have inserted my perhaps too frequent contributions, on
what I conceive to be the wrongs and requirements of the Muhammadan community.

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afterwards against ourselves as his successors. In the distant Province of Bengal


they have equipped band after band for the Frontier Camp. Every village, indeed
almost every family, has followed their example and contributed to the cost of
the war. Our prison gates have closed upon batch after batch of unhappy
misguided traitors; the Courts have condemned one set of ringleaders after
another to lonely islands across the sea; yet the whole, country continues to
furnish money and men to the Forlorn Hope of Islam on our Frontier, and
persists in its bloodstained protest against Christian Rule.
I am very sorry to say that the effect of the Decision of the Calcutta Society on
this numerous and dangerous class will be simply nil. The Pamphlet, however,
exhibits two distinct lines of argument against Holy War; one of them the view of
the Society itself, the other the Formal Decisions of the Law Doctors of Northern
India. These last are introduced only to be rebutted, but they had previously
appeared in an independent form, and, as I shall presently show, have worked
out a really authoritative argument from the Muhammadan Texts against
rebellion.
In the first place, it is only due to the learned authors of the Pamphlet to state
wherein their argument fails. Its object is to prove that India is a Country of
Islam, 148 and that THEREFORE Religious Rebellion is unlawful for
Muhammadan subjects. Significantly enough, the word THEREFORE is omitted
in the fundamental statement of the question on page 1. Still more significantly,
the two most important Decisions, that of the Mecca Doctors and of Maulavi
Abd-ul-Hakk, confine themselves to affirming that India is a Country of Islam,
and most carefully avoid drawing the inference that rebellion is therefore
unlawful. The truth is, that, according to strict Muhammadan law, the opposite
conclusion would be correct, and the Mecca Doctors well knew this when they
gave their decision. They affirm that India is a country of Islam, and leave it to
the Faithful to conclude that for this very reason they ought to strive, by war or
otherwise, to drive out the Infidels who have usurped the Government, and who
in a hundred ways have interfered with the practices and procedure, both legal
and religious, of the former Muhammadan rulers.149
The Pamphlet argues that India is still a Country of Islam because it was so
under the Muhammadan Rule, and that, although now conquered by an infidel
race, yet the three conditions under which it would have become a Country of
the Enemy (Dar-ul-Harb, literally House of Strife) do not apply to it. These three
conditions were laid down by the greatest authority of the Muhammadan Law,
Abu Hanifa. The Tract quotes them, however, not from one of the older and
148

Dar-ul-Islam.

149

See Appendix I., the Mecca Decusion.

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universally received works, but from the Fatciwi-i-Alamgiri of the reign of


Aurangzeb. This latter text materially differs from .the earlier works; and it is an
unquestionable fact that the conditions, as laid down by Abu Hanifa and by the
old authoritative law-books, do apply to India, and that, according to the
orthodox doctrine, India is a Country of the Enemy. I place the two enunciations
of the Law in parallel columns, and leave the reader to judge for himself:
THE THREE CONDITIONS UNDER WHICH A COUNTRY OF ISLAM
BECOMES Dar-ul-Harb, OR A COUNTRY OF THE ENEMY.
According to the Pamphlet, p. 3,
citing the Fataivi-i-Alamgiri.
(1.) When the Rule of Infidels is
openly exercised, and the ordinances
of Islam are not observed.
(2.) When it is in such contiguity to a
country which is Dar-ul-Harb that
no city of Dar-ul-lslam intervenes
between that country and Dar-ulHarb.
(3.) That no Musalmin is found in the
enjoyment of religious liberty, nor a
Zimmi (an Infidel who has accepted
the terms of permanent subjection to
Musalmin Rule) under the same
terms as he enjoyed under the
Government of Islam.

According to the Sirajiyah Imadiyah,


and all texts older than the Fatawi-iAlamggiri.
(1.) When the Rule of Infidels is
openly exercised.
(2.) When it is in such contiguity to a
Dar-ul-Harb that no Dar-ul-Islam
lies between it and the said Dar-ulHarb, so that no help can be brought
from the Dar-ul-Islam to that
country.
(3.) When neither Musaimams nor
Zimmis enjoy the Aman-i-awwal (a
technical term which will be
explained hereafter).1

These three150conditions, as laid down in the older and more authoritative texts,
apply to India.151 With regard to the first of them, it will be seen that the Fataiwii-Alamgiri adds certain words which I have italicized, and for which there is no
150

For this collection of Texts, as also for several of the Fatwas, and many of the arguments contained in
my examination of the Sunni Pamphlet, I am indebted to Professor Blochmann of the Muhammadan
College, Calcutta, a gentleman who will yet be recognised in Europe as one of the brightest ornaments of
Indian scholarship.
151

Abu Hanifa held that the whole of the three conditions above mentioned had to be fulfilled in order that
a Country of the Faithful should lapse into a state of a Country of the Enemy. His two disciples, the
Scihibdn, i.e. Imam Muhammad and Imam Yusuf, held that the existence of one of the conditions sufficed.
The Calcutta Sunnis rightly support the authority of Abu Hanifa against the Sdhibdn (p. 4 of the Pamphlet);
but I shall show that all the three conditions are now fulfilled in India, so that both according to Abu Hands
and his disciples the Country has become a Ddr-ul-Harb.

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authority in the earlier law-books, which cite direct from Abu Hanifa. The first
condition as authoritatively laid down is simply that the rule of the Infidels be
openly exercised; and this condition most unquestionably applies to India at the
present hour. With regard to the second condition, the Pamphlet makes an
omission as unwarranted as the addendum to the preceding one. According to
the orthodox texts, India is a Country of the Enemy because no intervening country
exists between it and England (the Ddr-ul-Harb in question), which can send help to
India to prevent its lapsing into the state of Ddr-ul-Harb. When England
conquered India, the road between the countries was the sea, and it is clearly laid
down in the Hamawi and Tahtawi that the sea is Ddr-ul-Harb. Consequently, on
the original and still the principal highway from India to England, there is no
Country of the Faithful which could send help to Hindustan. That Cabul, a
Country of the Faithful, borders on India, has nothing to do with the question;
for Abu Hanifas condition only refers to such a land as intervening on the road
between the two countries, and able to assist in preventing the one of them from
lapsing into a Country of the Enemy. Now no one will pretend that Cabul lies on
the route between England and India, or has any power to send aid to the
Muhammadan subjects in the latter.
But the most serious misinterpretation lurks in the Pamphlets rendering of the
third condition. The whole force of this condition turns upon the meaning of the
term Aman-i-awwal, which the Tract translates as religious liberty. But these
words totally fail to give a correct idea of what is meant. Aman literally signifies
security, and the meaning of Aman-i-awwal is distinctly laid down in the Jami-urrumuz as implying the whole religious security and full status which the
Muhammadans formerly enjoyed under their own Rule. This authority, which
the Calcutta Sunnis themselves will not venture to dispute, says that a Country
becomes a Country of the Enemy, (1) when Musalmans and Zimmis (i.e. the
Infidels subject to them) enjoy only such Aman (religious status) as the Infidels
choose to grant; and (2) when the full religious status formerly enjoyed under
their own Government, and the religious status which they, as the then ruling
race, granted to the Infidels subject to them, no longer exist. Now it is perfectly
clear that both these clauses apply to India at present. The Ama, or religious
status, which the Muhammadans now enjoy, is entirely dependent on the will of
their Christian rulers, and they enjoy it only in such a degree as we choose to
grant. This degree falls far short of the full religious status which they formerly
possessed. The British Government taxes the Muhammadans, and applies the
taxes to the erection of Christian Churches, and the maintenance of a Christian
Clergy. It has substituted Englishmen for the Muhammadan governors whom it
found in charge of the Districts and Provinces. It has formally abolished the
Musalman Judges and Law Officers.152 It allows pork and wine to be openly sold
152

Kazis, by Act XI. of 1864, on which more hereafter.

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in the market-places. It has introduced English into the Courts. It has superseded
the whole Muhammadan procedure and criminal law. It has afforded protection
to unhappy fallen women by Act XIV of 1868.153 It makes no provision such as a
king is bound to make, according to the Musalman Code, for seeing that the
people attend the mosques and perform their religious duties. It must be
remembered that the civil and religious law of Islam, and the civil and religious
status of Musalmans, are inseparably mixed up. The stamps required by our
Courts on a plaint, our statutes of limitation, the orders by our Judges to pay
interest upon money found to be due, and our entire system of legal procedure
and religious toleration, are opposed to the Muhammadan law, and are
infringements of the Aman, or status, which our Musalman subjects enjoyed
under their own rulers. Nor has the religious status of the Zimmis, or Christian
and other Infidel subjects of the Muhammadan Empire of India, undergone less
change. The Christian Zimmis are there no more a subject people, but conquerors
and governors. The Hindu Zimmis no longer pay the poll-tax;154 and we have
interfered with their religious usages in a hundred ways, such as doing away
with Trial by Ordeal, abolishing widow-burning, ignoring their system of caste,
and giving a legislative recognition to converts to Christianity. In short, the
Amiin-i-dwwal, or former status both of Muhammadans and of Zimmis, has
been totally altered; and according to the third condition also of Abu Hanifa,
India has become a Country of the Enemy (Dar-ul-garb).
The question has been settled over and over again, as a few analogous cases will
show. Greece was a Country of Islam so long as it remained under the Turk. But
since it shook off the Musalman yoke half a century ago, it has always been held
to be a Country of the Enemy, notwithstanding the Muhammadan population
which remained in it. The same remark applies to several of the Danubian
Provinces, the South of Spain, and every country in which a similar revolution of
Government has taken place. The Maim& of Imam Muhammad, Abu Hanifas
celebrated disciple, thus lays down the law: When a Country of Islam falls into
the hands of the Infidel, it remains a Country of Islam if the Infidels retain
Muhammadan Governors and Muhammadan Judges, 155 and do not introduce
their own Regulations. We have not retained Muhammadan Governors; we have
abolished the Muhammadan Law Officers; we have introduced our own
Regulations; and India has, according to the doctrine followed by the great
majority of Indian Musalmans, ceased to be a Country of Islam.

153

The Indian Contagious Diseases Act.

154

Jizya.

155

Kizis.

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The Wahabis start with the declaration that India has become a Country of the
Enemy, and from this they deduce the obligation of Holy War against its rulers.
The Calcutta Pamphlet denies the first position, and asserts that India has not
become a Country of the Enemy, but still continues a Country of Islam. It has
failed, however, to make out its case, and it will produce no effect whatever on
the great body of earnest Muhammadans whom it is so important to win over to
our side. The Law Doctors of Upper India have argued from quite a different
basis. They do not deny the Wahabis first position, that India has ceased to be a
Country of Islam, but they deny that the obligation to Holy War follows
therefrom.
This, I believe, is the true solution of the difficulty. Had India remained a
Country of Islam, as the Mecca Law Doctors insidiously try to make out, a large
portion of the orthodox sect would have deemed themselves bound to rebel. If
India were still de jure a Country of Islam, this portion of our Musalman subjects
would feel compelled to rise against us, and to make it a Country of Islam de
facto. It is written in all the law books: If Infidels press hard or occupy a town in
a Country of Islam,156 it is absolutely incumbent157 on every Muhammadan man,
woman, and child to hurt and drive away the Infidel Ruler. This is so established
a rule, that the King of Bokhara was compelled by his subjects to declare Holy
War against the Russians as soon as they entered the Country of Islam. Indeed, if
India were still a Country of the Faithful, every day some ground of rebellion
would arise. Our religious toleration would itself constitute a capital crime. For
example (and not to mention graver causes of offence), the Muhammadan texts
lay down that if the Ruler or King of a Country of Islam does not look after the
maintenance and spread of the True Faith, rebellion against him becomes lawful.
In the reign of Akbar, who modified the Muhammadan law in a spirit of
toleration towards his Hindu subjects, Formal Decisions commanding rebellion
were published, and led to bloody insurrections. Much more would rebellion
now be incumbent (if India had not ceased to be a Country of Islam) in the case
of the English, who have interfered in a hundred points with the Muhammandan
Code, extirpated the Musalman Law Officers, and abolished the whole Islamitic
Procedure. I therefore view with extreme suspicion the decision of the Doctors at
Mecca, that stronghold of fanaticism and intolerant zeal, when they declare that
India is a Country of Islam, but who, instead of deducing therefrom, as the
Calcutta Muhammadan Literary Society infer, that rebellion is therefore unlawful,
leave it to their Indian co-religionists to draw the opposite conclusion, namely,
that rebellion is therefore incumbent.
156

Bildd-ul-Isldm.

157

Farz-ain.

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Nevertheless there is a class of Indian Musalmans who would not draw this
inference. To them it will be a comfort that so respectable a body as the
Muhammadan Society of Calcutta has formally declared, by the mouths of
eminent Doctors of the Law,158 that India is still a country of the Faithful, and
that rebellion is therefore uncalled for. For in the Muhammadan as in the
Christian community, an endless conflict of doctrine goes on. To enable the
reader to enter into the feelings of this class, I give below159 the speech of a
158

Maulavi Karamat Ali of Jaunpur; Sheikh Ahmad Effendi-el-Ansari; Maulavi Abd-ul-Hakim; besides a
Muhammadan gentleman of high English education and keen practical intelligence, Maulavi Abd-ul-Latif
Khan Bahadur.
159

Sheikh Ahmad Effendi-el-Ansari (a respectable resident of Medina, and a descendant of Abu Ayyubel-Ansari, one of the Companions of the Prophet), who has for several days been staying in this City next
rose and said that he was not a Member of the Society. But as he had the good fortune of being present at
the Meeting, he would ask permission to be allowed to say a few words, as the discussion was on a very
important subject, involving the propriety or otherwise of a great many acts performed by Mohammadans,
both secular and appertaining to Divine Worship, and had also a personal bearing on his own conduct in
coming to this Country, and residing here for several years.
The President replied that the Meeting would listen to him with great pleasure, and would feel highly
obliged to him, and that whatever he would say would be considered of great value.
The venerable Sheikh thereupon said, that before this he had travelled in many countries, and that he had
been twice to Constantinople. The first time he went there was during the reign of the late Emperor, Sultan
Mahmad Khan; and on that occasion he stayed there for two years. The second time was after the accession
to the throne of the present Sovereign, Sultan Abd-ulAdz Khan, when he remained there for fourteen
months. He had also been to Egypt, Syria, and several cities in Asiatic Turkey, residing there for various
periods; and this was his fourth visit to India. He had first come to this country about twenty-nine years ago,
and remained at different places for nearly seven or seven and a half years. Thus he had been two and a half
years at Debli, and two years and nine months at Lucknow, during the reign of the late Amjud Ali Shah;
and while there he was all along the guest of the King, who was exceedingly kind, hospitable, and
courteous to him. For two years he was at Haidrabad in the Deccan, and then proceeded to Baroda. From
there he had proceeded to Afghanistan, where he continued travelling for four or four and a half years. His
visit to Afghanistan was made in the company of the brother of Amir Dost Muhammad Khan of Cabul, and
during his residence at Cabul he had been a guest of the King. On two other occasions also he had come to
India, but returned after staying only at Haidrabid in the Deccan, and in the Province of Sindh respectively.
It was nearly a year since he had this time come to India, and he had been travelling through Bombay,
Bhopal, Rimpur, Allahabad, Patna, Gaya, etc., and had lastly arrived at Calcutta. He had this time also been
very hospitably received everywhere, especially by Her Highness the Begum of Bhopal and His Highness
the Nuwab of Rimpur, to whom particularly he could not sufficiently express his gratitude for their
unbounded kindness and hospitality. The reasons of his giving the details of his travels was, that from this
varied experience which he had the good fortune to acquire in his sojourn in so many different countries,
especially during his four visits to India, he was in a position to support and verify all that had been said by
the several speakers with reference to the particular subject before the Meeting, especially the statement of
the Secretary as to the friendship between Her Majesty the Queen of England and His Majesty the Sultan of
Turkey. In truth, there was a closer intimacy between the British Nation and the Sultan, than between the
Sultan and any other Nation in the World. He, the speaker, remembered a very recent incident which
strongly testified to the great sincerity existing between the British Nation and the Sultan. A short time ago
the Khedive of Egypt showed a spirit of insubordination and disloyalty towards the Sultan. There was every
probability of the occurrence of serious events, and the Sultan ultimately sent a menacing and peremptory
Firman to the Khedive, a compliance with which alone could induce the Sultan to overlook the misconduct

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venerable Sheikh at the Meeting on whose proceedings the Pamphlet is based.


