Sir Syed Ahmad Khan: Reason, Religion And Nation
By Shafey Kidwai
Routledge, pp. 258
It is a fact that the Muslim renaissance in India began with the advent of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan (1817-1898), the founder of Anglo-Oriental College, which eventually became the Aligarh Muslim University. Before Sir Syed, there was no scholar among Muslims whose educational and reformative endeavour took the form of a movement. Since Sir Syed’s time to the present day, various books and articles have been written about his works and his personality. From biographical books like Khwaja Altaf Hussain Hali’s ‘Hayat-e-Javed’ (‘Immortal Life’, 1903) and Col. Graham’s ‘Life and Works of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan’ (1885) to Surayya Hussain, many books can be adverted. Undoubtedly, Sir Syed’s reformative and educational services can be better understood from these books. But one of the foremost problems with Sir Syed studies has been that it has always lacked proper equipoise. Perhaps this is the reason why the researchers on Sir Syed were either devout or hostile. Shafey Kidwai’s book ‘Sir Syed Ahmad Khan: Reason, Religion and Nation’ is not only an invaluable addition to Sir Syed Studies, but it also establishes a new paradigm of research.