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THE PAST
The city of Azamgarh in eastern Uttar Pradesh was founded in 1665 on the banks of river Tons during the reign of Mughal emperor Shahjahan by Azam Khan, son of Vikramjit, a Rajput Hindu landowner who converted to Islam. Being a primarily rural and agricultural town, Azamgarh district and its villages remained peaceful and were not involved in any of the wars of the era.
Azamgarh became a prominent town in the late nineteenth century when one of its illustrious sons, Allama Shibli Nomani became a renowned scholar of Islam and history and a pioneer for spreading education in north India. Nomani was a disciple of the renowned North Indian Muslim educationist and reformer, Sir Syed Ahmad Khan, the founder of Aligarh Muslim University. Inspired by the example of his mentor, in 1883 Shibli Nomani established a college known now as Shibli National College and an academy of learning called “Dar-ul-Musannafeen” (House of Scholars) in Azamgarh. Both institutions blossomed for many decades after the demise of Shibli Nomani in 1914, becoming a source of learning and a magnet for the Muslims of the entire eastern half of the prominent state of Uttar Pradesh.
The institutions and culture that Shibli Nomani planted in the rural soil of eastern Uttar Pradesh continued to inspire the citizens of the region towards higher accomplishments and towards service to the community. Thus when India’s freedom movement became popular, people of Azamgarh, including Muslims participated in it enthusiastically. In the annals of the Quit India movement of 1942, Muslims of the small town of Azamgarh played a nationally prominent role and hosted many gatherings of the top leaders of the freedom movement.
THE PRESENT
As India got partitioned in 1947 a significant number of Azamgarh Muslims migrated to both East and West Pakistan; a majority migrating to East Pakistan – what is Bangladesh now. For some reason this migration of a section of Azamgarh Muslims to Pakistan put a brake on the district’s Muslim population in the areas of the growth of education, enlightenment and integration into the mainstream.
While Azamgarh Muslims have continued to produce a handful of luminaries at the national level like the Uuutar Pradesh state High Court chief justice Iqbal Ahmed, renowned Urdu poet Kaifi Azmi, distinguished Urdu writer Iqbal Suhail, internationally acclaimed movie actress Shabana Azmi, and prominent scientist Shamim Jairajpuri , the district did not attract any significant new industrial or educational development. Of necessity, to be successful an Azamgarh Muslim had to emigrate away from the district.
The educational and cultural growth of Azamgarh Muslims has dimmed in the last sixtyone years, with below average educational accomplishment and with very few of them reaching prominent positions either in the government or institutions or the private sector. The school and scholars’ academy that Shibli Nomani established a century ago have stagnated as run-of-the-mill institutions, with hardly any remarkable achievement to their credit in the last sixtyone years. Surveying the Muslim community in Azamgarh one finds a community that withdrew into its shell, stopped integrating with others and lowered its goals to purely local levels.
Lack of opportunities in education and career in Azamgarh made a large number of Muslim youth migrate to other metropolitan cities in India, namely, Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta, Lucknow, Kanpur, Allahabad, Varanasi, Patna. A large number of Azamgarh Muslim students moved to the Muslim universities at Aligarh, Jamia Milia, Jamia Hamdard and the universities of Allahabad, Lucknow and Varanasi. Many Muslim youth turned to Islamic theological education at Darul Uloom, Deoband; Nadvatul Uloom, Lucknow; Jamia Islahia, Baleriagunj. Yet despite their migration to other cities and universities Azamgarh Muslims did not integrate well with others in their adopted hometowns
In West Pakistan, the Azamgarh Muslims did not integrate well with the Punjabis and Sindhis, and in East Pakistan they did not integrate well with the Bengalis. Being proud of their Avadhi and Urdu identity, in both places they remained aloof from the ethos and culture of the lands to which they had migrated. Thus in the 1971 mayhem in East Bengal that resulted in the formation of Bangladesh, having sided with West Pakistan they suffered greatly at the hands of the Bengalis. Many of them lost their lives and a large number of them lost their homes, businesses and properties and had to flee from Bangladesh in a desperate condition. That included some of my father’s cousins who sought shelter and relief with my family in Kanpur in the tumultous 1970-71 period. Meanwhile in West Pakistan where they continued to call themselves “Mohajirs” several decades after migrating there, they suffered significant discrimination.