The English are apt to misinterpret Indian affairs from a purely European point
of view. They will find that their Asiatic subjects, who are six times more
numerous than the whole population of the British Isles, can twist European
politics with equal ignorance and with equal hardihood to suit Indian exigencies.
The Calcutta Decision, although erroneous, will be acceptable to many easygoing well-to-do Muhammadans.
But the Authoritative Declaration of the Law Doctors of Northern India will
prove of far wider use. It accepts the Wahabi position of India being a Country of
the Enemy, and deduces by logical steps the duty of the existing Muhammadans
to live as peaceable subjects. I give their decision, which is a technical matter, as

of the Khedive. The Khedive hesitated to comply with the requisitions of his Liege Sovereign, and very
likely he would not have obeyed the Mandate at all. But before doing anything, he communicated to the
British Consul-General the Message that the Sultan had sent, and waited for advice. This was given at once.
The British Consul-General informed the Khedive that he had received instructions from the British
Ministry, that unless the Khedive obeyed the Imperial Mandate, the Consuls orders were to telegraph to
the British fleet at Athens to proceed to Alexandria at once. On hearing this the Khedive gave way, and all
thoughts of rebellion vanished from his mind. He at once complied with the peremptory and humiliating
conditions of the Mandate, and returned to obedience and loyalty. This shows the all erne degree of
cordiality and friendship of the British Nation with the Sultan. They had already fought with a Foreign
Enemy of the Sultan, and now they expressed their readiness to fight against an Internal Enemy who had
assumed the attitude of a rebel. Although the Sultan was, even single-handed, more than equal to the task of
bringing the Khedive to his senses, yet the British Nation did not like that he should be put to so much
trouble and vexation. It is worthy of notice that they were at the same time on terms of friendship with the
Khedive of Egypt. But this was because he enjoyed the position of the Sultans Lieutenant, and they
disregarded his friendship in a matter where the Sultans interests were concerned. In short, had they not
shown their readiness to fight against the Khedive, it would have been no matter of surprise if the latter had
ventured to measure his strength with his Liege Sovereign ; and the gentlemen present could well conceive
the calamities of such an internal conflict. Owing to the promptness shown by the British Government, both
the Sultan and the Khedive escaped the evil consequences of War. Is there a greater enemy to Islam than
one who would like to wage war against such sincere friends of the Sultan of Islam? Again, as to British
India being Dar-ul-Isldm. Besides the Authorities already quoted by the speakers at this Meeting, a Fatwa
had already been delivered by the most learned and pious men of the two Holy Cities of Mecca and Medina.
This he considered was more than sufficient for the purpose; for those venerable learned men have
pronounced British India to be Dar-ul-Isldm, after a thorough investigation into all the circumstances of
this country.
On the strength of this Fatwa, a native of Arabia comes to this country without any hesitation, and remains
here as long as he chooses without applying for or obtaining any guarantee from the British Rulers for civil
and religious liberty. Besides this, about twenty-nine years ago, when he first came to this country, there
existed hundreds of most learned and pious Muhammadans in Dehli and Lucknow, with all of whom he
was on terms of intimacy, but he never heard any one of them calling India Dar-ul-Harb. All of them
treated this country as Dar-ul-Isldm, and all the injunctions necessary in Dar-ul-Isldm were observed here.
It was within the speakers experience that in those days were observed, as at present, the Prayers of Friday
and the two Ids. No change had taken place which could take away the character of Dar-ul-Isldm from this
country. The learned Sheikh had kept such good company on his travels that he was quite oblivious to what
was going on among the masses of the Indian Musalmans.

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an Appendix, and now briefly unfold the more interesting historical aspects of
the case.
During the first half of the eighteenth century, precisely the same question arose
as that which now agitates the Indian Musalmans in the second half of the
nineteenth. The Marhatta, Infidels had overrun the Muhammadan Empire of
India. Provinces which had formerly been ruled over by Musalmans or by Hindu
deputies, according to the Muhammadan Law, were seized by an Unbelieving
Dynasty. Among the more devout Musalmans, the question of their status under
the conquerors, and of their obligation to rebel against them, immediately arose.
It was decided that, inasmuch as the Marhattas satisfied themselves with taking
one-fourth 160 of the revenue, without further interfering with the actual
administration, India still remained a Country of Islam. They left the
Muhammadan Governors of Provinces untouched. They maintained the
Muhammadan Judges and Law Officers 161 undisturbed. On the demise of a
Musalman Governor, a new ruler of the same religion was appointed. Indeed,
the confirmation of his hereditary successor was considered a matter of right
upon payment of a present to the distant Marhatta Court. The following is the
Decision which the greatest authority of that time gave forth:162- Now let us
suppose that a Country of Islam has fallen into the hands of Infidels, who,
however, permit the Muhammadans to say their Friday and Id Festival prayers;
who maintain the law of Islam, and appoint Kazis to carry it out according to the
wishes of the Musalmans, but in which, nevertheless, the Muhammadans have to
ask the Infidels to appoint [the Musalman] Governors. Such countries unhappily
exist in our time, where Muhammadan Governors are appointed by Infidels, and
where the Friday and Id Festival prayers are still said. For the Infidel [Marhattas]
have taken possession of some of our Provinces. It is therefore needful for every
Muhammadan to know what the law says in such a case.
The truth is, that if such a Muhammadan Province falls into the hands of the
Infidels, it continues a Country of the Faithful, because no Country of the Enemy
is adjacent to it, and because the law of the Infidels is not introduced, and
because the Governors and the Judges are Muhammadans, who decide
according to the law of Islam, and because even the Infidels themselves refer all
matters to the Muhammadan law, and the Musalman ft Law Officers pass
sentence on the Infidels.
160

Chauth.

161

Kazis.

162

I have again to express my acknowledgments to Professor Blochmann for this Fatwa. He copied it from
an Arabic work by Kbzi Muhammad Ala, son of Maulavi Sheikh Ali, son of Kazi Muhammad Hamid, son
of Maulavi Takiud-din Muhammad Sabir, a descendant of Omar of Tharnuah. It is entitled Ahkam-ul-arazi,
or Orders on Land Tenures, and deals chiefly with real property in a Ddr-ul-Islam.

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Not one of the reasons here assigned for India continuing a Country of the
Faithful holds good at the present day. The early servants of the East India
Company perfectly understood their position; and when they first took over the
Provinces, they left the Muhammadan Administration absolutely undisturbed.
They retained the Muhammadan code as the law of the land, appointed
Muhammadan Law Officers to carry it out, and in the smallest matter, as in the
greatest, acted merely in the name of the Muhammadan Emperor of Dehli.
Indeed, so afraid was the East India Company of assuming the insignia of
sovereignty that long after its attempts to govern the country through the
Musalmans had broken down, in consequence of the indescribable corruption of
the Muhammadan administration, it still pretended to be the Deputy of a
Musalman Monarch. It is a matter of history how this pretence in the end sunk
into a contemptible farce, and how we struck coins163 in the name of the King of
Dehli, while our Resident was paying the poor pensioner a monthly allowance
for his table expenses.
As Indian history has hitherto been generally written by persons164 who have
never set foot in India, it would be unfair to expect that the meaning of this
strange moderation on the part of the East India Company should be understood
in England. The truth is that had we hastened by a single decade our formal
assumption of the sovereignty, we should have been landed in a Muhammadan
rising infinitely more serious than the mutinies of 1857. The whole status of the
Musalmans would have been suddenly changed. We should have been in the
position of an Infidel Power who had seized and occupied a Country of Islam.
The great majority of the Indian Musalmans would have deemed it their absolute
duty to rebel; for, as I have already shown, the first obligation of every man,
woman, and child, in such a case, is to hurt and drive away the Infidel Ruler.165
The admirable moderation of the East India Companys servants, and their
determination to let the Muhammadan Power expire by slow natural decay,
without hastening its death a single moment, averted this danger.. India passed
from a Country of Islam into a Country of the Enemy 166 by absolutely
163

Bearing after 1773 the following superscription, slightly changed according to the name of the
Emperor: The King Shabalam, the Defender of the Faith of Muhammad, the shadow of the grace of God,
has struck this coin to be current through the seven climes. On the reverse: Struck at Murshidabad in the
19th year of the auspicious accession.
164

With the conspicuous exception of Marshmans and Meadows Taylors excellent volumes. Mountstuart
Elphinstone does not come down to the period in question.
165

Mabstit of Imam Muhammad.

166

i.e. from a Dar-ul-Islam to a Dar-ul-Harb.

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imperceptible gradations. After many years study of the Imperial and District
Archives, I find myself unable to place my finger on any given year or decade of
years as that in which the change was effected. We got rid of the subordinate
Muhammadan Governors long before we touched the nominal supremacy of the
Muhammadan Emperors. Long after that nominal supremacy had become a
farce, and indeed up to 1835, our coinage still issued in his name.167
Even after we thus ventured to impress the British Sovereigns effigy on our coin,
we maintained much of the Muhammadan Procedure along with the
Muhammadan Court Language. These in their turn slowly disappeared. But it
was not till 1864 that we took the bold step, and in my opinion the unwise step,
of doing away with the Muhammadan Law Officers by an Act 168 of the
Legislature. This Law put the last touch to the edifice of the new Empire of India
as a Country of the Enemy, the rebuilding of which had been wisely spread over
one hundred years (1765 to 1864). While the Muhammadan Rule thus
imperceptibly disappeared, a new set of obligations on the part of our Musalman
subjects was springing up. Before India had passed into a Country of the Enemy,
the duties incumbent upon the Muhammadans in a Country of Islam had faded
away. One of the first of these duties, as I have already said, is rebellion against
an Infidel Conqueror. But when the change has been finally accomplished, a new
set of obligations comes into play. The position of the Muhammadans wholly
alters. The existing generation is not responsible for the change; and instead of
being the owners of the country suddenly deprived of their rights and bound to
regain them, they have become what is technically called mustcimm, or seekers
for protection. As such, they obtain from their English Rulers a certain amount of
their civil and religious privileges (Aman). Not indeed their former complete
status169 under Muhammadan Rule, but sufficient for the protection of their lives
and property, and the safety of their souls. No interference is made with their
private prayers or public worship, and their religious lands and foundations are
respected. In return for this fair amount of religious and civil liberty (Arran),
they accept, as their forefathers during the past fifty years have accepted, the
position of subjects. The same authorities which would have formerly compelled
them as Muhammadans in a Country of Islam to resist an Infidel Invader, now
bind them, as subjects of a Country of the Enemy, to adhere to their engagements
with, and to live peaceably under, an Infidel Ruler.

167

The Companys Rupee of 1835, of 180 grains Troy, was the first one bearing the head of the British
Sovereign and the name of the East India Company.
168

Act XI. of 1864.

169

The Aman-i-awwal of the Sirajiyah, Imadiyah, and all other texts older than the Faidwi-i-Alamgiri.

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The duty of waging war has thus disappeared. The present generations of
Musalmans are bound, according to their own texts, to accept the status quo.
They are not responsible for it, and they are forbidden, in the face of Gods
providence, and with regard to the immense perils in which a revolt would
involve the True Faith, to have recourse to arms. They are compelled to adhere to
the mutual relation which has sprung up between the rulers and the ruled, and
to perform their duties as subjects so long as we maintain their status (Aman)
sufficiently intact to enable to discharge the duties of their religion.
If, however, their English Governors should infringe the tacit agreement by
interfering with the prayers, or the public worship, or other lawful ceremonies of
their Muhammadan subjects, or with the erection of Mosques, or with pilgrimage,
or with the adoration of saints, or with the domestic law of Islam, then rebellion
would be lawful. If, under such circumstances, rebellion, although lawful, were
impracticable, then wholesale emigration or Flight (Hijra) becomes incumbent on
every devout Musalman. The various conditions under which such Flight is
necessary are laid down by Shah Abd-ul-Aziz, and are given in all Law Books.
In my next Chapter I shall show that we have lately trenched perilously near
upon these conditions. For the object of this little book is not merely to explain
the duties of our Muhammadan subjects to their rulers, but to impress upon the
rulers their duty to the ruled. The Decision of the Law Doctors of Northern India,
which I have expanded historically in the foregoing pages, will carry weight with
the very classes whose goodwill it is important to conciliate. But it will carry
weight with them only so long as we respect their rights and religious privileges.
The Wahabis to a man, and a large proportion of the devout Musalmans, believe
India to be now a Country of the Enemy. But the more sensible majority of them,
while sorrowfully lamenting its lapsed state, are willing to accept the duties
belonging to that condition. The whole Kurein is based upon the conception of
the Musalmans as a conquering, and not as a conquered people. As already
explained, however, the Kuran was long ago found inadequate to the necessities
of Civil Polity, and a system of Canon and Public Law has been developed from
it to suit the exigencies of Musalman nations. It, is hopeless to look for anything
like enthusiastic loyalty from our Muhammadan subjects. But we can reasonably
expect that, so long as we scrupulously discharge our obligations to them they
will honestly fulfill their duties in the position in which God has placed them to
us.
The more acute among the Law Doctors long ago detected the coming change in,
the status of the Musalmans of India,the change which has now become an
accomplished fact. From time to time Decisions have appeared, which show that,
in spite of the cautious timidity of the East India Company, the revolution did
not go on unperceived. One of these Decisions declared that India would remain

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a Country of Islam only so long as the Muhammadan Judges, whom we have


abolished, continued to administer the Law. But perhaps the two most important
were those of Shah Abd-ul-Aziz, the Sun of India, and of his nephew Maulavi
Abd-ul-Hai. As we gradually transferred the administration to our own hands,
pious Musalmans were greatly agitated touching the relation which they should
hold to us. They accordingly consulted the highest Indian authorities on the
point, and both the celebrated men above mentioned gave forth responses. Here
are their decisions word for word.
When Infidels get hold of a Muhammadan country, Abd-ul-Aziz declared, and it
becomes impossible for the Musalmans of the country, and of the people of the
neighbouring districts, to drive them away, or to retain reasonable hope of ever
doing so; and the power of the Infidels increases to such an extent, that they can
abolish or retain the ordinances of Islam according to their pleasure ; and no one
is strong enough to seize on the revenues of the country without the permission
of the Infidels; and the (Musalman) inhabitants do no longer live so secure as
before; such a country is politically a Country of the Enemy (Dar-ul-Harb).
When we consolidated our power, the decisions of the Doctors became more and
more distinct as to India being Dar-ul-Harb. Maulavi Abd-ul-Hai, who belongs
to the generation after Abd-ul-Aziz, distinctly ruled as follows: The Empire of
the Christians from Calcutta to Dehli, and other countries adjacent to Hindustan
proper (i.e. the North-West Provinces), are all the Country of the Enemy (Dar-ulHarb), for idolatry (Kufr and Shirk) is everywhere current, and no recourse is
made to our holy law. Whenever such circumstances exist in a country, the
country is a Ddr-ul-Harb. It is too long here to specify all conditions; but the
opinions of all lawyers agree in this, that Calcutta and its dependencies are the
Country of the Enemy (Dar-ul-Harb).
These Decisions have borne practical fruit. The Wahabis, whose zeal is greater
than their knowledge, deduce from the fact of India being technically a Country
of the Enemy, the obligation to wage war upon its rulers. The more enlightened
Musalmans, while sorrowfully accepting the fact, regard it not as ground of
rebellion, but as a curtailment of their spiritual privileges. For example, in a
Country of Islam, where the full religious status exists, the Friday Prayer is
absolutely incumbent. In India not only do many devout Muhammadans refrain
from this service, but some of the mosques refuse to allow its performance. Thus
the two most eminent Musalmans of Calcutta in their respective walks of life, the
late head Professor170 of the Muhammadan College, and the late Chief of all the
Muhammadan Law Officers,171 refrained from saying the Friday Prayer. They
170

Maulavf Muhammad Wajfh.

171

The Kazi-l-Kuzat Fazl-ur-Rahman.

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accepted the position of India as a Country of the Enemy as a curtailment to this


extent of their religious privileges. But they lived loyal subjects to, and honoured
servants of the British Government. Many Muhammadans who acknowledge the
lapsed state of India, do not go so far as to deny themselves the consolations of
the Friday Service. A still greater number would break their connection with the
Wahabi party if they could see their way to doing so without peril to their souls.
The Formal Decisions lately issued by the Law Doctors of Northern India, with
the historical amplification now set forth, will give peace to thousands of devout
men.
It may seem that a cold acquiescence in our rule is but a meager result from the
discussions which have so long agitated the Muhammadan community. But such
an acquiescence is the utmost that the intolerant spirit of Islam will permit to a
really sincere disciple. Absolutely conscientious men, however, form a minority
among Musalmans as among Christians, and an established Government has
always the worldly-minded on its side. No young man, whether Hindu or
Muhammadan, passes through our Anglo-Indian schools without learning to
disbelieve the faith of his fathers. The luxuriant religions of Asia shrivel into dry
sticks when brought into contact with the icy realities of Western science. In
addition to the rising generation of skeptics, we have the support of the
comfortable classes; men of inert convictions and of some property, who say
their prayers, decorously attend the mosque, and think very little about the
matter. But important as these two sections of the Muhammadans may be from a
political point of view, it has always seemed to me an inexpressibly painful
incident of our position in India that the best men are not on our side. Hitherto
they have been steadily against us, and it is no small thing that this chronic
hostility has lately been removed from the category of an imperative obligation.
Even now the utmost we can expect of them is non-resistance. But an honest
Government may more safely trust to a cold acquiescence, firmly grounded upon
a sense of religious duty, than to a louder-mouthed loyalty, springing only from
the unstable promptings of self-interest.172

172

If Government deemed it prudent to put the case to the Muhammadan Law Doctors in a really crucial
shape, the following question would permanently bind them down to one side or the other. Such a
proceeding happily does not seem called for at present; but in event of its ever becoming needful to make
use of a public Test of Loyalty, this would be the best form for it:
QUESTION.
Learned Men and Expounders of the Law of Islam What is your opinion in the following matter:
In the case of a Muhammadan Ruler attacking India while in the possession of the English, is it the Duty of
the Muhammadans of that country to renounce the Aman of the English, and render help to the Invader?

