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Muslims never held Akbar in high regard. Hindus made him ‘Great'

Muslims never held Akbar in high regard. Hindus made him ‘Great'

The Print5 days ago
He practiced what he preached. His appreciation of Hinduism and other non-Islamic religions was evident as much in his statesmanship as in his personal belief and behaviour. To the Muslims, this amounted to heresy, blasphemy, and apostasy. They rose in rebellion, and the sword they drew against him still remains unsheathed. The jihad against Akbar — the infidel, the apostate — continues unabated.
Certainly not the Muslims. In popular culture, they refer to him not as Akbar-e Azam (Akbar the Great), but as Akfar-e Azam (Kafir the Great). He has been the bête noire of Muslim political discourse in India — for seeking to broaden the foundations of Muslim rule by accommodating Hindus in the system, and for trying to build a spiritual and ideological framework around this vision through the syncretic order called Din-e Ilahi (Divine Faith), and the policy of Sulh-e Kul (Universal Amity).
Akbar The Great Nahin Rahe' is a Hinglish play directed by Sayeed Alam of the theatre group Pierrot's Troupe. The title is a play on words with a dual meaning — Akbar the Great is no more , and Akbar is no more great . But was he ever? If yes, who made him great?
But more on that later.
Also read: Why highly placed Muslims became 'Krishna bhaktas' in the Mughal period
Who bestowed greatness on Akbar?
This article began with the question: who made Akbar 'The Great'? It's important to ask, because apart from Alexander and Ashoka, Akbar is the only king for whom this appellation has virtually become part of the name.
I couldn't find who used this label first, but the title of Vincent Smith's Akbar: The Great Mogul (1917) seems to have played a seminal role in popularising the epithet and creating a historiographical cult around the Mughal emperor. But the ascription of greatness wasn't just a British invention. It was, actually, an Indian (read: Hindu) show of magnanimity towards the memory of a king who, despite his limitations — and occasional slide into brutality, such as in Chittor (1567–68) — was a hundred times better than the rest of Mughal and Sultanate rulers.
That said, it raises a disturbing question: how oppressive was Muslim rule that Akbar — under whom Hindus got some relief, though no equality and much less any precedence, as the polity remained foreign with the overwhelming preponderance of Irani and Turani nobility — came to be regarded as great? It raises a further question: should this solitary example of Akbar be used to whitewash the crimes of a polity that reigned for centuries?
Hindus made Akbar great
When Vincent Smith's book was published, Lala Lajpat Rai reviewed it for Political Science Quarterly, an American journal. Rai was one of the Lal-Bal-Pal triumvirate (with Bal Gangadhar Tilak and Bipin Chandra Pal), which not only led the extremist faction of the Indian National Congress but also believed in Hindu nationalism. In his own words, Rai was 'wedded to the idea of Hindu nationality'.
The very first line of his review reads: 'Akbar the Great Mogul was by common consent one of the greatest monarchs known to history.' He glorified the monarch even though the book under review vividly described the Chittor carnage — thirty thousand Hindus slaughtered, hundreds of women committing Jauhar, and numerous temples destroyed — all confirmed by Akbar's own Fathnama (proclamation of victory) dated 9 March 1568.
Yet, Rai wrote, 'Mr. Smith… at places is unduly hard on him (Akbar), forgetting the times in which he lived and worked.' He could not have said this unless he was convinced that Akbar later made sincere efforts to amend his past wrongs. In a rare gesture, Akbar honoured the gallant defenders of Chittor — Jaimal and Patta — by installing their statues, mounted on elephants, at the Agra Fort gate.
James Tod writes in the Annals of Mewar: 'He (Akbar) finally succeeded in healing the wounds his ambition had inflicted, and received from millions that meed of praise which no other of his race ever obtained.'
Also read: Each day brings some new horror and hate. Worrying that ordinary Hindus aren't so shocked
The imperative of reconciliation
