222 48 83MB
English Pages 280 [253] Year 1999
is a must for every Muslim. The life of Khan can change and will challenge many readers in the Middle East.*'
“This book
Mubarak
E.
Awad, Director
Palestinian Center for the Study of Nonviolence
Jerusalem
“The work of Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan and the powerful
Muslim nonviolent movement of the Pathans bring new possibilities and great hope to people everywhere. I urge .
.
.
everyone to learn more about this nearly forgotten history."
Gene
Sharp, Director
Program on Nonviolent Sanctions Harvard University It
was
utterly improbable.
pated that such a
No one
could have
phenomenon— a Muslim
St..
antici-
Francis—
would emerge from the seething Pathan badlands. Khan’s backward tribesmen* stirred the whole of India when, at the height of Gandhi’s greatest campaign, they put
down
their
handmade
rifles
and faced, with-
out retreating or retaliating, the worst that the armies of a baffled, panicking empire could deal out.
Even Gandhi was amazed. "That such men,” he wrote, "who would have killed a human being with no more thought than they would have for killing a sheep or a hen, should at the bidding of one man have laid down their arms and accepted nonviolence as the superior weapon sounds almost like a fairy tale.” Gandhi, a truth-loving man, was never nearer the truth. Like many such tales, the story of Badshah
Khan
has hidden within
truth, of
much
which our
in need.
It is
—From
$ 7.95
it
the seeds of a
much
deeper
explosive, tottering world stands
time the
tale
was
told.
the Prologue
ISBN 0 - 915132 - 34-6
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DONATED BY NANCY CLARKE
The North-West Frontier Province Before the Partition of British India
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Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2017 with funding from
China-America
Digital
Academic
Library
(CADAL)
https://archive.org/details/mantomatchhismouOOeasw
Ekna
n
i
Easwaran
grew up
in
India
when Abdul Ghaffar Khan’s
at
zenith. Meetings with both
its
Gandhi's
influence was
men, together
with a devoted observation of their
lives,
con-
vinced him that Khan perfectly embodies the transformation behind what
Gandhi
callerl
“the
nonviolence of the brave.”
Easwaran followed a busy career
and professor of English
speaker,
India before
coming
to
as a writer,
literature in
the United States on
the Eulbright exchange program. In 1960 he
founded the Blue Mountain Genter of Meditation in Berkeley, Galifornia.
regularly
He
lectures
on Gandhi, meditation, and the
spiritual traditions of
Besides
A Man
to
the world’s great religions.
Match His Mountains,
Easwaran has written Gandhi the Man, Meditation, u'ith
Formulas
for Transformation,
Dialogue
Death, Love Never Faileth, The Supreme
Ambition, and The Bhagavad Gita for Daily Living,
and compiled God Makes the Rivers
to Flow. Articles
The
his weekly talks
on medi-
Lamp, the quarterly the Blue Mountain Genter of
tation appear in
journal of
from
Meditation.
Little
Badshah Khan^ Nonviolent Soldier of Islam
0
/
have one great
I
want
to rescue these gentle, brave, patriotic people
foreigners I
want
desire.
who have
to create for
them
disgraced
from the tyranny of the
and dishonored them.
a world of freedom, where they can live in peace,
where they can laugh and be happy. I
want
to kiss the
ground where
their ruined
homes once
stood, before they
were destroyed by savage strangers. I
want
to take a
broom and sweep the
clean their houses with I
I
want
to
wash away the
my own
stains
alleys
and
the lanes,
and
I
want
to
hands.
of blood from their garments.
want to show the world how beautiful they are, these people from the hills and then I want to proclaim: ''Show me, if you can, any gentler, more courteous,
more cultured people than
these.”
A Man to Match
His Mountains Badshah Khan, Nonviolent Soldier of Islam
By Eknath Easwaian With an Afterword by Timothy Flinders
NILGIRI PRESS
YSy. 0 3
£ oj
Copyright 1984 by the Blue Mountain Center of Meditation All rights reserved. Printed in the
United States of America
Designed, printed, and bound by Nilgiri Press First printing
November, 1984
Random House,
Distributed to the regular book trade by
ISBN:
We
cloth
0-9151 32-33-8; paper 0-9151 32-34-6
are grateful to the
the National Gandhi
London,
The
Nehru Memorial
Museum, New for
Inc.
Library,
New
Delhi, and the National
Delhi,
Army Museum,
supplying photographs used in this book.
Blue Mountain Center of Meditation, founded in
Eknath Easwaran, publishes books life in the home and the community.
Berkeley, California, in 1960 by
on how
to lead the spiritual
For information, please write to Nilgiri Press,
Box 477, Petaluma, California 94953.
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Easwaran, Eknath.
A man
to
Bibliography:
match
his
mountains.
p.
Includes index.
Khan, Abdul Ghaffar, 18912. Politicians — Pakistan — Biography. 3. Pushtuns — Biography. I. Title. 954.03'5'0924 [B] DS48LK42E27 84-20728 1984 ISBN 0-915132-33-8 ISBN 0-915132-34-6 (pbk.) 1.
.
7
1
Table of Contents
Preface
9
^
Prologue: August 14, 1947
PART ONE
1
The
2
Ghildren of the Prophet
3
The
4
PART TWO
PART THREE
25
Jubilee
Vale of 1 irah
Phe Guides
35
45
55
63
5
Islam!
6
Badshah Khan
7
O
8
The Pathan Mystique
9
The
77
87
Pathans!
Servants of
95
God
103
10
The Weapon
of the Prophet
11
7’he Frontier
Gandhi
12
Men
13
Phe Pwo Gandhis
14
Phe Pire of Freedom
of the
Book
131
141 1
5
165
Fpilogue: August 15, 1947
PA R
I'
PC)
UR
by Timothy Flinders Afterword: The
Map
of Pathan
Good
Fight
Homelands
Sources and Historical Notes Glossary
2
Ghronology Bibliography
Index
233
1
219 229
193
200 201
The
quotations at the head of each chapter are from
Abdul Ghaffar Khan. Certain passages which appear in this sloped type have
been dramatized to bring out the cultural or historical significance of an event. Sources for these incidents are cited in the Sources
and
Historical Notes, p. 201.
Preface
i
Two
MOTiVHS HAVK prompted me
Khan, d'he
first is
to write this
book on Badshah
personal: a matter of affection, gratitude, and, in a
certain sense, atonement.
The second motive
is
more urgent and con-
cerns the present. Ixt
me
begin
Ouring the
w-ith the first.
early years of the
Second World War,
student at the University of Nagpur. Lying as graphical center of India,
Nagpur is
from every direction: from Madras
it
I
was a graduate
does near the geo-
a major junction for trains in the south,
Bombay
coming
in the west,
Calcutta in the east, and Delhi in the north.
But the a
real
center of India at the time was Se\'agram ashram, near
town called Wardha about ninety miles
where Mahatma Gandhi
to the
south of Nagpur,
The
lived with his closest followers.
leaders
movement visited often to seek guidance, and the Working Committee of the Indian National Congress party met
of India’s independence
there regularly. I
larly
he
result
was that the whole constellation of
passed through
weekends
I
used
to
my
city of
Nagpur on
India’s leaders regu-
their w^ay to
go down to the railway station
Wardha.
On
to see India’s politi-
cal leaders. I
saw^
them
all:
Jawaharlal
Nehru, who became our
minister; Sardar Patel, later our
trusted lieutenant;
first
Maulana Azad, the
home great
first
prime
minister and Gandhi’s
Muslim
leader.
I
remem-
ber the austere Acharya Kripalani eating a bagful of potato chips.
saw Mrs. Sarojini Naidu,
a talented poet
and dedicated
patriot; C. \
I
.
Rajagopalachari, a brilliant lawyer and statesman; Rajcndra Prasad,
^
who became India’s first president— and, on one special occasion, Khan Abdul GhafFar Khan. was especially pleased to see Khan because he had become a real favorite of mine. Stepping down from the third-class carriage, this maI
jestic
Pathan from the North-West Frontier looked something of a
many
giant to me. His
foot-three-inch frame stately grace. Yet
There was
still
had taken their
him
that
made me want
to
six-
with a
it
he was so reserved, so unassuming— even
childlike.
down with
sit
a quiet chat.
did not have the nerve to approach
young and
but his
toll,
looked powerful and he carried
a simplicity about
him and have I
years in prison
reticent myself.
him on
that occasion.
I
was
But that brief encounter confirmed every-
knew of him: that of all the brilliant leaders around Gandhi, Badshah Khan was the one who best understood Gandhi’s meaning and true stature, and the only one who completely practiced Gandhi’s teachings. Formerly a wealthy landowner, Khan had handed his holdthing
I
ings over to his sons
and dedicated
own impoverished
his
carrying only a small religious renunciate,
his life to the service of
God and
homespun bag with him, he looked more like a people. Clothed in simple
cotton, fakir, a
than the renowned leader of one hundred thou-
sand Pathans. Shortly after
I
saw him, Khan showed
his true mettle.
It
was a
period of great anxiety for Indians because the Japanese had ad-
vanced
to
within a thousand miles of our eastern border, seemingly
poised to attack.
The Congress Working Committee met
and, in their
first
open opposition
be prepared
to
He
to
Wardha
Gandhi, declared that India must
defend herself militarily. But Khan would not go along.
resigned immediately, explaining that his nonviolence was not a
policy, to
be used when expedient, but an
Gandhi, nonviolence had become
for
at
a
article of faith.
way of
life.
For him, as
Later,
when
Working Committee recanted, Khan and Gandhi rejoined their I
own
it
the
— on
terms.
confess that at the time,
it
bothered
me
a great deal that
among
who were so eager to follow Gandhi into the independence struggle, only Khan was willing to follow his lead in other matters. Perhaps that is why he came to occupy such a large part of my all
10
those leaders
1
He had
affection.
Gandhi
joined
in
1919,
without conditions; and
since that time nothing had ever changed his resolve to stick by Gan-
dhi and put his teachings into practice. leaders,
but most of them did not understand the spiritual basis of
Gandhi s work — and honestly admitted he
lived
power.
That
is
it.
Khan
How
had been trying
I
had such
me
what drew
to
to
understand the source of Gan-
man become
a small
those disciplines myself at the time, but
Gandhi drew took
me
his
time
to
Not
that
was trying
I
power from. That was
a long, long
such a powerhouse?
Khan; he was obviously following Gandhi’s
spiritual disciplines as well as his politics.
It
not only understood,
it.
For some time, dhi’s
admired the other Indian
1
my main
was following
I
to find out
where
question.
understand that the answer
lay in
Gandhi’s renunciation of every self-centered impulse in his personality— as he put
cept to
made
little
it,
in his
to say,
God. This gave me a
zero.”
For years the con-
But Khan’s words were simpler: what drew him
sense.
Gandhi, he used
“reducing himself to
clue.
was Gandhi’s
ability to
submit his
will to
Khan’s heroic, decades-long efforts to forget
himself in the service of his people were a vivid illustration of how the deepest
so
resources can be released in anyone with the
and courage
pline It
human
to dig for
them.
has been a cause of deep regret for
little for
this heroic
freedom
movement were suppressed
me
that India was able to
do
Badshah Khan and
his
fighter later on.
in Pakistan in the tense years following in-
dependence, and because of his former association with tionalist
movement,
hope that
My
this
it
was impossible
book might
second reason
in
some
and
for India to
small
way atone
is
life
I
for that neglect. is
that
I
way
during the
F.iist
the greatest living exponent of
the world. As a devout Muslim, his
last
nom iolence
in
shows a face of Islam which
non-Islamic countries seldom see. Muslims themselves little
to his aid.
particularly Islamic countries, a
out of the violence that has convulsed the Middle
few decades. Khan
come
India’s na-
book on Badshah Khan
for writing a
believe he offers the world,
disci-
of the potential for nonviolent action inherent in
seem to know the wisdom of
Islam.
Khan’s example proves that within the scope of Islam exists a noble Preface «
1
alternative to violence.
The North-West
Khan carried out most of his life’s
work,
is
Frontier Province, where
ninety-five percent
Muslim.
His nonviolent army of Khudai Khidmatgars, the Servants of God,
was entirely Muslim.
He
based his movement upon the ancient
Islamic principles of universal brotherhood, submission to God’s will,
and the service of “It is
my
God
through
'‘the service
inmost conviction,” he selfless service, faith,
the spiritual laws that underlie
It
their
love.
all life,
implies a profound belief in the
form
said, “that Islam
and
nature — in particular, in mankind’s
of His creatures.”
Yakeen,
and
It
amal, yakeen,
faith,
is
a belief in
in the nobility of
ability to
respond to
power of muhabat,
human affairs, as Gandhi and Khan both lives. And muhabat is not the sentimental
trayed in films.
is
carries a spiritual content
human
spiritual laws. love, to trans-
demonstrated with notion of love por-
and force which, when
practised systematically, can root out exploitation
and transmute
anger into love in action.
Khan based
his life
and
his
work on
this
deep
principle, raising
army of one hundred thousand Muslims who embodied
it.
His “army
of God” played a leading role in ending imperialist rule in India. his
example better known, the Western world,
caught in the web of violence to
Were
Muslims
over the Middle East, might
come
recognize that the highest religious values of Islam are deeply com-
patible with a conflicts.
12
all
as well as
an
nonviolence that has the power to resolve great
To the people of the United whose
vigor, courage,
States
and idealism
joined to nonviolence
can reshape the course of history
rhe two Gandhis {Kami Gandhi)
Prologue [AUGUS'r
Smiling
in spi
i
e
of
14
,
1947]
the stifling heat, Louis P>ancis Albert Victor
Nicholas Mountbatten, great-grandson of Queen Victoria and viceroy of the Indian Empire, sat on a raised dais overlooking the crowded
Karachi assembly six
hall.
He
did not wish to rush matters. For the past
months he had had too
last viceroy,
time to do anything
little
he had been granted the
full
head of state by the Attlee government
New
in
else.
As
India's
plenipotentiary powers of a
London, and had arrived
in
Delhi with fourteen months to disengage the British Raj from
India.
He had
already
managed
it
in less
than
six.
Now, with independence only hours away, Mountbatten would
pro-
claim to the packed hall of the Pakistani assembly His Majesty King
George
mined
Vi's
good wishes
to give the
for
the fledgling republic.
moment its proper polish.
unhurried calm, Mountbatten was
still
He seemed
deter-
Yet despite his apparently
walking a tightwire.
He was
presiding over the tormented birth of not one country but two: Pakistan had
been carved away from the
rest of India in
the two separate
corners of the subcontinent where Muslims predominated over
Hindus. It
had been three and
a half centuries, almost to the year, since the
came to India; it had been two centuries since they established military control. PYom the beginning the Indian people had chafed British
with increasing bitterness under the British yoke, and the parts of the
country that had been longest under colonial rule had histories of rebellion
and
reprisal.
Then,
in the last thirty years,
Mahatma Gan-
dhi had captured the Indian imagination with an unprecedented challenge: to
make the
British ‘quit India,”
[
15
]
and
to see
them depart
as
friends.
It
was the only nonviolent overthrow of an imperial power in
recorded history, and
success had focused the attention of the
its
world on this day. Tall,
turbaned Punjabis
assembly milled with the
in the colorful
khans and chieftains of the wild
tribes of the south. Baluchis, Sindis,
and Pathans checkered the room. In the
were almost
hall
all
the
prominent Muslim leaders — Liaquat Ali Khan, Khwaja Nazimuddin,
Mohammed
Iskander Mirza, and, at the viceroys side,
soon
become
to
governor-general of the worlds
Abdul Ghaffar Khan had
electrified Indians
by raising an army of one
and
baffled the British
hundred thousand nonviolent violent peoples, the Pathans.
Province revered
him
soldiers out of
The
as a saint
fullness of
he, of
all
one of the worlds most
villagers of his
known
Gandhis
followers, best
it
must have seemed
ironic that the
done more than any other Pakistani Muslim struggle should
be absent
at
stances, however, the viceroy
its
man who had freedom
consummation. Under the circum-
would not have been surprised. Khan, to create a separate
state.
Mountbatten nodded tering
mirrored the
to fuel the
Muslim, had opposed partitioning India
a devout
as the Frontier
Gandhis way.
To Mountbatten,
Muslim
North-West Frontier
and called him Badshah Khan, the
“king of khans.” Throughout India he was
Gandhi because
Islamic republic.
absent.
Muslim was
Yet one prominent
first
Ali Jinnah,
crowd
stilled
to
to the stately listen
to
The
Jinnah and stood up.
chat-
the king-emperor’s message of
goodwill.
Only hours on
its
way
to
Mountbatten was aboard
later
New
his Royal Air Force York
Delhi. There, at midnight, the ceremony of inde-
pendence would be repeated. Across the night of a that
conch
shell
had roused
air
the low, thin wail
proclaimed the birth of the Indian Republic. India’s millions to revolution
roar over the city:
Mahatma Gandhi
and freedom
ki jail Victor}' to
The
cry
built to a
Mahatma
Gandhil Yet
Gandhi was
ceremony — India’s
16
five
hundred miles away. Declining
partition
to attend the
had been too high a price
to
pay
for
7
freedom — he had spent the eve of independenee
in
prayer and
fasting.
And
while Gandhi fasted in Calcutta, the “PVontier Gandhi" was
home village in Pakistan. Palms Badshah Khan turned toward Mecca and
finishing his evening prayers near his to the pale sky,
lifted
chanted verses from the sacred Koran,
uncounted millions had
as
chanted them before him. Pheir deep, slow music stirred the Bismillah ir-Rahman ir-Rahim
most merciful.
passionate,
Khan
raised himself
.
.
.
“In the
.
name
of
air:
God, most com-
." .
.
from the small prayer carpet. Ix)oking out
across the sprawling Peshawar valley to the scarred hills
and ridges of
the Khyber, he scarcely heard the tumult of celebration building in his village. lot
Freedom
for
him would be measured by how
quickly the
of the desperately backward Pathans in hundreds of villages spot-
and low
ting the valleys
most Pathans in their
still
would improve. Ignorant and provincial,
lived in poverty
rivals, families,
homelands against the
were awash
Badal, revenge, ran deep
fear.
and clans — and
British invaders.
Pathan
in
life,
defending
and
history,
in blood.
lo have to carry destruction,
of
and
blood and almost daily stained the social netting with vio-
lence between brothers, their
hills
some hundreds
of families
homes
if
not destitution, into the
is
the great drawback of border
warfare, but with savage tribes, to
whom
there
is
no
right but
might, the only course open as regards humanity as well as policy, If
as
is
to
make
all suffer.
objection be taken to the nature of punishment inflicted
repugnant to
ci\’iliziition,
be met and checked by their houses
the answer
is
that savages cannot
and that to spare leave them unpunished
civilized warfare,
and crops would be
and therefore, unrestrained. In
to
short, ci\ ilized warfare
is
inapplicable. Sir Neville
force
Chamberlain was commander of the Punjab Frontier
when he
sent this dispatch to lx)ndon during a puniti\’e
Prologue
cam-
«
1
paign against the Pathans in 1859.
most British held ever Pathan was a
distill
the attitude that
than civilized, subhuman, the
since. Less
“savage,” a “brute,” “cruel as a leopard,” a “treacherous
Khans people commanded the
murderer.”
— of the
The words
British
Empire
mountains around the
attention
— and
because they happened
solely
strategic
Khyber
the wrath
to inhabit the
The Khyber was
Pass.
gateway to India, the greatest source of wealth in the Empire. British
whom
were determined
to hold
it
at
the
The
any cost— and the Pathans,
independence was everything and warfare
a
way of
life,
for
were
equally determined to win their freedom.
The Pathans had
the bone-chilling January morning in 1842 vivor of the forty-five-hundred-man Jalalabad.
The
when
the sole English sur-
“Army of the Indus” rode
into Eort
eighty-odd years of guerrilla warfare that followed
hardened these
feelings into
an
article of faith.
of expeditions into the Pathans’
burned (and
and hatred ever since
carried the stamp of fear
bombed)
later
hills,
The
British sent scores
shelled their strongholds,
their villages, beat, flogged,
and
jailed
Pathans by the thousands. In between, in times that passed peaceful, they tried to bribe for long.
British
Empire never
tenure,
it
would be
town or
the lurking
sudden,
village
menace
silent
into submission.
The Pathan homeland remained
worked
tier
them
be
to
fully subjugated.
safe to say,
— or
no Englishman
for
But nothing
the only part of the
Throughout the
Raj’s
slept a night in a Eron-
even within an army cantonment— without
of a bullet crashing from a distant lookout or the
descent of a razor-sharp dagger.
The British counted on only one certitude on the Erontier:
that the
peace would break, and that British columns would once again have to file into the desolate hills.
the earth’s
five
it
No amount will
Grim.”
would not be the Pathans’ sharpshooting or cunning or
violent heroics that
and
would
finally drive
18
the British from the Erontier.
of sniping or suicidal assaults could match the
the Empire had at
its
command. Only
a reversal of the rules themselves, will
British soldiers stationed across
continents, the North-West Erontier Province was
called, simply, “the
But
Among
and send the
British
home.
could
weaponry
a historical mutation,
finally
thwart the imperial
It
was
— and
Gandhi
left to
to
Khan
to supply the innovation
— nonviolent
warfare
to provide the surprise. History played a great trick
upon the empire
when
builders of the Raj
it
brought forth from the
man who combined Pathan fire with the temdove. It was utterly improbable. No one could have
heart of “the Grim" a
pering
spirit
of a
phenomenon — a Muslim
anticipated that such a
St.
emerge from the seething Pathan badlands. That
Francis — would did,
it
and that
it
burst into a broad and mighty force, stands as one of history’s most
extraordinary— and most neglected — moments.
^
Khan’s backward tribesmen turned the tables on the British. These
same maligned Pathans they put
down
whole Indian subcontinent when
stirred the
and handmade
their daggers
rifles
and faced, without
armies of a baffled, panicking empire could
retaliating, the worst the
deal out. It
was severe in the extreme. In 1930,
nonviolence movement, a British report
at
the height of the Indian
less
polished than Sir Neville
Ghamberlain’s but more candid would conclude: “The brutes must be ruled brutally and by
brutes.’’
In British eyes, Khan’s nonviolence was
A
nothing more than a camouflage. tor;
they had seen too
many nameless one thing:
many
of the Empire’s finest cut
a bitter nuisance, perhaps,
a fraud that
but consistent at
A nonviolent
army found themselves the
world, leaving
government
with the
and easygoing opponents
The
thirties
in India
and
his non-
oflF
hand
to
On oc-
from the eyes of the crush the movement
impression that the British were is
fair
based largely upon the ignorance
which the treatment of Khan and
Throughout the
Khan and
target of savage repression.
forces a free
whatever way they could.
his people has
early forties,
been shrouded.
Pathans had to endure mass
shootings, torture, the destruction of their fields ging,
least
Pathan was unthinkable,
struggle, therefore,
casion the entire province was even sealed
in
too
masked something cunning and darkly treacherous.
During the Indian freedom
in
down on
crags to think otherwise. Gandhi’s nonviolence was
image of the peaceable Hindu.
violent
nonviolent Pathan was an impos-
and humiliations. Khan himself spent
and homes,
jail,
flog-
fifteen years in British
prisons, often in solitary confinement: in effect, in
every day that he was free. But the Pathans remained
jail
one day
for
nom iolent and Prologue
«
19
unmoved — suffering and dying
stood
in large
numbers
win
to
their
freedom.
Even
Indians, themselves engaged in the
were astonished. Jawaharlal Nehru, it
brother,
who
avenged the
valued
India’s first
man who loved
incredible that “the
life
same nonviolent
his
gun
prime minister, found
better than his child or
cheaply and cared nothing for death,
slightest insult
who
with the thrust of a dagger, had suddenly
become
the bravest and most enduring of India’s
history’s
more improbable turnabouts,
it
was
soldiers.” In
one of
Khan’s ragged
left to
tribesmen to explode the myth that nonviolence works only
who
struggle,
for
those
are already peaceful.
Gandhi had long claimed
that nonviolence was
more
truly the
province of the daring and the undaunted: and surely no people on the face of the earth was more daring or dauntless than the Pathans.
Even the average tribesman
prefers death to dishonor.
Gandhi would have predicted
that the evidence to back
But not even
up
his claims
would come from these swaggering sharpshooters. He knew the odds against such a miracle: killed a
human
“That such men,” he
said,
“who would have
being with no more thought than they would
sheep or a hen should
at
the bidding of one
man
have
laid
down
kill
a
their
arms and accepted nonviolence as the superior weapon sounds almost like a fairy tale.”
Gandhi, such
tales,
a truth-loving
man, was never nearer the
the story of Abdul Ghaffar
Khan
truth. Like
has hidden within
many it
the
seeds of a deeper truth, of which our explosive, tottering world stands
much
20
in need.
It is
time the
tale
was
told.
m
/
(
t
t
«
i
Part
* V*
i
One
ft
The Khyber
Pass, 1895.
%
Previous pages: British army in Kabul, 1879
{Both photos National
Army Museum, London)
CHAPTER ONE
The
Jubilee
[JUNE, 1897]
O Pathausl Your house has fallen into ruin. Arise and rebuild
it
— and
remember
to
what
race you belong.
AFTER ELEVEN oclock on the moming of June 22, 1897, Queen Victoria touched her fingers to the brass transmitting key in )us
i
the telegraph
message
room
Buckingham Palace and
at
started to click out a
to the 372 million subjects of the British
morning of her Diamond
“PTom my heart
1
thank
Within minutes the offices
westward
to
my
— sixty
people," the
years
was the
British throne.
Queen-Empress tapped with
of British possessions
Ireland,
on the
It
“May God bless them." Queens message was humming toward
a trace of nervousness.
telegraph
Jubilee
Empire.
the
throughout the Empire:
Canada, and Newfoundland, Irinidad and
Tobago, the Virgin Islands, Barbados, the Bahamas, the Ix^eward and
Windward
Islands, Ascension,
and the Ealklands; eastward
Bermuda,
to Gibraltar
British
Guiana, Honduras,
and Malta
in the Mediterra-
nean; then on to Nigeria, F^gypt, Gambia, the Gold Coast, Rhodesia,
Cape Province, Somaliland, Uganda, and Zanzibar, to Aden on the Red Sea, to Mauritius and the Seychelles in the Indian Ocean, and then to India, Ceylon, Burma, Malaysia, Hong Kong, and Singapore; from there
to Australia,
dozen other sorrie
North Borneo, Papua,
form of British rule — as
suzerainties, island fortresses,
Union
Jack
South
island groups in the
Eiji,
Pacific. All
Pitcairn,
and two
these were under
nation-states, colonies, protectorates,
and
isolated coaling stations
and governed by white military
— flying the
officers or civil servants
speaking crisp Queen’s Eaiglish.
Her message
finished, Victoria, dressed in black, stepped into
open landau drawn by
an
eight cream-colored horses. Joined by a proces-
[
25
]
sion of fifty
thousand troops from every corner of the Empire, she
made her way through the Lx)ndon '
s
streets to St. Paul’s
Cathedral
for
a thanksgiving service. Victoria
— and
all
England— had much
to
be thankful
for.
The
world had never before seen anything to match the power, the scope, the pure dazzle of the British Empire. Elung across every continent
and ocean of the world, earth’s land mass.
The
tion of the earth was It
possessions covered one fourth of the
well-being of one quarter of the entire populaits
was a stupendous,
tain’s
its
sworn
if
responsibility.
sprawling, success.
hundred thousand passengers and crew
imaginable port, rock
fortress,
reason: Bri-
moment her ships were carry-
navies ruled the seas. At any given
ing four
One good to
and from every
steaming island settlement, or up-
country trading post in Europe, Asia, Africa, America, and the South Seas. Eor every
thousand tons of shipping that passed through the
Suez Canal during the year of the
Jubilee, seven
hundred came on
British ships.
England
itself
cabinet, elected
was securely in conservative hands. Lord Salisbury’s
two years
earlier,
included two marquesses, two
dukes, an earl, a viscount, three barons, and three baronets: a govern-
ment whose
aristocratic credentials
made
it
the perfect mirror for the
'Tew imperialism” which spread over England that smiling summer. The Jubilee morning marked the zenith of the Empire. Eor those
burst of
who
attended, the Jubilee
favored
among
until yesterday
itself
was proof enough that England was
the nations of the world.
upon the embodiment
“The sun never looked down
of so
much
energy and power,”
one paper crowed. Another commentator estimated that the Jubilee would be “the
costliest event in
the world’s history.”
The premiers of eleven colonies rode
in
parade with Victoria, as did
twenty-three princesses, a grand duke, forty Indian maharajas, and a
crown to
prince.
form the
The
fifty
thousand troops who marched were thought
“largest military force ever
lookers caught the
sweep of the Empire
of the regiments: Canadian Hussars,
assembled in London.” Onjust
New
from reading the names
South Wales Lancers,
Trinidad Light Horse, the Zaptichs of Cyprus, the Jamaica Artillery, 26
the Bengal Lancers, the Bikaner camel troops, the Royal Nigerian Constabulary.
The
.
.
shimmering skies— ‘Queen’s weather’— remained
clear,
IVoops
until sunset.
snapped
.
drums
filed past,
in the breeze.
And
at
beat, a thousand
bright
Union
Jacks
the end of the procession, while
millions cheered, Victoria passed, alternately weeping and waving.
“No one ever, the
Queen
I
believe, has
met with such an ovation
as
was given me,”
wrote in her journal after returning to the palace.
was probably
And
she
right. ^
Caught up difficult for
in the
heady
brilliance of the day,
it
w(5uld have
been
any Englishman not to believe that Great Britain was
destined — indeed, called— to rule. In a thousand dark corners of the earth, the rule of law would prevail while ignorant savages were
enlightened and their burdens eased — all through the power and
good
offices of
the British Empire.
A
former
civil
servant in India told
the House of Commons that there was “a cherished conviction shared
by every Englishman in India, from the highest to the lowest, by the planter’s assistant in his lonely light of his
bungalow and by the editor
presidency town, from the Chief Commissioner in charge
of an important province to the Viceroy tion in every to
man
upon his throne — the convic-
that he belongs to a race
which
God
has destined
govern and to subdue.”
And who it
in the full
could argue with the notion?
would have been
disagree.
difficult
for
There had been nothing
Pax Britannica reigned.
to a
green held in the northwest
younger
tip
this halcyon
June day,
even the sourest anglophobe like this since
The Empire was
In one of the remoter corners of the
On
to
the days of Rome.
secure.
Empire
that June
morning— next
of British India — one of Victorias
subjects, the seven-year-old
Abdul Ghaffar Khan, was work-
ing mightily to stop a log floating in the shallows of the river Swat.
The
Behind the
boy,
sun was
bright, the air over the valley morning-cool.
the fields of his fathers farm stretched wide and green toward the ridges of the
Ghaffar
Khyber
Khan had
Pass.
probably never heard of Victoria. Here on the
North-West Frontier the British
political
agent was king, and a remote
The
Jubilee « 27
woman monarch on a
throne thousands of miles away eould not have
meant a great deal even mattered
to the
to
an edueated Pathan. At the moment, what
boy was a log eurling away from the bank into the
current.
The word fell faintly over the river, like a ehime struck far away. The boy swirled his stiek closer to the log. ''Ghaffar!" It hovered again, then vanished. The boy kept swirling. It was not unusual for Ghaffar Khan to have to be called more than onee. He was an intense boy who easily lost himself in the green world of his fathers farm— in the fields of cane and cotton, the orchards of '"Ghaffar!"
plum, peach, orange, and persimmon — and the
slow, dark waters
of
the river Swat.
