Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Articles
- Anxieties of Distance: Codification in Early Colonial Bengal
- Rammohan Roy and the Advent of Constitutional Liberalism in India, 1800–30
- Contesting Translations: Orientalism and the Interpretation of the Vedas
- Apologetic Modernity
- Beyond Culture-Contact and Colonial Discourse: “Germanism” in Colonial Bengal
- Striking a Just Balance: Maulana Azad as a Theorist of Transnational Jihad
- Self, Spencer and Swaraj: Nationalist Thought and Critiques of Liberalism, 1890–1920
- The Spirit and Form of an Ethical Polity: A Meditation on Aurobindo's Thought
- Geographies of Subjectivity, Pan-Islam and Muslim Separatism: Muhammad Iqbal and Selfhood
- Afterword
- List of Contributors
Striking a Just Balance: Maulana Azad as a Theorist of Transnational Jihad
from Articles
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 April 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Articles
- Anxieties of Distance: Codification in Early Colonial Bengal
- Rammohan Roy and the Advent of Constitutional Liberalism in India, 1800–30
- Contesting Translations: Orientalism and the Interpretation of the Vedas
- Apologetic Modernity
- Beyond Culture-Contact and Colonial Discourse: “Germanism” in Colonial Bengal
- Striking a Just Balance: Maulana Azad as a Theorist of Transnational Jihad
- Self, Spencer and Swaraj: Nationalist Thought and Critiques of Liberalism, 1890–1920
- The Spirit and Form of an Ethical Polity: A Meditation on Aurobindo's Thought
- Geographies of Subjectivity, Pan-Islam and Muslim Separatism: Muhammad Iqbal and Selfhood
- Afterword
- List of Contributors
Summary
This article probes the link between anti-colonial nationalist thought and a theory of jihad in early twentieth-century India. An emotive affinity to the ummah was never a barrier to Muslims identifying with patriotic sentiments in their own homelands. It was in the context of the aggressive expansion of European power and the ensuing erosion of Muslim sovereignty that the classical doctrine of jihad was refashioned to legitimize modern anti-colonial struggles. The focus of this essay is on the thought and politics of Maulana Abul Kalam Azad. A major theoretician of Islamic law and ethics, Azad was the most prominent Muslim leader of the Indian National Congress in pre-independence India. He is best remembered in retrospectively constructed statist narratives as a “secular nationalist”, who served as education minister in Jawaharlal Nehru's post-independence cabinet. Yet during the decade of the First World War he was perhaps the most celebrated theorist of a transnational jihad.
“The earth is thirsty, it demands blood, but of whom? Of the Muslims,” Abul Kalam Azad (1888–1958), the leading pro-Congress Indian Muslim nationalist, had rued in the late summer of 1913. As far as he could see, Tripoli was soaking with Muslim blood as were the plains of Persia and the Balkan Peninsula. Now Hindustan too was athirst for Muslim blood. In an egregious display of British arrogance and brute power in Kanpur in August 1913, Muslims protesting the demolition of a lavatory attached to a mosque were fired upon indiscriminately, leaving several dead.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- An Intellectual History for India , pp. 85 - 97Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2010