During the 1992/1993 communal riots and massive bomb blasts in Bombay, many Azamgarh Muslims were implicated by government authorities as being involved in unlawful and even violent activities and became the subject of a widespread police crackdown. Abu Salem the well known underworld don and others in his group who are alleged to have run a mafia operation in Bombay, and to have contributed to the 1993 bomb blasts in Bombay, are from Azamgarh.
As employment opportunities opened up in Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf countries in mid 1980s, a large number of Azamgarh Muslims migrated there. These émigrés earned good money and sent it to their families back in Azamgarh district. The families of these émigrés built good houses, shops, businesses, mosques etc with the Gulf money.
THE TUNNEL VISION
For some reason Azamgarh Muslims in the Middle-East countries and Western countries and their families in Azamgarh have chosen not to invest their earnings in building quality educational institutions in Azamgarh, that is woefully short of them e.g. a medical college, an engineering college or other professional colleges. They seem content with the century old college built by Shibli Nomani. In contrast for instance similar émigré Indian Muslims from Bhatkal – a small town in Karnatak – who similarly earned good money in Middle East and North America have built several good colleges, an impressive engineering college and are planning to build a medical college. Azamgarh Muslims on the other hand appear content with investing their increased earnings to build big houses, own expensive automobiles and to spend more time in religious activities. For instance a much larger number of Azamgarh Muslims now make many repeated Umrah pilgrimage visits to Mecca and Madina than just twenty years ago.
While they downgraded their involvement in quality education in the last few decades a large number of Azamgarh Muslims developed an intense fondness with cut-throat political activities, becoming partisans of either the Congress party or the Samajwadi party or the Bahujan Samaj party. That has resulted in sharp divisions and rivalries among the Muslims of Azamgarh, that prevents them from united community growth programs. All political parties exploited them but none of them rewarded them with any significant development in their home town of Azamgarh. Today when their community’s reputation is sullied, other than lip service none of these parties are doing anything of value for them.
The Azamgarh émigré Muslims in Gulf countries have also imported a certain orthodox Arab-Islamic culture into Azamgarh district that was hitherto unknown.
Today a visitor to Azamgarh is likely to come across a significant number of Muslim men wearing jubbas and kafiyas and women wearing abayas and jilbabs. Most of the time when these folks travel to their jobs in the Gulf countries they travel by airlines of Middle eastern Muslim countries, namely Saudia Airlines, Emirate Airlines, Qatar Airways, Oman Airways, Pakistan International Airlines etc. A far cry from the optimism and national integration that Shibli Nomani and Kaifi Azmi epitomized, today Muslims in Azamgarh have by and large turned into their shells, have become defensive, more orthodox Muslims and suspicious of others. Their integration with the Hindus in their own district is at a very low level.
Strangely enough the significant increase in orthodox religious affiliation of Azamgarh Muslims has caused sharp divisions in them along the fault lines of the various Islamic schools of thought, e.g. Wahabi, Deobandi, Ahle Hadith, Tablighi, and Ahle Quran etal that they are followers of. Rivalries between these groups and the tension resulting from that has spilled over to their mosques and madrasas where intense groupism is causing significant tension within the community at large.
THE DESPAIR
In the last couple of months as serial bombings in public places occurred with clockwork regularity in many Indian cities, police alleged that the Indian Mujahideen terrorist group, that has claimed responsibility for these blasts is actually a close-knit module of some Azamgarh Muslim youth who live in various cities. Police has arrested a large number of Azamgarh Muslim youth and has conducted house-to-house search in several Muslim majority localities and villages in Azamgarh district. Police claims that Azamgarh’s Muslim localities are a hub for those who are responsible for the recent serial bomb blasts in several cities that have put fear in the minds of the country’s population at large. Police has established a heavy presence, check points and close surveillance in the Muslim majority areas in Azamgarh district.
