Chief Minister V.S. Achuthanandan has described Panakkad Syed Mohammedali 
Shihab Thangal as a leader whose contributions to the cause of secularism 
remain ever relevant .
 

The Affable Peacekeeper of Panakkad
http://www.jaihoon.com/783.htm
by N. Madhavankutty

Source: by N. Madhavankutty, resident editor of The New Indian Express.
 


It is now both easier and harder to view Muslims as persons – Roland e Miller 
(Muslim Friends)
Easier, because you live closer to the Muslim than even before. Harder, because 
it is more difficult than before to overcome the politically reinforced 
stereotype of your Muslim neighbor as the other. The importance of Syed 
Muhammad Ali Shihab Thangal for Kerala is here. He may not be your ideal public 
figure, spiritual leader, but you trust him.
Shihab Thangal, the public figure who has just completed an eventful quarter 
century in quiet stewardship of the Indian Union Muslim League, arguably the 
one remaining mainstream parliamentary political party of Indian Muslims with a 
significant following in an unmistakable dove. Not in the sense of being meek 
but in the truly Islamic sense of a peacekeeper to his people, as the Muslim 
phrase of everyday greeting “Assalamu Alaikum” thoughtfully evokes. “Peace be 
unto you.”
In a democracy you really don’t fancy any one holding any office for that 
length of time and especially if that office has come his or her way by way of 
some birthright. But in the case of Shihab Thangal who was reluctant to take 
over the parties reins from his father PMSA Pookoya Thangal and has worn his 
political mantle so lightly, you tent to forgive. For you know that the price 
you pay for peace in such trying times is never too high.
This is not the place or the time to discuss if his own party would have fared 
better in Karla’s realpolitik under any other leader. The League had in the 
past more charismatic supremos. Shihab Thangal’s own father-in-law Syed Abdul 
Rahman Bafaqi Thangal was one. But the party never had anyone with Shihab 
Thangal’s natural Sufi grace and charm and a cool head over the shoulders wit 
that has given Kerala a quarter century of relative communal calm. Whether the 
Muslim League is still communal or not, is only a matter of detail.
Shihab Thangal has a doctorate in religion from Cairo’s Al Azhar University. 
But his success with his religion rests less on scholarship than on the 
spiritual aura that goes with Thangal title. The Thangals, like Sayyeds in the 
north, trace their lineage to the Prophet’s family. Religion and family no 
doubt play a part in the Thangal mystique as his detractors rightly claim. 
Then, it is also a fact that that Shihab Thangal in his full – sleeved shirt 
and mundu and black furcap has succeeded where more traditional religios in 
their awesome head wraps and full flowing robes has failed.
Even if the Thangal mystique were to explain his spell over the Mappilas, the 
mystery of his undisputed appeal as a friend of non-Muslims would remain 
unanswered. As in the case of the late CH Muhammad Koya, the non-Muslim is able 
to sense a personal sincerity in his ways even when they are not ready to trust 
his party. Thus, like the unassuming comma in a sentence, Shihab Thangal is 
both connects and separates Kerala’s Muslim milieu and the world; as delicately 
as he blends in himself the best of Islamic, Indian and Malayalee identities.
The religion that Shihab Thangal practices is down to earth as his politics 
with its sound expediency and a firm commitment to personal word of honour. His 
Kodappanakkal ancestral home in Panakkad in Malappuram on a Tuesday or Saturday 
is evidence of that. It is only daybreak and the courtyard of already full of 
ordinary men and women waiting to unburden heir everyday woes to the Thangal 
seek his intercession, advice and wise counsel. In his prayer to Allah they 
seem to find their solace, in his justice, satisfaction. There could be no 
better political education for any leader than this intimate knowledge of the 
gravest and most trivial goings on in the domestic life of the poor.
And the result of this education has been Shihab Thangal’s personal 
transparency, to be what he is in public. I still remember that day back in the 
early eighties when as a reporter I waited for him in the portico of his 
Panakkad home for my first interview. He emerged smiling from his study with a 
pack of 555 cigarettes in his hand and a whiff of eaude toilette. Strange 
habits for a political leader, I had thought then and still do. He is 65 now 
and I don’t know if he has still the fondness for fine foreign things. I wish 
he did, if only to mock the hell out of the rest of political tribe.


With Regards 

Abi
 

"It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong."
- Voltaire" 


      
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