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"Khan Ata Mohammad Khan Mentored Abul Kalam Azad" by Nasim Yousaf

\u201c[Translation] In 1903, Maulvi Shibli Nomani\u2026sent the respected Abul Kalam Azad\u2026to Qibla-au-Kaaba [Khan Ata] in Amritsar so that he could shape his [Azad] future. Therefore he [Azad] stayed with him [Khan Ata] for five years and was part of the editorial team of the\u2026Vakil.\u201d

- Allama Mashriqi, Dahulbab

Allama Mashriqi\u2019s father, Khan Ata Mohammad Khan (1846-1925), was the owner of The Vakil (Amritsar), a prominent newspaper in British India. Maulana Abul Kalam Azad (1888-1958) joined the said paper as a teenager and was under the tutelage of Khan, who helped shape Azad\u2019s intellectual, political, and journalistic ideas. This piece looks at the early influence of Khan on Azad, in commemoration of Azad\u2019s 60th death anniversary (February 2018).

Khan Ata belonged to a prominent family in India. The villages of Bayazeedpur and Hameedpur (in the district of Gurdaspur in Punjab, India) were named after his ancestors, Diwan Mohammad Hameed Khan and Diwan Mohammad Bayazeed Khan respectively. Khan himself was an accomplished literary individual and was a recipient of the prestigious Tamgha-i-Majeedia award from Emperor Abdul Hamid II of the Ottoman Empire. Khan\u2019s newspaper, Vakil, was well-respected and had the largest circulation of any Urdu language publication in the Indian sub-continent. The newspaper is still quoted in many books, and extracts (or English translations) are available in research libraries in the Indian sub-continent and abroad.

Maulana Abul Kalam Azad came to Vakil looking for a means to acquire knowledge and improve his language and writing skills. Azad\u2019s father was an orthodox Muslim and neither encouraged Azad to acquire modern knowledge nor sent him to an accredited educational institution to obtain a degree. Azad knew that under these circumstances, it would have been difficult for him to achieve his ambitions in life. In 1903, with Shibli Nomani\u2019s help, Azad was able to become a \u201cpart of the Vakil\u2019s editorial team\u201d (Dahulbab, see above) when he was only fifteen years old. Azad remained associated with Vakil for five years, from 1903-1908 (Note: in Azad\u2019s Urdu autobiography [Azad Ki Kahani Khud Azad Ki Zubani, p. 198-199], which has also been quoted in other books and articles, Azad stated that he was running Vakil as the sole editor from a young age, but in fact he was part of a broader editorial team).

In the aforementioned autobiography (p. 198-199), Azad provided his reasons for joining Vakil. According to Azad, there was no other publication (among the Urdu newspapers in British India) that could match Vakil\u2019s circulation and stature. He recognized that the newspaper had educated the people and generated interest in matters including the Turkish-Egyptian affairs, Sir Syed Ahmed Khan\u2019s Aligarh College, and raising funds for Hijaz Railways. Azad stated that The Vakil was the only newspaper in the country that freely and openly wrote about Turkish affairs. If Azad \u201cpublished his own newspaper, it would require a longer period of time to create a large readership.\u201d Thus, Azad explained that it was more beneficial for him to join an established and well-known newspaper so that he \u201cfrom day one [he] would get access to an extensive and able audience.\u201d Azad again reiterated that joining a qualified newspaper was better than \u201cstarting a newspaper [of his own] and that getting into a struggle and competition would be a waste of time.\u201d

An American University Professor, Gail Minault, in her book The Khilafat Movement, also explained Azad\u2019s reasons for joining Vakil: \u201cThe Vakil was one of the best known and stylistically excellent Urdu newspapers of the day. It dealt with national [as well as international] and community problems, and Azad could give his own views wider circulation through its editorial pages. Azad undoubtedly felt he would have greater scope with a newspaper like Vakil than an institutional journal like an-Nadwa [Al-Nadwa], and so he went to Amritsar.\u201d

Working at The Vakil had a major impact on Azad and this influence was reflected in many of Azad\u2019s religious and political thoughts. His support of Muslim-Hindu unity and co-existence of religions, his interest in pan-Islamism, his opposition to some of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan\u2019s views (which he had supported prior to joining Vakil) were reflective of the same ideals that Khan Ata espoused. After his tenure at Vakil, Azad started his own publications, Al-Hilal & Al-Balagh, which were along the same lines as Vakil; like Vakil, Azad\u2019s periodicals also generated enthusiasm for Turkey. Per S.M. Ikram\u2019s book entitled Indian Muslims and Partition of India: \u201cThe greater part of Al-Hilal was devoted to articles and photographs about Turkey\u2026He had seen in the Punjab, how enthusiasm for Turkey had been created by\u2026the Vakil...\u201d

Khan was a mentor to both his own son, Allama Inyatullah Khan Al-Mashriqi (famously known as Allama Mashriqi) and Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, who were nearly the same age. Mashriqi became a famous politician, Islamic scholar, and prolific writer. Azad followed a similar path in life. Both Mashriqi and Azad fought for freedom, played a leading role in the independence movement of the Indian sub-continent (now comprised of Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh), and were against the partition of India (they felt partition would bring violence and destroy peace in the region and was against the overall interests of the Muslim community). Both men spoke passionately about these topics and warned the people of the sub-continent about the grave consequences of division. Khan Ata\u2019s influence was evident throughout both men\u2019s lives and careers.

Azad\u2019s five years at Vakil at an impressionable age served as an important training ground in shaping his thought process and future career aspirations. As a mentor to Azad (as well as to his own son, Mashriqi), Khan Ata indeed played a hand in bringing about the end of British rule in the Indian sub-continent. As a way of expressing his gratitude to Khan Ata, Azad felt honored to write a preface for Khan Ata\u2019s book (Source: Allama Mashriqi, Dahulbab, p. 255).

Both Khan Ata and Azad were buried in India, Khan at Batala and Azad in Delhi. May their souls rest in peace.

Nasim Yousaf, a great-grandson of Khan Ata Mohammad Khan, has been conducting research in the United States for almost two decades. His books and articles bring a new dimension to the historiography of South Asia. More information on the author is available on the internet.

Copyright 2018 Nasim Yousaf

The Kashmir Monitor, February 17, 2018

***
Allama Mashriqi\u2019s father\u2019s bi-weekly, Vakil
https://www.facebook.com/TheVakilAmritsar

Allama Mashraqi\u2019s father, Khan Ata Mohammad Khan
https://www.facebook.com/KhanAtaMohammadKhan

Khan Ata Mohammad Khan Mentored Abul Kalam Azad
https://www.facebook.com/Khan-Ata-Mohammad-Khan-Mentored-Abul-Kalam-Azad-1679783088744642/

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