Muslims from Azamgarh who try to find rental houses and apartments in other cities in India are finding it very difficult do so. Most owners of houses either flatly decline to rent space to them or ask them to produce police verification of their background. Colleges and universities in other cities are similarly conducting surveillance on Azamgarh students as a pre-condition to giving them admission. Many an Azamgarh Muslim families in India’s large metropolitan cities have returned to their family homes in Azamgarh for safety. Many Azamgarh Muslims are now not telling others that they are from Azamgarh.
The mainstream print and electronic media is full of stories and reports casting aspersions on the the integrity of Azamgarh Muslims vis-à-vis the growing terrorist activities in the country. As can be expected, this tense environment has cast a pall and gloom over the entire Muslim population in Azamgarh district and Azamgarh Muslims in other cities.
THE CHALLENGE
For the Azamgarh Muslims the situation was building for many years now as mentioned above. Today they need to introspect why the perception of their countrymen about them has declined so much from their illustrious ancestors like Shibli Nomani and Kaifi Azmi to a point where, they are being increasingly identified with mafia thugs like Abu Asem and the Indian Mujahideen terrorism suspects. Clearly Azamgarh Muslims have to turn a new page; move away from being within their own shells, to integrating with the larger religiously and ethnically diverse population around them; invest the earnings of their émigrés in Middle east and West into building quality institutions of higher education in Azamgarh; phase out importing the overtly Arab-Muslim religious culture and lifestyle into Azamgarh district; root out those in their community who may have been misled into violent or sectarian activities.
Yet the Muslims of Azamgarh should protest against police brutality and high-handedness and should demand transparency in all police and government enquiries of allegations of wrongdoing against their people. They should also demand fair reporting from the mainstream media and object to stereotyping and targeting of their community. Dealing from a position of weakness they should understand that these efforts can be credible only when they have purged their community of unhealthy influences that crept into their community.
The writer is a community activist in Washington DC. He has extended family connections in Azamgarh. He can be reached on: kaleemkawaja@hotmail.com.
Photo: Azamgarh Mosque


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{ 11 comments }
Fantastic post of hostory and current situation in Azamgarh. Almost reads like a happy story turned sad. There have been lots of news on Azamgarh in media, both positive and negative. Though one thing is clear that Azamgarh has fallen into bad times.
Few months back I read in ToI , that most of Azamgarh youth consider Abu Azmi and Abu Salem as their role models. For many years underworld in Mumbai was staffed by guys form UP and Azamgarh in particular. And on TV when you see locals of Azamgarh, saying that it is a conspiracy by police to defame and hound the community, you cringe both with anger and sadness. Stereotypes and are wrong, but the fact is that stereotypes are built on exaggeration of underlying realities. Azamgarh has been stereotyped as terror factory.The realities are pointing to corruption and decline of a community in Azamgarh and unless they do something about to change those realities, there is little that they should expect anything from others.
The notorious reputation of Azamgarh is not something that has developed overnight. For several years now, it has been associated with the underworld.
The relatively more educated people who hail from Azamgarh have also done little for its advancement, as has been pointed out in the article.
Unfortunately, it is not the Muslims of Azamgarh alone who need to improve their reputation, it is Muslims all over – because there is a very heavy propoganda mill working against them.
They clearly need help
Good Post !
A nice critical analysis of the situation.
Cleared lot of my perceptions.
Its a nice compilation of historical facts…
Azamgarh is in the news for wrong reasons,i wonder what efforts have taken by the literate Muslim community including the author himself all these years, allowing and waiting till things gone from bad to worst.
Great Post.
I sense Kalim’s deep sadness & a feeling of nostalgia for the good old times of Azamgarh. But who wouldn’t?