Truth brings reconciliation and contrition brings closure. Those who try to hide the bad and the ugly of the past should learn from Ashoka and Akbar about honest disclosure and sincere reconciliation. In the Indian tradition, Pashchatap (remorse), Prayashchit (atonement) and Kshama (forgiveness) — in that order — have been the values of highest morality.
Every wound can be healed and every conflict can be resolved through truth and reconciliation. But to seek reconciliation, one has to see the need for it. So, the question is: do the Muslims have the moral compass and ideological conviction for peaceful coexistence with other communities, or are they still trapped in their medieval mode of thinking in which Islam is perpetually at war with other religions?
Do Muslims consider Akbar great?
The Muslim attitude toward Akbar is a good pointer to their groupthink. While they admire his empire-building achievements, they don't have the ideological framework to appreciate the philosophy behind his actions. Many wish he had remained as steadfast in Islam as his great-grandson, Aurangzeb.
Contrary to both common sense and academic consensus, they blame the fall of the Mughal Empire on Akbar's liberalism rather than Aurangzeb's fanaticism — which forced the Indian masses to rise in revolt and bring down the mighty empire. In their eyes, Akbar — despite being the true founder of India's grandest Muslim empire — was a renegade from Islam, whose policies weakened the foundations of the Muslim rule. They forget that, without Akbar's policy of conciliation and inclusion of the native ruling classes in the state apparatus, there would be no Mughal Empire.
Also read: That Muslims enslaved Hindus for last 1000 yrs is historically unacceptable: Romila Thapar
Muslim antipathy to Akbar
In 1579, when Akbar issued the Mahzar (an official declaration often mistranslated as the 'Infallibility Decree') to style himself Imam-e-Adil (the just leader) and reaffirm his authority as final arbiter in religious disputes, the simmering discontent against his policy of relief to Hindus burst out in open. Led by his half-brother Mirza Hakim, the orthodox establishment rose in widespread revolt. Though it was eventually crushed, while it raged, it was a touch and go situation for Akbar.
There was such discontent against Akbar's policy of religious liberality that his own court chronicler, Abdul Qadir Badauni (1540–1615), in his clandestinely written Muntakhab-ut-Tawarikh, castigated him in the severest terms and threw at him the worst religious calumny, accusing him of deviating from Islam.
Akbar in modern Muslim history
Historian Ishtiaq Husain Qureshi writes in The Muslim Community of the Indo-Pakistan Sub-Continent (610-1947): 'Akbar had changed the nature of the polity profoundly. The Muslims were still the dominant group in the State, but it had ceased to be a Muslim State … [Akbar] was no more as dependent upon their support as earlier Sultans had been. Now Muslims were only one of the Communities in the empire which controlled the Councils and the armed might of the State … Akbar had so weakened Islam through his policies that it could not be restored to its dominant position in the affairs of the State.'
Criticising Akbar's Rajput policy, Qureshi adds: 'In the beginning they [the Mughals] saw with satisfaction and even pride that the Hindu had started 'wielding the Sword of Islam'. They soon learnt that the Sword would not always be wielded in the interest of Islam.'
Akbar's religious and Rajput policies have often been blamed for slowing the spread of Islam in India and diluting the distinct Muslim identity — the very axis around which Muslim politics and religion in India revolve.
The most influential Muslim thinkers of the 20th century — Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and poet Allama Iqbal — despite their differences, were unanimous in branding Akbar a heretic and apostate. Azad, in Tazkira (1919), applied the term Ilhaad (heresy/apostasy) to Akbar, and glorified Shaikh Ahmad Sirhindi (1564–1624), the leading Naqshbandi sufi opponent of Akbar's policies, reviving his forgotten legacy.
Historian Muzaffar Alam notes that Sirhindi's rehabilitation by Azad as the counterpoint to Akbar 'had a long historiographic afterlife… Sirhindi's prominence in the South Asian Muslim imagination and history, however, remains almost unparalleled, comparable only to that of Shah Wali Allah of Delhi (d. 1762). In some circles, he is also considered the origin of the ideology of an independent homeland for the Muslims of the subcontinent.'