He
Ghaffar was the youngest ehild in the family of Behram Khan.
had two
sisters
and an
elder brother, five years his senior,
who was
at-
tending the Edwardes Memorial Mission High Sehool in Peshawar, the provineial capital. Ghaffar did not get to see it
him mueh. But now
was June and sehool was out, so he and his brother had been spend-
ing long, languid hours along the
river,
When he
tiny island in the middle.
occasionally rafting over to the
was alone, as now, he would often
He especially liked the and eraftsmen — uneommon for a khans son —
walk into the village where his friends lived.
sons of the laborers
and two of his
best friends were bhangis, sweepers.
This fragrant morning seemed with a
stiek,
made
churning the
river water
so he had left the farmhouse early and settled
down near
for
the shallows, where the ducks and wild swans fed. log,
Then he saw
the
too tantalizing a treasure to pass up.
“GhaflPar!”
This time the eall craeked the air like a ride shot and the
boy snapped around.
It
was his father
calling.
He
j'umped onto the
thread of path that skirted the river and sprinted toward the farm-
house through a cane row.
Behram Khan was standing near
the oak gate, a basket of unleav-
ened nan— flatbread— balanced on his head. ''Ghaffar!'' he boomed when he saw the boy. "Let's go. I need your help." Some travelers had spent the night in their guest house and needed to be fed.
Behram Khan came from 28
a line of
Pathan farmers who had settled
in
the rich Peshawar Valley
many decades
had given up the
before, d’hey
“independence'' of the theoretically free but generally poor tribes of the
hills to
prosper in a “settled" area — under the yoke of British rule.
Vor strategic reasons the British had divided the Frontier into three
geographic groups: the Agencies in the north, the so-called settled districts
between the Indus River and the
and the “free" areas
hills,
along the western border where the Pathans were
themselves under Pakhtunwali, “the d’hat Jubilee
summer
Law
were the
Khyhcr
who
and subgroups!
Among
larger
who were paid by the British to “guard" the their own marauding), and the Mohmands and
lived in the
mountainous provinces north of Pesha-
South of the Khyber, next
war.
of the Pathans."
Afridis,
Pass (from
Yusufzins,
govern
perhaps two million Pathans lived on the
Frontier, di\ ided into dozens of tribes tribes
to
left
to the Afridis, lived the Orakzais. Fur-
ther south were the Waziris and Mahsuds, perhaps the fiercest and
most
volatile of
The I
he
Raj “subsidized" these tribes, paying
British generally left
which was tier,
the Pathan tribes.
often.
tribes.
to
keep the peace.
alone, unless they caused trouble
During the four decades of
the British had sent
punish rebellious
them
them
their rule
—
on the Fron-
expeditions into the “free" territories to
fifty
The
policy never really worked
— but
was
it
better than all-out war.
Bchram Khan's
tribe,
the
Mohammedzais, was
smaller than most
Pathan tribes and was generally prosperous and peaceful. Behram
Khan himself was
wealthy.
He owned
beyond the big farmhouse and along the
all
the
fields that
river Swat.
was the khan — the chief- of Utmanz^i, a
stretched
Furthermore, he
about twenty miles
village
north of Peshawar. Utmanziii was a prosperous
village,
houses made of thick timbers and cal center of
with wide lanes and two-storied
clay.
It
lay
almost
the North-West Frontier Pro\ ince,
at
the geographi-
midway between the
Chinese border on the north and the barren southern deserts of Baluchistan bordering Iran. North of the \illagc were the
moun-
tainous regions of Swat, Dir, Buncr, and Bajaur, thickly forested and laced with tumbling rivers.
w ide
river
Around Peshawar the
hills
bottoms of the Peshawar and Kurram
ga\e way to the
valleys.
l
F’^ist
he Jubilee
of lU«
29
manzai was the broad Indus River and beyond GhaflFar '
^
Khan and
his father
it,
young
India. If the
had stopped and looked west
as they
walked toward their guest house that June morning, they would have seen the tanned, bare
and
central Asia
Travelers
hills
of the
Khyber
Pass, the
gateway between
British India.
from any of these areas might have been found staying
in
Behram Khan’s guest house. Most likely, however, they would be from the North, since Utmanzai lay along one of the main roads between
Peshawar and the northern highlands. Wherever they were from, whatever their intent, the Pathan social code of melmastia, hospitality,
dictated that they be treated as
and lodging. Every Pathan for this
own,
honored
village has at least
purpose. Wealthier Pathans like
for a large,
men
village,
and
sip
of the village to share their hospitality.
on
far into
strong tea and companionship, the
and
together, or simply tease
back on his pillow and
who had gone
tell
bluster.
to the gallows for
his station in
Pathan.
smoke from
a
It
was in the
common
water
And God
life,
men would
tell stories,
sing songs
Sometimes Behram Khan would
Pathan honor.
stirs a
No
Pathan more deeply.
honor has long been the true
help the British, the
Pathan clans— Afridi,
men would
matter
calling of a
agree,
if all
the
Mohmand, Yusufzai, Mahsud, Waziri, Moham-
medzai, Orakzai — ever
set aside their differences
tion to drive the foreign unbelievers firelight, a trace
the night. Exhilarated by the
about his grandfather, Abaidullah Khan,
Honor! Probably no word
what
built their
hot green qahwa tea from a hissing samovar. These even-
ing get-togethers could go
lie
Behram Khan
and khans commonly competed
hujras that villagers gathered to chat, pipe,
one guest house or hujra
comfortable hujra— with good food, amply given — is
the key to status in a Pathan to attract the
guests, entitled to food
from
and rose
as
one
na-
their homelands. In the
of bloodlust would steal across the dark, gleaming
faces as they elaborated the unspeakable fate that awaited the British.
Life without
freedom, It
how
freedom made
sense to a Pathan — for without
could there be honor?
was not unusual on such occasions
out a surnai and
30
little
fill
for
some robed
figure to bring
the evening with haunting, flutelike music.
a
Another might begin
poem
to
chant — slowly, with a measured rhythm —
of the immortal Khushal Khan:
The young men hare dyed red their hands, As the falcon dyes his talons in the blood of his prey! They have reddened their pale swords with blood: They have made the tulip-bed blossom in the middle of the summer.
Behram Khans guest house was long and
low. Ghaffar always ap-
proached the building with suppressed exciternent, forhe never knew what
turbaned strangers might have spent the night.
tall,
down from
find a blue-eyed Afridi
He might
the Khyber, ora Yusufzai in white
pyjamas from one of the terraced farms of the Malakand, or a Swati
on his way
to the big
city— hair scented, eyes darkened with
lyrium, a rose tucked behind his ear shoulder.
Or
it
might be a Hazara from the
with slanted eyes.
They were
Pakhtu that Ghaffar s own loved to
sit
and
in a circle
all
rifle
slung over his
far north, beardless
Pathans: they bantered in the
Mohammedzai
and share
a
clan spoke,
a water pipe
col-
and
same
and they
all
and the news.
Behram Khan had many servants, but he carried food to his guests himself and served it with his own hands. The code of hospitality did not demand this, and no other khan of the district was known to practice it. But the devout khan told his sons: 'An unknown traveler is a guest sent to us by God. I will serve
him
myself!'
That day of June 1897 the hujras of Utmanzai would have been
humming diamond
with news of much greater interest than a remote queens jubilee.
Behram Khan on
Mohmands their
way
to
or Swatis from the north, visiting
Peshawar, would have talked excitedly
who had recently returned from a pilgrimage to Afghanistan and was now touring the mountain areas north of Utmanzai to preach that the time had come to turn out the British. The Prophet himself had told him the hour had come. of Mullah Mastun, a 6 rebrand priest
Mullah Mastun promised that "he would throw stones River,
and they would become
into the
artillery shells to fling
Swat
back at the
infidel!'
The
Jubilee «
31
Behram Khan would not have been
surprised. Pathan mullahs
often urged their followers to take up arms. Chitral,
two years
earlier,
had brought out a
But the
last
uprising in
British force of Bfteen
thousand troops and convinced the British that they needed more forts
and roads up
there. It
would have forgotten have seemed
just
all
didnt seem
likely that the
northerners
of that so soon. To Behram Khan,
one more
call to revolt in
it
must
the long history of
rebellion since the British took control of the Frontier some fifty years before.
32
/
I
/
^'\s
1
The Shahur
Pass, Waziristan
{Holmes)
CHAPTER TWO
Children of the Prophet (JULY, 1897]
The
of my people
of victories and tales of heroism, but there are drawbacks too. Internal history'
is
full
feuds and personal jealousies have always snatched
away the gains achieved through
vast sacrifices.
They
own inherent power— for who could
were dispossessed only because of their defects, never by
any outside
oppose them on the battlefield?
the beginning, at least, the British had no intentions of creating an empire. One thing simply led to another. They had not In
even gone
to India for conquest. “Trade, not property”
Company when
policy of the East India Trading
1599, inaugurating Britain’s long association
it
was the
official
was formed in
with India. Nevertheless,
the Company’s officers eagerly took advantage of the opportunities for
expansion that presented themselves, and by the early part of the nineteenth century the E^st India Company’s board of directors had
become
holders of the greatest imperial possession in the world
“jewel in the It all
— the
crown of the Empire”— India.
began because of
pepper. That was
a five
how much
pounds
sterling
change
the Dutch privateers
in the cost of
who controlled
the
Indian spice trade suddenly raised their price. Eeeling the increase
unwarranted, a group of London merchants formed the East India
Trading
Company
in
September
1599.
Three months
later
Queen
new company “exclusive beyond the Cape of Good Hope for
Elizabeth signed a charter that granted the trading rights with
an
initial
its first
all
countries
period of fifteen years.” In August 1600, the
ship
on the west coast of
India, near
had come — on business. [
35
]
company landed
Bombay. The Redcoats
Quickly gaining
rights to trading depots near
Company soon had
the south, and Calcutta in the east, the
bringing to England great quantities of spices,
and muslin cotton, then
sailing
Bombay, Madras
gum,
sugar,
in
ships
raw
silk,
back with English manufactured
goods. Local rulers, finding their presence profitable,
welcomed the
traders.
Inevitably rivalries formed. into local politics to protect
The Company soon found
its
commercial
army of white mercenaries and Indian tious
Company
governors — in spite of
Thus was
seized control over land. cess of conquest
In 1757 a
which
official
set in
It
hired
motion an
irreversible pro-
colonel, Robert Clive, defeated the
were turning from merchants to
own
the Indian Empire.
of British influence. Almost imperceptibly the
may be
its
Company policy— had
of a local ruler in Bengal, opening northern India to the
greater blessing
forced
and before long ambi-
sepoys,
led, ultimately, to
young Company
interests.
itself
army
dominance
Company’s
officers
imperialists. Believing that ‘'no
conferred on the native inhabitants of India
than the extension of British authority,” ambitious governors ex-
tended their control to include Mysore and Travancore in the south,
Hyderabad and Maratha
in Central India, and finally
By the
can, Bengal, and the great Gangetic plain.
Company sessed
most of the Decearly 1800s the
controlled three quarters of the Indian land mass and pos-
some
seventy-five
army larger than any profits that often
thousand British and Indian employees, an
military force in continental Europe,
exceeded the revenues of Great Britain
and annual itself.
Only
the Royal Navy had more ships.
Along with spectacular success came corruption and mismanage-
ment and,
eventually, restriction. Politicians in
with the somewhat indefensible
fact that
London grew uneasy
one hundred million people
were being ruled by the board of directors of a private company. India
had become the most stupendous commercial enterprise in Gradually the British government curbed rights
and made the governor-general a
The Company became
officially
instrument of British foreign
what
its
government appointee.
had long been
in practice:
an
policy.
Conquest was a heady wine, and by the 36
monopolies and trading
virtual
it
history.
early nineteenth
century
it
had become
a habit
which the empire builders
I/)ndon and on
in
the Indian subcontinent found no reason to shed. I’hey used outright invasion only after they had persuaded themselves
public
— that
British control
was
in
— or
the
at least
the best interests of everyone con-
cerned. Annexation followed a pattern described by a
critic
of British
expansionism: “hdrst an English Resident (often forced upon the country), then advice urgently pressed, then complaint of mis-
government constantly published, then interference, then compulthen open annexation.”
sion,
No one
was fooled. Trading missions
evitably led to takeovers.
“The
Alexander Burnes, the
told
evil
first
to virgin Indian territory in-
already done,” a local chieftain
is
Englishman
He was
Indus River. “You have seen our country.” 1843, the
in
later,
Company
to visit
Sind along the
right.
Ten
years
governor-general. Lord Ellenborough,
ordered General Charles Napier “to pick a quarrel with the amirs [of Sind] and occupy their brigand-infested land.”
Occasionally the ion.
One
Company
overreached
itself in
spectacular fash-
instance of crucial significance to the Pathans was the
at-
tempt of Lord Ellenboroughs predecessor, governor-general Lord Auckland, to remove the amir of Afghanistan — the Pathan homeland
— and
establish a
permanent
British presence in Kabul.
Armed
with
guidelines to “interfere decidedly in the affairs of Afghanistan,”
Auckland created the “Army of the Indus,” fifteen
a staggering assemblage of
thousand troops and an equal number of horses, mules,
camels, and elephants.
On
October
1,
1838,
Auckland declared
in a
manifesto that the Afghan ruler had “avowed schemes of aggrandize-
ment and ambition
injurious to the security
of India”— and invaded the country.
opened with
a particularly
military success of the
But success was
The
and peace of the Eirst
frontier
Afghan War thus
sweet victory for the British, the
young
first
Victoria.
short-lived.
The
Afghans,
many
of
whom
were
Pathans, had not been defeated but had simply withdrawn to the safety of
mountain strongholds.
In the winter of 1841 they stormed
the British Residency, killing the Resident and forcing the troops to evacuate.
On
January
6,
1842, the British force of forty-five
hundred troops
Children of the Prophet
«
37
.
and twelve thousand camp
for
the frozen
Afghan and Pathan tribesmen swept
passes that led back to India.
down on
from Kabul
followers set out
On
the column, routing the entire army.
a freezing day in
mid-January Dr. William Brydon, a medical officer with the army and its
sole survivor,
verified,''
rode into Fort Jalalabad, only half
“Thus
is
who was later rescued, “what we were
wrote a civilian captive
told before leaving Cabul: that
alive.
Mahommed
the whole army except one man,
Akbar would annihilate
who should reach Jalalabad to tell the
tale."
The
next
summer an Army
Kabul long enough
to set
it
on
of Retribution forced fire,
then marched
its
way back
“as swiftly as terrain
and dignity permitted" over the passes of the Safed Koh and back British India.
manner leave
it
as
The
is
to create a
government amidst the
the consequence of their crimes."
the defeat did clip the pride of the Empire momentarily,
did not clip
armies had
governor-general announced, in as imperious a
Afghans themselves
anarchy which
it
into
he could muster under the circumstances, that he “would
to the
Though
into
its
wings. Before the decade was out, the Company's
won two
wars with the Sikhs, annexed Sind, the Punjab,
and Rajputana, and inherited from the Sikhs the nettlesome but strategic strip of land
between the Indus and the Afghan border that
came to be called the North-West Frontier. By the mid-1850s the East India Trading Company had become what amounted to a sovereign power. Only the emperor of China and the czar of Russia ruled over more people than the Company's governor-general In 1857 the Indian
army
rebelled against
British officers,
its
the rising that followed the British very nearly
The Great
Indian Mutiny, as the British called
feeling for the
Company
decree in 1858 and
its
in
London
responsibilities
“John Company," as
empress
herself.
and the
British Raj
that
was born — or
it
it,
at least
in
India altogether.
caused enough bad
was dissolved by royal
handed over
was
For the British there would be more
it
lost
and
to the
queen-
called, passed into history,
made
official.
victories, a
few setbacks, and
nothing but trouble on the North-West Frontier. But the four decades
between the Mutiny and the Diamond 38
Jubilee
saw a steady expansion
of Great Britain’s possessions in India and the consolidation of old ones. In 1897, of the 372 million subjects of the Kmpire, 308 million lived in India.
consumers
With seemingly
for British
raw materials and millions of
manufactured goods, India was unlike any
other part of the Empire. it
limitless
It
had been
in British
was part of the national consciousness.
Many
value the status and material benefits the
hands
for so long that
Indians had
come
to
Empire gave them
as
subjects. India’s future
summer,
The
must have looked supremely bright during the Jubilee
especially
from the windows of the
lessons of the Great
Mutiny had been
dian army had since proven
was
at
its
loyalty
viceroy’s palace in Simla.
well learned,
and the
In-
more than once. The country
peace. Even the Erontier had been quiet for a few years.
July 28, 1897, was hot
on the Frontier and the sun was almost
straight
overhead as Behram Khan and Ghaffar walked down the main street of Utmanzai, past the shops of traders and craftsmen that lay on either side.
A month had passed since the Jubilee. The street was quiet; most
of the
villagers
had gone
They passed the shoemaker, loom made from poplar branches,
to their fields.
then two brothers working a large
then the potter, then the coppersmith. Each of them nodded as the
khan walked
by.
''Kher ali?" they pealed
from behind wide
you?"
smiles. ''How are
"Tre mash," Khan called back with a smile. ‘Tre mash: / hope you are not tired."
Behram Khan would have stopped
to talk
home. These craftsmen were his equals:
all
had he not wanted
to get
Muslims — despite
differ-
ences in wealth and status— are equal according to Islamic law.
He
might easily have spent the evening sitting around a water pipe, smoking with the shoemaker or the coppersmith. But
now he
kept on
walking.
He
was coming from the
village
guest house, where travelers from
Swat and Bajaur had brought portentous news. All month the khan
had been hearing
that trouble was brewing in the north.
Now
it
seemed imminent. Mullah Mastun had succeeded in raising a large army of followers, and no one knew what might happen next. From Children of the Prophet
«
39
what these
travelers
ment. Behram
Khan wanted
The khan and zai.
were saying, violence could break out at any moto talk the
matter over with his family.
approached the old defense wall of Utman-
his son
Children scurried past them across the wide lane, seeking narrow
of shade
strips
Pathan
below the
to rest in
looked
villages often
With their watchtowers,
wall.
like walled
medieval
From
cities.
the
square windows of the lookout towers a flintlock ride could blaze away at
an approaching enemy. In a land where families were often em-
broiled in long-running vendettas with their neighbors, even
some
houses had watchtowers.
Some
older boys
wall beside the gate.
GhaffarF they called as the khans son passed.
''Hey,
smile and watched
cow browsed
milk
had climbed the crumbling
them jump the
into the
summer
The rustle ofpoplar leaves in
murmur of the
son.
river.
Two
"I'll
be
came the
home
a
boys
paused long enough
to
the slight breeze mingled with the
muezzin, calling the faithful
to prayer.
"God is great!'' was time for the midday namaz. "Go on ahead," the khan
"Allahu akharF It
village
them
stubble.
rinsing a water buffalo in knee-deep water
distant
shot
commons, where goats and a
Outside town the khan and his son followed the wave.
He
liquid tone.
shortly." Stretching his prayer
rug next
told his
to a poplar,
he knelt and faced Mecca. GhafFar s father seldom missed the
five daily
when
and spreading
it
meant stopping
in his fields
tween two rows of sugarcane. He belonged
periods of prayer, even his prayer rug be-
to the clan of the
medzais— ‘sons of Mohammed.” To Behram Khan, responsibility to live in the light of the Prophet
He was villagers
ten
as
knew he had to
his
valley, yet his
own ways of living Pakhtunwali, the
Pathan. Badal,
avenge the
brought the
word.
blue-blooded a Pathan as lived in the
Law of the
Pathan
s
this
Moham-
its strict
slightest insult.
unwrit-
code of revenge, obligated the For centuries badal had set
brother against brother, family against family, clan against clan.
The Reverend
T. L. Pennell, a respected physician
ning a missionary hospital in Bannu
about 40
how
at
who was
run-
the time of the Jubilee, wrote
deeply badal had entered into the Pathan mentality. “Re-
venge
is
word sweet
a
Pathan ear” he explains, ‘and even
to the
revenge satisfied by the culminating murder blow, preferably
man
on some dark
has a few minutes of
night,
life in
so
is
which
the sweeter
is
managed
if
that the
the
a
fatal
murdered
he has been
to realize that
outwitted.”
who had
1 he Reverend Pennell describes one Waziri Pathan his sight at the
hospital
hands of
and begged the doctor
“Oh, saheb,
if
you can give
to the mission
one day:
to restore his sight for just
me some
sight only just long
enough
my enemy, then shall be satisfied to be blind my life.” When the doctor tried to talk to him of the
and shoot of
He had come
his enemies.
lost
I
all
to
go
the rest
“Gospel of
goodwill and forgiveness,” the Waziri “would shake his head and sigh: ‘No, that teaching
Once
is
not for us.
had
a bloodletting
set
What
I
want
is
revenge
the wheel of vengeance in motion,
only the annihilation of the other party could bring
from father
obligations of badal passed
to son.
province had claimed more than a hundred
remember how
it
— revenge!’”
One
it
to a stop, for
vendetta in the
lives, yet
no one could
started.
man could not avenge an enemy’s insult with his blood, what kind of a man was he? low could he face his clan There was no escape.
If a
1
or wife?
To
die seeking revenge was
more honorable.
Behram Khan thought otherwise. He made no enemies; he avoided feuds, fie did not like the taste of revenge. He was known throughout
He had
the district for a most un-Pathanlike quality: forgiveness. received his share of insults, and there were those
who had
taken
advantage of his trusting nature. But honor, he believed, could be
gained in ways more enduring and more pleasing in the eyes of God.
He chose
to forgive rather
than seek revenge — a decision that must
have deeply influenced the character and career of his youngest son.
Behram Khan perplexed of a
khan was
to trust.
this?
— but
At the harvest,
the tribesmen of his villages — what kind
they
knew
villagers
instinctively that
handed over
he was
their savings to
a
man
him
for
safekeeping and did not ask for any assurance.
Even the given
them
British liked this service, as
khan who bore no grudges. He had never
had most of the other khans of the
he was honest and he respected them. They sought
area, but
his ad\ ice
Children of the Prophet
«
on *41
delicate matters,
exotic
names
as
and they did not complain when he confused such
O’Malley and Warburton and Short. They assumed —
and they were right— that
His namaz finished, Behram
and youngest son were
khan would not intend an
this
Khan walked to
insult.
the farmhouse. His wife
in the courtyard.
'Here, Ghaffar, today's nan.”
Ghaffars mother handed the boy two Hat chunks of bread.
down
on a small
cross-legged
cooked
split
peas— into
As the boys and asking about the society,
was
mothers
isolation,
he gleaned in the talking.
side
women from male
it
was his father
who did the
His mothers face turned ashen at the news of another rising. costs of war. Every Pathan had.
woman whose
daily namazs, even as
often turned into long periods of silent prayer.
dark beauty alone that had drawn young vein ofpiety was a treasure
pretend
one
a point of remembering bits of news
Today, however,
Ghaffars mother was a pious girl,
sat to
the Pathan gentry. Ghaffar did not like his
and he made
village.
mother
Purdah, the isolation of
She had seen Hrsthand the dreadful a
his right hand.
their father ate, Ghaffars
among
sat
scooping smooth green dal —
mouth with
his
village.
strict
pillow,
He
to
It
was not her
Behram Khan
he wanted his children
to her;
to have.
her
He did not
moods of prayer, but he had come to look Sometimes Ghaffar would rest his hand on her
understand her
upon them with awe. shoulder until
warmth brought her
its
back, eyes wide
and
wet, as
though returning from a long, winged Bight. Perhaps because he was her youngest, Ghaffar and his mother had
formed
a
deep attachment. She knew he had a temper— he was a
Pathan! — but he was a pure, truthful boy. did the solemn
moods
that
would
No one
steal over
him
understood as she
while sitting under
the shishim tree, saying nothing, or peering into the Barnes of the
cooking Bre until
it
cooled to ashes.
Even Behram Khan did not understand abstracted boy
who preferred
much time along
the
river.
42
is
independent,
company of sweepers and spent
But whenever his patience wore
wife always reassured him.
conBdently. "He
the
this
"He
is
a strong boy," she
a badshah, a king."
too
thin, his
would say
'‘I
But
xml, Lx)rd''
Behram Khnn would
if his wife said so,
mutter, tugging nt his hccird.
the hoy would turn out
all right.
Later that afternoon, or perhaps not until evening, word would
have reached Behram Khan that the trouble in the north had already
begun the day ing:
before.
The
first
reports were clouded hut encourag-
an enormous force of Pathans was attacking the
British forts at
Chakdarra and Malakand and slaughtering the armies of the Queen.
The small contingents of soldiers could not possibly hold out. Mullah Mastun had apparently been right: the day of their deliverance had come.
i
Children of the Prophet
«
43
\
S
V'
The
Tirah (Mela
Ram)
CHAPTER THREE
The Vale of Tirah [JUI,'i'-nF,CKMIU*',K, 1897]
Our fault
is
that our province
is
the gateway oflpdia.
\\V were horn in the Frontier Province. This
is
why
we were doomed. “In
i
hk small hours”
of July 27th, a Frontier war correspondent
wrote to his Ix:)ndon readers, the officers of the 11th Bengal Lancers at Nowshera were
who was astounded by out. This man in his shirt
aroused by a frantic telegraph operator the news his machine was clicking sleeves,
with a wild eye, and holding an unloaded revolver by
The whole country
the muzzle, ran round waking everyone.
was up.
he Malakand garrison was being overwhelmed by
I
thousands of tribesmen. All the troops were
Winston Churchill was twenty-three and Fourth Hussars
in India at the
when
it
under General
Sir
was ordered into the
march
at
once.
a First l.ieutcnant of the
time he wrote this account of the
beginning of the ETontier War of Field Force
to
1897.
He had
Bindon Blood
field to
joined the Malakand
as a
war correspondent
exact “massive retaliation” against
the rebellious tribes. “Like most young
fools,”
he wrote,
“I
was looking
for trouble.”
ChurchiHs dispatches
give a stirring,
if
transparent, account of
imperial warfare at the turn of the century. While tattered swarms of
tribesmen flung themselves against the cannon
fire
of the
Queens
armies, the young lieutenant wrote to the Ix)ndon Daily Telegraph
readership of daring and adxenture:
d’he tale
I
have
to
tell is
one of
frontier war.
The
fate of
empires
does not hang on the
result. Yet
the narrative
out interest, or material for reflection.
The rumors
.
till it
single
unimportant
fact
fantastic conclusions are
culated as
facts.
But amid
invention of fertile
it,
a
thousand wild,
illogi-
drawn. These again are
cir-
So the game goes on. this falsehood
all
— the
exaggerated, and distorted,
is
becomes unrecognizable. From
and
cal,
.
coming war grew stronger and stronger. The like the London coffee-houses of the last cen-
tury, are always full of marvellous tales
A
not be with-
of
bazaars of India,
brains.
.
may
and
idle report, there often lies
important information. ... As July [1897] advanced, the bazaar at Malakand became full of tales of the Mad Fakir. His miracles passed from
A
mouth
mouth with
to
suitable additions.
A
great day for Islam was at hand.
man had
arisen
them. The English would be swept away. By the time
to lead
of the
mighty
new moon,
not one would remain.
The Great
Fakir had
mighty armies concealed among the mountains. When the moment came these would sally forth— horse, foot and artillery—
and destroy the
It
infidel.
.
.
.
was understandable, nevertheless, that the young telegraph opera-
tor at the
Nowshera garrison should have been ‘astounded’'
the
at
news. Since the Chitral uprising in 1895, the Pathans had been noticeably quiet.
And
only a
month
ago,
he had read from the same
wire a cordial message from Her Imperial Highness, the Queen, in
whose Diamond
Jubilee ceremonies at Chakdarra, Malakand,
and
Peshawar many Pathans had joined.
A more informed party, however, would not have been surprised at the outburst of Pathan violence that July evening. British policies on
the Frontier had been inviting just such an attack for two decades. Ironically, these
were
policies
whose armies had never Ever since
1807,
on
set foot in the
at
Pathans, but at an
enemy
province — and never would.
when Napoleon met Czar Alexander
a raft in the Tilsit River assault
aimed not
I
of Russia
on
and proposed a combined Russian-Erench
India, the Russians
had been making the
British nervous.
Their steady expansion eastward across the Central Asian plain made
many 46
in the British Eoreign Office fear that Russia’s ultimate destina-
was
tion
India. In
Samarkand, and
1865 the cziirs armies
in 1868
annexed Tashkent, then
they turned Bokhara into a Russian
satellite.
The “Great Game” of imperial intrigue between Russia and Great had begun
Britain
in earnest.
Since the disastrous retreat from Kabul in 1842, the British had
been keeping
a respectful distance
from the Pathan
Afghan empire. The “Close Border School”
tribes of the
in the Foreign Office
had
decades — successfully— that the best way to deal with the
argued
for
Afghan
tribes
was
was
in intrigue,
to leave
them
alone.
I
he high Afghan
plain,
awash
the buffer the British needed between their Indian
all
Empire and the Russian menace.
The “Forward School,” otherwise. They argued
the hawks of the Foreign Office, thought for
an assertive policy that would keep
Afghans under the British thumb and free of Russian of stirring
risk
up
a little violence
among
intrigue.
The
the Pathan tribes of the
Frontier was a small price to pay for the security of India.
When
the Conservatives took office in 1874 under Disraeli, the For-
ward School was made appointed. Lord Lytton,
program
sionist
to
A new
who immediately began an
viceroy was
aggressive expan-
extend the Indian frontier into Afghan territory up
to the slopes of the
Hindu Kush. Lytton ordered
march on Kabul,
troops to
British policy.
official
forcing the
thirty
Afghan amir
to
thousand
cede the
administration of the Khyber Pass and other strategic areas to Britain.
He
also placed a British
envoy in Kabul to direct Afghan foreign
Despite fears of a repetition of the 1842 debacle. Sir Louis
policy.
Cavagnari was stationed in Kabul in July 1879 with a guard of eighty-
one all
troops.
its
On
September
occupants
killed.
A
3
the British Residency w^as stormed and
second British force occupied Kabul
in
October, and this time a pro-British amir was placed on the throne.
Afghanistan became, in
But
The
this
effect,
was not enough
an appendage of the Empire.
to placate the fears of the
borders between Afghanistan and India were
easily
defended.
1885, the
build a
When
ill
Forward School. defined and not
Russian troops clashed with the Afghans in
Conservatives insisted
it
w'as Britain’s
permanent buffer zone between
Russia along a secure border.
The
“bounden dutv”
British India
to
and Imperial
ob\ ions location for the border was
The Vale
of Tirah
«
47
the range of mountains between Afghanistan and British India. High
and rugged,
their
lem was that
narrow passes were
defended.
easily
The
this placed the buffer garrisons squarely
only prob-
within the
homelands of the Pathans. Not even Forward School hawks were eager to arouse Pathan
had no choice: all
ire.
But the protectors of the Empire
India, Britain’s prize possession,
felt
they
must be defended
at
costs.
In the
autumn of
Henry Durand was
sent to Kabul
border between Afghanistan and British India that
to negotiate a
would
1893 Lieutenant
hand over
effectively
to the British
lands, historically part of the
most of the Pathan home-
Afghan empire. The proposed border—
the “Durand Line”— cut through the heart of the Pathan nation, leaving a third of
Pathans in Afghanistan.
all
The Afghan amir warned from the settlement than he
the British that they had more to lose did. “If
you should cut the Pathan
away from my domain,” he wrote the viceroy
tribes
in desperation,
they will not be of any use either to you or to me. You will always
be engaged
in fighting
with them, and they
The
them
or be involved in
will always
British forced the issue.
some other
go on plundering.
On November
12, 1893,
amir’s signature to a treaty that brought under their territory
from the Hindu Kush
stan— and made to the
Empire’s
The
to the
presence was of their
hills
all
the
would
last
final days.
from external
“settled” tribes of the lower valleys built
dominion
westernmost limits of Baluchi-
British set out to forge a buffer
were
they got the
inevitable a conflict with the Pathans that
seal British India off
forts
trouble
zone that would permanently
threats.