Couple of coastal towns in Karnataka/Kerala are also experiencing similar radicalization – as local Muslims in substantial number return from Gulf with misplaced as well as strident anti-hindu & anti-India attitudes. Pre-existing or rather non-existent inter-community relations – only deepen & amplify the mistrust.
I fail to understand how the integration of whatever ‘mainstream’ we have in India is a one way street. Like the Muslim majority and Muslim populous towns, we find that the barest of basic amenities are deined to them. Moreover, why we need all Muslim towns and localites 7 star system that too self generated when we have not even a half-star life for most of us Indians, Muslims or Hindus? What is the guarantee that the not one but full batch of MBBS final year students will not be picked up just because they might attend a Juma or Taraweeh together. These have been the causes given as evidence of invlovement of youth in ‘anti-national’ activities like gathering in a mosque after a particular namaz, reading the Qur’an with Urdu translation, a book on namaz in Urdu or even a Urdu Newspaper.
Now, if one insists that Arabic Qur’an is not supposed to be read because it is in Arabic and that all Arabs are terrorising Israel, THE DEMOCRACY, isnt it a crazy situation? This same happens whereever we find a sizeable Muslims population in India. For example, we ask Pakistan to open trade routes for Kashmiri products, basically Apples whereas we claim that its an integral part of India. We are too happy to have the ‘healthy’ Washington, Wellington and Shanghai apples whereas our own Shimla and Kashmiri apple is considered for the not so healthy Indians.
I should wind up by telling all that we Indians, most of whom are Hindus should define the mainstream and join it by practising it as example then only we will grow the teeth to tell other Indians to join the ‘mainstream’ thus defined and practiced. We cant have Supreme and High court judged joining criminal orgs and telling others to follow the suit. I am sure, a day will occur in India when a Muslim PM or President will be arrested like what we see now for an MP, MLA, MLC and Corporator. The rule of land says that even if criminal, the PM or President can only be impeached and removed by the Parliament and not by the government agents viz police.
Unfortunately for common India, Muslim or otherwise, this is yet to happen, so this chaos. We need to come out of the euphoria by media that democracy and that too as practised by us is pennacea (Spelling please).
Democracy is by people and not by FEW people.
Lets stop finding faults with a struggling country like India and a struggling comminity like Indian Muslims. Be patients, things take time to settle down. It took 500 years for the so called developed world to come to the standard they are, so by this logic we are 5 times faster. صبر کا پھل میٹھا ہی ہوتا ہے۔
If we count the negatives (first) and positives (last) we find that the balance is a ‘credit’ as far as Azamgarh is concerned. If we ignore the media blitz which is not short of a war, I calculate that the Shibli, Kaifi, Shabana and Kaleem are more important that Abu Saalem etc that too if we convit him without trial. So, forget the Arabic dress and style becuase it smacks of imposing once dress code and life code on these people whereas these people have adopted it out of love for their host conutries. Contrast this with one fellow who lived in France. If he is not on consonant with the strict and of course targeted secularism, our own media will sermonise him and attack him for his religion whereas the willful acceptance of Arabic culture is taken as a attack on our Indian culture. Mr Kawaja please check whether you have taken Arabic language culture and religion through any tained goggle which is displayed in your country of stay without any reservation of sensitivity to the Arab people. You name too shows the disdain to the language as well!!
If the so called democratic US and West are too weak to Arabic things, why they preach contrary to what they practice. Do you mean once should wear a dhoti and choli to show that he/she belongs to India. Arent then you in league with the Shushma Sawaraj’s of India. Alas! you could have avoided attacking the cultural aspect because it is such a sensitive topic that discarding of tribal choli and ghagra by all in Rajasthan was used to attack Muslims in the 90s and blamed of Madarsa’s. Please remember that each distric of western Rajastan has one mosque each even though they have Muslim population of upto 20%.
Please analyse the situation as a whole and then treat the things so that the task is not defeated.
