MA Advanced Macroeconomics: 1. Introduction: Time Series ...
Introduction Ma Grab i
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Introduction*
READING HISTORY
Zaheer Ali***
History is perhaps the most perilous and at once the most vulnerable of all social
sciences.Unlike John Luckacs, Gerhard Ritter and others who insist that history should betreated as an 'art' or a discipline of humanities, I, like E. H. Carr, maintain that history is a
social science mainly because the historical accounts are not, and should notbe produced with
the power of the imagination (as is the case of arts) but should be deeply rooted in social,political, economic, psychological and cultural realities of the times, which are under inquiry
by the historians. So far as history being the most perilous of social sciences is concerned it
must be underlined that a distorted version of it may cause horrifying occurrences such as
riots, pogroms or even civil wars in societies that are heterogeneous in terms of ethnicity,religion and culture. In such a society, the economically and politically dominant group tends
to use, rather misuse, the real, but more often than not, the imaginary atrocities committed by
the other group in the past to subjugate it in all respects in the present. This is not only trueabout the region of South Asia but all pluralistic societies. Secondly, history is also the most
vulnerable of all social sciences because with every political change, history becomes the first
casualty. The new ruling clique usually undertakes a project to rewrite history which must
show the people, race, religion and culture towhich it belongs in the most propitiouscolours.We can cite quite a few examples of communalising history from the countries of the Indian
subcontinent and it is also true that these distorted historical accounts have occasionally led to
the outbreak of communal violence. In fact, in pre-independent India, in addition to thediffering economic and political arguments, conflicting historical perceptions constituted the
vital component of the 'two-nation theory' that ultimately partitioned the country.
Despite the pitfalls just mentioned, history is a discipline of great consequences. The
oft-repeated axiom of George Santayana that 'those who cannot remember the past arecondemned to repeat it' is loaded with truth. The crucial point is that we must remember a
truthful, unbiased and unprejudiced account of history. Studied with a spirit of objectivity and
openness history may offer feasible alternatives to the predicaments of the present. It is onlythrough history we know why we do certain things that we often do and, more often than not,
without being aware of the relevance of our actions. Many of the socio-cultural and even
economic practices cannot reveal their true significance unless we know the history behindthem. It is a matter of common knowledge that our past hands over a set of values, norms and
rules of social behaviour to us, which we are expected to cherish and observe. It is alsoexpected from the present generation to pass on the values and norms that it has inherited
along with the values and norms it has created on its own to the next generation. It is becauseof this reason it is logically argued that the son of a father is more intelligent because he notonly inherits the historical experiences his father inherited from his ancestors but he also
inherits the experiences of his father. This also explains how important is the practice of
writing down the historical accounts so that the future generations can benefit from them.It is how the historical account is presented or with what viewpoint it is interpreted
that is problematic. One often hears terms like objectivity and neutrality in this context. It
implies that the historical account be free from all religious, sectarian, ideological and cultural
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biases. Obviously it sounds reasonable. Nevertheless, it is quite possible that many historical
accounts purportedly written with utmost objectivity and strict neutrality on the part of the
historians may appear bizarre, preposterous, regressive or outright meaningless if they aretaken into consideration devoid of their religious, cultural, sequential or geographical
contexts. It was Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406) who first underlined that the cultural differences of
another era must not be lost sight of while assessing any historical account. He alsoemphasised the 'need for experience' along with rational principles for evaluating a culture ofa bygone age. Ibn Khaldun, more often than not refused to give uncritical credence to
superstitions and traditional historical narratives that are handed over by the past to the new
generations. He is appropriately acclaimed for pioneering a scientific method to the study ofhistory.
Ibn Khaldun is best known for hisMuqaddimah(known asProlegomenonin English)
that was first published in 1377. TheProlegomenon was, in fact, the introduction to his seven-
volumeKitabu-l-'ibar(Universal History) but because of its length and philosophical content,it came to be treated as a separate and the most valuable volume. It is because of Muqaddimah
that Ibn Khaldun is universally known as the 'father of historiography' and also as the 'father
of philosophy of history.' Ibn Khaldun is also regarded the father of the discipline of sociologywherein he is credited to develop a theory of social contract. Some scholars point out that the
Muqaddimah is also a sociological treatise in which he discusses politics, urban life,
economics and knowledge. The central notion of the work is what is known in Arabic as
'asabiyyah' that is usually translated as 'social cohesion' or sometimes as 'tribalism'. He arguesthat social cohesion comes naturally to the persons belonging to a tribe and it gets firmed up
further because of religion. Applying his sociological tools of analysis to the study of history,
Ibn Khaldun expounds that the political, economic, sociological and psychological reasons forthe downfall of a tribe are innately set in the cohesion itself. His argument is that a sedentary
social order, rich in art, culture with an appreciable level of opulence is more likely to be
vanquished by a nomadic group of warriors. In turn, when the victorious social group reaches
the zenith of grandeur and opulence it is more likely to be defeated by a new horde of soldiersof fortune. In such manner the march of history continues and dynasties keep appearing and
fading on the horizon of universal history. Most scholars read Ibn Khaldun's sociological view
of history as the foremost business cycle theory. I, however, would prefer to call it the,dialectics of extremities. When a dynasty beginning as a group of warriors reaches its
political, economic, socio-cultural extreme it is bound to be dislodged by another gang of
coarse warriors. Thus, it was Ibn Khaldun who first underscored the significance of dialecticsas a tool of analysis of history.
Almost four hundred years later, the German philosopher, George Frederick Hegel,
without acknowledging the pioneering work of Ibn Khaldun, applied the tool of dialectics to
explain the march of history. Hegel, had also borrowed the concept of 'philosophy of history'from Ibn Khaldun without giving any credit to the Arab philosopher of history. The argument
that Hegel might not be aware of Ibn Khaldun or his seminal work, Prolegomenon, could not
sound convincing because his life and works were introduced to Europeans in 1697 through
Barthelemy d'Herbelot de Molainville's tome, Bibliothque Orientale. The intellectualdishonesty of Hegel is not surprising because even earlier the European scholars heavily
borrowed ideas from the writings of Ibn Rushd (Averroes) and Ibn Sina (Avicenna) without
giving credit to the original thinkers.
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Hegel was not only dishonest but also a biased thinker for he spoke of ahistorical
nations by which he meant the peoples whom the 'world spirit', the driving force of history,
did not think worthy enough to reveal itself. In this category of 'ill-omened' peoples heincluded all the nations of the Orient. The teleological characteristic of his philosophy of
history with a predetermined course of the Spirit passing through various stages such as the
Oriental, the Greek, the Roman reached its ultimate peak, that's what he claimed, theGermanic people through Christianity. Thus, according to Hegel the German world with itsCatholic Church was the personification of Reason and the ultimate destination of World
Spirit. Interestingly, Hegel had also declared in 1806 that with the victory of Napoleon over
the Prussian forces at Jena, the history had come to an end. Besides, the obviouscontradictions of his philosophy of history, it must be pointed out that Hegel's writings on
history are a pile of entrenched racist prejudices produced by a spiteful-sectarian mind.
Dialectics as a tool of analysis to understand historical/social developments found its
finest treatment at the hands of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels who transformed it intodialectical materialism, which is also known as historical materialismin Marxist terminology.
Some Marxist scholars prefer to call it materialistic interpretation of history. It is obvious that
material conditions, for instance geographical realities, do influence the course of socialdevelopment. However, according to historical materialism the impact of geographical
environment is not of a seminal nature because social changes appear at much faster pace than
the changes and development of geographical phenomena. Citing from European history
Marx pointed out that during the last three thousand years three different social systemappeared viz. the primitive communal system, the slave system and the feudal system.
However, during the same period geographical environment almost remained as it was in the
past and whatever changes that took place in geographical realities of Europe wereinsignificant.
