HUMAN mind is so constituted that, in
spite of materialism, scepticism, cynicism and selfishness
that we find rampant in the world, it is willing to listen
to those who speak and preach the eternal verities of life.
War, famine, plague and pestilence ending in death, more
than anything else, force the question of the Great Unknown,
and of the Region Beyond, even on the most reckless, the
most selfish and the most callous of human souls. I have
always thought that the spiritual East has a great message
to the materialistic West. My grounds were not
only that the great Prophets, the founders of the great
religions of the world, were born in the East, but that time
and changed conditions of life and circumstances have not
taken away from Asia its spiritual supremacy over the
temporal domination of Europe. Whoever carries that
spiritual message of the East to the West is a great
benefactor of the human race, for there can be no real
progress for mankind if it is not laid on a spiritual basis.
Therefore, I was interested in Khwaja Kamal-ud-Dins
missionary work in England, and although I had the
benefit of his talk more than once, I was anxious to record
my conversation for the benefit of the readers of the
Rangoon Mail as well.
Meeting him at the lunch hour on
Thursday, I explained to him the object of my visit, but
said that the interview might be deferred till the lunch was
over. Seeing a sheet of paper in my hand in which I had
jotted down my interrogatories, he said with a smile, "That
is perhaps the volley you have prepared to make me target
of. I would digest it first before I digest my lunch."
However, we came to a compromise of lunching together first
and interviewing next.
Khwaja Kamal-ud-Din is a tall,
well-built man with a thick beard, dressed in the fashion of
his province, the Punjab, with a will and courage of his
own, and with an abiding faith in the success of the great
cause to which he has dedicated his life. Nevertheless,
there is the look of the tired man in him, tired not of
course of his mission, for death alone can sever it from
him, but tired owing to over-work and nervous exhaustion.
When I remarked that Nature exacts her penalty even on
Gods workers like him, he had a hearty laugh. Serious
as he is, he has related to me in a vein of humour several
incidents in his missionary work in England, and has laughed
with me. He said that he was particularly lucky in that he
has been treated with love wherever his work took him, and
opposition and misrepresentation, rancour and hatred shown
towards him in some places and on some occasions, said he,
had been only a passing phase. It is perhaps the old saying
that those who came to curse his work stayed there to
bless him. I began to catechise him thus:-
INTERVIEW
Q.
Khwaja Sahib, when I was in England 13 years ago, I
thought that Islam had made no impression in that country,
and had no converts, for the matter of that. How is it that
you were able to carry on a propaganda work since then, and
that you have made many converts?
A.
Before the movement in my hand came to existence, no
sustained effort was ever made in England for the
presentation of the Muslim faith to Western countries, and
if Islam could not hitherto make any good impression on
English mind, it was on account of lack of missionary
efforts on our part. On the other hand, much came in the
shape of libel and slander, with absolute misrepresentation,
from the adversaries of Islam to vilify it, but the present
experiment has shown that the Western mind, with all its
seeming strangeness to religion, is open to conviction, and
welcomes Islamic truths when brought home to it in some
suitable way.
Q.
Do you think that you have a good field for a work of
the kind you have so unselfishly undertaken?
A.
In 1917 and 1918 I studied the conditions obtaining in
England from quite different points of view, and what I saw
is this: that on one side, if Western mind has become
disgusted with the dogmatised religion in the Western
Church, it, on the other hand, finds no consolation in
tenets of dry materialism. Belief in God has become
revived, minds are hankering for a religion and faith
which, on one side, must be consistent with the demands of
rationality, and on the other, may give them some spiritual
food. The religion they look for must be free from
ceremonials, formalities, with no sacraments and
intermediaries; something which with its simplicity of
teaching may bring them face to face with God. New Churches
are cropping up in every nook and corner of the country.
They at present receive the inspiration mostly from America,
but if a person studies their doctrines thoroughly they
only preach different aspects of Islam in different accents
and stress. I may say that these various religious
movements such as Spirit moving under the same grove towards
Islam. I have addressed them from their respective platforms
on Islam, dealing with their respective tenets and
principles, and have found response favourable to Islam, so
much so that many conversions to Islam have emanated from
these various Churches.
Q.
What about your funds? How much have you spent on your
Mission till now?
A.
The Muslim Mission in my hand was first started on my own
responsibility, and I bore the financial burden to a
great extent myself; then help came from different
quarters, and I think more than 2 lakhs of Rupees (Rs.
