The Reception of Shah Waliullah’s Political Thought among His Contemporaries

Syed Ali Nadeem Rezavi

Shah Waliullah of Delhi (1703–1762) is a major figure in the intellectual history of South Asian Islam. Modern scholars have written a great deal about his ideas on political authority, social order, religious reform, and the decline of the Mughal Empire. But one question has not been explored enough: how did the people of his own time actually receive these ideas?

This distinction matters because later memory has often blurred what really happened in the eighteenth century. Shah Waliullah gained enormous prestige among Muslim scholars in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and that has led many to assume he had the same kind of influence during his lifetime. But modern research suggests a more complicated picture. He was certainly respected as a scholar, a traditionist, and a religious teacher. Yet the immediate political reception of his ideas seems to have been quite limited. His influence among contemporaries was neither universal nor uncontested. Instead, it was shaped by the sectarian, social, and political divisions of late Mughal India.

The political backdrop to Shah Waliullah’s thinking was deeply unstable. The Mughal Empire was no longer the dominant power it had been under Akbar, Jahangir, Shah Jahan, and Aurangzeb. Regional states were growing, military adventurers were grabbing power, and repeated invasions had left Delhi vulnerable. When Nadir Shah sacked the city in 1739, it was not just a military disaster. For many in the urban Muslim elite, it felt like a psychological breaking point.

Like many scholars of his generation, Shah Waliullah saw these events as symptoms of a deeper sickness. Social disorder, moral decline, political fragmentation, and religious laxity seemed to threaten the very foundations of society. But his response was not revolutionary. He did not try to build a new political order. Instead, he wanted to restore what he saw as the right balance between authority, religion, and society.

This diagnosis struck a chord with some sections of the Sunni scholarly class, especially those linked to Delhi’s religious institutions. The success of the Madrasa-i Rahimiyya and the later prominence of his descendants show that his intellectual authority was real. But intellectual authority is not the same as political influence.

One of the main problems Shah Waliullah faced was that the social groups whose support he needed had very different priorities. The Mughal nobility was split by factional rivalries. Provincial rulers were chasing their own regional interests. Military leaders followed strategic calculations, not scholarly advice. So even those who respected Waliullah’s learning had little reason to put his prescriptions ahead of their own political concerns.

The limits of his political influence become especially clear when you look at how his ideas were received among Shi’i elites. By the eighteenth century, Shi’i political power had become a significant feature of the Indian landscape. The rise of Awadh, the presence of Shi’i nobles in Delhi, and the growth of Shi’i religious institutions created an environment very different from the sixteenth century.

Shah Waliullah’s writings show a strong commitment to Sunni orthodoxy. He defended the legitimacy of the first caliphs and criticized Shi’i doctrines, reflecting long standing theological debates. But in the political setting of eighteenth-century India, these arguments took on immediate relevance. For many Shi’i scholars and administrators, Waliullah’s project looked less like universal reform and more like an assertion of Sunni normative authority.

So the reception of his political thought in Shi’i circles was limited. There is little evidence that major Shi’i intellectuals embraced his vision of political renewal. In fact, the growth of Shi’i institutions in Awadh and elsewhere shows that alternative centres of religious and political legitimacy were emerging. While Sunni scholars tied to the Rahimiyya increasingly celebrated Waliullah’s ideas, Shi’i scholars generally stayed outside that orbit.

This split is significant because it shows that Muslim responses to the Mughal Empire’s crisis were deeply fragmented. There was no single Muslim political perspective. Sunni and Shi’i intellectuals often diagnosed the same problems differently and offered different solutions.

Another important limitation had to do with non-Muslim political elites. Much of Shah Waliullah’s political thought was shaped by his concern over the rise of the Marathas and other regional powers. His famous appeal to Ahmad Shah Abdali came from a belief that Maratha expansion threatened the established political order of North India.

But not everyone saw it that way. For Maratha leaders, the weakening of Mughal authority meant opportunity, not catastrophe. For Jat chiefs around Bharatpur, the empire’s decline opened up new chances for autonomy. Rajput rulers were increasingly pursuing their own regional interests, independent of Delhi. In each case, restoring the old Mughal balance offered few clear benefits. As a result, Shah Waliullah’s political vision failed to gain support beyond a fairly narrow constituency. The groups whose cooperation would have been needed to restore the order he wanted were already building their own alternative futures.

This reality becomes even more striking when we compare Shah Waliullah’s vision with an earlier model of political legitimacy: Akbar’s doctrine of sulh-i kul, or peace with all. Seen from that perspective, Waliullah’s project was not simply a reaction to Mughal decline. It also marked a narrowing of the political imagination.

Akbar’s vision, whatever its practical limits and contradictions, sought legitimacy through the inclusion of diverse religious and social groups. The court welcomed Hindu nobles, Persianate administrators, Maratha warriors, and even, at times, Shi’i intellectuals, all under an imperial umbrella that deliberately blurred purely sectarian claims to authority. Sulh-i kul was fragile and never fully realised, but it was expansive in its ambition.

Waliullah, by contrast, sought legitimacy through the restoration of a morally disciplined Sunni political order. Where Akbar reached outward to accommodate difference, Waliullah turned inward to recover what he believed was a lost religious purity. This was not a revival of Mughal universalism. It was a different kind of project altogether.

The limited reception of his political ideas among Shi’is and non-Muslim elites may therefore tell us as much about the changing nature of eighteenth-century politics as it does about Waliullah himself. By his time, the conditions that had made Akbar’s eclecticism possible had largely eroded. The empire was fragmenting. Religious identities had become more marked. Patronage networks were increasingly shaped by sectarian and regional loyalties. In that environment, a call for Sunni moral discipline could only ever appeal to a narrower base. The problem was not simply that Waliullah failed to persuade Shi’i and non-Muslim audiences. It was that the political world he inhabited no longer made Akbar’s kind of persuasion easy or even possible.

This also helps explain why his famous letters to Ahmad Shah Abdali had such limited practical impact. Later Muslim historians often treated these letters as decisive interventions that changed the course of Indian history. But the contemporary evidence points to something more modest. Abdali’s campaigns were driven by his own strategic, dynastic, and economic concerns. Waliullah’s appeals may have offered religious legitimacy, but they did not determine Afghan policy. In fact, the very need to appeal to an outside ruler shows the weakness, not the strength, of Delhi’s scholarly establishment. If the ulama had real political influence within the Mughal state, such appeals would not have been necessary. The letters stand as testimony to the marginalization of scholarly authority as much as to its hopes.

Modern historians have read these developments in different ways. Khaliq Ahmad Nizami emphasized Waliullah’s role as a religious reformer who wanted political order as part of a broadly shared desire for stability. Nizami’s work is hugely valuable for recovering texts and tracing intellectual traditions, but it tends to downplay how much disagreement and resistance existed at the time.

Athar Abbas Rizvi offered a more historically grounded reading. By reconstructing the political and social world of eighteenth-century India, he showed that Waliullah’s ideas operated in a highly fragmented environment. Rizvi’s work reveals a respected scholar whose influence was real but whose ability to shape political events stayed limited.

Irfan Habib adds another layer. By placing Waliullah within the crisis of the Mughal ruling classes, Habib explains both the appeal and the limits of his political thought. The programme resonated with groups whose fortunes were tied to preserving the existing order. It was less attractive to those who stood to gain from change. Reception, in other words, was shaped not just by religious belief but by social and political interests as well.

More recent scholarship has moved beyond the question of immediate political influence altogether. Historians like Francis Robinson and Barbara Metcalf have shown that Shah Waliullah’s greatest success came not in eighteenth-century politics but in nineteenth-century intellectual history. Through the Madrasa-i Rahimiyya and the work of his descendants, his writings found audiences far larger than any he reached during his lifetime.

This brings us to a crucial point. As a political thinker, Shah Waliullah diagnosed the crisis of late Mughal society with real insight. But the solutions he proposed appealed mainly to a segment of the Sunni scholarly elite. They failed to attract broad support among the many different political and religious communities of eighteenth-century India. His vision neither united Indian Muslims nor generated meaningful backing from Shi’i scholars, Maratha leaders, Jat rulers, or Rajput elites.

His true triumph came after his death. The decline of the Mughal Empire, the rise of British power, and the transformation of Muslim intellectual life created new conditions in which his writings could be rediscovered, reinterpreted, and eventually canonized. The Shah Waliullah who became central to nineteenth-century reformist discourse was not simply the historical figure from eighteenth-century Delhi. He was also the product of a long process of intellectual construction carried out by his disciples, his descendants, and later scholars.

So the history of the reception of Shah Waliullah’s political thought reveals a striking paradox. During his lifetime, his influence was hemmed in by sectarian divisions, political fragmentation, and the rise of alternative centres of power. But after his death, those same ideas gained extraordinary authority across large parts of South Asian Islam. His immediate political legacy was modest. His intellectual legacy was transformative. Keeping that distinction in mind is essential for understanding both Shah Waliullah himself and the world he lived in.

Shah Waliullah of Delhi and His Reception by Modern Scholarship: Between Revival, Reform, and Historical Context

Syed Ali Nadeem Rezavi

Recently a thesis on the political views of Shah Waliullah of Delhi was awarded a PhD and the examiner enquired about the reception of his ideas. Here I am dealing only with his reception in modern times. The reception by the contemporaries will be dealt later.