Moreover, historical materialism holds that even growth in population, which is also a
material reality of a society, does not determine the nature of a social system. Population
growth may accelerate or retard the process of development of society, however, it cannot bethe major determining factor in social development. The reason is that population growth does
not provide an answer to the changes in social systems. In other words, an increase in
population fails to explain that why a primitive communal system got transformed into theslave system and why the slave system was replaced by the feudal system. The growth in
population does not result into the emergence of a higher kind of social system. For instance,
Indian population is many times more than the population of Germany but that does not makeIndian social system higher than that of Germany.
The obvious question that arises is, if geography and population growth are not the
determining forces of historical/social transformation then which is the determinant force?
According to historical materialism the modes of production of material values, are the realforces that bring about change in social system. In order to live and improve living conditions
people produce things of material values. The instruments of production that are put to use in
producing things of material values require for their operation labour skills and all these
factors may be jointly defined as the productive forces of society. Another facet of the processof production is the cooperative venture in which all men take part to exploit nature to create
material values. Thus, production is not an activity that can be carried out by an individual in
isolation. It is a task that can only be accomplished by cooperation of men and that is why it isknown as social production. In order to produce material values men join hands with other
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men in a relationship of mutual help which is not based on any kind of exploitation. The
relations of production may be of hierarchical nature or may change from one kind of relation
to another kind of relation of production. Nevertheless, despite hierarchy and ever changingcharacteristics, the relations of production remain fair and just. To quote Marx: "In
production, men not only act on nature but also on one another. They produce only by co-
operating in a certain way and mutually exchanging their activities. In order to produce, theyenter into definite connections and relations with one another and only within these socialconnections and relations does their action on nature, does production, take place."
Historical materialism suggests that an important feature of production is that it keeps
changing. At different stages of development different modes of productions keep appearing.Consequently, with the change of mode of production social system, political institutions,
spiritual life and the views of the people also change. Therefore, the nature of a social system
is determined by its mode of production. This is a very significant point because according to
this viewpoint the real history is not the record of the lives of kings and queens and theirexploits, expeditions and intrigues. The real history is the story of the development of
production, of the producers of the material values of the labourers who have always been the
major force in producing material values.Furthermore, every change in the mode of production bring about change in men's
relation of production and their economic relations. Though relations of production depend on
development of productive forces, they do react upon the development of productive forces
which may either accelerate or retard it. The significant point is that relations of productionshould be in conformity with the development of productive forces to ensure maximum
growth of production. Otherwise, a mismatch between relations of production and the pace of
growth of production will result in crisis of production and destruction of productive forces. Inorder to prove the point Marx cites the example of capitalist mode of production in which
private ownership of the means of production is in conflict with the productive forces. It is,
according to Marx, bound to result in the destruction of productive forces which can make a
social revolution imperative to define new relations of production in accordance with the kindof productive forces. This will lead to the creation of a socialist system. Thus, according to
historical materialism five types of relations of production are identified in history viz.
primitive communal, slave, feudal, capitalist and socialist.One of the finest exponents of Marxist School of historiography in the twentieth
century was Edward Hallett Carr who began not as a historian or a Marxist theorist but as a
diplomat and a scholar of international relations committed to the realist approach.Subsequently, however, he became a critic of empiricism in the realm of historiography and
thus ended up as a Marxist historian. Carr's magnum opus is theA History of the Soviet Russia
in 14 volumes covering the period of the former socialist republic between 1917 and 1929.
Carr's significant contribution to historiography, however, can be traced to his other book,What is History?, in which he discarded the efficacy of empiricism in historiography. His
argument is: "The belief in a hard core of historical facts existing objectively and
independently of the interpretation of the historian is a preposterous fallacy..." His contention
that historians usually make use of the historical facts selectively seems to be a valid one.Expounding the point, he classifies 'facts' into two categories, 'facts of the past' and 'historical
facts'. The former category comprises the historical data that are not considered worth to
inquire into by the historians while the latter includes the information that is cared for thehistorical research. The process of opting for and rejecting the historical data is invariably
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arbitrary. Carr points out that most historians choose to examine 'historical facts' to further
their ideological agenda. Therefore, he recommends: "Study the historian before you begin to
study the facts.Like a true Marxist, Carr believed in the deterministic view of history. He contended
that all historical events were rooted in certain causes and for that reason events could not
happen differently if the causes were similar. Carr was also critical of those scholars whowould give excessive importance to coincidence and unforeseen causes in the unfolding ofhistory. In his estimation such historian were either bereft of the historical craft or were
interested only in narrating the history of the 'losers'.
Reflecting on the all round progress the human civilisation made during the twentiethcentury, Carr advised the historians that they must alter their old values while writing history
because their works should replicate the progress of their times. Paying tribute to Karl Marx,
he pointed out that the German philosopher had developed a theoretical model for the
comprehension of the past, present and future sticking to which a historian could perform thedual role of an analyzer of the past events and also motivate the people to change the present
order to build a better and just future for the mankind. Carr asserted that historians must shun
the proclivity of passing moral judgements on historical figures because, in his view, it wasahistorical to evaluate the temperaments and actions of the people of the past according to the
moral values of the age of the historian. A dispassionate historian is likely to judge the
historical figures in the light of the values of their times and social orders. Nevertheless, Carr
conceded that if it was necessary for a historian to give expression to his moral opinions, heshould restrict them to the institutions rather than historical figures. Likewise, Carr insisted
that historians should refrain from calling historical events in terms of 'good' or 'evil'; in their
place he advocated the usage of terms like 'progressive' and 'reactionary'.Quite a few historians in Europe and elsewhere refute the class analysis of the
Marxists as a valid tool of historiography. The prominent among them are mostly the French
historians belonging to the Annales School that made its appearance in the twentieth century.
The school recommends what are known as the 'scientific methods' to be employed byhistorians and underscores the significance of social premises rather than political in the
interpretation of the historical data. Through its official journal, Annales d'Histoire
Economique et Sociale (Annals of Economic and Social History), the leading historiansLucien Febvre and Marc Bloch argued that all levels of society help understand the historical
development of a people and a region. They seem to take into consideration, what they prefer
to call, 'the collective nature of mentality' in shaping the course of history. The historians ofthe school assigns considerable credence to geography, psychology and culture of the people
and the times they are dealing with as they suspect the historical facts that are usually handed
over as facts accompli.
While launching the Annals (1929), its founders, Febvre and Bloch, had declared thatthrough it the historians committed to the standpoint of the school through their analyses
would bring about a paradigm shift in the thought processes of the people of the world that in
turn would help lessen the possibilities of economic and political adversities in times to come.
The purpose of the journal was to "study the present so as to reach a profound understandingof the past." The Annales School had significantly influenced many historians of Europe and
Latin America. Besides Febvre and Bloch, Fernand Braudel, Pierre Goubert, Robert
Mandrrou, Ernest Labrousse and others have been associated with the school.
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Among those who refuse to endorse the Marxist position on historiography is a group
of historians who have dedicated themselves to the study of British imperialism, in particular,
its impact on the colonised countries. It is known as Cambridge School of historiography,which emerged about 1960s and in a short while has registered quite an impact by way of
reinterpretation of the history of modern India, in particular, the rise of nationalism. The
historians of the group have been associated with the Cambridge University, hence the nameof the school. The prominent names of the group are John Andrew Gallagher, Anil Seal,Gordon Johnson et al. With reference to the colonial history of India, the Cambridge School
historians seem to believe that Indian nationalism was a corollary of British imperialism. The
thrust of this viewpoint is the centralised administration introduced by the colonial mastersthat, in their opinion, was not known to the subcontinent before the Raj. Besides, the railways
and other advanced modes of transport led to the increased interactions among the people of
different geographical areas who were hitherto cramped to their respective regions, the
introduction of a standardized kind of education, the impulsion of commercial activities andsome other services of common benefit such as telegraph and modern hospitals helped create
a vociferous national intelligentsia that was the driving force of Indian nationalism. This
thesis finds its optimum expression in a collection of essays by the leading lights of the groupentitledLocality, Province and Nation: Essays on Indian Politics, 1870-1940.
