"It may be instructive to recall that his father, Shāh‘Abdul Raḥīm, could have been his role model in the matter of writing letters to powerful princes to undertake jihad. For it was the pater familias who wrote a letter to Mīr Qamar al-Dīn Khān Ṣiddīqī popularly known as Āṣaf Jāh (1671–1748), the pioneer of the Deccan based state whose rulers were called Niẓāms, exhorting him to undertake jihad to weaken the infidels. ‘Abdul Raḥīm begins his letter with the assertion that it has already been decided that the infidels (kuffār) will be defeated and humiliated and if Āṣaf Jāh wants to take credit for this he should defeat them. He ends on the mystical note that ‘things said even with confidantes in secret are being revealed here on the tip of the pen so that no excuse should remain’."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Shah_Abdur_Rahim
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Shah Abdur Rahim
1644 – 1719
Shah Abdur Rahim (1644-1719) was an Islamic scholar and a writer who assisted in the compilation of Fatawa-e-Alamgiri, the voluminous code of Islamic law. He was the father of the Muslim philosopher Shah Waliullah Dehlawi. He became a disciple of Khwaja Khurd son of Khawaja Baqi billah a revered Sufi of Delhi. He established Madrasa Rahimiyya in Delhi, a theological college which later played a part in the religious emancipation of Muslim India and became the breeding ground of religious reforme
1 quote on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Shah Abdur Rahim →
Related Quotes
"We console ourselves, for the most part, with the superiority of our cultivation, which we consider to be qualitative…"
"It is also important to bear in mind that this present struggle, tremendous and unique as it may seem, is not the fir…"
"In days of yore, there reigned in the extenfive and populous empire of Hindoostan, emblematic of Paradise, a Sovereig…"
"The lady, on hearing this melody, like the nightingale, having expanded the wings of curiosity in search of this flow…"
"Love is a precious gem, which, like the rays of the sun, to shut up in the obscurity of secrecy, is out of the circle…"
"Are the Tales of , said to be translated by Colonel Dow, genuine, or not? They certainly are. The original work is ca…"