Few intellectual figures from eighteenth-century South Asia have drawn as much scholarly attention as Shah Waliullah of Delhi (1703–1762). He is remembered as a theologian, a traditionist, a Sufi, a social critic, and a reformer, and each generation has rediscovered him through its own concerns. Muslim revivalists have often seen him as the architect of Islamic renewal. Nationalist historians have sometimes presented him as a defender of a fading Muslim political order. And modern academic historians have used him as a window into the social, intellectual, and political changes that came with the collapse of the Mughal Empire.

The historiography of Shah Waliullah, then, is not just a record of changing interpretations of one thinker. It reflects larger shifts in how Indian history has been written, from the intellectual and institutional histories linked to the Aligarh school, to Marxist social history, and from religious biography to the study of networks, knowledge systems, and political cultures. The works of Khaliq Ahmad Nizami, Syed Athar Abbas Rizvi, Irfan Habib, Aziz Ahmad, Francis Robinson, Barbara Metcalf, and others show how different methods have produced very different understandings of the same historical figure.

The real Shah Waliullah lived through the long crisis of the Mughal Empire. By the time he came into his own as a scholar, the empire built by Akbar and strengthened under Aurangzeb had begun to fragment. Regional states were emerging across the subcontinent. The Marathas were pushing into northern India. Nadir Shah’s invasion in 1739 laid bare Delhi’s vulnerability. Afghan incursions and the growing autonomy of provincial rulers further weakened imperial control. This political instability came with economic dislocation and social uncertainty. It was in this atmosphere that Shah Waliullah developed his vision of religious reform and social revival.

His writings show remarkable intellectual range. He translated the Qur’an into Persian, promoted the study of Hadith, tried to reconcile the legal schools of Sunni Islam, reflected on social order and political authority, and sought to harmonize jurisprudence with mysticism. His Hujjat Allah al-Baligha remains one of the most sophisticated attempts by an eighteenth-century Muslim scholar to explain the social rationale behind Islamic institutions.

Yet modern scholars have disagreed sharply about what these activities really meant.

The earliest substantial academic treatment came from Khaliq Ahmad Nizami. Nizami belonged to a generation of scholars trained in the traditions established by Mohammad Habib and the Aligarh school. His work on Sufism, religious institutions, and medieval intellectual history was marked by vast learning and mastery of Persian and Arabic sources. His writings on Shah Waliullah, including editions of his political letters, made important materials available to later researchers.

That said, Nizami’s approach was mostly descriptive and reconstructive rather than analytical. His main concern was to recover what historical actors thought and intended. He rarely subjected those ideas to sustained social or structural analysis. His Shah Waliullah comes across mainly as a mujaddid, a religious reformer trying to restore moral order and revive Islamic learning. The political letters addressed to rulers like Ahmad Shah Abdali are explained in terms of the instability of the time, but they are not treated as evidence of larger social or ideological forces.

This is not to say Nizami lacked historical sophistication. Rather, his generation of historians generally saw their job as reconstructing intellectual traditions from primary sources and placing them within political events. Questions about class interests, social structures, ideological functions, or discourse analysis were not yet central to Indian historiography. So Nizami’s writing often shows great empathy for his subjects and a real reluctance to question their assumptions. In that sense, his work is less analytical than that of later scholars like Athar Abbas Rizvi or Irfan Habib. It belongs to an older generation of historians trained before Marxist social history and later social science methods had fully influenced Indian historiography. Compared with Rizvi, Habib, Athar Ali, Satish Chandra, or Nurul Hasan, Nizami’s writing tends to be rich in sources, narrative in style, and empathetic rather than problem-driven. His strength lay in recovering texts, institutions, and intellectual traditions; Rizvi’s lay in contextualization; Habib’s in structural explanation. So you could say that Nizami provided much of the documentary groundwork on which later, more analytical historians built their interpretations.

Syed Athar Abbas Rizvi represented a clear step forward. While sharing Nizami’s deep knowledge of Persian and Arabic sources, Rizvi adopted a more contextual and historically grounded approach. His Shah Wali-Allah and His Times remains the most thorough study of the scholar and his world. Instead of focusing only on theology or intellectual history, Rizvi reconstructed the whole social and political environment in which Waliullah lived and worked.

Rizvi moved beyond the older style of intellectual biography. He explored educational institutions, sectarian conflicts, scholarly networks, Sufi orders, and political developments. The result was a much richer sense of how ideas and circumstances were connected. Waliullah emerged not just as a religious thinker but as an intellectual responding to the collapse of imperial power and the breakup of established social structures.

Unlike Nizami, Rizvi gave serious attention to the political implications of Waliullah’s thought. He analysed the famous letters to rulers and military leaders and examined their place in contemporary debates about sovereignty and order. Yet Rizvi avoided simple conclusions. He did not portray Waliullah as a proto-nationalist or reduce him to a sectarian ideologue. Instead, he stressed the complexity of his engagement with the crises of eighteenth-century India.

The most radical reinterpretation came from Irfan Habib. Working within a Marxist framework, Habib shifted attention from intellectual history to social history. For him, ideas could not be understood apart from the material conditions that produced them. Religious thought was examined not just as theology but also as ideology.

Habib saw the eighteenth century as a time of deep contradictions within Mughal society. The weakening of central authority, the growing power of regional elites, and the erosion of older patterns of patronage created anxieties among sections of the Muslim scholarly and administrative classes. Shah Waliullah’s reform programme emerged from this context.

In Habib’s reading, Waliullah’s calls for social discipline, religious renewal, and political intervention reflected the worries of a social order under strain. His appeals to Ahmad Shah Abdali cannot be understood simply as religious exhortations; they were also attempts to restore a political balance that seemed to be falling apart. The emphasis on unity, order, and moral renewal corresponded to a perceived need to defend a threatened social and political structure.

Habib’s approach has been hugely influential because it connects intellectual developments to broader historical processes. But it has also been criticised for tending to privilege structural explanations over theological ones. Some scholars argue that this kind of interpretation risks reducing complex religious ideas to mere expressions of social interests. Even so, Habib’s work fundamentally changed the terms of the debate by insisting that intellectual history must be linked to social history.

A different angle came from Aziz Ahmad. His concern was with the evolution of Islamic modernism and reformist thought. Aziz Ahmad saw Shah Waliullah as an important link between classical Islamic scholarship and later revival and reform movements. He highlighted Waliullah’s efforts to return to foundational texts, his critique of blind imitation, and his focus on intellectual renewal.

Unlike Habib, Aziz Ahmad concentrated on the internal development of Islamic thought. Yet unlike Nizami, he examined these developments within a larger comparative framework that included the Ottoman Empire, Safavid Iran, and the wider Islamic world. His Shah Waliullah was not just an Indian scholar but part of a broader eighteenth-century pattern of Islamic revival.

Francis Robinson and Barbara Metcalf then pushed the discussion in new directions. Their work on Muslim intellectual networks and religious institutions brought out the long-term influence of Waliullah’s ideas. Robinson, in particular, stressed the importance of scholarly lineages, educational networks, and the circulation of texts. He argued that the intellectual traditions associated with Waliullah helped shape important strands of nineteenth-century Muslim thought.

Metcalf’s work on Deoband likewise showed the lasting influence of Waliullahi traditions. Yet both scholars warned against simple genealogies. They cautioned against portraying Shah Waliullah as the direct founder of later movements. Instead, they highlighted processes of reinterpretation and adaptation through which later generations made his legacy their own.

Recent scholarship has grown more critical of teleological readings that treat Shah Waliullah merely as a forerunner of modern reformism. Such approaches risk reading nineteenth- and twentieth-century concerns back into the eighteenth century. Today, historians increasingly stress the need to understand him within his own intellectual universe, not just as a stepping stone to later developments.

This shift has also brought fresh attention to aspects of his thought that earlier scholars neglected. His engagement with Sufism, his theories of social organisation, his understanding of history, and his attempts to reconcile reason and revelation have all drawn new interest. Historians now recognise that Shah Waliullah cannot be neatly labelled as either a conservative traditionalist or a revolutionary reformer. He was deeply rooted in inherited traditions and remarkably innovative in how he engaged with them.

The historiography of Shah Waliullah therefore mirrors the evolution of modern historical scholarship itself. Nizami represented a tradition of intellectual history grounded in close textual reading and sympathetic reconstruction. Rizvi introduced a more contextual and analytical framework that linked ideas to historical circumstances. Habib brought social structures and material conditions to the centre of the discussion. Aziz Ahmad placed Waliullah within broader currents of Islamic intellectual history. Robinson and Metcalf highlighted the importance of networks, institutions, and transmission.

Each of these approaches illuminates a different side of Shah Waliullah’s life and work. Yet none is enough on its own. Taken together, they reveal a figure who was at once a theologian, a Sufi, a social critic, an educational reformer, and a political thinker. The ongoing debate over his significance reflects not just the richness of his writings but also the lasting importance of the questions he addressed: the relationship between religion and power, the causes of social decline, the possibility of reform, and the role of intellectuals in times of political crisis.