Pathans were divided into
and “free”
and additional troops brought
felt.
with
tribes of the hills. in to
make
More
certain their
Eor the independent-spirited Pathans, the girdling forts
and garrisons and the
insufferable imperial rule
that followed simply could not be borne for long. British expeditions
had already been sent against the Akazais
in the
Black Mountains in 1891; in 1894 they went into Waziristan. In
January 1895, Chitral exploded in the north and fifteen thousand troops had to be sent to restore order. Ports were built at Malakand
48
and Chakdarra British in
in
name
Swat
to prevent further outbreaks.
But the area was
Independent tribesmen saw the new
only.
forts as
portents of a permanent occupation.
For two years they simmered. Then, in the early of 1897, Mullah
Mastun began touring the
reminded the tribesmen of
their humiliation
religious hysteria by proclaiming that the
the word: the time had
villages
come
summer months of the north. He
and roused them
to
Prophet himself had given
for jihad, a holy
war that would drive
the British out of the province and reclaim the Delhi throne, after a
He had found the thirteen-year-old heir to the Mogul dynasty and would place him on the throne himself. Within a month. Mullah Mastun — Churchills “Mad Fakir'— had
lapse of three centuries, for Islam.
raised
an army of ten thousand seething Pathans.
The explosion came at
ten o'clock on a moonless July night. Descend-
ing simultaneously on the forts at Malakand and Chakdarra, the
Pathans stormed the outer garrisons with their swords, knives, and ancient
rifles.
Caught
off
— but
guard
only momentarily
—
and Sikh troops fought back with land mines, cannon, and ing
fire
from their breech-loading
rifles.
Throughout the
British
devastat-
night,
wave
wave of tribesmen were repulsed — by massive firepower,
after
cipline,
and sheer pluck.
If
dis-
the Queen's troops could hold out, rein-
forcements could reach the
forts
from Nowshera and Mardan by
noon.
To the Pathans who threw themselves and
rifle fire,
Allah.
setbacks
They knew they
into the teeth of the
cannon
Time was with them — as was outnumbered the British. Hundreds of them meant
little.
died in the avalanche of bullets and the bursts of cannon and land
mines. But what was death? Only a promise of paradise.
Morning came, and the ground around the
forts,
forts
still
held. Bodies littered the rocky
but the Pathans kept up the attack. Their
cause was invincible.
Then an astounding thing happened. From over the bare hills of the pass came a great body of the Raj's soldiers and cavalry, with their breechloaders firing and their lances ready. The tribesmen simply stared, unbelieving.
The Vale of Tirah
«
49
“It is
no exaggeration” Churchill
perhaps half the tribesmen
to say that
kand had thought that the
'
writes,
who
soldiers there
attacked the Mala-
were the only troops
that the Sirkar [the government] possessed. “Kill these,”
What
they had
did they
know
said,
“and
all is
done.”
of the distant regiments which the
graph wires were drawing from
far
had
Little did they realize they
down
set the
tele-
in the south of India?
world
humming;
that
military officers were hurrying seven thousand miles by sea
and
camps among the mountains; that were carrying ammunition, material and supplies
land from England, to the
long trains
from distant depots
to the front.
.
.
.
These ignorant tribesmen had no conception of the sensitiveness of modern civilization, which thrills and quivers in every and complex system at the slightest touch. They saw only the forts and camps on the Malakand Pass and
part of
its
vast
the swinging bridge across the
The
river.
miscalculation was typical of these impulsive tribesmen — and
Churchill continues:
fatal.
Sir
Bindon Blood had with
his staff
ascended the Castle Rock,
to superintend the operations generally.
whole
field
was
visible.
white figures of the
On
From
this position the
every side, and from every rock, the
enemy could be seen
in full flight.
The
way was open. The passage was forced. Chakdarra was saved. A great and brilliant success had been obtained. A thrill of exultation convulsed everyone.
The
.
.
.
11th Bengal Lancers, forming line across the plain,
up the valley. ... All among the rice fields and the rocks, the strong horsemen hunted the flying enemy. No quarter was asked or given, and every tribesman began
a merciless pursuit
caught was speared or cut
down
at
once. Their bodies lay
thickly strewn about the fields, spotting with black
patches the bright green of the rice crop.
It
was
and white
a terrible lesson
and one which the inhabitants of Swat and Bajaur
will
never
forget.
The 50
victory was thorough,
but— as
usually the case
on the Frontier
— inconclusive.
By the time the Malakancl
h'ielcl
way through the higher regions of Swat, the
k’orce
Afridis
had blasted
its
had entered the
Khyher. Further south, Orakzais were sending assault parties into the
Kurram
Valley.
By the end
and the Khyher Pass
revolt,
of August the Frontier was itself— gateway to India
up
— fell
massive
in
from
British
hands.
A a
force of thirty-five thousand
machine gun detachment, and
the
field in
the
Firah,
response.
It
was aimed
men, including thirty at
sixty field
cannon,
thousand pack animals, took
the heart of the Afridi homeland,
whieh no foreign army had ever penetrated. By mid-
October, the Tirah Fxpeditionary Force had fought the protective ring of the
its
way through
Samana range and entered the
Valley of
Firah Maidan.
There, in the midst of barren, blistered peaks, the British found a
The
paradise.
passes
opened onto wide
chards of apricot and plum, apple,
was
in;
fig,
cultivated fans, terraced or-
and orange
trees.
The
harvest
the storage sheds behind the farmhouses were brimful with
corn and barley, beans, potatoes, onions, and walnuts. In the crisp
October
air,
autumn
tints
the valley looked as serene as an English landseape. ''The
upon the
trees are beautiful,” wrote a British correspon-
dent accompanying the expedition, "and carry one back to the
mother-country
at
once.
One
crops are in and the valley
can well imagine that when the spring is
green from end
to end, this
the
is
beautiful spot which has so inspired the Pathan poets.”
But the point of a punitive campaign landscape so incapable of supporting forced to surrender.
And
is
life
the Afridis had
to
that
punish — to render the inhabitants will be
its
made
the iob easier than
anyone expected. They were gone — fled with their families and flocks to the bare ridges silent
and
above the
valley.
From
there the\' watched,
helpless, as the khaki-colored troops spread out across the
valley. I
hey started with the
stocks.
Wagonfuls of beans and potatoes and
nuts were carted out of the storehouses and the orchards were stripped,
and the trees then
felled
with axes or ringed to die
slowly.
Standing crops were burned.
As they reached
a village, soldiers
would hurry
to sack the
houses
The Vale of Tirah
«
SI
^
copperware, furniture, and orna-
of the khans. Carpets and
silks,
ments were piled
wagons and carted back
What was
into long
not worth carrying
camps.
to the
back— utensils, farm equipment, house-
hold items— was heaped into a pile in the center of the village and
burned. Wagonfuls of granite boulders were drawn alongside the wells
and heaved
in to poison the water.
Sometimes
ventured too close to the valley walls and
soldiers
tims to ambush. At night, a lighted cigarette might draw
There were
a nearby crag.
casualties, but
moved about unimpeded. Once tion units laid
rifle fire
by and large the
vic-
from
soldiers
had been cleared, demoli-
a village
dynamite charges along the
November the Tirah
fell
walls
and
towers.
By mid-
Valley was close to being a desert, while high
on
the ridges, the tribal children began succumbing to the cold. Khans trickled into Expeditionary Force headquarters to accept the terms of
peace: three hundred
December, the
In
managed With
little
and a
fine of thirty
thousand rupees.
began a quick withdrawal and
British
just
through the Samanas before a howling winter storm
to get
slammed the and
rifles
passes shut.
shelter
and
The
virtually
Afridi families were less fortunate.
no food
stocks,
many
of the youngest
oldest died.
The
punitive campaign had
met
its
objective.
The
Frontier tribes
had been beaten back and the war ended. But the price was high. The
Empire had collected fines to cover the
In the process for
the next
it
a
few thousand rusting
rifles
expenses of a marching column
for
and enough
perhaps a week.
had guaranteed the enmity of the Frontier Pathans
fifty years.
Before a decade had passed, the British would have to face
If
new
and Orakzais — and once again have
to enter the
Churchill’s plucky prose stirred the British back
home to feel
uprisings of Waziris
Tirah.
in
the glamour and romance of the Frontier wars, other Englishmen
came
to assess the net effect of FTontier policy in
terms.
Some
of
them— like Annie
already agitating for Indian Churchill’s
We 52
more sobering
Besant, an Englishwoman in India
“home
rule”— came close to matching
fire:
loudly proclaimed that
we had no
quarrel with the Pathan
we burnt
nation, yet
their villages, destroyed their crops, stole
their cattle, looted their if
they resisted, while
men as women and
homes, hanged their
we drove out
their
“rebels"
children
to perish in the snow.
F^rom out of the darkness,
we shrink
in horror
moans
of suffering reach us, and
from the work which
is
being done in our
name. These starved babes wail out our condemnation. These frozen women cry aloud against us. These stiffened corpses, these fire-blackened districts, these snow-covered, bloodstained plains appear to
humanity
to curse us.
Englishmen, with wives nestled warm
in
your bosoms,
remember these Pathan husbands, maddened by Englishwomen, with babes smiling on your these sister-women, bereft of their wife and children as you do.
him
also the
from
cries
home
is
He
is
The Pathan
husband and is
and from
sacred.
loves
father.
To
To you he
his ravaged land. In
his cause.
But the British were helpless had overextended them into
to
change course. The Forward Policy
territories
permanent occupation of the Pathan costly
is
happy, the hearth
his desolate fireside
your hands
also
breasts, think of
ones.
little
their wrongs.
they could not fully subjugate; hills
would have been
an enterprise. But neither could they ignore the
far
too
tribes;
the
Pathans themselves would see to that. Thus they were reduced to vindictive
campaigns whose excesses only inflamed the Pathans while
offending liberal sensibilities at home. In a sense, the British had
become
prisoners of their
own
imperial designs.
Thus, within a few months of celebration of the
ning
to
“new
imperialism," at
have second thoughts.
a dark side
which the
Diamond Jubilee and its least some British were begin-
Victoria’s
The glittering image of the Empire had
resolute
Pathan resistance had begun
to un-
mask. Within two years the atrocities of the Boer War in South Africa
would confirm the darker aspects of empire. toria herself
would
die, mercifully
One more
spared the spectacle of her “best
and bravest" dying by the hundreds of thousands on the ders
year and Vic-
fields
of Flan-
and Verdun. The benign face of Pax Britannica, so shimmering
during the Jubilee summer, would never smile as brightly again.
The Vale of Tirah
«
53
A
British fort in Chitral, 1895 (Robertson)
CHAPTER FOUR
The Guides 1907 1909 -
[
I
he Holy Prophet
)
Mohammed came
into this yorld
and taught us: “That man is a Muslim who never hurts anyone by word or deed, but who works for the benefit and happiness of God's creatures. Belief in
God
is
to love one's
The reverend
Mr. E.
F.
fellowmen."
E.
Wigram was headmaster
wardes Memorial Mission High School in Peshawar.
of the Ed-
The Reverend
Mr. Wigram and his younger brother, Dr. Wigram, represented a
men and women — not uncommon during the who genuinely accepted the burden of improving Empire s less fortunate subjects. The two brothers
of
and
days of the Raj —
the welfare of the loved the Frontier
people, with their soaring spirits and their stern,
its
class
uncom-
promising codes of honor.
The
mission schools trained young Pathans in English, science,
and mechanics, mainly
to prepare
nations of the Punjab university.
Government Service
Indian
them for the matriculation examiFrom there they could enter the
as clerks, the only
other than the army open to native graduates.
form of occupation
Much
to the dislike of
the Muslim clergy, the mission schools also taught the Bible. Dr.
Wigram oversaw the
mission hospital in Peshawar, while his
brother oversaw the high school. Their family in England supported the work, to the extent of offering scholarships out of their
own
pockets to promising Pathan boys.
Ghaffar
Khan was
as
quick and strong-willed as any other sixteen-
year-old in the mission high school the spring of 1907. His elder
brother,
school,
Khan Saheb, the first boy from Utmanzai to attend was now in Bombay preparing to study medicine [
55
]
a British at
Edin-
burgh. Ghaffar was the second boy from the village to attend the school,
They condemned because they competed with their own maktabsy
and the mullahs of Utmanzai did not like
British schools
which taught only according
to the
it.
words of the Prophet. There boys
learned a doggerel which could be heard spilling out into the road in front of the
mosque: Those who leam
in schools
Are none but money's
tools.
In heaven they will never dwell;
They At
will surely
go
the mullahs of Utmanzai had
first
to hell.
made a sweeping rule:
parents
sending their sons to the mission school would be excommunicated. Before
Behram Khan no
sure, but the
villager
had dared
khan was too broad-minded
The
the education of his boys.
to risk the mullahs’ cen-
to let
them
interfere with
mullahs muttered imprecations
behind the closed doors of the mosque, but publicly they rationalized
The
their loss.
Khan’s boys were pious, and hadn’t young Ghaffar
learned the Koran by heart? There was nothing to
“Let the boys
fear.
read English,” they compromised, “so long as they do not read the Christian scriptures; for the Christians have tampered with these
books and
it is
no longer lawful
for
Muslims
to read them.”
Ghaffar was happy to be part of the same school his elder brother
had attended. He did not mind the mild indoctrination into Christianity
and Western — especially
received. tions
was
British
— culture that all the students
One
of the questions that regularly appeared
to
the benefits bestowed
list
Raj: the roads the British
had
magical telegraph lines that
Delhi and
down
to
built,
upon the people
on examina-
of India by the
with their high iron bridges; the
hummed
messages through the passes to
Madras; the schools, of course, even though they
thought Pakhtu too coarse to teach the boys; the railways that
climbed the high, bare passes soldiers that
ing
from harassing
British that Pathans
its
“settled” farmers.
would rather have had
It
did not occur to
their
telegraphs and iron bridges and the “rule of law.” 56
the hospitals; the
maintained the rule of British law and kept the maraud-
hill tribes
most
like iron serpents;
freedom than
Most Pathans — as
the Frontier
War demonstrated — preferred
j^rivation
and hardship
to
servitude.
Ghaffar never forgot the dark, drained faces of the
who had summer of
villagers
returned from fighting the British during that dreadful the Frontier War.
He had
ing eyes. After that
it
seen the
fire
beaten from their bright, burn-
was not the same when his father took him
men did
the village guest house. For a long time the
was no poetry. They drank tea and spoke
and the hoy heard hatred and
masters,
not sing and there
bitterly of
the Fnglish
fear in their voices.
But since then much had changed. The hoy had 'grown into muscular young man, over
six feet tall,
British friends in Peshawar.
his school,
to
and had made
He had come
a
number
a
of
to respect the teachers in
and he admired the poise and courage of the
British
Ghaffar was a born warrior — every Pathan was — and he
soldiers.
recognized the qualities of a good soldier when he saw them.
He also admired Reverend Wigram — almost as much, in fact, as his own father. The missionary was a strict but generous man, and Ghaffar
saw that although he was a foreigner from across the
seas,
he was
more concerned about the future of these Pathan boys than
own
parents were.
stay
on
An
in the school
idea
began
and work
But the Guides changed 1 he Guides, an stationed at
even given
and
a
man! At
s
mind: why not
good man?
of that.
a long history of distinguished service to the
commissions, which brought further prestige —
for glory.
least this
a lifelong friend,
son was
for this
in Ghaffar
sons of wealthy and influential Pathans and Sikhs were
officers’
chance
form
corps of Pathan and Sikh infantry and cavalry
Mardan, had
The
Empire.
elite
all
to
their
six foot
A
Guides
officer
was the equal of an English-
was what Barani Kaka, one of Ghaffar’s servants and
had been
telling
Ghaffar for the past year.
The khan’s
three and weighed over two hundred pounds, Barani
Kaka reasoned: the
British
would snap him up!
Ghaffar was in his tenth and
final
year at the high school.
He was
halfway through the matriculation examination of the university
when he
learned that he had been granted a commission and should
present himself before the recruiting officer the following day. In his exultation, he walked
away from the examination on the
spot.
The Guides
«
57
Barani Kaka was ecstatic, as was Ghaffars aging father.
Khan wasted no time
in spreading the
news
to the guest
Behram
houses in
every village between Peshawar and Tangi. Ghaffar had joined the
Guides!
After their Kissa
last class,
Khani Bazaar
Ghaffar and Barani Kaka walked
to
meet
down
to the
a former schoolmate.
Peshawar had long been the terminus of the great caravan roads leading from Iran
and Central Asia
ture for passengers
open
seas. Its
and
to India,
and the point of depar-
down
the Indus River to the
freight sailing
bazaar was a sprawl of narrow, curving streets of stalls
spilling over with the wares
of the Central Asian plains:
silks,
carpets,
prayer rugs, precious stones, copper and brass ware, bright colored
shoes with curving toes and
shimmering colors,
silk
brocade, great swaths of cloth in
entire armories of rifles
and curved daggers. Every
street— the Street of the Coppersmiths, the Shoemakers, the Cloththe Storytellers, the Weavers— had
iers,
The two youths turned onto
its
specialty.
the Street of the Silversmiths and
stopped in a small tea shop where they could see the pure white minarets of the Mahabat Khan mosque.
From
these towers the Sikhs,
during their bloody reign, had hung Pathans — two every day— as a
curb
to intrigue.
in front
Crowds of turbaned men with beards were milling
of the mosque or sitting in
tea shops, sipping dark
qahwa
tea
sweetened with sugar and buffalo milk and pufEng contentedly from clay pipes.
From out of the crowd a tall, uniformed Pathan stepped up to their stall, his combed hair glistening over a wide smile. It was their old schoolmate,
now
with the Guides. Ghaffar, taking in the crisp khaki
uniform and the close-cropped Western-style haircut, asked him
down. They ordered cups of tea and started
to talk.
Before long they heard a sharp, nasal voice: AVell,
Two
damn
''Really!''
'Sardar
be damned
f'
one of them snorted contemptuously. "Why,
Sahib— you fake Englishman! So you want
Englishman, do you?" 58
Til
English officers from the Guides were staring at Ghaffars
friends hair.
you
to sit
to
be an
GhafEir's
hand leaped toward
Pathan would
But
let
his friends to
check the
without waiting for a
The
English officers turned away
reply.
Ghaffar looked at his friend. His head was lowered.
No
No
such an insult go unanswered.
his friend did not move.
have said?
attack.
Guides
disrespect— not, that
officer
is,
if
could speak
he valued
to
What could he
an Englishman with
his commission.
Ghaffar turned on Barani Kaka, trembling with anger. ''You told me that a Pathan
Guide
is
the Englishmans equal!''
Barani Kaka tried to calm the young khan, hut Shortly after, GhaflFar refused his commission.
he had
rid
himself of a curse — and
to nfo avail.
He had the feeling that
just in time.
At home, however, Behram Khan fumed. Ghaffar had thrown away
an opportunity denied
to all but the
he decided, the boy would
rejoin.
most capable Pathan boys. Well,
Not even
him that his son had acted from deep Khan would not listen— his son would
his wife could persuade
principle.
This time Behram
rejoin.
The
Pressed, Ghaffar wrote his brother in England. plained,
because
had been obvious. He could not serve the it
turned brave Pathans into
slaves
choice, he ex-
British
— and
government
offered the risk of
getting insulted into the bargain.
Khan Saheb had
always admired the courage of his younger
He would not have done the same thing himself, but they were different. He wrote their father that Ghaffar had done right: no man should be made to suffer dishonor and disrespect. It was reasoning that any Pathan could appreciate. Behram Khan relented. How brother.
could he hold out against the pleadings of his wife, the thickheaded righteousness of his youngest son, and his eldest? Ghaffar could
Khan began
the polished arguments of
go on with his studies.
the next term at an Islamic school in Gampbellpur, on
the other side of the Indus dry, hot climate of the
and enrolled
now
river.
He wanted
Punjab did not
suit
to learn Arabic.
him.
He
left
But the
Gampbellpur
in a mission school at Aligarh, in the center of northern
India.
The Guides
«
59
Near the end of the term, he received
a letter
from
his father.
The
Reverend Wigram had persuaded Behram Khan that Ghaffar should
Khan Saheb to England. He was a good student of geometry; he could live with Khan Saheb and study engineering. The Reverend would make all the arrangements. England! The boy could not believe his eyes. And to live with his brother! His father sent him three thousand rupees to get himself follow
P&O liner that would leave
ready to go. His passage was booked on a in a
few weeks.
Ghaffar hurried home. In the prescribed mianner, he went to his
mother
to ask
her permission
hands clench and her eyes
fill
to go.
with
But
at the
first
tears. '"Not
words he saw her
my last
boyf' she said
in a whisper. No.
Ghaffar argued with her. ''Look at our country, Ma. Innocent people are dragged to the courts
are put to death.
Nobody s life is safe here. In England I can learn ways
to challenge these
No. Not the
goes
No.
it
will
One
bad
laws!'
last son.
to a foreign
"But
and men who have committed no crime
The mullahs had
son, the mullahs said,
'Ala, / won't
Til
to
any good
my brother!'"
had already gone from her
and he would never
come
be living with
to the
return.
if I stay here."
No. They said he would marry an English
and become
her that a person who
land never returns to his native home.
be only two years— and
unbelievers' land,
told
a Ghristian, a stranger to his
girl,
own
as his brother had,
people.
No.
Khan's strong shoulders slumped. The stricken face of this woman,
who was closer to him than any other person on him better than he knew himself— was enough. could not build his future on his mother's sorrow.
60
earth —
who knew
"All right, "All right.
Ma." I'll
He
stay."
$
I
i
i
I
The Malakand
Pass, 1895 {National
Army Museum, London)
CHAPTER
FIVE
Islam! 1909 1913 -
(
It is
my inmost conviction
muhabat
]
that Islam
amal, yak^'en,
and without these the name Muslim is sounding brass and tinkling cymbal. The Koran makes it absolutely clear that faith in One God without a second, and good works, are
[worky faith,
enough
to secure a
long been
It h ad
and
is
love]
man
his salvation.
insinuated by the rugged tribes of the
the settled Pathans of the Peshawar and
They
soft.
loved their land
Kurram
valleys
more than they loved
most of the Mohammedzais — including Behram
hills that
had grown
battle.
Certainly
Khan— would
have
pleaded guilty to the charge.
When
Ghaffars plans
natural for
the rich
him
England collapsed, therefore,
farming his father s lands.
felt restless.
As he talked with the peasants of the
he became painfully aware of the had
fallen.
\'iolence
At
first
all
He began
was
it
to
work
along the Swat with his usual energy.
fields
But he
to take to
for
He
looked
at
state into
he did not understand these
characteristic of the Pathans; at
which most of his people
the poverty, the ignorance, the apathy and
around him, and he wanted
mullahs railed
district,
to
do something about
feelings. Social
it.
reform was not
was a British notion. Although the
it
the sinful, decadent foreigners, they remained
firmly in their grip: the Raj protected the iron rule of the mullahs over
the
villagers,
and
mullahs discouraged any social or
in return the
political reform.
Young Khan knew the
lot
all this.
He knew
that any attempt to impro\e
of his people would be discouraged, even harassed. In the
[
63
]
moral
of the Pathan, the world belonged to those
life
enough
what they could hold: mercy and generosity were
to take
But although he wondered where
to Allah.
who were strong
it
came from, the
left
twenty-
the need to serve.
year-old farmer
felt
One afternoon,
working in the Helds behind the farmhouse, Ghaffar
Khan was ter.
thinking about the Reverend Wigram, his old schoolmas-
In the silence of the
Kharbuza
ra
summer
kharbuza dida rang
another melon,
it
takes
on
its color."
air,
me
an ancient proverb chimed. girad:
Ghaffar had spent years watching
the unassuming brothers at the Mission. generosity color as
must have rubbed Very
it will.
off,
well, then:
'"When a melon sees
The
color of their love
he decided— the melon
he would
and
will take its
serve.
But how? And where? Gertainly no help would come from the
Who
mullahs.
was
he— a
twenty-year-old
Mohammedzai farm
boy,
not even matriculated from high school— to uplift an ancient, noble
people?
himself
knew
“I
Mohammedzai— a child of the Prophet What more did he need? He could read. He could write. He
he was
Well,
just that, a
farming. All right, then, he would start a school.
men” wrote George
know
these
They
are brave as lions, wild as cats, docile as children. ...
Nathaniel Curzon of Kedleston: It is
with a sense of pride that one receives the honest homage of these magnificent Samsons, gigantic, bearded, instinct with loyalty,
Lx)rd
often stained with crime.
Curzon meant every word he wrote about the Pathans. He
mired them, but he had no
illusions
about them. In 1899 he was ap-
pointed viceroy of India precisely because he
Pathans than any other
man
to Pathan-proof the Frontier.
Tirah was devastated, and school,
were due
The 64
Between the
1910,
much had changed on
knew more about
England — and because he had
in
ad-
risings of 1897,
when Ghaffar Khan
the
a plan
when
started his
the first
the Frontier, and most of the changes
to the plans of the energetic
and resolute Curzon.
savage outburst of the Frontier wars of the 1890s
made
it
clear
to the British that they to
explode
at
were
sitting atop a
would be vulnerable
checked external
whim
to Russian intrigue, d’he P^orward Policy
was
security of the Indian to let
at stake.
its
As
Empire was
nothing— not even
sons”— stand in
of any crazed mullah,
threats, but internally the Frontier
able. India’s security
tended
that threatened
the very gateway to the Indian I^mpire. As long as the
Frontier could erupt in violence at the it
powder keg
viceroy,
was
still
Curzon knew
had
vulner-
that the
paramount duty, and he
his
his admiration for “magnificent
in-
Sam-
way.
Curzon’s plan put the Frontier directly under the conttol of the viceroy in Delhi. Crucial decisions could be
of disturbance. tricts; settled
The hill
Pathans
tribes
like
made
remained
Khan could
swiftly at the least sign
isolated
from the
settled dis-
not even enter the tribal areas
without permission. Vivisection of the Pathan nation was complete. Included in Curzon’s plan was a standing army of ten thousand
men
that girded the province along a two-hundred-mile perimeter,
from the Malakand
in the north to the
the Iranian border.
More
down
man
to
move army
forts
were
book, a hunting-ground
Department and the
Crimes Regulation.
a foreign penal
and railways and roads
built
The for
Waziristan on laid
A six-thousand-
province was declared to be the officers of the Political
military.”
Lord Curzon also enacted a Frontier
tip of
units quickly to any trouble spot.
police force maintained peace.
“a sealed
southern
colony— for
series of restrictive laws
A man
life
known
as the
could be “transported”— sent to
without counsel or
trial.
Justice
was in
the hands of the political agent or pro-British landlords called in to
hear cases. jects
The most elementary rights extended to Her Majesty’s sub-
throughout the Empire were denied the Pathans. All
this only
confirmed what the Pathans had long suspected: the imperial powers in
Delhi and London regarded them
On November 9, being.
It
was in
conditions
fact
1901,
as savages.
the North-West Erontier Province
an armed garrison,
a police state.
when Ghaffar Khan opened
came
into
These were the
his school in
Utmanzai.
Neither he nor Curzon could have imagined that someday the small school would help to undermine the viceroy’s plans.
Islam! « 65
For several years the Haji Abdul Wahid Saheb of Tarangzai had been
working
in the villages of
Mardan, near Utmanzai, giving
religious in-
He was the Frontier s first social reformer. Pathans throughout the district knew him as Haji Saheb and regarded him as a saint. He had attracted a dedicated band of young volunteers, and when he heard that a young Mohammedzai had started a school in Utmanzai, he was naturally interested. He guessed that he would find a kindred spirit and invited Khan to come to Mardan. Ghaffars school had been an instant success. The mullahs had struction.
%
always urged villagers to boycott the British schools, but they had
no
offered
The more liberal Pathans began to take Utmanzai. Khan and his co-worker, Abdul
real alternative.
notice of the school in Aziz, started several
more like
it
surrounding
number
they had enrolled a large
tirrte
in
Khans
caught the ever-watchful eye of the British,
him
and
in a short
of students.
Less sympathetic interests took notice too.
awakened peasantry on the
villages,
fledgling schools
who
did not want an
Frontier. In addition, the mullahs
as a competitor. If villagers
saw
became too educated, they might
stop giving alms.
Khan
tried to reason with
with a priest at that “It is
at
Murree
bungalow.
gress,
they walked
What do you
is
then you
the
man
an English mullah!
then the will
priests
have
The mullah was
to
If
tain.
priest
is
who
the main street, “look
it?”
lives
“I like
live well.
But
go begging from door
it.”
there?”
a country prospers
can also
to
if
and
people pro-
we remain
door
for
life
ignorant,
your stipend.”
of the English priest,”
shrugged. His income was meager, but at
Who knew
its
not impressed.
“Compare your life to the gested. “What a difference!”
The
think of
he once pleaded
Saheb,'’
down
very beautiful,” the mullah replied.
“Do you know who “No, who is he?” “He
as
them. “Mullah
what would happen
if
too
much
Khan
least
it
was
sug-
cer-
education were
given out?
“My words were wasted on the mullah,” Khan told Abdul Aziz later. “If God Himself could not make him understand, what could do?” I
66
Wlien the
him
asked
laji
I
Saheb
to start a school for older
Khan accepted at once. Khan liked the village, and he young
Khan
invited
Under
liberals.
boys
Muslim
he began
making, and
in the
to stir Indian
its
were
circle of
more
widely,
Yamindar and renaissance
just
beginning
Muslims.
British
on
the Frontier were feeling the breeze too.
public meetings were
illegal
All this activity
hey Haji
move about the province secretly. was making Behram Khan uneasy. His two daugh-
were well married; his
Khan and the
except in mosques, so
Sahebs co-workers were forced
But
I
anyone who read Al-Uilal. Under the Frontier Crimes Act
blacklisted
land.
laji s
^
The
ters
1
A Muslim
fresh, vigorous breezes
the north.
in
to read
periodicals like
Al-Hilal that were just beginning to appear.
was
Gaddar,
at
he
in Marclan,
liked contact with the
their influence
lie subscribed to progressive
meet him
to
to
his eldest son
was learning medicine in Eng-
youngest son had resigned a commission in the Guides
and was spreading education. 1 he old khan worried. Too many brave
young Pathans had been
jailed for lesser offenses, or
camps on the Andamans
Behram Khans a responsible
ed.
If
in the Indian
deported to prison
Ocean — or
simply hanged.
wife tempered his concern. Ghaffar, she said, was
boy who knew what he was doing. Behram Khan
his pious wife
approved of the boy
s
activities,
yield-
who was he
to
stand in the way? Still,
ried
he decided,
and
Ghaffar
s
life
settled. lie interest,
would look
different to the
arranged a marriage with a
gave
them
a village to
boy
if
he were mar-
who had caught
girl
manage, and hoped
for
the
best.
Ghaffar adored his beautiful wife, and in 1913 a son, Ghani, was born. Fhe young khan began to think that he might enjoy the regular
life
But the
more
of a landlord.
restlessness persisted.
front of the evening
thoughts would province. His to fear these
fire,
drift to
I
he often
lolding his infant son in his felt
something
stir
arms
in
within him. His
the impoverished, ignorant villagers of the
w ife could not understand the long
silences
and grew
moods. But what could she say?
Abruptly, disaster struck
Khan s dreams. Fhe
1
laji
Saheb decided
to
IsUim! « 67
a
fight the British openly.
He tried to rally the villagers of Buner to drive
the foreigners from their in their minds,
the mullahs,
When
who
appeared imminent, the Haji
after,
the
risk
too fresh
one night
fled
Mohmands. He never
to the
returned.
the British would say that their biggest mistake on
the Frontier was letting the Haji Saheb
about to
still
intrigued against him, and the alarmed British.
territories of
For years
But the Frontier War was
and the Haji Saheb found himself caught— between
his arrest
remoter
hills.
another
full-scale
slip
away. But they were not
war with the
Mohmands
to get
him
back.
