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Books
Section
> Dr.
Sir Muhammad Iqbal and the Ahmadiyya
Movement
> Iqbal on 'Who is a Muslim?' . Chapter
9: Iqbal writes: "Once, under the influence of some spiritual urge, the Holy Prophet Muhammad told one of his companions: Go and tell people that whoever in his life even once says with his tongue, there is no god but Allah, he should know that he shall enter paradise. The Holy Prophet purposely omitted the second constituent of the Kalima, i.e. Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah, without professing which a person cannot be a Muslim, and he considered just the confession of the Unity of God to be sufficient. (Khilafat Islamiyya, Lahore, 1923, pp. 9 10) At the end, I quote an extract from the statement of Iqbal which is regarded as his greatest attack upon the Ahmadiyya Movement. It is as follows: Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru thinks that Turkey has ceased to be a Muslim country. He does not seem to realize that the question whether a person or a community has ceased to be a member of Islam is, from the Muslim point of view, a purely legal question and must be decided in view of the structural principles of Islam. As long as a person is loyal to the two basic principles of Islam, i.e., the Unity of God and Finality of the Holy Prophet, not even the strictest mulla can turn him outside the pale of Islam even though his interpretations of the law or of the text of the Quran are believed to be erroneous. [Translators Note:The words ceased to be a Muslim country refer to the changes then being introduced in Turkey by Kemal Atatürk, who was replacing the traditional institutions of Islamic origin by those based on Western practices. Iqbal argues here that Turkey remains Muslim despite rejecting many Islamic practices because of its continued allegiance to the Kalima of Islam.] The extract above is quoted from Iqbals original English tract entitled Finality of the Prophethood: Reply to Questions raised by Pandit J. L. Nehru. The belief of Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad and the members of the Lahore Ahmadiyya Jama'at is exactly that which, according to Dr. Iqbals view given above, makes one a Muslim who cannot be turned outside the pale of Islam by any religious leader. As Hazrat Mirza writes: I believe in the Holy Prophet Muhammad, may peace and the blessings of Allah be upon him, as being the Khatam an-nabiyyin, and I know with perfect certainty and firmly believe that our Holy Prophet is the Khatam al-anbiya, and after him no prophet shall come for this Umma, neither new nor old. (Nishan Asmani, p. 28) Books
Section
> Dr.
Sir Muhammad Iqbal and the Ahmadiyya
Movement
> Iqbal on 'Who is a Muslim?'
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