It was not surprising that the Indian historians both Marxists and nationalists hotly
contested the basic premise of the Cambridge scholars. The Marxists argue that by
undermining the economic change in preference to the so-called employment opportunitiesmade available by foreign masters as the motivating force for historical developments
including nationalism, the Cambridge historians have in a way justified the colonial rule.
Secondly, to say that the rise of Indian nationalism was a logical upshot of the rise of educatedclass smacks of elitism and ignores the role of the working classes in the freedom struggle.
Similarly the nationalist historians contend that the Cambridge scholars are nothing short of
apologists of the British imperialism. They portray British rule in India as a rule of
benevolence and in doing so they have relied mainly on the documents produced by theforeign masters. Nonetheless, it is evident that the historiography of this school cannot be
universally applied. For instance, how could one explain the emergence of nationalism in the
countries that were never colonised?
II
Ancient Indians had no proclivity for writing history. This seems to be an oddity
because in ancient India disciplines such as philosophy, politics, mathematics, medicine,
astronomy, literature, in particular, poetry and drama had reached a reasonably high level of
merit. Acknowledging the fact even R. C. Majumdar who portrays everything of ancient India
in the most overvalued manner admits: "One of the greatest defects in Indian culture whichdefies rational explanation, is the aversion of Indians to writing history. They applied
themselves to all conceivable branches of literature and excelled in many of them, but theynever seriously took to the writing of history." Consequently, the scholastic works that we
find today dealing with ancient India have been recreated by modern historians, both Indians
and foreigners, on the sources like inscriptions (mostly religious disseminations) chiseled onrocks, archaeology and the chronicles written by the foreign travelers like Magasthenes,
Faxian, Xuanzang et al.
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Here, we may take a brief survey of the primary books that were produced during the
medieval period. The Indians came to learn the art of historiography through the historians of
Afghani-Turkish-Iranian origin who had visited the subcontinent at different stages of historyand produced some valuable of historical accounts. No wonder the first history of India, the
subcontinent and not a part of it, was written by Abu Reran al-Biruini known as Alberonius to
the medieval Latin scholars. Born in the outskirts of the city of Kath that was at the time thecapital of the Afrigid dynasty of Khwarezm (Chorasmia) in 973, al-Biruni was a multi-facetedgenius who excelled in various areas of knowledge. Besides being a historian he was a
polyglot having mastery over Khwarezmian (his mother-tongue, now extinct), Persian, Arabic
and Sanskrit while being familiar with Greek, Hebrew, Syriac and Berber. His genius was alsoreflected in many fields of knowledge such as physics, mathematics, astronomy and natural
sciences. He is also credited with originating the discipline that is known as Indology today
because it was he who, for the first time introduced India, its religions, customs, traditions,
cultures and languages to a much larger audiences abroad. His contributions to Earth Sciencesis consummate because of which he is called the 'father of Geodesy'.
When Mahmud of Ghazni annexed Rey (near Tehran) in 1017, al-Biruni happened to
be in the city. His fame as a polymath and a polyglot was widespread because of whichMahmud offered him an important position in his court. It was during one of the incursions of
Mahmud into India that al-Biruni accompanied the Ghaznavid army and thereafter kept
visiting the subcontinent for about thirteen years to study the languages, philosophy, sciences,
culture, customs, traditions, commerce and political system of India. The output of hisscholastic pursuits resulted around 1030 in the form of the first history of India, Kitab Tarikh
al-Hind (lit. The Book of History of India). The methodology, al-Biruni employed during his
research was remarkably scientific and similar to what present-day academic historians mightput in their research. His command over Sanskrit allowed him to scrutinize the ancient texts
his perceptive observation of the people, their actions, rituals and customs and his
innumerable interviews with the cross-sections of Indians enabled him to bring together a
huge amount of data to base his book upon.Tarikh al-Hind is not merely a narrative about the political dynasties and their
functioning, it is, in fact a compendium incorporating strands of Indian philosophy,
mathematics, geography, culture, religion and the way of life of the people of thesubcontinent. Al-Biruni expressed that he wrote the book to make available "the essential
facts for any Muslim who wanted to converse with Hindus and to discuss with them questions
of religion, science, or literature." He further explained: "My book is nothing but a simplehistoric record of facts. I shall place before the reader the theories of the Hindus exactly as
they are, and I shall mention in connection with them similar theories of the Greeks in order to
show the relationship existing between them." It was through this book that a major part of the
outside world got to know about the Bhagvad Gita, the Upanishads, Puranas, the Vedas,Hindu mythology and the scientific writings of Nagarjuna and Aryabhata. Though Al-Biruni
was quite impressed by the Indian philosophical and scientific traditions and also made a
comparative study of Indian and Greek thoughts, he reproved the pomposity, smugness and
blinkered propensity of most Indians that was antithetical to research and scholastic pursuits.Here is what he said about Indians in the context:
"The Hindus believe that there is no country but theirs, no nation like theirs, no kingslike theirs, no religion like theirs, no science like theirs. They are haughty, foolishly
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vain, self-conceited, and stolid. They are by nature niggardly in communicating that
which they know, and they take the greatest possible care to withhold it from men of
another caste among their own people, still much more, of course, from anyforeigner...Their haughtiness is such that, if you tell them of any science or scholar in
Khorasan and Persia, they will think you to be both an ignoramus and a liar. If they
traveled and mixed with other nations, they would soon change their mind, for theirancestors were not as narrow-minded as the present generation is."
It was obvious that al-Biruni could not openly condemn his employer's frequent raids
on Indian towns and ransacking of temples, in particular, in Mathura and Somnath but herecorded the said events with a discernible sense of lamentation. According to his English
translator, Edward C. Sachau al-Biruni did say that Mahmud "utterly ruined the prosperity of
the country." After a close scrutiny of the two faiths, Hinduism and Islam and their respective
cultures, al-Biruni remarked that the two religions were poles apart. In his words: "They(Hindus) totally differ from us in religion, as we believe in nothing in which they believe, and
vice versa. On the whole, there is very little disputing about theological topics among
themselves; at the utmost, they fight with words, but they will never stake their soul or bodyor their property on religious controversy. On the contrary, all their fanaticism is directed
against those who do not belong to them--against all foreigners. They call them mleccha,
i.e. impure, and forbid having any connection with them, be it by intermarriage or any other
kind of relationship, or by sitting, eating, and drinking with them, because they think theywould be polluted thereby." Added to this were the repeated plunders and loot of Mahmud's in
northwestern region of India. This was one of the reasons, as al-Biruni pointed out, for Hindus
to have animosity towards Muslims. It persists even after the interval of about a thousandyears and a few political parties in contemporary democratic,secularIndia primarily thrive on
it.
Among the notable Indian historians who left behind scholastic records of the
Sultanate period and the Mughal dynasty, the names of Ziauddin Barni, Abul Fazl, AbdulQadir Badauni and Muhammad Qasim Hindu Shah (Farishta) come to mind. Ziauddin Barni
(1285-1357) belonged to an aristocratic family whose ancestors occupied important positions
in the courts of various kings of the Delhi Sultanate. Though he never occupied an officialposition, he was a close friend of Muhammad bin Tughlaq. Ziauddin's fame rests on the two
books that have survived the vagaries of time and reached us. Of the two, Tarikh-e-Firoz
Shahi is exclusively an historical account of the Delhi Sultanate covering the timeGhiyasuddin Balban ascended the throne till the initial years of Firoz Shah Tughlaq's rule. The
other book,Fatawa-e-Jahandari,a book that may be described as a mishmash of Chanakyas
ArthashastraandManusmriti. Barni was perhaps the first Muslim in India who had stratified
the Indian Muslims into ashrafand ajlaf. He was vehemently opposed to the notion of socialegalitarianism that was trumpeted, by a handful of ulema, as the finest hallmark of Islam. In
Tarikh-e-Ftroz ShahiBarni blew his own horn that the rulers who paid heed to his counsel has
been successful in whatever they did and those who turned their back on his guidance had
failed miserably in every respect. His account of the period, though sketchy, is considered tobe a reliable primary source, in particular, about Alauddin Khilji's conquests of Chittor,
Ranthambor, Malwa and Deccan.