The
Hajis flight was a catastrophe for twenty-four-year-old Ghaffar
Khan.
Now only brave young men like him were left to carry on. Who
would lead them?
Khan decided progressive a
to look for help. In 1913
Muslims
at Agra,
he attended a conference of
once the center of Mogul India and
symbol of the most enlightened aspect of Islamic
Khan met Muslim
leaders like
civilization.
still
There
Maulana Azad who were engaged
in
the social, educational, and political uplift of backward Muslini populations
all
over the Indian subcontinent.
ference at Deoband, they suggested “free'’ tribes
of the
hills,
A
year
Khan
where the need
later, at
try to
for
another con-
work among the
education was greatest.
The hills? Ghaffar explained to these cultured Muslims from Delhi and Lahore that the Frontier Regulations prohibited like
himself from even talking with the
hill tribes.
agreed, the idea was compelling, and worth a
He decided where
to visit Bajaur, the
Nevertheless, he
try.
mountainous
district to
the north
tribesmen of Mullah Mastun had
fifteen years earlier the
started the Great Frontier War.
settled Pathans
The
British
had not
forgotten.
They
had made the Malakand — like other trouble spots on the Frontier— “Political Agency,”
something of a
under the absolute control of the
political no-man’s-land.
local political agent,
It
came
whose word was
law— and the British in Delhi made sure that his word would be harsh. Only the most hardened administrators were sent out to the Agencies.
The 68
political agent of
the Malakand was a notorious
man named
Cab. By his ordinance, Pathans had to
Englishman. Any Pathan the
commons,
his
who
head and
failed to
how
low before any passing
do so was locked
feet sticking out
in stocks in
through the
holes. 'Phe
entire district was ruled like a feudal fiefdom.
One
winter morning,
Khan
left for
Mohmand
Bajaur with a
col-
They reached the Malakand Pass at dusk. Police were searching anyone who looked suspicious, and Khan knew he would be stopped and perhaps arrested. He lay down in the hack of a horse carleague.
riage
and covered himself with
his long cotton cloth. ^
It
must have been dark, or perhaps the guard was
driver told
him
there was no one in the back.
moment
at
through.
Khans
Once
The
tirfed.
He peered
for
an endless
the pile of cotton on the carriage bottom and
Mohmand, walked
friend, being a
through cedar
it
toward Bajaur.
left
the
They walked
then into pines. Friends of the Haji Saheb gave
forests,
them food and rooms
trails
let
right in.
they were past the Chakdarra checkpoint, the two
main road and climbed steep
tonga
to sleep in
— at Chamarkand a small cottage on
the edge of the forest, with hives of honey bees droning in the morning sun. Following the creeks of the Panjkora for another day, they
reached Bajaur. Itinerant travelers
high-country
up near the
were not unusual
villagers.
village
about the saints and
sights,
even
to these remote,
Wandering mendicants often
mosques seers.
to read the scriptures
But
this
themselves
set
and
was no mendicant.
It
tell
was
stories
difficult
not to notice him.
Ghaffar thought the small village of Zagai would make a good place to start work.
tention,
It
and the
was remote enough, he thought, to escape undue villagers
seemed
plains for other workers to join
to like
and
He sent a message to the
him. Then he waited.
From near the mosque, one could forests
him.
at-
into the valleys of Bajaur.
look out over the pine and cedar
There the
British
watched every-
one and everything that passed through. After a few days of waiting, Ghaffar began to wonder
Had they even
if
something had happened
to his friends.
received his message?
Another day passed. And another. In the seclusion of the woods, the reality of his situation bore
down
Islam! « 69
upon GhafFar Khan. He did not
like
hiding from the authorities.
could he work under such conditions, '
s
A
when even
How
students were paid
by the British to inform on their teachers?
Alone and perplexed, young Khan decided to perform a
he would seek his
Mohmand
it
chilla, a fast. If
fell
back upon his
friend to wait for him. No,
a small
mosque and
At night he sipped creek water.
tired of kneeling,
He
he
And he
sat cross-legged
told
he explained, he did not
know what he was going to do. He hoped to find out. Khan stayed in the small, dim room for several days, ing.
He
he could not find help outside,
He found
within himself.
instincts.
prayed.
eating noth-
When
his knees
on the prayer carpet.
sought answers. Should he stay and
return to the relative safety of Utmanzai?
risk
capture? Should he
What
should he do? Find-
ing no help, he entered into the depths of his consciousness, until the
questions stopped.
Khan
Francis Bernardone of Assisi was a year older than Ghaffar
when, seven hundred years church of San Damiano
mand him:
earlier,
and heard
to pray
''Francis, rebuild
my
he entered the broken, deserted
churchF Obediently he walked out
some
into the countryside to collect
stones
and
the repair.
start
That the impetuous Francis took the command too 'church,” in fact, was
meant
to indicate
four walls of that broken structure
the
call,
that the lifting
an institution
— did
him up
rested
on
literally— that
far
beyond the
not matter. Francis mistook
but he did not mistake his calling.
hand of God had
com-
a bold, clear voice
He knew, however and that
his bare shoulder,
dimly, it
was
to a great task.
Laying those undressed stones along the broken wall of San Da-
miano
started Francis of Assisi
course of his
life.
Ghaffar
on
Khan
is
a mission that utterly
changed the
even more reticent about his inner
life
than Francis was, and in an immediate sense, to judge from
his
own
terse references, his chilla in the
clouded and inconclusive. But
on that
his activities
70
at Zagai
was
can be observed from that point
and words are stamped with
purpose — the service of seven decades.
it
mosque
God — that
does not
alter
a singleness- of
over the course of
It wijs Ccirly
morning when GhnfTnr Khun ended his
He folded his
fast.
pniyernig under his arm and walked out with the vague hut powerful
same man who had entered the mosque He had not reeeived the direct answers he had
sensation that he was not the a few days before.
sought— he still did not know what not
known
before.
to do.
And he understood,
But he
felt
dimly, that
a strength
it
he had
was the strength
of God. Islam! Inside
him, the word began
Submit! Surrender swelling within
to the Ix)rd
him
to
explode with meaning. Islam!
and know His strength! Ghaffar
the desire to serve this great God.
And since He
needed no service, Ghaffar would serve His children instead— the tered villagers
who were
too ignorant
and too steeped
felt
tat-
in violence to
help themselves.
Ghaffar looked
down
their stern tyranny, the
into the valley.
There were the
British with
entrenched khans, the reactionary priests.
saw before him only pain and unending
labor.
But he
felt
He
buoyed.
Like Francis, he did not fully understand the nature of his calling; but
he knew he had been rest in this
called.
He would submit, and he would not seek
life.
He swung his prayer carpet over his shoulder and started down
the
footpath, dodging the broken, peppered granite in his way.
Ghaffar
Khan could
hardly have suspected that his
life
now moved
along a path taken a decade earlier hy another subject of the Indian
Kmpire, Mohandas Gandhi. By the time Khan had returned village
the
and
flight
set
about reopening the schools closed hy the British after
of the Haji Saheb, a steamship was carrying
from South Africa, where the cluded
to his
history’s
first
Gandhi away
forty-five -year-old barrister
successful
non\iolent
struggle
had con-
against
im-
perialism.
In
South Africa Gandhi had undergone
ter that utterly altered his life’s
a transformation of charac-
purpose. For a decade he had been
systematically reforming his life-style to transform himself affluent lawyer into a disciplined seeker of God.
I
le
from an
had thrown
all
the
forces of his powerful personality into the task of reducing every ego-
centered drive in
him
“to zero.”
Walking the dry
hills
of Natal as a Islaml « 71
stretcher bearer during the
Zulu “rebellion’ of 1906 — another
notori-
ous British punitive expedition — he had heard within him the '
s
service
selfless
of the
human
and
the surge of power that follows the surrender
felt
an overriding cause.
will to
Gandhi returned from
new
strength, but
he found himself
Through
the head of a wholly
nonviolent
systematic,
trial
and
in
of fighting,
summer
Gandhi
to
to do.
new kind
a
Within weeks
of campaign
discriminatory
—
legislation.
sometimes supported by thousands of Indian by a handful of friends, Gandhi
winning the basic
ment. In the
The
resistance
error,
laborers, at times only
ceeded
ambulance service acutely aware of
his
unaware of what he was
still
at
call to
rights
finally suc-
denied his people by the govern-
of 1914, confident of the power of his
left
South Africa
forces released in the
Hindu
new way
to return to India. barrister
and the Muslim
re-
former were slowly converging— and they were unlike anything the statesmen and generals of the Raj had ever faced.
The British, masters
of the arts of diplomacy and war, had conquered a quarter of the
earths people. But the forces of history were against
something altogether new: satyagraha, “soul
unleashed from the depths of the India
seemed supremely secure
would have scoffed three decades.
at
human spirit. that summer of
1914.
force,”
power
Most
British
the notion that the Raj would collapse in just
Khan would
Gandhi, he had chosen
72
now moving to pit them
probably have scoffed with them. Like
to serve.
He
did not question the future.
f *
/
I
r
t
t
,(
\
s
'
om Lucknow, Khan went straight on nationalist leaders.
to
Delhi and met with other
Everywhere he encountered
a fierce sense of ur-
gency. Since their near-victory over the Raj in 1922, Indians had
been
warning the British that unless they were granted some form of government, another clash was inevitable. aloof.
Indians were
becoming
they were willing to fight for
Young
leaders like
that the time
restless.
The
British
self-
remained
They wanted freedom, and
it.
Nehru and Subhas Chandra Bose were arguing
had come
always cautious, asked
for
an
them
all-out battle
to wait
with the Raj. Gandhi,
and give the
British
time to
demonstrate their intentions. Besides, he urged, India was not ready for battle.
Give the British a
year. If
they did not grant concessions by
then, the impatient young Indians could have their fight — and
would be
it
to the finish.
Khan imbibed this new urgency and returned to the Frontier determined to sweep Pathans into the mainstream of Indian affairs. He spent the summer on a grueling tour through hot, dust-choked villages, trying to stir provincial people to see beyond their own fields and families. By the end of the summer he was drained and impatient.
Something more was needed. *
The world, once weak with summer's Grows strong again. For the poet Khushal Khan, as for
all
Pathans,
heat,
autumn
The Sen'ants
of
rather than
God
«
107
Then
spring brings renewal.
the sun dips south toward the Arabian
Sea, the air from the passes cools, wedges of geese float over from the
Central Asian plateau, the poplars and willows turn
Pathan blood
stirs.
September of 1929 brought cooling winds
Khan
Peshawar
to the
valley.
ready to do battle again — not with the British yet, but with
felt
He
his Pathans.
mined
amber— and
a great
felt
moment approaching and he was
would be
that his people
fit
for
deter-
it.
At a boisterous gathering in Utmanzai one afternoon, Khan stood
up and unveiled that
had crippled
his people.
could beat in an open,
“There are two ways one
outlining the petty vices
These hardy Pathans,
fair fight,
And
he declared.
British,
He began by
his feelings.
otism.
.
.
You have
.
no one
were helpless before the clever
they had no one to blame but themselves.
to national progress,”
the path of religion, and the other
is
whom
all
he is
told
them:
the road of patri-
heard of America and Europe.
people in those countries
may
The
not be very religious, but they
have a sense of patriotism, love
for their nation,
and
social
consciousness.
And
look at the progress that has
take a look at ourselves!
own
feet yet.
Look
We
at their
been made
have hardly learned
there.
Then
to stand
on our
standard of living and then take a
look at ours.
Thousands of proud Pathan eyes looked around — at the rags,
the hide-bare burros and thin goats browsing the stubble, the
gaunt faces If
tattered
we
are
.
.
.
on the road
to ruin,
it
is
because we have neither the
true spirit of religion, nor the true spirit of patriotism nor love for
our nation.
.
.
even heard about
.
A
great revolution
is
coming and you
haven’t
it!
During my recent visit to the subcontinent, I noticed that men and women were fully prepared to serve the nation. And here? Leave alone your women, even your men do not show any desire to serve. They hardly. seem to understand the meaning of the word “nation”! 108
Khan looked around,
his dark eyes Idazing.
had brought the milling mass
to silence.
he edge
I
in
Bearded, turhaned heads did
not move. Two goats scuffled behind the raised platform
Khan continued
noticed.
A it
revolution
can perish by
cultivates
through for
nation can prosper by
brotherhood and national
revoiLiiion. If the
the flood.
with
A
as well. y\ nation that
it
When
it
is
if
it,
and
wide awake, that sure to benefit
spirit, is
people are vigilant they
comes the whole nation
it.
But
no one
Init
hammer:
to
like a flood!
is
voice
liis
will
will
he ready
move along '
,
the people arc asleep!
If
they are indifferent to each
other and indifferent to the country, the whole nation will be
when the
swept away by the flood
Khan paused
revolution comes.
again and took a deep breath.
“O
Pathans!” he
thundered:
Take a look
at
the developed countries of the world.
think their prosperity has
just
Do
dropped from the sky?
It
you has
no more than our prosperity will drop from heaven! rhe secret of their prosperity is that they have men and women who sacrifice their luxuries, their pleasures, and their not,
comfort
for
the sake of the prosperity of the nation.
W^e do not have such self-interest tries,
and
let
men among
look only to our
the country go to the devil! In other coun-
people have learnt that no
country everyone
We
us.
lives in a
man
an
is
island.
dream world of
his
But
in
our
own — like
the
Any animal can find a place to live, find a mate, rear young. Can we call ourselves the crown of creation if we do
animals. its
just that
and nothing more?
Rarely had a Pathan spoken to fellow Pathans with words so plainspoken: Please
remember
this. If
everyone. F.very man,
the nation prospers
woman, and
it
will affect
child will benefit.
Do
not
think that by acquiring riches for yourselves your country
become
prosperous.
It
will not. If
will
you want your country and
your people to prosper you must stop living I
for
yoursehes alone.
he Scrwints of
God
«
109
You must
start living for
and
to prosperity
He had Allah and
finished.
men
Pathan vows
spoke with
They knew
is
the only way
progress.
had cut their Pathan pride bitter.
the community. That
filled
the
air,
steel in their voices.
invoking the
of
The badshahs words
like a razor-sharp tulwar,
that the tulwar
name
but they were not
had been hurled from love — to
rescue the honor of their nation.
For one young Pathan, Khans words cut deep enough
to
keep him
awake the whole night. The badshah had spoken nothing but the hard truth.
Much had been promised
had been sworn. But was
The next morning, morning prayer,
this
that
by the gathering; a thousand oaths
enough? The flood was already
before the muezzin had called out the time for
young man was hanging on the gate of Khans
courtyard, rattling a dozen chickens out of their roosts. his heart.
Something had
argued, one whose
near.
to
He poured out
be done. What about an organization, he
members would swear on
Allah's
name
to give
Not the Youth League — that was for organizers and social workers. What the country needed was men ready to die for it. It needed soldiers! their lives for their country?
.
Khan
.
.
liked the Are in this Pathans voice.
‘'Sit
down. Lets
talk."
Tea was brought, salted and hot, with a platter of fresh nan.
sun was
still
Soldiers!
those
who
The
below the horizon.
Khan
liked the idea. Plenty of Pathans were fighters, but
actually went to join
an army fought only
for the Raj.
Perhaps they did need soldiers — but certainly not more violence.
An
idea slipped out, as formless at
first
as the faint
courtyard around them in the early rays of dawn. violent soldiers, drilled
and
As
And pledged
far as
to fight:
Khan knew,
it
drum and
unarmed Pathans? 110
of non-
bagpipe corps like the
not with guns but with their
had never been done.
professional nonviolent soldiers was
The young man looked
An army
disciplined, with officers, cadres, uni-
forms, a flag— perhaps even a
Guides!
shadows of the
An army
lives.
of trained
something new.
at the badshah.
But Pathans?
An army
of
‘'Who reckless
else?''
enough
Khan
in a righteous
treating nor retaliating?
Khan
more
called for
as a disfigurement their blood
from
It
True, he admitted, Pathans would see
tea.
The code of revenge seemed in hadn't Gandhi been talking for a
He had argued
was meant especially for the undaunted, for those
A
it
first.
But then,
whatever the cost.
re-
kind of honor.
loftiest
decade about the “nonviolence of the strong"? to fight
would he
cause without weapons, neither
was the
ofhadal—at
birth.
else hut a I^athan
What could possibly take more bravado than
to try it?
enemy
facing an
Who
shot back.
that
it
who were not afraid
nation that was unfit to 6ght/he had said,
could not prove the virtue of not bghting. Well, Pathans were
far
ahead there! All they needed was the understanding. If he could persuade half a dozen
They
to try
...
it
called themselves the
Khudai Khidmatgars, “the Servants of
God.” Their motto was freedom, their aim, service. Since self
needed no
service, they
would serve
The Khudai Khidmatgars, under Khan, became
him-
his people.
the leadership of Abdul Ghaffar
army— and
history’s first professional nonviolent
most improbable. Any Pathan could
God
its
provided he took the army’s
join,
oath:
I
am
Khudai Khidmatgar, and
a
serving his creation in the I
name
of
is
as
serving him,
God
needs no service, but
promise
I
to serve
humanity
God.
promise to refrain from violence and from taking revenge.
promise
to forgive those
who
me
oppress
or treat
me
I
with
cruelty. I
promise
to refrain
from taking part
in feuds
and quarrels
and from creating enmity. Pathan
I
promise
to treat every
I
promise
to refrain
I
promise
to live a simple
from I
from
as
my
antisocial life,
brother and friend.
customs and
to practice virtue
practices.
and
to refrain
evil.
promise
not to lead a
good manners and good beha\’ior and of idleness. I promise to devote at least two
to practice life
hours a day to social work.
The Sen' ants
of
God
«
111
For a Pathan, an oath a
vow
easily
Fwen **
"
own tion.
to
keep his word
the
at
risk
of his
Nonviolence was the heart of the oath and of the organiza-
life.
was directed not only against the violence of British rule but
It
against the pervasive violence of Pathan their
does not enter into
because once given, a Pathans word cannot be broken.
enemy can count on him
his
He
not a small matter.
is
freedom and much more:
Khan drew
his
first
ated from his schools.
recruits
They
life.
With
they could win
it
prosperity, dignity, self-respect.
men who had
from the young
gradu-
flocked to him. Trained and uniformed,
they snapped in behind their officers and
out into the villages to
filed
seek recruits.
They began by wearing a
A
simple white overshirt, but the white was
men had
soon
dirtied.
nery,
and the brick-red color proved
easily,
couple of
dyed
their shirts a
at
the local tan-
It
did not dirty
breakthrough.
the dye was cheap, and — best of luck— it had
dropped
their plows to see
Recruits did not
come
who
easily,
these glowing figures were.
Khan and
but
Within a few months they had
teers persisted.
style. Villagers
his eager
five
young volun-
hundred
recruits
—
not enough for a Raj-shattering holy war, but a beginning. Volunteers
who
took the oath formed platoons with
commanding
officers
and
learned basic army discipline — everything that did not require the
They had drills, badges, a tricolor of rank— and a bagpipe corps.
use of arms. hierarchy
Khan
set
modeled
up
a
network of committees called
the entire military
jirgahs,
after the traditional tribal councils that
Pathan law
for centuries. Villages
ultimate authority. Since
all
the Provincial Jirga
The
larger groups,
Provincial Jirga was the
the committees were
became
named and
had maintained
were grouped into
responsible to district-wide committees.
officers,
flag,
filled
by elected
a kind of unofficial parliament of
Pathans. Officers in the ranks were not elected, since infighting. in
He
Khan wanted
appointed a salar-e-azam or commander-in-chief,
turn appointed officers to serve under him.
pletely voluntary;
were recruited
come. 112
to avoid
even the
too,
officers
The army was com-
gave their services free.
and played an important
who
Women
role in the struggles to
Volunteers went to the villages and opened schools, helped on work projects,
and maintained order
at public gatherings.
From time
to
time they drilled in work camps and took long military-style marches into the hills.
As they marched, they
We
are the
We
serve
sang.
army of God, By death or wealth unmoved. We march, our leader and we, Ready to die.
Our
love
i /
people and our cause.
Freedom
Our
and we is
our goal.
lives the price
we
Watching the narrow columns threading
one could
easily
pay. a
curving mountain
imagine that some angry mullah was unleashing
another holy war against the foreigners. But these Pathans, years
had carried
pass,
rifles
and tucked small armories of
knives inside their waistbands,
They armed themselves
now
who
revolvers
for
and
carried only a stick for walking.
only with their discipline, their faith, and
their native mettle.
The Sen'ants of God
«
113
W'ith First
Gandhi
at a prayer
meeting (Govt, of
meeting of the Khudai Khidmatgars,
;\pril
India). Pre\ ions pages:
1930 (\e/irii Memorial Library')
1
CHAPTER TEN
The Weapon of the Prophet 1930 193 -
[
I
am
going
]
you such a weapon that the police
to give
and the army will not be able to stand against it. It is the weapon of the Prophet, but you are not aware of it. That weapon is patience and righteousness. No power on earth can stand against it.
When you go that there
back
to
your
an army of
is
God and
Ask your brethren
tience.
Endure
villages, tell
to join
your brethren
weapon is pathe army of God. its
all hardships. If you exercise patience, victory^
will be yours.
On
riiF, S'l
ROKE
of midnight,
December
1929, a
31,
deafening roar
swelled over the ancient city of Lahore and spilled into the dark Indian
countryside.
It
was the cry of freedom. Five thousand Congress
delegates, closely
watched by some twenty-five thousand sympathetic
onlookers, had spent the previous
they
week arguing
India’s future.
demand independence outright— and unleash
go on reasoning and pleading with the British? there was no argument.
The
British
Should
a revolution
— or
On close examination,
had been given
a year to think
the matter over and their purposeful silence was answer enough. India, in their eyes,
would remain
Thus the cry. The selves
and
all
five
British
— indefinitely.
thousand delegates decided
Indians free
men and women,
to declare
them-
henceforth and forever.
Their declaration echoed the small band of American colonials Philadelphia in July of 1776:
We
believe that
as of
it
is
the inalienable right of the Indian people,
any other people, to have freedom and
[
117 ]
to enjoy the fruits
at
of their
have
toil
and have the
necessities of
opportunities of growth.
full
We
life
so that they
believe also that
may if
any
government deprives a people of these rights and oppresses them, the people have a further right to alter it or to abolish
The
British
Government
in India has not only deprived the
Indian people of their freedom, but has based exploitation of the masses politically, culturally
and
it.
itself
on the
and has ruined India economically,
spiritually.
We
believe, therefore, that
India must sever the British connection and attain complete
We
independence.
submit any longer to
hold
it
to
be a crime against caused
to a rule that has
man and God
to
this fourfold disaster
our country.
The young accuracy.
loomed
Jefferson could not have phrased the words with cleaner
No
doubt the image of the American colonials must have
in the
minds of many under the sprawling pavilion — as did
images of the American Revolution
itself.
Yet there was a difference. This was the Indian Revolution, not the
American, and the words were Gandhi s. The end was the same, but the means would be
utterly, startlingly different.
The
resolution went
on:
We
recognize, however, that the most effective way of gaining
our freedom
is
not through violence.
by withdrawing, so
far as
we
can,
all
We
will
voluntary association from
the British government, and will prepare for including the nonpayment of taxes.
prepare ourselves
We
civil
disobedience,
are convinced that
can but withdraw our voluntary help, stop payment of the
if
we
taxes,
without doing violence even under provocation, the end of this
inhuman
The
rule
assured.
is
Indian tricolor was raised and the gathering exploded in cele-
bration.
Two hundred
Pathans led the way, locking their arms in a
drums thumped and the
swayed
in
one of
the wild Pathan dances so reminiscent of the Gossacks. Even
Nehru
great circle. Their
circle
put on a Pathan turban and kicked up his patrician heels. India was free! All she
had
to
do now was prove
That was Gandhis 118
job.
it
to the British.
He would choose
the day and the issue on
which India would begin saty agra ha — ncmv‘K)\cn\ told Indians to
for
prepare themselves for the
the inner voice.
When
the
call
final
resistance. Gandlii
plunge while he waited
came he would know
it
— and
give
the signal. India waited
and simmered. Like monsoon clouds boiling on the
horizon, the whole country of three hundred million waited for the
storm to break. January passed, then February.
from Gandhi, hhe
British
murmured
I
here was no word
and clubs about
in their offices
the storm brewing— and waited. I'hey were not about to
thing out of nothing. Ixt Gandhi show himself.
On March
1930,
2,
Gandhi
scribed as “the strangest
*
what has been de-
sent the viceroy
communication the head of
ever received.” After a detailed, reasoned review of British rule as a curse,”
unless he “opened a
tionwide
civil
make some-
a
government
why he “regarded
he informed Lord Irwin respectfully that
way
conference between equals,” na-
for a real
disobedience would begin in nine days.
He
did not say
what would happen or where. Irwin acknowledged receipt of the
On March
letter.
Gandhi left his ashram on the Sabarmati River and began a twenty-four-day march to the seaside village of Dandi. On the morning of April 6, with thousands of cheering Indians surrounding 12,
him, he picked up
a
pinch of sea
salt
from the Dandi beach and broke
the law restricting the making and selling of
monopoly.
A
The
pinch was
sufficient.
Gandhis
salt law,
ploitation in a tropical land
on
it
the government
great Salt Satyagraha had begun.
country to break the
The
salt to
act signaled Indians across the
one of the more onerous forms of
where
salt is as essential as
law not only monopolized the market for
salt
which, until recently, had been the government
water.
but levied a tax s
second
largest
source of revenue. Everyone in India, rich or poor, had to use
Everyone was touched by the
salt law.
everyone was in a position to break bol of colonial tyranny,
it.
Therefore,
The
salt
ex-
salt.
Gandhi reasoned,
law was a perfect sym-
which the simplest Indian peasant could
understand.
A monsoon
of resistance broke over the country. In
open defiance,
Indians by the millions made, sold, and bought millions of pounds of
The Weapon of the Prophet
eagiie to join the
le
1
began
It
between the Congress and the
to call
Khan
a
to
do with
Hindu, d he
between Hindus and
I>eaguc,
Muslims, widened. In June 1940, France
fell
Germans.
to the
would be next,
Britain
rhe Congress Working Committee debated how India should spond
re-
event of an attack. Should their defense be nonviolent
in the
or not?
•
Gandhi and Khan argued
that there was
no
issue.
Nonviolence was
not an expedient that could be dropped once a goal had been
reached;
it
was a way of life, a code of conduct.
aspects of life
was
be effective
in
all
to
win her freedom nonviolently
if
it
to
if,
at
It
had
to
be consistent
could not hope
in any. India
the same time, she prepared to
defend her freedom with arms.
The Committee Nehru,
Patel,
disagreed. For the
time in twenty-five
first
years,
Azad, and Rajagopalachari — all veterans of the move-
ment-broke with Gandhi’s
Nonviolence could bring
leadership.
them freedom, they argued, but from outside aggression. With
could not protect their freedom
it
real grief,
the Working
Committee
resolved that they were “unable to go the full length with Gandhiji.”
Gandhi asked gress.
He would
violence.
It
stiffened.
to
work along
own
his
lines,
support them wherever they adhered
was a gentlemen’s agreement
He
in principle.
strictly to
non-
Khan, however,
to disagree.
moved away He knew too that if
did not want any part of the Congress
from nonviolence and Gandhi, even
Con-
separate from the
if
it
he gave even an inch on the matter, the combustible Frontier — with
Hindu-Muslim tensions simmering— might “It is difficult for
and
I
am
well go
up
in flames.
me to continue in the Committee,” he announced.
resigning from
the nonviolence
I
it.
I
should
have believed
of the Khudai Khidmatgars
.
.
.
in
like to
make
and preached
affects
all
our
clear that
it
to
life,
my
brethren
and only that
has permanent value.
The
Fire of
Freedom
«
167
The Khudai Khidmatgars implies
own
— servants
lives
must, therefore, be what our
God
and humanity— by laying down their and never taking any life. of
In July 1940, the Congress repeated to
throw
its
name
full
its
offer to
weight behind the British war
London.
It
effort, enlist
was ready Indians in
the army, and fight as one of the Allies — if the British granted
self-
government.
He was prime minister now, as imperial and eloHe had “not become the King s First Minister in order
Churchill said no.
quent
as ever.
to preside at the liquidation of the Empire.”
The
backward.
of Britain had
But he was looking
days of imperial glory would never return.
begun on August
and Great Britain was
8,
The
Battle
fighting for
its life.
Churchills dogged defense of imperialism drove an embittered —
and chastened — Congress back
Gandhi. Both he and Khan
to
joined the Working Committee, which
country in another satyagraha. about
it.
Khan,
He
know
did not
if
He
now
asked Gandhi to lead the
replied that
he would have
to
think
Indians were ready.
continued to stay out of
for his part,
re-
politics,
devoting his
energies to the arduous daily challenge of lifting his people out of
poverty and apathy.
From his stay at Wardha and his long conversations with Gandhi, Khan now understood how the Constructive Program, aimed at building a self-sustaining village economy, could eliminate the exploitation
opened
and greed responsible
and war. He
Utmanzai and
built himself
his center for village service near
a small, thatched hut
work
for poverty, violence,
which became
his headquarters.
There he could
quietly, out of the public eye.
He continued to press
for rights
freedom has been won,” he you
will
and involvement of women. “When
told a
group of
women
near Kohat,
have an equal share and place with your brothers in
We
two wheels of a big chariot, and unless our movements have been mutually adjusted, our carthis country.
riage will never
168
are like the
move.
Khan
Khudai Khidmatgar volunteers
to train
Mary
also started holding week-long
Barr,
eamps — his own innovation — in the
an Pmglish missionary teacher
influence, attended a
camp
Constructive Program.
who came under Gandhi s
in the early forties
and has
left a
very per-
sonal description:
After a hot drink— very welcome in the frosty early there was village cleaning for two hours,
teaching about sweeping having told
me
at last
Bapus [Gandhi s]
borne
One
fruit!
with glee that the batch he had been with
laad
cleaned up the police station in the village he went
The
rest of
the day went in spinning,
meetings, and two hefty meals of large dal,
morning—
drills, flag
flat rotis
Pathan even
to.
ceremonies,
[flatbread]
and
with no trimmings.
In addition to the four
about
a
hundred
visitors,
hundred “Red
Shirts" there were
mostly from Baluchistan, Kashmir and
Then Khan came into the big tent where we were gathered. He stood for what seemed a long time, looking
the Punjab. all
round solemnly, even
on the assembled campers. There
sternly,
was a pin-drop silence from the
he began
to
speak in a
But
a
of his entry, and
(|uiet voice, all listened earnestly,
now and then responded by he had
moment
a
unanimous shout
to
when
but
something
said.
Pathan training camp had
its
own
style, in
contrast to the
more sober atmosphere of Gandhi’s ashram:
More dancing
this
evening — great fun!
The band seemed
to
much as the others, swaying about in One drummer in his excitement threw
enter into the dance as
time with the music.
drum his
six feet
up
into the
air,
caught
it
his
again and went on with
rhythm.
After visiting the camp,
Mary
Barr went on to one of the schools
Khan had established in Utmanziii — a girls’ school, “a rare thing in the Muslim North.’’ Then Khan invited her to spend a few days with his family at their
walking the asked
home
fields
in
and
Utmanzai. She stayed in the large farmhouse, hillsides,
and talked with Khan’s son, Wali.
him whether he remembered the
“I
early days,’’ she writes.
The
Tire of
Freedom
«
169
He
said that
he had been too young
to
know anything about
the terrorizing in the early twenties, but
it
was bad enough in
He remembered the way they had been besieged in Utmanzai, when if even a eow wandered out it was shot or bayoneted. No one eould go out into the fields, with eonsequent 1931-32.
harm
He
and
to the crops
told of beatings
cattle,
— one
he became unconscious.
