Sir Syed Ahmed Khan’s pivotal role in laying foundations for Muslim revival
By News Desk
October 17, 1817, marks the birth of the renowned Islamic reformer, educationist and philosopher, Syed Ahmed Taqvi bin Syed Muhammad Muttaqi, in Delhi, known to the Muslims of the subcontinent as Sir Syed Ahmed Khan.

Sir Syed Ahmed Khan
After having witnessed the fall of the Mughal Empire, and catastrophic events of 1857 which resulted in the moral, social and economic decline of the Muslims of India, Sir Syed Ahmed Khan wrote his famous treatise “The Causes of the Indian Revolt” or “اسباب بغاوت ہند”

In 1875, Sir Syed Ahmed Khan founded the Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College at Aligarh, the first Muslim University of South Asia. Sir Syed advocated Muslims to use knowledge as power to reclaim their rightful social and economic place in India.
Maulana Altaf Hali, in his biography of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan writes: “As soon as Sir Syed reached Muradabad, he began to write the pamphlet entitled ‘The Causes of the Indian Revolt’ (Asbab-e-Baghawat-e-Hind), in which he did his best to clear the people of India and especially the Muslims, of the charge of Mutiny. In spite of the obvious danger, he made a courageous and thorough report of the accusations people were making against the Government and refused the theory which the British had invented to explain the causes of the Mutiny.”

Altaf Hussain Hali
As a social reformer, educationist, author and Muslim revivalist, Sir Syed wrote innumerable journals, articles, translations, books and treatise to awaken the Muslims of India. He advocated the use of Urdu, founded scientific societies and set upon establishing a “Muslim Cambridge” in India on the lines of the Oxford and Cambridge Universities in England.

“Suppose that the English community and the army were to leave India taking with them all their cannons and their splendid weapons and all else, who then would be the rulers of India? Is it possible that under these circumstances two nations—the Mohammedans and the Hindus—could sit on the same throne and remain equal in power? Most certainly not. It is necessary that one of them should conquer the other. To hope that both could remain equal is to desire the impossible and the inconceivable.”
Sir Syed was farsighted & pragmatic enough to understand that in an undivided India, the majority would reign over the minority.
The MAO College was given the status of a University, in 1920, and became the hub of modernising the Muslims of India, and its students became the hall-bearers of the demand of a separate homeland for Muslims of India: Pakistan.

The Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah called Aligarh “the arsenal of Muslim India” and AMU students were t the forefront in the all-important elections of 1946, when the Muslim League swept the elections, to make Pakistan a reality.
The Quaid-e-Azam, Muhammad Ali Jinnah was a lifelong contributor to Aligarh Muslim Univeristy, where his portrait hangs even to this day.
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Categories: History, Ideology
Tags: History, India, Islam, Muslim Ummah, Muslims, Pakistan, Quaid-e-Azam, Sir Syed Ahmed Khan
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