Perhaps the most important lesson from this historiography is that Shah Waliullah resists being claimed by any single ideological tradition. He cannot be reduced to a proto-nationalist, a proto-Islamist, a defender of orthodoxy, or an agent of class interests. He was all of these things in part, and none of them entirely. The historian’s task is not to recruit him for contemporary causes, but to recover the complexity of a thinker who lived at a moment when one world was passing away and another had not yet been born.

The Forbidden Hajj: Imam Husain’s Journey of Defiance from Mecca to Karbala

Syed Ali Nadeem Rezavi

In the sweltering heat of September 680 CE (8 Dhu al-Hijjah 60 AH), the holy city of Mecca should have been overflowing with pilgrims chanting the talbiyah in preparation for the annual Hajj. Among them was Imam Husain ibn Ali, the beloved grandson of the Prophet Muhammad. Yet on the very eve of that sacred pilgrimage, Husain gathered his family, which included women, children, the elderly, and the sick, along with some fifty faithful companions, and turned his back on the Kaaba. He did not leave willingly. He left because hundreds of assassins sent by the Umayyad caliph Yazid ibn Muawiyah were hiding in the alleys of Mecca, waiting to kill him even on the holiest ground. Rather than perform the Hajj, which had become impossible under the threat of murder, Imam Husain performed a quick Umrah and set his face toward Karbala. That departure was not an escape. It was the opening act of a revolution. It was a lesson to all humanity on how to say “No” to tyranny, even when saying “Yes” would save your life.

The Assassination Plot Inside the Sanctuary

Historical accounts tell us that Yazid did not simply want Husain to disappear. He wanted to kill him in a way that would crush all resistance permanently. His agents, led by Amr ibn Saad and others, infiltrated Mecca disguised as pilgrims. They carried concealed weapons under their ihram garments, the white robes of pilgrimage. Their orders were clear. Strike Husain during the crowded Hajj rituals, preferably near the Kaaba itself, and claim it was a random blood feud. This way, Yazid could deny responsibility. He could hide his crime behind the chaos of the pilgrimage season.

The Qur’an famously declares the Kaaba to be sacred in Surah Al-Ma’idah (5:97), which describes it as a safe sanctuary designated by God:

Allah has made the Ka’bah, the Sacred House, standing for the people and [has sanctified] the sacred months…” [Quran 5:97]

Word of this plot reached Husain through loyal supporters. He knew that if he stayed, two things would happen. First, his blood would desecrate the sanctuary of the Kaaba, a sin that would echo through eternity. Second, his murder would be lost in the noise of Hajj, dismissed as just another tribal killing. The world would never know that a caliph had ordered the assassination of the Prophet’s grandson inside God’s own house. Yazid would get away with it.

Thus, Husain made his decision. He would not give Yazid that cover. He would not let the sacred Kaaba become a crime scene. He would not let his own murder be swept under the rug. He would leave Mecca and force Yazid to kill him in the open, where everyone could see the truth.

Reasons for Leaving Mecca

Scholars have identified a number of profound reasons why Imam Husain chose to leave Mecca rather than stay and face the assassins. Each reason reveals the depth of his mission. I list some of the important ones here.

First, to maintain the sanctity of the Holy Kaaba. Husain said plainly that he would not allow the House of God to be stained with his blood. The Kaaba was not just a building. It was the symbol of divine peace and unity. If Yazid’s men shed blood there, that sanctity would be broken forever. Husain chose to become a wanderer rather than let his death become a tool for desecrating the sacred.

Second, to expose the evil of Yazid completely. Had Husain been killed during Hajj, Yazid could have hidden behind the crowd. He could have spread rumours that a random Bedouin or a personal enemy had committed the murder. The true face of Umayyad tyranny would have remained masked. Husain refused to let that happen. He said, “I will go to Iraq so that the people will know that Yazid is the killer. Let him not hide behind the cloak of the pilgrims.” By moving the battlefield to Karbala, Husain forced the evil into the daylight. There were no crowds to blame. No pilgrimage to confuse. Just a plain desert, a tyrant’s army, and the blood of the innocent. The world could not look away.

Third, to ensure that those with him were not treated as collateral damage. This is a point often missed. If Yazid’s assassins had struck in Mecca, they would have killed not only Husain but also his family and followers who stood nearby. The official story would have called them unfortunate bystanders, accidental victims of a scuffle. Husain refused to let his companions die as nameless collateral damage. He wanted every single person who fell with him to be counted. He wanted the world to know that they were deliberate targets of a murderous regime. He wanted their names, their faces, and their sacrifices to be remembered forever. That is why he kept his small group together and made sure they faced the enemy openly. Every death at Karbala was a conscious choice, not an accident of violence.

Fourth, to ensure that everyone who sided with him did so with full knowledge of the consequences. Husain never tricked anyone into following him. On the night before Ashura, he gathered all his companions and said, “The enemy is only interested in me. You are free to leave. Take your families and go. There is no shame in leaving.” He gave them a full and honest warning. The men who stayed knew exactly what awaited them. They knew they would be killed. They knew their women and children would be taken as captives. They knew the world would forget them for generations. And they stayed anyway. That is what makes Husain’s companions so extraordinary. They were not deceived. They were not pressured. They stood with Husain because they chose truth over survival. And by doing so, they rose to the same level as their leader. In Husain’s eyes, a faithful companion was no less than a prince. They all drank from the same cup of martyrdom. They all share the same eternal honour.

What This Journey Means for Us Today

We live in a world full of quiet evil and daily humiliations. The tyrant today rarely wears a crown or carries a sword. He might sit in a corporate office, a government building, or even inside our own compromises. The pressure to say “Yes” comes in soft forms. Say yes to the small lie that gets you a promotion. Say yes to the injustice you see but pretend not to notice. Say yes to the boss who humiliates you, the system that exploits you, the friend who asks you to betray your values. The world tells us that survival is everything. Keep your head down. Don’t make trouble. Live to fight another day.

Imam Husain says the opposite. He says that some lines cannot be crossed, no matter the cost. He says that a dignified death is better than a humiliated life. He says that your “No” matters even when you are alone. And he gives us a roadmap for how to resist.

First, refuse to let sacred things be stained. When the powerful try to use holy symbols, holy places, or holy names to hide their crimes, walk away. Do not let your presence become a shield for evil. Husain left the Kaaba itself. You can leave a mosque, a church, a temple, or a community that has been captured by corruption.

Second, expose the evil. Do not let tyrants hide. Speak the truth even if it costs you. Husain could have died quietly in Mecca and been forgotten. Instead, he chose a public death that would scream through history. You may not be called to die, but you are called to speak. Name the injustice. Refuse to pretend.

Third, refuse to be collateral damage. You are not an accident. Your pain is not a footnote. Your sacrifice, if you choose to make one, matters. Husain made sure every single one of his companions died as a deliberate witness, not as a casualty. When you stand for truth, know that your stand has meaning. You are not a number. You are a name.

Fourth, and most importantly, choose your side with open eyes. Husain never tricked anyone. He laid out the cost clearly. Life or death. Comfort or honour. Silence or truth. And he let people decide. That is the mark of a true leader. He does not promise you an easy path. He promises you a meaningful one. The companions who stayed with Husain did so knowing they would die. They went anyway. That is the level of commitment we are asked to have, not necessarily to die, but to never betray the truth once we have seen it.

This journey marks a way for us if we decide to stand with truth. You do not need an army. You do not need a platform. You only need the courage to say, when the moment comes, “No. Not me. Not today.” And you need the clarity to know what you are choosing. Husain chose to leave Mecca, to expose Yazid, to protect the Kaaba, and to honour his companions. You can choose, in your own small way, to do the same.

Today, 1,400 years later, we still remember his name. Most of us cannot name a single general who fought for Yazid. But we know Husain. The powerless man who said “No” has outlived the powerful man who said “Bow.” That is the real meaning of Ashura. That is the living legacy of Imam Husain. And that legacy is open to every one of us. All we have to do is choose.

Qatl e Husain asl me marg e Yazīd hai….

I would say:

So walk on, O weary traveller, though the night be long;
The dawn belongs to those whom neither fear nor doubt has misled.

Karbala, Iran, and the Twenty-First Century:

A Historical Perspective and a Lesson for the Muslim World

 

Syed Ali Nadeem Rezavi

Kullo yaumin ‘āshūra

Kullo ‘arzin Karbala

Everyday is Ashura

Every land is Karbala

*

Perspective

There is a thirst that does not begin in the throat. It begins in the soul, in the hollow place where hope used to live, and it spreads outward until the tongue turns to dust and the eyes become two dry wells. That thirst is the oldest story the Muslim world tells itself. It is the story of a people denied water, denied breath, denied the right to exist with dignity, yet refusing to kneel. On the plains of Karbala in 680 AD, Imam Husain, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, pitched his tents by the Euphrates River. But the river was locked behind the spears of an Umayyad army. For days, children cried for a single sip. Women held their dry lips together in silence. And men, knowing they would die before sunset, stood with nothing but raw courage in their hands.

Karbala was not a battle. It was a slaughter. Husain and his seventy-two companions, including his infant son Ali Asghar and his brother Abbas, faced an army of thousands. They were cut off from water under the scorching desert sun. The tyrant Yazid did not see them as human beings. He saw them as threats to his throne. But what Yazid did not understand, what no tyrant has ever understood, is that thirst does not break a righteous heart. It only makes it louder.