The
next morning,
while dirt piled up in the
village.
of which he experienced himself until .
.
.
Mary Barr
says,
Khan was up and busy
before
the rest of the household,
working with the servants sweeping and clearing up, both out-
and inside the house. Then Khan spent an hour spinning before going
side
.
.
.
to
work
in
He confessed to me that he disliked doing nothing. local men kept coming to hear about the camp, and
the garden. All
day
while chatting helped in whatever work was in progress out of doors.
In the evening the sons took
me
whether their father had always been said,
“No, he used to beat
thrash and
suggestive light
must have taken place
when Ghani was Gandhis
life
terribly
as
born.
in
We
in his twenties
wife, instances of
Khans
I
peaceful as
when
jump on anyone he thought was
The words throw that
me
and
for a walk,
them now. Ghani asked
was young, and
I
a
badmash
.
.
on the kind of transformation early years.
He was
twenty-three
have similar glimpses into
and
.
thirties
— heated
Mahatma
quarrels with his
an imperious temper; nothing more, but enough
to
human side of the man which we can recognize. “As a young boy,” Khan openly admitted, “I had had violent tendencies — the hot blood of the Pathans was in my veins.” Gandhis ideas and influence had made all the difference: “They changed my life forever.” Like Gandhi, Khan was not born nonviolent: he was a Pathan. He had had hint at a
to
remake himself. Lesser transformations must have taken place a thousand times
over during the years of taza
170
Khans work among the
Pathans. Even Mur-
Khan, the outlaw of Utmanzai that Ghani Khan wrote
of, ac-
became a commander in the
tiially
his prison sentence for killing Atta
permanent a
khan
at
like
1
hard to he a saint and
it
killing,
and the
change of heart and action that
a
transformation was not
lis
Nonetheless, this violent Pathan whose
time.''
had known mostly robbing,
left a
Khan.
Badshah Khans — he “found
the same
underwent
Khiidai Khidmatgars after serving
permanent impression on
his
inside of a Frontier
life jail
and
lasted for four years
life.
Ghani asked Murtaza how nonviolence could have become the creed of a former outlaw.
The
plainspoken reply offers an insight into the
dynamics of satyagraha, soul
human
the
Ghani. great, girls
“I
it
spirit. “I
was
up
tried to live
was a miracle.
I
force,
which
taps the hiddei^ potential of
a little saint for those four years,”
to
my dreams
instead of
my
he
desires.
told
was
It
refused fortunes for a hope and spared lovely
because they trusted
me and looked up to me.” In his unintended
way, Murtaza reveals the infectious power of nonviolence
— love in ac-
“You cannot help loving those that love you,” he
Ghani, “and
tion.
you cannot hurt those that ple
thought
I
was.”
trust you.
Thus the
I
tried to live
up
told to
what the peo-
grizzled outlaw went to prison again
—
but this time as a “servant of God” in the cause of his peoples freedom.
Khans period
of peaceful work did not
last long.
In
December
1941
the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and began a swift advance across
Southeast Asia. Malaya
fell,
then Singapore; then, in March 1942,
Rangoon. The Japanese were within reach of
The
British
government
India's border.
Gongress support
tried again to enlist
for
the war, but no agreement could be reached. Gongress, mindful of India's
treatment after the
last
world war, insisted on certain rights im-
mediately; and Ghurchill was not about to give India away. Pressure built for
renewed
campaign
struggle. In July 1942,
to rid India of British rule. Previous civil
movements had been aimed
at a particular
Gandhi decided, would make British:
The rest of
Gandhi proposed an
“Quit
India.”
just
the Gongress Working
On
disobedience
issue.
This one,
one sweeping demand of the
Nothing could be
British got the message.
law or
all-out
clearer.
August
9,
1942,
Gommittee were
Gandhi and the
arrested, along with
hundreds of Gongress leaders across the country. The
Fire of
Freedom
«
171
On ment
the Frontier, Khudai Khidmatgar volunteers entered governoffices
and courts carrying the Congress
— criminal
British slogans
acts
flag
and chanting
anti-
under the Frontier Crimes Regula-
The government cordoned the buildings and beat volunteers who tried to enter. Dr. Khan Saheb, who had relinquished his premiership in 1939 to protest British policies, now put on his red shirt tions.,
and walked his
into the headquarters of the Indian Civil Service
command
— under
only three years before — to deliver a speech denounc-
ing the war effort.
Khan
too courted arrest, but each time he went out to a village the
government simply picked him up to Peshawar. Frustrated,
Charsadda
Khan
in a patrol car
and returned him from
led a group of fifty volunteers
to “raid'" the court at
Mardan.
When
they saw a phalanx
of uniformed police in front of them, they locked arms and kept walk-
The
ing.
with
police beat
to the
breaking two of
steel tips,
arrested
them
and sent
to the
ground with
Khans
Haripur
jail,
lathis, four-foot staffs
ribs in
He was
the process.
usually reserved for hardened
criminals.
By the end
of the year, sixty thousand Indians were in
government, already panicky due
ened now by the Japanese bullets to break tire
in
to
wartime conditions and
Burma, used
The
jail.
threat-
and
tear gas, lathi charges,
up Indian demonstrations. With Gandhi and the
Congress leadership in
jail,
violence erupted
stations, post offices, railway stations
all
en-
over India. Police
— symbols of British authority—
were bombed, and telegraph and telephone wires cut.
The
British
responded with massive
force.
troops in that country,” Churchill admitted,
“The number
“is
of white
now larger than
at
any
time in the British connection.” Miraculously, however, the Frontier remained nonviolent. picketing and “raids” continued, but there was
some lines
no sabotage.
The
When
Khan if they could cut a few communications wouldn’t harm anyone — he told them to go ahead, so long as
volunteers asked
—
it
they turned themselves in to the police afterwards. “This would add to the
moral courage of the worker,” he added
heads
at
172
drily.
They shook
the unrelenting nonviolence of their badshah.
their
Pbr the rest of the war
of India’s political figures were kept in
all
movement
while intense repression kept the freedom
war neared
began
Public sentiment turned in favor of Indian
to soften.
released.
A
1945,
all
political prisoners
Labor government which promised
freedom was elected
in-
had
to grant India
autumn, and Churchill was
in the
prime minister. In March
power
As the
conclusion, however, Britain’s attitude towards India
its
dependence, and by the summer of
been
at hay.
jail,
its
retired as
Khan Saheb again came into Frontier Province when Hie Muslim
1945, Or.
as chief minister of the
L/Cague ministry suffered a vote of no confidence.
Immediately
after the surrender of Japan, the
Lxindon announced
government tion that
in India.”
’^s
intention of “an early realization of
Freedom had
remained was,
new government
whom
to
effectively
been won.
I
/Cague had
lycague
been unable
demanded
that
self-
he ques-
should power be transferred? I'he
question was scarcely academic, since Congress and the I
in
Muslim
form a coalition government. The Muslim
to
be designated the
it
sole representative of
Indian Muslims. But Congress, whose membership was only three
percent Muslim, refused;
Muslims
together.
stood for a united India of Hindus and
it
The League wanted
would have no part of a coalition
would be replaced by Hindu
in
which
16,
1946, Direct Action Day,
Muslim
state
and
British rule, as they argued,
rule.
W’hen an interim government was
Muslim league, the Ix^ague
a wholly
finally
formed without the
called for a boycott.
It
declared August
on which Muslims were
to express their
dissatisfaction.
d’hat day northern India exploded. In Calcutta riots broke out be-
tween Hindus and Muslims. loodlums from both communities took I
over the
city,
burning shops and
helpless. After four days the city
emotions had been
stirred.
killing thousands.
The
police were
was calmed, but only after deeply
Once
felt
released, they proved impossible to
contain. In Noakhali, in blast Bengal, the
were beaten and the
\
Muslims took revenge. Hindus
killed or forced to convert to Islam.
iolence build.
I
le
Gandhi watched
was seventy-six years old and his health was not
good, but he could not stand by
passively.
I
le
announced he was going
The
Fire of
Freedom
«
175
to Noakhali. “All life, “is
that
I
I
know” he
Congress leaders
told
who
won’t be at peace with myself unless
I
feared for his
go there.”
Gandhi had no plan. He entered the ravaged areas of Noakhali with no protection except the love in his heart. “I am not going to leave Bengal until the
last
embers of the trouble are stamped
a prayer meeting. “If necessary,
In the next flare-up
it
I
out,”
he
told
will die there.”
was the Hindus’ turn to take revenge. In Bihar
they descended upon the minority Muslims with a fury that almost destroyed them. Gandhi, “burning the candle at both ends” in Noakhali, asked
Khan
to
go
to
Bihar in his stead.
Armed
with the same
weapons, love and nonviolence, the gentle Pathan entered the storm. “You are right,” he wrote Gandhi.
Where thousands
“Our nonviolence
of police and soldiers had
been unable
the violence, the love of the two Gandhis began to work
Gandhi,
staflF
At each
village
in
hand, walked through some
he stayed
food, and joined
them
in the
home
of a
is
fifty villages in
Muslim
on
to
its
fire
test.”
check magic.
Noakhali.
family, ate their
in prayer. In the evenings, the villagers gath-
ered at his prayer meetings — at
first
only a few Hindus, but gradually
He spoke constantly of the unity underlying all religions. God was the same, he reiterated, whether He was called Rama or Muslims
too.
Rahim.
By March, Noakhali was calm. Hindus who had enough to return to their villages.
fled felt safe
Khan poured out his heart. “India seems an inferno,” he told the villagers. “My heart weeps to see our homes set on fire by ourselves.” The terrorized Muslims had fled in such panic that many had left their family savings buried underneath their homes. They In Bihar,
were too frightened officials
were willing
to return,
and not even Muslim government
to risk entering the areas to help.
“I’ll
go with
Khan promised, and he led them to their ravaged villages. With Noakhali quiet, Khan asked Gandhi to join him in Bihar. They stayed in Patna, driving out into the villages every day in an old car. Between stops the aging Mahatma often napped, his head in the lap of his niece, Manu, and his feet on Khan’s lap. While Gandhi slept, Khan massaged his feet. In each village Gandhi gathered the shamed Hindus and told them to give him their weapons and pledge you,”
174
never to raise hands against their Muslim brothers and
Often he
told
them how the
Muslim
silent
sisters agiiin.
giant next to
him had
transformed the dreaded Pathans of the Frontier with nonviolence — the nonviolence of the fearless and strong that he wanted Hindus to emulate.
And he would being recited
no good
at
pray.
When a hndu extremist objected
the prayer meeting,
Gandhi
retorted:
to see
one
man
of
is
Bad-
God, every inch of^him — if you
Have you no respect even
in the flesh.
Koran
“You are doing
Hinduism by your unreasoning Hnaticism. Here
to
shah Khan, a Muslim and a
want
to the
I
for
him?”
But the two Gandhis could not he everywhere. In the Punjab, aroused and alarmed by extremists of both
Muslims began
to terrorize
When Hindus
Frontier.
each other.
in
Hindus and
religions,
The
violence infected the
Peshawar were threatened. Dr. Khan
Khudai Khidmatgars. Muslims every one,
called in ten thousand
armed with nothing but
their courage
and
faith,
these red-shirted
Pathans protected the Hindu and Sikh minorities and helped restore
peace
to the city.
But communal violence continued proached, India was drifting toward fearful of seeing finally
civil war.
As independence ap-
Under
great pressure,
they had worked for destroyed, Gongress leaders
decided to acquiesce to the demands of the Muslim League
a separate
On March last
all
to spread.
Muslim
for
state.
22 Lord Mountbatten arrived in Delhi, the twentieth and
viceroy of the Indian Umpire. His task was a swift and orderly
transfer of power, d’he year before, after extensive investigation, a British cabinet mission
had recommended against
But the violence was spreading it.
swiftly,
a divided India.
and no one knew how
After long meetings with leaders of both Gongress and the
I>eague,
Mountbatten concluded that the only way
to
states.
He
Hindu and
drafted a plan which worked out the details of the
idea proposed by the a
Muslim
complete his
mission successfully was to partition India into separate
Muslim
to stop
Muslim
I^eague: in principle, those states
Muslim majority would become
part of Pakistan; those
w
ith
where Hin-
dus were numerically superior would remain part of India. I'hc hire of
Frccdotu
o
1~S
For Gandhi the partition of India seemed a grave error, worse even
than
civil war.
as fearful as
The
violence of tearing India apart, he
which invited the Muslim League
native plan
terests to the extent of
virtually
much deeper wounds. He
war and leave
naming an all-Muslim
drafted an
to protect
cabinet.
On
no support, not even from the League.
would be
felt,
alter-
Muslim
in-
But the plan got
March
31,
1947,
the Congress leadership accepted Mountbattens plan in principle. India would be divided.
Only Khan and Gandhi Muslims could work out British
had
violence.
of
It
Hindus
He
left.
in Pakistan
proved to be
communities
followed, over five
the Punjab, torn
that
as
it
and millions of Muslims
right.
When
in India.
August
1947,
in northern India fled
in the largest migration of peoples in the worlds
people
hundred thousand
down
homes, and
left their
were
lives
the middle, partition
in the chaos that
lost.
In Bengal and
legacy of violence
left a
fear that continues to this day.
mean abandonment.
It
Frontier Province under the governance of the
would place the
Muslim League,
which had battled Khan and the Khudai Khidmatgars
Khan and
his compatriots
had
cast their lot with
leave
them
resented
in the
Khans
my
mit,"
he
Gandhi and the
Now
hands of Muslim League ministers, many of
whom
influence and opposition. that he
and India would not abandon them.
intention to go to the Frontier as soon as circumstances pertold
Khan.
lieve in division.
be so
decade.
would
Gandhi assured him “It is
for a
partition
Congress, often in opposition to the League.
killed. If
“I shall
And
not take out a passport because
as a result
if
Pakistan
Gandhi confessed
comes
into being,
my
kills
me,
my
if
heart. But,
business
as
he
unmoved. That
I
I
is,
is
to see
gave way to
I
do not be-
shall
my place will be
he could not bear
be cowardly, and stalwart Pathan go about
somebody
later that
“His inner agony wrings
176
once the
would leave millions
partition took place in
and Muslims
in Pakistan
For Khan, partition would
I
Hindus and
he argued, would not resolve communal
would only worsen the problem,
history. Fifteen million
and
Gandhi argued
their differences in a united India
Partition,
Hindus remaining their
objected.
be glad
to
in Pakistan.”
Khans
tears,
it
grief.
would
he would break down. So
no small
thing.”
“We
shall
he
them.
maji
is
do not worry," he
“I
told friends in
Gandhi had promised
to pro-
told his colleagues, “so long as
Mahat-
Delhi. But he did not fear the future; tect
Khan
oiitcastes in the eyes of both,”
here."
May 1947 in Delhi was hot. It would be another month before the summer monsoons began to cool the air. Khan and Gandhi had come to the capital to
meet with the Congress Working Committee about
partition.
Gandhi had
persuade
him
talked several times with,the viccfroy, trying to
to leave India undivided.
Mountbatten
replied that he
too preferred a united India, but he was helpless under the
cumstances.
Mohammed
accept nothing
On May
in
and the Muslim Ixague would
than partition.
to the displeasure of extremist
7,
Jinnahs home.
no giving
less
Ali Jinnah
cir-
The two leaders
Hindus, Gandhi went
to
talked in a friendly way, but there was
on the idea of Pakistan. The two of them would never
agree on India’s future. Personally, Gandhi said in a sad, firm voice,
he could not bear the thought of
Muslims and Hindus. And
partition.
It
was wrong
he was convinced that
as long as
both
for
it
was
wrong, he could not possibly give his assent. At his evening prayer meeting, Gandhi pleaded with those
complained of his going fellow Indians.
ment evil
that the
deeds
in
I
hey had
to Jinnahs.
What was
to live in the
same
the harm? I hey were
land.
He refuted
Koran was bad because some Muslim Bengal and the Punjab. I’he
I
fanatics
a scripture
because hatred
the negation of true religion. flatly,
it
was the
fastest
Gandhi looked
way
grave. 1
adherents
for its
F’ar
Phen
his lips
filled
to read
your heart was
a long
one and
move.
“O God," he
his talk
He
begin every task with the remembrance of Phy name."
the
line of a prayer that
it
he used every day
closed
prayed in a strong
voice, “I first
in
it.
he day had been to
mad
from protecting I linduism, he stated
to destroy
began
had done
Not
with Jinnah, though cordial, had been a disappointment. his eyes.
the argu-
lindus had gone
Bihar, but that did not diminish the greatness of the Gita.
from
who
in his meditation
It
was
— and
was from the Koran:
The
Fire of
Freedom
«
177
Thou
art the
Thou Thou
art the creator
I
art
compassionate and the merciful.
Lord and master.
and
praise thee alone
Show me
of the universe. desire only thy help.
the right path,
the path which thy saints have taken.
Khan was staying with Gandhi and was
sick
.
.
.
with a
fever.
But he did
not want to take any medicine, and he could be as obstinate as Gandhi.
When
his
Hindu
friends told
him not
to overstrain himself,
turned his bearded face towards them. “Before long we Pathans
become
aliens in India,”
away from shall
be
all
he
said,
he
shall
“away from Bapu, away from India,
of you. Twenty-five years — and the end of our long fight
to pass
under the domination of Pakistan.
Who
knows what
the future holds for us?”
The next day Gandhi was leaving for Calcutta. There was no way to know when — or if— Khan would see him again. Every evening during his stay, Khan had massaged Gandhi s legs. This time, however, seeing Khans pale, feverish face, Gandhi tried to persuade him to rest instead. Khan looked into the face of his teacher and kindred spirit, whose word was law is
your
last night.”
Gandhi
to
He added
told his niece,
but the brave Pathan
Badshah
The
is
a
next day
panied him “I
man
have
“He
is
It is
Gandhi you.
well.”
Independence
will
come,
grim prospect,” he added, “but
left for
I
Calcutta on the train.
“Mahatmaji,” he told
him
Khan accom-
as
they parted,
look for no other support.”
warriors stood for a long time
to
on the platform and
mahatma and
the
Muslim
fakir,
be said? Their understanding had long ago passed
beyond words. Their
178
a
make me
“It
union of sacrifice and service.
What needed
know when
the soft voice pleaded.
of God.”
full faith in
in a
it,”
a true fakir.
looked at each other: the Hindu
wedded
do
gently, “It will
will lose his.
to the station.
The two aging
me
him. “Let
spirits
met
far
above language. They did not
they would meet again — they did not need to know. They
were Klnichii Khidmatgurs, servants of God. They would serve— and
God
would decide where and how.
Khan watched the express pull out of the station and clatter. Hundreds of robed and saried past
him toward
in a hurst of steam
figures swirled
around and
the door of the big terminal— and toward freedom.
And his Pathans? They would prevail. If they could find out their true strength,
it
would not matter whether they were part of India or
Pakistan.
Khan was at peace. His surrender lopg ago to the will of God shielded him like armor from these setbacks. He had not As
for himself,
f
looked for rest in this
was work
life,
and he would not
looking now. There
to do.
Khan glanced up
at the large
board near the top of the terminal:
the days arrivals and departures. Frontier in two hours.
He stepped through
It
smiled.
An
express left for the
to his people.
the rush of travelers toward the ticket window.
pink by now, he thought. to
He
was time he got hack
The plum orchard behind was time
start
the farmhouse would have exploded in
Its
splendor would not
last
much
longer. It
go home.
I'he Fire
of Freedom
«
179
With Gandhi
at a
prayer meeting {i^ational
Gandhi Museum)
Epilogue [AUCUIS'I'
consider
/
IS,
1947]
a crime to be a slave. Vhereforey until
it
establish in this countr}' a true people's
under which
every'
freedom, no matter
first
hour of
1
you
will find
me
who dominates
PASSi'.n, the earl
India’s
new
struggling for
the scene.
Mountbatten of Burma spent the
freedom elearing away the
Raj from his office in the viceregal palace in
the
government
community secures equal opportu-
nities for expansion,
As Mii:)MGH
we
leaders to begin with a clean slate,
vestiges of the British
New
and
Delhi, fie wanted
all
articles that
bore
the symbol of British rule were being carried unceremoniously away. “1 here was an air about
him
Alan Campbcll-johnson,
ment was too old
of serenity, almost detachment,” his aide,
recalls. “
1
he
scale of his personal achieve-
great for elation ... at this historic
and the new order were reconciled
As servants shuttled
silently in
moment, when the
in himself.
.” .
.
and out, Rajcndra Prasad, president
of the newly created Constituent .Assembly, and Jawaharlal Nehru, India’s first
come
to
prime minister, entered Mountbat ten’s
convey the
mal invitation as
its first
“In the
for
first
office.
Phcy had
new government: a forcontinue to serve the new republic
resolution of India’s
Mountbatten
to
governor-general. little
scene that ensued,” Campbell-Johnson
ship completely burst the
bounds of
formality.”
says, “friend-
Mountbatten, of
course, had already been approached privately on the question and
had given willing consent, but
still
he was freshly touched by the mag-
nanimity of the gesture. He accepted serve India “as
had
just
if
gladly,
adding that he would
he were himself an Indian.” Then the new
earl
— he
learned that he had been elevated a rank in the peerage by
[
181
]
George VI and raised Nehru,
for his
conduct in India — poured out port
his glass in a toast.
whom
he had come
gesture, raising his
own
for his guests
‘To India” he offered, turning toward
to
admire deeply. Nehru returned the
glass in a
spontaneous gesture of friendship.
“To King George VI!” Later that day, in the opulent Durbar Hall where twenty British viceroys had held audience. Lord Mountbatten, the great-grandson of
Queen Victoria, took a solemn oath “to become the humble and faithful first servant of an independent India.” Then he swore in the ministers of the new government— Nehru, Patel, Azad, men who, Mountbatten observed, had As
a
all
twenty-one-gun salute
Lady Mountbatten stepped
served time in British prisons.
boomed
in the
background. Lord and
into a gold state carriage
and proceeded
The
carriage passed
out into the streets of Delhi toward the palace.
through a sea of cheering, waving Indians, former subjects and longtime opponents of the riage with affection
their
new
British,
who were now reaching toward the car-
and gratitude
to grasp the outstretched
governor-general. All the
representative of the Raj
way back
hand of
to the palace, the last
which had ruled Indians
for
three cen-
turies— not without harshness — heard with pleasure the cries that burst from the massive crowd: ‘‘Mountbatten ki
jai!
Long
the
live
Mountbattens!” It
was a remarkable, even unprecedented scene, yet
it
marked the
general tenor of the day throughout India as power finally passed from British to Indian hands.
No one
could have expected the outburst of
mutual goodwill that was expressed rulers
and
subjects;
it
in countless
was unique in colonial
tory but Great Britain,” K.
history.
M. Munshi wrote
conceded independence with such
grace,
and
style
“No power in
his-
that day, “would have
and no power but India
would have so gracefully acknowledged the
The Mountbattens
ways between former
debt.”
deserve great credit for the courage, warmth,
with which they carried out their mission, effecting the
transfer with
uniform dignity and respect
for
the citizens of their
former colony. To this day they are remembered in India with deep affection. ish
182
But the overwhelming sense of amity that enveloped
and Indians
alike at the
Brit-
moment of independence came as a direct
and
logical
conse(]uence of the
against their former masters,
iini(|iic
revolution Indians had
hhey had chosen
to resist nonviolently,
to defy the will of the
Kmpire and accept, without
consequent
he goodwill of that decision continues
suffering.
I
waged
retaliation, the
to the
present time.
For
this,
of course, the credit
seeking compromise respect — even love
Gandhi
at
is
Gandhi s. Never hating his enemies,
every turn, insisting that Indians accord
— for their rulers as they doggedly defied their rule,
set the stage for a
remarkable triumph. Indians had fought
against the greatest empire in world history, without weapons,
they had
won
their freedom. At the
admiration and affection.
Britain's
to nation that
and
same time, they had won Great
Of all
the transitions from colony
would take place over the next decades, none would
proach the tenor of fellowship that accompanied the British
as
ap-
they
left India.
For the Indians, the changes were sweeping and abrupt. Indian officers
found themselves suddenly
never before been allowed to
in
charge of an army they had
command. The few
Indian
members
of
the Indian Givil Service found themselves overnight in control of the
heartbeat of a large, teeming nation.
And
for those
who had
led the
freedom movement, independence brought sudden power and
re-
Nehru became prime minister; Sardar Patel, deputy Ghange — sweeping, abrupt, and unpredictable — would
sponsibility.
minister.
characterize the country for
some time
to
come.
For the two Gandhis, however, independence only brought more of the same opportunities to serve and to suffer in the cause of truth.
The two
servants of
enormous
suffering
God would
and
be called upon
it
Unable
engulfed the
when independence came
to reach his
communal
violence that followed parti-
people in any other way, Gandhi
finally
dertook a “fast unto death” in January 1948, to be broken only
could be assured that the slaughter had stopped — and that
it
never be provoked again. In the anguishing days that followed, in India
turned toward
to
did not bring peace, flundreds of thousands
died in the conflagration of tion.
bear witness to
to stand, in the darkness that
country, as lamps of light and truth. For India and Pakistan,
to
this frail, beloved old
un-
if
he
would all
eyes
man. Fear of losing him Epilogue
«
183
finally
brought an end to a seizure of
amount
of police action had
Following his
now
fast,
been
communal madness
able to touch.
Gandhi wanted
go to Pakistan, and Jinnah,
to
governor-general, agreed to his coming. Gandhi,
in riveting the attention of his
no
that
countrymen on
still
masterful
a particular problem,
decided he would walk— directly through the Punjab, which had experienced the worst of the
would do much
to salve the
almost eighty and
still
communal
violence. His
deep wounds
left
by the
mere presence
riots.
Gandhi was
suffering the effects of his last fast, but
feeling buoyant. Indians
and Pakistanis
had responded
alike
he was
to his fast
with an immense outpouring of sincerity and affection, and he
felt
Khan was
the promise of greater things to come. Also, of course,
in
He still had much to say to the Khudai Khidmatgars — and he had made them a promise which he wanted to fulfill, although he did not yet know how. But Gandhi never got his chance. He died shortly after five o'clock on the afternoon of January 30, 1948, blessing with the name of God the man who had just fired three shots into his frail body. The assasPakistan now.
sin, a fanatical
too
Hindu, was angered because Gandhi kept giving away
much to the Muslims — among other things, he had
the Indian government to
make good
its
just
pressured
debt of 550 million rupees
to Pakistan as part of the partition settlement.
He
believed the
Ma-
hatma was pro-Muslim. With Gandhis death,
his
promise of protection
for the
Khudai
Khidmatgars evaporated amidst the animosity that broke out be-
tween India and Pakistan over the disputed it is
territory of
doubtful what even Gandhi could have done.
already
been made. He had accepted
Kashmir. But
Khans
sacrifice
had
Pakistan.
By the logic of the Mountbatten plan, the Frontier would have remained with India. Though almost entirely Muslim, it had chosen Khudai Khidmatgar representatives over the Muslim League. But the League would not have Pakistan without the
Frontier. Finally
Mount-
batten had insisted on another election — a referendum to choose be-
tween Pakistan and
communal
184
India.
It is
difficult to
exaggerate the horror of the
violence that surrounded those times. Badshah Khan, like
Gandhi,
felt
he was watehing the
he pressed
in flames. If
eaiise
he had given
his ease, the f rontier
lenee like the rest of northern India — but
would
lence
tear
and
villages
families
Kvcrything he had helped his people gain
would be undone.
apart
to abstain
go
iij)
in vio-
Pathans, that viofor
generations.
unity and self-respect
an agonizing act of renunciation, Khan
In
urged the Khudai Khidmatgars
dum.
life for
would explode
among in
his
from voting
d he rest of the f rontier, in that climate of
finally
in the referen-
communal
hatred,
voted for Pakistan.
The eonscquenccs followed
swiftly.
One week after ifidependence.
Khan Sahebs government in the fVontier was disbanded and replaced by a Muslim I/Cague ministry. Dr.
Shortly thereafter, a large gathering of Khudai Khidmatgars met at
Sardaryab and resolved that “the Khudai Khidmatgars regard Pakistan as their
own
safeguard
its
country,” pledging to “do their utmost to strengthen and
and make every
interest
same time, Khan asked in
which
all
for a
sacrifice for the cause.”
At the
united Pathan province within Pakistan,
Pathans would be reunited under “rule of the Pathans,
by the Pathans, and for the Pathans.” In this scheme, peoples of Pakistan would have their
all five
ma)or
own semiautonomous prov inces.
Like Bengalis in Kast Bengal, Sindis in Sind, Punjabis in the Punjab,
and Baluchis
in Baluchistan,
Khan argued, Pathans deserved “Pakh-
tunistan,” the “land of the Pathans.”
Khan toured
the Frontier and spoke out boldly for his plan and the
democratic rights of his people. The government,
at
war with India
over Kashmir, claimed he was disloyal and in league with India.
June
15,
1948,
Khan was
sentenced to three
arrested for “fomenting
years’ rigorous
open
to
jail.
and
imprisonment. Phe Khudai Khid-
matgars were banned and their hcad(iuarters razed.
thousand of them went
sedition”
On
Phe Pakhtun, Khan’s
More than
journal,
was
a si-
lenced forever. Phus, within
less
than a year of the night that Mountbatten handed
over the reins of power to India and Pakistan,
been assassinated by shah Khan had been
a
I
Mahatma Gandhi had
who feared he was pro-Muslim and Badby an Islamic government who claimed he
lindu
jailed
Epilogue
«
185
Two name of
was pro-Hindu. The irony could not have been more complete. of India’s foremost
men
of
God
had been sacrificed
in the
religion.
So began Khan’s second long ordeal
in the cause of
freedom. His
sentence was extended twice, so that he actually served seven years before being released — only to be imprisoned again the following year.
During the
spend
first
three decades of Pakistan’s existence, he would
fifteen years in prison
and seven years
in exile. Pakistan itself
would labor much of the same time under military dictatorships and ft
martial law. India, with
Khan’s
sively at
own difficulties, could only look on pasAny attempt to offer him assistance might
its
travails.
have repercussions on his safety or provoke another war.
Whenever he was out
Khan continued
of prison,
to plead for a
united Pathan province and the rudiments of democracy for his people.
In 1956 he and three other leaders founded the National
Awami
(People’s) Party, “the first social-democratic party in Pakistan,”
functioned as the major opposition party through the seventies with Khan’s son Wali as
was
jailed several
be silenced,
to
sixties
Frontier leader. Ghaffar
its
more times “for antistate
activities.”
his life since partition has
been
which and
Khan
Since he refuses
a history of prison
terms broken occasionally by interludes of freedom.
Thus Badshah Khan’s extraordinary saga continues. Gounting from 1910, when he opened his first school in Utmanzai, he has gone on
serving, reforming,
years.
of
It
and
would be unlikely
more unbroken
to find
life
principles of love
tyranny
anywhere
service in the cause of
Despite his thirty years in third day of his
resisting
in prison
jail
— Khan has
Kabul 186
in
in the world’s history a life
freedom and
justice.
never ceased to stand by the
and service with which he began
Through
all
his mission.
As
a
the suffering and
he has remained the dedicated “servant of God,” compas-
sionate, forgiving, resilient— and as
Pyarelal,
more than seventy
— he has spent the equivalent of every
biographer writes, “He will not bend.” setbacks,
for
Gandhi’s 1965,
last
dogged
as ever.
personal secretary, visited Badshah
when Khan was
Khan
in
a state guest of the Afghanistan
government while
Khans
character that will
He
left
roomy and
us a vivid personal description of
stand today.
still
found his friend seated
Pyarelal villa,
in exile.
in front of his residence, “a lovely
modern convenience,” surHe looked much the same as when
well furnished, with every
rounded by
a score of visitors.