Iqbal, spiritual acolyte of Sirhindi, in one of his poems, called him the guardian of the Muslim community in India — 'wo Hind mein sarmaya-e Millat ka nigahban.' In another Persian poem, in which he sang paeans to Aurangzeb, he condemned Akbar: 'Tukhm-e-Ilhaad ke Akbar parwarid' (The seed of heresy that Akbar nurtured).
Also read: How I unlearned my Islamophobia one step at a time
Different gazes at Akbar
Hindus and Muslims have always viewed Akbar differently. Hindus exalt him for the liberality with which he treated them in a polity where their persecution was summum bonum. He abolished jizya — a poll tax designed to humiliate non-Muslims (Quran 9:29). Historically, the burden of jizya led many to convert in the first wave of Islamic conquests — from Iran to Central Asia in the Sassanid territory, from Syria to Egypt in the Byzantine territory — and so too in India.
How demeaning jizya was can be seen in Ziauddin Barani's account of cleric Qazi Mughisuddin advising Alauddin Khilji: 'As soon as the revenue collector demands the sum due from him, [the Hindu] pays the same with meekness and humility, coupled with utmost respect, and free from reluctance, and he, should the collector chooses to spit into his mouth, opens the same without hesitation, so that the official may spit into it …' Centuries later, Aurangzeb echoed the same sentiments about jizya: 'By this means idolatry will be suppressed, the Muhammadan religion and the true faith will be honoured, our proper duty will be performed, the finances of the state will be increased, and infidels will be disgraced.'
Akbar could not make Hindus equal citizens — far from it — but by removing religious disabilities like jizya and pilgrimage taxes, he alleviated their misery and, most importantly, restored their honour.
In the long history of Muslim rule, he was the first king to treat Hindus with dignity — and none after him ever surpassed him in this basic decency. His Rajput policy was not only statesmanly prudence but also a moral response to the rights of the sons of the soil.
And it didn't stop here. To build an inclusive polity, he propounded the philosophy of Sulh-e Kul and, recognising the imperative of composite culture, founded the spiritual order Tauhid-e Ilahi (popularly called Din-e Ilahi).
So why do Muslims censure Akbar?
For precisely the same reasons that Hindus celebrate him.
As Abul Fazl wrote in Akbarnama, the root of Muslim discontent was that Akbar 'received all classes of mankind with affection, and searched for evidence in religious matters from the sages of every religion and ascetics of all faiths.'
Muslims judged Akbar by the only measure they have — the yardstick of orthodox Islam. But he was far too big for that frame. His incorporation of Hindu practices in his spiritual exercises outraged them. His Ibadatkhana, where scholars of different religions and sects gathered to debate the issues of faith, placed Islam on an equal footing with 'false' religions, something unacceptable to supremacist theology.
Sulh-e Kul — universal amity — was the radical departure from the theology of incessant Jihad until Islam triumphed and all other religions were extirpated. Akbar had the Ramayana, Mahabharata, and other Hindu texts translated into Persian. This reverence was interpreted as disrespect toward Islam.
It's a travesty to say that Akbar's stature is being diminished only now under the influence of the present dispensation. The bitter truth is: Muslims never held him in high regard. Had they truly honoured him, they would today hold aloft the ideals of Sulh-e Kul, which was the same as Sarva Dharma Sambhava, and conciliate Hindus as Akbar did by showing respect towards Hinduism and Indian culture.
Ibn Khaldun Bharati is a student of Islam, and looks at Islamic history from an Indian perspective. He tweets @IbnKhaldunIndic. Views are personal.
Editor's note: We know the writer well and only allow pseudonyms when we do so.
(Edited by Prashant)
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BJP rolls out CAA help desks to blunt Mamata's ‘Bengali Asmita' pitch in crucial Matua belt
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BJP rolls out CAA help desks to blunt Mamata's ‘Bengali Asmita' pitch in crucial Matua belt

