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247 pages
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A fascinating account of the Muslims in twentieth-century India, Pakistan and Bangladesh through his biographical sketches of eight prominent Muslims Sayyid Ahmed Khan (1817-1898), Fazlul Haq (1873-1962), Muhammad Ali Jinnah (1876-1948), Muhammad Iqbal (1876-1938), Muhammad Ali (1878-1931), Abul Kalam Azad (1888-1958), Liaqat Ali Khan (1895-1951) and Zakir Hussain (1897-1969) Rajmohan Gandhi, the grandson of Mahatma Gandhi, provides a deeply insightful and comprehensive picture of the community in the subcontinent today.

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Publié par
Date de parution 14 octobre 2000
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9788184750720
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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Rajmohan Gandhi
Understanding the Muslim Mind

PENGUIN BOOKS
Contents
About the Author
By the Same Author
Dedication
Preface
Hindus and Muslims
Sayyid Ahmed Khan (1817-1898)
Muhammad Iqbal (1876-1938)
Muhammad Ali (1878-1931)
Muhammad Ali Jinnah (1876-1948)
Fazlul Haq (1873-1962)
Abul Kalam Azad (1888-1958)
Liaqat Ali Khan (1895-1951)
Zakir Husain (1897-1969)
Conclusion
Footnotes
Hindus and Muslims
Sayyid Ahmed Khan (1817-1898)
Muhammad Iqbal (1876-1938)
Muhammad Ali (1878-1931)
Muhammad Ali Jinnah (1876-1948)
Fazlul Haq (1873-1962)
Liaqat Ali Khan (1895-1951)
Zakir Husain (1897-1969)
Conclusion
References and Notes
Bibliography
Copyright
PENGUIN BOOKS
UNDERSTANDING THE MUSLIM MIND
Rajmohan Gandhi, born in 1935, has written, among other works, Rajaji: A Life . (Penguin), The Good Boatman: A Portrait of Gandhi (Viking/Penguin), Patel: A Life (Penguin). His most recent work is Revenge and Reconciliation: Understanding South Asian History (Penguin).
Currently, he is a professor with the Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi.
Books by the same author
Rajaji: A Life The Good Boatman: A Portrait of Gandhi Patel: A Life Revenge and Reconciliation: Understanding South Asian History
For Sonu, Bhaiya, Leela, Divya, Amrita, Supriya, Debu and all those whose forebears, famous or unknown, shed tears, sweat and blood on the earth of India,
Preface
W ritten in 1984-85 and published in the United States in 1986, Understanding the Muslim Mind was first brought out in India by Penguin Books in 1987. The public has been indulgent towards its reprints, and now the book appears in a new edition. I welcome the opportunity to write a fresh preface, particularly in light of the interest drawn by my study of South Asian history, Revenge and Reconciliation , which was published by Penguin at the end of 1999.
Tracing the South Asia story from the Mahabharata all the way to Kargil in 1999, and looking at a long chain of avengers as well as bridge-builders, Revenge and Reconciliation acknowledges at the end that the heterodoxy of reconciliation [has] not become a dominant Indian or South Asian trait. The final chapter, exploring strategies for reconciliation, underlines the need for listening with the heart as well as the ear, to what is said and also to what is unsaid.
It was a desire to listen in such a spirit to the other side that had led to Understanding the Muslim Mind . Having no idea how it was going to be received, I had mentally prepared myself to be told by Muslims that I had failed to enter their psyche, that it was presumptuous for a Hindu to try to do so; likewise I was ready for being labelled by some Hindus as the typical pseudo-secularist unwilling to acknowledge Muslim wrongs. In the event, however, some staunch Hindus, e.g., M.V. Kamath, gave the book a good grade, while a leading Pakistani intellectual Eqbal Ahmad, interviewed me on the book over Pakistan Television, and a Lahore publisher produced an Urdu edition, as I discovered when a traveller brought a copy. (Otherwise I might not have known of the Urdu edition.)
The opening line of my preface to Penguin s first edition in 1987 read as follows: Any nuclear clash between India and Pakistan (may God forbid it) would in part be due to history. That theoretical spectre was certainly not banished by the blasts that came in the summer of 1998 in Pokharan and Chagai Hills, and subsequent events on the subcontinent have not made my 1987 prayer obsolete.
Of course, the Hindu-Muslim and India-Pakistan questions are two distinct things. As we in India are always quick to point out, India s Muslims equal or outnumber Muslims residing in Pakistan. Also, India s Muslims have regularly fought on India s side in Indo-Pak battles. Yet the two questions are connected. After all, Pakistan was formed in 1947 partly because many Muslims wondered about their security in a Hindu-majority India free of the departing neutral power, Britain; and when there is an India-Pakistan cricket match, India s Muslims can become conscious of eyes probing their inner sentiments.
Sane India-Pakistan relations and the welfare of India both require that Muslims understand the Hindu mind, and Hindus the Muslim mind. I hope that no one will infer from such a statement, or from the title of this book, that its author believes in a single or uniform Muslim (or Hindu) mind. The study is of a number of different minds and different lives, and I request the reader to interpret the title broadly.