Pyarelal last
saw him, before independence: “Bare-headed, with
gray-
ing hair, and in sandals, he was wearing his flowing blue-dyed shirt
and pyjamas
as of yore.”
The two
veteran soldiers of nonviolence
tened to the news on the radio and then ate a simple dinner:
had declined the sumptuous meals the government wanted for
him. After dinner the two went wrote
years,” Pyarelal
for a walk.
ing but the liness
.
all
Khan
to provide
his seventy-five
later,
he seemed, indeed, extraordinarily steady step.
“For
lis-
fit.
He walked
with a firm,
The countenance bore marks of intense suffereyes beamed deep compassion and an air of kind.
.
surrounded him. Even more striking was the complete
absence of rancor or bitterness on his part after his people
had suffered
a result of their
all
that
as a result of India's partition
subsequent neglect.
It
he and
and
as
speaks volumes for his
large-hearted ness that he retains his regard and affection for his
Congress colleagues and the people of India, unaffected
friends.
by
all
As
that I
he has been through.
.
.
.
took leave of Badshah Khan, the feeling uppermost
my mind was one
wonder and amazement at the unconquerable spirit of this man of God, who, hav ing watched from behind the prison bars [as] the things he had given his life to [were] broken, had now, in the evening of his life, set about in
of
undeterred by the overwhelming odds arrayed against him, to build
them up
[again].
Badshah Khan has this
life.
said
many times
Certainly he has found
seem only
to
little.
that he
“One
of suffering,” he once said with
had not had the
spirit
learns a
more than
wonder what would have happened
to
rest in
Yet his long years of suffering
have enlarged his sweeping
strength and capacity to love.
would not seek
me if
I
and magnified
good deal
in the school
a touch of
Gandhi.
had had an easy
privilege of tasting the joys of
jail
and
his
all it
life
“I
and
means.”
Epilogue
«
187
'
Judged by the normal standards of human
women
of
God may
conclusive. This
whom
the
affairs,
look overburdened with suffering, and even
watched
in-
would have seemed true of St. Francis of Assisi, with
have compared Khans beginnings. In his
I
men and
of
lives
helplessly while the institutions
he had
Francis
latter years,
and
built faltered
lan-
guished. But the profound currents he released into the stream of his-
were
tory
And
beginning
just
to stir
humankind
they continue, a thousand years
at
later, to
the time of his death.
be
felt
today.
was the same with Gandhi. Today, almost forty years
It
after his
death and the partition of his country which he so strongly opposed, the impact of his ideas
than
is
being
any time during his
at
felt
life.
more, by a larger part of the world, His influence grows by the year,
spreading and leavening the visions of seekers in world.
As the
and
both East and West
And so with Khan. will
begin
parts of the
intellectual leaders of the world
fail
to shine in
will
It is
be examining
his nonviolent alternative.
only a matter of time before his special light
many
corners of the earth. For his contribution
when
to the legacy of nonviolence has special significance today,
many
nonviolence,
it
of their long-forgotten legacy of truth and
has been given to Badshah Khan,
the same great service for Islam. His
found values of
to all
so
countries of the Islamic world are torn by violence. Just as
Gandhi reminded Indians
since
to grap-
monstrous problem of violence, more and more people
ple with the in
political
many
its
love, faith,
and
believe, to
perform
a perfect mirror of the pro-
embedded in Islam ‘army of God” stands as a beacon
selfless service
inception. His nonviolent
Muslims who seek an
life is
I
alternative to the self-destructive violence
of our times.
Like Gandhi in Hinduism, tianity,
Badshah Khan and
clusively that nonviolence
like
his “Servants of
— love
a vigorous, resurgent Islam.
Martin Luther King,
in action
Khans
But Khan s message
Muslim world than that, 188
it
to
is
— is
its
in Chris-
God” demonstrated
simplicity,
service represent the Islamic tradition at
Jr.,
con-
deeply consonant with
deep
faith,
and
selfless
purest and most enduring.
scarcely limited to Islam.
It
can help the non-
understand the true greatness of Islam, but more
should help
all
nations to understand their
own
potential
for love in action. If Baclshah
Khan could
raise a nonviolent
of a people so steeped in violence as the Pathans, there
on earth where
it
cannot he done.
I
hc message he sent
is
army out
no country
for this
hook
“The present-day world can only survive the mass production of nuclear weapons through nonviolence. Phe world is
simple and urgent:
needs Gandhi before,
if it
from the
The violent
s
message of love and peace more today than
does not want to wipe out
civiliziition
it
ever did
and humanity
itself
earth’s surface.”
world
may
freedom
yet
come
hgiiter
and
to
know
of this simple, courageous, non-
his eloquent
message of loPe
in action.
Epilogue
«
189
Part Four
'The “Muslim IVcv
ioiis
fiikir”
(Yendulkar)
pages: in Bihar, 1947 (J.V. Mehta)
AFTERWORD
The Good Fight BY riMOTHY FLINDERS
f
Nonviolent Muslims. Nonviolent Muslim Pathans in an “army of
God” sworn
to lay
down
their lives in the cause of
freedom, without
fighting back.
One
could be forgiven a
of doubt,
stir
some puzzlement.
when Mahatma Gandhi first heard of the nonviolent resistance of Khans Pathan tribesmen during the Salt Satyagraha of 1930, though he may well have been surprised, even awed, he would not Yet
have been puzzled.
No doubt
But
to
without scru-
Gandhi, who understood better than anyone
else the inner
dynamics of satyagraha, Khans “miracle” was the Pathans — or
someone
like
Gandhis search went back which he had taxes.
The
unmasked turbing.
entirely
consonant with
Gandhi had been looking
his idea of nonviolence. In fact, for
rest of India like
— ruthless, clannish, vengeful,
a kind of eastern Mafiosi ple.
Pathans seemed to the
them — in order
to
for a
make
decade
a point.
to the Kaira struggle of 1918,
during
led Indian peasants in a nonviolent revolt against unfair
Kaira peasants a truth
They had
won
the struggle, but in the process they
about their nonviolence which Gandhi found
dis-
taken to nonviolence, they admitted, only because
they lacked the courage to
fight
with violence. “With
me
alone and a
few other co-workers,” Gandhi reported, “[nonviolence] came out of our strength and was described [of resisters]
it
as Satyagraha, but
with the majority
was purely and simply passive resistance, which they
resorted to because they were too
weak
to
undertake the methods of
violence.”
This was not Gandhis idea of nonviolence. True nonviolence did not issue from weakness but from strength.
[
193 ]
It
was a matter of the
powerful voluntarily withholding their power in a conflict, choosing to suffer for the sake of a principle rather
though they could. Gandhi called
opposed
strong,” as
he
inflict
suffering— even
the “nonviolence of the
this
to the “nonviolence of the
found in his Kaira peasants. active force,”
than
weak” that he had
“My creed of nonviolence no room
insisted. “It has
for
is
an extremely
cowardice or even
weakness.”
much thought about
After sion,
Gandhi stunned
the implications of the peasants' admis-
his colleagues
by starting a recruiting cam-
paign in Kaira to raise an army of Indians to fight for the Empire in the First World War.
then they should fighting. “I
“But
do not
Indians were afraid of violence, he argued,
If
learn to fight so that they could renounce
first
infer
from
this that India
do say that India must know how
I
who thought he had
leagues
nation: “A nation that
is
lost his
way,
unfit to fight
must
fight,”
to fight.”
To perplexed
Gandhi gave
If
if it
jority of
Indians were not prepared
that not
one
not
The unnatural
to die.
When
a colleague.
fear of
fighters,
meant sending them
he
to war.
1918 proved a failure.
yet objected [to recruitment]
Gandhi wrote
kill?”
fighters, fearless,
The mato take up arms. “But do you know
Gandhis recruitment campaign of
man has
a simple expla-
he could not find natural
decided, he would create them, even
col-
cannot from experience prove
the virtue of not fighting.” True satyagraha required
impassioned, and dogged.
he explained.
death
“They is
because he would
object because they fear
ruining the nation.”
the war ended, so did his recruiting campaign. But
never stopped looking for those born fighters
who would
Gandhi
prove to the
world that nonviolence was especially meant for the strong. “There
hope
for a violent
there
is
none
man
to
be some day nonviolent,” he
is
insisted, “but
for a coward.”
Gandhi heard about the heroics of Khans Khudai Khidand he must have known that he had found what he was
In 1930
matgars,
looking
be
sure.
plete:
for.
Pathans knew
to fight.
They were an
unlikely
lot,
to
But the Hindus' image of the menacing Pathans was incom-
they were vengeful and they could be ruthless, but they were
not without scruple. discipline
194
how
Honor was everything. They were capable of self-
and temperate
in their habits.
Raised with a Spartan aban-
don
God and
comfort, they lived with a deep-running faith in
for
“
legendary contempt for fear and cowardice:
So
read, “but his shrieks live on.
The coward
dies,”
we
[the Pathan boy] learns not to shriek.”
Gandhi could not have invented
a people better fitted to his radical
notion.
But he did not have
need
to invent
them. More than
them: Khan had done
to transform
for
it
that,
he did not even
him. Badshah Khan’s
genius, as Easwaran has pointed out, was to sense the underlying nobility
of the Pathan temperament — with
— and
passion plains,
to tap
it
for a
profound and compelling
its
high purpose. “Being
fighters,”
Khan
“they had learnt discipline already.” All that he had to do was
to give
it
“a nonviolent turn.”
Gandhi’s — it worked: Khan’s
and most enduring of F.ven
Khan was
And
amazement— except Pathans became, we read, “the bravest to everyone’s
India’s [nonviolent] soldiers.”
baffled at the extent of his success. “I started teach-
ing the Pathans nonviolence only a short time ago,” he told
once. “Yet, in comparison, the Pathans
son and grasped the idea of nonviolence ter
than the [Hindu] Indians.
Gandhi, almost laconic “Nonviolence
And Hiat
.
.
How
.
seem
to
much
It is
Gandhi
have learned this
quicker and
much
les-
bet-
do you explain that?”
in his self-assurance, told the
not for cowards.
is
for
Pathan leader:
the brave, the courageous.
the Pathans are more brave and courageous than the Hindus.
the reason
is
why the Pathans were
Thus the unique tory of nonviolence.
meant
for the
violence
lence
ex-
is
to fight
is
able to
remain nonviolent.”
place of Khan’s Khudai Khidmatgars in the his-
They proved Gandhi’s claim
strong— no insignificant matter
that nonviolence
in today’s world,
is
where
seen almost as a natural response to conflict and nonvio-
dismissed as a refuge of those
who are
too
weak or too
fearful
with guns.
But Gandhian nonviolence has another sonal than political,
which aims
at
side to
transformation.
“transformative” nonviolence, to distinguish political forms.
generate
Here nonviolence
human
personality.
The
is
it:
used
it
We
as a tool to
can
per-
call this
same
reform and
re-
movement among
nom iolence
negative forces in personality and use those
more
from the more overt
story of Khan’s
the Pathans demonstrates the power of
a side
to harness the
forces to transform
Afterword
«
19S
an individual, a community, or even
a society. Transformative nonvio-
own
lence could find a special place in the regeneration of our industrial democracies,
wherever
political
post-
tyranny has been replaced
by subtler forms of oppression: meaninglessness, alienation, pervasive dissatisfaction, ennui.
Khan was
Like Gandhi,
essentially a reformer.
He
first
seized
upon
nonviolence not as a political weapon — he was forced into politics by British suppression,
he claimed— but
which had long paralyzed
as
an antidote
to the violence
his vigorous but indiscriminate people. His
%
first
concern was not British repression, but the Pathan cult of
vio-
lence and revenge.
Khan found
power
Pathan temperament into a potent, positive force
to recast the
without diminishing
“To
me
evils that
my
all
had the
vigor.
come to represent a panacea for all the surround my people,” Khan said. “Therefore I am devoting nonviolence has
energies toward the establishment of a society that would be
based on
Khan
its
that Gandhi’s nonviolence
its
and peace.” In
principles of truth
his “Servants of
God”
released a powerful, socially benign force equal but opposite to
the destructive forces
embedded
in the
Pathan temperament and
he was following almost
ture. In doing so,
to the letter the
cul-
powerful
dynamics of transformative nonviolence that Gandhi had discovered twenty-five years earlier in
South
Dissatisfied with the hopeless
sistance” to describe the innate his
own term
Africa.
inadequacy of the phrase “passive
power of nonviolence, Gandhi coined
in 1906: satyagraha. Satya
means truth
in Sanskrit,
agraha comes from a Sanskrit root meaning “to hold on
Gandhi used ble
meaning:
as a it
synonym
signifies a
truth; while at the
grappling,
for “force.”
Thus satyagraha
determined holding on
same time
it
what Gandhi called
re-
to,
to,”
and
which
carries a dou-
a grappling with
implies the force that arises from that
“soul-force.”
Satyagraha stands
the means and the ends, the struggle and the force that
is
for
both
generated
in that struggle.
As heat
is
generated by friction, Gandhi contended, power
leased from within the depths of the
ward truth. The raw material through 196
bitter experience,”
for this
human
power
is
is
re-
spirit in its struggle to-
passion. “I have learned
Gandhi explained, “the one supreme
les-
my
son to conserve
anger,
and
as heat
conserved
is
transmuted into
energy, even so our anger controlled can be transmuted into a power
which can move the world” In or repressed: energy
is
conserved and transmuted. Thus in
formative aspect nonviolence
is
not nonviolence at
We could more
transmuted, harnessed, used. lence,
where the power of passions
shaped into a potent fighting
With
nothing
this “truth-struggling”
all,
its
trans-
but violence
properly call
it
tmnsvio-
hatred, and fear
like anger,
lost
is
is
re-
force.
Khan had an abundance
his truculent, explosive Pathans,
of raw material to work with. Because of their powerful tendencies
toward violence, they had great potential for nonviolence. Their grappling toward nonviolent truths sometimes provoked excruciating
and required a demanding psychical and emotional about-
suffering, face.
A Khudai
Khidmatgar who took Khans oath renounced not
violence but the code of revenge
itself,
badal, the cornerstone of his
value system and the cult of the heroic Pathan. “To bear this [tyranny] without retaliation
is
just
hard indeed,”
we
zulum
read one villager
tell-
ing Verrier Elwin at the height of the British repression in 1932.
“But do you
“With
all
still
our
believe in nonviolence?”
hearts.”
Because of their demanding inner
struggle,
Pathans under Khans
leadership were able to invoke resources of courage and will that far
exceeded
their
known
limits,
and came
into possession of that inner
strength—“soul-force”— which Gandhi claimed we not
know
human
about.
spirit.
When
he
It is
a
Gandhi
all
possess but
do
power released from within the depths of the called
it
the strength of God.
visited the Frontier in 1938,
Gandhi made
clear the pro-
foundly spiritual nature of transformative nonviolence. “To realize
nonviolence means to
feel
within you
know God.” At Utmanzai he Khudai Khidmatgars
told
really felt
its
Khans
strength — soul-force
— to
red-shirted officers, “If the
within themselves an upsurge of soul-
force as a sequel to their renouncing arms, they
would have the
strength of God behind them.” Gall
there
it
what you
ing the display of this power in the lives of both
Khan, or It is
in the collective force of
will,
is
no deny-
Gandhi and Badshah
Khans Khudai Khidmatgars.
a tribute to the Pathans’ capacity for faith, as
much
as to their
Afterword
«
197
bravery, that they eoiild so genuinely accept such a foreign
conduct and use
work the
to
it
code of
and action we
reversals of thinking
read of here. Their transformations were not always complete or per-
manent,
as in the case of the
outlaw Murtaza Khan, but they were
Khans example they left perma-
often profound, and even in Murtaza
nent marks.
The
Khans movement on the progress of his people can never be measured. What remains unmistakable in the story of full effect
of
the Khudai Khidmatgars
is
that nonviolence, properly undertaken, re-
%
and empowers the human
casts
this kind of transformation.
personality. Very
little is
While some attention has been given by
scholars to nonviolence as a political
weapon,
virtually
in the literature regarding the effects of nonviolence
practice faith,
it.
known about
nothing
upon those who
Since we are dealing with such intangibles as
and “conscious suffering"— difficult
exists
“soul-force,"'
qualities to quantify
observe — these dimensions of nonviolence
may
well
lie
and
outside the
scope of traditional scholarship.
And
perhaps this
is
as
it
should be. For in the
nonviolence — this “truth-grappling""— is a private mostly within the
human mind and
sphere of acceptance, what
is
heart.
needed
mitted individuals ready to undertake
The
lack of
work on
this subject
is
its
Badshah Khan
to
throw some
fitting in this regard that
does not
story
is
To move
it
into a wider
much
as
mean after
that
man
personalities to
to enter into detail
pro-
and now there
all,
the path.
It is
especially
being presented to western
their personal transformations
permanent
com-
we must
audiences by Eknath Easwaran, for his primary interest in both
and Gandhi has been
out
disciplines.
light across
Khans
affair carried
not study so
ceed alone or unguided. There was Gandhi, is
such
last analysis,
forces for good. This
Khan
from flawed huis
not the place
about the exact nature of the disciplines that non-
violence requires; Easwaran has done this exhaustively in other
books. But to those
who would
follow in
Khans
footsteps, the extra-
ordinary story of his courage and doggedness in his fight against
tyranny leaves no illusions about what
whether
political, social, or personal,
ment of the 198
will against
is
is
required. Nonviolence,
a battle, an unflagging engage-
tyranny using the weapons of fearlessness.
love,
to
and
be against
nations
tyranny
.
is
As Khan
faith.
.
.
all
tyrants,
you
found
will
to
told his
Khudai Khidmatg^irs, “You have
whoever they may he; whether individuals or
oppose them’— even, we can assume,
if
the
be those turbulent forces of the soul which tyran-
nize from within the recesses of one’s
Those who would
take
up
own
heart.
this call step into the
stream of an an-
Buddha and Jesus, continues through St. Francis, and is passed on today, among others, by Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Jr., Mother Teresa, and Badshah Khan. The fight, as Khan says, “is always noble,” and those Who make the at-
cient tradition of fighters that includes the
tempt
to enter
its
world needs such
“holy edifice” will find their powers on the
men and women. May they
Khan himself might
say to
flourish
rise.
The
— or as Badshah
them, Tre mash: may they never grow
tired.
Afterword
«
199
Sources and Historical Notes BY riMO HY
FI.INDF'.RS
I
/
Full citations to references in these notes will
be found
in the Bibliogra-
phy which follows. (“Tendulkar” and “Desai” without further title reference always signify these authors' biographies of Abdul Ghaffar Khan; their other works are specified.) The numbers at the left refer to page
numbers
in the text.
General Notes
ABDUL GHAFFAR KHAN: NAME AND VARIANTS. in the
we
names of most
in the
West
call
“Abdul”
is
included
Pathan boys, but is not generally what the given name. Abdul Ghaffiir Khan was called aristocratic
name we use throughout the chapters on his youth. As a man he became known formally as Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan (the first Khan being a title) or as Badshah Khan (badshah
“Ghaffar” as a boy, and that
meaning
To add
“king”).
is
the
to the
confusion
for Westerners, Indians
and
Pathans often speak or write of him as “Khan Saheb,” the “Saheb” “Sahib”) being customarily added by Pathans to a person’s ter of respect.
brother,
who
We is
to reserve
known by no
THE PAl’HANS.
LANGUAGE
have tried
“Khan Saheb”
In Pakhtu, the
word Pakhtun
come
who
below) simply means “one British
as a mat-
Ghaffar Khan’s
other name.
Pakhtun became Pathan, pronounced
Through the
for
name
(or
to
connection in India,
(or
Pushtun; see note on
speaks Pakhtu.” In India,
rhyme roughly with baton.
it is
this Indian
name
that has
into English usage.
Pathans living in their ancestral homeland refer Afghans. By this they Afghanistan; Afghan
is
mean no
to
themselves also as
special reference to the present state of
name of their people, and was once no
simply the
[
201
]
synonym, originally Persian, for Pakhtun. (Dupree, in Muslim Peoples, 323) To a Pathan (and his neighbors) the word Afghanistan still carries connotations of its literal meaning—“land of the Afghans’— and in fact the original kingdom of Afghanistan took shape as an attempt to establish not so much a territorial entity as a union of all the Pathan
more than
a
Pathans are and have always been the dominant
tribes (Fletcher, 245).
ethnic group in Afghanistan.
By one of the perversities of political boundaries, however, the socalled Durand Line, drawn by the British in 1893 and still preserved (though disputed) as the boundary between Afghanistan and Pakistan, arbitrarily divides Pathan tribes and even villages. The result is that today roughly half of the Pathans (some six million) live in Afghanistan and the other half (perhaps Pakistan.
five million) in
Remembering how
the North-West Frontier Province of
arbitrary this division
is
in
Pathan eyes
will
help a Western reader to understand the importance of Afghanistan at certain junctures in Khan’s story.
Their lands were the home of the prophet Zoroaster, the Vedic hymns of the Hindus, and a flourishing Buddhist culture long before Islam came.
Pathan origins are
LANGUAGE. The
lost in antiquity.
language spoken by Pakhtuns
is
called
Pakhtu — or,
Pukhtu, Pushtu, Pashto, or a number of different variants. The main division in dialects is between “hard” and “soft”: roughly, a Pathan from north of the Kabul River would speak of “Pakhtu” and “Pekhawar” when someone from the south might say “Pashto” and
depending on the
dialect,
“Peshawar.” This leads to
which we have English (such as
though keeping spellings established Pathan, Khyber, and Peshawar).
tried to avoid,
Specific 3
15
“I
kinds of confusing variations in spelling
all
have one great
THE BRITISH
Notes and Sources
desire”:
RAJ.
in
The
Ghaffar Khan, 124-125. British reign in India
began
to
be called
the “British Raj” (from the Hindi word for “reign” or “rule”) after 1858,
when Queen
Victoria took over the holdings of the East India
Company
and began to govern India through a viceroy responsible to Parliament in London. In a looser sense, however, the Raj may be said to date from 1757,
when Colonel Robert Bengal by defeating tion of the
Empire. 202
its
Clive established military control of the state of
nawab on the
battlefield of Plassey.
term was that the British were successors
to the
The
implica-
mighty Mogul
«
15-16
I
he
transfer of
power
Karachi and Delhi
in
is
drawn from
Campbell-Johnson and from Collins and Lapierre.
17
“To have
to carry destruction”:
quoted
in
Yunus, 75-76.
Guernica stands out in the minds of most Westerners, but it was the colonies of Western powers — Great Britain, Prance, Italy— that first expe18
rienced aerial bombing of civilians for no military purpose but terrorism.
Kabul and Jalalabad were bombed by the Royal Air Force in the Third Afghan War, 1919 (Dupree, 442); villages in the Frontier were bombed thereafter to destroy the
homes
of Pathans
who
participated in anti-
British raids (Caroe, 408).
/
At the Air Disarmament Conference in Geneva in 1933, it was not Germany but Great Britain that objected to a proposed ban on aerial bomb-
Anthony Eden asked that an exception be made in the inaccessible mountain districts, sparsely inhabited, case of “certain where wild and armed hill tribes had sometimes passionate appetite for ing of civilians. Sir .
.
.
disturbing the tranquility of their neighbors. Unless order was main-
tained in those districts by this
method
bombing], the only alterna-
[i.e.,
was to use land troops, involving in normal times a large number of troops [and] casualties perhaps of a heavy nature. That was bluntly tive
.
.
.
the problem,” he concluded—“the policing of these areas.” (Quoted in
Tendulkar, 154)
19
“The
brutes”: Tendulkar, 73. Wolpert (324) verifies that “the Frontier
had suffered the harshest British repression during the second satyagraha campaign ... as a result of Lord Willingdons no-nonsense policy.”
20
“The man who
loved his gun”: Yunus,
“That such men”: Tendulkar, dust
25
“O
25-27
The
Jubilee
is
drawn from Morris and Tuchman.
Newspaper quotes and “The
27
“No one
ever”:
quoted
in
largest military force”: Morris,
Tuchman,
“A cherished conviction”: quoted
The
(1911)
31.
55.
in Collins
estimated population of the Frontier
given in the eleventh edition
29-32
jacket.
Pathans”: Ghaffar Khan, 226.
26
29
x.
is
and Lapierre, from figures
17.
for 1901
of the Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Information on Khans childhood and his parents
Ghaffar Khan, Desai, and Tendulkar.
ITe
is
taken from
descriptions of Pathan
life
draw on Spain, Tendulkar, Dupree, Pennell, and the authors acquaintance with Indian Muslim village
life.
Notes
«
203
KHUSHAL KHAN. “The
31
Dupree
Muslim
(in
Peoples, 327),
eloquent in jirgah [council].
who do become Khan Khattak. .
Pushtun
idealized “is
the warrior-poet, brave in battle and
Few men
both requirements, but those as did a special hero, Khushal
fulfill
the heroes of their age, .
male,” writes Louis
The poetry of Khushal Khan
is still
recited with relish
and quoted with respect by outsiders who write about his people. Warrior, poet, philosopher, and historian, he sings of the Pathan spirit, its love of honor and passion for freedom, its longing for the hills and rivers of home, and its acceptance of the transiency of worldly fame and fortune. (See Caroe, 221-246; Spain, 107-116) in the hujras of the Pathans,
31-32 35
Mullah Mastun’s
“The
The
35-38 Miller
37
history of
my
story
is
from
people”: Yunus,
115.
history of the East India Trading
Company
is
drawn from
and from Collins and Lapierre. an English Resident”: Annie Besant,
“First
“To pick a quarrel”: Miller, 90. “To interfere decidedly”: Miller, “Avowed schemes”: Miller, 32.
38
Miller, 265-266.
Strictly speaking,
in
Yunus, 79-80.
30.
the North-West Erontier was not so narned as a
province until 1901. At the time of the Jubilee, the area was simply a back-
ward (and
largely ignored) part of the Punjab,
by the East India
38
“Thus
is
Company
verified”:
Pathan.
just fifty years earlier.
Mahommed Akbar was the of Afghanistan — and, incidentally, a
quoted in Miller,
79.
Mohammed, first amir The East India Company designed
son of Dost
which had been annexed
to
depose the amir and put
on the throne one Shah Shuja, who, though despised by his people, was favored by the British because he promised to resist any Russian advance through his country. 38
“As swiftly as permitted” and “Would leave
38-39
THE GREAT MUTINY. Though
it”:
Miller, 85.
triggered by a revolt of Indian
“Mutiny” was actually a popular rebellion. But it was not a nationalist one, and it was finally suppressed only because the British were still able to secure the help of some Indian regiments (notably the
troops, the
Gurkhas and Sikhs) against
others. Pathans are not
proud
to recall that
when ties with the rest of India were slight, many of them helped to put down what is now known in India as the First War of Independence.
at this
It is
204
time in their
history,
difficult to exaggerate
the shadow the Mutiny cast over the remain-
There is no doubt that every subsecjuent Indian even those in which nonviolence was strictly pledged and
ing years of British rule. “uprising,’’
preserved, evoked the terror of those days in 1857
when
comparative
a
handful of British soldiers and civilians faced an angry nation gone out of their control.
The
British, understandably,
remembered
cruelties they suffered at
the hands of the Indians in the course of the uprising. “But there other side to the picture
also,”
Nehru
writes, “that
impressed
itself
an-
is
on the
my own province especially the memory of persists in town and village. One would like to forget this, for is a ghastly and horrible picture showing man at his worst, even according to the new mind
of India, and in
it
it
r
standards of barbarity set up by nazism and
238-239)
The Mutiny was
which even the
official
scar in Indians’
the Mutiny
One
month
war.
.
.
.”
(Nehru,
of indiscriminate reprisal
report to Parliament admits was directed simply
against Indians in general, left a
followed by a
modern
women and children
minds
at least as
deep
included.
as that left
These
reprisals
on the English by
itself.
from the Mutiny dominated policy thereafter: that they had won only because of India’s lack of unity. Any attempt at organization or unification — of Hindus and Muslims, or caste Hindus and “untouchables,” or the Frontier and the rest of India — posed lesson the British learned
a potential threat to British control.
41
“Revenge
45
“Our
is
fault”:
a word”: Pennell, 71-72.
Tendulkar, 186-189.
“In the small hours”: Churchill, 88.
“Like most young strings to get a leave
quoted in Miller, 269. Churchill had pulled
fools”:
from
his
own
regiment, stationed in India, to cover
the Frontier uprising as a war correspondent.
45-46 47
“The
The
tale
I
have to
tell”:
Churchill, 82-83.
description of Forward School policies follows Miller.
More
in-
Caroe and James. “'The Great Game,’ of which Kipling writes so stirringly, became a frantic scurry for advantage between two expanding empires. Peace and progress on the Frontier was of little concern to the men who ruled India. formation
is
in
Security was the all-important objective. To this end, Afghanistan was
looked upon as a buffer
state.
The settled Pathan districts along the
Indus
were made an integral part of India. Tribal territory in the hills [in between] was a marchland which must be dominated.” (Spain, 34) T he degree to which the Pathan homeland was carved up by Great Game geopolitics
can be seen from the map on page 200. Notes
«
205
48
'‘If
you should cut”: quoted
in
Yunus, 77-78.
49-52
The
50
no exaggeration”: Churchill, 94-95. Bindon Blood”: Churchill, 90.
War
is
from Churchill,
Miller,
and James.
“It is
“Sir
51
Frontier
“The autumn
52-53
“We
tints”:
James,
147.
loudly proclaimed”: quoted in Yunus, 80.
55
“The Holy Prophet Mohammed”: Ghaffar Khan,
56
“Those who learn
The the Raj
58-59
is
in schools”: Ghaffar
from Tandon,
The
13.
dialogue between
Khans
friend
64-65 66
know
officer
is
his
mother
is
from Ghaffar
these men”: quoted in Miller, 284.
The Curzon
The
and the English
20.
60 The conversation between Khan and Khan, 22-23, and Mehta, 241. “I
12.
reference to standard examination questions on the benefits of
from Ghaffar Khan,
64
Khan,
231.
material
with the mullah
talk
is
is
from
Miller, 283-293.
from Ghaffar Khan,
27.
67 Al-Hilal was founded by Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, a brilliant Muslim scholar and staunch nationalist who was one of Gandhi’s earliest and most loyal co-workers. Azad and Gandhi came together in 1920, when they were co-workers in the three-man committee that launched the first noncooperation movement as a united Hindu-Muslim front. 68
Ghaffar
Khan
whose
(29) describes
the Haji Saheb as essentially a social
where “outdated and useless traditions” could be replaced with newer ideas still consonant with Islam. This was scarcely the contemporary British view; to them he was simply an outlaw. He unified the Mohmands and roused them against the British on several occasions: hence the British complaint that letting him escape was the first big mistake they made on the Frontier. reformer,
struggle was to found Islamic schools
In British military accounts of the time, the “Haji of Turangzai” figures
only as a regrettably long-lived enemy.
68-69 British
“Had
to
bow
low”: Tendulkar, 25. Garoe, the last in the line of
commissioners and governors-general of the Frontier, comments
that justice in the Frontier agencies was mostly a matter of the agents’ character.
206
>
70
Vhc accounts of Khan’s Yunus (105), who knew Khan
77
chilla arc
all
sketchy.
This version follows
intimately.
“Like flowers in the desert”: Ghaffar Khan, 122-124.
78 Ghani’s illness and the death of his mother are drawn from Ghaffar Khan, 39-40. Ghani Khan wrote later (51): “She did not live long to see [her husband's] long silences
and dark moods turn
and
into strength
ac-
She died before she was twenty-five. They covered her with flowers and took her to the burial ground in her wedding robe. She left behind two baby boys with a bewildered, terrified look in their eyes.. He [Ghaffar Khan] left his children in the tender care of his ojd mother and drowned his sorrow in work and service.” tion.