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CHAPTER IV.
WRONGS OF THE MUHAMMADANS UNDER BRITISH RULE.
THE Indian Musalmans, therefore, are bound by their own law to live peaceably
under our Rule. But the obligation continues only so long as we perform our
share of the contract, and respect their rights and spiritual Privileges. Once let us
interfere with their civil and religious status (Aman), so as to prevent the
fulfillment of the ordinances of their Faith, and their duty to us ceases. We may
enforce submission, but we can no longer claim obedience. It is the glory of the
English in India, however, that they have substituted for the military occupation
of all former conquerors, a Civil Government adapted to the wants and
supported by the goodwill of the people. Any serious wrong done to the
Muhammadans would render such a Government impossible. Even minor
grievances attain in their case the gravity of political blunders,blunders of
which the cumulative effect, according to the law of Islam, would be to entirely
change the relation of the Musalmans to the ruling power, to free them from their
duty as subjects, and bind them over to treason and Holy War.
Of such blunders the Indian Government has, in my humble opinion, been more
than once guilty. But before pointing out what I conceive to be our shortcomings,
beg it to be distinctly understood that my remarks refer only to those
Muhammadans who peaceably accept the British Rule. The foregoing Chapters
establish the two great facts of a standing Rebel Camp on the Frontier, and a
chronic conspiracy within the Empire. The English Government can hold no
parley with traitors in arms. Those who appeal to the sword must perish by the
sword. Herr Teufelsdrockhs simile of the Alpine hamlet, Peace established in the
bosom of Strength, applies in a nobler sense to the Indian Empire; and the first
moment that the English in that country cease to be able, from financial or from
any other reasons, to go to war upon a just cause, they had better take shipping
from the nearest Ports.
With regard, also, to the traitors within our territory, justice must have free
course; but justice tempered with mercy, and mitigated by a knowledge of the
not ignoble motives which lead men, sin6erely good according to their lights,
into treason. The powers of arrest granted by the Legislature to the Executive
enable the Government to deal with the evil. The ringleaders suffer the penalty
of personal restraint, without obtaining the glory of a public appearance or
behalf of their faith. Even those sentenced to transportation for life by the Courts
are treated with contemptuous leniency by the Government, being generally
returned in a few years to the Muhammadan community, as apostates to the

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Wahabi cause. Any attempt to stamp out the conspiracy by wholesale


prosecutions would fan the zeal of the fanatics into a flame, and array, on their
side the sympathies of all devout Musalmans. The distempered class must be
segregated without the slightest feeling of resentment, and indeed with the
utmost gentleness, but with absolute strength.
But while firm towards disaffection, we are bound to see that no just cause exists
for discontent. Such an inquiry would with more dignity have been conducted
before pressure had been brought to bear from without.
Concessions made when confronted by a great conspiracy, have small pretension
to generosity or gracefulness. But if in any matter we have hitherto done injustice
to the Muhammadans, it would be mischievous vanity to allow considerations of
this sort to delay our doing justice now. The British Government of India is
strong enough to be spared the fear of being thought weak. It can shut up the
traitors in its jails, but it can segregate the whole party of sedition in a nobler
wayby detaching from it the sympathies of the general Muhammadan
community. This, however, it can do only by removing that chronic sense of
wrong which has grown up in the hearts of the Musalmans under British Rule.
For there is no use shutting our ears to the fact that the Bengal Muhammadans
arraign us on a list of charges as serious as was ever brought against a
Government. They accuse us of having closed every honorable walk of life to
professors of their creed. They accuse us of having introduced a system of
education which leaves their whole community unprovided for, and which has
landed it in contempt and beggary. They accuse us of having brought misery into
thousands of families, by abolishing their Law Officers, who gave the sanction of
religion to the marriage tie, and who from time immemorial have been the
depositaries and administrators of the Domestic Law of Islam. They accuse us of
imperiling their souls, by denying them the means of performing the duties of
their faith. Above all, they charge us with deliberate malversation of their
religious foundations, and with misappropriation on the largest scale of their
educational funds. Besides these specific counts, which they believe susceptible
of proof, they have a host of sentimental grievances perhaps of little weight with
the unimaginative British mind, but which not less in India than in Ireland keep
the popular heart in a state of soreness to the Rulers. They declare that we, who
obtained our footing in Bengal as the servants of a Muhammadan Empire, have
shown no pity in the time of our triumph, and with the insolence of upstarts
have trodden our former masters into the mire. In a word, the Indian Musalmans
arraign the British Government for its want of sympathy, for its want of
magnanimity, for its mean malversation of their funds, and for great public
wrongs spread over a period of one hundred years.

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How far these charges are true, how far they are inevitable, I propose at some
length to inquire. But I beg the reader to bring to this examination of our conduct
towards the Muhammadans at large, a mind free from any petty resentment
against the section of them whose misdeeds the foregoing chapters have recited.
Insurrection and fanatical ebullitions are the natural incidents of an alien Rule;
and so long as the English remain worthy of keeping India, they will know how
to deal alike with domestic traitors and with frontier rebels. For my own part,
once I have opened the case for the Muhammadan community, I shall make no
further reference to these misguided Wahabis. But in order that I may afterwards
keep silence about them, I shall here quote certain statements by the two
Englishmen who, of all the present generation, are most competent to pronounce
on the connection between Musalman grievances and Musalman seditions. In
India, the line between sullen discontent and active disaffection is a very narrow
one, and our inattention to the wants of the peaceable Muhammadans in Bengal
has enlisted their sympathies on the side of a class whom they would otherwise
shrink from as firebrands and rebels.
The officer in charge of the Wahabi prosecutions173 lately wrote: I attribute the
great hold which Wahabi doctrines have on the mass of the Muhammadan
peasantry to our neglect of their education. He then goes on to show how the
absence of a career under our Rule affects, in an equally pernicious way, the
higher classes, for whose instruction our schools do make some slight provision.
In the Amballa Trial will be found a case exactly in point. Osman Ali, a man
personally known to me, says: About three years since I had occasion to go to
Jessor. There I met the Chief Bailiff of the Judges Court. He asked me of my state.
I said my fortunes were much broken. He answered, you are an educated man,
and ought not to be in distress. If you like what I am going to tell you, you will
do well. I asked, what is it? He replied, Take your Scriptures in your hand, and
go into the neighbouring Districts, and preach the injunctions of your creed to
the people; and when you see likely men, induce them to go on the Crescentade.
Accordingly I preached throughout the neighbouring Districts. Many people
gave me money. Here is a man who, from what I have known of him, I believe
preached partly from belief and partly for money. The whole country has been
overrun by such men. They have excited the peasantry, and the Ambeyla
campaign has shown us that they are not to be despised, and that the timid
Bengali will, under certain conditions, fight as fiercely as an Afghan.
Is it any subject for wonder, writes a still higher authority,174 that they have held
aloof from a system which, however good in itself, made no concession to their
173

Mr. James OKinealy, C.S.

174

Mr. E. C. Bayley, C.S.I., Secretary to the Government of India in the Home Department, to whose
scholarly sympathies the Musalmans owe a debt of gratitude.

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prejudices, made in fact no provision for what they esteemed their necessities,
and which was in its nature unavoidably antagonistic to their interests, and at
variance with all their social traditions?
The educated Muhammadan, confident in his old training, sees himself
practically excluded from the share of power and of the emoluments of
Government which he hitherto had almost monopolized, and sees these and all
the other advantages of life passed into the hands of the hated Hindu.
Discontenta feeling if not of actual religious persecution, yet of neglect on
account (indirectly) of his religious viewshas filled the minds of the better
educated. Their fanaticism, for which ample warrant can always be found in the
Kuran, has been hotly excited, until at last there is danger that the entire
Muhammadan community will rapidly be transformed into a mass of disloyal
ignorant fanatics on the one hand, with a small class of men highly educated in a
narrow fashion on the other, highly fanatic, and not unwarrantably discontented,
exercising an enormous influence over their ignorant fellow-Muhammadans.
But, indeed, from the highest official to the lowest (and no one has penetrated
into the wrongs of the Musalmans more deeply than the present Viceroy), there
is now a firm conviction that we have failed in our duty to the Muhammadan
subjects of the Queen. A great section of the Indian population, some thirty
millions in number, finds itself decaying under British Rule. They complain that
they, who but yesterday were the conquerors and governors of the land, can find
no subsistence in it today. Any answer based on their own degeneracy is a petitio
principii, for their degeneracy is but one of the results of our political ignorance
and neglect. Before the country passed under our rule, the Musalmans professed
the same faith, ate the same food, and in all essentials lived the same lives, as
they do now. To this day they exhibit at intervals their old intense feeling of
nationality and capability of warlike enterprise; but in all other respects they are
a race ruined under British rule.
For this decay we are not entirely to blame. The Musalmans can no longer, with
due regard to the rights of the Hindus, enjoy their former monopoly of
Government employ. This ancient source of wealth is dried up, and the
Muhammadans must take their chance under a Government which knows no
distinction of colour or creed. As haughty and careless conquerors of India, they
managed the subordinate administration by Hindus, but they kept all the higher
appointments in their own hands. For example, even after the enlightened
reforms of Akbar, the distribution of the great offices of State stood thus:
Among the twelve highest appointments, with the title175 of Commander of more
175

Mansab. See a very interesting but all too brief Pamphlet by Prof. Blochmann, The Hindu Rajas
under the Mughul Government. Calcutta, 1871.

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than Five Thousand Horse, not one was a Hindu.176 In the succeeding grades,
with the title of Commander of from Five Thousand to Five Hundred Horse, out
of 252 officers, only 31 were Hindus under Akbar. In the second next reign, out
of 609 Commanders of these grades, only 110 were Hindus; and even among the
lowest grades of the higher appointments, out of 163 Commanders of from Five
Hundred to Two Hundred Horse, only 26 were Hindus.
It would be unreasonable for the Muhammadans to expect any such monopoly
of offices under the English Government. But this is not their petition and
complaint. It is not that they have ceased to retain the entire State Patronage, but
that they are gradually being excluded from it altogether. It is not that they must
now take an equal chance with the Hindus in the race of life, but that, at least in
Bengal, they have ceased to have a chance at all. In short, it is a people with great
traditions and without a career. When such a people have co-religionists in India
numbering thirty millions of men, it becomes a question of not less importance to
their rulers than to themselves to know what to do with them.
The greater part of the peasant population throughout Eastern Bengal is
Muhammadan. In those districts of overwhelming rivers and boundless swamps,
the aborigines were never admitted into the respectable Hindu community. The
Aryan migration southwards had not penetrated in sufficient strength into the
seaboard and Deltaic tracts to thoroughly pound down in the Brahmanical
mortar the earlier people of the soil. They accordingly remained beyond the pale
of Hinduism, out-castes fishing in their remote estuaries, and reaping hazardous
rice crops from their flooded lands, without social status or religious rites.177 So
impure are they, that a Brahman of the highest caste cannot settle among them
without taint,178 and in a few generations his descendants cease to have the jus
connubii with the Brahman community a few days journey to the north, from
which they sprang.179 The Muhammadans recognised no such distinctions. They
came down upon the country, sometimes as military colonists, sometimes as
heads of great reclamation enterprises in the Deltaic Districts. Even in an old
settled District like Jessor, the earliest traditions begin with an enterprise of the

176

Under the reign of Shihjahan. It should be remembered that these Military Titles were held by the
Officers of the Civil Administration.
177

I speak of the Districts south of Dacca and Vikrampur, the last great Brahmanical settlement in the
Delta.
178

This I ascertained by personal inquiry in Faridpur District, Bickarganj, and the Sundarbans.

179

On the ground that they have lived among, and in some cases acted as priests to, a low chandal
population.

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latter sort.180 As the primeval heroes of the inner parts of India slew monster
beasts, quelled demon tribes, and hewed down the all-covering forest; so the first
object that looms on the prehistoric horizon in Deltaic tracts, is the man who
pushed forward tillage into regions formerly the prey of the sea.
The Musalmans led several of these great land reclamation colonies to the
southward, and have left their names in Eastern Bengal as the first dividers of the
water from the land. The sportsman comes across their dykes, and metalled
roads, and mosques, and tanks, and tombs, in the loneliest recesses of the jungle;
and wherever they went, they spread their faith, partly by the sword, but chiefly
by a bold appeal to the two great instincts of the popular heart. The Hindus had
never admitted the amphibious population of the Delta within the pale of their
community. The Muhammadans offered the plenary privileges of Islam to
Brahman and outcaste alike, Down on your knees, every one of you, preached
these fierce missionaries, before the Almighty, in whose sight all men are equal,
all created beings as the dust of the earth. There is no God but the one God, and
His Messenger is Muhammad. The battle-cry of the warrior became, as soon as
the conquest was over, the text of the divine.
To this day the peasantry of the Delta is Muhammadan. So firmly did Islam take
hold of Lower Bengal, that it has developed a religious literature and a popular
dialect of its own. The patois known as Musalman Bengali is as distinct from the
Urdu of Upper India, as Urdu is different from the Persian of Herat. Interspersed
among these rural masses are landed houses of ancient pedigree and of great
influence. Indeed, the remains of a once powerful and grasping Musalman
aristocracy dot the whole Province, visible monuments of their departed
greatness.
Murshidabad a Muhammadan Court still plays its farce of mimic state, and in
every District the descendant of some line of princes sullenly and proudly eats
his heart out among roofless palaces and weed-choked tanks. Of such families I
have personally known several. Their ruined mansions swarm with grownup
sons and daughters, with grandchildren and nephews and nieces, and not one of
the hungry crowd has a chance of doing anything for himself in life. They drag
on a listless existence in patched-up verandahs or leaky outhouses, sinking
deeper and deeper into a hopeless abyss of debt, till the neighbouring Hindu
money-lender fixes a quarrel on them, and then in a moment a host of mortgages
foreclose, and the ancient Musalman family is suddenly swallowed up and
disappears for ever.

180

Report on the District of Jessor, by Mr. James Westland, C.S.by far the best account of an Indian
Deltaic District that has yet appeared. Calcutta, 1871.

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If an individual instance be demanded, I would cite the Rajas of Nagar. When the
British first came into contact with them, their yearly revenues, after two
centuries of folly and waste, amounted to fifty thousand pounds. From the
pillared gallery of their palace the Rajas looked across a principality which now
makes up two English Districts. Their mosques and countless summer pavilions
glittered round the margin of an artificial lake, and cast their reflections on its
surface, unbroken by a single water weed. A gilded barge proudly cut its way
between the private staircases and an island in the centre covered with flowering
shrubs. Soldiers relieved guard on the citadel; and ever, as the sun declined, the
laugh of many children and the tinkling of ladies lutes rose from behind the wall
of the Princesses garden. Of the citadel nothing now remains but the massive
entrance. From the roofless walls of the mosque the last stucco ornament has
long since tumbled down. The broad gardens with their trim canals have
returned to jungle or been converted into rice-fields. Their well-stocked fish
ponds are dank, filthy hollows. The sites of the summer pavilions are marked by
mounds of brick dust, with here and there a fragmentary wall, whose slightly
arched Moorish window looks down desolately upon the scene.
But most melancholy of all is the, ancient Royal Lake. The palace rises from its
margin, not, as of old, a fairy pillared edifice, but a dungeon-looking building,
whose weather-stained walls form a fitting continuation to the green scum which
putrefies on the water below.181 The gallery is a tottering deserted place. The
wretched women who bedeck themselves with the title of princesses182 no more
go forth in the covered barge at evening. Their luxurious zenana is roofless, and
its inhabitants have been removed to a mean tenement overlooking a decayed
stable yard. Of all the bygone grandeur of the House of Nagar, a little
watercourse alone remains unchanged, holding its way through the dank
solitudes in the same channel by which it flowed amid the ancient palaces, and
reminding the spectator in its miniature way of the one immutable relic of
antiquity in Rome:
Ne ought save Tyber hastning to his fall
Remaines of all: O worlds inconstancie!
That which is firme doth flit and fall away,
And that is flitting doth abide and stay.183

181

I describe the buildings and tank as I saw them in 1864. Since then, I hear that the latter has been
cleaned, and the former fallen deeper into decay.
182

Ranis

183

Spensers Ruines of Rome, by Belay.

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In a corner of the dilapidated palace, the representative of the race mopes away
his miserable days, chewing drugged, sweetmeats, and looking dreamily out on
the weed-choked lake. If any statesman wishes to make a sensation in the House
of Commons, he has only to truly narrate the history of one of these
Muhammadan families of Bengal. He would first depict the ancient venerable
Prince ruling over a wide territory at the head of his own army, waited on
through life by a numerous household, with all the stately formality of an
Eastern Court, and his death-bed soothed by founding mosques and devising
religious trusts. He would then portray the half-idiot descendant of the present
time, who hides away when he hears of an English shooting party in his jungles,
and when at length dragged forth by his servants to pay the courtesy due to the
strangers, lapses into a monotonous whimper about some tradesmans execution
for a few hundred rupees which has just taken place in his palace. I have dwelt at
some length on the Musalman peasantry and the. Musalman aristocracy of
Bengal, in order to bring clearly before the English eye the class of people with
whose grievances this chapter deals. I would further premise that my remarks
apply only to Lower Bengal, the Province with which I am best acquainted, and
in which, so far as I can learn, the Muhammadans have suffered most severely
under British Rule. I should be sorry to believe, or to convey to the reader the
belief; that the following remarks were predicable of all the Muhammadans of
India.
If ever a people stood in need of a career, it is the Musalman aristocracy of Lower
Bengal. Their old sources of wealth have run dry. They can no longer sack the
stronghold of a neighbouring Hindu nobleman; send out a score of troopers to
pillage the peasantry; levy tolls upon travelling merchants; purchase exemption
through a friend at Court from their land-tax; raise a revenue by local ceases on
marriages, births, harvest-homes, and every other incident of rural life; collect
the excise on their own behoof, with further gratifications for winking at the sale
of forbidden liquors during the sacred month of Ramazan. The administration of
the Imperial Taxes was the first great source of income in Bengal, and the
Musalman aristocracy monopolized it.184 The Police was another great source of
income, and the Police was officered by Muhammadans. The Courts of Law were
a third great source of income, and the Musalmans monopolized them. Above all,
there was the army, an army not officered by gentlemen who make little more
than bank interest on the price of their commissions, but a great confederation of
conquerors who enrolled their peasantry into troops, and drew pay from the
State for them as soldiers. A hundred and seventy years ago it was almost
impossible for a well-born Musalman in Bengal to become poor at present it is
almost impossible for him to continue rich.

