http://www.thenews.com.pk/Todays-News-9-316419-Which-Musalmans-do-we-claim-descent-from

Which Musalmans do we claim descent from?
Ayaz Amir
Tuesday, May 05, 2015

Islamabad diary

Muslim rule in Hindustan was mainly Turkish rule - from Mahmud to
Babur all Turkish conquerors or rulers - interspersed with episodes of
Afghan rule as under the Lodhis and Sher Shah Suri. But we the
denizens of the Fortress of Islam - the confused begetters of holy
enterprises like Jehad-e-Afghanistan - what have we in common with
those warriors?

They were full-blooded men marching at the head of conquering
armies...Muslims to be sure but with none of the false piety or
hypocrisy which often seems to be the leading currency of our Islamic
Republic. Come to think of it, none of them proclaimed their empires
as Islamic Empires. Confident in the strength of their arms they felt
no obligation or necessity to issue declarations about their rectitude
or their championship of the faith.

The best or greatest of them were open about themselves. They
maintained large harems, kept slave girls, married as often as they
liked and when it came to imbibing, those given to this sin made no
secret of it. With our weasel-like and snivelling ways - doing things
behind doors and keeping up appearances in public - do we at all look
like the descendants of Mahmud and Babur and Akbar?

What to talk of anything else, centuries before gay liberation came to
San Francisco those inclined in that direction were fairly
matter-of-fact about that too. So many times in his memoirs Babur
referring to various chieftains or fighting men says of them that they
had "vicious" tendencies - meaning to say that they were inclined to
swing that way (although Babur uses words more direct than this).

Babur, however, is in a class by himself. Could ever a prince be more
open about his foibles? We all know that the Babur-nama is full of
references to drinking parties. Apart from being a warrior and a poet,
Babur was an aesthete with a discerning regard for the finer things of
life. Wherever he went, he planted gardens - I think it can quite
justifiably be said that the father of the modern Hindustani garden is
Babur. 'I ordered a char-bagh to be laid...I ordered a platform to be
built because the view from this spot was so wonderful to look at':
the memoirs are replete with such descriptions. And whenever a valley
or a prospect catches the Padishah's fancy he can't resist a drinking
party.

Or it could even be an occasion to partake of maajun, a favourite with
this prince of princes. (I haven't been able to find out whether
maajun is from charas or opium.)

Sometimes these drinking parties go on for hours. The Padishah drinks
at this chieftain's place and then they move to the abode of some
other companion. And so many times it happens that they march at the
crack of dawn - Babur throughout calls it "shoot of dawn" - against a
fortress or an opposing army. Tough men...the word hangover does not
occur in these recollections.

And who can forget that famous passage about Babur's infatuation when
in Andijan (near Ferghana) for the bazaar-boy, Baburi. There is
nothing to beat Babur's own words: "In those leisurely days I
discovered in myself a strange inclination, nay! as the verse says, 'I
maddened and afflicted myself for a boy in the camp-bazar, his very
name, Baburi, fitting in....From time to time Baburi used to come to my
presence but out of modesty and bashfulness, I could never look
straight at him; how then could I make conversation (ikhtilat) and
recital (hikayat)? In my joy and agitation I could not thank him for
coming; how was it possible for me to reproach him with going
away?...One day, during that time of desire and passion when I was
going with companions along a lane and suddenly met him face to face,
I got into such a state of confusion that I almost went right off. To
look straight at him or to put words together was impossible...Sometimes
like the madmen, I used to wander alone over hill and plain; sometimes
I betook myself to gardens and the suburbs, lane by lane."

Babur broke his drinking cups and forswore the use of wine before the
battle against Rana Sangha at Kanwaha. But he keeps pining for what he
has renounced. In a letter to Humayun: "...in truth the longing and
craving for a wine party has been infinite and endless for two years
past, so much so that sometimes the craving for wine brought me to the
verge of tears...If had with equal associates and boon companions, wine
and company are pleasant things; but with whom canst thou now
associate? With whom drink wine?"

Is there anything in the culture, the mores and values of our republic
in common with the sentiment expressed in these lines? We draw a
direct line with the Timurids and say that we come from them. As we
say in Urdu: chota moonh, barhi baat. Kahan woh, kahan hum. Bhutto
made the admission in a public meeting that "mein thori see peeta
hoon" and the maulvis and religious parties went after him. Would the
Timurids have tolerated anything like our religious parties? Would
they have countenanced any of their preaching?

Muslims ruled Hindustan for well over 600 years. During all this time
did they feel the need to proclaim anything like the ideology of
Islam? Did the Slave Kings or the Timurids fall back on anything like
the Objectives Resolution?

They lived by the sword and when their sword-arm weakened their empire
declined and from a master race they became a subject race. And Sir
Syed Ahmed Khan in the days of their subjection and decline taught
them the virtues of obedience: "...reflect on the doings of your
ancestors, and be not unjust to the British Government to whom God has
given the rule of India; and look honestly and see what is necessary
for it to do to maintain its empire and its hold on the country."
Pakistan was born out of this milk-laced-with-water philosophy.

The spirit of Sir Syed, unless I am grossly mistaken, would be at home
in Pakistan. Sir Syed would have been a great one for our pro-American
alliances and for the Anglophilia of the chattering classes. But the
spirit of Babur...it wouldn't know what to make of the Pakistani scene
or the Pakistani conversation.

Shouldn't the Babur-nama be compulsory reading for all Pakistani
students of history? The history we are taught is a distorted history,
events and personalities painted in black-and-white and too many false
gods and false heroes. What this history does above all is to make
numb if not kill the critical faculty. You stop asking questions. You
start accepting too many things on trust. You lay yourself open to the
acceptance of outright nonsense.

Every society has its lunatic fringe. Every society has its share of
rightward-leaning evangelists. But in societies where critical
thinking is alive a fringe remains a fringe, part of the mosaic of
society. It doesn't become the bishop of the dominant discourse.

The Tablighi Jamaat is not peculiar to us. Something like it is there
in every society, Christian, Hindu and Judaic. Our salvationists are
of course adherents of Islam. Hindu salvationists do obeisance before
their own deities. And Christian fundamentalists subscribe to their
own creed. But in all three examples the rigid mindset is the same.

The Babur-nama would be prohibited reading in a madressah as it would
be in a Christian seminary or a Hindu dharamsala. The priest as much
as the mullah would feel ill at ease before words such as these: "A
few purslane trees were in the utmost autumn beauty. On dismounting
seasonable food was set out. The vintage was the cause! Wine was
drunk! A sheep was ordered brought from the road and made into kababs.
We amused ourselves by setting fire to branches of holm-oak...There was
drinking till the Sun's decline; we then rode off. People in our party
had become very drunk..."

Is there anything in us worthy of this description? Would the Timurids
recognise in us anything of their legacy? So why don't we come down to
more level ground? Why don't we build a more prosaic, a slightly more
rational republic, and leave the building of fortresses, whether of
Islam or of ideology, to hands stronger than ours?

Email: [email protected]

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Peace Is Doable

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