The founder of Mughal dynasty, Zahiruddin Babur, himself was a poet and followingthe footsteps of his famed ancestor, Timur, wrote his autobiography in Turkish that was his
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mother tongue. The memoirs originally named as Tuzuk-e-Baburi, also came to be known as
Baburnama when they were translated into Persian by Abdur Rahim Khan-e-Khanan in the
reign of Akbar the Great. Accordingly, we get to know the details about the initial phase ofthe Mughal dynasty through the life story of the man who had established it. Baburnamais an
authentic record of the adventurous life of Babur. Though the memoirs do not tell us the
complete story of Babur who died at a comparatively young of 47, a considerable portion ofthe book comprises the narrative of India, its land, people, resources, flora, fauna climate etcthrough the eyes of the man who was not only a brave warrior but also a sensitive poet
because of which even in the midst of war and death-defying travels he could appreciate the
beauties of nature and write about them.The sudden illness of Babur from which he never recovered was, as per the chronicle
of his daughter, in response to his supplication to God to save his son Humayun's life from a
grave illness in lieu of his own life. Babur's daughter, Gulbadan Begam (1523-1603) was also
a poet and a very well educated person. Her fame in history is because of Humayun Namathatshe wrote on the request of Akbar, her nephew. The significant of the book can be gauged
from the fact that it is the only surviving book written in 16th century by a Mughal princess.
Here is what she wrote about the end of Babur:During Humyn's illnesshis Majesty walked round him and turned
his face (in intercession) to his Reverence, Murtaa 'Al Karmullh. He kept up
that going-round from the Wednesday and made intercession from the Tuesday,
in anxiety and deep dejection. The weather was extremely hot and his heart andliver burned. While going round he prayed, saying in effect: O God! if a life
may be exchanged for a life, I who am Bbar, I give my life and my being for
Humyn."That very day he fell ill, and Humyn poured water on his head, and
came out and gave audience. Because of his illness, they carried my royal father
within, and he kept his bed for two or three months...The death took place on
Monday, December 26th, 1530 (Jumda I. 5th, 937H.)."Having lost the kingdom in 1540 to Sher Shah Suri, Humayun fled to Iran passing
through Lahore and Kabul. During her brother's 15-year banishment from India, Gulbadan
Begum stayed in Kabul. Akbar had commissioned her to write whatever she could recollectabout Humayun and his reign so that the reminiscences could be used by Abul Fazl in writing
Akbarnama. Her recollections provide information about the hardships and problems her
brother faced in reestablishing the Mughals dynasty along with a few glimpses of the kind oflife women had to live in Mughal harem.
BesidesAkbarnama, there are a couple of other historical accounts written during the
reign of the third Mughal emperor. Abdul Qadir Badauni was a scholar of Persian language,
an historian and translator. Despite his orthodox religious views Akbar had appointed him tothe religious office where he translated the Sanskrit epics Ramayana and Mahabharata into
Persian. His fame as an historian is because of Muntakhab-ul-Tawarikh (1595) in three
volumes. The first volume chronicles the reigns of Babur and Humayun while the third is a
general history of the prominent Muslims who had made extraordinary contributions toIslamic thought, medicine, literature and poetry. It is the second volume that deals with the
reign of Akbar, and because of the extremely orthodox Sunni views of its author, is
exceptionally critical of Akbar's religious approach, his secular administration, his catholicityand, in particular, his policy of appointing Hindus to the high offices. It was because of such
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critical views about the emperor and his administration, the second volume was not published
in the lifetime of Akbar. With the ascension of Jahangir and the return of orthodox mullahs to
the durbar the second volume of Badauni's history got published. Needless to add that it is anawfully biased account of Akbar and his governance. No wonder that the book is a favourite
source material for the orthodox history scholars, leaders of Muslim communal parties and
organisations and fanatic mullahs in the subcontinent and elsewhere whenever they intend toderide liberal views and secular policies.Another significant history of the Akbar's reign is Tabaqat-e-Akbari of Khwaja
Nizamuddin Ahmad who was Mir Bakshi (Chief Accountant of the Armed Forces) of Akbar's
court. It is a wide-ranging account of historical events from the raids of Ghazni to 1594 thatwas the 38th year of Akbar's reign. However, the principal history of Akbar's times is
Akbarnamaof Abul Fazl. Its three volumes cover the history of Akbar's ancestors beginning
from Timur and ending at the 46th year of Akbar's supremacy. Abul Fazl, his poet-laureate
brother Faizi and his scholar father Sheikh Mubarak Nagori were the resolute supporters ofAkbar's religious reforms, his secular policies and all-inclusive administration. It was because
of his liberal views, the orthodox elements of Akbar's period such as Abdul Qadir Badauni
hated the influence of Nagori brothers in Akbar's court. Abul Fazl is also the author of anadministrative account of Akbar's reign, Ain-e-Akbari, which is also spread over three
volumes.
The liberal policies of Akbar inspired quite a few men of letters to get engaged in
chronicling their times. As a result of it we find many historical accounts emanating from thereign of Akbar not only in and around the seat of power but also in different parts of India.
For instance, Tarikh-e-Haqqi is, in fact, an extension of Badauni's Muntakhab-ul-Tawarikh.
Its author Abdul Haq Dehlavi was an orthodox Sunni Muslim which obviously made him abitter critic of Akbar's religious reforms and his secular administration. A mention must also
be made of Tarikh-e-Alfi, which was compiled on Akbar's orders by Maulana Ahmad,
Badauni and others. Alf in Arabic means a millennium. A millennium of Islamic calendar got
completed in Akbar's reign. An inexplicable buzz that was to be discerned everywhere inthose times was that Islam would come to an end after a thousand years of its birth. This
prompted Akbar to issue orders for compiling the history of the first millennium of the Islamic
calendar.There are a few very authentic and valuable books that provide information about the
state of affairs in the Deccan at the time of Akbar. A very popular book of history is Gulshan-
e-Ibrahimi, which is widely known as the Tarikh-e-Farishta. The author Muhammad QasimHindu Shah of Astarabadi alias Farishta was of Irani origin who was first in service of the
Nizam Shahi dynasty of Ahmadnagar and later served the Adil Shahi sultans of Bijapur. In
the preface (muqaddama), the author briefly describes the history of India prior to the arrival
of the Muslims. This section also includes the biographies of the great Hindu rajas of theauthor's times. The main part of the book provides an overview of the Muslim rulers of India
from the time of Ghazni up to 1610 when it was completed. Farishta has made extensive use
of whatever earlier histories he could find in the compilation of his work.
A useful book that gives information about the post-Bahamani period of the history ofthe Deccan isBurhan-e-Maasir also belonging to the reign of Akbar. The author Spayed Ali
bin Azizullah Tabatabai was of Iraqi origin who had first joined the court of Ibrahim Qutb
Shah and later entered the service of the Nizam Shahi. He was commissioned by BurhanNizam Shah II to write the history of the Nizam Shahis. Though the book is named after the
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royal patron, it is also chronogram because the Persian letters of the titleBurhan-e-Maasiradd
up to 1000 A. H. corresponding to 1592, which is incidentally the year of the foundation of
the city of Hyderabad.
Burhan-e-Maasir comprises three sections; the first section gives the information
about the sultanate of Gulbarga, the second one is about the sultanate of Bidar and the third,
which is also the bulkiest, records the history of the sultans of Nizam Shahi of Ahmadnagarup to the Peace Treaty of March 14, 1596 between Shah Murad, the representative of theMughals and Chand Bibi.