Abbas’s stand in Karbala has become a legend over fourteen centuries. Abbas rode into the Euphrates to fetch water for the children, but his hands were severed by enemy swords. Still, he pressed forward, holding the waterskin with his teeth, until an arrow pierced it and the water spilt onto the sand. He fell facing the tents, still reaching toward those he loved. That image, a man without hands still trying to bring water to thirsty children, is the image of resistance itself. It is the refusal to let cruelty have the last word. For the Muslim world, it remains the ultimate lesson in what it means to stand for justice when justice has become a death sentence.

The 21st Century Iran

Now look at Iran in the twenty-first century. Look at the embargo, the sanctions, the slow strangulation of a nation by economic warfare. Medicines cannot reach hospitals. Babies in intensive care cannot get imported formula. Cancer patients watch their treatments become memories. The world calls it pressure or leverage. But when you see a mother in Tehran watching her child’s lips crack from preventable dehydration because medical supplies are blocked, you are seeing Karbala again. The thirst of Imam Husain is happening right now under American sanctions. A powerful empire denies basic sustenance to the powerless. And the powerless refuse to break. This is the historical perspective that the Muslim world must absorb. Tyranny does not retire. It simply changes its uniform.

That is why the saying holds such a terrifying and beautiful truth. Every land is Karbala and every day is the Day of Ashura. Tyranny is reborn in every generation, in new flags, new blockades. And so must resistance be reborn. When you see the people of Gaza, where entire families are erased by bombs, where children are pulled from rubble with the same silence that fell over Husain’s camp, you are seeing the Umayyad army again. The same logic of crushing those who will not submit. The same cries of thirsty children that the powerful pretend not to hear. For the Muslim world, Gaza is not a distant headline. It is a mirror reflecting Karbala.

But there is another side to this story. In Iran, despite the embargo that would have broken any other nation, scientists work in hidden labs to make their own medicines. Mothers organise underground networks to smuggle insulin. Engineers keep the lights on with salvaged parts. This is the spirit of Abbas, reaching across centuries to offer water when every hand has been cut off. It is humanity doubling down on justice when justice has become expensive. And this is the lesson for the Muslim world. Sanctions are designed to break your will. But will is broken only by hopelessness. And hopelessness is a choice you can refuse to make.

The tragedy of Karbala was never about defeat. Husain knew he would die. He gave his followers a choice to leave before the battle. Not one left. They chose to die standing rather than live kneeling. That choice turned a massacre into a revolution. Ashura became the day when cruelty put on its most terrifying mask and humanity looked it in the eye and said no. From a historical perspective, this was the moment when the Muslim world learned that power without justice is not power at all. It is just noise.

Now consider Ayatollah Khamenei, the leader of Iran, standing against the weight of the world’s most powerful empires. Like Imam Husain, he knew what his end would be. The sanctions were designed to starve his people into submission. The assassinations of his nuclear scientists, the bombing of his generals, the constant whisper of regime change. And yet he did not hide. He did not give in. He told his people the truth that no tyrant wants to hear. That dignity is worth more than comfort. That survival without honour is not survival at all. And when the moment came, he died fearlessly. Not for power, not for wealth, but for his ideals, for his people, and for the dignity of a nation that refused to bow. He died as Husain died, with empty hands and a full heart, knowing that the body can be killed but the truth cannot be buried. The Muslim world has seen this shape before. A leader who could have surrendered to the empire. And instead, he chose the thirsty path.

Just before Karbala, Husain told his followers they could slip away and save themselves. Not one left. In Iran today, under the most crushing embargo any nation has endured in modern times, the same scene unfolds. Sanctions have turned ordinary life into an endurance test. Medicines are scarce. Jobs are lost. Futures are cancelled. And yet the people do not budge. They do not rise up against their leader as the enemy had hoped. Instead, they pour into the streets, and their pouring itself turns the day into Ashura. Every crowded avenue becomes Karbala. Every clenched fist becomes a flag. Every cry of Labbaik Ya Husain becomes a declaration that they would rather die on their feet than live on their knees. They have seen what happens to nations that kneel. They have seen Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya. They have seen how empires promise democracy and deliver only rubble. So, they choose the hard path. They choose the thirst. They choose the martyrdom they have already accepted in their hearts. For the Muslim world, this is the deepest lesson. Sanctions and blockades are not new. The Quraysh once boycotted the Prophet in the valley of Abu Talib and starved his clan for three years. They did not surrender. The weapon is old. The response must be older.

When we say every land is Karbala, we mean that injustice migrates. Today, it wears the face of sanctions that starve Iranian children. Tomorrow, it wears the face of a blockade that drowns Gaza in darkness. But when we say every day is Ashura, we mean that resistance also has no single address. It lives inside the Iranian mother who hides medicine in her hijab. It lives inside the Palestinian father who digs for his daughter with his bare hands. It lives inside a leader who died without flinching and a people who turn every street into a battlefield of conscience. This is the historical perspective that the Muslim world must carry forward. The Umayyads are gone. The British are gone. The Soviet Union is gone. Empires crumble. But Karbala remains. Because Karbala is not a place. It is a choice.

The Essence

Thirst is not only the absence of water. Thirst is the absence of mercy. And mercy is not given by empires. It is created by ordinary people who refuse to let each other die of shame. Karbala teaches the Muslim world that the tyrant always has more swords. But the thirsty have something the tyrant can never own. They have the truth of their own suffering. And that truth, once spoken, is an unkillable thing. From the seventh century to the twenty-first, cruelty wears new masks. Resistance wears the same face. The face of a man without hands still reaching for water. The face of a mother hiding medicine. The face of a nation that turns every ordinary day into Ashura.

So, remember, Abbas, with his severed arms, is still trying. Remember the children of Gaza. Remember the hospitals in Iran where doctors work without an anaesthetic because the shipment is stuck at a border that politics has poisoned. Remember the leader who died fearlessly for his ideals, his people, and his dignity. And remember that the Muslim world is not a helpless witness. You are part of the same story. Every time you choose to see another person’s thirst as your own, you become a waterskin carried through enemy lines. You become Karbala’s echo, whispering across every land, on every single day, that justice is not dead. It is just very, very thirsty. And thirst, as history proves, is the beginning of every revolution.

The Roach That Roared: When Satire Becomes the Last Voice of the Betrayed

Syed Ali Nadeem Rezavi

The image is strange, even a little disgusting. A “Cockroach Janata Party.” On the surface, it sounds like a joke. But for millions of frustrated Indians, it feels painfully real. It is not a political party in any official sense. It is a cry made of dark humour, born from a nation that feels betrayed and dreams that have been shattered. Comparing a satirical cockroach to the French Revolution seems absurd. One is about guillotines and bloodshed. The other is a meme. Yet beneath the surface, the emotions are the same. When people lose faith in courts, leaders, and promises, they find a voice. Sometimes that voice is a revolution. Sometimes it is a cockroach.

To understand why this comparison works, we have to look at what happens before any uprising. People stop believing that the system will work for them. In France before 1789, the king and nobles lived in luxury while ordinary people starved. The government was corrupt and deaf to suffering. The common man had no real say. Something similar has happened in India over the last several years, not in one dramatic moment but through a slow, grinding disappointments that have touched every corner of the country.

Take the farmers’ protest of 2020-2021. For more than a year, thousands of farmers, mostly from Punjab, Haryana, and Uttar Pradesh, camped on the borders of Delhi. They were demanding the repeal of three farm laws that they believed would destroy their livelihoods. They were met with tear gas, water cannons, and barricades. The government called them anti national. The media called them puppets of foreign forces. But the people saw old men and women sitting in the cold, dying of heart attacks and suicides, just asking for a fair deal. The laws were eventually repealed, but the trust was not restored. Many farmers felt that the government only listened when the protest became too big to ignore. That feeling of being heard only under duress is a deep wound.

Then came the unemployment crisis. Every year, millions of young Indians graduate with degrees but no jobs. The government releases figures that do not match reality. The exam scams, the paper leaks, the recruitment delays. Young men and women spend years preparing for government jobs that never come. They sit in study circles, their dreams slowly turning into bitterness. When they raise their voices, they are told to be patient. Patient for what? For a system that seems designed to exhaust them?

But the dismantling of hope goes far beyond jobs. It has reached the very places where young minds are supposed to be built. India’s universities and colleges, once seen as temples of learning, are being systematically hollowed out. Budgets for education have been cut year after year. Faculty positions remain empty. Research grants have dried up. The flagship institutes like JNU, Jamia Millia Islamia, Aligarh Muslim University, and even the IITs and IIMs have seen political interference, surveillance of students and teachers, and the appointment of vice chancellors based on loyalty rather than scholarship. The new education policy talks about reform, but on the ground, libraries are closing, laboratory equipment is broken, and teachers are overworked and underpaid. A generation of young Indians is being pushed out of genuine learning and into coaching centres that teach only how to pass exams, not how to think.

The neglect of knowledge systems is even more tragic. India once had a rich tradition of pluralistic learning, where Sanskrit, Arabic, Persian, Tamil, and Bengali manuscripts sat side by side. But today, history textbooks are being rewritten to fit a narrow version of the past. Scholars who question the official narrative are intimidated, sued, or forced to leave their positions. The social sciences are seen as suspect. Philosophy, comparative religion, and even basic sociology are being removed from curricula. What is left is a hollow, job oriented education that produces workers, not thinkers. The idea of a university as a space for debate, dissent, and discovery has been replaced by the idea of a university as a training ground for obedient employees. When you kill real education, you kill the soul of a society. People stop asking why. They only learn how to survive. That is the goal. An unthinking population is easier to rule.

