The world of Islam has lost a great scholar in Professor Muhammad Hamīdullāh,
who passed away quietly in Jacksonville, Florida, USA, on December 17, 2002.
He was 94. His funeral prayer was led by his friend, Dr Yusuf Zia Kavakci,
and he was laid to rest in the Muslim cemetery in Jacksonville. Professor
Muhammad Hamīdullāh went to rest after breakfast, having performed the Fajr
prayer earlier that morning; he did not wake up.
His life spanned many decades of research and writing. He was born in
Hyderabad, Deccan, on February 19, 1908. He started his publishing career at
the age of 16 in 1924. In 1935 he obtained a PhD from the Sorbonne (Paris,
France). In 1936, he returned to Hyderabad to resume his teaching career at
the Usmania University. From 1946 to 1948 Professor Hamīdullāh was actively
involved in the struggle against Indian occupation; after the fall of
Kashmir to an Indian military invasion he went into exile in France. In
1996, he moved to the US, where a grandniece, looked after him (he was not
married). Professor Hamīdullāh was fluent in 22 language besides Urdu, his
mother tongue; he was the first Muslim to translate the Qur’ān into French.
Professor Hamīdullāh was best known for his original work on the Sīrah of
the Prophet (sws), especially relating to the political, administrative and
military aspects of his blessed life. The late professor was a pioneer in
this field, doing painstaking research to dig out original manuscripts to
confirm or reject what others had written about the noble Messenger (sws).
The author of more than 250 books and papers on Islam, Islamic history, the
Sīrah and the Qur’ān, Professor Hamīdullāh went to original sources that
were often buried in dusty libraries in the Muslim world. He discovered the
earliest hadīth manuscript in a Damascus library, and translated and
published it in Urdu under the title Sahīfah Hammām. His book Rasūl-i-Akram
ki Siyāsī Zindagī (‘The Political Life of the Noble Messenger’) is at
present the best original work available on political aspects of the Sīrah.
Similarly his book ‘Ahd i Nabawī kay Maydān i Jang (‘The Battles of the
Prophetic Period’) is a masterpiece of incisive analysis and detailed
description of what really transpired in the battles fought during the time
of the Prophet (sws). His great strength was that he was not satisfied to
rely on others’ work; he took great pains to visit the places mentioned in
such works. For instance, before he published his book on the Prophet’s
battles, he made a detailed study of the battle-field locations, drew maps,
and provided answers to critical questions that other scholars had not
bothered about.
‘Ahd i Nabawī kay Maydān i Jang was
first published as a manuscript in Majmu‘ah-i-‘Ilmiyyah, the magazine of
Usmania University of Hyderabad, Deccan, in 1940. It was widely acclaimed;
after many reprints in simple form it was eventually published as a book.
Among his other works are The Prophet of Islam: Life and Achievements (in
French); Muhammad Rasūlullāh (sws) (English); ‘Ahd i Nabawī mayn Nizām i
Hukamrānī (Urdu); and Khutbā i Bahawapur (Urdu). He also wrote many original
works in French and translated others into various European languages.
His first brush with political
activism was in his native Hyderabad, Deccan, which bore the onslaught of
the Indian army from 1946 to 1948. When the state lost its independence to
Indian military invasion and occupation, the scholar in him refused to
accept this humiliation; he went into exile instead. In 1955 and 1956 he was
invited to help draft Pakistan’s first constitution. Professor Hamīdullāh
readily accepted the offer and devoted his immense talents to the task, but
resigned because he soon discovered that the feudal lords and
western-educated bureaucrats who dominated Pakistani politics were more
concerned about safeguarding their vested interests then worrying about the
Islamic content of the constitution. He returned to France to resume his
research and teaching. In 1985 he was awarded Pakistan’s highest civilian
award, but the quintessential scholar refused to use the money for himself,
choosing instead to hand over the cash for Islamic research.
He will be sorely missed because he
did so much original work on the Sīrah. A fitting tribute to him would be
for us to continue the work that he pioneered, rather than simply heaping
accolades on him without building on his intellectual contribution.
(Courtesy: Da‘wah Highlights, Islamabad)
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