In the tradition of his ancestors, Timur and Babur, Jahangir wrote the major part of his
memoirs Tuzuk-e-Jahangiri, which is also known as Jahangirnama. Therefore, it serves themost authentic source of the reign of the fourth Mughal emperor. Jahangir wrote the history of
the first twelve years of his rule himself and thereafter assigned the task to Muhammad Sharif
Motamad Khan who was Mir Bakshi (Chief Accountant of the Armed Forces). Thus, the
narrative after the twelve regnal yeras of Jahangir were chronicled by Motamad Khan.Amusingly, Motamad Khan, in addition to writing the text of Jahangirnama, was also writing
his own memoirs. This book that got published in the reign of Shah Jahan is known as
Iqbalnama, that gives a broader idea of the history of the Mughals from Timur to theaccession of Shah Jahan to the throne. Iqbalnama is a very helpful source material chiefly
because of the original and authentic material it provides about the last five years of Jahangir's
rule that were troubled with court intrigues and the de facto rule of Noor Jehan.
It is assumed that Shah Jahan had commissioned Khwaja Kamgar Ghariat Khan towrite the history of the rule of Jahangir. The book, Maasir-e-Jahangiriwas completed in the
third regnal year of Shah Jahan, throws light on the defiant ways and vices of prince Salim
that had put him into trouble on quite a few occasions with emperor Akbar. This informationis missing from Tuzuk-e-Jahangirias well asIqbalnama.
Shah Jahan's reign is considered to be the 'golden age' of the Mughal empire because
of comparative calm and peaceful conditions that prevailed throughout the empire. It was also
the time when, because of the patronage of the emperor fine arts and architecture. Acomposite language that originated in the thirteenth century as a lingua franca between the
people of Turkish, Iranian and Arab origin and the Indians, got the much needed push in the
reign of Shah Jahan especially in the Deccan where some of the earliest and the first-rateliterary works, both in poetry and prose, were produced in its initial mode, the Dakhni. The
period of prosperity and peace was also very conducive to the research and academic
activities. Consequently, we find a number of historical accounts, both official and non-official, dealing with the reign of Shah Jahan.
Here, a mention must be made of Padshahnama, the three books of which were
produced by three different historians at different phases of Shah Jahan's rule on emperor's
orders. A comprehensive narrative of the first regnal decade of Shah Jahan was prepared byMuhammad Amin Qazvini. It is, however, too flattering a record of the emperor's first ten
years as the historiographer seems to be in awe of his patron. The second book of
Padshahnama that runs into two volumes, was written by Abdul Hamid Lahori who was a
veteran and also a very competent historian. The book does not carry forward the narrativefrom the point it is left in the first one but Lahori revisits the initial career of Shah Jahan as a
prince and then, with reasonable objectivity, presents the record of the first twenty years of the
emperor i.e. up to 1648. The thirdPadshahnama was produced by Muhammad Waris, an ablepupil of Lahori. In his version, Waris too reworks from the beginning of Shah Jahan's life-
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story and concludes it with his removal and subsequent confinement by Aurangzeb in 1658.
Waris's account is very helpful in getting an insight of the last regnal decade of Shah Jahan,
the rivalry between his sons for the emperor's crown, the emperor's partisan attitude towardsDara Shikoh and the ruthless military prowess of Aurangzeb. Waris's version of Padshahnama
is also valuable because of the first-hand accounts of the planning and construction of the
exquisite buildings of Shah Jahan's reign including the world renowned Taj Mahal.Besides these official accounts there are a few histories of Shah Jahan's period thatwere produced independently. A high-ranking official in Shah Jahan's administration, Inayat
Khan also known as Muhammad Tahir Aashna, in his book Mullakkhas, popularly known as
Shahjahan-nama, brought together the significant events of the first thirty years of theemperor's reign. Most of the details of the book seem to be reproduced from the official
Padshahnama. Another Shahjahan-namawas produced by Muhammad Sadiq Khan who too
was an official in emperor's administration. It is a far more dispassionate account of the period
under consideration and for this reason is far more accurate than the official biographies of theemperor. Khan's position is also important in history because after defeat and execution of
Dara Shikoh, he acted as a mediator between the emperor and the triumphant Aurangzeb.
Therefore, Khan's description of the struggle among the princes for the crown of Mughalempire is original and dependable.
Aurangzeb ruled India for almost half a century and this long reign was marked by
dissension, disruptions, insurgencies and outright mutinies against the authority of the
emperor in different part of the countries. This state of affairs was the off-shoot Aurangzeb'sappalling policies especially in respect with religious issues. Having achieved power by
treachery combined with ruthless force and incarcerating his own father who was least
inclined to pass on the control of the empire to him, Aurangzeb expediently adopted the imageof an orthodox and pious religious man to placate the disquiet that was prevalent among the
trusted military officers who had not expected such a violent manner of transfer of power.
Additionally, he himself had a very narrow and fanatic view of Islam that was awkwardly
unsuitable in a largely non-Muslim country like India. The puritanical and the regressiveversion of Islam he believed in, obliged him to reintroduce the collection of poll-tax (jizya)
from his non-Muslim subjects, a throwback of the primitive tribal Islamic state that was
largely populated by the desert people. No wonder, he had to spend the major part of his reignquelling one rebellion after another.
He was also suspicious of the people who showed the slightest interest in intellectual
activities. He could tolerate men of letters only if they were engaged in Islamic theology thattoo if it endorsed his orthodox version of the faith. Initially, in the tradition of his ancestors he
too appointed Mirza Muhammad Kazim as the official historiographer of his reign. The book,
Alamgir-nama, that Kazim produced wraps up only the first decade of Aurangzeb's rule. It is
believed that the text of the book was severely altered by the emperor himself in order to givea gratifying image of himself and his administration. He, however, could not review the non-
official chronicles the other historians might be writing about his reign. Consequently, in
twenty-first regnal year by an order he completely prohibited the exercise of writing of
contemporary history across the empire.In view of the prohibition most historians who could have produced authentic records
of the period became inactive. One person, Muhammad Hashim Khan, however, kept
recording all the major events of Aurangzeb's reign clandestinely. The book thus producedentitled, Muntakhub-ul-Lubab gives a comprehensive picture of the rule of Aurangzeb.
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Obviously the book was made public after the death of the last great Mughal emperor and the
author's scholarship earned him an official position and the title of Khafi Khan conferred by
the then emperor Muhammad Shah. The word Khafi means secret that indicates the wayHashim Khan wrote his book. Khafi Khan's book is not just about the reign of Aurangzeb but
it also portrays an unbiased account of the history of the Mughals from the reign of the
founder of the dynasty to the fourteenth regnal year of Muhammad Shah.Quite a few historical accounts dealing with Aurangzeb's reign were produced after thedeath of the emperor in 1707. The notable among them are Maasir-e-Alamgiriby Muhammad
Saqi Mustaid Khan, Nuskha-e-Dilkusha by Bhim Sen and Futuhat-e- Alamgiri by Isar Das
Mehta. Mustaid Khan was a high official in the administration of Aurangzeb and according tohis assertion, had undertaken the project of recording history in secret on the instruction of the
emperor himself. Maasir-e-Alamgiri encompasses the details of fifty-one years of
Aurangzeb's rule that are heavily based on official records. Bhim Sen was an officer in the
military of Aurangzeb and in that capacity had spent many years with the emperor in theDeccan. Nuskha-e-Dilkusha is, therefore, provides a clear picture of Aurangzeb's military
expeditions in the Deccan beginning from his invasion of Hyderabad in 1656. Isar Das Mehta
too was an officer during the reign of Aurangzeb having the responsibility of looking after theadministration of the district of Jodhpur. His book exclusively deals with the events that took
place in Rajputana and Malwa from 1657 to 1698.