And who rules? Increasingly, the same families. One of the deepest betrayals of the Indian promise has been the way political positions have become hereditary property. Every major party, regardless of ideology, has turned into a family business. The sons, daughters, grandsons, daughters in law, and nephews of sitting politicians are given tickets for elections. They are made ministers, chief ministers, even prime ministers. Experience does not matter. Talent does not matter. Loyalty to the family matters. A young person from a poor family, no matter how brilliant or hardworking, will never get a chance to lead because the top positions are reserved for the progeny of one brand of politicians. This is not a republic. This is an oligarchy of bloodlines dressed in election clothes.

The common people watch this and feel a deep, cold anger. They see a young man who has never worked a day in his life become a member of parliament while their own son, with a master’s degree and five years of hard work, cannot even get a clerk’s job. They see a daughter in law of a powerful family become a minister while their own daughter, who topped the university, is told to wait for a vacancy that never comes. The system is not just corrupt. It is closed. The gates are locked from the inside. And the people outside are told to be grateful for the crumbs.

All of this has been accompanied by a slow, steady dismantling of an inclusive society and what many once understood as Indian culture. India was never a monolithic culture. It was a river with many tributaries. Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs, Christians, Jains, Buddhists, Parsis, Jews, Adivasis, Dalits, and countless castes and tribes all lived, often badly but together, in a messy but functional pluralism. The idea was not that everyone agreed, but that everyone could exist. That idea is being replaced. The new vision of Indian culture is narrower, louder, and more exclusive. It speaks one language primarily. It worships one set of gods. It celebrates one version of history. Everyone else is asked to either assimilate or leave. And if they cannot leave, they are told to be quiet.

This is not just about religion. It is about food, dress, music, and even the way people mourn their dead. Interfaith marriages are attacked by mobs and sometimes by families. Love is treated as a crime if it crosses the wrong line. Food stalls are forced to put up signs declaring their owners’ names and religions. Festival processions are deliberately routed through sensitive neighbourhoods to provoke a reaction. The very air in many towns has become tense. People do not speak freely anymore. They do not invite neighbours from other communities to their homes. They do not send their children to certain schools. They do not celebrate together. The old, comfortable, chaotic India is being replaced by a cleaner, colder, more suspicious place. And the people who are suffering the most are the ordinary ones who just want to live their lives without fear.

But the betrayal goes deeper still. It has entered the realm of safety and belonging. Across India, we have seen a rise in communal clashes and lynchings. Men have been killed for transporting cows, for eating beef, for merely looking different. In Rajasthan, a man named Pehlu Khan was beaten to death by a mob in broad daylight while his sons watched. The attackers walked free. In Jharkhand, a Muslim man named Alimuddin Ansari was killed for refusing to stop selling meat during a religious procession. In Karnataka, a man was lynched over a social media post. These are not isolated incidents. They are a pattern. And in each case, the state’s response has been either silence or slow justice. People have learned that if you belong to the wrong community, your life is cheap. The police are often absent or complicit. The courts take years. The government sometimes praises the mob. That is not a failure of law and order. That is a failure of the idea of equal citizenship.

Then there is the new kind of punishment that has emerged in recent years. It is called bulldozer justice. The name itself tells you what it is. No court order. No notice. No chance to defend yourself. Just a bulldozer that arrives one morning and flattens your home, your shop, your mosque, your madrasa. The man most associated with this is Yogi Adityanath, the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh. After communal violence in a town, the government does not wait for an investigation. It does not arrest the guilty through a fair process. Instead, it sends bulldozers to the homes of accused or even to the entire neighbourhood of a particular community. The message is clear. You are guilty until proven poor. Your house will be destroyed before any judge looks at your case.

There have been many such instances. In 2020, after a Hindu priest was killed in a suspicious encounter, riots broke out in parts of Delhi. The government responded by demolishing the shops and homes of Muslims in the affected areas. In 2022, after a man was beheaded in Udaipur by two Muslims who posted a video of the act, the government did not just arrest the killers. It bulldozed the home of one of the accused in Rajasthan. In Uttar Pradesh, towns like Khargone, Jahangirpuri, and Jalalabad have seen bulldozers roll in after every major clash, regardless of who started the violence. The victims are almost always from minority communities. And the bulldozer operators are cheered on by local politicians who post videos of the demolitions on social media to win applause from their supporters.

What makes bulldozer justice truly terrifying is that it bypasses every institution that is supposed to protect a citizen. The police can arrest you. The court can convict you. But even before that happens, the state can destroy everything you own. Your home is not just a roof. It is your savings, your memories, your address, your identity. When a bulldozer flattens it, you become a refugee in your own city. Your children cannot go to school because you no longer have an address. Your business is gone. Your neighbours are afraid to help you. And you cannot complain because the politicians who ordered the bulldozers are the same people who control the police and the courts. So you suffer in silence. You pack whatever you can carry. You move to a rented room in a slum. You do not tell anyone what happened because you are afraid. That is the goal of bulldozer justice. It is not just punishment. It is a public warning to everyone from your community. Step out of line, and we will erase you from the map.

Then there is the more technical but equally cruel weapon: the mass removal of names from voter lists. In states like Assam, Uttar Pradesh, and Gujarat, thousands of people, mostly Muslims and Dalits, have found their names missing from voter rolls just before elections. No notice. No hearing. They go to vote and discover they no longer exist. The excuse is usually a clean up of fake voters, but the people who are removed are real. They have lived in the same house for generations. They have ration cards, Aadhaar cards, land records. But the system quietly erases them. If you cannot vote, you do not matter. Your complaint goes nowhere. You become a ghost in your own country. This is a kind of institutional betrayal that does not make headlines but destroys faith one person at a time.

Assam itself is a deeper wound. The National Register of Citizens, or NRC, was meant to identify illegal immigrants. But the process was chaotic, rushed, and cruel. Nearly two million people were left out, many of them Bengali speaking Muslims. They were told to prove their lineage, to produce documents from before 1971. For poor villagers, for women who never went to school, for people whose homes had no electricity or land records, this was impossible. Families were separated. Fathers were sent to detention camps. Children grew up without parents. The promise was that genuine citizens would be protected. The reality was that entire communities were made to feel like foreigners in their own home. And even now, years later, thousands of people are still waiting in camps, their lives frozen, their citizenship uncertain. The government has stopped talking about the NRC, but the fear remains.

Manipur and the other states of the northeast tell a similar story. The conflict between the Meitei and Kuki communities has burned for months, with dozens killed and thousands displaced. Homes have been torched. Women have been paraded naked. The army has been called in, but peace has not returned. People in Manipur feel abandoned by Delhi. They feel that the rest of India does not care because Manipur is far away and its people look different. The internet has been shut down again and again, cutting them off from the world. When the world does not see your pain, it is easier for the state to ignore you. The people of Manipur have learned that their lives are not considered as important as the lives of people in the capital. That is a terrible lesson.

Bengal, too, has seen its share of blood. The 2021 elections were followed by waves of post poll violence. Houses were burned. People were killed. Women were assaulted. The ruling party and the opposition blamed each other, but the victims were ordinary people who had voted for the wrong side. The police did little. The courts moved slowly. Many families fled their villages and lived in relief camps for months. They went back to find their homes destroyed and their neighbours hostile. The message was clear: democracy is fine as long as you choose the winner. If you choose the loser, you pay with your blood. That is not democracy. That is a warning.

The Cockroach Janata Party speaks to all these people. The farmer who lost a son to police bullets. The young Muslim who fears walking at night because a mob might mistake him for a cow smuggler. The man who watched a bulldozer crush his home while a chief minister smiled on television. The Assamese woman whose father sits in a detention camp with no trial date. The Manipuri mother who fled her burning village and now lives under a plastic sheet. The Bengali man whose house was torched because he supported the wrong candidate. The young graduate who gave ten exams and failed each time by one mark, and then watched the son of a politician get a job without any exam at all. The student whose university library was shut down because the books were deemed too dangerous. The professor who lost his position because he asked an uncomfortable question. The Dalit whose name was removed from the voter list. The shopkeeper whose stall was flattened without a single court notice. The young woman who fell in love with someone from another religion and now lives in hiding. The old man who remembers when neighbours shared food during festivals and weeps at what the country has become. The cockroach is a survivor. It lives in filth, eats scraps, and refuses to die. For all these people, the cockroach is not an insult. It is an identity. It says, “You have pushed me into the gutter, but I am still here.”

This kind of protest is not new in India. We have seen it before. In 2011, Anna Hazare sat on a fast for the Jan Lokpal Bill, an anti corruption law. Millions of ordinary Indians came out to support him. They were tired of paying bribes for everything from a driver’s license to a hospital bed. The movement was peaceful, Gandhian in style. But the government dragged its feet. The bill was passed in a weak form. The energy fizzled out. People went back home, more cynical than before. They learned that even a respected activist and a mass movement could be managed, delayed, and finally forgotten.

