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Dr. Muin-ud-Din Ahmad Khan deserves our grateful thanks
for editing the documents and papers under the title “ Selections
fro m 1 the Bengal Government Records on Wahhabi Trials” ,
which for the first time reveal in true colours the magnitude
of the so-called Wahhabi Movement. This corpus of documents
is a separate work from his thesis on the Fara’idi
movement. Incidentally he is the second research scholar of
the Department of History, University of Dacca, who earned
a doctorate of philosophy after the birth of Pakistan. These
documents now in print formed part of the material utilised in his
doctorate dissertation. Their publicity will enable scholars to throw
new light on the movement which might have escaped Dr. Khan’s
attention or could not be accommodated in the short narrative
of his thesis. The Wahhabi or Muhammadi Movement starting
from a reformist cult was directed towards liberating the Panjab
from the Sikhs whose relations with the Muslims in the past
had been anything but pleasant. Apart from cowing down the
Punjabi and North West Frontier Muslims by brute force, they
had proscribed the open practice of their religion prohibited
the azan, (the call to prayer) in most of the cities under their
rule and had converted the mosques into barracks for soldiers
or stables for the horses. The Wahhabis failed in their first
objective after the defeat at Balakot in 1831. After the incorporation of the Panjab into the British dominions the Wahhabis
carried their movement against the British rule and the papers
presented here give us an idea as to the wide nature o f its
ramification, the way organizations were set up for collecting
funds, and the laborious methods adopted for transmitting funds
and news, the secretive way of its working and also of the fact
that the Bengali Muslims were in the forofront of this liberation
movement and that they made more sacrifices than the people of
other parts of India. I have strong hopes that these papers will serve a very useful purpose and enable the present generation
of our people to form a fair idea of the sacrifices made
by their forefathers. That though thay failed in their objective
in their own generation and suffered instead death disgrace and
deportation and detention they allowed the fruits o f their sacrifices
to be enjoyed by their grandchildren and great grandchildren.
The Wahhabis were pioneers of the movement which gave the Muslims
a separate living space in the Indo-Pakistani subcontinent.
The facts revealed will belie the assertion often made in ignorance
that the Bengalis are a race of cowards. |
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