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Old Sunday, April 25, 2010
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Thumbs up Muslim Revolution In Indian Sub-Continent

EVOLUTION AND GROWTH OF MUSLIM SOCIETY IN THE SUB-CONTINENT
Umayyad caliph, Walid bin Abdul Malak’s Invasion to Subcontenent 712 A.D
Suleman bin Abdul Malak 715-717 A.D
Abbasids’s rule over sub-continent 750 A.D
Turks invasion (Mamud Of Ghazni) 10th century
Ghoris ruled 1148-1206 A.D
Delhi Sultanate ruled 1206-1526 A.D
Mughals, earlier known as Mongols ruled 1526-1857 A.D
In Indian sub-continent, islam came first in south western tip of peninsula, in tadays Kerala State of India when a group of Sahaba under Malik Ibn Deenar came in Malabar cost and preached Islam.
1st mosque was built by the king Cheraman Perumal in 5 hijra who converted to Islam later on and his name was changed to Tajudeen. He travelled to meet Muhammad (P.B.U.H) and died on way bak in Oman.
Although Islam spread rapidly in the world as soon as it surfaced in the world, but it took its root in the Indo-Pak Sub-continent in the beginning of the 8th Century A.D.

It was during the rule of sixth Umayyad caliph, Walid bin Abdul Malak (705-715 A.D), when an overarching incidence of ship looting occurred near Debal, a sea port. The ships, carrying widows and children of deceased Arab soldiers, sent by the king of Ceylon (present day Sri-Lanka) to the Umayyad Governor, Hajjaj bin Yousef, of Baghdad were ransacked by a contingent of ferocious Hindu pirates. Hajjaj sent his emissary to the Rajput king, Raja Dahir under whose jurisdiction the pirates carried out the loot. The raja bluntly turned down the Governor’s claim said the pirates were not under his sway. Hajjaj decided to send the young Imaduddin Muhammad bin Qasim to teach the raja a lesson and release the prisoners. Muhammad bin Qasim was the ruler of Faris when he was called back by the Governor.

Muhammad bin Qasim then led a glorious Muslim army and invaded Sindh in 712 A.D. During his short stay in Niran he was reinforced by four thousands Jats who were long subdued by the self-righteous king. Raja Dahir came with his 40,000 soldiers along with contingents of elephants. However, the Raja killed in the battle field and his demoralized army retreated. Muhammad bin Qasim not only released the prisoners along with the looted ships but also established Islamic society/rule in Sindh. Qasim continued to expand the Muslim society beyond Sindh. He marched up to Multan where he defeated Raja Gor Singh.

During this time several changes occurred that made his expeditions slow down and finally put a halt. Hajjaj bin Yousef had been died in 714 A.D and, within months administrative changes wrought in Damascus. Walid bin Abdul Malak was replaced by his brother Suleman bin Abdul Malak (715-717 A.D). The new ruler was extravagantly luxury loving and quite incompetent for the accession to the throne. Suleman called off the best Generals from around their respective destinations and through intrigues executed them one by one. These Generals brought laudable victories to Walid. They included
• Qutaiba bin Muslim, the conqueror of Turkistan;
• Tariq bin Ziad, the conqueror of Andalus;
• Musa bin Nasir, the conqueror of North Africa; and
• Muhammad bin Qasim, the conqueror of Sindh.
Muhammad bin Qasim was died languishing in the prison at the age of just 22. Qasim’s rule, though short, is marked by the historians as marvelous and magnificent. He gave relieved the local population scourged by the extra judicious rule of the erstwhile rajas in general and Raja Dahir in particular. Furthermore, he espoused inter-religious harmony and brought prosperity and good governance in the areas under his domain. Italian scholar F. Gabrieli said: “Present day Pakistan, holding the values of Islam in such a high esteem, should look upon the young Arab conqueror, Muhammad bin Qasim, almost as a distant Kistes (founding father), a hero of South Asian Islam”.

With the passage of time rule of Umayyads finally evaporated in 750 A.D. They were succeeded by the Abbasids. The Abbasid rulers time after time sent their governors in the Sub-continent. According to Ibn Haukal, who traveled extensively through the Arab domains around the middle of the 8th Century, particularly mentioned the affluence of the people of Sindh. Moreover, during the rule of Abbasid caliph Al-Mansur (754-775 A.D), scholars from the Sindh were welcomed at the court of Baghdad. In the north Islam was making inroads from Afghanistan into the north-western region of Pakistan. Islamic missionaries were actively spreading their faith among the tribes.

Due to weak Abbasid ruler, who acceded to the throne later on, lost sway over the territories of the Sub-continent at the end of 9th Century. In the 10th Century Turks invaded the Sub-continent through renowned Khyber Pass. The most important of them was Mahmud of Ghazni, the son of Sabuktagin the great General. Mahmud invaded India seventeen times from 1001 to 1027 A.D; the motives behind the attempts were not for the cause of Islam but for bounties.

After the Ghaznavids, came Ghoris headed by Muhammad Ghori. The Ghoris ruled from 1148 to 1206 A.D. From 1206 to 1526 A.D Delhi Sultanate rose to power. It is believed that though this period of Delhi Sultanate was politically turbulent but the Muslim society under the Sultanate period flourished at a great length. Sufism also made it way during this era.

Mughals, earlier known as Mongols ruled India from 1526 A.D to 1857. This period of Muslim rule is particularly known as the period of Muslim architecture, literature and gave a boost to religious reformists and saints such as
• Sheikh Ahmad Sirhindi,
• Shah Walliullah,
• Sheikh Farid-ud-Din Ganj Shakar,
• Nizam-ud-Din Chishty, etc.

The effects of Islam on the Sub-continent were far-reaching. Islam completely changed the living standard and style of thinking of the people of the Sub-continent. The Muslim society gave a welcome fillip to the cultural, economic and, social environment in the Sub-continent. Turks introduced Persian language which intermingled with the other local languages and this gave the birth of new language later known as Urdu. Hence, it was the period of Muslim glory in the Indo-Pakistan Sub-continent.
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