184

This is subject to the explanation given further on.

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The Muhammadan aristocracy, in short, were conquerors, and claimed as such


the monopoly of Government. Occasionally a Hindu financier, and more seldom
a Hindu general, came to the surface; 185 but the conspicuousness of such
instances is the best proof of their rarity. Three distinct streams of wealth ran
perennially into the coffers of a noble Musalman HouseMilitary Command,
the Collection of the Revenue, and Judicial or Political Employ. These were its
legitimate sources of greatness, and besides them were Court Services, and a
hundred nameless avenues to fortune. The latter I have indicated at the
beginning of the last paragraph, and of them I shall not further speak; but,
confining myself to the three fair and ostensible monopolies of official life, I shall
examine what remains of them to the Musalman families of Lower Bengal under
British Rule.
The first of them, the Army, is now completely closed. No Muhammadan
gentleman of birth can enter our Regiments; and even if a place could be found
for him in our military system, that place would no longer be a source of
wealth.186 Personally, I believe that, sooner or later, the native aristocracy of India
must, under certain restrictions, be admitted as Commissioned Officers in the
British Army.187 The supreme command of any regiment must always be vested
in an Englishman. Indeed, great care would be required before the experiment
can be entered upon at all; but the warlike peoples of Northern India could turn
out under their own hereditary leaders, a light cavalry second to none in the
world. Such employment would be eagerly sought after. No commissioned
officer now-a-days expects to make a fortune by serving the Queen, and the
Muhammadans are perfectly aware of this. But they covet the honours and
decent emoluments of a military career, and bitterly feel that their hereditary
occupation is gone.
The second support of the Musalman aristocracy was the collection of the Land
Revenue. This monopoly had its roots deep in the canon and public law of Islam.
185

Whenever they did, great was the discontent among the Musalmans. In the two beat known cases, that
of Raja Todar Mall the Financier, and Raja Man Singh the General, formal deputations of remonstrance
were sent to Court. In the case of Man Singh, some of the Muhammadan Generals refused to serve under
him in the Expedition against Rana Pratab. I have already given the statistics of the Hindus who rose to
conspicuous offices under the least bigoted of the Musalman monarchs.
186

A very few Muhammadan gentlemen hold commissions from the Governor-General, but so far as I can
learn, not one from the Queen. A native of India can only enter the Army as a private soldier, and the rare
individual instances of men promoted from the ranks by a merely local commission form no exception to
the rule. The single case of a Muhammadan obtaining even the honorary rank of Captain is Captain Hidayat
Ali, who was brought forward by Colonel Rattray during the mutiny,a Muhammadan gentleman in every
respect worthy to hold Her Majestys commission, as I can by personal knowledge of himself and of his
deeds attest.
187

Among the exponents of this view, I would particularly cite the most recent and the ablestCaptain
Osborn of the Bengal Cavalry, in the columns of the Calcutta Observer.

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The payment of taxes was a badge of conquest; and to the conquerors accrued
not only the revenue, but also the profitable duty of collecting it. It can never be
too often insisted upon, however, that in India the relation of the conquerors to
the native population was regulated rather by political necessity than by the
Muhammadan Code. The haughty foreigners despised the details of collection,
and left it to their Hindu bailiffs to deal directly with the peasantry. So universal
was this system, that Akbar successfully defended the selection of a Hindu for
his Minister of Finance by referring to it. On Todar Malls appointment as
Chancellor of the Empire, the Musalman princes sent a deputation to
remonstrate. Who manages your properties and grants of land? replied the
Emperor. , Our Hindu agents, they answered. Very good, said Akbar; allow
me also to appoint a Hindu to manage my estates.
While the higher fiscal posts remained in the hands of the Musalmans, the direct
dealing with the husbandman was thus vested in their Hindu bailiffs. The
Hindus, in fact, formed a subordinate Revenue Service, and took their share of
the profits before passing the collections on to their Muhammadan superiors.
The latter, however, were responsible to the Emperor, and formed a very
essential link in the Muhammadan fiscal system. They enforced the Land Tax,
not by any process of the Civil Courts, but by the sharp swords of troopers.
Arrears were realized by quartering a marauding banditti upon a District, who
harried the villages till the last penny was paid up. The husbandmen and Hindu
bailiffs constantly tried to get off at less than the fixed sum; the superior
Musalman officers ceaselessly endeavored to extort more than it.188
The English obtained Bengal simply as the Chief Revenue Officer of the Dehli
Emperor. Instead of buying the appointment by a fat bribe, we won it by the
sword. But our legal title was simply that of the Emperors Diwan or Chief
Revenue Officer.189 As such, the Musalmans hold that we were bound to carry
out the Muhammadan system which we then undertook to administer.
There can be little doubt, I think, that both parties to the treaty at the time
understood this,190 although the Grants and Treaties do not in my opinion bind
us down.

188

Curious illustrations of this perennial conflict occur in Mr. Westlands recent report on Jessor, and may
be found in the rural archives of almost every District of Bengal.
189

See the Firmins of 12th August 1765, in Mr. Aitchisons Treaties, or in the Quarto Collection put forth
by the East India Company in 1812, Nos. xvi. to xx.
190

We took it under a kind of promise to carry on the Musalman Rule as it then existed, writes the
Officer in charge of the Wahabi Prosecutions, and we did so.

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For some years the English maintained the Muhammadan officers in their posts;
and when they began to venture upon reforms, they did so with a caution
bordering upon timidity. The greatest blow which we dealt to the old system
was in one sense an underhand one, for neither the English nor the
Muhammadans foresaw its effects. This was the series of changes introduced by
Lord Cornwallis and John Shore, ending in the Permanent Settlement of 1793. By
it we usurped the functions of those higher Musalman Officers who had
formerly subsisted between the actual Collector and the Government, and whose
dragoons were the recognised machinery for enforcing the Land-Tax. Instead of
the Musalman Revenue-farmers with their troopers and spearmen, we placed an
English Collector in each District, with an unarmed fiscal police attached like
common bailiffs to his Court. The Muhammadan nobility either lost their former
connection with the Land-Tax, or became mere landholders, with an inelastic
title to a part of the profits of the soil.
The Permanent Settlement, however, consummated rather than introduced this
change. It was in another respect that it most seriously damaged the position of
the great Muhammadan Houses. For the whole tendency of the Settlement was
to acknowledge as the landholders the subordinate Hindu officers who dealt
directly with the husbandmen. I have carefully gone over the MS Settlement
Reports of 1788-1790; and notwithstanding the clauses touching intermediate
holders in the Code of 1793, it is quite clear to me that our Revenue Officers of
those days had an eye to only three links in the previous systemthe State, the
local agent or landholder who collected direct from the peasantry, and the
husbandman who tilled the soil. These were the three features of the former
administration requisite to our new plan, and by degrees all the other links of the
Muhammadan Revenue System were either extruded or allowed to drop out. For
example, the provisions respecting the separation of Independent Talukdars, or
subordinate tenure-holders who held from the superior Musalman lord by a
perpetual lease, and paid their Land-Tax direct to the State, were in themselves
fatal to the greatness of many a Muhammadan House. Such a family, although it
might grant away part of its territory in permanent farm, always exercised a sort
of jurisdiction over its subordinate holders, and, when occasion demanded,
managed to extract cesses or benevolences, in short money in one form or
another, from them. The officer who has studied the Permanent Settlement most
minutely in connection with the present Muhammadan disaffection writes thus:
It elevated the Hindu collectors, who up to that time had held but unimportant
posts, to the position of landholders, gave them a proprietary right in the soil,
and allowed them to accumulate wealth which would have gone to the
Musalmans under their own Rule.191

191

Mr. James O'Kinesly, C.S.

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This, then, is the first public wrong on which the Muhammadan aristocracy
arraign the British Government. They assert that we obtained the Administration
of Bengal from a Musalman Emperor on the understanding that we would carry
out the Musalman system, and that as soon as we found ourselves strong enough
we broke through this engagement. Our reply is, that when we came to look into
the Muhammadan Administration of Bengal, we found it so onesided, so corrupt,
so absolutely shocking to every principle of humanity, that we should have been
a disgrace to civilization had we retained it. We can prove from the records of
every District, that Revenue was the sole object of the Musalman Government.
Almost all the functions of Administration were heaped upon the Collectors of
the Land-Tax, and they might do pretty much as they pleased so long as they
discharged their revenue. The people were oppressed in order that the
landholder might have his rent, and were plundered in order that the
landholders servants might become rich, complaint against wrong was useless.
The landholder or his, officer had it entirely in his own option whether he should
listen to it or not; and the complainant had very little chance of relief; for the
oppressor was often the landholders servant, and the plunderer, even if they
took the trouble to trace him, would not find it difficult to make friends with his
captors.192
The truth is that under the Muhammadans, government was an engine for
enriching the few, not for protecting the many. It never seems to have touched
the hearts or moved the consciences of the rulers, that a vast population of
husbandmen was toiling bare-backed in the heat of summer and in the rain of
autumn, in order that a few families in each District might lead lives of luxurious
ease. It is only after we had begun to break away from the system which we had
virtually engaged to uphold, that the existence of the People discloses itself. The
greatest wrong which we did to the Musalman aristocracy was in defining their
rights. Up to that period their title had not been permanent, but neither had it
been fixed. At a costly sacrifice of the acknowledged claims of the ruling power,
we gave them their tenures in perpetuity; but in doing so, we rendered these
tenures inelastic. A race of men accustomed for centuries to the privilege of
contemptuous plunder, could not, however, learn the peaceful art of managing
their estates by the stroke of a Governor-Generals pen. The Musalman
monopoly of rural oppression ceased and the Resumption Laws thirty years later
put a finishing stroke to their fortunes. To these laws I shall have to devote some
paragraphs further on, and at present shall only say that they enriched the State
192

Mr. Westlands District of Jessor, p. 67. I refrain with difficulty from frequent reference to my Annals
of Rural Bengal, and shall only add, that till arrangements are made for bringing the Bengal Records into
intelligent contact with the European world, the Indian Government continues guilty of a great historical
injustice to the British nation. But perhaps a Government which subverted a Power more extensive than
that before which the majesty of Rome itself fell back, and which has built out of the shattered creeds and
oppressed peoples of India a prosperous Empire, may be pardoned a noble indifference to the written
memorials of its glory.

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by means of a stricter construction of title-deeds than the Muhammadans had


ever been accustomed to under their own Emperors. During the last seventy-five
years the Musalman Houses of Bengal have either disappeared from the earth, or
are at this moment being submerged beneath the new strata of society which our
Rule has developedhaughty, insolent, indolent, but still the descendants of
nobles and conquerors to the last.
With regard, therefore, to the first two great sources of Muhammadan wealth,
viz. the Army and the higher administration of the Revenues, we had good
reasons for what we did, but our action has brought ruin upon Muhammadan
Houses of Bengal. We shut the Musalman aristocracy out of the Army, because
we believed that their exclusion was necessary to our own safety. We deprived
them of their monopoly of the most lucrative functions in the Administration,
because their deprivation was essential to the welfare and just government of the
people. But these grounds, however good in themselves, fail to convince an
ancient nobility suffering under the blight of British Rule. Their exclusion from
the Army seems to the Musalmans a great public wrong; our departure from
their ancient fiscal system, an absolute breach of faith.
The third source of their greatness was their monopoly of Judicial, Political, or in
brief, Civil Employ. It would be unfair to lay much stress on the circumstance,
but it is nevertheless a significant fact, that none of the native gentlemen who
have won their way into the Covenanted Civil Service, or up to the bench of the
High Court, are Musalmans. Yet for some time after the country passed under
our care, the Musalmans retained all the functions of Government in their own
hands. Musalman Collectors, as we have seen, gathered the Land Tax; Musalman
Faujdars and Ghatwals officered the Police. A great Musalman Department, with
its headquarters in the Nizams palace at Murshidabad, and a network of
officials spreading over every District in the Province, administered the Criminal
Law. Musalman jailors took bribes from, or starved at their discretion, the whole
prison population of Bengal. Kazis or Muhammadan Doctors of Law sat in the
Civil and Domestic Courts. Even when we attempted to do justice by means of
trained English officers, the Muhammadan Law Doctors sat with them as their
authoritative advisers on points of law. The Code of Islam remained the law of
the land, and the whole ministerial and subordinate offices of Government
continued the property of the Musalmans. They alone could speak the official
language, and they alone could read the official records written in the Persian
current hand.193 The Cornwallis Code broke this monopoly less violently in the
Judicial than in the Revenue departments; but for the first fifty years of the
Companys Rule the Musalmans had the lions share of State patronage. During
its second half century of power the tide turned, at first slowly, but with a
193

Shikastah, literally broken, an abominable sort of shorthand with the vowels left out.

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constantly accelerating pace, as the imperative duty of conducting public


business in the vernacular of the people, and not in the foreign patois of its
former Muhammadan conquerors, became recognised. Then the Hindus poured
into, and have since completely filled, every grade of official life. Even in the
District Collectorates of Lower Bengal, where it is still possible to give
appointments in the old fashioned friendly way, there are very few young
Musalman officials.194 The Muhammadans who yet remain in them are whitebearded men, and they have no successors. Even ten years ago, the Musalmans
invariably managed to transmit the post of Nazir, or Chief of the Revenue Bailiffs,
to men of their own creed; but now one or two unpopular appointments about
the jail are the most that the former masters of India can hope for. The staff of
Clerks attached to the various offices, the responsible posts in the Courts, and
even the higher offices in the Police, are recruited from the pushing Hindu youth
of the Government School.195
Proceeding from the inconspicuous mass of non-gazetted officials to the higher
grades, the question passes from the sphere of individual observation into the
unquestionable domain of statistics. Two years ago I put forth a series of
articles,196 showing how completely the Judicial and Revenue Services in Bengal,
in which the appointments are greatly coveted, and the distribution of patronage
closely watched, had been denuded of Musalmans. These articles were
immediately translated into Persian, and copied into or discussed by many of the
Anglo-Indian and vernacular papers. A Commission was issued by the Bengal
Government to inquire into the higher class education of the Muhammadans in
Calcutta; but the net result has been, that the Musalman element in the public
service has gone on growing weaker every year, just as before.
This statement the following statistics will prove. In the highest grade in which
the appointments dated from a previous generation, the Muhammadans had not
much to complain of; as in April 1869 there was one Musalman to two Hindus:
there is now but one Musalman to three Hindus. In the second grade there were
then two Muhammadans to nine Hindus; there is now one Musalman to ten
Hindus. In the third grade there were then four Musalmans to a total of twentyseven Hindus and Englishmen; there are now three Musalmans to a total of
twenty-four Hindus and Englishmen. Passing down to the lower ranks, there
were in 1869 four Musalmans among a total of thirty of all creeds; there are now
four among a total of thirty-nine. Among the probationers from whom the
194

Amlah.

195

These remarks apply to the whole Province of Bengal, but with special force to every District of it,
excepting those of the Bhagalpur and Patna Divisions.
196

In the Pioneer, the leading journal of the North-West Provinces. I have freely used these articles in this
Chapter.

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service is recruited, there were only two Musalmans in a total of twenty-eight;


there is now not a single Muhammadan in this rank.
It is, however, in the less conspicuous Departments, in which the distribution of
patronage is less keenly watched by the political parties in Bengal, that we may
read the fate of the Musalmans. In 1869 these Departments were filled thus:In
the three grades of Assistant Government Engineers there were fourteen Hindus
and not one Musalman; among the apprentices there were four Hindus and two
Englishmen, and not one Musalman. Among the sub-Engineers and Supervisors
of the Public Works Department there were twenty-four Hindus to one
Musalman; among the Overseers, two Musalmans to sixty-three Hindus. In the
Offices of Account there were fifty names of Hindus, and not one Musalman; and
in the Upper Subordinate Department there were twenty-two Hindus, and again
not one Musalman.
But it is unnecessary to multiply instances of a fact that is patent in every page of
the Civil List. I have made up a table of the gazetted appointments for which
Englishmen, Muhammadans, and Hindus are alike eligible:

A hundred years ago, the Musalmans monopolized all the important offices of
State. The Hindus accepted with thanks such crumbs as their former conquerors
dropped from their table and the English were represented by a few factors and
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clerks. The proportion of Muhammadans to Hindus, as shown above, is now less


than one-seventh. The proportion of Hindus to Europeans is more than one-half;
the proportion of Musalmans to Europeans is less than one-fourteenth. The
proportion of the race which a century ago had the monopoly of Government,
has now fallen to less than one-twenty-third of the whole administrative body.
This too, in the gazetted appointments where the distribution of patronage is
closely watched. In the less conspicuous office establishments in the Presidency
Town, the exclusion of Musalmans is even more complete. In one extensive
Department the other day it was discovered that there was not a single employee
who could read the Musalman dialect; and, in fact, there is now scarcely a
Government office in Calcutta in which a Muhammadan can hope for any post
above the rank of porter, messenger, filler of ink pots, and mender of pens.
Is it that the Hindus have all along been better men than the Musalmans, and
only required a fair field in order to outstrip them in the race? Or is it that the
Musalmans have so many careers open to them in non-official life, that they are
indifferent to Government employment, and leave the Hindus to walk over the
course? The Hindu has unquestionably a high order of intellect; but an universal
and immeasurable superiority on the part of the Hindus, such as would be
required to explain their monopoly of official preferment, is unknown at the
present day, and is in direct contradiction to their past history. The truth is that
when the country passed under our rule, the Musalmans were the superior race,
and superior not only in stoutness of heart and strength of arm, but in power of
political organization, and in the science of practical government. Yet the
Muhammadans are now shut out equally from Government employ and from
the higher occupations of non-official life.
The only secular profession open to well-born Muhammadans is the Law.
Medicine falls under a different category, as I shall afterwards show. Now the
Law is even more strictly closed to the Muhammadans than the official services.
Among the Judges of Her Majestys High Court of Judicature in Bengal are two
Hindus,197 but no Musalman. Indeed, the idea of a High Court Judge being taken
from the race that once monopolized the whole administration of justice is
inconceivable alike to Anglo-Indians and to Hindus at the present day. In 1869,
when I last made up the statistics of the Indian Professions, they stood thus:
The Law Officers of the Crown were six in numberfour Englishmen, two
Hindus, and no Musalman. Among the Officers of the High Court of sufficient
rank to have their names published, twenty-one in number, there were seven
Hindu gentlemen, and not one Musalman. Among the Barristers-at-Law were
three Hindus (now greatly increased, I believe), and not one Musalman.

