Because of the events that lead me to my father grave, on June 18th., 2005. I stated looking into things more and more about the time of his death because he was in fact still a young man and it seemed strange to me his untimely death. And more important, at the time there were major investigation launched out of the FBI seeking information on blacks who were moving ahead too quickly.
So were people within the Black Islamic movement whereby there were people sent in you looked Black but they were indeed included in on the watch against their own people.
Many are still around and many ended up heading many of these groups as a cover for a government control operation.
Indeed I was aware of this, made aware by my father and mother, and then later my those who were inside and knew that there telephone lines were being tapped and they were being watched and placed in things that caused them later to be controlled by the government. This was the way of those within the FBI, that felt that Blacks were moving up and needed to be stopped, as I had started within other areas of my website, they watched and made it clear that we were not going anywhere.
those within the Black Nation of Islam headed up this list because they were too unvolved with the movement and pose a threat to this mentality.
A hatred of minorities coming right out of the government.
Designed to keep them in there place.
The reason why the so-called cases came up with McCarty was due I felt to the fact that many Blacks including my father and others in NYC and other areas were now moving in circles with wealthly whites and those within the entertainment industry.
It became apparent this was what was to be called "Communist Movement, you see people like Lucy Ball, Tutullah Bankhead, Martha Raye, Eddie Cantor, Milton Berle, ORson Wells, Walter Winchell, Jack Benny, The Orginal Rat Pack, which included Humphery Bogart, Lauren McCall, Kathleen Hepburn, and Lloyd Bridges others stepped over the race lines.
It was a area where the talented then, included all but it was within the backdoors and Harlem.
Indeed Blacks had to go in and out of back kitchens to perform, and were not being paid well, nor were allowed to sit in many of the night clubs as today.
They were allowed in but at the same thing not allowed the right of the basic freedoms which we take so lightly today here in the United States.
Out of this racism coming out of those who controlled the political flow. Many tied to their states and the KKK others not knowing anything else other than what travel through their vains as their rights and freedom to oppress others,
This was America, then.
The Blacks in the Military was far worse, and to think many brave men who were black had to fight within a war to make sure our nation and those of others were protected but again within its own base, the branches of the military racism was alive.
Black soldiers were not allowed to eat, speak to, and or sleep in any area mear blacks,they were off limits, this racism is hardlly spoken of, but I had a chance to talk to some of them and it was indeed outrageous what happen to them inside our military, and much of the same at a lower level is still going on within today. But we are told to fight within a country which is not giving us all are rights and freedoms.
As we are not given the same right to this day within the court system . This is the way and unless we see are evil ways and fix them America is just a paper giant without any real truths just myths that have now caught up with us.
By D'Anne Burley
About the time line of Dan Burley going back to 1959 and to his death in 1962
The Question About Islam and the Moor Movement of Drew Nobel Ali and Elijah Mohammad
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A SUDANESE MISSIONARY TO THE
UNITED STATES:
S◊TT M◊JID, ‘SHAYKH AL-ISL◊M IN NORTH
AMERICA’, AND HIS ENCOUNTER WITH NOBLE
DREW ALI, PROPHET OF THE MOORISH SCIENCE
TEMPLE MOVEMENT
*
A
HMED
I. A
BU
S
HOUK,
J.O. H
UNWICK &
R.S. O’F
AHEY
For Dr. Mu˛ammad Ibr hım Abü Salım, to commemorate his retirement
as Secretary-General of the National Records Office, Khartoum.
Introduction
Sometime in the late 1920s there was an encounter, direct or
indirect we do not know for certain, between two figures
from two very different traditions of ‘Islam’. The present
article partially documents this encounter, presenting a tanta-
lising glimpse of African American Islam’s earliest encounter
with global Sunnı Islam. On the one side is a Sudanese fi lim,
the very model of Nile Valley Islamic orthodoxy; on the
other is an African American, a generation only removed
Sudanic Africa, 8, 1997, 137-191
*
This article presents the texts and translations of various documents
from a book found by Abu Shouk and O’Fahey in the National
Record Office, Khartoum. We give them here as a contribution to
both African-American and Sudanese history, but while we can
claim some expertise in the latter, we have none in the former.
O’Fahey wishes to thank the Norwegian Universities Fund for
Development Studies (NUFU) for financial support and Dr Ali
Salih Karrar and his staff at the National Records Office in Khartoum
for their unfailingly courteous assistance. Abu Shouk has earlier
published, ‘S ttı M jid al-Süd nı alladhı aßba˛a shaykhan li’l-Isl m
fı Amrıka’, al-Multaq , Khartoum, August 1993.
from slavery, an actor in the great northward migration that
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was to transform the African American worldview, as it was
later to transform world music. The Sudanese fi lim was S ttı
M jid Mu˛ammad al-Q ∂ı from Dongola; the African-
American was Timothy Drew, later known as Noble Drew
Ali, from North Carolina. The topic also opens up new avenues
for research into the missionizing activities of immigrant
Sunnıs, A˛madıs, and other Muslim groups, and for the history
of the Moorish Science Temple, which latter movement may,
in some sense, have been—even unconsciously—a link be-
tween the Islam of some African slaves in the antebellum
South and the Lost and Found Nation of Islam of Elijah
Muhammad.
1
S tti M jid Mu˛ammad al-Q ∂ı Suw r al-Dhahab
The Sudanese are not known as a nation of wanderers (although
today three million Sudanese are estimated to live outside
their country). But there are, of course, exceptions. The nine-
teenth century Jafialiyyın diaspora of itinerant traders, from
petty peddlers to merchant conquerors like al-Zubayr Pasha
(1830-1913), that established networks and states from Lake
Chad to Ethiopia has been relatively well studied.
2
Another
type of Sudanese diaspora arose when the British employed
Sudanese as teachers of Arabic, junior administrators and judg-
es in Northern Nigeria and South Arabia in the 1940s and
1950s. More individually motivated were the careers of one
or two adventurous figures who exploited new opportunities
1
See Michael A. Gomez, ‘Muslims in early America’, Journal of
Southern History, lx, 4, November 1994, 671-710. See also Allan D.
Austin, African Muslims in antebellum America: transatlantic stories
and spiritual struggles, New York 1997.
2
See Anders Bjørkelo, Prelude to the Mahdiyya: Peasants and traders
in the Shendi Region, 1821-1885, Cambridge 1989.
3
On a near contemporary of S ttı M jid who was to have a distinguished
career as an Islamic modernist reformer in Indonesia, see R.S. O’Fahey
and M.I. Abu Salim, ‘A Sudanese in Indonesia. A note on Ahmad
far from home.
3
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S ttı M jid was born in al-Ghadd r in Old Dongola in
1300/1883; his father was from the Zay d b section of the
Dahmashiyya Bidayriyya and a member of a well-known Su-
danese holy family, the Suw r al-Dhahab.
4
Indeed, when he
finally returned to the Sudan, he seems to have claimed the
headship of the family, calling himself on his visiting card
(below),
5
ra√ıs sajj dat usrat Suw r al-Dhahab bi-Dunqul
al-fiAjüz, ‘Head of the Suw r al-Dhahab family in Old Dongo-
la’.
tÒKÃUÐ oŁ«uë
V¼cë —«uÝ błUÄ wðUÝ bOë
ÎUIÐUÝ ≠ WOÃULAë UJ¹dÄQÐ ÂöÝô« aOý
“u−Fë öI½bÐ V¼cë —«uÝ …dÝ« …œU−Ý fOz—Ë
Sayed S. Magid Mohamed
Pr. Sheikh Al Eslam
of the U. S. A.
S ttı’s first teacher was a Shaykh fiAwa∂, with whom he
began the memorization of the Qur√ n. He then went to the
masıd, or mosque/school, of another shaykh, A˛mad Abü
Zayd Wadıdı, in the village called Rümı, where he completed
the memorization of the Qur√ n.
6
Muhammad Surkitti’, Indonesia Circle, 59–60, November 1992– March
1993, 68-72.
4
On the origin of the family, see Ali Salih Karrar, The Sufi Brotherhoods
in the Sudan, London 1992, 25, 59. On the Bidayriyya, see H.A.
MacMichael, A History of the Arabs in the Sudan, Reprint London
1967,
I
, 201-3.
5
fiAbd al-˘amıd Mu˛ammad A˛mad, Shiy khat al-Isl m fı Amrık ,
S ttı M jid Mu˛ammad al-Q ∂ı 1904-1929, Khartoum: Wiz rat al-
thaq fa wa’l- fil m 1978, 9.
6
Al-‡ yyib Mu˛ammad al-‡ayyib, al-Masıd, Khartoum 1991, 89, where
a piece of doggerel by Wadıdı remembered by S ttı M jid is given.
Al-‡ayyib says he obtained the information from S ttı Mu˛ammad b.
S ttı M jid, a well-known lawyer in Omdurman.
The next date we know with some certainty in S ttı’s life
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is 1904, when, at the age of twenty-one, he apparently arrived
in the United States.
7
He had left the Sudan at an uncertain
date, but probably after 1900, intending to make for Egypt
and study at al-Azhar. It is not clear if he ever spent any
significant amount of time in Cairo, for the next thing we
learn is that he had moved on to England. No reason is given
for this rather drastic change of direction. One may guess
from the nationalities of the two friends he made in England,
that he went as a sailor. There, with the friends, a Kenzı
Nubian who had already learnt English, and a Yemeni,
8
he
founded an Islamic missionary society (jamfiiyyat li’l-tabshır
bi-dın al-Isl m), the first of several such organizations that he
was to found and so tirelessly work for.
