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Thursday 14 May 2009 - 07:03

Seyyed Jamal-o-Din Asadabadi

Story Code : 4882
Seyyed Jamal-o-Din Asadabadi
Biography and Activities of Syed Jamal aI-din Asadabadi



Seyyed Jamal-o-Din Asadabadi (or Seyyed Jamal al-Din Al-Afghani) was born in Asadabad, Iran, in 1838; he died in Istanbul, Turkey, on March 9, 1897. A philosopher and politician, he promoted the concept of unity of all Muslims against British rule in particular and against global western interests in general. His call for Muslim solidarity influenced Egypt's nationalist movement, Turkey's Tanzimat reforms, as well as Iran's constitutional and Islamic revolutions.

It is commonly agreed that Asadabadi was born into a family of sayyids of Asadabad, Hamadan. Asadabadi himself, however, claimed that he was born in the village of As'adabad, near Kabul, Afghanistan. Neither claim can be verified; the account of Asadabadi's childhood pieced together from the information provided by his biographer, Mirza Lutfullah Asadabadi, is sketchy at best. Later events in his life, however, indicate that he was educated at home until the age of ten. Thereafter he attended school in Qazvin and Tehran. During his teens, he studied theology and Islamic philosophy in Karbala and Najaf, centers of Shi'ite learning in Iraq.

In 1855, around the age of seventeen, Asadabadi traveled to India via the port of Bushehr, on the Persian Gulf. In India, he became acquainted with British imperialism and observed how Muslims were systematically discriminated against in receiving government appointments as well as in participating fully in religious and educational institutions. Indeed, the Muslims' struggle against British tyranny left an indelible impression on young Asadabadi. And increasingly he came to agree with the Indians who claimed that the British intended to undermine and discredit Islam. From India, Asadabadi traveled to Mecca before returning to Karbala and Najaf, centers at which he had studied earlier. He remained in Iraq until 1865, when he traveled to Iran and, the following year, to Afghanistan.

Documented reports of Asadabadi's residence in Afghanistan date to 1866, when he was part of the entourage of Mohammad A'zam Khan, the military ruler of Qandahar under Dost Mohammad Khan. When Dost Mohammad died in 1863, his three sons fought among themselves for the rulership. Amir Shir 'Ali Khan, Dost Mohammad's third son, assumed power in Kabul, pledging to modernize the nation. Shir 'Ali's brothers, however, rebelled in Qandahar and ousted him in 1866. A'zam became king, and Asadabadi became his close confidant. As part of his duties, Asadabadi reportedly drew up a national recovery plan for Afghanistan that included provisions for a network of schools, establishment of centralized government, institution of a national newspaper, and a well-regulated communication system. In politics, he advised the king to ally himself with Russia to prevent the steady northward movement of the British accross the Punjab. A'zam's rule, however, was short-lived. Shir 'Ali returned in 1868, deposed Mohammad A'zam and expelled Asadabadi--a foreigner who spoke dari with a farsi accent. He retained Asadabadi's modernizing reforms, however.

Asadabadi was a clergyman with a strong constitution. He is reported to have had a magnetic personality and a dogged determination, both of which he used competently to penetrate exclusive circles in which he could promote his cause. And he cherished secrecy at the expense of social norms. He wore a white turban while calling himself a sayyid, and adamantly refused any association with women. He was quick-tempered, quick of action, and quick to envisage a British plot at every turn.

Afghanistan afforded Asadabadi a worthy education by supplementing his understanding of the dynamics of struggle against imperialism with a possible response. He came to realize that the Shi'i and Persian rational philosophy that had inspired him in India could be used to rid the Muslim masses of ignorance and poverty, especially if they were enhanced with armed struggle and savage confrontation. If Afghans with their bare hands could defeat the forces of Britain in the First Afghan War, he posed the question, what impact would the force of the total Muslim community under a charismatic ruler have on the West! Asadabadi then made a point of injecting himself into the growing confrontation between the Muslim East and the Christian West.

The Muslim ruler charismatic enough to realize Asadabadi's secret aspiration was Abdulaziz, the Ottoman sultan. Forming a master plan, Asadabadi befriended the Ottoman Sultan from afar and, in 1869, traveled to Istanbul expecting to be named the Sultan's confidant. Turkish officials, steeped in the Tanzimat reforms, however, did not pay him the attention that he felt he deserved; they appointed him to a lesser position on the Council of Education. An opportunist, Asadabadi used the Council as a forum for the promotion of his ideas and delivered a series of inspiring lectures on reform. The contents of the lectures--anti-imperialism, need to modernize Islamic society, and Shi'ite rationalist philosophy--raised the ire of Istanbul's Sunni holy men. Asadabadi was denounced as a heretic, especially when he compared the Sunni holy men's understanding of God with an ordinary man's knowledge of a craft. Before long, the confrontation between the ulema and Asadabadi became too volatile for Abdulaziz to support. Asadabadi was expelled from Turkey.