197

These gentleman rank among the first grade of public servants; their salary is 5000 a year.

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But the list of Pleaders of the High Court, a sort of subordinate Barristers, tells
the most cruel story of all. This was a branch of the Profession almost completely
in the hands of the Musalmans within the memory of men still living. The
present list dates from 1834, and the surviving Pleaders of that year consisted in
1869 of one Englishman, one Hindu, and two Musalmans. Up to 1838 the
Musalmans were almost as numerous as the Hindus and English put together,
the proportion being six of the former to seven of both the latter. Of the Pleaders
admitted between 1845 and 1850 inclusive, the whole survivors in 1869 were
Musalmans. Even as late as 1851 the Muhammadans stoutly held their own, and
in fact equal the whole number of the English and Hindu Pleaders put together.
From 1851 the scene changes. A new order of men began to come to the front.
Different tests of fitness were exacted, and the list shows that out of two hundred
and forty natives admitted from 1852 to 1868, two hundred and thirty-nine were
Hindus, and only one a Musalman.
Passing to the next grade in the Profession, the Attorneys, Proctors, and Solicitors
of the High Court, 198 there were in 1869 twenty-seven Hindus and not one
Musalman; while among the rising generation of articled clerks there were
twenty-six Hindus, and again not one Musalman. It matters not to what
department of the Profession I turn, the result is the same. In the Office of the
Registrar of the High Court there were in 1869 seventeen employees of sufficient
standing to have their names published. Six of them were Englishmen or East
Indians, eleven were Hindus, and not one was a Musalman. In the Receivers
Office four names were given, two Englishmen and two Hindus, but no
Musalman. In the Office of the Clerk of the Crown and Taxing Officer were four
Englishmen and five Hindus, but no Musalman. In all the nooks and crannies of
the law, in the Offices of Account, the Sheriffs Office, Coroners Office, and
Office of Interpreters, twenty names were giveneight Englishmen, eleven
Hindus, and one Musalman, the sole representative of the Muhammadan
population on the list, and he a miserable maula199 on six shillings a week.
The Profession of Medicine remains. But unhappily, Medicine, as practised by
the native doctors, scarcely ranks as a Profession among the upper classes of
Muhammadans. A Musalman gentleman has two medical attendants. The one is
a physician who, under the name of Tabib, or, as he is generally designated by
English writers, Hakim, receives honorable entertainment from his employers.
The other is the Jarrdh, which in simple English means barber. It is he who
performs all surgical operations, from shaving to amputation; and so rigid is the
line between Medicine and Surgery, that a Tabib of good standing would refuse
to bind up a wound. This line, however, the surgeon-barber by no means
198

On the side of Original Jurisdiction.

199

Law-officer.

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scruples to transgress. Practically, almost the whole science of Medicine falls


within his jurisdiction, and the Muhammadan physicians proper are now a small
and decaying class. In the great towns of Upper India they may still be found,
but in the Bengal Districts they are never met with. The practice of Medicine has
now fallen into the hands of the illiterate Musalman barbers and of the Hindu
doctors.200
Indeed, the traditional Muhammadan Physician, even where he still survives in
Northern India, is a scholar and recluse rather than an active practitioner. He
derives his art from Persian and Arabic manuscripts, and confounds our English
science of Medicine with the despised occupation of the surgeon-barber. It thus
happens that in Bengal, where the State affords admirable facilities for the study
of Medicine, the son of a good Musalman family scarcely ever enters the
Profession. Crowds of ill-bred Muhammadan boys from the lower and even the
menial walks of life, jostle for just that amount of gratuitous instruction which
will qualify them for a regimental apothecary ship. They are, in short, the barbersurgeons of a former time, despised by the upper classes of the Musalman
community, absolutely unrecognized by the few surviving Muhammadan
physicians, thankless for the benefits which they receive, and insolent to their
instructors except under the weight of an almost military discipline. It has been
my good fortune to be intimately acquainted with many Hindu doctors whose
bearing and whose learning entitle them to the respect due to their noble calling.
But I have never met a single Musalman doctor of this class. Such men may exist
in Northern India, but in Bengal the Muhammadans do not seem to aspire to any
of the recognised grades of the Medical Profession. In 1869 the statistics stood
thus:Among the Graduates of Medicine in the Calcutta University there were
four doctors; three Hindus, one Englishman, and no Muhammadan. Among
eleven Bachelors of Medicine, ten were Hindus and one an Englishman. The
hundred and four Licentiates of Medicine consisted of five Englishmen, ninetyeight Hindus, and one solitary Muhammadan. Recently the Government
conferred two titles of Bahadur upon members of the native medical profession
immediately connected with the Calcutta University. Political considerations
rendered it expedient that one of the titles should be given to a Hindu, the other
to a Musalman; and it is well known how highly the Muhammadans value such
a distinction. Yet I hear that, notwithstanding the excellent personal qualities of
the Musalman gentleman selected, the title has failed to give him that social
status among the higher classes of his countrymen which it generally confers.
The truth is, that Muhammadans do not consider Medicine as taught in our
schools the profession of a gentleman; and social prejudice closes this vocation to
sons of good Muhammadan families, as completely as the other professions, and
200

The Hindu doctors are also of two sorts: the Kabiraj, who practices on the native system of medicine,
and is often a mere quack; and the trained medical man of our English Colleges.

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the Government Services are shut to them by the overpowering rush of highlyeducated Hindus.
I have seldom read anything more piteous than the private letters and
newspaper articles of Bengal Musalmans. The Calcutta Persian paper 201 some
time ago wrote thus all sorts of employment, great and small, are being
gradually snatched away from the Muhammadans, and bestowed on men of
other races, particularly the Hindus. The Government is bound to look upon all
classes of its subjects with an equal eye, yet the time has now come when it
publicly singles out the Muhammadans in its Gazettes for exclusion from official
posts. Recently, when several vacancies occurred in the office of the Sundarbans
Commissioner, that official, in advertising them in the Government Gazette,
stated that the appointments would be given to none but Hindus.202 In short, the
Muhammadans have now sunk so low, that, even when qualified for
Government employ, they are studiously kept out of it by Government
notifications. Nobody takes any notice of their helpless condition, and the higher
authorities do not deign even to acknowledge their existence.
The following sentences are from a petition lately presented by the Orissa
Muhammadans to the Commissioner.203 Their stilted phraseology may perhaps
raise a smile; but the permanent impression produced by the spectacle of the
ancient conquerors of the Province begging in broken English for bare bread, is, I
think, one of sorrowful silence:As loyal subjects of Her Most Gracious Majesty
the Queen, we have, we believe, an equal claim to all appointments in the
administration of the country. Truly speaking, the Orissa Muhammadans have
been levelled down and down, with no hopes of rising again born of noble
parentage, poor by profession, and destitute of patrons, we find ourselves in the
position of a fish out of water. Such is the wretched state of the Muhammadans,
which we bring unto your Honours notice, believing your Honour to be the sole
representative of Her Most Gracious Majesty the Queen for the Orissa Division,
and hoping that justice will be administered to all classes, without distinction of
colour or creed. The penniless and parsimonious condition which we are
reduced to, consequent on the failure of our former Government service, has
thrown us into such an everlasting despondency, that we speak from the very
core of our hearts, that we would travel into the remotest corners of the earth,
ascend the snowy peaks of the Himalaya, wander the forlorn regions of Siberia,

201

Durbin, of 14th July 1869.

202

I have not at present the means of officially tracing and verifying this statement of the Persian
journalist, but it attracted some notice at the time, and was not so far as I heard, contradicted.
203

Mr. E. W. Molony, C.S., to whom I am indebted for a copy.

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could we be convinced that by so travelling we would be blessed with a


Government appointment of ten shillings a week.
How comes it that the Muhammadan population is thus shut out alike from
official employ and from the recognised Professions? The Musalmans of Bengal
do not want intelligence, and the spur of poverty constantly goads them to do
something to better their condition. The Government has covered Bengal with
schools, and many of its Districts are peopled with Muhammadans; yet the
Government schools fail to develop a class of Musalmans who can compete
successfully at the University, or find an entrance into any of the professions. The
same schools send forth every year a vast body of well-read, ambitious, and
intellectual Hindu youths, who distinguish themselves as young men at the
University, and in after-life monopolize every avenue to wealth or distinction.
The truth is, that our system of public instruction, which has awakened the
Hindus from the sleep of centuries, and quickened their inert masses with some
of the noble impulses of a nation, is opposed to the traditions, unsuited to the
requirements, and hateful to the religion, of the Musalmans. Under
Muhammadan Rule the Hindus accepted their fate exactly as they have done
under our own. At present, preferment depends upon a knowledge of English,
and they learn English. Formerly, preferment depended upon a knowledge of
Persian, and they learned Persian. As far back as 1500 A.D. they had begun to
compose works in that language. The verses of one of these early Hindu authors
survive; and although an Infidel, he obtained a public position as a teacher of the
Muhammadan youth, and a lecturer on their sciences. Under Akbar, the Hindus
met the enlightened monarch half-way, and produced an eminent Persian poet.
But it was not till a knowledge of Persian had become profitable to the Hindus
that it became general among them. At the end of the sixteenth century the
Chancellor of the Empire, himself a Hindu, commanded that the public accounts
should thenceforward be written in Persian, and the Hindu subordinate Revenue
Service forthwith learned Persian to a man. When, therefore, we introduced
English into the public offices, the facile Hindu immediately mastered the
language necessary to his success in life. The former language of public business
under the Muhammadans, and the new one under ourselves, were alike foreign
tongues to him. He was equally indifferent to both, except as a means of
preferment; indeed, as our Government schools gave him this important
talisman of success at less than half the cost price to the State, he greatly
preferred our system to the one which had preceded it.
With the Musalmans the case was altogether different. Before the country passed
to us, they were not only the political but the intellectual power in India. They
possessed a system of education which, to use the words of the Indian statesman
who knows them best, however inferior to that which we have established, was

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yet by no means to be despised; was capable of affording a high degree of


intellectual training and polish; was founded on principles not wholly unsound,
though presented in an antiquated form; and which was infinitely superior to
any other system of education then existing in India;a system which secured to
them an intellectual as well as a material supremacy, and through the medium of
which alone the Hindus could hope to fit themselves for the smallest share of
authority in their native country.204 During the first seventy-five years of cur
Rule we continued to make use of this system as a means for producing officers
to carry out our administration. But meanwhile we had introduced a scheme of
Public Instruction of our own; and as soon as it trained up a generation of men
on the new plan, we flung aside the old Muhammadan system, and the
Musalman youth found every avenue of public life closed in their faces.
Had the Musalmans been wise, they would have perceived the change, and
accepted their fate. But an ancient conquering race cannot easily divest itself of
the traditions of its nobler days. The Bengal Muhammadans refused a system
which gave them no advantages over the people whom they had so long ruled, a
people whom they hated as idolaters and despised as a servile race. Religion
came to the support of the popular feeling against the innovation, and for long it
remained doubtful whether a Musalman boy could attend our State Schools
without perdition to his soul. Had we introduced our system by means of
English masters, or boldly changed the language of public business to our own
tongue, their religious difficulty would in one important respect have been less.
For the Muhammadans admit that the Christian Faith, however short of the full
truth as finally revealed by their Prophet, is nevertheless one of the inspired
religions which have been vouchsafed to mankind. But Hinduism is to them the
mystery of abominations, a system of devil-worship and idolatry unbroken by a
single gleam of the knowledge of the One God. 205 The language of our
Government Schools in Lower Bengal is Hindu, and the masters are Hindus. The
higher sort of Musalmans spurned the instructions of idolaters through the
medium of the language of idolatry.
By degrees this detestation yielded to the altered necessities of the age. Religion,
which had at the beginning shed its sanction upon the popular dislike to our
Schools, began to waver. Decisions by the most learned Law Doctor of the age,
the Sun of India, who has already appeared more than once in this book, were
wrested into an approval of an English education. This celebrated Professor had
204

Mr. E. C. Bayley, C.S.I.

205

I need hardly say that I totally disagree from this view, which is possibly still the view of some
uninstructed Christians. The Muhammadans simply paid the price of their bigoted ignorance touching the
faith of the people over whom they had so long ruled.

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already decided as to employment under the English. Some official occupations,


he had said, are desirable, others indifferent, and others sinful. Thus, if the
English engage Musalmans for praiseworthy posts, such as Law Officers
according to the Muhammadan Code, overseers on roads or resting-houses for
poor travellers, as protectors of property or suppressors of thieves, it is well. For
thus the Prophet Joseph was employed as Treasurer and Inspector-General of
Police to the Infidel King of Egypt, and likewise Her Highness Must served
Pharaoh for the purpose of suckling Moses. But if the service tends to make a
person irreligious, then the Musalman who accepts it commits sin.
In the same way, when his disciples asked him whether it was lawful to learn
logic or English, he replied: Logic is not necessary for salvation, but it is a help
like grammar in learning the necessary knowledge. If any man learns it in order
to cast doubts on religion, he is a sinner. But if he learns it for learnings sake, he
is guiltless. Learning English for the purpose of reading books, writing letters,
and knowing the secret meanings of words, is permitted; because Zeid Ibn Sabit
learned the language and dictionaries of the Jews and Christians by the Prophets
order that he might be able to answer the letters which the Jews and Christians
sent to the Prophet. But if any man learns English for pleasure, or in order to
unite himself with the English, he sins and transgresses the Law: even as in the
case of a weapon of iron, if the weapon is made for driving away thieves or for
arresting them, then the making of it is a pious act; but if it is made to help or
defend the thieves, then the making of it is sinful.
The more zealous Muhammadans, however, have never quite accepted the
lawfulness of an education in our State Schools. While the worldly-minded
among them made advances towards our system, the fanatical section shrunk
still further back from it. During the last forty years they have separated
themselves from the Hindus by differences of dress, of salutations, and other
exterior distinctions, such as they never deemed necessary in the days of their
supremacy. Even as late as 1860-62 there was only one-Musalman to ten Hindus
in our schools; and although the proportion has increased since then, the increase
is due to the additional Aided Institutions, and not to the District Government
Schools. The attendance at the English Schools has not increased; and the officer
in charge of the Wahabi prosecutions, on whose authority I make these
statements, and who is intimately acquainted with Eastern Bengal, declares that
the number of Muhammadan students bears no fair ratio to the Muhammadan
population.
The truth is that our system of Public Instruction ignores the three most powerful
instincts of the Musalman heart. In the first place, it conducts education in the
vernacular of Bengal, a language which the educated Muhammadans despise,
and by means of Hindu teachers, whom the whole Muhammadan community

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hates. The Bengali schoolmaster talks his own dialect and a vile Urdu, the latter
of which is to him an acquired language almost as much as it is to ourselves.
Moreover, his gentle and timid character unfits him to maintain order among
Musalman boys. Nothing on earth, said a Muhammadan husbandman recently
to an English official, would induce me to send my boy to a Bengali teacher. In
the second place, our rural schools seldom enable a Muhammadan to learn, the
tongues necessary for his holding a respectable position in life, and for the
performance of his religious duties. Every Muhammadan gentleman must have
some knowledge of Persian, and Persian is a language unknown even in our
higher class District schools. Every Musalman, from the peasant to the prince,
ought to say his prayers in one of the sacred languages, Persians206 or Arabic, and
this our schools have never recognised. It was lately asserted on high authority,
that the prayers of the Musalmans find no acceptance with God unless they are
offered in the prescribed tongues.) In the third place, our system of Public
Instruction makes no provision for the religious education of the Muhammadan
youth. It overlooks the fact that among the Hindus a large and powerful caste
has come down from time immemorial for supplying this part of a boys training,
while among the Muhammadans no separate body of clergy exists. Every head
of a Musalman household is supposed to know the duties of his religion, and to
be his own family priest. Public ministrations are indeed conducted at the
mosques; but it is the glory of Islam that its temples are not made with hands,
and that its ceremonies can be performed anywhere upon Gods earth or under
His heavens. A system of purely secular education is adapted to very few nations.
In the opinion of many deeply thinking men, it has signally failed in Ireland, and
it is certainly altogether unsuited to the illiterate and fanatical peasantry of
Muhammadan Bengal.
Is it therefore, to repeat the words of the Indian Statesman who has studied the
subject most deeply, any wonder that the Musalmans have held aloof from a
system which made no concession to their prejudices; made no provision for
what they esteemed their necessities; which was in its nature unavoidably
antagonistic to their interests, and at variance with all their social traditions?
Yet many English Officers have gone through their service with a chronic
indignation against the Muhammadans for refusing to accept the education
which we have tried to bring to every mans door. The facility with which the
rest of the population acquiesced in it made this refusal more odious by contrast.
The pliant Hindu knew no scruples, and we could not understand why the
Muhammadan should be troubled with them. But the truth is, that we
overlooked a distinction as old as the religious instinct itself,the distinction
206

Persian has become a quasi-sacred language with the Bengali Musalmans as it was the vehicle through
which the Law and the Scriptures of Islam reached them.

