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Wednesday, February 20, 2019

H.C. Mookerjee’s review of Maulana Abul Kalam Azad

A Biographical Memoir by Mahadev Desai, 22 February 1942

This very readable book not only gives information not generally known to the public on the life and activities of the President of the Indian National Congress but also throws a flood of light on those elements on his religious, intellectual and political make-up which have placed him in the unique position he occupies to-day in the public life of India.

The first four chapters give an account of the rich heritage to which Maulana Abul Kalam Azad was born and the way in which he developed his inborn powers. There is next a quick transition to the social, economic and political education the Maulana sought to impart to his brothers in faith by starting his deservedly known “Al Hilal”. Uncompromising in his views and outspoken in given utterance to them, the Maulana was interned but his activities did not in any way suffer from the cause.
            
          The chapters which will probably have the greatest appeal for the reader are those headed “A Declaration of Faith”, “Views on the Religion” and “Another Campaign”. A large part of the first of these consists of an English translation of the statement made by the Maulana in that polished Urdu of which he is such a great master when he was sentenced to one year’s imprisonment for the prominent part he had taken in the non-co-operation movement when Congress declared a boycott of all functions arranged to give a reception to the Prince of Wales and Government in that connection declared Congress volunteers to be illegal. This statement lays down clearly and in the most eloquent of terms those eternal and immutable principles on which freedom has based itself everywhere and at all times. Part of it quoted below has a significance all its own even to-day, two decades after the ideas found expression from the eloquent pen of the Maulana:

“It is my belief that liberty is the natural and God given right of man. No man and no bureaucracy consisting of men has got the right to make the servants of God its own slaves. However attractive be the euphemisms invented for ‘Subjugation’ and ‘Slavery’ still slavery is slavery, and it is opposed to the will and the canons of God. I therefore consider it a bounden duty to liberate my country from its yoke. The notorious fallacies of ‘reform’ and ‘gradual transference of power’ can produce no illusion and pitfalls in my unequivocal and definite faith. Liberty being the primary right to men, it is nobody’s personal privilege to prescribe limits or apportion shares in the distribution of it. To say that a nation should get its liberty in graduated stages is the same as saying that an owner should by right receive his property only in bits and a creditor his dues by instalments. What-ever philanthropic acts might be performed by a man who by a man who as usurped our property, his usurpation would still continue to be utterly illegal.
           
          “Evil cannot be classified into good and bad. All that is in fairness possible is to differentiate the varying degree. For instance we can say very heinous robbery and less heinous robbery, but who can speak of good robbery and bad robbery? I cannot, therefore, at all conceive of any justification for such domination because by its very nature it is an act of iniquity”.                
            
        Shree Mahadev has proved that with all his learning and scholarship, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad is intensely practical. This rare combination of qualities is probably responsible for the position he occupies in what even the most uncharitable of critics must admit as our largest, most influential, non- communal oraganisation the doors of which are wide open to admit members of every religious, social and economic group. The reader should be thankful to Shree Mahadev for the exceedingly lucid way in which he has explained this great qualification of the President of the Indian National Congress.

In Shree Mahadev’s biography we are given an opportunity of entering into the Maulana’s inner sanctum. We get a picture of the man as he is, his religious beliefs, his outlook on the very interesting and important political problems of our motherland and his deep and abiding patriotism which has kept him in the service of our motherland in adversity and prosperity and, most of all, which has enabled him to meet with unflinching courage uncharitable criticism and even downright obloquy. One feels as one goes through the book that India need not despair so long as she has, as her children, men of the type of Maulana Abul Kalam Azad. The services he has already rendered to us and which we are certain he will continue to render so long as the breath of life is in him rightly entitle him to be called as he has actually been called be Shree Mahadev “The First Servant of the Nation”.      


Source: M.K. Gandhi (Pyarelal Papers), MSS, NMML  

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