9
He also started to
preach, his sermons being translated into English.
Of his going to America there are two versions, one vague
and brief, the other very precise and detailed. The brief version
7
We have two major sources for S ttı’s life; one is Mu˛ammad fiAbd
al-Ra˛ım’s al-Nid √ fı daffi al-iftir √ (Cairo 1371/1953, 328-30), based
on the author’s interview with S ttı. Mu˛ammad fiAbd al-Ra˛ım was
himself a Dahmashı Bidayrı and his writings contain much on the
history and personalities of his people. On fiAbd al-Ra˛ım, see fiAlı
∑ li˛ Karr r, Ya˛y Mu˛ammad Ibr hım and R.S. O’Fahey, ‘The life
and writings of a Sudanese historian: Mu˛ammad fiAbd al-Ra˛ım (1878-
1966)’, SAJHS, 6, 1995, 125-36. Our second major source is fiAbd
al-˘amıd Mu˛ammad A˛mad’s, Shiy khat al-Isl m fı Amrık . The
copy we are using is in the National Records Office, Khartoum,
Miscellaneous 1/258/3403. There are, however, additional papers on
or by S ttı elsewhere in the National Records Office. In 1995 fiAbd
al-˘amıd revised, added new chapters to and published his book under
the title: al-D fiiya al-isl miyya al-Sud niyya bi-Amrıka, 1904-1929,
Khartoum.
8
Yemenis from Aden, a British colony since 1839, had been serving on
British ships since at least the 1850s. The Yemeni settlement in and
around Newcastle and South Shields dates back to 1870s and is one of
the oldest, if not the oldest, Arab communities in Western Europe.
The British in Egypt often had Nubian servants, as did indeed upper
class Egyptians, so the Kenzı Nubian may have come to England as a
servant.
9
fiAbd al-Ra˛ım, al-Nid √, 328.
is given by S ttı M jid himself in an autobiographical fragment
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entitled Ta√rıkh intish r al-Isl m fı Amrık , ‘A history of the
spread of Islam in America’, evidently written in Cairo some-
time after his return there in 1929.
10
Here he talks of how he
went to America
11
and in vague terms of his dismay at the
anti-Islamic writings he found in the newspapers of the bil d
al-˛urriyya wa’l-fiad la, ‘the land of freedom and justice’.
12
He continues by saying that he tried to have articles published
defending Islam against these calumnies, but was not very
successful. It was then that he decided to establish an Islamic
Benevolent Society.
In the second version, it is the missionary society he
founded in England that is said to have delegated him to
travel the United States to counter anti-Islamic propaganda
allegedly being published in the New York Times.
13
His biog-
rapher tells us that before his arrival, the only official Islamic
presence in the United States was that of the Ottoman ambas-
sador in Washington, A˛mad Rustum Bey, the Ottoman
Consul-General in New York, Jal l Bey, and the imam of the
Embassy’s mosque in Washington, Shaykh Mu˛ammad fiAlı.
Their missionary effort is said to have attracted a number of
10 It is written on a headed notepaper from Hotel Port–Fouad. Presumably
it was written as part of his campaign to be officially appointed as an
Azharı missionary in the United States; see further below. A truncated
version of it is given in A˛mad, Shiy kha, 21-2.
11 In a notarized document from 1929, evidently made to obtain a re-entry
visa to the USA in connexion with his journey to Egypt in that year,
he gives New Orleans as his point of entry into the USA.
12 Elsewhere he writes ‘Unkal S m’ for the U.S.A.
13 Mu˛ammad fiAbd al-Ra˛ım, al-Nid √, 329. Earlier, in 1895, the New
York Times had under the title ‘Fall of Islam in America’ gleefully
reported the dissensions and downfall of the first recorded Islamic
missionary enterprise in New York State, that of the American journalist
and convert, Alexander Russell Webb; see Marc Ferris, ‘To “Achieve
the Pleasure of Allah”: immigrant Muslims in New York City’, in
Yvonne Y. Haddad and Jane I. Smith (eds.), Muslim Communities in
North America, New York 1994, 210-11.
Syrians to America, among them Shaykh Salm n Badür al-
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Drüzı
14
who in 1910 was to establish a newspaper, al-Bay n,
in New York. Others who came were a group from Ba‘albek,
who included Shaykhs Kha†† r Yüsuf al-Dayr nı and A˛mad
˘amza Faww r.
15
It was in this context that S ttı M jid came to New York
and set to work. When the New York Times refused to publish
his articles in defence of Islam, S ttı M jid took the newspaper
to court to force them to publish his articles or pay $200,000
in damages for pillorying Islam and insulting its dignity. The
court found in S ttı’s favour. The whole episode caused a
great stir; S ttı M jid became known as Shaykh al-Isl m fı
’l-Amrık and a number of American, Afghans, Indians and
Africans converted to Islam.
16
The problem with this version of events is that there is
no clear reflection of this in the columns of the New York
Times, at least insofar as we have been able to establish. The
second account of S ttı’s coming to America and his later
encounter with Noble Drew Ali seems more reminiscent of
the A˛madı missionary, Ghul m A˛mad, and his encounter
with an anti-Islamic Illinois Catholic priest, John A. Dowie,
14 Who, despite his name, was presumably a Sunnı Muslim and not a
Druze.
15 Interview with S ttı M jid, see the newspaper al-Bal gh, Cairo, no.
2921, 14 August 1935.
16 Ibid.
17 ‘One account of Ahmadi involvement in the United States describes
the virulently anti-Muslim campaign of John A. Dowie, a Catholic
priest in Illinois who is said to have proclaimed himself to be the
Prophet Elijah. In the first decade of the twentieth century Dowie
devoted himself to preaching the destruction of Islam. “I pray to God
that the day of destruction of Islam approach nearer. O God! Do like
that, O God, bring destruction to Islam”. Hearing of Dowie’s attack
on Islam, Ghulam Ahmad [an A˛madı missionary] invoked the
mubahala [mub hala, i.e., the curse of God], publishing a formal
challenge in which he called on the preacher to stop his diatribe and
enter into a prayer contest. According to the terms of the contest,
whoever was a liar would die during the lifetime of the one who was
telling the truth. Followers of Ghulam Ahmad believe that their leader
a.k.a. the Prophet Elijah.
17
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Meeting with little success against the might of the Amer-
ican press, S ttı M jid decided that a more profitable course
of action would be to establish various benevolent societies
to promote Islam and serve the Muslim community. Thus he
founded, presumably at different times, the following,
(a) the Muslim Unity Society – jamfiiyyat al-itti˛ d al-Isl mı,
(b) the Islamic Missionary Society – al-jamfiiyya al-tabshır-
iyya al-Isl miyya,
(c) the Red Crescent Society – jamfiiyyat al-hil l al-a˛mar,
(d) the Islamic Benevolent Society – al-jamfiiyya al-khayriyya
al-Isl miyya.
Again, there is a large chronological gap in our picture of
S ttı M jid’s life, for we have to wait some seventeen years
before we catch a glimpse of him again. In 1921 we encounter
him in New York, and obtain a vivid picture of his engagement
in the welfare of migrant or sojourning Muslims in the New
York area through a series of letters exchanged between S ttı
on the one hand and the British Consulate-General in New
York and Embassy in Washington, dated between 4 August
and 15 September 1921.
18
The first letter in the series adequately
explains the issues involved,
Rev. Majid Mohamed
22 West Street
New York
August 4th 1921
won the contest, in which the American press took great interest,
since Dowie became paralyzed, went insane, and finally died. A local
newspaper reported that Ghulam Ahmad regarded “the misfortunes
which befell his traducer as evidence of divine vengeance coming
with divine judgment’; Yvonne Y. Haddad and Jane I. Smith, Mission
to America. Five Islamic sectarian communities in North America,
Gainesville 1993, 59-60. One obvious question was why was Dowie
so obsessed with Islam?
18 We have not reproduced all of them here for considerations of space.
To His Excellency,
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The Consul General of Great Britain,
44 Whitehall Street,
New York City
Dear Sir,
[…]
19
city, beg to inform your Excellency that there in the City of
New York are [sic] a great number of sailors from the City of Eden
[sic, Aden], Arabia, which is under British Authority, and who were
serving during the World War as sailors on board British ships, and a
good number of their comrades who were their compatriots perished
during the War, either by German submarines or by other destructive
means by the enemies of Great Britain, and the said surviving sailors
were employed for the service of British ships by English officers at
the said city of Aden […] and faithfully are without employment, and
suffering [some dis]tress and poverty, as those who employ sailors for
English steamers give preference in obtaining employment to those
who pay them commissions.
May I further inform your Excellency, that I wrote on behalf of
the said sailors to Mr. John D. Rockefeller, requesting him to kindly
give them employment, and he replied that he had no work for them.
At present these people are kept from starvation by Shiek Yiahia,
who has already spent a good sum of money helping them and cannot
continue to help them any longer. I, therefore, in the name of humanity
and renowned English justice, beg of you […] and to graciously help
them in obtaining employment on British steamers, and you would
thereby serve God and humanity.
Thanking you in advance for any kind service you may render
these […] I am […]
This correspondence, conducted on S ttı’s side in impeccable
English, and on the British side with appropriate courtesy
was essentially about British colonial subjects, mainly sailors
from the Yemen and the Indian subcontinent, who were strand-
ed in New York in large part because they could not pay the
commission required to obtain a new berth. The letters ex-
changed make it clear that the Reverend S ttı M jid Mu˛ammad
19 There is a lacuna at the beginning.
was acting as a concerned pastor for various ‘abandoned’
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fellow Muslims for whom he felt a responsibility.