.
80 p. 3.
“Non\ iolence in its dynamic aspect”: Young India, August Quoted in Gandhi, Mind of Mahatma Gandhi, 121. “Truth implies love”: Gandhi, Satyagraha, 102. “Satyagraha is soul force”: Gandhi, Satyagraha, 105.
“There is no time limit”: Young India, Lebruary Quoted in Gandhi, Mind of Mahatma Gandhi, 173.
19,
.
1920,
8,
1925, p. 61.
same year as the Rowlatt Act— 1919 — King George V announced the so-called Montagu-Ghelmsford reforms, which aimed at 81
Ironically, the
placating Indian sentiment with a system of “dyarchy” or parallel govern-
ment. Provinces were to elect Indian ministers to gos'ern provincial (agriculture, health, education, etc.), while the central
affairs
Government of
India would remain wholly British. This scarcely satisfied the Indian de-
mand
for
home
rule,
but
it
was a significant concession.
Montagu-Ghelmsford went
into effect in 1920 in every Indian province
deemed
except the North-West Frontier, which was cratic reforms
— despite
most ancient and
“No
The
for local bodies.”
so hollow.
most Indian
cities,
The
(Garoe, 425)
Rowlatt Act
became law on March
18,
why
it
1919; in
the hartal or day of prayer and fasting to protest the
was observed on April
Dyer,
democracy in the world. no legislature, no ministry— not
egalitarian forms of indigenous
events surrounding Montagu-Ghelmsford help to explain
seemed act
the fact that the Pathan jirgah was one of the
franchise for Pathans, no elections,
even elections
demo-
“unfit” for
who had been
in
6.
One week
charge of the
later
Brigadier-General Reginald
volatile
province of Punjab
for all
of four days, blocked with troops the sole viable exit available to a peace-
meeting of unarmed men, women, and children in Amritsar, the sacred city of the Sikhs, and ordered his men to fire on the crowd until ful
ammunition was exhausted — producing, according
to the official British
inquiry, 1516 casualties with 1650 bullets.
Notes
«
207
The Amritsar massacre,
which followed, offended many
ations of martial law
from y
together with the public floggings and humiliBritish (though far
home and in India; but it aroused Indians universally, and was forgotten. The Montagu-Chelmsford system was announced less
all)
never
at
than eight months
later.
Since
it
the British hands, and since the Rowlatt
drawn,
seemed
it
and military control
left veto, police,
Act— martial law— was
clear that British rule could never
in
not with-
be separated from
'‘Dyerism,” the mentality of the British military in India.
82 The dialogue between Khan and the from Ghaffar Khan, 48.
The Pathan mass
83
British
commissioner
is
taken
pilgrimage to Afghanistan, an Islamic kingdom,
protested another grievance of Indian Muslims. In World
War
I,
the
Brit-
had sent Muslim soldiers in India against Turkey. Since the sultan of Turkey was not only the temporal ruler of the Turkish Empire but the caliph or spiritual leader of all Islam, Muslims in India mounted a strong ish
caliphate or khilafat British rule.
and
movement
Gandhi, by urging
after the
war was
first
by anger
a united protest against the Rowlatt
British treatment of the caliph, brought
gether for the
over, fueled
at
Act
Hindus and Muslims
to-
(and only) time in a joint nonviolent noncooperation
campaign.
The
85 by
Khan bending the bars was reported to the author Gurudayal Mallick, who heard of it from an eyewitness.
Sri
87
incident of
“One
87-90
learns a
Khans
good
deal”: Desai, 23.
prison experiences are from Ghaffar Khan, 58-81.
90
“She was most keen”: Tendulkar,
91
“It is better”:
“O
quoted in Fischer, 203. people”: Ghaffar Khan, 78.
92
“One day
95
“Is
95-101
45.
a lioness”: Ghaffar
Khan, 83-84.
not the Pathan”: Desai, 68. Material in this chapter
103
“My
106
“A deplorable lack of
religion
is
is all
truth”: Ghaffar tact”:
from Ghani Khan.
Khan,
195.
Alan Gampbell-Johnson
is
quoted
in
Fischer, 256.
once weak”: Khushal Khan
107
“The
108
“There are two ways”: Ghaffar Khan, 93-94.
208
world,
is
quoted
in Spain, 110.
1
The
10
scene describing the founding of the Khiidai Khidmatgars
a dramatization of the
not want this
account Khan gives
movement
“We did Khan adds
in his autobiography.
have anything to do with
to
is
politics,”
(Ghaffar Khan, 95-96), “but later on the cruel oppression the British sub-
made
jected us to tics.”
Caroe
(432)
it
impossible for the
movement
to
acknowledges that “the impetus
came originally from
keep away from
[of
poli-
Khans movement]
the British failure to grant to the Pathans the system
of representative institutions set
up elsewhere
subcontinent in
in the
1920 [the Montagu-Chelmsford reforms].”
Khans notion
military models, stands as
nonviolence,
one of the
pivotal
sive resistance.” (See
Gandhi, Satyagraha,
111
The Khudai Khidmatgar
113
“We
117
“1
are the
am
“We
moments
in the history of
much as does Gandhi s spontaneous decisiori on September
1906, to fight discriminatory legislation in
11,
upon
of a professionally trained nonviolent army, based
oath
is
South Africa through
95.)
from Ghaffar Khan,
army of God”: Yunus,
“pas-
97.
114.
going to give you”: Tendulkar,
129.
believe”: Tendulkar, 64.
NONVIOLENCE in the West,
it
may be
IN ISLAM. Since Islam
is
so poorly understood
some explanation
helpful to give
of
how Khan can
speak of nonviolence as the “weapon of the Prophet.” Sabr, often inadequately translated as “patience” or “endurance,” in the a
Meccan
is
counselled repeatedly
makes it clear that if “satyagraha” comes closest to what
suras of the Koran, but the context
one-word translation were
possible,
The reference is to the early years of the Prophet s teaching in Mecca, when he and his few followers had to endure torment ranging is
meant.
from
Their stance was consistently meaning of satyagraha, without either
ridicule to the harshest persecution.
to “hold
on
to truth,” the literal
retaliating or retreating, in perfect submission (islam) to
the consequences of their
Sabr ful
is all
this
and more:
truth and
faith. it
means
tenacity in a righteous cause, cheer-
resignation in misfortune, forgiveness, self-control, renunciation,
refraining from revenge,
complaint.” first
God s
blow.”
One saying is An epigram
ascribed to this virtue in
the best of our
becomes
life
“bowing before the blow without a sound or reminiscent of Gandhi: “Sdfir is revealed at the attributed to
some
circles in
Umar
suggests the high value
medieval Islam:
in sabr.'’ In the mystics, particularly in al-Ghazzali, sabr
a cardinal virtue in the “holy war” (jihad)
that every
human
“We have found
being
is
called
(Shorter Encyclopedia of Islam,
upon
s.v.
to
wage
between good and
in his or her
own
evil
heart.
“Sabr”)
Notes
«
209
Sabr extend
is
Khans nonviolent resistance, of course. It was his genius to meaning to the renunciation of all retaliation by the strong.
not
its
119
“The
121
The
strangest communication”: Fischer 269-271.
had much more on their hands than the Khudai Khidtime. While Khan and his followers were courting arrest
British
matgars at this
with nonviolent
activities,
of the confusion to stage
some of the Pathan hill tribes took advantage some raids, including two major assaults on
Peshawar. (Caroe, 272) British writers like Caroe and Barton (and Miller, an American, following them) associate these violent uprisings with the
Khudai Khidmatgars, and thus impugn the nonviolence of Khan s movement. Barton, a British administrator on the Frontier for twenty years, writes in 1939 that Khan, “a fanatical, bitterly anti-British Pathan,” Red Shirt agents preached war “preached sedition along the Frontier. against the British in Dir, Bajaur and in the protected areas of the Malakand.” (Barton, 164) The British, of course, had never allowed Khan .
.
.
work with the “free” tribes of the hills, and in any case these uprisings occurred while he was in jail. Of particular importance are the raids on Peshawar, which immediately followed Khan’s arrest. When Afridis, the tribe around the Khyber Pass, heard about the treatment of the Khudai Khidmatgars, they to
marched on Peshawar and delivered an ultimatum: “Release Badshah Khan and Malang Baba [the “naked fakir,” i.e., Gandhi], release the Khudai Khidmatgars, and stop the atrocities and repression against the Pathans. If you don’t, we shall declare war on you.” (Tendulkar, 74) The Afridis were stopped by British cavalry and fighter planes; but in the meantime,
in
the south, Waziri tribesmen had besieged a British
garrison. It
is
instructive to note that while the tribal violence
was quickly
repulsed by overwhelming British military power, Khan’s nonviolent
movement
flourished in spite of repression, so that by 1932
the Pathans significant political concessions. (See Interestingly, the British
Government
it
had gained
p. 129.)
of India report
comments
that
during these raids “the tribesmen altogether abstained from looting in their
customary manner the
kar, 74) If
Khan had been
two decades of reform
them with nonviolent 122-124 122
210
able to
they had passed through.” (Tendul-
work among these
prior to 1930,
hill tribes
he might have been able
during his to inspire
ideals.
The Gongress
“When
villages
report
is
quoted
those in front”: Sharp,
p. 110.
in Tendulkar, 67-70.
122-123
When
one event most
Western writers mention the
be inckidecl
likely to
Sinee Khans nonviolenee
1930.
is
Khiiclai Khiclmatgars, the
the Peshawar “disturhanees” of
is
often judged on this event,
some
re-
marks about soiirees are warranted. Writers like Miller and Barton rely solely on British military aeeounts, ignoring the other eyewitness testimony eollected in the Congress Inquiry Committee report on Peshawar. Millers story, like the rest of his book, makes colorful reading.
The “dis-
turbances” amounted to a “full-scale insurrection” in which “regular
in-
and cavalry regiments sometimes came close to being scattered and routed in volleys of bricks that were supported by charges of Red Shirts carrying clubs and knives. (Miller, 349) fantry
.
.
.”
why
Neither Barton nor Miller asks
Pathans,
consider themselves dressed without a
rifle
who would
and
ordinarily not
two apiece, off cavalry, armored
a knife or
would throw their armories away and choose to fight cars, and machine guns with bricks and stones. 123
Sentences of the Garhwal Rifles are from Tendulkar,
124
Dr.
125
In addition to the Pathans’ nonviolence, another very disturbing
Khan
Saheb’s report
factor for the British
was the
is
70.
in Tendulkar, 66.
fact that
Khan had aligned the Khudai Khid-
matgars with the Congress party instead of the Muslim League, which
had cooperated with the British since the twenties. The leaders of the Muslim League “were not prepared to help us,” Khan writes (110-111), “because we were opposing the British.” When the Khudai Khidmatgars then joined hands with the Congress, the government “sent me a mes‘The Frontier Province,’ the message said, ‘will immediately enjoy all the reforms that have been brought about in India, and in future we will do even more for you than we are doing for India. But on the condition that you resign from the Congress.’” True to form, Khan refused sage.
the
.
.
.
offer.
The
Khudai Khidmatgar captain 70-71, and Ghaffar Khan.
126
126-127
story of the
Wali Khan’s rescue
is
from Tendulkar,
127
The
128
“You must prevent”: Desai, 51. “The two years”: Yunus, 118.
129
“The nauseating
incident with Abbas
.
.
.
Khan
is
is
from Tendulkar,
71.
from Tendulkar,
71.
spectacle”: Fischer, 281.
Notes
«
211
129
“Thanks
131
“I
132
largely to”: Miller, 350.
have but one”: Desai,
“Do
not add”: Tendulkar,
The
description of
132-133
179.
Khans touring
is
from Yunus,
133.
Pyarelal (in Tendulkar, 525-526) gives insight into the impor-
when
tance of Khan’s village work: lar
92.
asked
how he had had “such
spectacu-
success in turning the fiercest warriors on earth into matchless soldiers
of nonviolence,”
Khan answered
that
“it
consisted simply of education
through direct, personal touch. Most of the time he lived
in the villages
homes. ‘We taught them elementary things of daily life: how to keep clean and healthy and at peace with one another. Being fighters, [he said,] they had learned discipline already. All that he had to do was to give it a nonviolent turn.” like
and with the people .
.
.’
“My
133
in their
sisters”:
Tendulkar, 101-102.
Devadas Gandhi
is
quoted in Tendulkar,
The newspaper quotes are from “Do not fear death”: Tendulkar,
134
It is
Khan was
107, 109.
Tendulkar, 130-131. 126.
uncertain to what extent the British in India believed that a
communist;
our
in
own
times, lack of evidence has not
prevented similar allegations from being
made and
But in any case the fear of Russian expansion was powerful and genuine, both on the Frontier and at home in England. Much of the British activity and policy regarding the Pathans can only be understood if it is remembered that British foreign policy has been dogged by fear of the “Russian menace” for well over a century. (491),
“once observed that
all
“The Tsar Nicholas he had
to
do
believed.
II,”
comments Morris
to paralyse British policy
was
send a telegram mobilizing his forces in Russian Turkestan.” (See note for page 47 above.)
to
134-135 132-133,
The
conversation with Sir Ralph Griffith
and Ghaffar Khan,
136-138
Verrier Elwin
is
quoted in Tendulkar, 144-150.
“To gain independence”: Tendulkar,
141
“As a young boy”: Mehta, 241. political
from Tendulkar,
141.
138
“The
is
161.
atmosphere”: Tendulkar,
160.
Gandhi’s Gonstructive Program, in contrast with the noncooperation dia’s
212
movement, anticipated independence and attempted ravaged village
economy while forming
to rebuild In-
a just social order.
The
spinning wheel stood
at
the center of the program because
it
offered work
and an inexpensive source of income for the millions of villagers who were normally idle during six months of the year. Other aspects of the program were sanitation, the boycotting of foreign cloth, Hindu-Muslim unity, the emancipation of women, and the removal of untouchability. 143
“I’he
more
“The
greatest thing”: Desai, 90.
“You
will have”:
“The
brothers’ friendship”: Tendulkar,
I
knew”: Desai, Tendulkar,
i-ii.
176.
“To be with them”: Tendulkar, 1
44
145
171.
193. ^
these brothers”: Desai, 86-87.
“It is
/
“You will be surprised”: Desai, 34, and Tendulkar, 172-173. Ahle Kitab is the Prophet’s term, used frequently in the Koran,
who
Jews and Christians: those
for
share with Muslims the earlier books of
revelation (the Torah, the Psalms,
and the Gospels) which Islam regards
completed and perfected by the Koran. The Shorter Encyclopedia of Islam (s.v. “Ahl al-Kitab”) states that in the interests of mutual religious tolerance, “Islam extended very early the circle of the Ahl al-Kitab beyond its original limits,” even in India. as
146
“I
appreciate”: Tendulkar,
“I
would like to”: Tendulkar, 177. have never found”: Desai, 91-92.
“I 1
47
“What
is
our
fault”:
Tendulkar, 186-189.
148
The
151
“Whenever Gandhiji “I
description of Khan’s arrest
am
is
from Desai, 104-106.
takes”: Desai, 91.
a loyal”: Tendulkar, 199.
“And indeed, 152
171.
it
“The province
amazed”: Tendulkar, 205. has”: Tendulkar, 207.
153 The Government of India Act of 1935 made the chief minister of each province an elected official for the first time (previously the position had been filled by British appointment). In 1937 the first elections were held; Dr. Khan Saheb was chosen chief minister as the Khudai Khidmatgars
won
a strong majority in the Frontier legislature.
“At long
154
“I
155
“We can
last”:
Yunus,
126.
noticed wherever”: Tendulkar, 238.
never forget”: Tendulkar, 238.
Notes
«
213
155
“I
congratulate you”: Tendulkar, 239.
155-162
Gandhi's conversations with
Khan and
the Khudai Khidmat-
from verbatim reports recorded by Pyarelal (Pilgrimage, Gandhi s personal secretary, who accompanied him on his Fron-
gars are taken 57-76),
tier tour.
“We want you
158
“Even
159
“If
I
“My from
Tendulkar, 249.
to”:
as the rose”: Pyarelal, 87.
had
my
way”: Pyarelal, 95.
impression”:
The
conversation between
Gandhi and Khan
Pyarelal, 71-76.
162
“Whatever the Khudai Khidmatgars”: Tendulkar, 284-288.
165
“The Prophet
faced”: Yunus, 132.
“A free democratic
166
is
85.
quoted in Tendulkar, 306.
“The Working Committee could not “It is difficult”:
168
India”: Fischer, 354.
“Divide et Impera”: quoted in Yunus,
Jinnah
167
is
Churchill
(“I
Tendulkar,
go”: Fischer, 356.
327.
have not become the King’s
First Minister”)
is
quoted
in Fischer, 357.
The
168-170
descriptions of the
camp and
Khan’s
home
are from
Barr, 228-234.
170
“As a young boy”: Mehta, 241. Transforming and harnessing anger
come easy to Khan and seems to have been a long-fought struggle. He gave some indication of the nature of this struggle when he told some of his workers in 1938, “I know it is difficult to curb one’s anger altogether. did not
But you have pledged yourselves
God
By
to
it
before God.
may
Man
is
by nature weak
be completely nonviolent but God helping, you will succeed. It may not be all at once. The progress will be slow and there will be setbacks. But each effort will take you a step higher on your path. Do not lose heart.” but
all-powerful.
is
yourselves you
fail
in
your
efforts to
(Pyarelal, Pilgrimage, 69)
170-171
Murtaza Khan’s
172
“The number
173
“All “I
214
I
am
story
is
from Ghani Khan,
16-21.
of British troops”: quoted in Tendulkar, 359.
know”: Fischer, 444. not going”: Fischer, 444-445.
174
“Burning the candle”: the expression
is
Nayars,
I)r. Siishila
who
was with Gandhi at this time; quoted in Fischer, 468. “You are right” and “India seems an inferno”: lendulkar, 403.
176
177
“It is
my
“We
shall
Gandhis
hatma,
178
181
intention”
be
and “His inner agony”: Tendulkar,
422.
outcastes”: Tendulkar, 416.
talk at
the
May
7 prayer meeting
is
from Tendulkar, Ma-
391.
“Before long” and “He “I
have
“I
consider
full faith”:
it
“In the
“As
181-182
if
little
a true
Tendulkar,
a crime”:
“There was an
is
air”:
fakir^':
Tendulkar, 416-417.
417.
.
quoted in Yunus,
132.
Gampbell-Johnson, 156-157.
scene”: Gampbell-Johnson,
157.
he were”: Gollins and Lapierre, 266.
Mountbattens
from Gampbell-Johnson,
from viceroy to governor-general is and Gollins and Lapierre, 266-267,
transition 156-157,
275-277.
182
“No power
185
“Rule of the Pathans”: Tendulkar, 465.
in history”:
quoted in Gampbell-Johnson,
162.
“The Khudai Khidmatgars”: Tendulkar, 450-451.
THE REFERENDUM. The
Mountbatten plan divided India not where Muslims were predominant, but where the elected representatives belonged to the Muslim League. By this criterion, the Frontier would have remained part of India, on the same basis as any of the other Indian provinces. Less than a year earlier, in a clear majority,
it
had voted
Khan Saheb and other Gongress and Nationalist candidates Muslim League. Yet Jinnah would not accept a “moth-eaten that did not include the Frontier. Further, the to
Many
it.
over the Pakistan”
League could not “claim
be the unqualified representative of Muslim India” with
percent Muslim province voting against
in Dr.
a ninety-five-
(Gopal, 333)
— including Sir Olaf Garoe, governor-general of 1946 — personally supported the Muslim League. The
British officials
the Frontier since
League had cooperated with them loyally since the twenties; the Khudai Khidmatgars and the Gongress had been thorns in their sides. To such men, a Gongress-governed Muslim province was an aberration to be cleared up. Garoe “acted openly on the premiss that ‘the Gongress is not natural here,’” and a letter from him to Mountbatten indicates that he “repeatedly urged [Dr. Khan Saheb] to oust the Hindus in his ministry
and sever
his
connection with the Gongress — advice which was Notes
«
215
hardly in keeping with the governor’s constitutional position.” (Gopal, 348)
Caroe argued
Mountbatten that another election was needed to allow the Frontier to ally itself with its Muslim neighbors. It was, he felt, the only way to make Pakistan a reality. Mountbatten adopted Caroes plan into his own and pressed the whole package on the Congress, whose to
around them went from horrible to worse. Northern India was being torn to pieces by Hindu-Muslim riots and a kind of panic had set in; self-government was wholly blocked until the issue of partition could be resolved.
leaders finally acquiesced as the violence
186
“He
186-187
will
not bend”: Tendulkar,
Pyarelal’s
account of his
1.
visit
with
Khan
is
quoted in Tendul-
kar, 523-528.
189 “The world needs”: From Khan, February 2, 1984. 193
“With
194
“My “I
Day,
me
from Abdul Wali
alone”: Desai, Day-to-Day, 174.
creed”: Gandhi,
do not
a letter to the author
infer,”
Mind of Mahatma Gandhi,
143.
“A nation,” and “But do you know”: Desai, Day-to-
166.
“There
is
hope”: Gandhi,
Mind of Mahatma Gandhi,
194-195 “The coward dies”: Ghani Khan, 30. 195 “Being fighters”: Tendulkar, 526. “The bravest”: Nehru is quoted in Yunus, x. “I started” and “Nonviolence is not”: Ghaffar Khan, 196
197
“If
the
Pyarelal, Pilgrimage, 59.
198
“You have
199
“Is
216
193-194.
“To me”: Yunus, xiii. “I have learned”: Gandhi, Mind of Mahatma Gandhi, “To bear this”: Tendulkar, 148. “To realize nonviolence” and
to
be
against”: Tendulkar, 187.
always noble”: Yunus,
132.
143.
16.
Khudai Khidmatgars”:
Glossary
i
an English context,
In
all
these words
mately with vowels as in Spanish or
dhle ainal
Selfless service
amir
An Afghan
145
based on
spiritual disciplines
Revenge, vendetta, blood feud
Scoundrel
badrnash
King
badshah
A
chilla
period of meditation and fasting Small, bowl-shaped clay pipe used for smoking
chillum
A
fakir
haji
p.
ruler
A community
badal
haj
approxi-
Italian.
“People of the Book”: see note for
kitcih
ashram
may be pronounced
renunciate, holy
man
Pilgrimage Title taken
by one
hujra
Guest house
jirgah
Council of
who
has gone on haj to
for travelers
Mecca
and communal gatherings
elders, tribal leaders, lineage leaders, or
heads of
families
khan
Added
to a
name
to indicate superior social status, often of a
village or tribal chief
maktab
A
school run by a mosciue
muezzin
The Pathan code -of hospitality Crier who calls the faithful to prayer
muhabat
lx)ve;
melmastia
mullah
Muslim
compassion religious leader, often with
training
[
217
]
no formal theological
namaz
Prayer
A
nan
delicious kind of
The Pathan code
nanawati
A Hindi
pyjama
some
unleavened bread
word
for
of giving sanctuary to fugitives
the baggy trousers and long shirts worn in
regions in north India and beyond
Pakhtun
Pathan; see note,
The “way
Pakhtunwali
p.
201
of the Pathan': the social codes of badal,
melmastia, and nanawati by which Pathans rule themselves
The
Pakhtu pir
language of the Pathans; see note,
A Muslim
purdah
Veil;
qahwa
202
saint
the custom of keeping
Green
p.
tea,
drunk
women
in seclusion
salted or sugared; the
“Pathan national
drink” raj
Hindi
satyagraha
for “reign”;
used of the Mogel and British Indian empires
“Soul-force,” the
term Gandhi coined
to describe his
nonviolent campaigns satyagrahi
sepoy
A
One
engaged in or training
native Indian soldier, generally
martial tribes: Sikhs, Gurkhas, sitar
surnai
tulwar
A
from one of the so-called
and Pathans
stringed instrument of northern India
A reed instrument A curved sword
of the Pathans
yakeen
Faith
zulum
Tyranny, oppression, injustice
218
for satyagraha
Chronology
4 f
Events in Badshah Khans
life
are chronicled in the
general events in the right. Before 1947, the right-hand ally follows
developments
left
column
column gener
in British India; after 1947, in Pakistan.
1890
Born (Utmanzai)
1894
Lord Elgin, viceroy
1895
Chitral punitive expedition
1897
Queen
Victoria’s
Diamond
Jubilee (June 22)
Great Erontier War
1898
Enters Municipal Board
School in Peshawar
Transfers to Edwardes
1899
D)rd Gurzon, viceroy
1901
North-West Erontier Province
mission school, Peshawar
created
Grimes Reg. Act
1903
Erontier
1905
Lord Minto, viceroy
Refuses Guides commission
1906
Muslim League formed
Islamic school at Aligarh
1908
Decides against college England
in
1909
Utmanzai
1910
Opens
first
school,
[2191
Lord Hardinge, viceroy
Marries
1912
Left to lead reform move-
ment by
Haji of Turangzai
Attends Muslim League
1913
conference, Agra
Ghani, born
First son,
To
Bajaur; long fast (chilla);
1914
World War
1915
Gandhi returns
begins (August)
1
returns to work with settled tribes >•
»
Second son,
Wali,
born
to India
from
South Africa
Wife dies
Exposure
to
Muslim
sance in Al-Hilal
renais-
1916
Lord Chelmsford, viceroy
1918
World War
1919
Rowlatt Act passed (March)
etc.
Gandhi
ends
I
calls
nationwide strike
to protest (April 6)
Arrested
&
months
Amritsar massacre
sentenced to 6 in prison
(Apr.. 13);
martial law in India Khilafat
movement begins
Gandhi begins publication Young India (Oct)
of
Montagu-Chelmsford reforms passed (Dec)
1920
Released; remarries
To
Khilafat conference in
Delhi; sees Gandhi, Azad, et al.
Joins
mass pilgrimage
to
Afghanistan as part of Khilafat protest
Attends Nagpur session
Nagpur Congress,
at
Gandhis
of Indian National
urging, declares policy of
Congress (Dec)
self-rule
&
the
time (Dec)
220
first
nonviolence
for
Founds high school
&
Arrested years’
sentenced to
1921
1
1922
Gandhi announces
/ord
Reading, viceroy
3
imprisonment (Dec) satyagraha, calls
it
off
(Feb); arrested (Mar. 18)
&
sentenced to 6 years’
imprisonment
Mother
1923
dies
/
Released from prison
Mecca
Pilgrimage to of
&
1924
Gandhi
1926
Lord Irwin, viceroy
1928
Simon Commission boycotted
tour
Muslim countries
Wife dies
in Jerusalem
Father dies Starts journal,
Pakhtun
Punjab unrest: Lajput Flai killed by police; police
Attends Khilafat conference
&
released from prison
Congress session
in
Calcutta (Dec)
chief assassinated (Dec)
Forms Khudai Khidmatgars
1929
Attends Lahore session of
Congress (Dec)
Gandhi
&
&
meets
Congress declares
Nehru
independence (Dec.
1930
Salt
March begins (March)
Salt
Satyagraha launched
Dandi
(April
Many thousands
Arrest (April 23) triggers mass
demonstrations and
jailed in
shootings in Peshawar
activities
Repression in Utmanziii
(May
at
5)
attacked and
nonviolent
throughout
India worst repression ;
on
Frontier in history of
13)
British
1931 Released (March)
Commences
31)
village tours
ILij
Gandhi
arrested
Gandhi
released (Jan)
(May
Gandhi-lrwin Pact; resistance
ci\
4)
il
suspended
(March)
Chronology
«
221
Attends Karachi session of
1931
Lord Willingdon, viceroy
Gandhi
Congress (March); member of Working
London
to
for
Round
Table Conference on
Committee with Gandhi
Indian independence
(Sept-Dec)
Imprisoned
in arrest of
Gandhi-Irwin “truce” breaks
all
down under new
Congress leaders
viceroy;
Congress leaders arrested;
& martial law Frontier & elsewhere
repression in
(Dec)
1932
Gandhi imprisoned without trial (Jan)
Civil resistance
resumed
Elwin report on Frontier repression
1933
Gandhi
released at start of
21-day fast (May)
Gandhi
arrested; released;
rearrested; released (Aug)
Released;
banned from
1934
Frontier (Aug)
Gandhi at Wardha Visits Muslims in Bengal
Joins
Gandhi
from politics to concentrate on Constructive Program retires
of village uplift (Sept)
Declines presidency of
Bombay
Congress; gives speeches in
Bombay
session of
(Oct);
Arrested at Wardha for
Gandhi
Congress resigns,
pledging support
Bombay speeches (Dec) 1935
Govt, of India Act provides for election of provincial officials
Released from prison
banned from
222
(July);
Frontier
1936
Lord Linlithgow, viceroy
Banishment lifted by new Imontier government;
home
returns
1937
Congress wins majority of provincial elections;
Khan
Saheb chief minister of
(Aug)
Frontier
Gandhi
visits
(May
&
Oct)
1938
Begins Constructive
Program
in Frontier
1939
World War
starts
II
Congress ministries resign t
Opens center for Constructive Program
at
1940
Sardaryab
Muslim
Resigns from Congress (June)
commitment
passes
resolution for separate
(near Peshawar)
out of
Muslim Ixague
state
(March)
war support UK if independence promised (June); refuses support when promise
Congress
to
nonviolence
offers
to
refused (Aug)
1941
Gandhi
gives
up leadership of
Congress;
starts individual
civil
Pearl
Pledges support of “Quit
1942
civil
movement
Harbor attacked (Dec)
Singapore
falls,
then Rangoon
Gandhi launches “Quit
India” (Aug); Frontier
begins
resistance
India”
campaign (Aug)
resistance
Gandhi & Congress Working Committee arrested (Aug) 1943
Ix)rd Wavcll,
Imprisoned (Oct)
1944
Gandhi
Released (March)
1945
World War
v
iceroy
released (May) II
ends
General release of
all
political
prisoners
Khan Saheb
reinstated as
chief minister of Frontier
New
Lal^or govern inent in
I>ondon prepares for Indian independence
Chronology
«
223
1946
Simla conference on transfer of power
on
fails
issue of
Pakistan
Muslim League “Direct Action Day”;
riots in
Calcutta (Aug
16)
Interim govt, formed (Sept)
Tours
riot-torn
Noakhali massacre (Oct.
Bihar
Gandhi departs riots in
1947
Gandhi
for
10)
Noakhali;
Bihar (Oct. 28)
joins
Khan
in Bihar
(Jan)
Riots in Punjab
&
Frontier
Lord Mountbatten, viceroy, arrives in Delhi (Mar. 22) Congress accepts partition in principle
Referendum
Asks Khudai Khidmatgars to boycott referendum
(May
1)
(July 6-18);
Frontier votes to join
Pakistan
Independence granted to India
(Aug.
Khan
Pakhtun suspended by meeting of Khudai
Khidmatgars
Pakistan
15)
Saheb's Frontier
ministry dissolved by
Pakistan govt. (Aug) Calls
&
Pakistan (Aug)
Fighting begins in Kashmir,
to accept
disputed by Pakistan
Pakistan (Sept)
&
India (Sept. 24)
Takes oath of allegiance to
1948
Gandhi
assassinated (Jan. 30)
Pakistan (Feb. 23)
Elected head of Pakistan Peoples Party (Mar.
13)
Imprisoned (with Khan Saheb); Khudai Khidmatgars suppressed (June)
224
Jinnah dies (Sept.