The history of the later Mughals i.e. the emperors who ascended the throne of Delhi
after Aurangzeb is, in fact, a record of deterioration and decadence, of betrayal and duplicity,of intrigue and disloyalty, of internal dissension and open revolt. From 1526, the year Babur
conquered Delhi to 1707, the year Aurangzeb died, six emperors ruled India for almost two
hundred years. In the post-Aurangzeb era, however, India witnessed twelve emperors during aspan of 150 years. A few of the so-called emperors ruled for a few months while a couple of
them were assassinated by their treacherous ministers, commanders or other claimants to the
throne. The central administration had almost collapsed during the period. Indigenous centres
of power such as the Marathas in the Deccan, central India and even in the north and the Sikhsin Punjab had consolidated their power. The foreigners, in particular, the British became
politically powerful first in Bengal and thereafter gradually spread their tentacles in rest of
India. In the blood-spattered aftermath of the uprising of 1757, the East India Companydeposed the last Mughal emperor, Bahadur Shah Zafar and a year later India became a colony
of the British empire.
During this era of disorder and anarchy there was a plethora of historical writings in allparts of the country. Quite a few of these books are, however, lack in authenticity and
detachment, which make them questionable in the eyes of the scholars. A mention must be
made of a couple of primary historical writings from the period that are reliable, informative
and written with objectivity. They include Tarikh-e-Iradat Khan, which chronicles the eventsfrom the last phase of Aurangzeb to the six-year rule of Farrukhsiyar, the third Mughal
emperor after Aurangzeb. A highly critical assessment of Aurangzeb's regressive religious
policy can be found in Ibratnamaof Muhammad Kasim. Another book, Tarikh-e-Chughtai,
authored by Muhammad Hadi is a general history of the Mughal period ending at 1724, whichwas the 6th regnal year of Muhammad Shah.
This is a brief survey of the most sign cant primary books of history of India from Al-
Biruni's Kitab-e-Tarikh-e-Hind to the books produced during the post-Aurangzeb period.Almost all the reputed historians, Indians as well as foreigners, have made extensive use of
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these books to reconstruct their historical accounts. Modern India saw the production of many
historical books by the foreigners. Many of these books present an extremely biased account
of ancient and medieval periods of Indian history; these periods, on purpose, wererespectively christened as the Hindu period and the Muslim period. It was part of the overall
strategy of the British to divide Indians on religious lines and perpetuate their rule.
Interestingly, the British historians named the phase of their imperialism as Modern India.There are many valuable historical accounts produced by the Indianhistorians of ancient, medieval and modern India from different perceptions. Among the
scholars who adhere to the concept of unity of Indian nation with a composite culture the
name of Tara Chand and his outstanding book,Influence of Islam on Indian Culture, comes tothe mind. Then there are those who subscribe to two nation theory and look at Indian history
from a communal point of view. Many of such writers are not exactly historians but
propagandists of their divisive ideology and therefore, do not deserve a mention at all. Yet,
because the work of one of them is evaluated by S. H. Magrabi, he must be identified. He isR. C. Majumdar who seriously believes that the Hindus and the Muslims are two conflicting
religious entities and for that reason Muslims cannot possibly be a part of Indian nation.
According to Irfan Habib, To him (Majumdar) the entire period c. 1200 onwards was one offoreign rule; Muslims were alien to Indian (Hindu) culture; the Hindus oppressed and
humiliated, wished nothing better than to slaughter the Mlechas (Muslims); the British
regime was a successor more civilised than Muslim rule; yet real opposition to the British
came from the Hindus, not Muslims, even in 1857; and finally the national movementscourse was throughout distorted by concessions made to Muslims by Gandhiji Mjumdar's
counterpart in Pakistan is I. H. Qureshi for whom the reign of the Muslim emperors was
nothing short of a pinnacle of glory and prosperity for India and its people.The most reputed and equally authentic histories have been, however, produced by
those who were ideologically connected to what is known as the Marxist school of
historiography. The first important work in this category is that of R. P. Dutt's India Today
that was first published in 1940. Dutt exposed the multilateral abuse of India under the British.A very respected name among the Marxist historians is that of D. D. Kosambi whose
Introduction to the Study of Indian Historyand quite a few other books dealing with ancient
Indian history are internationally acclaimed for their exactitude and consistency. RomilaThapar is another significant historian who has mainly dealt with the history of ancient India.
Her major works include Asoka and the Decline of the Mauryas, Ancient Indian History:
Some Interpretationsand Early India: From the Origins to AD 1300. Through her scholarlyworks we come to know about the origin of Hinduism and its constant interactions between
different and at times differing social forces in ancient India. Irfan Habib is also a prominent
historian belonging to this group. His main research work, Agrarian System of Mughal India,
(1963), is considered to be the most authentic book on the subject. His other works such asEssays in Indian History: Towards a Marxist Perception, An Atlas of the Mughal Empireand
Medieval India: The Study of Civilisationare equally well received.
III
S. H. Magrabi, the author of the papers included in this collection was a dedicatedstudent of history and an exceptionally brilliant teacher of the discipline. He taught history in
colleges of Aurangabad and Hyderabad before migrating to the USA to pursue his doctoral
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research from the University of Illinois, Chicago. As a research scholar he got the opportunity
to interact with and was guided by some of the well-known scholars of the USA. The notable
among them have been Prof. Edward C. Thaden, Prof. David Jordan, Prof. Mellon and Prof.Hockings. He was working on the topic of imperialism. Sadly the work could not be
completed because a few years after his arrival in the USA, he was afflicted by various
ailments, the most dreadful being renal failure. Though in a major operation a healthy kidneywas transplanted but he could not live long.This bunch of research papers was preserved by his wife, Syeda Fahim Magrabi, with
the intention of getting it published. I was assigned the task of editing the the papers and
making arrangement for their publication in a book form. Having read and edited them, I feelthat it was a fruitful exercise because some of the papers have been produced after painstaking
research and a few of them are insightful too. All the papers included here are not research
articles; nor they all belong exactly to the discipline of history. A few of them are pieces on
crucial topics primarily written for the newspapers and magazines. They justify theirinclusion here on account of being part of the intellectual legacy of the author. Any endeavour
to discern an ideological undercurrent in the book may not entirely be rewarding. Though
Magrabi seems to have a leftist tilt, as some articles that are part of the book vouch for, heappears to have shifted his position while dealing with some other themes. Nevertheless, all
the articles make interesting reading.
In the research article entitled 'Some Footnotes on the Art of History Writing in India',
Magrabi's hypothesis is that the art of historiography failed to develop in India because theideas and method, the cardinal elements of an approach, are missing and despite making
efforts Indian historian have failed to acquire craftsmanship. Then he goes on to explain what
craftsmanship really is and how the European historians have acquired it. He asserts that anhistorian can master craftsmanship if he does experimentation, uses new techniques and is
firmly grounded on a philosophical foundation. He attempts to accentuate the point by making
a comparison between the European historians of nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Referring to James Mill's History of British India, Magrabi seems to have neglectedthe real motive of the publication of such an uncongenial book. Mill's praise of Muslims was
not exactly because the chronicles were available or the Muslims' mastery over
historiography; it was more a part of the British's time-tested strategy of 'divide and rule'.Most European historians of India, like Mill, do not treat Indians as Indians but as groups
adhering to different religions, in particular, Hinduism and Islam, which, according to them,
are perpetually in a state of conflict. How could Magrabi condone Mill's calculated mischiefof periodising Indian history on religious ground as Hindu period and Muslim period.
Magrabi is justified to criticise R. C. Majumdar because of his extremely biased views
about the entire medieval period. Majumdar, at best, is an accomplished history scholar of the
Hindu Right. Nevertheless, Magrabi's critical comments about Indian Marxist historians andtheir historiography are contentious. His statement that economic history of India has been
ignored is certainly true but he should not have ignored the fact that a few significant
historical accounts dealing with Indian economy were produced only by the Indian Marxists.