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which in all ages and among all nations has separated polytheism from the
worship of One God. Polytheism, by multiplying the Objects of its followers
adoration, divides its claims on their belief. What Gibbon finely said of the
Greeks, applies at this moment with more than its original force to the Hindus:
Instead of an indivisible and regular system which occupies the whole extent of
the believing mind, the mythology of the Greeks was composed of a thousand
loose and flexible parts, and the servant of the gods was at liberty to define the
degree and measure of his religious faith.207 The Muhammadans have no such
licence. Their creed demands an absolute, a living, and even an intolerant belief;
nor will any system of Public Instruction, which leaves the religious principle out
of sight, ever satisfy the devout follower of Islam.
How far it may be possible to do justice to the Musalman population in this
respect, without sacrificing our position as a Christian Government, I shall
afterwards inquire. Meanwhile the Muhammadans have just ground for
complaining that the funds which we levy impartially from all classes for State
Education are in Bengal expended on a system exclusively adapted to the
Hindus.
But unfortunately this is not their most serious charge against us. While we have
created a system of Public Instruction unsuited to their wants, we have also
denuded their own system of the funds by which it was formerly supported.
Every great Musalman House in Bengal maintained a scholastic establishment in
which its sons and its poorer neighbours received an education free of expense.
As the Muhammadan families of the Province declined, such private institutions
dwindled in numbers and in efficiency. It was not, however, till the second half
century of our Rule that we arrayed against them the resistless force of British
Law. From time immemorial the Native Princes of India had been accustomed to
set apart grants of land for the education of the youth and for the service of the
gods. The ruling power for the time being always possessed unquestioned and
unlimited powers in this respect. Under the careless sway of the Mughuls, and
during the anarchy amid which their Empire closed, the power had been to some
extent transferred to, and to a still greater extent usurped by, the Provincial
Governors and their subordinates. The distant Dehli Court troubled itself little
about what was going on in Lower Bengal, so long as the total tribute of the
Province was discharged. The indolent and luxurious Governor at Dacca or
Murshidabad was equally indifferent to the details of the District Administration.
Every great Farmer of the Revenue could do pretty much as he liked with the
lands under his care, so long as he paid up the stipulated Land-Tax. According to
the form of his religion, he gave rent-free tenures to the temples or to the

207

Roman Empire, vol. ii. p. 360, quarto ed. of 1786.

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mosques and a long life of cruelty and extortion might always be condoned by
liberal death-bed devises in pios usus.
When we took over charge of Bengal, the ablest Revenue Officer of the time208
estimated that one-fourth of the whole Province had been transferred from the
State. In 1772 Warren Hastings discerned the gigantic fraud, but the feeling
against resuming such tenures was then too strong to allow of any active steps
being taken. In 1793 Lord Cornwallis again asserted in the strongest and
broadest manner the inalienable right of Government to all rent-free grants
which had not obtained the sanction of the Ruling Power. But even the powerful
Government of that day did not venture to carry out this principle. The subject
rested for another quarter of a century, until 1819, when the Government again
asserted its rights, but again shrank from enforcing them. It was not until 1828
that the Legislature and the Executive combined to make one great effort. Special
Courts were created, and during the next eighteen years the whole Province was
overrun with informers, false witnesses, and stern pale-faced Resumption
Officers.
At an outlay of 800,000 upon Resumption proceedings, an additional revenue of
300,000 a year was permanently gained by the State, representing a capital at
five percent of six millions sterling.209 A large part of this sum was derived from
lands held rent free by Musalmans or by Muhammadan foundations. The panic
and hatred which ensued have stamped themselves for ever on the rural records.
Hundreds of ancient families were ruined, and the educational system of the
Musalmans, which was almost entirely maintained by rent-free grants, received
its death-blow. The scholastic classes of the Muhammadans emerged from the
eighteen years 210 of harrying, absolutely ruined. Any impartial student will
arrive at the conviction, that while the Resumption Laws only enforced rights
which we had again and again most emphatically reserved, yet that the
Resumption Proceedings were harsh in the extreme, and opposed to the general
sense of the Indian people. Prescription cannot create rights in the face of express
enactments, but seventy-five years of unbroken possession give rise to strong
claims on the tenderness of a Government. Our Resumption Officers knew no
pity. They calmly enforced the law. The panic of those days is still remembered,
and it has left to us a bitter legacy of hatred. Since then the profession of a Man of
Learning, a dignified and lucrative calling under Native Rulers has ceased to
exist in Bengal.
208

Mr. James Grant.

209

Vide Friend of India of 80th April 1846, whose calculations have been accepted by subsequent
Revenue Authorities; e.d. Mr. J. H. Young, C. S., in the Revenue Handbook, p. 69. Calcutta, 1861.
210

The Resumption proceedings were fiercest at the beginning, and after languishing for some years, were
officially terminated by the Government Order of March 4, 1816.

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The Muhammadan foundations suffered most; for with regard to their titledeeds, as with regard to all other matters, the former conquerors of India had
displayed a haughty indifference unknown to the provident and astute Hindu.
We demanded an amount of proof in support of rent-free tenures, which, in the
then uncertain state of real-property law, they could not have produced in
support of their acknowledged private estates. During seventy-five years we had
submitted under protest to a gigantic system of fraud, and the accumulated
penalty fell upon a single generation. Meanwhile the climate and the white-ants
had been making havoc of the grants and title-deeds which might have
supported their claims. There can be little doubt that our Resumptions fell short
of what had been stolen from us ; but there can be no doubt whatever, that from
those( Resumptions the decay of the Muhammadan system of education dates.
The officer now in charge of the, Wahabi prosecutions cites them as the second
cause of, the decline of the Musalman community in Bengal.
The justice of these proceedings may, however, be defended; the absolute
misappropriation of scholastic funds, with which the Musalmans charge us,
cannot. For it is no use concealing the fact that the Muhammadans believe that, if
we had only honestly applied the property entrusted to us for that purpose, they
would at this moment possess one of the noblest and most efficient educational
establishments in Bengal. In 1806 a wealthy, Muhammadan gentleman of Hugli
District died, leaving a vast estate in pios usus. Presently his two trustees began to
quarrel. In 1810 the dispute deepened into a charge of malversation, and the
English Collector of the District attached the property, pending the decision of
the Courts. Litigation continued till 1816, when the Government dismissed both
the trustees, and assumed the management of the estate, appointing itself in the
place of one trustee, and nominating a second one. Next year it let out the estate
in perpetuity, taking a suitable payment from each of the permanent leaseholders. These payments, with the arrears which had accumulated during the
litigation, now amount to 105,700,211 besides over 12,000 which has since been
saved from the annual proceeds of the estate.
The Trust had, as I have said, been left for pious uses. These uses had been
defined by the will, such as the maintenance of certain religious rites and
ceremonies, the repair of the Imdmbdrah, or great mosque at Hugli, a burial
ground, certain pensions, and various religious establishments. An educational
foundation came strictly within the purposes of the Trust, but an educational
establishment on the Muhammadan plan, such as the founder would have
himself approved. A College for poor scholars has always been considered a
pious use in Musalman countries. But any attempt to divert the funds to a non211

The College building, however, was paid for out of this source.

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Muhammadan College would have been deemed an act of impiety by the


testator, and could only be regarded as a gross malversation on the part of the
trustees. Indeed, so inseparable is the religious element from a Muhammadan
endowment, that the Government had to carefully investigate the legality of
applying a Trust, made by a gentleman of the Shiah sect, to the education of the
Sunni Musalmans.
We may imagine, then, the burst of indignation with which the Muhammadans
learned that the English Government was about to misappropriate the funds to
the erection of an English College. This, however, it did. It devoted an estate left
expressly for the pious uses of Islam, to founding an institution subversive in its
very nature of the principles of Islam, and from which the Muhammadans were
practically excluded. At this moment the head of the College is an English
gentleman ignorant of a single word of Persian or Arabic, who draws 1500 a
year from a Muhammadan religious endowment for teaching things hateful to
every Musalman. It is not, of course, his fault, but the fault of the Government
which placed him there, and which for thirty-five years has been deliberately
misappropriating this great educational fund. In vain it attempted to cloak so
gross a breach of trust by attaching a small Muhammadan school to the English
College. Besides the misappropriation of the accumulated fund in building the
College, it annually diverted 5000 to its maintenance. That is to say, out of an
income of 5260, it devoted only 350 to the little Muhammadan school which
alone remained to bear witness to the original character of the Trust.
It is painful to dwell on this charge of misappropriation, because it is impossible
to rebut it. The Muhammadans declare that the English took advantage of
irregularities on the part of the first Musalman trustees, to place an Infidel
Government in charge of their largest religious endowments; and that they have
since aggravated this initial wrong by substituting for the pious objects of the
Musalman testator, an Institution which is of no service to the Muhammadans
whatever. Some years ago it is stated that, out of three hundred boys in the
English College, not one percent were Musalmans; and although this disgraceful
disproportion has since been lessened, the sense of injustice still remains among
the Muhammadan community. I believe it is difficult, writes a Civilian who has
studied the matter deeply, to over-estimate the odium, not to say the contempt,
which the British Government has incurred by its action in this case. This
language may perhaps be deemed strong, but I can testify to the fact that during
twenty-eight years residence in India I have repeatedly broached the subject (I
visited Hugh within a few weeks after my first arrival), and I can affirm that I
never heard from native or European any other account. Rightly or not, the
Muhammadans do think that Government has behaved unjustly, and even
meanly, towards them in this matter, and it is a standing sore and grievance with
them.

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Even this, however, does not complete the wrongs with which the Musalmans
charge their English Rulers. They arraign us not only upon depriving them of
any chance of success in this life, but also upon attempts to imperil their
salvation in the next. All religions of the noble type have set apart certain days
for the performance of their spiritual duties. We can picture the sorrow and
indignation with which the English would regard the arbitrary fiat of a foreign
conqueror, declaring that Sundays should no longer be days of rest. The
Muhammadans venerate, with emotions of equal tenderness their own solemn
festivals. In most parts of India we have respected this feeling. But in Lower
Bengal the Muhammadans have of late so completely sunk out of sight, that their
religious requirements were gradually overlooked, then neglected, and finally
denied. Last year the Muhammadan Pleaders of the High Court presented two
memorials on this subject. They pointed out, that while the number of closed
days allowed to the Christians were sixty-two in number, and those to the
Hindus fifty-two, only eleven were granted to the Muhammadans. Formerly the
sanctioned Musalman holidays amounted to twenty-one; and all that the
petitioners ventured to beg was, that they should not be further decreased below
the minimum of eleven which they had already reached. These memorials were
called forth by an order that the native holidays observed by the High Court
should hereafter be the same as those allowed in other Government Offices. Now,
in other Government Offices no Muhammadan holidays are sanctioned at all.
The head of each establishment may allow any Muhammadans whom he may
have under him to absent themselves during their six great fasts or festivals,
making a total of twelve days per annum; but the office remains open, and the
general work goes on as usual.
The Muhammadan Pleaders pointed out that a permissive system of this sort
would by no means meet the requirements of a public Court of Justice. Such
tribunals have to consider not only their officers and practitioners, but also the
public for whose convenience they exist. They urged that, although the number
of Muhammadan Pleaders has greatly diminished, yet that the number of
Muhammadan suitors who come to look after their cases has, in consequence of
railway communication, more than proportionately increased. That even if the
Muhammadan Pleaders might be excused from attendance on a Muhammadan
holiday, yet that they could not divert their minds from suits which might still be
carried on if a Hindu or an English Pleader happened to be also engaged in them.
In short, that the order amounted to a total abolition of their religious festivals,
an abolition opposed to the practice of the seventy-two years during which the
Court had sat, and prohibitive of the duties enjoined by their faith. If holidays are
to be allowed to Hindus and Christians according to their religion, your
Memorialists submit that the Muhammadans should not be deprived of the

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holidays set apart for the performance of their religious duties and ceremonies.212
The hardship is aggravated by the fact that, with the exception of two festivals
(the Id-ul-fitr occupying three days, and the Id-uz-zuha occupying one), all the
Musalman holidays are seasons of humiliation and mourning, during which
every religious man should shut out the affairs of the world and take account
with his soul.
To so low an estate has the race which once monopolized the whole legal
appointments throughout India fallen in Bengal. It is gratifying to know that at
least this piece of injustice was not allowed to take effect. The Supreme
Government interfered and authoritatively set apart a certain limited number of
Muhammadan holidays ; not, indeed, so many as the Musalmans desired, but as
many as the exigencies of public business would permit, and sufficient for the
observance of the great festivals of their faith.
One charge yet remains. The Muhammadans complain that not only has our
system extruded them from the legal profession, but that an Act of the
Legislature has deprived them of the one essential functionary for the fulfillment
of their domestic and religious law. Under a Muhammadan Government, the
Kazi unites many of the functions of a criminal, a civil, and an ecclesiastical judge.
It was to him that we chiefly trusted to carry on the administration of justice
when we first took charge of the country. Our earliest code recognised his
importance and confirmed his office, and a long list of twenty-five Regulations
touching his duties may still be found in our Indian Statute Books.213 Indeed, so
in dispensable is the Kazi to the Muhammadan domestic and religious code that
the law-doctors decided that India would continue a Country of Islam so long as
the Kazis were maintained, and become a Country of the Enemy the moment
they were abolished.
Unfortunately, the intimate acquaintance with Muhammadan popular feeling,
which Muhammadan disaffection has now forced us to acquire, is of a very
recent date. In 1863, one of the Provincial Governors called in question the
propriety of continuing to appoint Kazis. He appears to have thought that such
appointments involved a recognition of their sacerdotal character by the
Government, and to have believed that the Muhammadan community might be
safely allowed to make the appointments themselves. Accordingly, after some
212

Memorial of the Muhammadan Pleaders of the High Court to the Officiating Chief-Justice and his
companion Justices, para. 3.
213

BENGAL CODE.Reg. IV., 1793; Reg. XII., 1793; Reg. XXXIX., 1793; Reg. VIII, 1795; Reg. XI.,
1793; Reg. XLIX., 1795; Reg. X., 1798; Reg. III., 1803; Reg. XI., 1803; Reg. XLVI., 1803; Reg. X., 1806;
Reg. VIII., 1809; Reg. XVIII., 1817; Reg. XI., 1826; Reg. III., 1827; Reg. III., 1829. MADRAS CODE.
Reg. XI., 1802; Reg. III., 1808; Reg. VII., 1822; Reg. III., 1828. BOMBAY CODE.Reg. II., 1827; and
Reg. XXVI., 1827. Act XXVII. of 1836; Act VII. of 1843; and Act V. of 1845.

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discussion, and a strong protest from Bombay, the whole previous legislation on
the subject was repealed, and Government formally discontinued its
appointment of Kazis.214
During the past seven years a great and constantly increasing section of the
Muhammadan community have been deprived of the functionary necessary for
the celebration of marriages and other important ceremonies of their domestic
Code. The evil did not tell at first so severely as afterwards, for the old Kazis
remained. It was only on the death or retirement of one of them that the law took
effect, by having abolished the machinery for filling his place. The subject early
attracted the attention of the present Viceroy, but no absolutely con
elusive evidence could be obtained until in 1870 the Madras High Court took up
and decided the question. Mr. Justice Colletts decision215 leaves no doubt that
Kazis can only be appointed by the ruling Power; that in default of such
appointment the Muhammadans are powerless to elect one themselves ; and that
the Act of 1864 has deprived their community of the most important officer of
their law. His duties are defined as preparing and attesting Deeds of Transfer,
celebrating marriages, and performing certain other religious rites and
ceremonies. Now it so happens that one of the crying evils in Lower Bengal
which embarrasses and defies the Magistrates is marriage litigation among the
Muhammadans. For some reason or another, the marriage tie has of late been
relaxed. Charges of adultery or abduction, both of which come under the Penal
Code, pour into the Courts of the Deltaic Districts, and in nine cases out of ten it
is impossible to prove the legality of the marriage. Such cases in the two
Divisions of Eastern Bengal rose from 561 in 1862, two years before the
discontinuance of the official appointment of Kazis, to 1984 in 1866, or two years
after that discontinuance. Since then the number has decreased in the Criminal
Returns, apparently not from any real diminution, but because it has become
customary to refer such complaints to the Civil Courts.216
I take these figures from a valuable note by the officer in charge of the Wahabi
prosecutions, and an official of still greater weight and experience thus sums up
the political evil that the discontinuance of officially appointing Kazis has done:-214

By Act XI. of 1864, subsequently repealed by the schedule attached to Act VIII. of 1868, which,
however, did not revive the old Regulations under which the appointments had formerly been made.
215

Original Suit, No. 453 of 1869; Muhammad Abubakr v. Mir Ghulam Husain and Another.

216

The excessive growth of marriage litigation was to some extent due to the people learning more fully
how to make use of the Indian Penal Code. But the fact of our having rendered breaches of the marriage tie
a criminal offence made it the more important that the marriage law should be well defined. We took the
very worst moment that could possibly have been chosen for the abolition of the Musalman marriage
officers.

