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Maudoodi and the Age of Islamic Innocence
[An excerpt from Kaukab Siddique's 
forthcoming book RETURN TO PAKISTAN.]
Sayyid Abu ‘Ala Maudoodi laid the 
foundations of the modern Islamic 
movement in South Asia. During his final days,  
he was with his son, a physician 
living in America. During one of my conversations 
with him by phone, he 
complained about the people who surrounded him in 
these words: "Inhon nay mujhe 
zinda muqbara bana lia hay." ["They have made me 
a living tomb."] The paradox of a 
great man usually is that his followers focus 
more on him than on his 
teachings. Progress becomes difficult because the 
brilliance of the man stops the 
very movement forward which he wanted. Fewer and 
fewer people try to read his 
books but more and more people buy his books to 
decorate their living rooms with.
Maudoodi's achievement belongs to an era 
when Islam was not a 
socio-political force. Without him Pakistan would 
have been another secular state like 
Turkey 
and the hopes of Allama Iqbal and Mohomed 
Ali Jinnah would have come to 
nothing. With his efforts, Pakistan has seen an 
ongoing tension between the 
Islamic aspirations of the people and the 
secularized self-perpetuating ruling 
class left behind by the British. Maudoodi had 
the intellectual ability to win 
supporters for Islam from the very schools and 
universities dedicating to 
making Islam irrelevant. His efforts generated 
intense hatred from the 
military-landlords-civil services complex which 
has ruled Pakistan.
I see Maudoodi as the spiritual father of 
the modern Islamic movement. I 
also see him as belonging to my past, a kinder, 
gentler time when most 
Islamic Pakistanis believed that change could be 
brought about by peaceful means. It 
was the era before the Soviets invaded 
Afghanistan, 
and before America 
decided to take over the world. Our era, the late 
20th and early 21st century of the 
Christian era, is the era of Dajjal, a demonic 
force which has the ability to 
move across the globe. We live in a time when the 
Islamic ethos is 
confronting the powers of hegemony in ways which 
few could have thought possible. It is 
a time of limitless evil confronted by previously 
unimaginable Islamic 
challenge. The new Islamic ethos is that of 
Shaikh Omar ‘Abdel Rahman 
who taught that 
Jihad 
is fard-e-‘ain, as much of an obligation as 
prayer and fasting. Who 
could have thought that "Saudi" 
Arabia 
would 
produce Osama bin Laden and that the 
Taliban would defy America even when faced with 
B-52s.
Understandably, Pakistan too has responded 
to the brutality of our times 
by producing a burgeoning Jihad movement, a major 
segment of which is led by 
Hafiz Saeed of Jamaat ad-Da'wa (the founder of 
Lashkar-e-Taiba).
One of the best books on understanding 
Maudoodi is very recent. Titled 
Mushahidaat: Maulana Maudoodi, Jamaate Islami, 
Pakistan, it is by Mian Tufail 
Muhammad, Maudoodi's closest associate and takes 
the form of interviews of Mian 
Tufail conducted by Salim Mansoor Khalid 
(published in the Urdu language in 
2000 and reprinted in 2001 and 2003, 608 pages, 
hard cover). It is frank, honest 
and factual. Almost every important moment in the 
life of Maudoodi as seen by 
his closest associate is discussed. In addition 
Mian Tufail's own life, which 
is typical of the hardcore Islamic activist, is 
well presented.
What's so wonderful about this book is that 
the author does not try to 
be politically correct. He doesn't seem to care 
what people will say and how 
they will attack him or Maulana Maudoodi because 
of it. Here are some major 
impressions:
Maudoodi was truly dedicated to the 
relationship he had with Allah. All 
else came second. Unfortunately he was living in 
a society which was corrupt 
to the nth degree and most people though 
emotionally tied to Islam were 
ignorant and superstitious. He and Mian Tufail 
and the entire Jamaate Islami started 
organized Islamic work from zero and built it 
into a formidable force in 
Pakistan.
Mian Tufail and other central personalities 
of the Jamaat were sufaid 
poosh [middle class] people who believed in rule 
of law, discussion, dialogue 
and peaceful means. Right from the beginning they 
ran into state oppression 
coming from corrupt politicians and military 
rulers. The secularized Pakistani 
ruling class which has been pillaging Pakistani 
relentlessly saw Maudoodi as the 
obstacle in their way. He was subjected to 
incredible abuse by those in power.
The Pakistani rulers were not interested in 
Islam. They were not willing 
to listen to basic issues related to state 
ideology. The peoples' movement to 
define Qadianis (Ahmeddis) as non-Muslims was 
seen as a threat. Maudoodi was 
great at defining things and believed that by 
writing well he could solve 
issues. The rulers thought otherwise. In response 
to his book on Qadianis, they 
arrested him and sentenced him to death for 
sedition. [He was released following 
street protests and changes in government.] 
Maudoodi refused to ask for mercy 
when he was sentenced. That was the spiritual 
power of the man which 
energized the movement.
The history of Pakistan is linked at every 
step to the Islamic struggle 
led by Maudoodi, both in its successes and in its 
failures. He defied the 
military power of Field Marshal Ayub Khan and was 
imprisoned along with the entire 
central committee of Jamaate Islami. On the other 
hand, the Field Marshal knew 
that Maudoodi was the essence of Islamic 
Pakistan. When 
India 
crossed into 
Pakistan in 1965, Maudoodi, forgiving what the 
government had done to him, came 
on the radio to urge people that Jihad against 
India was their religious duty.
Mian Tufail's book is also about the HUMAN 
EFFORT which was required at 
the level of everyday life to make organized 
Islamic movement a reality. When 
Mian Tufail, with his wife, first joined Maudoodi 
in Pathankot, there was no 
electricity and the land was covered with tall 
weeds. The foundations of the 
Jamaat were laid in poverty and with hard and 
persistent effort.
An amazing insight which comes out of Mian 
Tufail's narration in 
MUSHAHIDAAT is about his wife, Mahmudah. Such 
women are the foundation of Islamic 
society, though seemingly not attracting any 
attention at all. She went with her 
husband through thick and thin, often in intense 
poverty, bearing him numerous 
children, never complaining about his repeated 
arrests by the government. She 
worked steadily, studied much, and supported the 
Islamic struggle with all 
her power by supporting her husband. Such women 
might be the reason why Pakistan 
has survived. Together Mian sahib and his wife 
were the kind of couple, old 
fashioned but invincible, about whom Milton wrote 
in his unabashed male 
chauvinism:
He for God
She for God in him
I have never agreed with Mian Tufail on the 
policies of Jamaate Islami 
but it can be said in all honesty: He is a real 
gentleman but not the kind of 
person one can defeat. In fact quite complex.
MUSHAHIDAAT is also antidote for the 
poison the opponents of Islam 
have spread about Jamaate Islami in the form of 
propaganda that: Maudoodi opposed 
Pakistan, or that Maudoodi got money from 
America, or other such frivolities. 
Mian Tufail does a good job of pointing out who 
were the opponents of 
Maudoodi who spread this propaganda and the 
emptiness of their claims.
The saddening part of Pakistani politics is 
that many of the traditional 
religious groupings did not understand the modern 
world and were skillfully 
used by Pakistani rulers against Jamaate Islami. 
Jamaat for long could not 
succeed in Pakistani politics not because of 
secular rulers but because the 
sectarian religious people saw him as a threat to 
their narrow view of religion.
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2003-08-02 Sat 17:58ct