20
The English version of the jamfiiyya khayriyya seems, in
fact, to have been the ‘African Muslim Welfare Society’,
judging from the only non-Sudanese account of S ttı M jid’s
activities we have found.
21
The Welfare Society was founded
in Pittsburg in 1928. As we shall see, it was to have a compli-
cated history.
Sometime in the late 1920s S ttı M jid came into contact
with the first indigenous African-American Islamic organ-
ization to emerge in the United States, the Moorish Science
Temple Association of Noble Drew Ali. This was probably
after 1927 when Noble Drew Ali printed an edition of The
Holy Koran, an act which brought his claims of prophecy and
revelation squarely into the public domain.
Noble Drew Ali
Noble Drew Ali’s background could hardly have been more
20 This aspect of S ttı’s career deserves further investigation; presumably
the British consular records from New York will contain more
information.
21 Adib Rashad, Islam, Black nationalism and slavery: A detailed history,
Beltsville,
MD
1995, 141-2; this is apparently based on a paper by Dr
Sulayman Nyang, ‘The African Welfare Society: an unknown factor
in American religious history’, published in the Saudi Gazette [Jeddah],
1983.
22 The most detailed ‘insider’ account we have found is Peter Lamborn
Wilson, ‘Lost/Found Moorish Time Lines in the Wilderness of North
America’, in idem, Sacred Drift: Essays on the margins of Islam, San
Francisco 1993, 15-50. An up-to-date overview is provided by Ernest
Allen Jr., ‘Religious Heterodoxy and Nationalist Tradition: the
continuing evolution of the Nation of Islam’, The Black Scholar, xxvi,
3-4, 1996, 2-34. An excellent new account of Noble Drew Ali and his
movement, which places him in the broader context of African-
American identity struggles (and especially the movement of Marcus
Garvey) is Richard Brent Turner, Islam in the African-American
Experience, Bloomington 1997, 90-108. However, none of the existing
accounts make mention of the encounter between S ttı M jid and
different than that of S ttı M jid.
22
Born as Timothy Drew on
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23
in North Carolina, a child of ex-slaves, and
brought up among Cherokee Indians, Drew seems to have
come from a culturally complex background.
24
Little is known of Noble Drew Ali’s early life, although
he is said to have suffered great hardship as a child and as a
young man to have travelled in the Muslim world.
25
At some
stage he moved to New Jersey, where he worked as a railway
expressman. He established his first Moorish Science temple
in Newark in 1913; others were later founded in Pittsburg
and Detroit.
26
Noble Drew Ali moved in 1925 to Chicago,
27
which became, and has remained, the centre of the Moorish
movement. He died in mysterious circumstances in 1929 and
Noble Drew Ali. Two other ‘insider’ accounts that add details are Isa
al Haadi al Mahdi, Who was Noble Drew Ali?, Brooklyn 1988, and
José V. Pimienta–Bey, ‘Some ‘Myths’ of the Moorish Science Temple:
an Afrocentric Historical Analysis’, Ph.D. thesis, Temple University
1995.
23 Thus about three years younger than S ttı M jid.
24 Wilson (‘Lost/Found’, 15-17) discusses most, if not all, of the possible
theories. He raises (p. 28) the unanswerable question as to what degree
there existed among people of Timothy Drew’s generation a folk
memory of Islam. In other words, did Drew’s group go into and
appropriate from Free Masonry, Shrinerism etc., the symbols they
needed simply because they had no access to ‘the real thing’! There is
a parallel here between the later doctrinal shifts of Warith-ed-Deen
Muhammad and Louis Farrakhan, with the former moving to ‘orthodox’
Islam while the latter continued to preach the teachings of Elijah
Muhammad.
25 Al Mahdi, Who was Noble Drew Ali?, 4-5.
26 The first temple was called the Canaanite Temple. According to Turner
(Islam in the African-American Experience, 90), a dozen temples were
established in the first ten years of the movement’s life.
27 Or 1923, according to Turner, Islam in the African-American
Experience, 92.
28 Noble Drew Ali’s corpse, ‘lies in a stately mausoleum in Lincoln
Cemetery. It can be viewed from windows from all sides and he looks
exactly as though he will keep his promise to “to rise up and walk
with my people again” sometime in the very near future. Fez-wearing
Moors (and there are many of them still to be seen around the city)
is buried in a mausoleum in Chicago.
28
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The relationship between Noble Drew Ali, the elusive
Wallace Fard, regarded by some as a reincarnation of Noble
Drew Ali,
29
and Elijah Muhammad, the founder of the Nation
of Islam, has also been the subject of much speculation. This
is however not our concern here.
The Encounter
S ttı M jid does not make it clear how he encountered Noble
Drew Ali; his account is vague.
30
He begins by saying the
Noble Drew Ali was set up by some ‘bigots’ or ‘fanatics’
(mutafiaßßibın), gave himself a ‘prophetic’ name and wrote a
‘qur√ n’. S ttı continues that one of those who were following
true Islam brought him one of Ali’s books—presumably the
keep a vigil at the cemetary to be on hand when Noble Drew gets up
from his death couch’; Dan Burley, ‘Elijah Muhammad: Part II: Pomp,
Mysticism Key to Power’, Chicago Defender, 22 August 1959, 2,
quoted in Essien Udosen Essien-Udom, Black Nationalism: the rise of
the Black Muslims in the U.S.A., Harmondsworth 1966, 387 n. 54.
The mausoleum in Lincoln Cemetery (at 125th and Halstead Streets)
was visited by two of the authors. It is not, however, the tomb of
Noble Drew Ali, but rather that of several persons who claimed to be
reincarnations of him. Hunwick and O’Fahey were told by the Cemetery
staff that the mausoleum is still frequently visited. The Chicago
telephone directory lists five Moorish Science Temples in Chicago.
29 Al Mahdi (Who was Noble Drew Ali?, 50) calls him Abdul Wali
Farad Muhammad, ‘An Arab from the East who came to Newark [in
1924] and began teaching Arabic and the Islaamic [sic] way of life.
The people were fascinated by him …’. He continues that many of
Noble Drew Ali’s followers deserted him to follow Abdul Wali and it
was for this reason that Ali moved to Chicago. Turner says (Islam in
the African-American Experience, 92) that in 1914 [sic] Abdul Wali
Farad Muhammad unsuccessfully challenged Noble Drew Ali for
leadership of the movement, but he does not give any source for this
claim. See further Claude Andrew Clegg
III
, An Original Man: The
Life and times of Elijah Muhammad, New York 1997, 20-1, and Turner,
op. cit., 160-6, for wildly varying origins for Wallace Fard.
30 What follows is based on A˛mad, Shiy kha, 20-1, from the unfinished
autobiographical note by S ttı M jid.
‘qur√ n’! He read it, but did not find any verse of the Qur√ n
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or ˛adıth of the Prophet in it.
The ‘qur√ n’ in question has as its full title, The Holy
Koran of The Moorish Science Temple of America, although
Wilson says that it is more commonly known as the Circle
Seven Koran, from the design at the front of the book. It is a
mystical composition, culled from a number of sources, but
according to Abbie Whyte, over half of it is taken from The
Aquarian Gospel of Jesus the Christ by ‘Levi’ H. Dowling of
Ohio.
31
S ttı says that he wrote to Noble Drew Ali and advised
him to change his name and burn his book. The indignation
S ttı undoubtedly felt comes through vividly in his account.
S ttı continues by saying that he attempted to take Ali to
court to seek American justice and put the latter to the test
‘thumma innı † labtuhu li’l-mu˛ kama am ma fiad lat ˛ukü-
mat h dhihi ’l-bil d afinı bih ˛uküm t al-Wil y t al-
Mutta˛ida al-Amırıkiyya li-ajal al-imti˛ n’.
32
S ttı wanted
Ali to prove his prophethood by performing miracles (mufijiz t),
that is, those miracles that only a prophet can perform.
33
He
then says that he approached the government personally (qadd-
amtu nafsı il ’l-˛uküma), since this man was bringing the
Islamic faith into disrepute (ah na ’l-diy na ’l-isl miyya).
The ‘U.S. Government’ (Department of Justice?), we are told,
referred S ttı to the ‘men of knowledge and religion’ (rij l
al-fiilm wa’l-dın) as the suitable people to deal with such
matters. S ttı, somewhat lamely, concludes his account by
saying that he continued to raise the issue of Ali’s claims in
the newspapers.
31 See Abbie Whyte, ‘Christian elements in negro American Muslim
religious beliefs’, Phylon, xxv, 4, 1964, and Wilson, Sacred Drift,
18-23. Haddad and Smith (Mission, 81) note ‘The scripture [Noble
Drew Ali] provided for the Moorish American communty … makes
no pretense at being a replica or even an approximation of the Qur√ n’.
32 A˛mad, Shiy kha, 21.
33 This is, of course, a perfectly orthodox Muslim position.
There is a puzzle here: from Essien-Udom and Lincoln
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up to the more recent studies,
34
there has been a great deal of
research on the origins of African American Islam. It seems
strange, especially in light of some of the documents presented
here of American provenance, that no echo of this controversy
has been found in the historical records in America.