Then there was the Nirbhaya case in 2012. A young woman was brutally gang raped on a moving bus in Delhi. She died days later. The entire country erupted in anger. People marched, held candles, and shouted for justice and safer cities. The government promised fast track courts, stricter laws, and safer streets. But years later, the situation for women has not changed much. Rapes continue. Convictions remain low. The promised change never arrived. The protestors felt used. Their anger was briefly acknowledged and then absorbed. That is a terrible feeling. When your pain becomes a headline for a week and then disappears.

The French Revolution was different in scale and violence, but the emotional journey was the same. People first asked politely. Then they begged. Then they protested. Then they rioted. Then they smashed everything. The Cockroach Janata Party is not at the smashing stage. It is at the stage of bitter laughter. But that laughter is a warning. History shows that when people lose faith in peaceful protest, they either give up or explode.

There was another moment in recent Indian history that captures this loss of faith. The 2019 protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act, or CAA, and the National Register of Citizens, or NRC. Thousands of students, particularly from Jamia Millia Islamia and Aligarh Muslim University, were beaten by police inside their own campuses. The internet was shut down. Leaders were put under house arrest. Yet people poured into the streets, especially women in Shaheen Bagh. They sat for months, knitting and singing, refusing to move. The government called them anti national and traitors. The protestors were not asking for much. They just wanted the government to not turn its back on Muslims seeking refuge. But the message from the government was clear: dissent would be crushed. Many people quietly went home, not because they agreed, but because they were exhausted and afraid. That exhaustion is the perfect breeding ground for satire. When you cannot shout, you laugh. When you cannot hold a rally, you share a meme.

The Cockroach Janata Party is not a real political force. It will not file nominations or win seats. But it is a symptom. It tells us that a large number of Indians have stopped expecting anything from the system. They no longer believe that a vote changes anything. They no longer believe that a protest moves the needle. They see politicians as a separate species, one that feeds on public money and public patience and passes power to its children like a family heirloom. They see the police as protectors of the powerful. They see the courts as slow and expensive. They see bulldozers as the new judges. They see universities as empty shells. They see their own culture being shrunk into a narrow, angry version that does not recognise them. So they turn to irony. They call themselves cockroaches because that is how the system treats them. And by owning the insult, they take away the sting.

The French Revolution ended with Napoleon, a dictator. The Indian farmer protests ended with a repeal, but no justice for the dead. The Anna movement ended with a weak law. The Nirbhaya movement ended with the same fear on the streets. The CAA protests ended with silence and surveillance. The Assam NRC process ended with thousands still waiting in camps. The Manipur violence ended with no real accountability. The Bengal post poll violence ended with the same families still afraid. And the bulldozers have not stopped. They keep rolling. Every few months, some town erupts, some home is flattened, some family becomes homeless overnight. The people watch in silence because they know that speaking up might bring a bulldozer to their own door. That silence is not peace. That silence is the sound of a nation holding its breath.

And underneath that silence, something else is growing. Not a party. Not a leader. Not a manifesto. Just a shared feeling, passed through memes and whispers and bitter jokes. The feeling that the India of the promise, the India of the constitution, the India where everyone had a place, is gone. What is left is a colder, meaner place, where your worth is determined by your bloodline, your religion, and your willingness to stay quiet. The Cockroach Janata Party is not the answer to this. It is just the name of the wound.

So what comes next? Maybe nothing. Maybe the cockroach just keeps crawling. But maybe, one day, enough people get tired of laughing and tired of suffering in silence. They remember that a cockroach, when stepped on, does not always die. Sometimes it multiplies. That is the real lesson from history. Betrayal is a slow poison. But when it reaches a certain level, even a cockroach can become a revolution. The only question is whether the people of India will continue to bow their heads or finally decide to bite back.

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अकबर और समावेशन की राजनीति: ऐतिहासिक विवादों के दौर में मुगल विरासत की पड़ताल

सैयद अली नदीम रेज़ावी

मदन मोहन मंदिर वृंदावन जिस के लिए अकबर ने अनुदान दिया

आज के दौर में मुगल बादशाह अकबर का चरित्र भारतीय इतिहास को लेकर छिड़ी बहसों का एक प्रमुख मुद्दा बन गया है। हिंदुत्व इतिहासलेखन के समर्थकों द्वारा लिखी जा रही लोकप्रिय पुस्तकों और टिप्पणियों में मुगल काल को धार्मिक दमन और सांस्कृतिक अलगाव का दौर बताने की कोशिश की जा रही है। इस तरह के आख्यान में अकबर या तो एक चालाक राजनीतिज्ञ के रूप में दिखता है, जिसकी सहिष्णुता महज साम्राज्य विस्तार का मुखौटा थी, या फिर वह एक अलग अपवाद बनकर रह जाता है, जिसकी नीतियाँ मानो यह साबित करती हैं कि बाकी सभी मुस्लिम शासक कट्टर थे। हाल ही में विक्रम सम्पथ जैसे टीकाकारों ने अकबर की समावेशी नीतियों की गहराई और ईमानदारी पर सवाल उठाते हुए पुराने तर्कों को फिर से ज़िंदा किया है। सम्पथ और उनके जैसे अन्य लोगों का कहना है कि अकबर की नीतियाँ दरअसल व्यावहारिक सुविधा का साधन थीं, न कि किसी बड़ी समावेशी सोच की अभिव्यक्ति। एनडीटीवी पर उनके हालिया साक्षात्कारों के बाद यह दृष्टिकोण काफी चर्चा में आया है।

लेकिन इस तरह की व्याख्याएँ एक जटिल ऐतिहासिक सच्चाई को सरल बना देती हैं। कोई भी गंभीर इतिहासकार इस बात से इनकार नहीं करता कि अकबर एक साम्राज्य निर्माता था और उसकी नीतियाँ राजनीतिक आवश्यकताओं से आकार लेती थीं। लेकिन यह बात इतिहास के हर सफल शासक पर लागू होती है। असल सवाल यह नहीं है कि अकबर की नीतियाँ राजनीतिक थीं या नहीं, बल्कि यह है कि वे किस तरह की राजनीति का प्रतिनिधित्व करती थीं। सबूत बताते हैं कि अकबर ने सचेत रूप से एक ऐसी राजनीतिक व्यवस्था बनाने की कोशिश की थी जो संकीर्ण सांप्रदायिक पहचानों से ऊपर उठती थी। उसकी सोच शुरुआती आधुनिक दुनिया के सबसे उल्लेखनीय समावेशी प्रयोगों में से एक थी।

1579 का महज़र: राज्य की सत्ता का दावा

अकबर की इस सोच की सबसे साफ झलक 1579 के महज़र में मिलती है। अक्सर इसे अकबर के पैगंबर बनने या नए धर्म की स्थापना की घोषणा के रूप में गलत समझा जाता है, लेकिन यह दस्तावेज़ दरअसल एक बारीक राजनीतिक पहल थी। यह एक कानूनी घोषणापत्र था, जिस पर प्रमुख मुस्लिम विद्वानों ने हस्ताक्षर किए थे। इसमें अकबर को पैगंबर नहीं बल्कि ‘इमाम-ए-आदिल’ यानी न्यायप्रिय शासक माना गया और उसे यह अधिकार दिया गया कि जब प्रमुख विद्वानों के बीच मतभेद हों तो वह किसी एक राय को चुन सकता है। जैसा कि इतिहासकार एफ. डब्ल्यू. बकलर ने एक महत्वपूर्ण पुनर्व्याख्या में दिखाया, यह दस्तावेज़ अकबर की कूटनीतिक जीत थी, जिसने उसे धर्मशास्त्रियों के आपसी झगड़ों से ऊपर उठने का अधिकार दिया।

इसके पीछे का संदर्भ समझना ज़रूरी है। अकबर के सामने ऐसी स्थिति थी जहाँ धार्मिक विद्वानों के अलग-अलग समूह इस्लामी कानून की अपनी-अपनी व्याख्याएँ कर रहे थे, जो अक्सर परस्पर विरोधी और अपने-अपने फ़ायदे के लिए होती थीं। महज़र इन्हीं सांप्रदायिक कानूनी झगड़ों को राज्य के अधीन करने का एक प्रयास था। असल में, अकबर यह कह रहा था कि राजनीतिक सत्ता धार्मिक पंडितों की प्रतिद्वंद्विता के हाथों बंधक नहीं बन सकती।

इबादतख़ाना: बौद्धिक संवाद का मंच

इस सोच की संस्थागत अभिव्यक्ति थी फतेहपुर सीकरी का इबादतख़ाना यानी पूजा का घर। शुरू में यह मुस्लिम विद्वानों के बीच चर्चा का स्थान था, लेकिन जल्द ही इसमें कई तरह की परंपराओं के प्रतिनिधि शामिल हो गए। सुन्नी और शिया विद्वानों के साथ सूफ़ी, जैन, ब्राह्मण, पारसी और यहाँ तक कि गोवा के पुर्तगाली ईसाई पादरी भी बहसों में शामिल होते थे। ईसाई पादरियों का अकबर के दरबार में आदरपूर्वक स्वागत हुआ और उन्हें बादशाह के सामने ईसाई धर्म की शिक्षाएँ रखने का मौका मिला। अकबर का मकसद धर्मांतरण नहीं था, बल्कि बौद्धिक संवाद था। उसका मानना था कि सच्चाई हठधर्मी अलगाव से नहीं, बल्कि खुली बहस से निकलती है।