The article, 'A Critical Note on Macaulay's History of England' is, in fact, a criticalevaluation of Thomas Babington Macaulay's History of England. Magrabi fittingly extols the
huge amount of information supplied by the Englishman concurrently putting on record that
Macaulay 'was the sole historian of 19th century who, through his writings, raised thestandard of history writing by adopting the narrative style, which he interlaced with artistic
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and literary values'. The point that since Macaulay was a Whig, the main purpose of writing
History of Englandwas to underscore the significance of the Glorious Revolution got clearly
conveyed in the article. Magrabi also points out the deficiencies of Macaulay as a historian.Macaulay was basically an orator and for that reason he would, like any other orator, keep
repeating his views. Nevertheless, Macaulay's significance, as Magrabi states, is because of
his chronicling the constitutional history of England. In this particular field he was thepioneer.The next five articles have a loose thematic continuity. The article, 'Manchester in
Retrospect' is an in-depth review of Friedrich Engels' work, The Condition of the Working
Class in England. That was incidentally his first book. In the aftermath of IndustrialRevolution the English society underwent a sea change. From a rural agrarian society England
became a highly complex urban social order. Engels perceptively analysis the transformation
of English economy from a feudal to the capitalist one. The emergence of the middle classes
was also a phenomenon that accompanied the rise of capitalist economy. The middle classesbecame the conduit of the capitalists as they had developed political and economic interests
in the new economic order that simultaneously fortified parliamentary democracy.
Engels points out that one of the consequences of industrialisation was the expansionof four towns of England into major centres of big industries viz. London, Manchester,
Birmingham and Leeds. Since Manchester was the focal point of British industrial economy,
Engels studied the living conditions of the classes of the city very closely. Magrabi says:
'Engels lived in Manchester for twenty months and keenly observed what an industrializedeconomy did to a city.' In the words of Engels: It is only the industrial age that has made it
possible for the owners of these shacks, fit only for the accommodation of cattle, to let them at
high rents for human habitations. It is only the modern industry which permits these owners totake advantage of poverty of the workers, to undermine the health of thousands to enrich
themselves. Only industry made it possible for workers who have barely emerged from
the state of serfdom to be again treated as chattles and not as human beings."
It has been similar story of most European countries in the formative phase ofcapitalism. The writings of Marx and Engels, beside stirring up the proletariat from their
stupor also alerted the bourgeoisie and their political agents to address the daunting problems
of the industrial workers. Almost all labour laws and the trend of rising wages were, in fact,the logical corollary of Marxist clarion call, a fact rarely acknowledged even by the workers
of today. If we closely observe the condition of the major industrialised centres of India, the
living conditions of an overwhelming majority of the working classes appear worse than whatthey were in nineteenth century England. Where is the so-called 'human face' of free market
economy?
In the piece, 'Utopian and Scientific Socialism' Magrabi discusses basic ideas of the
thinkers whose contribution to the idea of socialism prior to Karl Marx and Engels, issignificant. His characterisations of Saint Simon, Robert Owen and Charles Fourier are, no
doubt, interesting and bring into view the point that the ideas of these thinkers have influenced
Marx to some extent. Magrabi, however, fails to Marx's objections to the views of his
predecessors. It is also not properly discussed why Marx called these thinkers 'utopiansocialists'.
The next write-up, 'Legacy of Marxism' deals with the various problems which
confront the Third World, in particular, India. Though India opted for 'mixed economy' and'democratic socialism', Magrabi believes that the Marxist model may be a better alternative to
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further the interests of India. In 'Fetishism or Alienation' the author underlines the Marxist
canon that private property, in reality, is an offshoot of alienated labour. In his view fetishism
'contains the element of dehumanization in all forms of alienation.' Magrabi informs that Marxhas not used the term 'alienation'. However, fetishism conveys similar meaning that frequently
appears in the writings of Marx.
In 'Theory of Imperialism and Bolshevik Revolution', the author contends that Marx,in addition to the proletariat revolution, also thought of a peasant uprising against theimperialist powers because he had closely scrutinized the devastating effects of British
imperialism on the industry and economy of the colonies. Magrabi concludes by saying that it
was Lenin who successfully combined the two models to bring about Bolshevik Revolution inRussia.
'Imperialism and Free Trade: Its Impact on British Foreign Policy on India and the
Middle East in the Mid-Nineteenth Century' is a noteworthy research paper. In its preparation,
it appears, Magrabi referred to many reference books and other authentic sources. The impactof British imperialism on all colonies was disastrous from cultural and economic points of
view. It was bound to be so because the imperialist forces representing 'the nation of the
shopkeepers' essentially had one-point agenda i.e. loot and plunder the economic resources ofthe colonies. The British historians and social scientists did make attempts to camouflage the
core agenda by proliferating dubious concepts such as 'white man's burden' and 'British
civilising mission' but such endeavours could hoodwink none except the imperialists. No
wonder the poorest nations in the contemporary world are those which were the colonies ofthe European powers till the end of World War II.
Magrabi, by citing credible data, reiterates here that the British had completely
destroyed the local industry, commerce, agriculture and other financial institutions to establishand promote their industrial products in the captive markets of India and the Middle East.
British imperialism, therefore, protected the commercial interests of the British capitalists and
speculative bourgeoisie by force in all the colonies. Moreover, imperialism had also helped
the Anglican Church to get engaged in proselytization and all missionary activities werefinanced the government of India. In pursuance of the missionary work the priests and
chaplains and their sympathisers in the government smashed up local culture, traditions and
rituals by deriding them as superstitions.One must admit that British imperialism did make some positive contributions such as
laying down railway lines, industrialisation, introduction of modern medical institutions like
colleges and hospitals, establishing educational institutions for imparting modern liberal andscientific learning and establishing local governing councils that helped germinate democratic
administration especially in India. Nevertheless, even in the introduction of modern
institutions and facilities, the colonial masters were actually pursuing their cardinal policy of
commercial exploitation of the colonies. Magrabi has firmly established the validity of thisargument the paper.
'Shibli as a Historian' is also a well-researched paper in the preparation of which the
author has referred to a large number of original and secondary sources both in English and
Urdu. Shibli Nu'mani was one of the most gifted colleagues of Syed Ahmad Khan. Though hewas committed to the objectives of the Aligarh Movement, he had some differences with its
protagonist, in particular, on political and religious issues.
Magrabi's attempt to portray Shibli as 'the first historian who employed the moderntechniques for writing the Islamic history in Urdu' is commendable but not entirely successful.
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The basic flaw, as I understand, in Shibli's approach to history is his conviction that
extraordinary individuals can make and mould history. His series about the 'Heroes of Islam'
corroborates the point. Shibli failed to take into account social, historical and mostimportantly economic forces that were responsible for the emergence of Islam in the Arab
peninsula and its subsequent expansion. He could not even contemplate such a thought
because of his essentially religious worldview. It explains his differences with Syed AhmadKhan on religious issue. Though Syed Ahmad Khan's political ideas were not exactlyprogressive enough to favour democracy in India and his educational movement also had an
elitist tilt, his commentary of Qur'an (albeit incomplete) was thoroughly rationalistic and
enlightening. I believe that Syed Ahmad Khan's Tafseer-ul Qur'an (of the first seventeenparts) is the most valuable commentary of the Qur'an ever produced by a scholar of South-
Asian origin. For Shibli such a rationalistic and scientific interpretation of Islam and its tenets
was unpalatable. This is the truth about the his so-called differences in religious matters with
Syed Ahmad Khan. Shibli's political views were certainly more progressive than Khan. Heopposed Muslim separatism and advised his countrymen to rally behind a common political
front to oppose the British. Unlike Khan, he wanted the Muslims to support the Indian
National Congress. Nonetheless, Shibli despite being a nationalist, could not shun the fantasyof pan-Islamism.