35
In writing a ‘qur√ n’ and in claiming prophetic sta-
tus—however defined—Noble Drew Ali was outraging the
orthodox Muslim sensibilities of S ttı M jid. It is unreasonable
to expect the latter to have been sensitized to the African-
American need to create alternative world-views and their
receptivity to such currents as Free Masonry, Garveyism, and
similar.
36
S ttı reacts in the appropriate Sunnı Muslim way;
he seeks a fatw from his would-be alma mater, al-Azhar in
Cairo, condemning Ali. Thus he travels to Cairo and presents
a formal istift √, request for a fatw or judicial opinion, which
he duly receives.
The interest in the istift √ lies in S ttı’s summation of
what he thought was Ali’s doctrinal position. Although it is
for specialists in African American Islam to evaluate this
further, our impression, based on Wilson, Lincoln and others,
is that S ttı does not too grievously misrepresent Noble Drew
Ali. The latter did write a book entitled The Holy Koran; he
did in some way regard himself as a sharıf; he did proclaim a
new ‘revelation’ out of Morocco/the land of the Moors, and
he did claim to have travelled and been with the fiulam √ of
various Muslim countries. In other words, on the basis of
what we know about Ali’s doctrinal position, the ‘charges’,
from S ttı’s perspective, were not false.
The response from the Middle East is equally difficult to
34 C. Eric Lincoln, The Black Muslims in America, 3rd edn, Grand Rapids
1994. See Allen, ‘Religious heterodoxy’, 2-34, for a review of the
literature.
35 The answer may be that researchers have simply not looked in the
right places; hopefully the present article may help in this respect.
36 Wilson, ‘Lost/Found’, passim, is a subtle and humorous analysis of
these complexities.
evaluate. One interpretation is to view the various fatw s that
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S ttı obtained as essentially routine documents. The problem
with this that a mutanabbı or ‘would-be prophet’ in the USA
in the late 1920s could hardly have been a routine designation.
Again, we are to a large degree in the dark.
S ttı’s Later Career
S ttı left New York for Alexandria 31 January 1929; he was
never to return.
37
But this does not mean that he abandoned
his American followers. It is difficult to trace his activities
for the next decade and what follows is only a preliminary
account.
The most reasonable reconstruction of events surrounding
the istift √ and the various fatw s is that S ttı obtained them
by physically going to al-Azhar and to Khartoum and Omdur-
man. Since he never returned to America, there is no reason
to suppose that the fatw s were ever seen there. Nevertheless,
S ttı continued to correspond with his African American fol-
lowers and apparently produced a journal from Cairo (pre-
sumably in Arabic) that was sent to his followers in America.
This emerges from the various letters from his American fol-
lowers that are reproduced in the present article under ‘The
Documents’. In one (no. 4), the implication is that some of
his followers had mastered Arabic, but wanted the material
translated into English. In the same letter there is reference to
local conflicts between S ttı’s followers and a Mooree James
– the latter has yet to be identified.
There are two final themes; first, S ttı’s attempts to have
himself recognized and appointed as al-Azhar’s official mis-
sionary or d fiı to North America, an attempt that failed as
the following letter from Mu߆af al-Mar ghı decisively shows:
WOM¹bë ÀuF³Kà t×ýdð WO?LKŽ ö¼RÄ t¹bà fOà tðdCŠ Ê√ bOH½
37 His ticket is reproduced in A˛mad, Shiy kha, opp. p. 15.
U?Ä qÂË Ã—U?)« vÃ≈ d¼“_« U?¼b?u¹ w²Ã«
t½√ UML?N??√ t½√ d?Ä_« w
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vK?Ž t½√Ë UJ¹d???Ä√ w w?Äö??Ýù« s?¹bë sŽ ŸU???bK?à t?????H½ V?B½
Ʊπ≥¥Ø±≤ر∑ Æ WOÄöÝù« UOFL'UÐ ‰UBð«
38
We declare that he does not have the scholarly qualifications to be
appointed to a religious mission such as al-Azhar is accustomed to
send abroad. All that happened is that he informed us that he had
appointed himself to defend Islam in [North] America and had had
contacts with Islamic associations [there. Dated 17 December 1934.]
Secondly, there is the story or tradition that S ttı was prevented
from returning to the States because he seems to have been
perceived by the FBI as a potential ally of Japan.
39
It seems
possible to deduce from the letters sent him that he was seen
by his American followers in an increasingly Garveyist mode,
as the references to Ethiopia and Japan make clear.
In the meantime S ttı was attempting two things, one to
obtain official Azhar recognition, the other to find financing
for a renewed mission to America—as his letter to a relative
of the Nizam of Hyderabad, below, shows. In both these
endeavours he evidently failed.
Having failed to gain al-Azhar’s approval and being seem-
ingly prevented from returning to America, S ttı returned to
the Sudan sometime in the 1940s and died there 17 March
1963.
40
The Documents
The following lists all the letters and other documents given
38 A˛mad, al-D fiiya al-isl miyya, 335, 337.
39 Rashad, Islam, Black Nationalism, 141-2, quoting a number of relevant
sources.
40 We have been unable to discover any more about his later life.
in A˛mad’s Shiy kha.
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(1) Certificate of emigration for S ttı M jid (address 24 Seneca
St, Buffalo, New York), described Imam of Islam in United
States (opp. p. 14).
(2) Ticket, Fabre Line, New York to Alexandria, 31 January
1929 (opp. p. 15).
(3) Ta√rıkh intish r al-Isl m fı Amrık . Apparently written
in Cairo in about 1930 (on notepaper headed Hotel Port-
Fuad, Cairo). The editor of Shiy kha reproduces a page
in facsimile (opp. p. 20) and gives as much of the text as
he can, pp. 20-22.
(4) List of grave locations? Some of the names are Islamic
(opp. p. 22).
(5) Nid √ fi mm li-jamıfi al-muslimın fı k ffat al-aq† r al-
Isl miyya. An open invitation to all Muslims to subscribe
towards the costs of publishing a book about the injıl
Barn b , i.e., The Gospel of St. Barnabas. Dated
1350/1936 (opp. p. 24).
(6) From S ttı M jid to the British Consul General in New
York, 4 August 1921 (see above).
(7) From the British Consul General (G. Leslie? Armstrong)
to S ttı M jid, 6 August 1921 (opp. p. 28).
(8) From S ttı M jid to the British Consul General, 12 August
1921 (opp. p. 30).
(9) From S ttı M jid to the British Consul General, 22 August
1921 (opp. p. 32).
(10)From S ttı M jid to the British Consul General, 27 August
1921 (opp. p. 34).
(11)From S ttı M jid to the British Consul, 1 September 1921
(opp. p. 36).
(12)From S ttı M jid to the British Ambassador, Washington,
7 September 1921 (opp. p. 38).
(13)From S ttı M jid to the British Consul General, 9 Sep-
tember 1921 (opp. p. 43).
(14)From the British Embassy to S ttı M jid, 15 September
1921 (opp. p. 45).
Nos 6 to 14 all concern the question of sailors from
British colonies who were destitute in New York. During
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this period S ttı’s address was 22 West Street, New York.
(15)From S ttı M jid to Hon. E.H. Hull, Commissioner General
of Immigration, Department of Labour, Washington
DC
,
dated 31 October 1927.
41
The letter concerns the immigrant
status of one Soleman Tahir, ‘the treasurer of the Turkish
Red Cresent [sic]’ (opp. p. 47).
(16)From Elijah Mohommed to S ttı M jid, 17 December
1928 (opp. p. 49; see below).
(17)From [names illegible] to ‘Father Sayed Majid Mohamed,
Supreme Dictator of African Moslem Welfare Society,
Cairo, Egypt’, 5 February 1930. The writers’ address is
2444 Bedford Avenue, Pittsburg,
PA
. They write to confirm
the sending of money to S ttı (opp. p. 51).
(18)From [names illegible] to S ttı M jid; virtually unreadable.
There is a reference to the disruptive activities of a ‘Hashia
Farrell’, 1930 (opp. p. 53).
(19)To S ttı M jid; incomplete (see below; opp. p. 55).
(20)From E.L. Martin to S ttı M jid, 18 May 1932 (see below;
opp. p. 58).
(21)From [E.L. Martin] to S ttı M jid, 18 January 1933 (see
below; opp. p. 61).
(22)A letter of religious exhortation in Arabic signed by S ttı
M jid Mu˛ammad al-Q ∂ı, announcing the conversion
to Islam in Egypt of a Coptic priest and asking for support
for him since he is now destitute; seemingly addressed to
imams of mosques. He says his is fiAbd All h b. S ttı
M jid Mu˛ammad al-Q ∂ı, suggesting that S ttı M jid
‘adopted’ him (after p. 61).
(23)Letter to the Egyptian newspaper Kawkab al-sharq, asking
them to place an advertisement, signed fiAbd All h S ttı
M jid, and dated 22 June 1924 (p. 65).
(24)Letter from Mu˛ammad K mil ˘amdı to S ttı M jid, 22
April 1935 (p. 66).
(25 Letter from Mohammed Elias to S ttı M jid, 11 September
41 S ttı’s address is now 450 Seneca Street, Buffalo,
NY
.
1935 (see below: after p. 66).
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(26)Unidentified letter (before p. 71; see below).
(27)Draft of a letter to Mawlana Khan Bahadur A˛mad fiAl √
al-Dın of Hyderabad (opp. p. 71; see below).
(28)Letter from S ttı M jid to the Civil Secretary, Sudan
Government (opp. p. 73; see below).