11);
Khwaja
Nazimuddin governorgeneral of Pakistan
1951
Ghulat
Mohammad
governor-
general of Pakistan
Released from
jail;
under house
1954
kept
Khan Saheb
released from
prison; joins central
arrest
cabinet of Pakistan
Returns
to Frontier after 7
1955
Gen. Iskander
years’ detention (July)
Mirz.a assumes
presidency of Pakistan
“One
Unit” plan incorporates
Frontier
&
other
provinces of West Pakistan
under central govt.; Khan Saheb chief minister, W. Pakistan Arrested; property confis-
1956
Pakistan proclaimed Islamic
cated in lieu of fines
republic; constitution
(June)
adopted (March
Forms National Awami Party
23)
1957
(July)
1958
Dr.
Khan Saheb (May
assassinated
9)
Mirza declares martial law throughout Pakistan;
Pres.
abolishes constitution;'
dismisses central provincial govts.
& &
dissolves all political
parties (Oct. 7)
Arrested
&
jailed (Oct.
Mirza exiled; Gen. Ayub Khan takes power in coup
11)
(Oct. 28)
Released “on consideration of age
&
1959
health” (April);
disqualified
any public
from holding
office
Chronology
«
225
Arrested
&
jailed
1961
with
hundreds of co-workers
for
“spreading disaffection” (April 12)
Named Amnesty
1962
Interna-
constitution (March
tional Prisoner of the Year
Released (poor health) to
house Allowed
go to England
1)
1964
Nehru, Khan’s foremost champion in India, dies (May 27)
1965
Further fighting between
arrest (Jan) to
Ayub Khan proclaims new
for
medical treatment (Sept) Exile in Afghanistan (Dec.)
India
&
Pakistan over
Kashmir
1968
Thousands of Khudai Khidmatgars demonstrate for
&
end of
One
Unit Rule
restoration of Frontier
province (April)
Student
&
opposition leaders
arrested Visits India to
speak
at
1969
Gandhis birth centenary; fasts for Hindu-Muslim
Student
&
labor unrest
throughout Pakistan
Ayub Khan
resigns to General
Yahya Khan,
unity in India
who
proclaims martial law
(March
1970
New
25)
Pakistan constitution
(March
29)
Martial law continued; tensions
between E.
Pakistan break into
1971
226
Civil
war (March)
&
W.
1971
Returns from exile (Dec) with end of
War ends (Dec);
K. Pakistan
secedes as independent
12 years'
state of
military rule in Pakistan
Bangladesh
Yahya Khan resigns (Dec. 20);
Bhutto president
Ali
Frontier, Baluchistan, etc.
again declared separate
provinces
1972
Pakistan withdraws from British copi monwealth '
(Jan. 30)
1973
New
Pakistan constitution
(Aug); Bhutto chief
executive Civil
war begins
as
Baluchistan attempts to
secede (continues until 1977) Jailed as National
Awami
1975
Party outlawed
Released from
jail
“in con-
sideration of his old age”
1977
Ceasefire in Baluchistan
Gen. Zia proclaims martial law
&
postpones elections;
army assumes control (Kily)
1979
Bhutto hanged
USSR
invades Afghanistan
(Dec) Arrested with son Wali
&
all
1983
opposition leaders; kept
under house
arrest in
all
medical treatment
hospital in
Kabul
opposition parties)
nonviolent resistance
Released (Dec); to hospital
To
of
attempts nation-wide
govt.-designated “subjail”
for
Movement for Return to Democracy (coalition
against military rule
1984
Chronology
«
227
Badshah Khan {Yunus)
Bibliography
(
KHAN ABDUL GHAFFAR KHAN The primary based on
sources of biographical information for Khan’s
oral interview:
life
are both
Desai (1935) and the autobiography as narrated to
Other biographies rely heavily on these two sources. history of Khan’s life and movement remains to be written.
K, B. Narang (1969).
The Barr,
definitive
Mary. “A Tribute to the Frontier Gandhi.” In Bapu: Conversations and
Mahatma Candhi. 2nd The most intimate glimpse
Correspondence with
ed.
Book House, 1956. westerner. Mary Barr lived
of
in Gandhi’s
Bombay:
Khan
yet
International
produced by
ashram and draws on personal experi-
ence of Khan during the Bombay Congress session of 1934 and a Frontier in 1941,
when
Two
a
visit to
the
she was a guest at Khan’s house.
Times Press, 1935. The first biography of Badshah Khan, commissioned by Gandhi during Khan’s stay with him at Wardha. Desai bases it upon extensive conversations Desai, Mahadev.
with the two
Khan
Servants of God. Delhi: Hindustan
brothers at the time.
Khan, Abdul Ghaffar. [1969].
My
Life
and
Struggle. Delhi:
Khan’s autobiography as told to K.
Pyarelal.
N.W.F.P.
A
B.
Hind Pocket Books,
Narang.
Pilgrimage for Peace: Gandhi and Frontier Gandhi Pathans.
Ahmedabad:
Navajivan
Publishing
Among
House,
the
1950.
Describes Gandhi’s two tours of the Frontier in 1938. Pyarelal, Gandhi’s per-
accompanied him on these tours and kept graphic records of Gandhi’s words and actions. sonal secretary,
Thrown
to the
detailed steno-
Wolves: Abdul Ghaffar. Calcutta: Eastlight Book
House, 1966. Based on the Desai biography and rience.
[
229
]
Pyarelal’s personal expe-
Tendulkar, D. G. Abdul Ghaffar Khan: Faith
Peace Foundation (Popular Prakashan), 1967.
Is
a Battle.
Bombay: Gandhi
The most comprehensive
biog-
raphy to date, commissioned by Nehru after the model of Tendulkar’s eight-
volume biography of Gandhi, Mahatma. Tendulkar had access to the unpublished autobiography and draws on it heavily for Khan’s story, along with the Desai biography.
government gress
and
its
He
quotes extensively from such primary sources as British
and official reports, the records of the Indian National ConWorking Committee, handwritten transcriptions of Khan’s and
files
Gandhi’s speeches, issues of the Pakhtun (Khan’s journal), and other
peri-
odicals.
Yunus,
Mohammad.
a social
and
Bombay: Hind
Frontier Speaks.
political history of
movement. Yunus was
a
Kitabs, 1947. Primarily
the Pathans, with a section on Khan’s
life
and
Pathan colleague of Khan’s.
Zutshi, G. L. Frontier Gandhi:
The
National Publishing House, 1970.
Fighter, the Politician, the Saint. Delhi:
A condensation of material
from the above
biographies with the author’s commentary.
THE PATHANS AND THE NORTH-WEST ERONTIER Barton, Sir William. India's North-West Frontier. Lx^ndon: John Murray, 1939.
Barton was a British
official
on the Frontier
for
twenty
years. Writing
during
the height of the independence movement, he displays the attitudes of those officials
who saw
leaders (Khan,
the Indian nationalist
Gandhi, Nehru,
et
al.)
movement
and
its
as disloyal opportunists.
Caroe, Olaf. The Pathans: 5 SO B.C. — A.D. J957. 1958.
as “insurrection”
The most complete scholarly work on the
New York:
St.
Martin’s Press,
Pathans. Caroe, the
last
gover-
nor of the North-West Frontier Province before independence (1946-1947), writes of the Pathans with understanding, respect,
and
affection. His treatment
of Khan’s movement, however, and the Indian independence general,
is
movement
in
understandably characterized by a staunch pro-British attitude.
Dupree, Louis. Afghanistan. Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1980.
An
and cultures of Afghanistan by the foremost anthropologist. Includes a good deal about the Pathans.
authoritative discussion of the history area’s
“Pushtun.” In Muslim Peoples, ed. by Richard V. Weekes. Westport,
Conn.: Greenwood
Press, 1978.
Khan, Ghani. The Pathans:
A
Bombay: National Information and Publications, 1947. A small but sensitive and often moving description of Pathan life and temperament by Badshah Khan’s eldest son, a respected poet. Unfortunately the book is out of print and difficult to obtain. 230
Sketch.
'
Mayne,
The Narrow Smile.
Peter.
account of a return
l>on(lon:
to the Frontier by
John Murray,
an Fnglishman
1955.
who lived
An
engaging
with Pathans
in the last years of British India.
Miller, Charles.
Khyber: British India’s NorthWest Frontier; The Story of an
Imperial Migraine.
New
York:
Macmillan Co.,
tionalized history of the Frontier,
which
1977.
A
lively
hut often sensa-
on
British military
relies heavily
sources. Pennell, T. L.
& Co.,
1909.
doctor
who
Said Khan, story of the
Mostly
Among the Wild Tribes of the Afghan
Pathan lived
life at
Frontier.
London: Seeley
the turn of the century, described by a missionary
on the Frontier
Mohammed. The
for
many
years.
i
Voice of the Pukhtoons. [Lahore:
Pukhtoons of the twentieth century
articles written for the
1972].
“The
living in Pakistan today.”
Khyber Mail, the Pakistan Times, and the
Peshawar Times, now suppressed. Guardians of the North-West Frontier: The Pathans. Peoples of the Wild series. Amsterdam: Time-Life Books, 1982. A sensitive, readable Singer, Andr^.
record of an anthropologists stay firsthand description of
life
among
the
Mohmands,
including a rare
behind purdah from one of the photographers,
Toby Molenaar. Lavish color photographs
in the
Time-Life Books tradition.
The Pathans of Pakistan. New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1962. A balanced and most readable account of Pathan history, written by a sympathetic American scholar. Includes a brief account Spain, James W. People of the Khyber:
of an interview with
Khan
in the early sixties.
OTHER WORKS CITED Campbell-Johnson, Alan. Mission with Mountbatten. London: Robert Hale, 1951.
Churchill, Winston
G.
P.
S.
Great Destiny. Edited by
F.
W. Heath.
New
York:
Midnight.
New
York:
Putnam's Sons, 1965.
Collins, Larry,
Simon and
and Dominique Lapierre. Freedom
at
Schuster, 1975.
Desai, Mahadev.
Prakashan, 1968. Fischer, Louis.
Day-To-Day With Gandhi. Benares: Sarva Seva Sangh Cited: Vol. 1, From Nov. 1917 to March 1919.
The Life of Mahatma Gandhi. New
York:
Harper
Se Brothers,
1950; Collier Books, 1962.
Bibliography « 231
Fletcher, Arnold. Afghanistan:
Highway of Conquest
Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell
University Press, 1965.
Gandhi, M. K. All Men Are Brothers. Ed. by Krishna Kripalani. Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing House, 1960.
The Mind of Mahatma Gandhi. Ed. by R. K. Prabhu and Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing House, 1967. Satyagraha
House,
U. R. Rao.
South Africa. Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing
in
1950.
Gopal, Sarvepalli. Jawaharlal Nehru: versity Press, 1976. Cited: Vol.
James, Lionel.
The Indian
and Tirah Expeditions,
1
1,
A
Biography. Cambridge: Harvard Uni-
1889-1947.
Frontier War: Being an Account of the
897.
London: William Heinemann,
Mehta, Ved. Mahatma Gandhi and His Apostles.
New York:
Mohmund
1898.
Penguin Books,
1976.
Morris, James. Pax Britannica:
The Climax of an Empire. London: Eaber and
Eaber, 1968.
Nehru, Jawaharlal. The Discovery of India. Ed. by Robert I. Crane. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Co., Anchor Books, 1960. (Original ed.: The John Day Co.,
1946.)
Gandhi Wields the Weapon of Moral Power: Three Case Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing House, 1960.
Sharp, Gene. ries.
Histo-
Tandon, Prakash. Punjabi Century: 1857-1947. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1968.
Tendulkar, D. G.
8
vols.
Mahatma: Life of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. 2nd
Delhi: Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcast-
ing, 1962. Cited: Vol.
7,
1945-47.
Tuchman, Barbara W. The Proud Tower: War, 1890-1914.
New
Wolpert, Stanley.
A New History of India.
Press, 1982.
232
ed.
York:
A
Portrait
Macmillan Co.,
of the World Before the
1966.
2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University
Index
i /
Abdul Aziz, 66
Azad, Maulana Ahul Kalam
Abdul GhalTar Khan, Khan, see
167,
Khan, Khan Abdul Ghaffar Abdul Wahid Sahcb,
Haii,
Azad
167,
Maulana,
197.
Revenge
Abdul Ghaffar Bajaur, 69-70
37_38, 47-48, 201-202, 205
Pathan emigration
to, 83,
Barani Kaka, 57-59
208
Barr,
Afridis, 29, 30, 210 213:
Khan
Mary, 169-170
Bengal, 106, 145-146,
on, 145
Air nisarmanicnt Gonfcrcnce, 203
Akhar,
40-41, 96,
Badshah Khan, see Khan, Khan
206
Able Kitah,
17,
see also
9, 68,
Afghanistan: British policy and,
Akaziiis,
school, 83,91
badal, Aziid,
206
66-68,
206
Abul Kalam
atroeities, 38,
204
173,
52-53
Bhaizai, 133
Alniora prison, 152
Bihar, 174, 177
omul,
Blood, Sir Bindon, 45, 50
12
Bolshevism: imputed to Khan,
Amritsar massacre, 208 Anger: Gandhi on, 197
Bombay: Khans speeches
on, 214
of Retribution, 38
Bose, Suhhas Chandra, 106
of the Indus, 37-38
British
British
Amritsar, 207-208
at Kissa
Khani
Government
46-47
of India,
see British Raj
Baz^iar, 122-124
British public sentiment, 151,
of 1931-32 Salt Satyagraha,
173, 183
136-137, 169-170
British Raj:
Auckland, Lord, 37
Maulana Ahul Kalam,
Empire, 25-27
British Foreign Offiee,
in Tirah, 51-53
Aziid,
in, 147,
151-152
Atrocities: at Utmanziii, 125-127
at
128,
134
Anjuman-Islah-ul-Afaghina, 82, 91
Army Army
177
Besant, Annie: on Frontier
48
Mahommcd,
Khan
(cont.)
Army
of the Indus,
18 9,
development of policy on
68,
[233
]
Comm,
Congress Working
British Raj (cout.)
Nagpur,
Frontier, 46-53, 64-65,
at
215-216
during World War
during World War
II,
165,
165-168
Constructive Program,
141, 142,
146, 160, 168-169, 212-213
Cowardice: Gandhi on, 194
15-16
of,
establishment
72, 182-183
Daily Mail: report on Khan, 134
independence, 172-173
policy of Divide 166,
Curzon, George, Lord, 64-65
35-39, 202
of,
nonviolence and, offers
and Rule,
65,
Dandi
salt
march,
118
Declaration of Indian independence,
205
reforms suppressed by, 77-79,
117-118, 121
Dera Ghazi Khan prison, 90 Dera Ismail Khan prison, 88-90
81-85, 120-121, 133-134,
207-208 relations
9, 10 II,
167-168, 171-172
end
(cont.)
with Pathan
17-19, 29, 45-53,
Khan
Desai, Mahadev: on
tribes,
64-65
brothers,
143-144
Diamond
repression in North-West
Queen
Jubilee,
Victorias,
25-27, 38-39, 46, 53
Frontier, 17-19, 51-53, 81,
Direct Action Day, 173
122-127, 136-137, 170, 203
Brydon, Dr. William, 38
Divide and Rule policy, 65,
Buddha,
Durand Line,
the, 199
166,
205
202
48,
Dyer, Gen. Reginald, 207-208
Burnes, Alexander, 37 Byculla prison, 152
Gompany, 35-38
East India Trading
Cab
(Political Agent),
Education: on Frontier,
68-69, 77
Khans reforms
Calcutta, 173
Campbell-Johnson, Alan,
in,
56,
83
77-79, 82-85
Ellenborough, Lord, 37
181
Caroe, Sir Olaf, 215-216
Elphinstone, Alountstuart, 166
Chamberlain,
Elwin, Verrier, 136-138, 197
chilla, 70,
Sir Neville, 17
English government, see
207
Chitral: 1895 uprising, 32, 46, 48
British Raj
Churchill, Winston, 45-46, 49-50, 129, 168, 171, 172, 173
Clive, Robert, 36, 202
Close Border School, 47
Communal
War
Frontier
Indian National Congress party
Congress Inquiry Committee report, 120-124
18,
37-38
of Independence, 38,
205
Policy, 47-53, 65
Francis of Assisi,
Congress, Indian National, see
234
First
Forward
183-185, 216
172
Afghan War, 39, 123,
violence, 173-176,
Congress Working Committee,
First
St., 70,
199
Grimes Regulation Act,
65, 67, 172
Frontier 57.
War
‘
(1897),
45-46, 49-53,
See also Mastun, Mullah
171,
Gandhi, Devadas,
133
“Gandhi,
Frontier,” see
Khan,
Khan Abdul Ghaffar Gandhi, M. K.: and Khilafat
Gandhi'lrwin Pact, 129
Garhwal
Rifles, 123
Great Britain, government
movement, 208 and Partition, 17, 175-178
“Great
arrested following Salt
Great Indian Mutiny,
in India, see British Raj
Game,
205
the,” 47,
38, 39, 123,
204-205
Satyagraha, 120
Griffith, Sir Ralph, 134-136
assassinated, 184 at
Wardha,
at
time of independence,
9,
of,
142-145, 147-148 16-17,
“Grim,
the,” 18, 159
Guides, the, 57-58,
124, 155
183-184
during World War
II,
167-168,
Ilaji
206
171-172
during
fast
communal
violence,
Al-llilal, 67,
noncooperation movement,
relations, 166-167,
173-176, 183-184, 205, 208,
215-216
91, 139
his
206
Hindu-Muslim
183-184 halts
Saheb of Tarangzai, 66-68,
army recruitment campaign,
Honor, Pathan code
194
95-101,
of, 30,
84,
111
imprisoned, 136
Hospitality of Pathans, 30
in Bihar, 174
hujraSy 30, 204
in Noakhali, 173-174 in
South Africa, 71-72, 196
influence
of,
on Khan,
Imperialism: mercantilism
transformed
78, 85,
See also British Raj
170
Independence of
launches Salt Satyagraha,
India, 16-17:
and nonviolence,
118-119
negotiates with Lord Irwin,
128-129
on
35-39
to,
on nonviolence,
117-118
20, 80,
16-17
celebration
of,
declaration
of, 117-118, 121
Indian National Congress party:
India’s declaration of
independence,
183
111,
156-158, 160-162, 193-194
and Khudai Khidmatgars, and Muslim League, 166, at
Calcutta (1928), 106
rising influence of, 78, 79
at
Lahore
sends Elwin to Frontier, 136
at
Lucknow
source of his power,
at
Nagpur
11
tours Frontier, 154-162, 197 tried tries
and imprisoned, 91 to keep Khan from
with
to
of,
(1929), 117-118 (1929), 107
(1920), 83
Gandhi’s leadership
in,
80
prison,
Irwin, Lord, 106,
119,
128-129
Iskander Mirza, 16
go
Khan
youth
173, 175
leadership jailed, 172
148, 151
wants
211
to Frontier, 146
brothers, 142-145
170
Islam:
and nonviolence,
156,
11-12,
209-210
Khan’s understanding
of, 11-12,
Index
«
235
Khan, Khan Abdul Ghaffar
Islam (cont.)
and
63, 143-145, 188-189, 210
renaissance
Partition, 16, 166, 174-179,
183-185
103-104,
of, 67,
166
British
view of his nonviolence,
19, 85,
Jallianwalla
Bagh
210-211
imprisoned, 19-20, 81-82,
tragedy, see
Amritsar massacre
84-85, 121-122,
Jesus, 199
Jinnah,
(cont.)
136, 138-139,
152, 172, 185
Mohammed
boyhood
Ali, 16, 177,
setting, 27-28,
39-43
influence of his parents, 41-42
215
207
jirgah, 104, no,
education
55-57, 59-61
of,
joined British regiment, 57-58
witnessed insult by English
Kaira, 193-194
Kashmir,
184, 185
59
officer,
Khan, Abaidullah, 30
listened to mother's plea, 60-61
Khan, Abbas,
yearns to serve, 63-64, 70-71
Khan, Abdul
127
reform work
Ali, 145
Khan, Abdul Ghani,
Khan Abdul
Khan,
challenged mullahs, 66 married, 67
Ghaffar
Khan, Abdul Wali,
birth of son (Ghani), 67
125, 126-127,
meets Haji Saheb, 67
136, 145, 169-170, 186
Khan,
Atta,
96-98
Khan, Badshah,
see
meets national
Khan,
meets Maulana Azad,
Khan, Behram, 28-31, 39-43, death
attends
59-60: of,
67,
fast, 70,
transformation
83-84
68,
of,
207
70-71, 170,
198, 214
death of
127
Khan, Khan Abdul Ghaffar: at Nagpur railway station, his renunciation,
10,
Gandhi,
wife, 78
first
influence of
Gandhi on,
78-79,
83, 85, 170
10
tours villages, 78-79, 107,
132
132-134, 154-155, 158-159, 212
10-11, 176, 178
nonviolence, a creed, 10-11,
167,
196
religious basis of his work, 11-12,
called “Badshah," 79, 132 in shackles, 81,
87-88
70-71, 134, 143-145, 188-189,
remarried, 82
198-199, 207
emigrated to Afghanistan, 82-83
raised nonviolent army, 12, 110-113, 195-197
236
Muslim conference,
undertakes
Khans reform work,
his loyalty to
206
goes to Bajaur, 68-70
103
Khan, Hassan,
68,
106
imprisoned with son, 81-82 questions
leaders, 68,
106-107
Khan Abdul Ghaffar 56,
121,
168-169, 212-213
95-101, 105, 136, 145, 170 see
64, 65-71,
77-79, 82-85, 104-105,
67, 78, 91,
Khan, Abdul Ghaffar,
of,
16,
at
Congress meetings, 106-107, 117-118
83,
Khan, Khan Abdul Ghaffar
Khan, Khan Abdul Ghaffar on Gandhi, 146-147, 170
(cont.)
not drawn to politics, 83
plans work with Bcngiili Muslims,
treated like criminal, 84, 87-90,
146, 147-148
138-139, 172
refuses to give security, 84-85
arrested for
refuses British compromise, 87
147-148
in
Dera Ismail Khan
in
Dera Ghazi Khan prison, 90
prison,
88-90
on
women,
in Bihar, 174-175
and
Pakhtu journal, 104-105
conference, 106-107
•
independence, 183-187
in Pakistan, 184-186
seeks united province for
meets Gandhi, 107
Pathans, 185-186
meets Nehru, 107
thirty years in prison, 186
Khudai Khidmatgars,
in Afghanistan, 186-187
unconquerable
195-197 128, 134, 212
on tyranny, 199 131,
142
his
name and
variants, 201
influence of Aziid on, 206
objectives, 132
his influence, 133-134, 153-154
Khan
his appeal to villagers, 133-134
Khan, Liaquat AH,
brought to Ghief Gommissioner,
Khan, Mehar Khan,
134-136
banned from at
Frontier, 141-142
143,
144-145, 188-189
Gandhi on,
143-144, 162, 176,
107,
204
16
Taj, 145
Mohammed
Naquib, 128 170-171,
198
Khan, Rabnawaz,
147-148, 153
temperament,
Khattak, Khushal,
Khan, Murtaza, 96-98,
Gandhi’s ashram, 142-145,
his religious
187
spirit,
his genius, 195
131
called “Frontier Gandhi,”
two
Partition, 176-179
after
observes Gandhi’s patience, 106
regarded as saint,
170
during “Quit India” campaign, 172
104-105,
his sister, 105, 132-133
his
167-168,
on Gandhi’s influence,
of, 104, 132
calumniated,
II,
171-172
132-133, 147, 168
110-113,
'
during World War
103
led reforms for
establishes
exile, 153-154
167
death of second wife, 103
at Khilafat
151-152
refuses to renounce nonviolence,
goes on pilgrimage, 103
started
Bombay,
184-185, 211
gives alms to sciioul, 103
asceticism
Bombay speech,
and Muslim l^eague, 166-167,
violence, 101
Mecca,
trial in
ends
understood cause of Pathan
in
(cont.)
Khan
125
Saheb, Dr., 28
after Partition, 185 at
Gandhi’s Ashram, 142-145, 147-148
178
with Bengali Muslims, 145-146
banned from Frontier, 141-142 compared to brother, 144
declines Gongress presidency, 146
during 1930 campaign, 121-122,
compared
to brother, 144
Index
«
237
Khan
“Mad
Saheb, Dr. (cont.)
124-125
Maffey, Sir
during World War
communal
during
Mahsuds,
172
II,
violence, 175
elected to office, 144,
153,
214
173,
29, 30
Malakand: Khan
in,
68-70
Mastun, Alullah,
31,
39-40, 43,
68, 131
Mecca: Khan
Gandhi on,
143
imprisoned,
136, 139
in, 103
the Prophet’s nonviolence
from government,
resigns
Mastun, Mullah John, 83-84
Fakir,” see
165,
in,
209
melmastia, 30 Mercantilism: transformed to
171
imperialism, 35-39
returned from Europe, 87 studied in England,
60
55, 59,
Mohammed,
supports Khan, 59
movement, 208
Khilafat
Khudai Khidmatgars,
110-113,
and Muslim league, 166
Mohammedzais, 29, 30 Mohmands, 29, 30 207-208, 209
Moslems, see under Islam
in Pakistan, 185
Mountbatten, Louis,
called Bolshevik, 128
Constructive Program entirely
Faiz, 126
Montagu-Chelmsford reforms,
194-199, 211
banned
Mirza, Iskander, 16
Muslim,
of,
168-169
175, 177, 181-182,
muhabat,
12
Earl, 15-16,
215-216
12
Gandhi meets, 154-162
Mullahs: and British education, 56
historical significance of, 195,
Munshi, K. M.,
Muslim League,
209 in
“Quit India” movement, 172
in Salt Satyagraha, 121-128, 210
oath
repression
of, 121-129,
state:
movement
for, 166,
136-138
Muslims, see under Islam
of, 112
Khwaja Nazimuddin,
107,
204
National
Martin Luther, 199
Jr.,
Kissa
Khani Bazaar,
Kripalani, Acharya
122-124, 152
J.
B.,
9,
83 9,
Awami
104
Party, 186
Nehru, Jawaharlal,
9, 107, 118,
153, 167, 181-182
on the Pathans, 20
209
175, 177-178,
Nagpur,
Naidu, Sarojini,
16
Pass, 29, 30, 51
King,
Koran,
Muslim
Mutiny, see Great Indian Mutiny
Khushal Khan Khattak,
Khyber
175-177, 211, 215
Congress Party accepts, 175
of, 113
uniform
166-167, 173,
215-216
of, 111-112
protected minorities, 175
song
182
9
meets Khan, 107 tours Frontier, 154
Gandhi
Lajput Rai, Lala, 106
Noakhali:
Liaquat Ali Khan, 16
Noncooperation, 90-91
Linlithgow, Lord, 165
Nonviolence: and end of British
Lytton, Lord, 47
238
Raj, 182-183
in,
173-174
Nonviolence
North-West Frontier (cout.)
(cout.)
•and Islam, 11-12,
209-210
156,
and personal transformation,
68, 120
suppression of reforms in, 11-T), 81-85, 120-121, 147, 209, 210
170-171, 195-199, 214
and World War
Flwin reports on, 136-138
167
II,
as tool for building society,
North-West Frontier Province, 65,
204
155-156, 160-162
Congress Party adopts,
Gandhi on,
83, 118
Orakziiis, 29, 30, 51, 52
80, 156-158,
160-162, 193-197
incomplete, is
Pakhtu language, 1Q4-105, 202
155, 158, 161
Pakhtun,
a battle, 199
Khan
refuses to renounce, 167
of the brave, 18-20,
Pakhtun
105, 185 Jirga,
'
104
“Pakhtunistan,” 185
111
of the strong, 157-158, 194-195
Pakhtuuu'ali, 29, 40
of the weak, 156, 193
Pakistan:
Pathans capacity
for, 18-19,
101, 122-128, 137-138,
independence,
Khidmatgars
15-17, 183-185,
proposed, 166 Pashto, Pashtu, see
Pakhtu
language
Satyagraha
North-West Frontier,
12, 17-18:
Passive resistance, 193, 196.
See also Satyagraha
British acquisition of, 38,
46-48
Patel,
British policy in, 17-18,
46-48, 64-65,
207
147,
tours, 133-134
during 1919 hartal,
Salt Satyagraha, 121-128,
210 211 ,
I,
during World War
II,
77
of,
82-83
154-162
political agencies of, 67-68,
Pathans: and Partition, 184-186
Congress meeting
at
autonomous province bombing of, 203
Lahore, for,
118
185-186
48-53, 170,
81,
120-128, 136-138,
203
capacity for nonviolence, 18-19, 101,
122-128, 137-138, 155-162,
170-172, 193-198
206
repression in, 17-19, 48-53,
characteristics of, 17-20, 30-31,
40-41, 56-57, 95-101, 110-112,
120-128, 136-138
sealed off by British,
Pathan Youth league, 104
British repression of, 17-19,
171-172
in, 56, 77-79,
9, 167,
Patel, Vithalbhai, 120
at
81
during World War
Sardar Vallabhbhai,
182, 183
reorganiziition of, 65
Devadas Gandhi
77,
184
Partition, 175-179, 215-216
Nonviolent resistance, see
Gandhi's tour
to,
216
Nonviolent army, see Khudai
education
go
185-186
transformative, 195-199
during
to
government imprisons Khan,
155-162,
170-172, 193-198
Curzons
Gandhi
19, 65,
194-195, 197-198, 204
Index
«
239
Pathans (cont.)
courage
sahr,
Salt Satyagraha, 118-120
122-128, 195
of, 18-19,
Satyagraha, 72, 80,
fear of, in India, 158, 193, 194
division
between
and
“settled”
“free,” 29, 47-48,
196,
118, 171,
209
Sharp, Gene, 122
205
Simon Commission,
hospitality of, 30-31
homeland and language
Khans exhortation
209-210
of,
of,
201-202
106
Soul force, 197-198. See also Satyagraha
92,
Spinning, 145-146,
108-110, 121, 133
158, 161, 170
Suleiman Inquiry Committee, 120
religious devotion of, 131 tribes of the^ 29
women,
Teresa of Calcutta, Mother, 199
104-105, 132-133
Pax Britannica,
Two
27, 53
Ser\ants of God, 143
Pennell, Rev, T. L., 40-41 Personality: nonviolence transforms,
195-198
108:
British sack of (1919), 81
Peshawar: “disturbances,” 121-124,
Gandhi
in, 155
repression in, 124-128
211
welcomes Khan, 91-92
repression in, 136-137 Political
Agencies, 68-69, 77, 206
Prasad, Rajendra, 9-10, 181 Prison:
Utmanzai, 29-30,
Khans experience
Victoria,
Queen, 25-27
Village reforms, 139, 142, 144-146,
in, 81,
147-148, 160-161, 168-169
82, 84-85, 87-90, 138-139,
Violence: of the Pathans, 95-101
152-153
Pukhtuns, see Pathans
transformation
of,
197
Punjab, 106, 177, 184
purdah, 104, 105
Wardha,
Pushtu, see Pakhtu language
Waziris, 29, 30, 48, 52
Pyarelal, 186-187, 214
Wigram, E.
ashram, 142-145
9:
F. E., 55, 57,
Women: Khan on “Quit
Rajagopalachari, C. V.,
9,
Rajendra Prasad, 9-10,
181
Shirts, see
167
in
Khudai
Khidmatgars Revenge: Pat ha n
I:
World War
II:
112
India during, 77
India during, 165,
207-208
12
Mohammed,
Yusufzais, 29, 30
British policy in
North-West Frontier, 46-48, 206, 212
168
147
lust for, 17,
Yunus,
and
for,
167-168, 171-172
hadal Russia:
240
World War
yakeen,
81,
of,
Khudai Khidmatgars,
40-41, 95-101. Sec also
Rowlatt Acts,
reforms
Pathan, 104-105, 132-133, 168
India,” 171
awakening
Red
60
65,
Zagai, 69, 70
zulum, 197
128, 153
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Nonviolent Soldier: The
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When Mahatma Gandhi roused ence
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— The New
Yorker