With his hopes dashed, Asadabadi returned to Egypt in 1871 to pursue his teaching as well as his dream of creating a Pan-Islamic nation free from imperialist domination. While thus engaged, in a series of lectures on reform, he grafted the example of Egypt's economic strangulation by European banks to medieval Islamic philosophy concluding that the situation would not have obtained if Western exploitation was not operating in the region. He also formed and led a Masonic lodge in Cairo, among whose members were counted such promising young leaders as Mohammad 'Abduh, a future leader of the Pan-Islamic movement.

Asadabadi's activities in Egypt brought him in direct confrontation with Khedive Isma'il and his suzerain, Sultan Abdulhamid II, as well as with European, especially British, powers. Asadabadi had placed Khedive Isma'il in a difficult position by openly condemning his financial mismanagement as the cause of Egypt's capitulation to European bankers. To ward off Asadabadi's allegations, Isma'il blamed the foreign bankers who, in turn, pressured the Sultan to depose the Khedive. In 1879, when he ran out of alternatives, the Sultan dismissed the Khedive.

Mohammad Tawfiq Pasha, Isma'l's son, expelled Asadabadi from Egypt that same year. From Egypt, Asadabadi traveled to Hyderabad, south of India where, for two years, he offered seminars, gave public lectures, and wrote. "The Refutation of the Materialists" (1881) was written at this time. This essay affords a glimpse of Asadabadi's growing interest in social consciousness, modernism, and rational thinking.

Writing within the Utopian tradition, Asadabadi described his vision of the "Virtuous City," as a hierarchically structured society that functions on the principles of shame, trustworthiness, and truthfulness, and aspires to the ideals of intelligence, pride, and justice. Higher intelligence, Asadabadi argued, leads to new capabilities and advanced civilizations; pride leads to competition and progress; and justice leads to global peace and harmony among nations. Naturalists (neicheris), Asadabadi argued, intended to destroy the solidarity of the Virtuous City through division and sectarianism.

From Hyderabad, Asadabadi traveled to London and, shortly thereafter to Paris, where he engaged the French philosopher Ernest Renan in a debate on the position of scientific discovery in Islam. Then, in the 1870s, Asadabadi accomplished his most consequential activity--his collaboration with Mohammad 'Abduh on editing a revolutionary journal in Arabic called al-'Urwat al-Wuthqa (the firmest bond). This publication established Asadabadi as the champion of Pan-Islamism, the movement blamed as the chief cause of Abdulhamid's 1877 defeat in the Russo-Turkish War--whereby the Tanzimat reforms had been proved ineffective--and in the 1882 occupation of Egypt by Great Britain. Al-'Urwat al-Wuthqa published articles by Asadabadi and 'Abduh on diverse topics. The Sultan was not impressed. Disappointed, Asadabadi left for Russia. Waiting at the port of Bushehr to collect his books, he received an invitation from Nasir al-Din Shah of Qajar Dynasty, the sovereign in Tehran, who had read a translation of an essay from al-'Urwat al-Wuthqa. When this brief interview did not go well, Asadabadi resumed his trip.

In Russia, Asadabadi continued his anti-British activities. He argued that, with his mobilization of Indian and Central Asian Muslims, Russians could easily drive the British out of the subcontinent. The Russians humored him, delaying his departure to irk the British. Asadabadi's two-year visit in Russia gained for him a second royal invitation to Tehran. Iran of the 1890's was much like Egypt of the 1870's. It was plagued with financial mismanagement and hounded by foreign investors, who sought concessions on every resource. The shah, however, unlike the Khedive, ruled under the protection of divine right. He could sell Iran to whomever he pleased.

Asadabadi arrived in Iran from St. Petersburg at a time when Iranians were growing increasingly alarmed by Nasir al-Din Shah's doling out their country's resources. Asadabadi himself had distributed leaflets condemning these concessions. Needless to say that Asadabadi was not received by his host, who also denied Asadabadi's claim that he had been commissioned in Munich to go to St. Petersburg and make amends on lran's behalf. Worse yet, Asadabadi was clandestinely informed of orders for his arrest. To save himself from the shah's wrath, he took sanctuary (bast) in the shrine of Shah Abdul 'Azim south of Tehran. From there, using clandestine methods and superb oratorical techniques, Asadabadi attracted Iranians in droves to listen to his fiery attacks on the shah and his anti-reformist actions, especially the murder of Mirza Taqi Khan, Amir Kabir.

