Remembering a non-violent soldier
Remembering a non-violent soldier
"My faith is clear. I will forsake it even if I stand alone in the
People"
(Bacha Khan)
Dr Fazal-ur-Rahim Marwat
Source: The Frontier Post.
When the history of the sub-continent is being written, perhaps only a
very
few of those who occupy public attention will find a mention in it. But
among
those "very few there will be the outstanding and commanding figure of
Badshah Khan" said Jawaharlal Nehru, "Straight and simple, faithful and
true,
with a finely chiseled face that compels attention, and a character
built up
in the fire of long suffering and painful ordeal, full of hardness of
the
man of faith believing in his mission and yet soft with the gentleness
of the
one who loves his kind exceedingly."
If any body can be said to be a universal man it is Khan Abdul Ghaffar
Khan,
popularly known as Bacha Khan for h e stands not for any narrow
sectarianism
or political group, but for the eternal values of love & peace that
will be
valid for all times to come. D.G. Tendulkar in his book Abdul Ghaffar
Khan:
Faith is Battle, asserts, "The life of Abdul Ghaffar Khan is an
inspiring
saga of a triumph of spirit which knows nothing of force, whose
conquests
are won by the power of invincible gentleness." Bacha Khan was against
violence in any form and for any case. Violence always promotes a sense
of
hatred. It is not good for any country or nation because it is
ultimately
self-destructive. The alarming growth of violence, itself a
manifestation of
social disruption and moral degeneration has been prohibiting progress
on all
fronts. Without overcoming this trend, we cannot solve the political,
economic
and social problems of our society. If some individual or party, state
or
nation supports violence and terrorism in any form and for whatever
objective, that individual, party, state or nation would ultimately
plunge
itself in trouble and disorder.
Bacha Khan's was a difficult saga and difficult mission. Difficult
because,
the people, the political parties and the government have moved so far
away
from the party of non-violence and peace. Commenting on Bacha Khan's
observation, Searchlight in its October 14th, 1969 issue writes: "There
is
much force in Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan's observation that if the
political
leaders in this country (India) did not pay heed to the fast changing
world
and take
immediate steps to improve the lot of the common people they would meet
the
fate of Ayub Khan of Pakistan and Chiang Kai Shek of erstwhile China.
No
country can ignore the march of time and the forces of change that
mould
history."
The life and work of great personage like Bacha Khan gives us faith in
the
future of humanity. In his person and movement one could search for
peace,
vision and progress.
One of his admirers wrote about Bacha Khan in his lifetime.
"With the vision of idealism in his eyes, he looks beyond the
desolation now
surrounding man. He is striving to bring man and man, nation and nation
closer to one another. His achievement signifies the evolution of a new
type
of human force which alone can ultimately be the motivation of enduring
international amity."
Bacha Khan was more adherent to non-violence than Gandhiji and never
deviated
from his path throughout his life. In 1940, when all Indian National
Congress
discussed the policy towards the war, Bacha Khan resigned from the
working
committee by saying:
"Some recent resolutions of the working Committee indicate that they
are
restricting the use of non-violence to the fight for India's freedom
against
constituted authority.... I should like to make it clear that the
non-violence I have believed in and preached to my brethren of the
Khudai-Khidamatgars is much wider. It affects all our life, and only
that has
permanent value... The Khudai-Khidmatgars must, therefore, be what our
name
implies, servants
of God and humanity by laying down our own lives and never taking any
life..."
Mostly the Western and Indian scholars and even in his latest book
about
Bacha Khan 'A Frontier Gandhi' by a Sindhi scholar-bureaucrat S.M.
Korejo
tries to prove that Bacha Khan was a follower of Gandhiji and his
non-violence. This observation is regrettable. J.S. Bright MA writes in
his
booklet "Frontier and its Gandhi" in 1994 about Khan Abdul Ghaffar
Khan,
"Ghaffar Khan is in complete
accord with the principle of non-violence. But he has not borrowed his
outlook from Mahatma Gandhi.
He has reached it. And reached it independently. Independently like a
struggler after truth. No doubt, his deep study of Quran has influenced
his
doctrine of love..." He added, "At any rate, Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan is
not a
Brahmin. Neither he is a Mullah commissioned by his Majesty the King of
Afghanistan.
He is a plain Khan and tribesmen do not doubt his sincerity. Hence, if
Ghaffar Khan has arrived at the philosophy of non-violence, it is
absolutely
no wonder. Of the two, Ghaffar Khan and Mahatma Gandhi, my personal
view is
that the former has achieved a higher level of spirituality. The Khan
has
reached heaven, while the Pandit is firmly on the earth but ironically
enough; the Mahatma is struggling in the air! Ghaffar Khan like Shelley
has
come
from heaven to the earth, while Mahatma Gandhi like Keats is going from
earth
to be heaven.
Hence, I do not understand why Ghaffar Khan should be called the
Frontier
Gandhi. There is no other reason except this that the Mahatma was
earlier in
the field, more ambitious than spiritual and has been able to capture
somehow
or the other, a greater publicity. If we judge a person by spiritual
qualities, Mahatma Gandhi should rather be called the Indian Khan than
Ghaffar Khan the Frontier Gandhi, true, there the matter ends."
He has given his people a new consciousness of life. A life of labour
and
love. He was man of conviction rather than of words. He was Muslim but
neither a pretender nor a hypocrite. A man who for his services is
known as
Fakhari-Afghan but he called himself simply Ghaffar or Abdul Ghaffar.
He was
a man who tried to light the lamp of hope and struggle in the hearts of
young
Pakhtuns. A person who spent half of his life behind the bars and in
chains
but still preached message of love and compassion to his people.
It was Bacha Khan who practically proved by raising the professional
cadres
(Qasabgaran) to the status of general and commanders of the
Khudai-Khidmatgars over Khans and Chiefs in the traditional Pakhtun
society.
To him no man is superior to another except for his services for the
community and his piety.
He tried h is best in invite the Pakhtuns to trade and business by
opening
himself a shop.
He was so particular about the quality and quantity of items/things
advertised in his journal 'The Pakhtun' that that he advised to check
the
advertised items himself or by anyone before publishing it, and if the
trader
was found of adulteration or wrong-doing his advertisement would not be
published again in his journal.
Without following the principles taught by Bacha Khan, our nation, our
country, rather the entire world would wait for another Messiah, to
rescue us
from the quagmire of violence, terrorism, sectarianism and selfishness.
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