Mazhar Ali Azhar

Mazhar Ali Azhar (13 March 1895 – 4 November 1974)[1] was one of the founding leaders of Majlis-e-Ahrar-ul-Islam and a political figure in the history of colonial India and Pakistan. He was elected three times to the Punjab Assembly, serving from 1924 to 1926 and 1934 to 45.[2] He also took part in the Tehreek-e-Madh-e-Sahaba in Lucknow, India. He, along with other Ahrar leaders, opposed the partition of India.[3]

Mazhar Ali Azhar
Born(1895-03-13)13 March 1895
Died4 November 1974(1974-11-04) (aged 79)
Lahore, Pakistan
OccupationPolitician, Islamic Scholar, Senior Advocate, Member Punjab Assembly.
Spouse(s)Fatima Mazhar
ChildrenBakhtiar Abbas (son)
Qaiser Mustafa (son)
Khakan Babar (son)
Riaz Fatima (daughter)
Imtiaz-un-Nisa (daughter)
Parent(s)Muhammad Abdullah (Father)

Early life and career

He was born on 13 March 1895 in Jammu and Kashmir. He was born into a Shia family but later converted to the Deobandi school of Sunni Islam and ran a madrassa and mosque in Gurdaspur, during British Raj. Being a close companion of Syed Attaullah Shah Bukhari, he joined Majlis-i-Ahrar, and offshoot of Khilafat Movement, and took part in the religious agitations like the 1931 finality of the prophethood movement in Kashmir and the 1937-1939 Tehreek-e-Madh-e-Sahaba in Lucknow.

Role in Madhe Sahaba Agitation

The Madhe Sahaba Agitation of Lucknow is predecessor of the sectarian violence in Pakistan. Mazhar Ali Azhar played a prominent role in that movement. He believed that "Madhe Sahaba can be a weapon against the League"- an obvious reference to Jinnah's own background as a Khoja Shia.[4] Justice Munir writes in his report:

"How they attempted to defeat the Muslim League with Islam as their weapon will be apparent from some utterances of Maulana Mazhar Ali Azhar, the Ahrar leader, to whom is ascribed the couplet in which the Quaid-i-Azam was called kafir-i-azam. This gentleman is a Shia, but madh-i-sahaba with him is dearer than life, and during the days of Shia-Sunni riots in Lucknow both he and his son adopted this slogan which rouses the fire of every Shia and went from Lahore to Lucknow to fan the Shia-Sunni fire. Speaking outside Bhati Gate at a public meeting of the Ahrar, he said that he had, for the preceding two or three months, been asking the Muslim League whether the names of sahaba-i-karam would be revered in Pakistan, but had received no reply. He alleged that in the Congress-governed Provinces where Government was still with the British and the League had no power, the Leaguers were not permitting the sahaba to be named with reverence and asked whether, if power passed to the League; the state of affairs would be the same as in Lucknow and other Provinces where Muslims were in a majority and madh-i- sahaba would be an offence. Proceeding, he inquired if words of praise for Hazrat Abu Bakr, Hazrat Umar and Hazrat Usman could not be uttered in Lucknow and Mahmudabad, what would be the condition in League's Pakistan and what interest the Musalmans could have in such Pakistan (vide 'Shahbaz' of 20 November 1945)? In its issue of 2 November 1945, the 'Nawa-i-Waqt' published a letter written by this very gentleman to another Ahrar leader. As the genuineness of this letter was questioned, we examined Maulana Mazhar Ali Azhar about it. He says that he does not definitely remember having written it but since this letter was published in one of the prominent papers of Lahore and was not contradicted by him, we have no hesitation in holding that the Maulana did write this letter. It is impossible that the Maulana, a renowned leader as he was in those days, should not have been aware of the publication of this letter, and, if he failed to contradict it, the only inference can be that the 'Nawa-i-Waqt' was in possession of the original letter, the authorship of which, in case the matter came to proof, could have conclusively been proved. The subject-matter of this letter is again madh-i- sahaba and we may repeat that the Maulana himself is a Shia. In this letter the Maulana says that the weapon of madh-i-sahaba could effectively be used against the League and that both the League and that both the League and the Government will have to surrender over this issue whatever might, be the result of the elections. This conduct of the Maulana shows quite clearly how the Ahrar and other parties can conveniently exploit religion for their political ends. In this connection we may also mention a similar effort made by the Muslim League itself in 1946 to have pirs and masha'ikh, who command considerable followings, on its side in the struggle for the establishment of Pakistan."[5]

Mazhar Ali Azhar referred to Jinnah as Kafir-e-Azam[6] ("The Great Kafir").[7] He, as with other Ahrar leaders, opposed the partition of India.

Life after independence

In 1947, he moved to Pakistan and started living in Lahore. He took part in the 1953 riots against Ahmadiyya community. Under the Displaced Persons Act of 1957, he was allotted a Bungalow in Fane Road, Lahore by the government of Pakistan against his claim of the assets he had left behind while migrating from Gurdaspur. He lived in this place till the end of his life.

References

  1. Saʻīd, Aḥmad (1997). Muslim India, 1857-1947: a biographical dictionary. Institute of Pakistan Historical Research. p. 220. OCLC 38425611.
  2. Biographical Encyclopedia of Pakistan. Biographical Research Institute. 1972. pp. 229–230.
  3. "Impact: International Fortnightly". Impact: International Fortnightly. News & Media. 4–6: 5. 1974. Maulana Mazhar Ali Azhar, 81, a leader in the Ahrar party, opposed to the partition of India.
  4. Yasser Latif Hamdani, "The Short And Sordid History Of Majlis-e-Ahrar-e-Islam", Pak Tea House, 2009.
  5. Justice Munir, "Report of the court inquiry constituted under Punjab act II of 1954 to enquire into the Punjab disturbances of 1953", pp. 254-255, (1954).
  6. Ik kafira ki khatir islam ko chora (27 November 2013). "Starting from the beginning". The Express Tribune. Retrieved 11 December 2020.
  7. Hussain, Syed Taffazull (2019). Sheikh Abdullah-A Biography: The Crucial Period 1905-1939. 2019 Edition. Syed Taffazull Hussain. p. 90. ISBN 978-1-60481-603-7.
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