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Abu Alaa Maududi
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Abu-I A'la Mawdudi |
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Abu-l A'la
Mawdudi (1903-1979) was a Muslim writer and religious and
political
leader in the
Indian
sub-continent. He was the founder and head of the fundamentalist religio-political
party, the Jama'at-i Islami.
Mawdudi, usually
referred to as Mawlana Mawdudi because of his religious learning, was born
in Awrangabad in
the present
Hyderabad state of India into a family with a strong religious and
traditional Muslim culture. His father, Ahmad Hasan Mawdudi, was an
advocate who for several years during Mawdudi's childhood renounced his
profession and gave himself over to mystical exercises. Mawdudi received
his formal
education
in the schools of Hyderabad, but at age 15 he was forced to leave school
never to return upon the death of his father; much of his earliest
instruction was conducted in
the home.
He never attended a traditional Muslim
religious school,
a fact that later brought him much criticism when he began to publish his
religious views.
Mawdudi's
earliest profession was
journalism.
At the age of 17 he became a correspondent and then editor of the
newspaper Taj in Jabalpur. In 1920 he assumed the editorship of
Muslim, the publication of the Jam'iyat-i 'Ulama,' the organization of
India's learned Muslim divines. He continued in that position until the
newspaper closed in 1923 and, after an interregnum of 18 months, became
editor of its replacement, the prestigious al-Jam'iyah. Mawdudi
left
journalism
in 1927 to engage in scholarly writing. During this period he wrote a
history of the Asafiyah dynasty of Hyderabad and a history of the Seljuk
Turks, as well as a slim volume called Toward Understanding Islam
which
established
him in India as a serious religious writer.
Mawdudi along
with one of his elder brothers, Abu-l Khayr, was an ardent supporter of
the Khilafat and satyagraha movements of 1919-1921. He continued
his support for the former until its collapse after the establishment of
the Turkish Republic, and he was bitterly disappointed when Gandhi called
off the satyagraha effort in 1921 in response to the events at
Chauri Chaura. From that point onwards Mawdudi came increasingly to feel
that the interests of India's two major communities, the Hindus and the
Muslims, were divergent and irreconcilable.
The years of
journalism
also marked his first significant venture into writing on Islamic subjects
in the volume The Holy War in Islam (1926), composed as a series of
essays in al-Jam'iyah to refute Hindu charges that Islam was a
militant and bloodthirsty religion. The principles espoused in Mawdudi's
later writing may all be found in this initial work.
In 1932 Mawdudi
became associated with the Hyderabadi journal Tarjuman al-Qur'an,
and in the following year he assumed sole responsibility for it. It
was--and remains--the principal vehicle of his views and those of the
organization he later founded. At first Mawdudi used the journal to
advocate reform among Muslims, but in the late 1930s he turned to Indian
politics. He opposed both the all-India nationalism of
the Indian
National Congress and the Muslim nationalism of the Muslim League. His own
solution to India's
political
problem lay in urging Muslims to recognize Islam as their sole identity
and to become better Muslims. His views during this period are collected
in the three volumes of Muslims and
the Present
Day
Political
Struggle.
In 1941 Mawdudi
convoked a meeting in Lahore to found a body that would put his views into
practice. The organization was called Jama'at-i Islami (The Islamic
Society), and Mawdudi was elected its head or amir. The purpose of
the Jama'at was to propagate true Islam and to train a cadre of devoted
men capable of establishing an Islamic system of government and society.
It was thus a religiously-based
political
party of fundamentalist persuasion. The organization became a major factor
in Pakistani national politics.
When
the Indian
sub-continent was partitioned in 1947, Mawdudi moved with some of his
followers to Pakistan, where he quickly assumed an important
political
role as the principal advocate of the Islamic state. He evoked the
displeasure of the government and in 1948 was put in jail, where he
remained for more than a year. Upon his release he resumed the agitation
for an Islamic state with renewed vigor. The peak of his
political
influence was achieved in 1951 in connection with the controversy over the
Basic Principles Report of the Pakistani Constituent Assembly.
Mawdudi acted as leader and spokesman of the Pakistani 'ulama' in their
response to the report.
Mawdudi was again
arrested in 1953 for his alleged part in the agitation against the
Ahmadiyah sect. He was sentenced to death by a military court, but the
sentence was never carried out. In 1958 Pakistan came under military rule,
and political
parties, including the Jama'at-i Islami, were banned. From that time
Mawdudi's interest turned from the Islamic state to the achievement of
true democracy in Pakistan. Mawdudi was again arrested for his bitter
opposition to the Ayyub Khan government in 1964, and in the 1965 elections
he supported the presidential candidacy of Fatimah Jinnah against Ayyub
Khan--though it was counter to his Islamic beliefs that a woman should
hold high office. Mawdudi joined with other right wing and religious
parties in 1970 to oppose the socialism of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto and the
demands of Shaykh (Sheik) Mujib al-Rahman's Awami League. During the 1971
civil war that led to the emergence of Bangladesh Mawdudi supported the
military action of the government against the Bengalis. In 1972 he
resigned as amir of the Jama'at-i Islami, having held the post, though not
without challenge, since the inception of the organization. He died in
September 1979 in Rochester, New York, where he had gone to visit a son
and to receive
medical treatment
for a long standing ailment.
Courtesy: World Biography
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