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In connection with the Wahabi movement, there is, I think, no doubt that their
abolition has acted in two ways. It has increased the number of zealous partially
instructed men of letters, 217 who, without other means of livelihood, and
embittered against the existing state of things, go about preaching among the
ignorant Muhammadan population, apostles of disloyalty. But it also acts in a far
more serious way. There can be no doubt that a Muhammadans life can hardly
be conducted in conformity to the roles of his religion where no proper Kazi
exists. Not only do certain ceremonies require their sanction, but there are
perpetually small questions of religious and formal law cropping up in the
every-day life of a Muhammadan, which should properly be resolved by a Kazi.
If no such officer exists, it gives a broad opening to a man who is disloyal to
Government to press on a conscientious Muhammadan that the Government is
not one he can properly live under. On the other hand, the use and recognition of
a Kazi appointed by Government is virtually a recognition of the authority and
lawfulness of that Government.
The question is one of the most important that ever came before the Indian.
Legislature. Under an acknowledged military occupation, as in Algiers, it may be
doubtful how far the Kazis require recognition by the Ruling Power. But all the
evidence tends to show that such recognition or appointment is necessary under
a settled Civil Government like that of British India. The point is an intricate one,
but meanwhile the decision of the Madras High Court remains in force, and
leaves the office of Kazi shorn of dignity and legal authority. Deep consideration
of the whole bearings of the case, and consultation with the ten Provincial
Governments into which India is divided, will no doubt be required before a
decision can be safely arrived at. But the earnest attitude which the Viceroy has
taken up, and the firm resolve of Government to do justice to the Muhammadans,
at whatever cost of admitting its former mistakes, give good ground for belief
that this too will presently be removed from the list of Musalman charges against
British Rule.
The neglect and contempt, with which, for half a century, the Muhammadan
population of Lower Bengal has thus been treated, have left their marks deep in
recent Indian literature. The former conquerors of the East are excluded from our
Oriental journals and libraries as well as from the more active careers in life. The
old Court of Directors wisely shared its favours between Musalmans and Hindus,
and the admirable Arabic and Persian scholarship displayed in the earlier series
of the Bibliotheca Indica was merely the literary representative of this political
impartiality. But during the last fifty years the Hindus have extruded the
Muhammadans alike from State literature and State employ, and the 600 a year
which the Court of Directors granted to the Bibliotheca Indica has been allotted
217

The class from whom the Kazis were recruited and who looked to that office as their career in life.

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in almost as one-sided a way as Bengal official patronage. Between 1847 and 1852,
under Dr. Roers rule, few efforts of Semitic scholarship appeared; and although,
during the brief incumbency of Dr. Sprenger, a reaction set in, and two works of
the first magnitude were begun, they have been left unfinished.
Dr. Horace Hayman Wilsons enthusiastic Sanskrit scholarship could ill brook
the expenditure of an Indian grant upon Arabic literature. Under his inspiration,
the Court of Directors issued an injunction that the Bibliotheca Indica should be
devoted entirely to Indian subjects, upon pain of withdrawal of the 600 a year.
Perhaps it was well that a man with so much force of character, and with such
paramount claims to be heard on his own subject, should have been temporarily
allowed to have his way. Dr. H. H. Wilson built the basement of modern Sanskrit
learning; the masonry which Max Muller is now overlaying with his exquisite
ornamentation, and upon which he is rearing upper storeys of a light and
graceful architecture hitherto unattempted in scholarship. Meanwhile
Goldstiicker, Aufrecht, Fitz-Edward Hall, and Muir are strengthening the
foundation, throwing out buttresses, and adding substantial wings, so that the
beautiful structure shall abide for ever.
But a little band of Semitic scholars were still holding together, and defending
their position to the last. The Court of Directors had withdrawn its support from
any undertaking extraneous to India Proper. The Semitic scholars did not feel
strong enough to fight on this ground, and accordingly abandoned the Arabic
outworks ; only to entrench themselves, however, behind the Persian literature of
the Muhammadan Empire. Sir Henry Elliot went on with his labours unmoved.
Mr. Thomas, Mr. Hammond, Sir William Muir, and a few others, formed a
brilliant group of Civilians, who wrung from the Local Government what the
distant Court of Directors had refused. In 1855 the Lieutenant-Governor of the
North-West Provinces sanctioned the collection of Persian MSS. at the public
expense. Sixty-seven were landed at a single haul. The publication of Sir Henry
Elliots papers, under the admirable although somewhat leisurely editorship of
Mr. Thomas, Professor Dowson, and Mr. Beames, marks a vast stride. Meanwhile
the Lucknow Muhammadan Presses have been annually pouring forth their
varied, if not very careful or well-considered, productions. Colonel Nassau Lees
has devoted all his influence and learning to the cause; and in Dr. Rost, the new
librarian at the India Office, Orientalists have obtained one of those rare scholars
who combine a broad range of subjects and interests with depth and absolute
trustworthiness. In India the reaction is equally well marked, and a scholar has
arisen in the person of Mr. Blochmann, whose industry, talent, and enthusiasm
recall the early days of Oriental learning.
I have now set forth the Muhammadan Petition and Complaint against British
Rule. The charges of misappropriation and specific wrongs may be safely left to

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Government to deal with,a Government which has during the last two years
shown its earnestness equally in putting down disaffection and in trying to
remove the causes of it. But on the more general and less tangible accusation of
neglect I must say a few words. If we analyse this charge, we shall find that our
unsympathetic system of Public Instruction lies at the root of the matter. The
Bengal Musalmans can never hope to succeed in life, or to obtain a fair share of
the State patronage, until they fit themselves for it, and they will never thus fit
themselves until provision is made for their education in our schools. The
changes required are, in my opinion, very simple and inexpensive. But before
entering on them, I propose to relate the one great effort we have made in this
direction. The English in India have failed in their duty towards the Musalmans,
but it is only fair to narrate the difficulties and discouragements which they have
met with in trying to do it.
During exactly ninety years, a costly Muhammadan College has been maintained
in Calcutta at the State expense. 218 It owes its origin, like most other of the
English attempts to benefit the people, to Warren Hastings. In 1781 the
Governor- General discerned the change which must inevitably come over the
prospects of the Musalmans, and tried to prepare them for it. As the wealth of
the great Muhammadan Houses decayed, their power of giving their sons an
education which should fit them for the higher offices in the State declined pari
passu. To restore the chances in their favour, Warren Hastings established a
Muhammadan College in the Capital, and endowed it with certain rents towards
its perpetual maintenance. Unfortunately for the Musalmans, he left its
management to the Musalmans themselves. Persian and Arabic remained the
sole subjects of instruction, long after Persian and Arabic had ceased to be the
bread-winners in official life. Abuses of a very grave character crept into, the
College, and in 1819 it was found necessary to appoint an European Secretary. In
1826 a further effort was made to adapt the Institution to the altered necessities
of the times; an English class was formed, but unhappily soon afterwards broken
up. Three years afterwards, another and a more permanent effort was made, but
with inadequate results. During the next quarter of a century, the Muhammadan
College shared the fate of the Muhammadan community. It was allowed to drop
out of sight; and when the Local Government made any sign on the subject, it
was some expression of impatience at its continuing to exist at all.
Between 1851 and 1853, however, the authorities awoke to the necessity of doing
something towards reforming an Institution which had become a public scandal.
The result of the proposals then put forward219 amounted to this. The College
218

Known in Bengal as the Madraseh.

219

By Mr. J. R. Colvin, the Civilian who then chiefly enjoyed the confidence of the Muhammadan
community, as from his accomplishments in Persian and Arabic he deserved it, and who, on the death of

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was divided into two Departments, the lower of which, under the name of the
Anglo-Persian Branch, taught Urdu, Persian, and English up to a very moderate
standard.220 The upper Department was devoted entirely to Arabic. The defects
of this plan soon became apparent. When the youths passed into the purely
Arabic Branch, they forgot what they had learned in the more miscellaneous
lower Department. In 1858 the effects of the system are thus described: It turned
out a few scholars, good in their peculiar narrow way, but not in the least fitted
to take their place in the competition of official or general life; and who were in
consequence, as a class, bigoted, self-sufficient, disappointed, and soured, if not
disloyal.221
Another effort was made to reform the College, and for a year or two with some
success. 222 But things soon relapsed into their former state, and in 1869 the
Bengal Government had to issue a Commission, still sitting, to inquire into the
causes of its inefficiency. The truth is that the Muhammadan College fitted its
students neither for the University nor for active life. The whole system, says the
most distinguished Musalman Reformer of the day, 223 can land them only in
half-and-half results. As students entirely of Arabic, they lose the benefit of the
little English training they were acquainted with; for the College has no means
for continuing English instruction, and it does not take much time to obliterate
from their minds whatever little English they may have learned.
I propose briefly to explain how so sad a result has been obtained from so wellmeant an effort. In the first place, the supervision has been all along deficient.
Even during the brief period that an English Principal has existed, his
appointment and his authority have been little more than nominal. He has had
charge of other and more important offices; and to these the Principalship of the
one great Muhammadan College which we have in Bengal has been tacked on as
a sort of honorary appointment, with a merely nominal addition to his other
salary. For example, the present Principals chief appointment is Secretary to the
Board of Examiners; and through his hands the whole of the Military Officers at
the Presidency have to pass, in order to qualify themselves for appointments,
Mr. Thomason, became Lieutenant-Governor of the North-Western Provinces. He died in the Agra Fort
during the Mutiny.
220

At present, to the entrance standard of the Calcutta University.

221

Mr. E. C. Bayley, to whose notes I owe several of the ideas contained in this Chapter.

222

Under the suggestion of Colonel Nassau Lees, the Honorary Principal of the College. It is only fair to
Colonel Lees (who is not now in India to speak for himself), to state that he again and again earnestly set
forth the necessity for reform, and that some of the proposals which I shall make later on were urged by
him many years ago.
223

Maulavi Abd-ul-Latff Khan Babadur.

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with all the Civilians who read for honours in the native languages. He is also
officiating as Assistant-Secretary and Translator to the Government of India in
the Home Department, besides any occasional work which may be thrown upon
him, such as Committees and miscellaneous references from Government. In
addition to all this, he is supposed to be Principal of the Muhammadan College;
and however enthusiastically the present incumbent may have entered on this
fragment of his multifarious duties, it is hopeless to look for permanent
efficiency from such a system.
The internal arrangements are still worse. An able and energetic scholar presides
over the lower Department, but his control ends just where such supervision is
most needed, viz. in the higher Arabic Branch. This Department, on which the
whole success of the Institution depends, is left in the hands of the native
Maulavis. Nominally, indeed, one of the latter gentlemen enjoys precedence over
the other Masters, with the title of Head Maulavi. But no distinct chain of
subordination exists; the under Masters were not responsible to him, and he was
never seen out of his own class. 224 There were no monthly nor quarterly
examinations; no daily, nor even weekly, inspections of the classes. It is clear that
no good could come out of such a system. The Principal could not really
superintend, because he had other work; the Head Maulavi never attempted to
supervise, and we know the practical results.
It is impossible to exaggerate the evil which this neglect has done to the
Muhammadan youth of Bengal. We must remember that, since we
misappropriated the Hugh Endowment a generation ago, the Calcutta College is
the one Institution where they can hope to obtain a high-class education. A body
of young Musalmans, about a hundred in number, are gathered together in the
heart of a licentious Oriental capital ; kept under bad influences for seven years,
with no check upon their conduct, and no examples of honourable efficiency
within their sphere; and finally sent back to their native villages without being
qualified for any career in life. About eighty percent of them come from the
fanatical Eastern Districts;225 the difficulty of getting any lucrative employment,
without a knowledge of English, having driven away the youth of the more loyal
parts of Bengal from the College. The students have passed their boyhood in an
atmosphere of disaffection. Many of them are poor, and when they come to
Calcutta, lodge in the houses and live on the charity of English gentlemens

224

I do not know whether the fact of a Commission being actually sitting has changed matters in this and
the other respects subsequently mentioned. But I guarantee the absolute accuracy of my statements as
representing the general conduct of the College when the Commission was appointed.
225

Chittagong, Sandwip, and Shahbazpur send the majority.

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butlers.226 These are the moneyed men among the Muhammadan community,
and they deride their masters behind their backs with all the suppressed
insolence of menials belonging to a subject race. The students are all above
sixteen, some above twenty, and some, I am told, over thirty years of age. The
butlers with whom they live not only acquire the religious merit of supporting
them, but often marry their daughters, with a handsome dowry, to their guests.
The latter come from the petty landholding class, who care nothing for English or
for science, little for Persian, and a great deal for the technicalities of Arabic
grammar and law. At home they were engaged in ploughing their little fields or
plying their boats; and they speak the rude peasant dialect of the Deltaic
Districtsa patois unintelligible to the Calcutta Musalman.
This is the new-caught student. In a few years he loses his barbarous jargon, gets
his beard clipped, and sets up as a young professor of the Musalman Law. A.
generous Government allows twenty-eight scholarships among the hundred
students, so that sooner or later any youth of the smallest application is sure to
get one. Meanwhile the more enterprising and less studious among them set up a
little trade. The advanced student has a consequential swagger all his own. He
struts about Calcutta with his books under his arm, and, throwing aside the
character of a poor pensioner, demands the respect due to a man of learning
from the butler on whom he lives. Thanks to our short-sighted abolition of the
Kazis, the domestic Code of Islam has fallen into the hands of unlicensed
practitioners. The College Students read the marriage formula in the lower sort
of Muhammadan families, settle matters of inheritance, and sell shallow
Decisions according to the Hidayah and the Jami-ur-runniz.
There never was a set of young men who stand more in need of good guidance
than these poor students of the Muhammadan College. What amount of
guidance they get, I have already set forth. Every year under our instruction
makes them more confident in their own narrow system of learning, more
vicious as to their morals, less fit for any active career in life, and more disloyal to
our Government. They hate the sight of an Englishman. When the scandal had
grown so public as to render imperative a resident English Professor in the
College,227 he had to be smuggled into it by night. During more than ninety years
the Chapters on Holy War against the Infidel have been the favourite studies of
the place; and up to 1868 or 1869, I forget the exact date, examination questions
were regularly given in this Doctrine of Rebellion. A mosque of fanaticism

226

Khansamans, who maintain poor scholars as a religious act. Such board and lodging is called a jagir,
the name by which the military fiefs of the Muhammadan Empire were styled.
227

At present Mr. Blochmann. Unhappily the Resident English Professor has no jurisdiction over the
Arabic or Upper Department.

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flourishes almost within the shadow of the College,228 and the students frequent
the Rebel places of worship throughout all Calcutta. The present Head Master is
the son of one of the leading Doctors whom the Mutiny of 1857 brought to the
front, and who expiated his crimes by transportation for life to an island in the
Indian Ocean. The library of the learned traitor, after being confiscated by
Government, is now lodged in the Calcutta College. Within the last few months,
the Resident English Professor had to turn out of the grounds a wandering Arab,
who came to preach religion, or, in other words, the doctrines which have cost
us three Frontier Wars, and spread a network of conspiracy over the Empire.
After a seven years training of this sort, we dismiss the Muhammadan youth to
the fanatical Eastern Districts whence they came. But unhappily an even sadder
tale remains to be told. I do not speak of the last two years during which the
Special Commission has been sitting. But there is evidence on record to show
that, within a quite recent period, the students brought their courtesans into the
College.229 About twenty-six of them have rooms; and the quarters thus granted
by the Government were converted into dens of profligacy. Not content with
harbouring what Carlyle calls the unmentionable women, they sunk into those
more horrible crimes against nature which Christianity has extirpated from
Europe, but which lurk in every great city of India. Within the last five or six
years three cases were discovered; how many occurred can never be known.
Even the few among them who, if left to themselves, would try to do well, had
no means for obtaining any sound or practically useful knowledge. In the first
place, the time daily devoted to teaching was too short. The fixed hours are from
ten to two, from which about twenty minutes must be subtracted in order to
allow masters and students to smoke a hooka, known in the College slang as
Moses Rod; and about half an hour for calling the roll, a ceremony which had
to be performed twice a day, as many of the students finally disappeared at
twelve oclock. Some of the more diligent supplement the meagre College
curriculum by reading religion in private Musalman schools outside. Such
external studies consist chiefly of the Muhammadan Traditions (Ffaclis), and
law-books of the fanatical mediaeval stamp,a sort of learning which fills the
youthful brain with windy self-importance, and gives rise to bitter schisms on
the most trivial points within the College walls. Not long ago, as the English
Resident Professor was going his evening rounds, he heard a tumult in the
students rooms. Your religion is all wrong,230 and similar phrases, resounded
228

A Fardizi mosque.

229

It is only just to add that the non-resident English Principal, Colonel Lees, was in no way responsible
for these occurrences, and when the courtesan discoveries were made, took steps for rendering their
repetition impossible.
230

'Tumhara iman thik ne.'