Their pitch is clear: 'apply first, verify later'. Refugees, who fled neighbouring countries due to religious persecution, mostly undocumented, can still apply for Indian citizenship under the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, a BJP leader said. Branded as 'CAA Sahajogita Shibirs', these help desks first emerged in Bagda and are now spreading rapidly to Bongaon South and other Matua-majority pockets in North 24 Parganas. Kolkata, Aug 2 (PTI) In a push to reclaim the Matua vote and blunt TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee's 'Bangali Asmita' pitch, the BJP has launched CAA help desks in parts of West Bengal, facilitating 'citizenship applications without documents' in what is being seen as its most aggressive outreach initiative to woo refugee voters ahead of the 2026 assembly polls. The BJP is setting up these camps as both a lifeline for persecuted Hindus from Bangladesh and a direct ideological counter to Mamata Banerjee's identity politics, the party functionary said. 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ThePrint Exclusive: Government ID cards, family testimony nail Pakistan links of Pahalgam killers
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ThePrint Exclusive: Government ID cards, family testimony nail Pakistan links of Pahalgam killers

This week, though, hard evidence emerged from the bodies of the three terrorists killed in Kashmir's Dachigam, firmly establishing ties between the perpetrators of the Pahalgam massacre, Pakistan and the Lashkar. Two of three terrorists alleged to have carried out the attack in Pahalgam, intelligence sources told ThePrint, carried copies of their digital Pakistan government-issued identification, enabling their precise identification with stored biometric information. There was no one, back in the summer of 1998, seeking vengeance for Leela's sindoor. The then Union home minister Lal Krishna Advani had promised to punish the perpetrators of the wedding procession massacre at Chapnari, among the first in a series of communal mass killings that have claimed the lives of more than 700 Hindus and Sikhs in Kashmir. The prosecution of men accused of involvement in the massacre, though, collapsed for want of evidence. 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However, weapons were not allowed to be displayed. The district magistrate's letter, though, establishes that Pakistan is aware that proscribed jihadist groups continue to send operatives to engage in violence in Kashmir, but chooses not to crack down even after the Pahalgam massacre. Last year, ThePrint had reported the Lashkar's announcement of a Ghaibana Namaz for Lashkar terrorists Abdul Wahab, also known by the alias Abu Saifullah, and Sanam Jafar, who were killed near Sopore in north Kashmir in a firefight with Indian forces. The Lashkar had claimed Wahab was the fifth resident of Barmang to be killed fighting with the group in Kashmir. The terrorist group called the slain men 'great warriors who were martyred fighting the tyrannical Indian Army'. Video obtained by ThePrint also showed armed Jaish cadre firing shots in the air at a Ghaibana Namaz for slain terrorist Hafiz Mohammad Arsalan in 2022. Lashkar leader Naseer Ahmad told a gathering in Muridke, held soon before the Pahalgam massacre, that 'the ideological offspring of Hafiz Mohammed Saeed will continue his jihad'. Earlier, Lashkar co-founder Amir Hamza, internationally sanctioned for his role in raising terrorism funding, delivered a sermon in Murdike urging 'jihad against the infidels'. Local Lashkar leader Rizwan Hanif, speaking in Khaigala, close to Pahalgam attacker Tahir's village, urged followers to prepare for 'our jihad against the cow-worshippers'. Failed investigation in previous cases Lack of evidence, like the NADRA cards, has previously led to the investigation of massacres of Hindus in the Jammu region being stonewalled. The investigation into the wedding procession in Chapnari illustrated the problems. Abid Husain, known by the code name Abu Maaz, the LeT commander held responsible for the massacre and two other mass killings of Hindus that summer at Sarawan and Chhana-Thackrai, was shot dead in 1999. There was no hard evidence, however, to link him to Pakistan or the Lashkar. Five Indian nationals from the Doda area were prosecuted for their role in enabling the massacre, but all were acquitted for lack of evidence. Local resident Farooq Ahmed, arrested in 1998 but acquitted in 2006, left the village of Kastigarh soon after, and is now believed to be living in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, police say. Abdul Qayoom Hajam, Mohammad Rafiq and Ataullah Mohammad, all residents of the hamlet of Bhatta Deesa, were also arrested in 1998, but again acquitted. 'Even the persons, who in fact had disclosed the names of the accused, did not support the case of the prosecution and specifically denied their involvement in the occurrence,' the Jammu and Kashmir High Court had recorded while acquitting the accused. 'They went to the extent of saying that the accused facing the trial were not the assailants.' 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'All these cases had to be investigated by police, who had no access to suspects across the Line of Control, nor assistance from Pakistani authorities,' an official involved in the Doda investigation told ThePrint. 'The fact that we finally have hard evidence will hopefully lead the international community to step up and pressure Pakistan.' (Edited by Mannat Chugh) Also Read: Pakistani accomplices, shootouts, sealed chargesheet—how the 7/11 blasts case fell apart

BJP rolls out CAA help desks to blunt Mamata's 'Bengali Asmita' pitch in crucial Matua belt
BJP rolls out CAA help desks to blunt Mamata's 'Bengali Asmita' pitch in crucial Matua belt

Time of India

timean hour ago

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BJP rolls out CAA help desks to blunt Mamata's 'Bengali Asmita' pitch in crucial Matua belt