As I write these lines in the spring of 2000, the subcontinent s hates and suspicions seem to have leapt to an all-time high. It may be needed more than ever, but mutual understanding does not seem to be what mainstream Indians or Pakistanis, or Hindus and Muslims, are pining for. Yet I take a little heart from the fact that in South Asia the pendulum constantly swings. It was only thirteen months ago that Indians were stirred by Atal Behari Vajpayee s bus trip to Lahore, and by his words in that pulsating metropolis:
I regret that we have spent so much time in mutual bitterness. It is unworthy of two nations the size of India and Pakistan to have wasted so much time in mutual ill will . . . As we approach a new millennium, the future demands upon us to think of the welfare of our children and their children . . . We have had enough of enmity, let us live in amity . . .
I was mindful of scholarship s norms when I wrote Understanding the Muslim Mind and did not wish to sweep unpleasant facts under a carpet of unreal harmony. Yet I make no secret of my desire, as unqualified now as it was in 1987, for reconciliation between South Asia s neighbouring communities and nations, even though the intervening years saw an intensification of Kashmir-related bitterness, the Babri demolition, the nuclear tests, the growth of the BJP and of Hindutva, the Kargil war, and the Musharraf coup.
* * *
Though the Muslim question pursued me from my childhood, I allowed a lot of time to pass before attempting a serious understanding of the subcontinent s Muslims. Like many compatriots I mouthed the fact that India was the world s second largest Muslim country but I had not cared to study the history of the subcontinent s Muslims or the impulses that moved them.
I was ignorant but not, I recognized with some concern, more so than most of my non-Muslim compatriots, including highly educated ones. Thus, to give only two revealing examples, they did not know, as I had not known until I was more than forty, that the Qur an contained a verse that unambiguously frowned upon compulsion in religion, or that it spoke more than once of God sending prophets to all nations and peoples. Muslims have been similarly uninformed about Hindu beliefs and points of views. Hence these pages, an attempt to reduce the understanding gap, or scale the separating wall.
History will not dissolve resentments and suspicions. Selective history will in fact harden them. Yet a frank and, as far as possible, non-partisan look at the past can at least tell us of blocks to Hindu-Muslim partnership and tell us, too, of what went wrong, and why, in the efforts to remove them. If we learn of times when the other side, too, was large-hearted, and of other times when our side also was small-minded, that awareness may make us, whoever we are, Hindus or Muslims, less prickly. History will then have served the cause of national, and subcontinental, understanding.
The Hindu-Muslim question can of course be addressed in several ways. I approach it here through the lives of eight Muslims who were prominent on the subcontinent s stage in the hundred years following the 1857 rising. Some of these individuals were what conventional historiography in India calls communal . Others in the group of eight were nationalist .
Why these eight, and not any others? For one thing, I had chosen to probe the thoughts and reactions of those no longer living, a criterion that unfortunately eliminated one who is important to the story of modern South Asia, Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan, who died in 1988, three years after the book was written.
It will be seen from the list at the end of the book of works and documents consulted that I was able to study a number of Muslim authors, including many Pakistanis and Bangladeshis. Yet it was not my purpose to produce a Hindu s summary of the Muslim view of the history of the last 150 years. Neither was it to provide a Hindu refutation of the Muslim view. The intention was to look, as honestly and fairly as I could, at the lives of the eight, and through them at the Muslim mind, and to share what I saw with others.
I would like to record again that a fair portion of this book was written during the eight months in 1984-85 that I spent in Washington DC as a Fellow of the Woodrow Wilson Center for Scholars, Washington DC, and also that none of it could have been written without the total involvement and support, including editorial and secretarial, of Usha, my wife.
New Delhi, March 2000
Rajmohan Gandhi
Chapter 1
Hindus And Muslims
T he Muslim question nagged me from my depths, and from an early age. Hamid Saheb, main sharminda hoon . ( Mr. Hamid, I am ashamed. ) So I, a twelve-year-old, heard my father say in 1947. He, Devadas Gandhi, editor, of the Hindustan Times , was speaking in our second-floor Connaught Circus flat, directly above the paper s offices, to his Muslim friend, an official of Jamia Millia, the Muslim college with a nationalist bent.
We think of 1947, accurately, as the year of our independence from British rule but that is not quite how the future will look upon it. Unless I am greatly mistaken, our descendants will regard the transfer of power as less significant than the inhumanity to which many Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs allowed themselves to sink that year. It is a year of our shame, not a year of our achievement.
Places in the north and east of what was still u

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