Mirza Ghulam Ahmad
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Mirza Ghulam Ahmad (February 13, 1835–May 26, 1908) was a Muslim religious figure and the founder of the Ahmadiyya religious movement in Islam.
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad remains a controversial figure to this day because of his claims to be the Promised Messiah and Mahdi, and because of the movement he established. Most (but not all) of his followers consider him to be a prophet, raising even more controversy among mainstream Muslims.
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Biography
Ahmad was born in Qadian Punjab in India on 13 February 1835 (or 14 Shawwal 1250), the surviving child of twins born to a well-off family. It is reported that he was always interested in the people around him, often thinking of them instead of himself. He spent a lot of time in the mosque and with the study of the Qur'an and his religion, Islam. This did not lead him to fulfill his father's wishes of his son becoming a lawyer or civil servant. Still, Ahmad would be pulled into his father's preferred career path at times, but he would remain devoted to religious learning, and teaching. In his course of studying religious topics, he would often interact with many Muslims, non-Muslims, and with Christian missionaries with whom he would have great debates.
When Ahmad was forty years old his father died. At this time Ahmad claimed that God had begun communicating with him, often through direct Revelation . (The prophet of Islam, Muhammad also received his first revelation at forty years of age). Initially, Ahmad's writings from this time were intended to counter what he perceived to be anti-Islamic writings originating from various Christian missionary groups. He would also focus on countering the effects of various groups such as the Brahmo-samaj.
As time progressed, his writings would begin to exhibit his claims of being the mujaddid or reformer of his era. These writings were compiled in one of his most well-known works: Barahin Ahmadiyya, a work consisting of a number of volumes. In later volumes, he would essentially claim to be the messiah of Islam. This proved and continues to be very controversial, as traditional Islamic thought holds that Jesus is the Messiah, who himself will return in the flesh at the end of times. Ahmad countered this by claiming in his book Jesus in India that Jesus was dead, and had in fact escaped crucifixion and died in India. According to Ahmad, the promised Mahdi was a spiritual, not military leader as is believed by most Muslims. With this proclamation, he also began to step away from the traditional idea of militant Jihad, and redefined it as a “spiritual” battle rather than a physical one. In addition to these controversial claims, he would later claim that Guru Nanak, the first Sikh Guru, was in fact a Muslim.
These writings began to turn the general Muslims ulema (religious clerics) against him, and he was often branded as a heretic. To add to this controversy some of his followers would later claim him to be a prophet, while others maintained that he was a prophet in a metaphorical sense only.
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad's claim is based on his personal interpretation of various verses of the Qur'an, Hadith, prophecies of past Saints and astronomical signs of eclipses. The list is extensive and details are available from multiple sources listed in the links at the end of this article. Mirza Ghulam Ahmad prophesied thousands of prophesies and claimed that God will spread his community of His to all countries of the world as this prophecy has in his book "The Narrative of Two Martyrdoms" The exact wording of his prophecy for understanding his inspiration and believed. "Listen O ye people! This is the prophecy of Him Who has created the Heavens and the earth! He will spread this community of His to all countries of the world, and will grant it victory with powerful arguments and signs. The days are coming, nay, they are near, that there will be only one faith which will be regarded with respect in the world. God will bestow extraordinary and unprecedented blessings upon this community. This dominion will stay for ever until the Judgment Day. If someone mocks at me, their mockery can do me no harm. There is no prophet that has not been mocked at. It was, therefore, necessary that the Promised Messiah also face the mockery.. The third century from today would not have been completed when all who await the physical descent of the son of Mary, whether they are Muslims or Christians, will utterly despair of that belief and will discard it. Then there will only be one faith and one Spiritual Leader. I have come only to sow the seed. So I have sown the seed. It will now grow and prosper. No one can stop it."
Controversy
The teachings of Ahmad and the beliefs of his followers are a great source of controversy among Muslims, especially in Pakistan where most Ahmadis live. Many Islamic leaders have pushed the Pakistani government to label Ahmadis as non-Muslims, and have succeeded in recent years. In Pakistan, it is illegal for the Ahmadis to practice or preach their religion, and many hundreds of them are charged with preaching their religion, or with Contempt of Prophethood, the legal punishment for which, is death. Likewise, a good number of Islamic websites on the Internet are devoted to trying to prove that Ahmadis are heretics.
