http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010\01\26\story_26-1-2010_pg3_2

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

view: Abdul Ghaffar Khan, Islam and non-violence -Ishtiaq Ahmed

 Abdul Ghaffar Khan was a man of peace. He approached Islam in the hope of 
finding a complementary message to Gandhi's interpretation of Hinduism as Ram 
Raj and ahimsa (non-violence) and he found it



A question that keeps popping up in  discussions on violence, terrorism and the 
Taliban is the following: is the use of force and violence intrinsic to Pakhtun 
culture? Superficially it seems that it must be so because the Pakhtuns, known 
as Pathans in the rest of the South Asian subcontinent, have been bearing 
firearms since a long time. They were producing firearms much before the Afghan 
jihad started. Many invasions of India were launched from the north-western 
mountain passes by the Afghans belonging to Pakhtun tribes and clans. 
Therefore, in popular memory a proclivity towards violence has been associated 
with the Pakhtuns. This, however, is a myth derived from an essentialist 
understanding of any culture. 

Against such 'evidence' is the fact that apart from the mass civil disobedience 
movement that Mahatma Gandhi started from 1919 onwards, the most organised 
movement of peaceful resistance to colonial rule was put forth by the Pakhtun 
leader Abdul Ghaffar Khan (1890-1988) and his Khudai Khidmatgars or Red Shirts. 
In Pakistani official narrative Abdul Ghaffar has been portrayed as a traitor 
because of his close association with the Indian National Congress. Such 
association found him opposed to the partition of India, and later when the 
partition did take place, he and the Khudai Khidmatgars came under a cloud. 
They were incarcerated for demanding Pakhtunistan - an entity that was 
conceived from complete independence to substantial autonomy. The problem was 
further complicated by the fact that the Pakhtuns did not recognise the Durand 
Line as an international border dividing the Pakhtun tribes between Afghanistan 
and Pakistan. That problem remained unresolved even when the Taliban were in 
power in Afghanistan (1996-2001). It is still a sticking point between the 
Karzai and Pakistani governments. 

Here, we are not interested in the politics that drove the Khudai Khidmatgars 
and the Muslim League away from each other, except to note that in 1929 Abdul 
Ghafffar Khan approached both the Muslim League and the Indian National 
Congress for closer relations. However, while Gandhi responded to his overtures 
with warmth and sympathy, the Muslim League rebuffed him. The reason was that 
the Muslim League was opposed to mass-based politics till at least 1937, and 
even when it became a mass-based party, it was never involved in any 
anti-colonial agitation. Only on January 24, 1947, the Punjab Muslim League 
resisted inspection by the police of its office in Laxmi Building, Lahore, and 
some of their leaders were arrested for a few days. 

On the other hand, the story of the Khudai Khidmatgars was entirely different. 
They were constantly getting into trouble with the British for protests and 
agitations that were carried out in the NWFP in coordination with similar 
initiatives of the Congress. Civil disobedience remained peaceful, but police 
repression against the Khudai Khidmatgars was severe. Torture was often 
employed against the leaders and cadres who bore the pain and humiliation with 
great dignity and stoicism. 

It is important to mention that the Khudai Khidmatgar movement started 
initially as a social reform initiative that sought to promote modern education 
and opposed tribal vendettas among the various tribes and clans. It was a great 
success and at one time it had more than 100,000 cadres who were always at hand 
to carry out social services. The same cadres continued to work in the 
anti-colonial agitations, courting arrest and punishment.

Abdul Ghaffar Khan derived his inspiration from the Holy Prophet (PBUH) and 
Islam. He particularly emphasised the formative period in Makkah when the 
Prophet (PBUH) and his devoted followers had to face persecution but did not 
hit back at their oppressors. For Abdul Ghaffar Khan, violent confrontation 
with the British was counterproductive because the colonial state always 
succeeded in defeating armed resistance. Therefore, peaceful resistance was the 
only effective method to protest colonial domination.

The question then is: how come the Taliban and al Qaeda interpret Islam as a 
militant ideology that sanctions the use of naked terror? Are there two Islams? 
This is the most difficult question to ask but we must try to answer it if ever 
some new level of awareness is to be achieved. While teaching at Stockholm 
University, I would often be asked by my students the following question: what 
is the true or real message of the Quran? The question was being asked in the 
background of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

I came up with an answer and explanation, which I believe is honest and true. I 
told them that all religious scriptures are amenable to a variety of 
interpretations; hence also the Quran and indeed the life of the Prophet 
(PBUH). Therefore it depends on the enquirer what support he seeks from the 
sacred sources. For those who are convinced that violence is the way forward 
for Muslims, they can select those portions of the sacred sources that seem to 
sanction violence. On the other hand, those who believe in peaceful and 
civilised ways of conducting their affairs can find plenty of material in the 
same sources that confirms their standpoint as well.

Abdul Ghaffar Khan was a man of peace. He approached Islam in the hope of 
finding a complementary message to Gandhi's interpretation of Hinduism as Ram 
Raj and ahimsa (non-violence) and he found it. The Taliban and al Qaeda 
arbitrarily emphasise the wars fought during the lifetime of the Prophet (PBUH) 
and indeed allusions to the use of violence against non-Muslims in the Quran. 
Similar things can happen in other religious traditions. I suppose when the 
Pope ordered the crusades against the Muslims, he surely was not interested in 
Jesus' idea of offering the other cheek. Similarly, fundamentalist Jews cannot 
be serious about the 8th of the 10 Commandments, "You must not steal", when 
under one pretext or another they keep confiscating Palestinian land in the 
occupied territories. 

Even secular-minded individuals who do not subordinate their reason and 
conscience to religious authority have to make a choice. There is secular 
humanism that accepts all human beings as part of the same family, but there 
have been secular ideologies justifying racism and ultra-nationalism as well. 
Ultimately, it is the singer not the song that is important. In the higher 
court of history, nobody takes notice of the sources and motivations behind 
actions. It is the deeds that count. In any event, those who want to find 
practical guidance on the Islamic philosophy of non-violence in contemporary 
times should study the life of Abdul Ghaffar Khan and the activities of the 
Khudai Khidmatgar movement.

Ishtiaq Ahmed is a Visiting Research Professor at the Institute of South Asian 
Studies (ISAS) and the South Asian Studies Programme at the National University 
of Singapore. He is also a Professor of Political Science at Stockholm 
University. He has published extensively on South Asian politics. At ISAS, he 
is currently working on a book, Is Pakistan a Garrison State? He can be reached 
at [email protected]



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