(29)Letter from the Secretary of the Commonwealth of Penn-
sylvania, dated 15 January 1928, authorizing the founding
of ‘The Society of Muslim Africans’ and referring to the
Rules of the Charitable Association established 16 May
1923 (opp. p. 79).
42
(30)Letter to the members of the Islam Benevolent African
Society, presumably from S ttı (after p. 79; see below).
(31)‘By Laws of Moslem Welfare Society’, dated 1922; a
three-page typescript (after p. 83).
(32)Letter in English, signed by several people, dated Detroit,
MI
, 23 August 1922, that opens, ‘Be it known that we, the
undersigned officers and members of the Moslem Welfare
Society of America in aide [sic] of the Ottoman Red
Crescent of Angora [Ankara], Turkey …’. The letter con-
tinues by adding four new articles to the society’s bylaws
giving complete authority to S ttı M jid (opp. p. 91). An
Arabic version is printed on p. 91.
(33)Membership application (in Arabic) for the Jamfiiyyat
al-Süd niyyın al-khayriyya, dated 5 May 1938.
(34)Letter from S ttı to the mufti of Egypt, dated 17 September
1931.
(35)Letter to S ttı from an unidentifed correspondent, dated
29 Jum d II 1350/10 November 1931.
(36)Letter from S ttı to Mu˛ammad Safiüd, teacher of ˛adıth
at the Aqß Mosque in Jerusalem, asking him for a ruling
concerning the claim being made in America by one Sharıf
Kh n, a follower of Ghul m A˛mad Kh n, that the latter
42 The original document is too blurred to be read; the information given
here comes from the Arabic translation on p. 79.
43 On the history of A˛madı missionary activity in the States, see Haddad
and Smith, Mission, 49-78.
is the messiah foretold in the Qur√ n (opp. p. 118).
43
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The Noble Drew Ali Documents
It is unclear if the istift √ from S ttı was sent or taken by him
to al-Azhar. The latter seems the more likely since we know
he left America in 1929 and the two Sudanese fatw s are
dated 1930. It should be noted that all three fatw s presented
here form one continuous document. In other words, S ttı
took his request to al-Azhar, who gave him a fatw , which he
then took to the al-Mafihad al-fiilmı in Omdurman. There a
fatw was issued on 3 Shafib n 1349/23 December 1930, to
which was appended a fatw on 8 Shafib n/28 December by
the muftı of the Sudan, Ism fiıl al-Azharı.
Finally, we give the official al-Azhar ‘translation’—rather
a précis—of their fatw , obviously intended for dissemination
in the United States.
The istift √ from S ttı M jid Mu˛ammad al-Q ∂ı to the
fiulam √ of al-Azhar
rOŠdë sLŠdë §« rÐ
dB0 nOM(« wÄöÝô« s¹bë ¡ULKŽ «dCŠ vë
qÐu½ò vL?¹ Âu?Oë błË q?ł— w ≠ rJKC «œ ≠ r?JÃuÁ U?Ä
UO?ŽbÄ ÆwKŽ …u?³Më XOÐ sÄ qK²*« w³Më ÁU?MFÄ åwKŽ «Ë—œ
v????O???Ž t?Ð d???AÐ Íc?ë ÊU???Äeë d????š¬ w t?Ð œu???Žu*« w?³Më u?¼ t½«
vMF??ÄË Ê¬d??Á w?Ãu¼ Í– ÁU??L??ÝË UÐU??²?? nMË Âö???ë t??OKŽ
b?L?×?Ä U½b??O?Ý vKŽ WJ0 ‰e½« Ícë ”b?I*« ʬd??Ië ʬd?Á wÃu¼
—u???????Ý s?Ä …—u???????ݤ «c¼ t?ÐU???????²??????? w? b???????łu?¹ ô pÖ l?ÄË £
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£ b??L??×???Ä UMO??³?½ Y¹œU??Š« sÄ Y?¹b??Š ôË n¹d??A?ë ›Ê¬d??Ië
›ì¤
44
s?ŽË 5O??????³?Më -U??????šË §« ‰u??????Ý— vK?Ž r?KJ?²¹ t?½« vK?Ž
ÆÊUDKÝ sÄ tÐ §« ‰e½« UÄ Ícë ÂöJë kOKGÐ ›ì¤
wðQ¹ UÄ vKŽ qL²AÄ »U²Jë «cJ¼Ë
t??OKŽ v??O??Ž tÐ d??AÐ Ícë t??¾?O??−0 œu??Žu*« w³M?ë u¼ t½« ∫ôË«
Âöë
ÕU???????×???????ô« w? t???????²?¹ƒ— w U?M?Šu¹ Ád???????– Íc?ë u?¼ t?½« ∫U???????O½U?Ł
›ì¤ YÃU?¦?ë r²?)« `²?? U*Ë vMŽ« W?ÝœU??ë W?LKJ?Ã«Ë ”œU?ë
t??OK?Ž fÃU??'«Ë œu??Ý« ”d?? «–«Ë dE?M «ËdE½«Ë «u??LK?¼ ∫ ‰u??I¹
Æ›aì¤ Ê«eOÄ tFÄ
b???ÁË `O???×??? Âö???ÝU?Ð fOà t?K³???Á ÊU??? Ícë Âö???Ýô« Ê« ∫U???¦?ÃUŁ
W½U¹bë ¡U?݃dÐ l?L?²?ł« t½«Ë ”U? WM¹b0 t?ÄuKŽ v?IKð t½« vŽœ«
¡ULK?Fë lOLł Ê«Ë ‚«d?FÃ«Ë “U−?(«Ë dB?Ä wË „UM¼ WO?ÄöÝô«
kŽu¹ Ácš«Ë ÊUÄeë dš¬ w tÐ bŽu*« w³Më u¼ t½UÐ tà «ËbNý
¨Âö?ë tO?KŽ vO?Ž ›ì¤ tðu?³½ d?Ý t½« ‰uI¹ rŁ «c?NÐ rÃU?Fë
Âö?Ýô« œu?³?FÄ Ê«Ë rÃU?Fë s?Ž ÁuH?š«Ë tK³?Á sÄ Âö?Ýô« Ác?š«Ë
44 Square brackets here and below indicate a lacuna is the printed text.
fOÃË tÐ l?L?¹ Ê–« ôË tÐ e??O1 qI?Ž ôË tÐ d??B?³¹ 5?Ž tà f}Ã
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Ád?HÂ sÄ Ád?Nþ« U?Ä «c¼ ›W?c?¤ W?Ádš ‰U?O?š ô« u¼ UÄ …u?Á tÃ
ÆdO¦Â sÄ qOKÁ «c¼Ë UH½¬ —uÂc*« tÐU²Â w tÁUH½Ë
U?N??Oë W?ÝU??Ä W?łU??(«Ë pÖ w U½u?²??Hð Ê« rJ²K?O?C? s?Ä b¹dM
Æ5MÄR*« tzUMÐ«Ë nOM(« s¹bKà «bCŽ §« rJÄ«œ«Ë
vÃUFð tOë dOIHë WOÃULAë UJ¹dÄUÐ WOÄöÝô« WK*« ÂœUš
w{UIë bL×Ä błUÄ wðUÝ
Translation
In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful.
To their excellencies, the fiulam √ of the pure Islamic
faith in Egypt.
What say you—may your virtue endure—about a man
currently living called Noble Drew (nübil dr.w. ) fiAlı, the
meaning of [his name being] the prophet who is linked to the
House of Prophecy, fiAlı,
45
alleging that he is the prophet
promised at the end of time who was announced by Jesus,
upon whom be peace, and who composed a book and called
it dhı hülı qur√ n.
46
The meaning of hülı qur√ n is the Holy
Qur√ n, which was revealed at Mecca to our lord Mu˛ammad,
upon whom be blessings and peace. However, there is not to
45 S ttı M jid seems to think the ‘Drew’ has some such meaning between
‘Noble’ and ‘fiAlı’, e.g., the noble one who drew [his ancestry from]
fiAlı. Interestingly this is how al Mahdi (Who was Noble Drew Ali?,
45) interprets the name, that ‘drew’ (past tense of ‘draw’) meant nobility
was being drawn out of the [House of] fiAlı, i.e., the Prophet’s family.
46 ‘The Holy Koran’.
47 The editor notes a lacuna caused by the document having crumbled;
the passage is restored from A˛mad, Shiy kha, 20.
be found in this book of his [any süra of the]
47
Noble [Qur√ n]
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or any ˛adıth of our Prophet Mu˛ammad, upon whom be
blessings and peace. Nevertheless, he speaks about the Mes-
senger of God and Seal of the prophets and about […] with
harsh words for which God sent down no authority.
This book contains the following:
Firstly, that he is the prophet whose coming was promised
and who was announced by Jesus, upon whom be peace,
Secondly, that it is he whom John mentioned in his vision,
in the sixth chapter [and the sixth verse], that is to say, ‘When
he opened the third seal […], he said, “Come and see”, and I
looked and, behold! There was a black horse and a rider upon
it with a scale, etc.’
48
Thirdly, that the Islam that was before him was not true
Islam and he claimed that he had garnered his knowledge in
the city of Fez and that he had met with leaders of the Islamic
religion there and in Egypt, the ˘ij z and Iraq, and that all
the scholars had testified that he is the prophet promised at
the end of time. He began to preach this to the world. Then
he said the secret of his prophecy [was] Jesus, peace be upon
him. His adoption of Islam was in former times and that
they
49
had hidden this from the world.