Asadabadi predicted that Iran would soon capitulate to British might, as Egypt had in 1882. He demanded that Iranian revenues be spent on the construction of a railroad, on education and hospitals, and on a viable army to thwart imperialism, rather than on the shah's pleasure trips to Europe. Iranians, he said, must be given the right to express their opinions in publications independent of the government. Iran must have a constitution, a parliament, and a house of justice. Above all, he emphasized, Iranians deserved a just king.

Nasir al-Din Shah was approaching his fiftieth year of rule. Since Asadabadi had been instrumental in his own recent humiliation to become the first shah to revoke his own writ--the tobacco concession--and since this action had precipitated Iran's first foreign debt, the shah ordered the unruly mullah to be expelled. Ignoring the rules of sanctuary, the shah's guards invaded the holy shrine in 1892, placed Asadabadi, half naked and in the middle of winter, on the bare back of a mule, and deported him. Asadabadi went to London, where he reestablished ties with his lodge members and then traveled to Turkey at the invitation of the sultan. Rather than becoming the sultan's confidant and Pan-Islamist consultant as Asadabadi had hoped, he became the sultan's prisoner.

From Turkey, Asadabadi continued to foment revolt in Iran, using his devotees to carry out his behest. One such devotee was Mirza Reza Kermani who, in 1896, was commissioned to assassinate Nasir al-Din Shah. Mirza Reza carried out his mission on the anniversary of the shah's fiftieth year of reign in the very sanctuary in which Asadabadi had been humiliated a few years before.

Asadabadi died of cancer of the chin at the age of about sixty and was buried in a secret grave. In 1944, the government of Afghanistan claimed him as a citizen; his supposed remains were transferred to and buried on the grounds of the University of Kabul under a respectful shrine.

Jamal al-Din Asadabadi was an Iranian by birth. His activities and the corpus of his writings reflect that. When visiting Europe, he affiliated himself with Afghanistan; when in Afghanistan, he associated himself with Ottoman Turkey and called himself "Istanbuli." This was, perhaps, necessary under his circumstances to gain the confidence of Sunni rulers while evading Iranian officials. There are several reasons for Asadabadi's inability to materialize his dream. First, he put too much trust in the goodwill of Muslim rulers and too little in the people of the Middle East. In ignoring the grass roots support for his Pan-Islamism, he violated the rules of his own Virtuous City, a violation that he regretfully acknowledged in a letter he wrote from prison before his death.

Second, he used religion to achieve political aims and, assuming that world rulers acted independently of one another, secretly groomed all for the same office--that of caliph. This policy backfired on him many times, finally costing him his life. Third, he annoyed rulers by lecturing them. Nasir al-Din Shah dismissed him when Asadabadi blatantly offered himself as a sword with which the shah could cripple the imperialists. Perhaps the shah was more gracious than the sultan. Finally, Asadabadi failed to distinguish between policy and personal dispositions. He sought Queen Victoria's assistance against Nasir al-Din Shah within a short time of the tobacco boycott against British interests in Iran, a boycott that he himself had helped bring to fruition.

Asadabadi's Major Works:
1- Al-Ta'liqat 'ala sharh al-Dawwani li'l-'aqa'id al-'adudiyyah (Cairo, 1968). Asadabadi's glosses over Dawwani's commentary on the famous kalam book of 'Adud al-Din al-'Iji called al-'aqa'id al-'adudiyyah.

2. Risalat al-waridat fi sirr al-tajalliyat (Cairo, 1968). A work dictated by Asadabadi to his student M. 'Abduh when he was in Egypt.

3. Tatimmat al-bayan (Cairo, 1879). A political, social and cultural history of Afghanistan.

4. Hakikat-i Madhhab-i Naychari wa Bayan-i Hal-i Naychariyan. First published in Haydarabad-Deccan, 1298/1881, this is Asadabadi's most important intellectual work that he published during his lifetime. It is a scathing criticism and total rejection of naturalism which Asadabadi also calls 'materialism'. The book has been translated into Arabic by M. 'Abduh as al-Radd 'ala al-dahriyyin (The Refutation of the Materialists).

5. Khatirat Jamal-o-Din Asadabadi al-Husayni (Beirut, 1931). A book compiled by the Lebanese journalist Mohammad Pasha al-Mahzumi. Mahzumi was present in most of Asadabadi's talks in the last part of his life and developed his conversations in to the present book. The book contains important information about Asadabadi's life and ideas.




By:Iraj Bashiri
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