200,000.00) has been spent till now on the various
activities of the Mission; but I cannot say that the Mission
is on a completely satisfactory basis financially. It exists
to some extent at the consideration of my Muslim
brethren.
Q.
I do not believe that your community has ever thought
of the possibility of a propagandist work for Islam in other
countries.
A.
My efforts and the success they have been crowned with, have
inspired people with the idea of sending such Mission to
other countries as well, but the present political cloud
which is frowning over Muslim countries has possibly damped
all enthusiasm and zeal; but I am sure if the Muslims will
give their best consideration to the question, they will
very soon realise that Islam has still a very large field
before ita very brilliant future on the missionary
lines. From what I have seen in Europe from various
angles of thought, I may say that the European point of
view is not Christian, but to greater extent Muslim. One
has simply to study the Western mind and know the way to
approach it, then it will be only a question of time to see
the desired result. At least my experience assures me of
it.
Q.
Do you think your community will realise the good of your
work and contribute towards your Mission as much as the
Christian communities have invested their millions on
Christian Missions?
A.
I think my community has realised it, though to a very
limited extent. Christian Missions, more or less, get their
support from those who see the realisation of their
political ends in the missionary work, and this explains the
flourishing condition of Christian missionary finance; but
very soon my community will have to appreciate that the
chief good of their community lies in this
direction.
Q.
I know you have numerous sects in Islam. Do you advocate
any particular sect in England?
A.
I am afraid that you are impressed by the absurd bickering
which comes out of pure ignorance of the adherents of the
so-called sects in Islam. Islam on its doctrinal side
does not admit of any sub-section and sub-division.
Difference of opinion in matters not cardinal should not be
mistaken for differences of doctrines. All the so-called
sects of Islam do converge on their fundamental
doctrines. The only difference in them is in things of
no importance from religious point of view. Islam allows
differences of opinion and respects personal judgement. This
salubrious permission in Islam has led to various schools of
thought. This was a happy sign of progress on the
religious plane, but unfortunately ignorance and
fanaticism sometimes convert this blessing of difference
in opinion, as the Prophet himself calls it, into something
very very undesirable.
My belief is that Islam is a
religion without sect, in the real signification of the word
"sect". I do not believe in preaching sectional
differences in propagation of Islam in non-Muslim countries.
They dont carry any weight in Islam. My preaching has
been, and will remain always, free from sectarian
principles. They have nothing to do with those fundamentals.
This I say from conviction which finds its translation in my
missionary activities. I may say I find no sects in
Islam.
Q.
Is the future for Islam very bright so far as its Mission
to the world is concerned?
A.
I think I have said enough in the replies to other questions
as to the brilliant prospects of Islam in the West. I may
say that if only a few co-workers are added to my Mission
and the area for free circulation of Islamic literature in
English among non-Muslim quarters is extended, the results
will be ten times more. My means, though independent,
dont cope with the demand. I have been giving 15
and 20 lectures a month in the year 1918, and most of them
from non-Muslim pulpits at their request, and this
caused me a nervous breakdown. Demand is still the same, but
where are the workers to satisfy it? The field, I say, is
ready for sickle, but where are men to collect the harvest?
I have come here to lay my case before my community. My
services have never been a burden on the Mission for
their remuneration, and will remain so. The Islamic
Review is my personal property, but its proceeds have
always been and will remain for the benefit of the
community.
Thus ended an interesting
interview. What impressed me most was the fact that the
Khwaja Sahib is being seriously handicapped in his work,
first by lack of funds, and secondly, by want of
fellow-workers. For a great and rich community like the
Muslim, it is not impossible to afford him relief in both
ways. Look at the sacrifice he has undertaken! Humanly
speaking, if he had continued his practice at the Bar, he
would have wealth and position in life in abundance. It is,
therefore, but right that his Muslim brethren should help
him most generously in his work in the West for the
propagation of Islam. To one who, like me, belongs to the
school of Protestant Hinduism, his presentation of Islam on
a Broad-Church basisalthough I know he will repudiate
in his eloquent language that Islam has neither several
Churches nor several sects, as there is only one Church
according to the Quranis very appealing. I
wondered before I took leave of him after the close of the
interview whether the Khwaja Sahib has not half converted me
to the Islamic faith. |