According to the Maulana, as reported in the paper, “Islam had not come down from God merely to lay down some articles of Faith and Law; it had come to make the True Religion triumphant, and raise the banner of Islam high all over the world.” The Maulana was giving the opening speech on the first day of the conference. The conference was then also addressed by Dr. Ahmad al-Rumi, a representative of the Saudi Embassy, and Dr. Muhammad bin Samil, who represented the Rabita-al-‘Alam-al-Islami (Muslim World League). It is worth noting here that the learned Maulana felt safe to name the Jews in the usual manner—yahudi—but was politic enough to use the less-common nasaara (Nazarene) to refer to the Christians, instead of the usual ‘isaai. As for his “Enemies of Islam,” the audience knew whom he meant but could not name so publicly in India—yet. As is well-known, Shi’ahs do not hold all Companions of the Prophet in equal regard, in fact they hold several in disregard. And yet ordinary Shi’ahs and Sunis in South Asia have lived in amity for centuries.
Only a few months earlier, in April 2011, a similar gathering was organized by Maulana Arshad Madani in Delhi that was graced by the Imam of Ka’ba. The latter lost no time to use the occasion to defend Saudi policies against democratic movements in Arab lands. Many years ago, in 1997, the famous Maulana Ali Miyan, organized a major event at the Nadwat-ul-‘Ulama at Lucknow, which was announced as an “Educational Convention.” It too was graced by the then Imam of Ka’ba. Then too much time was spent denouncing the Ahmadis, accusing them of working as “the tools of the Jews and the Nazarenes.” The covert agenda then as now was to project the Saudi regime as the “True” defender of Islam, and diminish the appeal of the religio-political rhetoric coming out of Iran. Lucknow, like Hyderabad—for that matter, like any Indian city—never had noticeable Ahmadi presence. The Ahmadis, frankly, have become an unfortunate proxy for the purpose of a different kind of battle that the Saudis keep launching to protect themselves from democratic changes of any kind.
Hyderabad, to my knowledge, has a respectable history of religious tolerance and sectarian amity. I note that long ago, in the 15th century, it gave shelter to the Mahdavis—the followers of the Mahdi of Jaunpur—who were declared heretics in North India. They lived there in peace and also flourished, and gained prominence in various fields as recently as the previous century. Nawab Bahadur Yar Jang, in politics, and Alam Khundmiri, in Islamic Studies and philosophy, are two names that immediately come to my mind. As I read the reports in Munsif I could not help noticing many names familiar from reading about Muslim politics and sectarian contestations for power in North India. I have seen hardly any challenge to their actions and views in the Urdu press of the city, even in the rivals of Munsif. One hopes that the Urdu intelligentsia of Hyderabad City, particularly at its three universities and many colleges, will take notice of these sad developments, and not betray the heritage of tolerance they received.