50
The object of worship
51
in Islam has no eye with which it sees and no intelligence
with which it reasons, nor any ear with which it hears, nor
does it have power; it is nothing but fantasy, shot through
with hocus pocus. This is what he put abroad of his unbelief
and hypocrisy in the book mentioned above and this is but a
small part of a large whole.
We ask your grace to give us a fatw about this for we
48 Revelation, 6:5, where the text reads (Authorized Version): ‘And when
he had opened the third seal, I heard the third beast say, Come and
see. And I beheld, and lo a black horse, and he that sat on him had a
pair of balances in his hand’.
49 Possibly, Noble Drew fiAli’s followers.
50 Tentative translation.
51 The following passage is unclear; it may refer to a passage in Noble
Drew fiAlı’s Holy Koran.
are sorely in need of it. May God keep you as a support of the
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pure religion and its believing sons.
The servant of the Islamic community in North America,
the poor one of Him Most High,
S ttı M jid Mu˛ammad al-Q ∂ı.
Fatw from al-Azhar
o(« s¹œË ÈbNÃUРΫbL×Ä U½bOÝ vHDB*« Áb³Ž ›ì¤
e¹eFë ◊«d vÃ≈ rNЗ Ê–UÐ —uMë vÃ≈ ULKEë sÄ ›ì¤
5F?L??ł« oK)« vKŽ t?²??−?Š tÐ -«Ë 5KÝd*«Ë ¡U??O?³½ô« tÐ ›ì¤
rà v?²??Š o(« —U???Nþ« w m?ÃUÐË W½U???Äô« Èœ√Ë d??Ä√ U???L?? ›ì¤
t —c²F* Ϋ—cŽ Ÿb¹
Æ —«dÐô« dzUÝË t³×Ë —UNÞô« tK¼« vKŽË
u¼Ë e¹e???Fë tÐU???²?? w? vÃU??F?ðË „—U??³ð §« ‰U???Á b??I??? åb??F?Ð U??Ä√ò
sJÃË rJ?ÃU?ł— sÄ b?Š√ UÐ√ b??L?×?Ä ÊU?? U?Ä5
§« bMŽ s¹bë Ê≈v
sK UM¹œ Âö?Ýô« d?O?̀ l?³?²¹ sÄËt
vÃU????F𠧫 ‰U????ÁË ˝s¹d???ÝU????)« sÄ …d????šü« w u¼Ë t?MÄ q³????I¹
t??L??Ý« Íb???FÐ sÄ wðQ¹ ‰u???ÝdРΫd??A??³???ÄË`ÎU???O??ÂU??Š
Æ ˝bLŠ√
œu????????N?????????Oë s?Ä »U????????²?J?ë q?¼√ a?O?Ðuð w? v?ÃU????????F?𠧫 m?ÃU?Ð b????????ÁË
bL×Ä .dJë w³Më «c¼ WFÐU?²Ä vÃ≈ «uŽ—U¹ rà –« È—UBMëË
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t½QÐ …b?¼U?ýË t??OK?Ž W?I??³D?M*« U??Äö??FÃUÐ W??IÞUMë rN??³??²??ÂË £
wMÐ ¡U?O?³½√ s?Ä U?L?NMOÐ sÄË v?O?ŽË vÝu?Ä tÐ d?A?Ð Ícë w³Më
«uKšœË o(UÐ «ud²?ŽU ›ì¤ ÊËdO¦Jë »U−²?Ý« bÁË qOz«dÝ≈
r?¼U?M?O?ð« s¹c?ë˚ ∫ v?ÃU?????????F?ð ‰U?????????Á 5?F?zUÞ Âö?????????Ýù« s?¹œ w?
rN?MÄ U????I¹d???? Ê≈Ë r¼¡UM?Ð√ Êu???d????F¹ U????L???? t½u????d???F?¹ »U???²?Jë
U????L?K t?½U????×?????³????Ý ‰U????ÁË ˝ Êu?????LK?F¹ r¼Ë o?(« Êu????L?????²J?OÃ
e?Ž ‰U?ÁË ˝s¹d?UJ?ë vKŽ §« WMFK tÐ «Ëd?H?? «u?d?Ž U?Ä r¼¡U?ł
o¹d? c³½ rN?FÄ U?* ‚bB?Ä §« sÄ ‰uÝ— r¼¡U?ł U*Ëq
w U¹ü«Ë ˝r¼—u?Nþ ¡«—Ë §« »U?²? »U?²?Jë «uð√ s¹cë sÄ
Æ Î«bł …dO¦Â vMF*« «c¼
Õu????{u?ë vN????²M?Ä w U????N?MŽ r?²ÃQ????Ý w²?ë WÃU?????*« d????ÄQ???? Ê–≈
v?O?Ž t?Ð d?AÐ Ícë u¼ t½√ Ë√ w³½ t?½« ›ì¤ U?ł—œ vKŽ√Ë
›ì¤ »c?J?¹ Ê√ W?¹d?????????? r?E?Ž√ t?½S????????? W?|d??????????H?ë r?E?Ž√ ›ì¤
p?¾ÃË√˚ ˝ U?Ðc????? §« vK?Ž Èd?????²?????« s2 r?Kþ√ s?ÄË˚ ÷—_Ë
vKŽ «u?Ðc? s?¹cë ¡ôu¼ œU??N??ýô« ‰u?I¹Ë r?NЗ vKŽ Êu??{d??F¹
t½√ Êu?MÄR?*« U???N?¹√ «u???L?KŽ√Ë ˝5?*UEë v?KŽ §« WM?Fà ô√ r?NЗ
U???Ä vH½√ Ê√Ë ‚b???B?ë u¼ U???N???«u???š hš√Ë …u???³Më “«u?à ÂeÃ√
Æ »cJë u¼ UNOU−¹ UÄ bý√Ë UNOUM¹
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ÊU¼dÐ lB½√ t???H½ sÄ ÂU?Á√ b?Á tMŽ r²ÃQ??Ý Ícë qłdë «c¼Ë
Ϋd?¹Ëe?ð r?ÃU????????????F?ë b???????????ý√ t?½√ v??K?Ž q?O?Ãœ l?D?Ý«Ë t?Ðc???????????? v?K?Ž
wŽb¹ t½√ «c¼ rJzU²?H²Ý« w -d?– rJ½U ¡«d²« r¼d?¦Â√Ë
ÂöÝù« ŸUL²ł≈ sÄ U¼dÒË dBÄ w ¡ULKFë dÐUÂQÐ ŸUL²ł« t½√
WKN?ł sÄ q¼U?ł pÖ qF?H¹ Ê√ §« –U?F?ÄË Á«u?Žœ vKŽ ÁËd?ÁQ?
r¼dÐU?Â√ s?Ž ö?C? rNzU?LK?Ž sÄ rÃU?Ž sŽ ö?C?? 5LK*«
£ t?Ãu???????Ý— WM?ÝË Ád???????š¬Ë t?ÃË√ s?Ä vÃU???????F?𠧫 »U???????²??????? Ê≈Ë
Á«u??Žœ w »«c?Jë «c¼ ‚b?? sÄ Ê√ «u???ô« l—QÐ ÊU¹œU?MOÃ
sÄ tÐ s¹b??²Ã« VKÞË ÁœU??³?Fà ÁU??Cð—« Ícë §« s¹œ c??³½ b??I?
