Letter to Hafiz Saed
Dear Janaab Hafiz Saed Saheb,
I hope you are fine. I know you
travel a lot, sometimes to Karachi, sometimes to Kashmir to make people realize
that the task of ultimate importance is to get 70 virgins (even if they come at
the cost of your identity, the blood of your own brothers and the peace of the
subcontinent). This kind of intense travelling and spreading the message of
jihad requires lot of effort and energy so to begin with I wish good health for
you as you are our elder. You have a strong influence over you followers so I
feel that if you know the truth and if you have good intentions (which I
believe you have because you are a Hafiz and Quraan must have had some
influence on you) you can be a great messenger of peace. This is one another
reason why your good health is so important for me and all my peace loving
brothers from India and Pakistan.
First and foremost, I wish to inform you or rather enlighten you that you
are a Hindu. In fact not just you, everyone who resides in India, Pakistan and
Bangladesh is a Hindu. Maulana Fazlur Rahmaan, Imaraan Khan and millions of
Pakistanis are Hindus. Please don't get me wrong. I do not want to hurt your
religious sentiments. I just want enlighten you about your true identity.
Janaab, the word ‘Hindu’ has never
ever been mentioned in any of the religious scriptures like Bhagwat Gita,
Puranas, Ramayana and Mahabharata. Its origin is very interesting. The word was
first used by Iranian Achaemenids in 6th century B.C. for the people
who lived in the land of river Indus. The river was known as Sindhu in those
days. In Iran they used to pronounce ‘S’ as ‘H’ so Sindhu became Hindu. After
that the word ‘Hindu’ was used by the great Iranian scholar Abu Raihaan
Muhammad Ibn Al Baruni in his ‘Kitaab-ul-Hind’ in 11th century. So
the word has no religious connotation. It is a term which denotes a particular region.
It has a geographical significance or some kind of cultural significance.
Now, I feel that you will say something about the foreign origins of Muslims.
It’s not just you who, I assume will think like this. The other day I met this
beautiful girl from Pakistan in Cornell university who gave the same reply when
I called her ‘Hindu’. Well, sir, there are 250 million Muslims in India and
about 180 million Muslims in Pakistan. If, all of them have foreign origins
then this defies the logic of peaceful spread of Islam in India through the channel
of Sufi saints. In fact if you refer to the history of south Indian sultanates
in Mughal era you will come across a clash between Ashrafs and Ailafs. Ashrafs
were the local or Hindustani Muslims and Ailafs were the foreigners. In the
reign of Muhammad bin Tughlaq also there was a clash between the Muslim nobles
of foreign origin viz. ‘sadah amirs’ and the Hindustani Muslims. The number of
foreigners was always marginal as compared to Hindustani Muslims.
There is one more angle to look at this idea of foreign origin. This
subcontinent has always been the land of migrants. The Achaemenids who first
used the word ‘Hindu’ were the descendents of one of those several Aryan tribes
who moved towards Iran and then towards India. They were the descendents of ‘Parsas’
and the other tribes like Yadus, Turvas, Panchals came to India. Similarly, the
Rajputs who fought against Ghaznavi and Ghurids also had foreign origins. They
were the descendents of Huns and Shakas and other central asian tribes who
invaded India. So, by this logic everyone is a foreigner in India except the Dravidians
and tribal communities of India. Now it is completely impossible to trace the
origins of Indians except for those few who migrated 100 or 200 years back like
the Pathans who came with Muhammad Khan Bangash. In fact, in their case also
the marriages with local Muslims have not left the foreign origins intact. In
Kerela also the Arab merchants married with local females and now there is no
such thing as pure Arabic in them now. There could be one more possibility. The
major section of Muslim population can claim to be the true Hindus in sense
that the conversions took place among the lower caste people of India and they
were those groups who were probably the earliest migrants to India in 12th
century B.C. or they could also be the original inhabitants of India.
I
believe, I have conveyed my message to you. My idea is that please do not
forget your identity. You are basically a Hindu who follows a religion which
originated in the Arab world in exactly the same way that Japanese and Chinese
follow a religion which originated in India. So please respect the diversity
and cultural harmony of the subcontinent and come out of you hatred for the
people of India. In my next letter, I will tell you more about the reasons for
the communal riots and the conflict between ‘Hindu-muslims’ and ‘Hindu-brahmanical’
followers. I will also discuss the issue of ‘minority’ in India.
With regards,
Abhinav Pandya
M.P.A, 2014
Cornell University
i think there is a confusion.. according to my knowledge, ashrafs were the foreigners (or as they claim, were the descendents of muhammad) and ajlafs(not ailafs) refers to the lower castes of the islamic community, which i think, refers to the converts..
ReplyDeletewhatever the case, i really like your blog.. well written.. publicise it.. i want more people to read it.. and i also want to request you to write more frequently..
Dear Shubham, Thx a ton for appreciating. I have also posted part 2nd of this letter.You can read it.
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