Among the most controversial issues that trouble other Muslims are:
- The issue of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad's prophethood, whether allegorical or real.
- His claim that he was the Messiah rather than a returning Jesus
- The claim that he was the Mahdi
- Ahmad's reluctance towards a militant interpretation of Jehad
- His belief that the Qur'an cannot be Abrogated
Ahmad's claim to Prophethood
Muslims in general hold the belief that no new prophet can come after Muhammad. They do however believe in the return of Jesus himself at the end of days.
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad referred to himself as a prophet in his writings and claimed to be the second coming of Jesus. Hence this claim is abhorrent to most Muslims. Followers of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad are divided into two camps as far a belief in his claim to prophethood is concerned. For details see Ahmadi.
Allegations of being a British agent
Some accused Ahmad of working for the British who were trying to use him to remove the concept of Jihad from Indian Muslims, in order to quell any desires that they may have had for fighting against the British Rule of India. Ahmad's father had a close relationship with the British and was awarded land and wealth by them due to his support of the colonial regime during the Indian Mutiny. However, defenders of Ahmad justify this by claiming that Ahmad's father saw the British as protectors of Muslims from the Sikh regime that had previously ruled Punjab. Defenders of Ahmad also state that his declared mission against Christianity, the religion of the British empire, was inconsistent with allegations of him being a British agent.
Abrogation of the Qur'an
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad objected to the belief among Muslims of his time that one verse of the Qur'an can supersede another, called Abrogation. He believed that the Qur'an was the revealed Word of God and contains no imperfections. Any apparent contradiction in the Qur'an is due to a misunderstanding and the reader's understanding. Lexical methods must be used to find the original medifferent in meaning than 1400 years ago. The Qur'an is protected by God, but common Arabic usage is not. By reconciling two apparently divergent verses, one comes to a understanding of the Qur'an as the revealed Word of God.
External links
Biographies
Books
- A Life of The Holy Founder of The Movement To Unite All Religions – Ahmad The Guided One by Iain Adamson
- Jesus in India – Ahmad's book on Jesus
- The Essence of Islam: Volume One – Extracts from the Writings of Ahmad's book
- The Essence of Islam: Volume Two – Extracts from the Writings of Ahmad's book
- Philosophy of the Teachings of Islam – Ahmad's book
- The Will – Ahmad's book
- Lecture Ludhiana – Ahmad's book
- The Narrative of Two Martyrdoms – Ahmad's book
- Victory of Islam (pdf) – Ahmad's book
- Elucidation of Objectives – Ahmad's book
- The Removal of a Misunderstanding – Ahmad's book
- (A Message of Peace) is the last written work of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad – Ahmad's book
Articles
Websites
- Ahmadiyyah Muslim Community
- Muslim Television Ahmadiyya
- Ahmadiyyah Muslim Community – Bahasa Indonesia
- Indonesian Ahmadiyya Awareness Campaign
- Dutch German-Ahmadiyya webpage
- MTA-International German
- Canadian-Ahmadiyya webpage
- The Ahmadiyya web Portal
- Tahir Foundation – Commemorating the life and workd of Hadrat Mirza Tahir Ahmad
- The Baitul Futuh Mosque – The Largest Mosque in Western Europe
- AHMADIYYA de ZARAGOZA.
- Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Annual Convention.
- Fazl-e-Omar Hospital, Rabwah – Founded in 1958, by the Ahmadiyya Jamaat of Pakistan
- Tomb of Jesus (In India)
- The Lahore Ahmadiyya Movement in Islam
- Ahmadiyya Anjuman Isha'at-e-Islam Lahore
- Biography from the Lahore Ahmadiyya Movement – Pro-Ahmadiyya webpage
- Reforms?
- Fundamental-Sh.Nadzir As Saghir
Categories: NPOV disputes | 1835 births | 1908 deaths | New religious movements | Founders of religions or sects