जैसा कि मैंने इबादतख़ाना पर अपने काम में दिखाया है, ये बहसें महज दरबारी मनोरंजन नहीं थीं। यह एक सोची-समझी परियोजना का हिस्सा थीं, जिसमें अंधानुकरण के बजाय तर्क को प्रमुखता देनी थी। इबादतख़ाना को एक ऐसी जगह बनाया गया था जहाँ सच्चाई के दावों को अधिकार के बल पर थोपने के बजाय संवाद के ज़रिए परखा जा सके।

सोलहवीं सदी का सामाजिक अनुबंध

अकबर की सोच को जो चीज़ वाकई अनोखी बनाती थी, वह थी राज्य की उस अवधारणा को जो उसने और उसके दरबारी इतिहासकार अबुल फज़ल ने विकसित किया। उस दौर में जब दुनिया भर के शासक दैवीय अधिकार या वंशानुगत विशेषाधिकार का दावा करते थे, अकबर और अबुल फज़ल ने सामाजिक अनुबंध पर आधारित राज्य का सिद्धांत पेश किया। इस ढाँचे में शासक का अधिकार ईश्वर का दिया हुआ उपहार या अत्याचार का लाइसेंस नहीं था। बल्कि, शासक लोगों की रक्षा के लिए होता है। राजत्व एक भरोसा था, एक ज़िम्मेदारी थी, और इसकी वैधता सभी प्रजा, चाहे उनका धर्म कोई भी हो, की रक्षा और कल्याण से आती थी। यह सिर्फ दार्शनिक बातें नहीं थीं। इसका अनुवाद ठोस नीतियों में हुआ: गैर-मुस्लिमों पर लगने वाले दंड करों को हटाना, मंदिरों और गिरिजाघरों की रक्षा करना, और साम्राज्य के सबसे ऊँचे पदों पर विविध समुदायों के लोगों को शामिल करना।

वह दिव्य प्रकाश जो सब पर बरसता है

इस राजनीतिक सिद्धांत की नींव में एक गहरी आध्यात्मिक दृष्टि थी, जो इशराक़ी यानी रौशनी के दर्शन से ली गई थी। अकबर ने ‘फ़र्र-ए-इज़ादी’ यानी दिव्य प्रकाश की अवधारणा का आह्वान किया। लेकिन दिव्य कृपा की ज़्यादातर विशेषाधिकारवादी व्याख्याओं के विपरीत, अकबर ने इस रौशनी को ऐसा समझा जो बिना किसी भेदभाव के हर चीज़ और हर किसी पर पड़ती है और उसे रौशन करती है। यह रौशनी मुस्लिम और हिंदू में, रईस और आम आदमी में, फ़ारसी और राजपूत में कोई फ़र्क नहीं करती। दिव्य प्रकाश सारी सृष्टि पर समान रूप से चमकता है। सम्राट, इस रौशनी का प्राप्तकर्ता होने के नाते, उसकी सार्वभौमिकता को प्रतिबिंबित करने के लिए बाध्य था। उसका न्याय, उसकी सुरक्षा, और उसका संरक्षण चयनात्मक नहीं हो सकता था। उन्हें उसी दिव्य चमक से स्पर्श हर प्राणी तक फैलना था।

यही ‘सुल्ह-ए-कुल’ यानी सार्वभौमिक शांति का दार्शनिक हृदय था। इस सिद्धांत के अनुसार राज्य को सांप्रदायिक विभाजनों से ऊपर उठकर सभी प्रजा के साथ समान चिंता का व्यवहार करना चाहिए। आधुनिक व्यंग्य के उलट, सुल्ह-ए-कुल सिर्फ एक नारा नहीं था। जैसा कि एम. अथर अली, इरफ़ान हबीब, शिरीन मूसवी, बी. एल. भदानी, और सावित्री चंद्र के काम ने लगातार दिखाया है, इसने कुलीन वर्ग में भर्ती, प्रशासनिक व्यवहार और शाही विचारधारा को आकार दिया। अकबर के समय में जो समावेशी कुलीन वर्ग बना, उसकी तुलना शुरुआती आधुनिक दुनिया में कहीं नहीं मिलती। राजपूत, भारतीय मुस्लिम, फ़ारसी, मध्य एशियाई, अफ़गान और दूसरे समुदायों के लोग एक उल्लेखनीय रूप से समावेशी शासक वर्ग का हिस्सा थे।

धर्म के नाम पर लड़ती दुनिया: अकबर का वैकल्पिक रास्ता

इन विचारों का महत्व तब और साफ़ हो जाता है जब हम उन्हें वैश्विक संदर्भ में रखते हैं। सोलहवीं शताब्दी तीव्र धार्मिक संघर्षों का दौर था। यूरोप में सुधार और प्रति-सुधार ने खूनी हिंसा की लहर दौड़ा दी थी। कैथोलिक और प्रोटेस्टेंट एक-दूसरे को जलाते थे। फ्रांस में धर्मयुद्ध, स्पेनिश इनक्विज़िशन और डच विद्रोह सब ईसाई सच्चाई के अलग-अलग दावों के लिए लड़े गए। वहीं, फ़ारस का सफ़वी साम्राज्य शिया इस्लाम को अपना राजधर्म बना चुका था और अक्सर सुन्नी अल्पसंख्यकों पर अत्याचार करता था। तुर्क साम्राज्य, अपनी प्रशासनिक दक्षता के बावजूद, शिया सफ़वियों के खिलाफ अथक युद्ध लड़ रहा था और अपने इलाकों में सुन्नी रूढ़िवादिता लागू करता था।

जिस समय पूरा यूरेशिया संप्रदायी मतभेदों पर बँट रहा था, अकबर उल्टी दिशा में जा रहा था। वह दूसरे धर्मों को सिर्फ सहन ही नहीं कर रहा था, बल्कि सक्रिय रूप से उन्हें अपने दरबार में आमंत्रित कर रहा था। उसने एकाधिकार नहीं थोपा, बल्कि कई आवाज़ों के लिए एक मंच बनाया। सोलहवीं शताब्दी के किसी भी बड़े शासक ने इतनी सारी धार्मिक परंपराओं के प्रतिनिधियों के साथ सार्वजनिक बहसों का आयोजन नियमित रूप से नहीं किया। यूरोपीय राजा विधर्मियों को जला रहे थे, तो मुगल बादशाह अंतरधार्मिक संवाद को प्रोत्साहित कर रहा था। सफ़वी शाह और तुर्क सुल्तान संप्रदायी एकरूपता लागू कर रहे थे, तो अकबर एक ऐसी दृष्टि बता रहा था जहाँ राजनीतिक समुदाय धार्मिक भेदों से ऊपर उठ सकता था। यह अंतर चौंकाने वाला है और ऐतिहासिक रूप से अभूतपूर्व था।

जज़िया, तीर्थ कर, और भेदभाव का अंत

अकबर की व्यावहारिक नीतियाँ भी यही सोच दर्शाती हैं। उसने 1563 में तीर्थयात्रा कर और 1564 में जज़िया को समाप्त कर दिया। इन कदमों ने उन करों को हटा दिया जो गैर-मुस्लिमों पर असमान रूप से बोझ डालते थे, और यह संकेत दिया कि शाही प्रजा के साथ धर्म के बजाय राजनीतिक समुदाय के सदस्य के रूप में व्यवहार किया जाना चाहिए। पाठ्यपुस्तकों में संशोधनों को लेकर छिड़ी हालिया बहसों ने इन नीतियों को फिर से चर्चा के केंद्र में ला दिया है। कुछ टिप्पणीकार इन करों को हटाने के समय और मंशा पर सवाल उठाते हैं। आलोचक अक्सर इन कदमों को महज राजनीतिक चालाकी बताते हैं, जिसका मकसद हिंदू कुलीनों, खासकर शक्तिशाली राजपूत परिवारों, का समर्थन जीतना था। लेकिन इस तरह की आलोचना एक साफ तथ्य को नज़रअंदाज़ करती है: शासक अपनी प्राथमिकताएँ उन नीतियों से ज़ाहिर करते हैं जिन्हें वे चुनते हैं। अकबर ये कर जारी रख सकता था, जैसे दुनिया के दूसरे शासकों ने अल्पसंख्यकों पर भेदभावपूर्ण बोझ जारी रखा। इसके बजाय, उसने उन्हें समाप्त कर दिया।

अकबर विष्णु के अवतार के रूप में

गैर-मुस्लिम प्रजा के बीच अकबर की स्वीकार्यता की गहराई का सबसे अच्छा उदाहरण बी. एल. भदानी के शोध में मिलता है। उन्होंने दिखाया है कि अकबर को उसके समय के ब्राह्मणों ने विष्णु का अवतार घोषित किया था। यह कोई कल्पना या महज राजनयिक शिष्टाचार नहीं था। यह एक वास्तविक धारणा को दर्शाता है कि अकबर का शासन उसके अपने धर्म से परे धार्मिक न्याय का प्रतीक था। समकालीन विवरण बताते हैं कि ब्राह्मण अकबर के झरोखे यानी दर्शन बालकनी के नीचे एकत्रित होते थे, ताकि व्रत तोड़ने से पहले उसके दर्शन कर सकें। यह रिवाज़, जो हिंदू देवताओं से जुड़े दर्शन की याद दिलाता है, बताता है कि कई प्रजा के लिए अकबर सिर्फ एक सहिष्णु शासक नहीं था, बल्कि अपने आप में एक पवित्र चरित्र था।

इस तरह के सबूतों को अकबर को सिर्फ एक चालाक या कूटनीतिज्ञ बताने वाली व्याख्याओं से जोड़ पाना मुश्किल है। ब्राह्मण ऐसे शासकों को देवता का दर्जा देने के लिए नहीं जाने जाते जो सिर्फ राजनीतिक फ़ायदे के लिए काम करते थे। अकबर को विष्णु के अवतार के रूप में स्वीकार करना बताता है कि उसकी समावेशी नीतियों को उन लोगों ने सच्चा और बदलाव लाने वाला अनुभव किया, जिनके लिए वे बनाई गई थीं।

आलोचकों को स्वीकार करना: राजनीतिक व्यावहारिकता या सच्ची सोच?