U?????????N????????O?K?Ž s?ÄË ÷—ô« §« Àd¹ Ê√ v?Ã≈ ÷—_« q?¼√ l?O????????L?????????ł
o×????²????Ý«Ë r?OE?Fë ʬd????Ië s?Ä ÎU¹—Ëd????{ ÎU????LK?Ž rK?Ž U????Ä nÃU????šË
qÐ »«cJë Íd??²??H*« «c¼ lÄ d??O?F??ë »«c?Ž w? ÍbÐ_« œuK)«
§« vK?Ž 5ЫcJ?ë sÄ t?¼U???³????ý√Ë Íd???²????H*« «c?¼ œu???łË Ê≈ ‰u????I½
£ b?L?×??Ä §« ‰u?Ý— U½b?O?Ý «e??−?F?Ä sÄ tKÝ— r?N½√ ¡U?ŽœUÐ
…ö?????B?ë t?????OK?Ž tM?Ž —U?????³?????š_« X?×????? b?????I????? 5Ä_« ‚œU?????B?ë
s¹d???²???H*« 5?ЫcJë œu???łËË À«œu???(« Ác?¼ ÀËb??×?Ð Âö???ëË
tðU???Ë b???FÐ U???NMÄ d???O???¦Jë d???Nþ …d???O???¦??? »u??O???Ž ›ì¤ Èu???ŽbÐ
b??FÐ ›ì¤ Á—U??³??š√ ·d?Ž s?Ä Õu?{u?Ð pÖ rKF¹ U??L?? ›ì¤
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‰U???¦???ÄUÐ ›ì¤ Ê√ rK???Ä q —c???×???OK? «c¼ UMÄu?¹ vÃ≈ t½U???Ä“
U???O½b?ë …U??O???(« ÷d???Ž ÊËb?¹d¹ s¹cë ”U?Më vK?Ž 5ÃU???²???;« ¡ôR¼
s¹cë rK?F?O?ÝË˚ ˝ÊuK?L?F¹ U?L??Ž qU?GÐ p?З U?ÄËU
˝Êu³KIM¹ VKIMÄ Í√ «uLKþ
vÃ≈ W??BÃU?š U??NÐ b??A½ Âö?Ýô« ¡U??LKŽ d??ýU?F??Ä UM²??×?O??B½ Ác¼
“U?? b??I?? U??NK³??Á sL?? d??šü« Âu??OÃ«Ë t?Ãu?Ý—Ë §U?Ð sÄR??Ä qÂ
vÃuð s?ÄË W?Lz«b?ë …œU?F??ë W??I??O?I??×Ð d??HþË Èb??Në rO??L??BÐ
5³*« Ê«d)« √u?³ð ÍbÐô« ¡UIAë …«uNÄ w t?HMÐ vÄ— bI
›ì¤ n?O???????ÂË 5L?K??*« UM?½«u???????š√ d?zU???????ÝË pÖ §« U?½U???????ÁË ≠
Èd???²???H¹Ë ”U?Më vK?Ž »cJ¹ u¼Ë q?ÁU???Ž »«cJë «c?¼ Èu???ŽbÐ
«u???Áb????Ë t¹√— v?KŽ Áu???F?¹U???ý rN?½√ rŽe????O??? rK?Fë q¼√ v?KŽ
ÊuJ¹ nOJ ”UMë sŽ tKI½ w? ÎUMOÄ√ sJ¹ rà sL? Á«uŽœ
vKŽ Èd???²??H¹ Ê√ √d??²???ł« sÄË qłË e??Ž §« sŽ q?IMë w ÎU?MO??Ä√
rÃË W?L??OEFë W?“U?:« Ác?¼ ·“U?łË »d?G*«Ë ‚d?A?*« ¡U?LKŽ
U?L rN?OKŽ d?²?HÄ t½√ rN?½öŽ≈Ë tà rN?³¹cJ²Ð tÐU?−¹ Ê√ q−?¹
sÄ q?Š b???I???? W???U???? Âö???Ýô« ¡U???L?KŽ ÊU????KÐ Êü« s?×½ sK?F½
¡U??N??H??Ý tMŽ ÁeM²?¹ Ícë q;« ‚ö??š_« ¡u??ÝË f½bÃ«Ë W??ŠU??Áuë
…ö?????Bë r?N????O?KŽ §« ¡U?????O????³?½√ Ê√Ë rN?zU????×?K s?Ž ö????C????? ”U?Më
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v?KŽ√Ë q?zU?????C??????H?ë …Ë—– vN??????²M?Ä w? ÊuJ?¹ Ê√ V−?¹ Âö??????ëË
Æ ‚öš_« —UJÄ
¡UO³½ô« Ê√ UL tÐc b¼U?ý sÄ ≠ UMHKÝ√ UL ≠ ‰Ułbë «cN
W??−???(« tÒKK r?N??Áb?? 5?¼«dÐ rN??F???Ä Âö??Ã«Ë …ö???Bë rN???OKŽ
Æ 5*UFë »— § bL(«Ë
Æ d¼“_UÐ ¡ULKFë —U³Â W¾O¼ sÄ Íułbë nÝu¹ t³ðUÂ
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ Íułbë dB½ l«dë b³Ž
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ w³Ký nÝu¹
Æ n¹dAë d¼“_UÐ Íu½U¦Ã« rIÃUÐ ”—bÄ ÍbLŠ sŠ
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ w½U³Á Âöë b³Ž bL×Ä
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ w½«œuë bL×Ä
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ sŠ wKŽ œUOŽ
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ b¹“ vHDBÄ
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ s¹bë w×Ä bL×Ä
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ b¹eë uЫ bL×Ä §« b³Ž
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ wK̀d ÊUDKÝ tÞ
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ VOFý ‚œU
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ UMNÄ e¹eFë b³Ž
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Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ eŽ uÐ√ sŠ
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ wÄ«eFë WÄöÝ
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ WÄöÝ wMGë b³Ž
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ ÂöŽ wH}HŽ
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ gOKŽ bLŠ√
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ ÍbM'« rO¼«dÐ≈
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ bFÝ bL×Ä
Æ w½uð ≠ d¼“_UÐ ”—bÄ ¡«œdë bOFÝ bL×Ä
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ wK̀dHë ÕU²Hë b³Ž bL×Ä bL×Ä
Æ d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ wÁU³Ã« b³Ž bL×Ä
W??O??Ád??Aë »u??F??Aë sÄ ¡U??LK?Fë WKO??C??Hë »U??×??√ «¡U??C??Ä«
W}ÄöÝô«
Æ w½u²Ã« wÁË“d*« rÃUÝ bLŠ√ bL×Ä
fKЫd?Þ W¹ôuà W??FÐU??²Ã« tð«d??B??Ä sÄ t?KO??A?? œu?F????Ä b??L??×??Ä
Æ »dGë
Æ g«dÄ Æ wKŽ 5(«
Æ fKЫdÞ …œU³*« dLŽ bL×Ä
Æ wA«d*« §« b³Ž sLŠdë b³Ž
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ÆÍdz«e'« wÐdG*« VODë bOFÝ bL×Ä
ÆwKЫdDë Í—u²OHë Âöë b³Ž Ãd
Æ Ídz«e'« bL×Ä dOGBë bL×Ä
Æ Ídz«e'« bLŠ√ ‰uKł bL×Ä
Æ wKЫdDë rO¼«dЫ sÐ wKŽ sÐ dLŽ
≠ wKЫdD?ë wð«d?*« Âö?ë b?³?Ž b?L?×?Ä b??L?×?Ä tЗ b?³?Ž
tÐ v?MF?| å5ЖUJ?ë »c????Â√ t½≈ò ≠ t?zU????C????Ä≈ V½U????−?Ð V²????¤
›T³M²*«
Æ 5DK ¡ULKŽ sÄ ‚“«dë b³Ž nÝu¹
Æ 5DK sÄ wð«Ëeë bL×Ä oOuð
Æ 5DK ¡ULKŽ sÄ …œuLŠ wKŽ bLŠ√
Æ d¼“_UÐ wMODK VÃUÞ ÍËUOM³Ã« tЗ b³Ž bL×Ä
Æ d¼“_UÐ wMODK VÃUÞ wŽ«d'« bL×Ä §« b³Ž
Æ d¼“ôUÐ wM}DK ÊUŠdÝ q}Kš bÃUš
Æ 5DK ¡ULKŽ sÄ §« b³Ž bL×Ä bÄUŠ
Æ U¹—uÝ ¡ULKŽ sÄ œ—uë vHDBÄ dLŽ
Æ 5DK ¡ULKŽ sÄ Íd³F'« wKŽ ÊULOKÝ
Æ d¼“_UÐ 5DK ¡ULKŽ sÄ ‘UL)« 5Ä√ VOJý
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Æ 5DK ≠ d¼“_UÐ VÃUÞ wKOIKIë sŠ wKŽ
Æ 5DK ≠ d¼“_UÐ VÃUÞ “U³Ã« sŠ bLŠ√
Æ 5OMODKHë d¼“_« ¡ULKŽ sÄ 6ÃuÐ√ qOKš
∫ „«dðô« ¡ULKŽ …œUë «dCŠ ¡ULÝ√
Æ Êœ—_« ‚dý rO¼«dÐ≈ wMŠ
Æ Í—UÁuIë §« b³Ž dLŽ
Æ Êœ—ô« ‚dý sÄ wÂd'« ”UOÃ≈ bOLŠ
Æ Êœ—_« ‚dý sÄ wÂd'« —œUIë b³Ž ÍdJý
Æ wÃu{U½ô« »U−Š bLŠ√
Æ Í—uHÝu³Ã« Z$Uł bL×Ä bL×Ä
Æ ›ì¤
ÊU??L???Ýô« Ê«c¼¤ ÊU??²???½U??G??√ ¡U???LKŽ …œU???ë «d??C??Š ¡U???L??Ý√
∫ ›åvÃUFð §UÐ dU t½UÐ bNA½ò ULNÃuIÐ ÊUÁu³Ä
Æ WO½UG_« ‚«Ë— aOý wÃË XOÐ
Æ w½UG_« bL×Ä s¹bë œULŽ
∫ «ËUł ¡ULKŽ …œUë «dCŠ ¡ULÝ√
Æ VKD*« b³Ž qOŽULÝ≈
Æ Õu½ bL×Ä ÃU(«
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Æ bOFÝ sLŠdë b³Ž
Æ dLŽ s¹bÐUFë s¹“
Æ ÍdFý_« bL×Ä dJÐ uÐ√
Æ s¹“dŠ —uLŠ
Æ U¹d“ —U²Ä
›ì¤ sLŠdë `²
Æ ÍbOLŠ bL×Ä ÃU(«
∫ 5H¹dAë 5Äd(« ¡ULKŽ …œUë «dCŠ ¡ULÝ√
Æ wJ*« ÍË«Ëeë wKŽ nÝu¹ bOë
Æ wJ*« ÍË«Ëeë wKŽ d¼UÞ bOë
Æ wJ*« wIOM*« wKŽ bLŠ√
—U¹b?ÃUÐ wÃU????F?ë wu????Bë fK?:« ¡U???C????Ž« «d????C????Š U???F????O????Áuð
∫ W¹dB*«
wÃU?F?ë wu?Bë fK:« u??C?ŽË W?O?ðuK)« W?O?L??OMGë …œU??ë aO?ý
Æ w½«“U²H²Ã« wLOMGë bL×Ä
wu?Bë f?K:« u?C?ŽË W?}?ðuK)« W?}½U?L??ë …œU?ë Âu?L??Ž aO?ý
Æ qL'« r}¼«dЫ bL×Ä W¹dB*« —U¹bÃUÐ wÃUFë
wÃU???Fë wu???Bë fK:« u???C??ŽË W??O???Äu??O???³Ã« …œU??ë W???I|dÞ a?}??ý
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Æ wMGë b³Ž bL×Ä qC bLŠ√ W¹dB*« —U¹bÃUÐ
wu?Bë fK:« u?C?ŽË W?OÖU?Aë W}?Äö?ë …œU?ë W?I¹dÞ aO?ý
Æ W³Oý bL×Ä bL×Ä wÃUFë
WO½«œuë —U¹bë ¡ULKŽ «dCŠ ¡ULÝ√
Æ dOAÐ vHDBÄ s(« bL×Ä
Æ Í—UIÐ bLŠ« bL×Ä »U¼uë b³Ž
Æ wÐdFë tÞ bLŠ√
Æ wKŽ bL×Ä bLŠ√ „U'«
Æ ”U³Fë bL×Ä
Æ bLŠ√ d¼UDë vHDBÄ
dJÐ uÐ√ b?L?×Ä W¹d?B*« —U¹bÃUÐ W?OM̀d*« W?I¹dDë Âu?LŽ aO?ý
ÆwM̀dOÄ
Æ ÷uŽ bL×Ä W¹dB*« —U¹bÃUÐ WOM̀d*« WI¹dDë ÂuLŽ qOÂË
Translation
Thereafter:
52
God Most High and Praised said in His Mighty
Book—and He is the most truthful of speakers: ‘Mu˛ammad
was not the father of anyone of your men, but is the Messenger
of God and the Seal of the prophets’ [Q 33:4]. God Most
High also said: ‘Surely in God’s sight religion is Islam’ [Q
3:19]. He also said, Sublime is He: ‘Whoso follows other
than Islam as a religion, [this] will not be accepted from him,
and in the Afterlife he shall be one of the losers’ [Q 3:85].