Evaluating Al-Farooq, a biography of Shibli's much loved hero, Omar, Magrabi
seems to have approved the author's appraisal of the second caliph unreservedly. This is
problematic because a few of Omar's actions have always been considered contentious in thehistory of Islam. Take, for instance, the Quirtsincident as described inAl-Farooqand cited by
Magrabi as the evidence of Shibli's objectivity! According to Shibli four days before his
death, Muhammad asked the people to get ink and paper so that he could write his Will andTestament. When a few companions of the Prophet were about to comply his order, it was
Omar who stopped them saying "Muhammad is mentally sick due to hyper-pyrexia; he is
talking irrelevant things. We do not need any Will and testimony as we have Qur'an". And
thus, the Prophet was denied the last wish that he had expressed a couple of days prior to hisdemise.
In this context, the Shia scholars have a strong case blaming Omar for denying the
Prophet of Islam to express his genuine desire to nominate Ali as his successor. Shibli hasapproved Omar's action on the ground that the Prophet 'lived for three more days after this
incident...If he wanted to make a Will, he could have done it.' It is nothing short of
sidetracking the issue and defending an action of Omar that is absolutely indefensible.Magrabi has also stated that Shibli as a historian mostly falls back on darayat
(reasoning). In the incident noted above, however, Shibli appears to be a staunch Sunni
scholar who, by design, refuses to take into consideration the circumstances in which the
Prophet died. A few occurrences prior to the demise of the Prophet and after it should havebeen reflected upon by any dispassionate historian while dealing with the Qirtas incident.
Shibli expediently ignored the 'farewell sermon' of the Prophet. On his way back to Mecca
after performing the Farewell Pilgrimage (the last Hajj), the Prophet stopped at the pond
(Ghadir) of Khumm and addressed the Muslim masses. In that sermon, the Prophet inter aliaannounced: "For whomever I am Mawla of, then Ali is his Mawla." The event has been
reported in all the authentic books of Sunnis and Shias. The word Mawla means master. Thus,
in plain and clear terms the Prophet nominated Ali as his successor. The Sunni scholarsincluding Shibli, however, maintain that the Prophet was just praising Ali.
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Secondly, how could Shibli approve of Omar's impudent defiance of Prophet's
command? Was Omar a psychiatrist as well to declare in no uncertain terms that 'Muhammad
was mentally sick'? Moreover, what 'irrelevant things the Prophet was talking'? And if hereally did, then why no other reputed biographer of the Prophet from Ibn Hisham (Ibn Ishaq)
to Maxim Rodinson did not report them? These are, of course, scratchy posers, which most
Muslims prefer to avoid. However, a historian with objectivity as his proclivity, as Shibli wasin Magrabi's estimation, should have addressed them.Had Shibli applied reasoning he would have also considered another unfortunate
incident that took place after the demise of the Prophet. It was Omar again whose belligerent
canvassing made Abu Bakr the first caliph. Sunni ulema, including Shibli, assert that the firstcaliph and the subsequent three (Khulfa-e-Rashidun) were democratically elected by the
ummah. One fails to understand what exactly do they mean by democracy? Most Sunni
ulema, with the intention of contravening Ali's claim to caliphate, holler about democratic
principle. Shibli is far from objectivity in dealing with this issue. The three groups that hadlaid claims to the caliphate immediately after the death of the Prophet, included Banu Hashim
led by Ali, Muhajirun or the Qureish of Mecca led by Abu Bakr and Omar and the Ansars
whose chief was Sa'ad bin Abada. If the caliph was to be elected on democratic principle thebin-Abada should have been the first caliph as Ansars constituted the majority of the Muslims
of Medina and they had also expressed the desire to elect bin-Abada. They were, however,
restrained to exercise their democratic right on the entreaty that the caliph had to be from the
tribe of the Qureish. Shibli overlooks even this action of Omar in complete disregard ofegalitarianism of Islam (that was forcefully underlined by the Prophet in the sermon delivered
at the conclusion of his last Hajj).
Omar was, no doubt, a great soldier of Islam. He was a simple man whose integrity asthe caliph is legendary. However, his attitude towards the members of the house of the
Prophet, in particular, Ali was far from congenial. True, he was entitled to have his opinion
about anyone around him. Nevertheless, Shibli refuses to treat him as a human being who
might err.Al-Farooqis more a glorified account of 'his hero' than an objective portrayal of thepersonality and deeds of the second caliph.
'Sufism and Spread of Islam in Deccan' is a journalistic write-up meant for the readers
who seek out information on such topics. The only point worth mentioning in the piece, isMagrabi's valid refutation of the calumny that 'Islam was spread with the force of sword'.
Similarly, the piece, 'Terrorism--a Global Phenomenon' was also written for a magazine. In it,
Magrabi brings into focus two interesting causes that help terrorism grow. The first one,according to him, ibis the power-politics of the most commanding nations of the world
characterised by the rivalry among them for complete domination of the world. In the current
multi-polar world we may say that certain erroneous policies of the USA help terrorism grow.
The second cause that Magrabi has cited is the pulls and pressures of modern democraticworld that has completely decimated cultural and human values. Such degeneration of society
that has reduced most human beings as chattles can only generate terrorism. One may have
reservations to accept such arguments of the author but they should be read because they are
different.The last two articles are, in fact, review articles of three valuable books. The first one
is an in-depth analysis of the renowned book of Edward Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the
Roman Empire, which has a status of a classic. The book runs into six volumes which dealwith the history of the Roman Empire highlighting three phases viz. the age of paganism, the
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age of religion and the age of reason. Gibbon asserted that the Roman Empire gave strength
and unity not only to Europe but to Asia and Africa as well. Such assertions are obviously
debatable to say the least. The most significant point that Gibbon makes about the Romanadministration is its secular character. The religious freedom people that was available to the
heterogeneous groups of people in the vast empire spread over three continents was something
astonishing and laudable. In the context Magrabi quotes Gibbon: "...the various modes ofworship, which prevailed in the Roman World were all considered by the people as equallytrue; by the philosopher as equally false; and by the magistrate as equally useful."
The healthy secular values that were the hallmark of paganism in ancient Rome could
not survive when Constantine acceded the throne and embraced Christianity. With theinstitutionalization of Christian Church the secular values were brusquely buried and, to quote
Magrabi: "Roman Empire, which was a beautiful flower-vase that consisted of different
varieties and different shades of flowers, lost its charm once and for all and adoration to one's
faith separated it from others."The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empireis fittingly considered a classic the world
over and for writing such a magnum opus Gibbon's name is permanently etched among the
most profound historians of the world. Nevertheless, he had to face the brickbats too for hisfor applauding the secular character of paganism and its obliteration with the
institutionalization of Christian Church. In the article, Magrabi brings into focus this point
too. What Gibbon says about Christianity is true about other organized religions, in particular,
Judaism and Islam as well. Religion in this context plays the role of a grotesque despot whichprohibits almost all the natural liberties of the people.
The two books Magrabi reviews in the last piece are: i) Louis Hartz's The Founding of
New Societies, and, ii) Oscar Handlin's The Uprooted. As the titles of the books slightlysuggest, they are about the trials and tribulations of the immigrated people face in finding a
foothold in the totally strange and, at times, hostile surroundings. Magrabi has competently
underscored the gist of both the books in his review. Hartz's book primarily deals with first
wave of immigrants to the New World, their ordeals and nightmares and their ultimate successin establishing social, political and economic institutions. Hardlin's book, on the other hand
encompasses the various problems the secondary immigrants who went to the United States in
the nineteenth century. The overall picture of the conditions of the immigrants that emerges inthe pages of the two books is not exactly enviable. Magrabi wraps up the article quoting Kraus
that "they (immigrants) sought comfort of body, mind and heart in city ghettoes or rural
enclaves."
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* It is the Introduction to H. S. Magrabi's collection of essaya on history, Reading History: A
Bunch of Papers, edited by Zaheer Ali.***Zaheer Ali is a former professor of Political Science. Currently, he is a human rights
activist, a political commentator and a freelance journalist. He is heads the Centre for
Democracy and Secularism.
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