आलोचकों के तर्कों को गंभीरता से लेना ज़रूरी है। विक्रम सम्पथ और उनके जैसे अन्य लोग यह कहने में सही हैं कि अकबर आधुनिक अर्थों में धर्मनिरपेक्ष नहीं था। वह एक मुस्लिम बादशाह था, और उसकी नीतियों का मकसद अपने साम्राज्य को मजबूत करना था। इसके अलावा, महज़र को रूढ़िवादी धर्मशास्त्रियों के खिलाफ एक चाल के रूप में भी पढ़ा जा सकता है, जो उसके अधिकार को चुनौती दे रहे थे। कुछ इतिहासकार यह भी बताते हैं कि अकबर ने अंतरधार्मिक संवाद को बढ़ावा दिया, लेकिन इबादतख़ाना की बहसें 1582 में बंद कर दी गईं, संभवतः क्योंकि वे समझ बढ़ाने के बजाय कड़वाहट को और बढ़ा रही थीं।

लेकिन अकबर की नीतियों को महज राजनीतिक अवसरवादिता कहकर नकार देना बड़े ऐतिहासिक बिंदु को नज़रअंदाज़ करना है। सफल राज्य हमेशा राजनीतिक गणनाओं से बनते हैं। सवाल यह है कि वे गणनाएँ बहिष्कार को बढ़ावा देती हैं या समावेश को। अकबर की प्रतिभा इस बात को पहचानने में थी कि इतने विविध उपमहाद्वीप पर संप्रदायी वर्चस्व के ज़रिए शासन नहीं चलाया जा सकता। स्थिरता के लिए समायोजन चाहिए था और वैधता के लिए समावेशन चाहिए था। तथ्य यह है कि उसने ये नीतियाँ दशकों तक जारी रखीं, और ये काफी हद तक उसके उत्तराधिकारियों जहाँगीर और शाहजहाँ ने भी जारी रखीं, यह बताता है कि ये महज अस्थायी चालें नहीं थीं। वे एक सच्ची शासन दर्शन का प्रतिनिधित्व करती थीं। यहाँ तक कि उसके परपोते औरंगज़ेब ने भी, जिसने जज़िया फिर से लगाकर इनमें से कई नीतियों को उलट दिया, उस साम्राज्य को चलाने में संघर्ष किया जो अकबर के समावेशी मॉडल की नींव पर खड़ा हुआ था। यह औरंगज़ेब की नीतियों को सही ठहराना नहीं है, बल्कि यह स्वीकार करना है कि अकबर का ढाँचा एक सोचा-समझा विकल्प था, न कि मुस्लिम शासन की कोई अपरिहार्य विशेषता।

समावेश बनाम बहिष्कार: हमारे समय के लिए एक सबक

आज दुनिया के कई हिस्सों में जो हो रहा है, उसके विपरीत, जहाँ बहिष्कार की राजनीति ने खतरनाक रूप ले लिया है, अकबर समावेशन में विश्वास रखता था। उसका मानना था कि शासक की वैधता सभी लोगों की रक्षा में है, न कि सिर्फ अपने धर्म के लोगों की। उसका मानना था कि दिव्य प्रकाश सबको बिना भेदभाव के रौशन करता है। उसका मानना था कि एक स्थिर और न्यायपूर्ण राज्य में कई आवाज़ों, कई परंपराओं और जीवन के कई तरीकों के लिए जगह होनी चाहिए। ये महज राजनीतिक गणनाएँ नहीं थीं। ये गहरे विश्वास थे, जिन्हें एक लंबे शासनकाल में परखा गया और बनाए रखा गया, और उन्होंने उपमहाद्वीप की राजनीतिक कल्पना पर एक अमिट छाप छोड़ी।

समकालीन राजनीति से ज़्यादा तीखा अंतर शायद ही कोई हो। आज हम ऐसी सरकारों और आंदोलनों का उदय देख रहे हैं जो दुश्मनों को पहचानने, बहिष्कार की रेखाएँ खींचने और कुछ समुदायों को अवांछित घोषित करने पर पनपते हैं। अकबर का मॉडल एक शक्तिशाली विकल्प पेश करता है। यह हमें याद दिलाता है कि समावेशन कमज़ोरी नहीं है, विविधता खतरा नहीं है, और सबसे टिकाऊ राजनीतिक समुदाय वही हैं जो संकीर्ण वफादारियाँ थोपने के बजाय साझा मानवता की पहचान पर बनाए जाते हैं।

स्थायी विरासत

इसका मतलब यह नहीं है कि अकबर एक आधुनिक धर्मनिरपेक्ष लोकतांत्रिक शासक था। वह एक शुरुआती आधुनिक बादशाह था, जिसका अधिकार गहरे स्तर पर व्यक्तिगत और राजतंत्रीय बना रहा। न ही इसका मतलब यह है कि उसके शासन में सभी संघर्ष गायब हो गए। लेकिन ऐतिहासिक समझ के लिए ज़रूरी है कि हम चरित्रों को उनके अपने संदर्भ में परखें। सोलहवीं शताब्दी के मापदंडों के हिसाब से, जब यूरोप से लेकर सफ़वी फारस तक और तुर्क साम्राज्य तक धार्मिक उत्पीड़न आम बात थी, अकबर की नीतियाँ धार्मिक शासन के प्रचलित मॉडलों से एक असाधारण विदा थीं।

अकबर की सबसे बड़ी देन उसकी सैन्य विजयें या प्रशासनिक सुधार नहीं, बल्कि वह राजनीतिक कल्पना थी जो उसने उपमहाद्वीप को दे दी। उस समय जब दुनिया का बड़ा हिस्सा धार्मिक संघर्षों से बिखर रहा था, उसने एक ऐसी दृष्टि सामने रखी जिसमें राजनीतिक समुदाय धार्मिक भेदों से ऊपर उठ सकता था। महज़र, इबादतख़ाना, भेदभावपूर्ण करों का अंत, मंदिरों और गिरिजाघरों का संरक्षण, राज्य का सामाजिक अनुबंध सिद्धांत, इशराक़ी दर्शन जहाँ दिव्य प्रकाश सभी प्राणियों को रौशन करता है, और सुल्ह-ए-कुल का सिद्धांत, ये सब उसी बड़ी परियोजना की अभिव्यक्तियाँ थीं।

अकबर को या तो एक उदारवादी छद्मवेशी अत्याचारी बताने या उसकी समावेशिता को महज चालाकी करार देने की आधुनिक कोशिशें सोलहवीं शताब्दी के बजाय समकालीन विचारधाराओं की घबराहट को ज़्यादा उजागर करती हैं। गंभीर ऐतिहासिक विद्वता, जिसमें एम. अथर अली, इरफ़ान हबीब, शिरीन मूसवी, बी. एल. भदानी, और सावित्री चंद्र से लेकर इबादतख़ाना पर मेरे अपने काम शामिल हैं, ने मुगल शासन की जटिलता को लगातार दिखाया है। सबूत धार्मिक उत्पीड़न के आसपास संगठित साम्राज्य की छवि का समर्थन नहीं करते। बल्कि, वे एक ऐसे राज्य को उजागर करते हैं जिसने, खासकर अकबर के अधीन, विविधता को शाही अधिकार के साथ समेटने की कोशिश की।

आज के इस दौर में, जो अतीत और वर्तमान की बहिष्कारवादी कल्पनाओं की ओर बढ़ रहा है, अकबर का प्रयोग ऐतिहासिक रूप से उतना ही महत्वपूर्ण बना हुआ है, क्योंकि यह ठीक उल्टी दिशा की ओर इशारा करता है। उसका शासन हमें याद दिलाता है कि प्राचीन भारत की सबसे शक्तिशाली राज्य व्यवस्थाओं में से एक धार्मिक एकरूपता पर नहीं, बल्कि इस पहचान पर बनी थी कि एक टिकाऊ राजनीतिक व्यवस्था के लिए कई धर्मों, समुदायों और जीवन शैलियों के लिए जगह ज़रूरी है। उसने बहिष्कार के बजाय समावेश को चुना, अंधकार के बजाय रौशनी को, और निरंतर संघर्ष के बजाय शांति को। शायद यही वह सबक है जो अकबर को आज इतना विवादास्पद और साथ ही इतना प्रासंगिक बनाता है।