By asking and singling out the community which is only 20% of the population once could not resist to ask as to why is the lefover 80% population so isolated about. It seems that when one castigates the Muslims, a lot of perceptions, well perceptions are cleared. So, when we have perceptions to be cleared by innocent blood (that very commodity has been used by the state as well as terrorists), I am sad to add that its more than the tribalism we show in brutally killing goats and bulls in temples, though we do not eat them. Isnt this in conjunction with people accusing muslims of being insensitive to ‘animals’ whereas there have been numeroud things happenings for more than a hundred years now, that nobody has shown ’sensitivity’ towards creatures looking lie human beings (Muslims -even if you do not consider them human, they look like one).
The double standards are killing everything hopeful.
How come we question only 20 out of a 100 and do not feel those 80 accountable. Secularism and democracy do not grow in isolation and those who think that they have it for them and in them by default, should look for the have nots who are more than 50% of this country. We do not have any foreign power to be blamed for in future. Are we going to blame these terrorists for the ills (50 % as defined above) of our future?
Kaatib,
“Sabr ka phal meetha hota hai” has its own context. When the situation demands action, you cannot have “sabr”. In fact, you have to have “be sabri” because you sense the urgency.
Ayatollah Khomeini had an Islamic REVOLUTION and not EVOLUTION, because, in his perception, that was the need of the hour.
So, we cannot WAIT for things to happen. We need to MAKE them happen.
1. Adopting Arabic culture, dress mode, lifestyle etc:
A large number of Muslims from Arabia, Iran, Turkey migrated to India over the years and settled down there. Integrating with Hindus they created the Indo-Islamic civilization and culture. That includes a form of dress, food, language, way of life which has some elements from the migrants’ countries of origin and some elements from India.
Today Shalwar-kameez as dress is not Muslim and Saree is not Hindu. It is worn by women of both communities. Look at how much shalwar-kameez has become popular among wonen in South India. This is integration my friend.
For the last six hundred years Indian Muslims have not been wearing Arab garments or eating Arab food or listening to Arab music or using Arab language (other than for religious prayers). Today when many Indian Muslims are working/living in Arab countries, why should they suddenly switch to Arab lifestyle and give up their centuries old Indian lifestyle? Why should they de-integrate from Indian lifestyle?
Why should Indian Muslims try to be imitation Arabs or imitation Iranis or imitation Turks? Why not be what they really are, which is Indian? Albeit Indian lifestyle does not mean the Hindu lifestyle, it means the multireligious, multicultural lifestyle.
Does adopting Arab lifestyle make Indian Muslims more pious Muslims? For sure there is not even the remotest such hint in either Quran or Hadith or the works of countless Sufi saints.
2. Police harassment of Muslims:
Yes in the last 25 years under the influence of Hinduttava votaries a certain anti-Muslim virus has crept into some some Hindu policemen and govt officials and they behave unjustly to wards Muslims. Muslims must protest against that injustice and lobby with the majority secular Hindus to ensure that this virus is eliminated. But surely adopting Arab or Irani lifestyle, dress etc or traveling by the airlines of Muslim countries is only going to worsen the isolation of Muslims. The answer lies in better integration.
3. Indian mainstream:
Today the Indian mainstream is a composite of various religious, ethnic streams with the color of modern (western) culture on it. The Hinduttava votaries who are trying to bring back the ancient Hindu culture in the name of purifying the mainstream are not getting any success. Life always moves forward, not backward.
I agree with the fact that ultimately the will of the genuine Hindus will prevail and pseudo Hindus like Advani, VHP etc will be relegated to the background.
Hinduism is too tolerant a faith to have the likes of the above besmirching its name. You have to only see the massive Hindu turnout at Dargahs like that of Khwaja Gharib Nawaz (r.a.) to appreciate the catholicity of the Hindu mind.
The Muslim has nothing to fear from the genuine Hindus. Only saffron brigade goons are a danger.
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