Mohammad Amir Ahmad Khan
Raja Sahib Mahmudabad راجا صاحب محمود آباد | |
---|---|
Born |
Amir Ahmed Khan امیر احمد خان November 5, 1914 Uttar Pradesh, British India |
Died |
October 14, 1973 58) London, England | (aged
Resting place | Near Tomb of Imam Raza Mashhad, Iran |
Citizenship | British India, Pakistan, United Kingdom |
Alma mater | La Martiniere Lucknow |
Occupation |
|
Religion | Shia, Islam |
Spouse(s) | Rani Kaniz Abid |
Parent(s) |
|
Mohammad Amir Ahmed Khan راجا صاحب محمود آباد, Raja of Mahmudabad (5 November 1914 – 14 October 1973) popularly known as Raja Sahib of Mahmudabad[1][2] was a prominent politician and leader of the All India Muslim League, during the Pakistan Movement.[2]
He served as Managing Trustee from 1940–1944 of Madrasatul Waizeen, a centre of Shia Islamic education founded by his father located in Lucknow.
Titles and honours
- Khan Bahadur Khan
- Amirul Omara
- Saeedul Mulk Muzzafar Jung Ghanzanfaru-daula
Literary and cultural aspects
He carried on the family tradition and was an accomplished poet in Urdu and Farsi. He composed a number of ruba'iyat, salaams, and marsiya as well as some ghazals and nazms under the takhalus (nom de plume) of 'Bahr' and 'Mahbub'. One of his previously unpublished marsiya, entitled Jawn Martyr of Karbala Lamented, has been recently published in London.
Inheritence and legacy
He inherited the Estate of Mahamudabad in 1931 upon death of his father Maharaja Sir Mohammad Ali Mohammad Khan.[2] After his demise, his Estate was taken over by Government of India under Enemy Properties Act. His wife Rani Kaniz Abid and his only son and heir Raja Mohammad Amir Mohammad Khan remained Indian citizens and fought a case for recovery of their ancestral Estate for reclaiming their heritage worth millions of rupees and the case is as present in high profile legal dispute in India. He won the case after 37 herculean years winning through district court, High Court of Bombay, and the Supreme Court of India which gave a landmark judgement in 2005 ordering "vacant possession" to his properties. Yet till date the order is far from implementation as the Indian Government continues to bring emergency ordinances in order to block the Supreme Court' order; so the case is back in the courts.[3]
Freedom Movement
He was one of the youngest member of Working Committee of All India Muslim League in 1937. In 1937, he founded All India Muslim Students Federation, which later mobilized into vocal supported to Pakistan Movement.[2] However, he was against the independence of Pakistan in 1947. When the Muslim League passed the resolution at Lahore in 1940 for a separate Pakistan, he stood against it and formed All-India Jamhur Muslim League in 1940 to counter the move. The first session of this party was held at Muzaffarpur, Bihar. Raja Saheb was elected its President and Dr. Maghfoor Ahmad Ajazi as General Secretary.[4] Later on he changed his mind under the influence of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, who was a long time family friend and eventually supported the idea of a separate Muslim state. Maharaja Mohammad Ali Mohammad Khan had created a trust with Motilal Nehru, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, Deputy Habibullah and Chaudhary Bam Bahadur Shah amongst others to administer the estate as his son was still a minor. Motilal Nehru predeceased the Maharaja and after the latters death in 1931, Mohammad Ali Jinnah became the dominant personality on the board. .[5] He said that "...the idea of a separate Muslim state in India [sic] stirred the imagination of the Muslims as nothing else had done before."[5]
Disillusionment
In 1945, before the Independence of India, he migrated to Iraq.[6] He subsequently moved to Pakistan in 1957.[6] He later settled down in London.[2]
Life in London
He was the first Director of the Islamic Cultural Centre in London, and devoted rest of his life in supervising the building of the Regent Park Mosque.[2] He was the moving force behind the World of Islam Festival held in 1976 in the United Kingdom. Ali Allawi reminisces about the events of 1976.[7]
Death
He died in London in 1973 but was buried in Mashhad in Iran.[2]
Leagacy
His house in Karbala, Iraq was left to the Government of Pakistan. The Mehmoodabad area of Karachi is named after him.
Further reading
- Syed Ishtiaq Husain. Glimpses of Freedom Movement: The Life and the Times of Raja Saheb of Mahmudabad. Mehboob Academy, Karachi (1990)
- Khwaja Razi Haider. Raja Sahib Mahmoodabad: Hayat-o-Khidmaat. Quaid-i-Azam Academy, Karachi
BCCI and Mahmudabad marriage.
References
- ↑ Mohammad Khan was never the Raja of Mahmudabad Times of India. 10 Sep. 2006 Retrieved 17 March 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Raja Sahib of Mahmudabad". Pioneers of Freedom. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
- ↑ "Enemy Property Bill: A Raja's Lost Legacy". NDTV. 26 August 2010. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
- ↑ South Asian History And Culture,Routledge,London,ISSN.1947-2498.Vol.2.Taylor and Francis Group.pp16-36
- 1 2 Pandey, Gyanendra (2001). "Remembering Partition: Violence, Nationalism, and History in India". Questia, Your Online Research Library. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
- 1 2 The Riyasat of Raja of Mehmoodabad by Farzana Behram Contractor. Retrieved 17 March 2016
- ↑ Ali Allawi, former Iraqi Minister, fondly remembers the instrumental role of Raja of Mahmudabad in the organisation of the Festival in The Crisis of Islamic Civilization.