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through the corridors, and fierce were the denunciations on all sides. He hurried
to the scene of the uproar, and found that one of the students had discovered in a
law-book that during prayer the heels should be joined, else the petition has no
effect in heaven or on earth. Those who had said their prayers with unclosed
heels denounced the discoverer of the new mode as a pernicious heretic; while
he and a little band of followers consigned all who prayed in the old fashion to
the eternal torments of hell.
Three hours instruction is as much as they could possibly obtain from the
College teachers in the day ;one who has practical acquaintance with it, tells me
that the actual time of teaching seldom exceeded two and a half hours. Anything
like preparation at home is unknown, and indeed is opposed to Muhammadan
ideas. Each master reads out an Arabic sentence, and explains the meanings of
the first, second, and third word, and so on till he comes to the end of it. The
diligent student writes these meanings between the lines of his text-book, and by
easy degrees learns the whole sentence and the interpretation thereof by heart.
To teach him how to use the dictionary at home, or to reason out the meaning of
a passage on his own account, is an altogether foreign invention, possibly
dangerous to his religious faith, and at any rate unknown in the Calcutta College.
At the end of seven years the students know certain books by heart, text and
interpretation; but if they get a simple maruscript beyond their narrow
curriculum, they are in a moment beyond their depth. Such a teaching, it may
well be supposed, produces an intolerant contempt for anything which they have
not learned. The very nothingness of their acquirements makes them more
conceited. They know as an absolute truth that the Arabic grammar, law, rhetoric,
and logic, comprise all that is worth knowing upon earth. They have learned that
the most extensive kingdoms in the world are, first Arabia, then England, France,
and Russia, and that the largest town, next to Mecca, Medina, and Cairo, is
London. Au reste, the English are Infidels, and will find themselves in a very hot
place in the next world. To this vast accumulation of wisdom what more could
be added? When a late Principal tried to introduce profane science, even through
the medium of their own Urdu, were they not amply justified in pelting him with
brickbats and rotten mangoes?
I have dwelt on these painful details, because I believe it most important, now
that the Government has awakened to the necessity of really educating the
Musalmans, that it should avoid a system which has brought failure upon its one
great previous attempt. The Calcutta Muhammadan College has been practically
left in the hands of the Muhammadans themselves, and it is under their
management that it has proved such a scandal and disgrace. At first our
tenderness, and afterwards our indifference, to the waning fortunes of the
Musalman community, prevented the Government from interfering with an
institution which it knew to be inefficient, but which it did not see very clearly

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how to amend. A hundred years of native management has moulded the system
to suit the prejudices rather than the wants of the Muhammadans. Our one great
fault has been, that we have left the Muhammadan College too much to the
Muhammadans themselves. As early as 1819 this was clearly perceived, but the
Government of that day went on hoping against hope that a merely nominal
control by a European Secretary would in time suffice. The same unwillingness
to interfere has characterized and has baffled all the efforts at reform during the
past twenty years. When a Principal was at length appointed, his office was an
honorary and a nominal one; when a Resident Professor was finally introduced,
his jurisdiction stopped short at the Department in which it was most needed.
A recent State Paper complained that only in Northern India do the
Muhammadans contribute a fair share, either in numbers or money, to our
Schools. The answer lies on the surface. In Bengal, both the more pious and the
wealthier families, such as the Nakhudas of Calcutta, will have nothing to do
with institutions which do not teach Persian or Arabic, and in which the religious
faith of their children might be sapped by infidel Hindu masters. The middleclass does send its boys to our schools; but in Bengal the middle-class of
Musalmans is so thin as to have but slight effect one way or the other. The lowerclass Muhammadans have never been reached by our system of Public
Instruction, although I have known Missionary Schools such as those of the Rev.
James Long full of them. The fanatical, seething masses of the Musalman
peasantry in Eastern Bengal remain beyond the pale of English education or
English influence.
Yet I believe that an efficient system of education for all classes of the Musalman
community might be organised at a very small charge to the State. Such a system
would have to provide for low-class, middle-class, and high-class instruction.
With regard to the first, a liberal construction of the existing Grant-in-Aid Rules
would almost suffice. It is not more money that is needed so much as a
consideration of the special wants of the Musalmans. Government has wisely
declared that it will not assist two schools within five miles of each other, for
such assistance would produce an unprofitable rivalry at the cost of the State.
The astute Hindu, in this as in all other matters, has been first in the field. He has
covered the country with schools admirably adapted to the wants of his own
community, but wholly unsuited to the requirements of the Muhammadans. The
five miles rule, therefore, should be relaxed so as to allow a State grant to
Musalman schools within that distance of existing Hindu ones. Where separate
institutions are not needed, Government might make provision for the
Musalmans, by appointing a Muhammadan teacher to the existing Hindu school.
Such Musalman teachers could be had at five shillings a week.

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With regard to the fanatical Eastern Districts, how-ever, I think it would well
repay Government to create a special machinery for reaching the Musalman
peasantry. Such machinery was at one time found requisite for the Hindus. Lord
Hardinge instituted a number of schools in order to extend education into
Districts where there was no self-supporting demand for it. Of these schools
thirty-eight survived in the Educational Division of Bengal, that I had in my
charge in 1866. They cost the Government over 1100 a year, besides the fees,
which amounted only to 267, and were in no sense self-supporting. But it is
difficult to overrate the good that these schools have done. Wherever the
peasantry were too ignorant, too poor, or too bigoted to set agoing a school
under the Grant-in-Aid Rules, one of the Hardinge Institutions was temporarily
established. At first the villagers got their education for almost nothing; but by
degrees, as the presence of an educated class created a demand for further
education, the fees were raised. In a few years the self-supporting element was
thus introduced, a higher class of school was formed, and the cheap Hardinge
School was transferred to some more backward part of the country. In this way
education has been thrown out deeper and deeper into the jungles Of SouthWestern Bengal.231
I think the same might now be done for the fanatical Eastern Districts. The Grantin-Aid Rules will not reach a population hereditarily disaffected to our
Government, and averse to our system of instruction. But fifty cheap schools,
with low - paid. Musalman teachers, to which Government contributed the
larger part of the expense, would in a single generation change the popular tone
of Eastern Bengal. Such Institutions would have but a small success at first. But
they would gradually attract not merely the Musalman peasant youth,232 but also
the Musalman teachers, who now earn a precarious livelihood on their own
account; and to whom an additional five shillings a week from Government
would be an independent fortune. We should thus enlist on our side the very
class which is at present most persistently bitter against us.
So much for the lower-class education of the Musalmans. With regard to their
middle-class instruction a still smaller change would be required. The officer in
charge of the Wahabi prosecutions has already urged that Muhammadan
teachers (Maulavis) should be appointed to each of the District Government
Schools, and this would suffice. Such teachers should instruct in the usual
branches of education through the Urdu vernacular, and give a thorough
knowledge of that language, besides an acquaintance with Persian, and perhaps
231

In 1865-66 there were 283 schools, with an attandance of 16,043 pupils, in the South-Western Division.

232

The attendance on the 38 Hardinge and Model Schools in the South-Western Division rose from 1431
in 1861-62, to 2034 in 1865-66, the year of my Report. The cost per pupil during the same period decreased
from 12s. 6d. to 8s. 6d.

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a little Arabic. The prevailing tone of a District Government School might be


safely left to itself to produce a desire of learning English among the Musalman
boys who frequented it.
These charges would cost little, but a complete and an efficient system of higherclass Muhammadan education would cost the State not one penny. The sum set
apart by Warren Hastings for the Calcutta Musalman College, and the ample
endowments of the Hugh Institution, would, if properly applied, amply suffice.
The funds which we at present misappropriate to maintain an English College
should henceforth be honestly devoted to the purpose for which the testator left
them. Whether one really good College would not be better than two, and
whether it should be fixed in Calcutta, or at Hugh, which is only twenty - four
miles off by railway, are matters of detail on which I need not enter here. The
actual instruction might for the most part be conducted by Muhammadan
teachers as at present; but each College should have a Resident European
Principal acquainted with Arabic, and capable both of supervising his
subordinates and of enforcing their respect. The emoluments of the position, say
from 1200 to 1500 a year, would command an adequate order of scholarship
from the English - or German Universities.
Such higher-class education would consist not of two distinct branches, as in the
Calcutta College, in the Upper of which the student forgets whatever he has
learned in the Lower, but of a well-planned unbroken curriculum. The present
Upper or Arabic Department could be turned into an Anglo-Arabic one, and
form a well-amalgamated extension of the Lower or Anglo-Persian branch. A
Musalman boy would thus pass by easy transitions from the District
Government School, through the two College Departments, to the highest
branches of learning. It is more than doubtful whether the Muhamdan Law
should be taught as a regular study, incumbent on all. It certainly should not be
made the chief object of instruction. For the Muhammadan Law means the
Muhammadan religionthat religion, too, at a time when its followers looked
upon the whole earth as their lawful prey, and before they had learned the duties
of modern Musalman States in alliance with, or in subjection to, a Christian
Government. It would not be wise to do away altogether with the teachers of
they Law, for its total abolition would imperil the popularity of the College with
the present generation of Musalmans. Yet it should be remembered that our
original reason for encouraging Muhammadan Law, to wit, the production of
qualified Musalman Law Officers, has ceased to exist. The study no longer
answers any requirement of the Government, nor does it offer to its students any
career in life. An adequate knowledge of it could be given in separate lectures,
somewhat as the Hindu Law is taught at the Calcutta University. For the present
daily drill in the Code of Islam, might be substituted Arabic or Persian literature,
and the study of Western science through the medium of Urdu.

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In this way we should develope a rising generation of Muhammadans, no longer


learned in their own narrow learning, nor imbued solely with the bitter doctrines
of their mediaeval Law, but tinctured with the sober and genial knowledge of the
West. At the same time they, would have a sufficient acquaintance with their
religious code to command the respect of their own community, while an English
training would secure them an entry into the lucrative walks of life.
For the lower and middle class education of the Musalmans, a special Deputy
Inspector of Schools belonging to their own faith would be required. Such an
officer might be obtained for 200 a year. One of his first duties should be to find
out and report on the Musalman schools and colleges 233 under native
management. An excellent private institution of this sort, with an attendance of
110 boys, exists in Calcutta, but can get no Grant-in-Aid. Another, founded by
Warren Hastings, survives not far off in a village to the west of Hourah, but does
nothing, A third lingers near Maimari, on the East India Railway; a fourth at
Sasseram. Similar establishments drag on an obscure existence wholly unknown
to our Educational Inspectors. In some of them, I believe, a fair degree of
efficiency is maintained, and it would be well to find out if anything is to be
learned from the system they pursue. I do not think that they would submit to
regular supervision by English officers, but many of them would agree to the
visits of a Deputy Inspector of their own faith, as the easy condition of a Grantin-Aid. We should thus enlist the most seditious Institutions in Bengal on the
side, if not of loyalty, at least of peace and order. For the present puerile follies
which the Musalmans read in their schools, a series of well-chosen and welledited Text - books should be issued. The Colleges might be safely left to the care
of their English Principals; and for these ample funds exist, if properly applied,
without costing an extra shilling to the State.
We should thus at length have the Muhammadan youth educated upon our own
plan. Without interfering in any way with their religion, and in the very process
of enabling them to learn their religious duties, we should render that religion
perhaps less sincere, but certainly less fanatical. The rising generation of
Muhammadans would tread the steps which have conducted the Hindus, not
long ago the most bigoted nation on earth, into their present state of easy
tolerance. Such a tolerance implies a less earnest belief than their fathers had; but
it has freed them, as it would liberate the Musalmans, from the cruelties which
they inflicted, the crimes which they perpetrated, and the miseries which they
endured, in the name of a mistaken religion. I do not permit myself here to
touch upon the means by which, through a state of indifference, the Hindus and
Musalmans alike may yet reach a higher level of belief. But I firmly believe that
233

Madrasehs.

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that day will come, and that our system of education, which has hitherto
produced only negative virtues, is the first stage towards it. Hitherto the English
in India have been but poor Iconoclasts after all.
Meanwhile it remains for Government, while sternly putting down disaffection
among the Bengal Muhammadans, to deprive them of every excuse for it. It has
to make amends to them, not only for the decay in which our conquest and
changed administration have involved their community, but also for the want of
sympathy which has rendered their ruin less bearable and more complete. Its
dealings with the disloyal section of the Musalmans should be managed so as not
only to commend themselves to public justice, but also to public opinion. The
unskilful conduct of a well-merited condemnation234 left for centuries a stain on
the memory of the most virtuous Emperor of Rome. Hitherto we have shed no
blood, except on the field of battle, and the result has been a crop of Wahabi
apostates instead of an army of Wahibi martyrs. At the moment I write this page,
the infamous Meat-Supplier of the British Troops, who was condemned to death
in 1864, is giving evidence at Patna against the brethren of his former faith. Had
his original sentence been carried out, thousands of devotees would every year
be making a pilgrimage to his tomb. A death in the cause of religion has in all
ages sufficed to illuminate a life of infamy. The fortunes of an even viler MeatSupplier to the Army than our Dehli butcher, stand out in history to warn the
Government against capital sentences, which its Musalman subjects would
regard as religious executions. It should never forget how George of Cappadocia,
after a life of obloquy as a parasite, as a defaulting bacon-contractor to the
Roman Troops, 235 and as a dissolute prelate, obtained an apotheosis by an
unwilling death, and became Saint George of Merry England.

234

That of the Viceroy of Africa, the Notary audentius, and the tyrant Duke of Egypt, under Julian.

235

Muhammad Shaff.

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APPENDICES.
APPENDIX I.
DECISION OF THE MECCA LAW DOCTORS
(the Heads of the three Great Musalman Sects).
QUESTION.
What is your opinion (may your greatness continue for ever) on this question ;
whether the country of Hindustan, the rulers of which are Christians, and who
do not interfere with all the injunctions of Islam, such as the ordinary daily
Prayers, the Prayers of the two Ids, etc., but do authorize departure from a few
of the injunctions of Islam, such as the permission to inherit the property of the
Muhammadan ancestor to one who changes his religion (being that of his
ancestors), and becomes a Christian, is Dar-ul-Islam or not ? Answer the above,
for which God will reward you.
ANSWER No. I.
All praises are due to the Almighty, who is the Lord of all the Creation! O
Almighty, increase my knowledge!
As long as even some of the peculiar observances of Islam prevail in it, it is the Ddr-ullslam.
The Almighty is Omniscient, Pure and High!
This is the Order passed by one who hopes for the secret favour of the Almighty,
who praises God, and prays for blessings and peace on his Prophet.
(Signed) JAMAL IBN ABDULLAH SHEIKH OMAR UL-HANAFI, the
present Mufti of Mecca (the Honoured). May God favour him and his
father.
ANSWER No. II.
All praises are due to God, who is One; and may the blessings of God be
showered upon our Chief, Muhammad, and upon his descendants and
companions, and upon the followers of his Faith!
O God! I require guidance from Thee in righteousness.
Yes I As long as even some of the peculiar observances of Islam prevail in it, it is Ddr-ulIslam.
The Almighty is Omniscient, Pure and High!

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This is written by one who hopes for salvation from the God of mercy. May God
forgive him, and his parents and preceptors, and brothers and friends, and all
Muhammadans.
(Signed) AHMAD IBN ZAINI DAHLAN, Mufti of the Shafif Sect of
Mecca (the Protected).
ANSWER No. III.
All praises are due to God, who is One! O! Almighty! increase my knowledge!
It is written in the Commentary of Dasoki that a Country of Islam does not become Darul-Harb as soon as it passes into the hands of the I fidels, but only when all or most of the
injunctions of Islam disappear therefrom.
God is Omniscient May the blessings of God be showered upon our Chief,
Muhammad, and on his descendants and companions.
(Signed) Written by HUSAIN IBN IBRAHIM, Mufti of the Malikf Sect of
Mecca (the Illustrious).

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APPENDIX II.
THE DECISION OF THE LAW DOCTORS OF NORTHERN INDIA.
TRANSLATION OF THE ISTIFTA OR QUESTION, PUT BY SAYYID AMIR
HUSAIN,
PERSONAL ASSISTANT TO THE COMMISSIONER OF BHAGALPUR.
What is your Decision, O men of learning and expounders of the law of Islam, in
the following?
Whether a Jihad is lawful in India, a country formerly held by a Muhammadan
ruler, and now held under the sway of a Christian Government, where the said
Christian Ruler does in no way interfere with his Muhammadan subjects in the
Rites prescribed by their Religion, such as Praying, Fasting, Pilgrimage, Zakat,
Friday Prayer, and Jamaat, and gives them fullest protection and liberty in the
above respects in the same way as a Muhammadan Ruler would do, and where
the Muhammadan subjects have no strength and means to fight with their rulers;
on the contrary, there is every chance of the war, if waged, ending with a defeat,
and thereby causing an indignity to Islam.
Please answer, quoting your authority.
Fatwa dated the 17th Rabi-us-sani, or Rabf II., 1287 H., corresponding with the
17th July 1870.
The Musalmans here are protected by Christians, and there is no Jihad in a
country where protection is afforded, as the absence of protection and liberty
between Musalmans and Infidels is essential in a religious war, and that
condition does not exist here. Besides, it is necessary that there should be a
probability of victory to Musalman and glory to the Indians. If there be no such
probability, the Jihad is unlawful.
Here the Maulavis quote Arabic passages from Manhaj-ul-Ghaffar and the
Fatawi-i-Alamgiri, supporting the above decision.
MAULAVI ALI MUHAMMAD, of Lucknow;
MAULAVI ABD-UL-HAI, of Lucknow;
MAULAVI FAZLULLAH, of Lucknow;
Seals of MUHAIIMAD NAIM, of Lucknow;
MAULAVI RAHMATULLAH, of Lucknow;
MAULAVI KUTAB-UD-DIN, of Dehli;
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MAULAVI LUTFULLAH, of Rampur;


and others.

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APPENDIX III.
DECISION OF THE CALCUTTA MUHAMMADAN SOCIETY.
After declaring, in opposition to the northern Law Doctors, that India is a Dar-ulIslam, Maulavi Karamat Ali proceeded thus:
The second question is, Whether it is lawful in this Country to make Jihad or
not. This has been solved together with the first. For Jihad can by no means be
lawfully made in Dar-ul-Islam. This is so evident that it requires no argument or
authority to support it. Now, if any misguided wretch, owing to his perverse
fortune, were to wage war against the Ruling Powers of this Country, British
India; such war would be rightly pronounced rebellion; and rebellion is strictly
forbidden by the Muhammadan Law. Therefore such war will likewise be
unlawful; and in case any one would wage such war, the Muhammadan subjects
would be bound to assist their Rulers, and, in conjunction with their Rulers, to
fight with such rebels. The above has been clearly laid down in the Fatiwi-iAlamgiri.

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