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Muhammad Ilyas
Mawlana Muhammad Ilyas, the founder of the Tablighi Jama’at of South Asian
subcontinent, is arguably one of the most influential, yet least well-known ,
figures of the twentieth century Islam. Despite his enormous contribution
towards the development of a powerful grass root Islamic Da’wah movement,
Mawlana Ilyas has not received much attention in the literature on modern
Islamic movements. Most of the Western, and even Muslim, scholarships have
remain occupied with the more spectacular and dramatic manifest ions of Islamic
revivalist upsurge. The available literature on Maulana Ilyas and his Tablighi
movement is mostly in Urdu and that too consists mainly of inspirational works
by its leaders and devotional writings by its followers and supporters.
Mawlana Ilyas was born in 1885 in a small town in the United Province of British
India in a family of religious scholars. He received his early religious
education at home and later went to the famous center of Islamic education in
Deoband where he studied the Qur’an, Hadith, Fiqh and other Islamic sciences
under the early Deoband luminaries. After completing his education at Deoband,
Mawlana Ilyas took up a teaching position at another famous Madarsah Mazaharul
Uloom in Saharanpur (U.P., India)
It was at this point in his life that Mawlana Ilyas became aware of the "dismal
Islamic situation" in the Mewat region near Delhi where majority of Muslims were
living a life that had very little to do with Islamic teachings and practices.
Mawlana Ilyas sent several of his disciples to Mewat to survey the situation and
later himself undertook many Da’wah trips there. Mawlana Ilyas met Mewati
Muslims who could not even recite Shahadah and who had not prayed even once in
their life because they did not know how to pray. He saw Muslims greeting each
other in a typical Hindu manner; some had even adopted Hindu deities and visited
Hindu temples to participate in devotional practices.
Mawlana Ilyas fully aware of the difficult task ahead was, nevertheless,
determined to bring the Meo Muslims back to the fold of true Islam. In the early
1920s, he prepared a team of young Madrasa graduates from Deoband and Saharanpur
and sent them to Mewat to establish a network of Masajid and Madrasas throughout
the region. He soon realized, however, that the Madrasa ulama trained in the
Deoband tradition were simply reproducing their prototypes and had no
significant impact on society at large. Mawlana Ilyas concluded that these
Madrasas were ill-equipped to produce Muslim preachers who would be willing to
go door to door and remind people of their Islamic obligations. These
institution were good only for producing religious functionaries, not Da’wah
workers.
It was because dissatisfaction with the Madrasas that Mawlana Ilyas resigned
from a prestigious teaching position at Madrasa Mazaharul Uloom in Saharanpur
and came to Basti Nizamuddin in the old quarters of Delhi to begin his Da’wah.
The Tablighi movement was born in this place in 1926. Basti Nzamuddin became his
permanent residence as well as the headquarter of the Tablighi movement.
The new movement met with dramatic success in relatively short period of time,
thanks to Mawlana Ilyas’s utmost devotion, untiring efforts and sincerity of
purpose. As a result many Muslims joined Mawlana Ilyas to preach the message of
Islam in every town and village of Mewat. The rapid success of his efforts can
be seen from the fact that the first Tablighi conference held in November 1941
in Mewat was attended by 25,000 people many of them had walked on foot for ten
to fifteen miles to attend the conference. Sayyid Abul A’la Mawdudi, the founder
of the Jama’at-e-Islami paid glowing tribute to the spectacular successes of the
Da’wah efforts of Mawlana Ilyas in Mewat and elsewhere in India and described
the Tablighi movement as a major step toward the Islamization of Indian Muslim
society.
Mawlana Ilyas was neither a charismatic leader like Mawlana Mohammad Ali Jauhar
of the Khilafat movement, nor an outstanding religious scholar like Abul Kalam
Azad of the Indian National Congress. He was not even a good public speaker like
Ataullah Shah Bukhari of the Ahrar movement. Unlike Sayyid Abul A’la Mawdudi of
the Jamaat –e-Islami who was a prolific writer and a systematic thinker, Mawlana
Ilyas did not author a single book in his life.
Physically frail and intellectually unassuming, Mawlana Ilyas was, nevertheless,
enthused with the zeal of a dedicated Da’wah worker. His passion to reach out to
the Muslim masses and touch them with the message of the Qur’an and Sunnah knew
no bounds.
Like a true missionary, he was persistent, untiring, and whole-heartedly devoted
to his cause. During one of his many missionary tours of Mewat, he was once hit
with a stick by a peasant upon whom he was impressing the importance of leading
a religious life. The Mawlana, already physically frail, fell on the ground and
collapsed. When he regained consciousness, he got up and, holding his assistant
affectionately, said: "Look, you have done your job. Now would you let me do my
job and listen to me for a little while?" As one of his colleague put it, "Mawlana
Ilyas, though a mere skeleton, can work wonders where he takes up anything."
His eagerness and indomitable determination to reach every Muslim and remind him
of his obligations as a believer took precedence on every thing else. His
passionate concern for the spiritual welfare of his fellow Muslims caused him
great anguish. A friend once came to visit him while he was on his deathbed.
Mawlana Ilyas greeted his friend by telling him. " People out there are burning
in the fire of ignorance and you are wasting your time here inquiring after my
health!"
He wanted every Muslim to be on his feet, preaching the message of Islam to
others. He exerted his friends and followers to dedicate their lives to this
cause. Once when he was trying to peruse his audience to volunteer for a
missionary trip to Kanpur, U.P. India, not a single person responded to his
call. Spotting one of his friends in the audience, Mawlana Ilyas asked him what
prevented him from going to Kanpur. His friend was suffering from serious
ailment and was obviously too weak to travel. He told Maulana Ilyas that he was
"almost dying" and there was no way he could travel. The Mawlana said, "If you
are dying already, you had better die in Kanpur."
It is important to note that while Mawlana Ilyas kept himself completely aloof
from politics of the day and focused his program of action exclusively on making
the Muslims aware of their religious obligations, he did not, at any time,
criticized those Islamic groups which were actively engaged in politics. On the
contrary, he maintained extremely cordial relations with Hussain Ahmad Madani
and other Ulama of Deoband school whose political organization, Jamiat Ulama-e-Hind,
a pro-Indian National Congress group, was very much active in Indian politics.
Mawlana Ilyas had equally warm relation with pro-Pakistan faction of the Deoband
school led by Mawlana Ashraf Ali Thanvi and Mawlana Shabbir Ahmad Usmani.
However he refused to take any position on the issue of united India vs. a
separate Muslim state of Pakistan for the obvious reason that this would
distract his movement from its main religious tasks, and would also create
dissensions within its ranks. Mawlana Ilyas was of the view that the Tablighi
movement and the politically-oriented Islamic groups, although operating in two
different spheres, were complementing each other’s work and hence there should
be no competition and rivalry between them.
Once when someone pointed out that his movement was "too narrowly focused" and
did not address the larger issue of socio-political reforms in Muslim society,
the Mawlana responded that this narrow focus in the initial phase of the
movement was necessitated by the available manpower and that the movement could
grow to encompass a larger and more comprehensive program in the future. It is
unfortunate that those who succeeded Mawlana Ilyas did not realize his larger
vision and saw the Mewat model of Da’wah as eternally fixed. Nevertheless, the
fruits of Mawlana Ilyas’s efforts are visible all over the world today.
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