In a push to reclaim the Matua vote and blunt TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee's "Bangali Asmita" pitch, the BJP has launched CAA help desks in parts of West Bengal, facilitating "citizenship applications without documents" in what is being seen as its most aggressive outreach initiative to woo refugee voters ahead of the 2026 assembly polls. Branded as " CAA Sahajogita Shibirs ", these help desks first emerged in Bagda and are now spreading rapidly to Bongaon South and other Matua-majority pockets in North 24 Parganas. Explore courses from Top Institutes in Please select course: Select a Course Category Management PGDM Data Analytics MCA Technology Data Science CXO Product Management others Digital Marketing Design Thinking healthcare Project Management Public Policy Data Science MBA Healthcare Others Cybersecurity Operations Management Artificial Intelligence Finance Leadership Degree Skills you'll gain: Duration: 11 Months IIM Kozhikode CERT-IIMK General Management Programme India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 10 Months IIM Kozhikode CERT-IIMK GMPBE India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 9 Months IIM Calcutta CERT-IIMC APSPM India Starts on undefined Get Details Their pitch is clear: "apply first, verify later". Refugees, who fled neighbouring countries due to religious persecution, mostly undocumented, can still apply for Indian citizenship under the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, a BJP leader said. The BJP is setting up these camps as both a lifeline for persecuted Hindus from Bangladesh and a direct ideological counter to Mamata Banerjee's identity politics, the party functionary said. "CAA is a law passed under the BJP's rule to help persecuted minorities, especially Hindus from neighbouring countries. Its smooth implementation is our responsibility. There have been issues related to documentation. It will be taken care of. BJP workers will stand by the refugee society everywhere," said West Bengal BJP president Samik Bhattacharya. Live Events Local BJP workers and Matua volunteers are assisting with online forms, securing affidavits, and handing out receipts that act as proof of application. The party's message is "justice delayed is no longer denied". Behind the visible mobilisation lies political urgency and a series of unsettling episodes that have injected fresh momentum into the CAA campaign. Just last month, a Matua family from West Bengal, now residing in Maharashtra, was detained by Pune police on suspicion of being Bangladeshi, despite possessing identity documents and even an ID card from the All India Matua Mahasangha signed by Union Minister Santanu Thakur. With the CAA rules notified in 2024, allowing persecuted non-Muslim migrants from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan, who entered India before December 31, 2014, to apply for citizenship, the BJP is now in overdrive, attempting to both rebuild trust and correct course after initial confusion. Many applicants had earlier tried to apply online but dropped out midway after realising they lacked valid documentation. The Mahasangha is playing a leading role in the campaign. "These camps will be held across West Bengal, not just in refugee belts. It's not just about Matuas, every persecuted Hindu has a stake in this. Over the next few months, we aim to reach 1.5 crore people," said Mahitosh Baidya, general secretary of the Mahasangha. In Bagda, saffron-clad volunteers help elderly applicants fill forms under BJP tents. Mobile booths move from village to village. "As per CAA's 10-D clause, no persecuted non-Muslim refugee who entered India before 31 December 2014 can be expelled for lack of documents. That is our guarantee," said a BJP leader managing the camps, citing gazette notifications. "The 'apply first, verify later' model is central to the campaign. Once an online application is submitted and acknowledged, document verification will take place later during district-level hearings. Immediate paperwork is not required, an assurance designed to address long-standing fears. "It is this anxiety we are tackling," said a BJP leader from Gaighata. "People are scared to even apply. We're saying: take the first step, we will walk with you," he said. The Mahasangha, led by Union Minister Santanu Thakur, has emerged as a full partner in the effort. At a student-youth conference in Thakurnagar, the Matua spiritual nerve centre, he announced volunteer training programmes to assist with filing applications, issuing affidavits, and verifying religious identity. Thakur alleged, "The Bengal government is deleting Matua names from electoral rolls in places like Bagda and Gaighata. And now, they are crying about Bengali pride? Matuas were promised the CAA. The Centre has delivered. The state must cooperate." With camps planned in Harindanga, north Bengal's tea garden regions, and several parts of Nadia, the BJP's strategy is clear - build early momentum, flood the system with applications, and revive grassroots networks ahead of the 2026 polls, a party leader said. But the TMC is not ceding ground. Mamata Banerjee has mounted a counter-offensive move by combining emotional appeals with allegations of harassment of Bengali-speaking migrants in BJP-ruled states. TMC MP Mamata Bala Thakur said, "Matuas in Maharashtra were branded as Bangladeshis. Even the minister's signature couldn't protect them. That exposes the BJP's duplicity. If the CAA is so empowering, why are Bengali Hindus still being questioned outside Bengal? This is a gimmick." The TMC is weaving such incidents into a broader narrative of exclusion and fear. Political observers say the stakes are high. Political scientist Biswanath Chakraborty observed, "The BJP's strategy carries both promise and risk. If the 'no-document' pitch backfires and leads to mass rejections during hearings, it may reinforce the TMC's narrative that CAA was just a political stunt. But even a few successful applications can signal that CAA is a real safety net." Ultimately, the battle in Bengal's refugee heartland is shaping into a contest of credibility between the TMC's emotive appeal and the BJP's promise of deliverance.

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