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God Most High also said, speaking with the tongue of the
Messiah: ‘And giving good news of a messenger who shall
come after me, whose name is A˛mad’ [Q 61:6].
And God Most High most strongly denounced the Jews
and Christians among the People of the Scripture, since they
did not hasten to follow this noble prophet Mu˛ammad—may
God bless him and grant him peace—and their books that
speak of the signs relating to him, and bearing witness that he
is the prophet whom Moses and Jesus announced, and those
the prophets of the Banü Isr √ıl [who came] between them.
Many of them responded […] and confessed the truth and
entered obediently
53
into the religion of Islam. God Most
High has said: ‘Those to whom We gave the Scripture know
it as they know their sons; and surely a group of them conceals
the truth, while yet they know it’ [Q 2:146]. He who is Sublime
said: ‘When there came to them what they knew, they disbe-
lieved in it—then the curse of God be upon the unbelievers’
[Q 2:89].
54
And He—Mighty and Exalted is He—said: ‘When
there came to them a messenger from God confirming the
truth of what was with them, a group of those who has been
given the Scripture turned their backs on the Book of God,
[not knowing]’. And there are very many verses in this sense.
Hence the answer to the question which you posed is
extremely clear, and of the highest rank, [i.e., whether] he is
a prophet or whether he is the one spoken of by Jesus […] the
greatest falsehood. The greatest falsehood is that one should
lie […] and to earth. ‘Who is more wicked than he who
fabricates a lie against God [or says “There was revealed to
me, when nothing was revealed to him”’, Q 6:93. ‘And who
is more wicked than one who fabricates a lie against God].
Those shall be brought before their Lord, and witnesses shall
52 The basmala and other introductory formulae have been omitted.
53 The printed text reads: † √ifın, but this must undoubtedly be corrected
to: † √ifiın.
54 The printed text is corrupt.
say; “These are they who lied against their Lord”. The curse
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of God be upon the wicked’ [Q 11:18].
55
Know, O believers,
that the most convincing attribute of prophethood and the
most specific of its properties is the truth, and that what dis-
avows it most and makes it most repulsive is falsehood.
This man of whom you asked has himself established the
clearest proof of his falseness, and the most shining demon-
stration that he is the greatest liar in the world and the man
most [guilty of] perverting [the truth]. In your request for a
fatw you mentioned that he has met with the leading scholars
in Egypt and other places in the way of Islam, and that they
acknowledged his claim. God forbid that any ignorant Muslim
should do that, let alone one of the scholars—to say nothing
of the leading scholars, when the Book of God from beginning
to end, and the Sunna of His Messenger—may God bless him
and grant him peace—cry out in the loudest voice that whoever
gives credence to this liar in what he claims has repudiated
the religion of God which He approved for His servants, and
which He asked all folk of the earth to follow until God shall
inherit the earth and those upon it, and has gone against what
is known indisputably from the Mighty Qur√ n, and deserves
eternal and everlasting punishment in Hell, together with this
lying slanderer. Nay, we would say that the existence of this
slanderer and liars against God like him who claim they are
His messengers are one of the miracles of our master Mu˛am-
mad—may God bless him and grant him peace—the truthful
one, the trustworthy one, for the accounts related on his au-
thority—peace and blessing be upon him—confirm the occur-
rence of these events and the existence of liars who fabricate
a claim […] many faults, of which many were apparent after
his death […] as is known clearly by him who knows the
accounts […] after his time until now. So let every Muslim
be warned that […] the likes of these people who deceive
folk who seek the trivialities of this life and its blandishments.
‘Their Lord is not heedless of what they do’ [Q 6:130 etc.].
55 The printed text is corrupt.
‘Those who commit wickedness shall know what a reversal
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they shall suffer’ [Q 26:227].
This is our counsel, O scholars of Islam, which we direct
especially to all who believe in God and His messenger and
the Last Day. Whoever accepts it has obtained pure guidance,
and has gained true and lasting happiness. Whoever turns
aside has cast himself into an abyss of eternal misery, and has
assumed evident loss—God protect us and the rest of our
Muslim brothers from that. And how […] any discerning
man in the claim of this liar, as he lies to people and slanders
the people of learning, for he claims that they shared his view
and believed his claim. How could someone who is not honest
in what he reports of people be honest in what he reports
from God—Mighty and Exalted is He. Whoever is bold enough
to utter falsehoods against the scholars of the east and west
and to embark on such hugely reckless ventures as these, and
is not ashamed that he will be answered by their proclaiming
him a liar and announcing that he is a slanderer against them,
as we now do in the name of all the scholars of Islam, has
reached a level of impudence and baseness and immorality
that fools would disown, let alone pious folk; but prophets of
God—blessing and peace be upon them—must be at the very
highest level of virtues and of the most exalted moral character.
This imposter, as we have said before—is someone who
bore witnesses to his own lying, just as the prophets—blessing
and peace be upon them—have with them proofs of their
genuineness. To God belongs the proof. Praise be to God,
Lord of the worlds.
Its scribe: Yüsuf al-Dijwı, from the association of the
senior fiulam √ (hay√at kib r al-fiulam √) at al-Azhar.
56
fiAbd al-R fifi Naßr al-Dijwı, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
Yüsuf Shalabı, from the fiulam √ of the association (hay√a) of
56 Yüsuf b. A˛mad b. Naßr b. Suwaylim al-Dijwı, 1870-1947, a blind
M likı teacher at al-Azhar, and author of several works including a
rebuttal of fiAlı fiAbd al-R ziq’s al-Isl m wa-ußül al-˛ukm. See Ziriklı,
ix, 287.
al-Azhar.
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˘asan ˘amdı, teacher the second section (al-qism al-th nawı)
at the Noble Azhar.
Mu˛ammad fiAbd al-Sal m Qabb nı, from the fiulam √ of
al-Azhar.
Mu˛ammad al-Süd nı, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
fiAyy d fiAlı ˘asan, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
Mu߆af Zayd, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
Mu˛ammad Mu˛yı ’l-Dın, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
fiAbd All h Mu˛ammad Abü Zayd, from the fiulam √ of al-
Azhar.
‡ h Sul† n Faraghlı, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
∑ diq Shufiayb, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
fiAbd al-fiAzız Muhann , from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
˘asan Abü fiIzzat, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
Sal ma al-fiAzz mı, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
fiAfıfı fiAll m, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
fiAbd al-Ghanı Sal ma, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
A˛mad fiIllaysh, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
Ibr hım al-Jundı, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
Mu˛ammad Safid, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
Mu˛ammad Safiıd al-Radd √, teacher at al-Azhar-Tunis.
Mu˛ammad Mu˛ammad fiAbd al-Fatt ˛ al-Faraghlı, from the
fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
Mu˛ammad fiAbd al-B qı, from the fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
Signatures of their excellencies the fiulam √ on behalf of the
peoples of the Islamic East:
Mu˛ammad A˛mad S lim al-Marzüqı al-Tünisı.
Mu˛ammad Masfiüd Fashıla, from Mißur ta, which belongs
to the wil ya of ‡ar bulus al-Gharb [Tripolitania].
al-˘usayn fiAlı al-Marr kushı.
Mu˛ammad fiUmar al-Mub da al-‡ar bulusı.
fiAbd al-Ra˛m n fiAbd All h al-Marr kushı.
Mu˛ammad Safiıd al-‡ayyib al-Maghribı al-Jaz √irı.
Faraj fiAbd al-Sal m al-Fıtürı al-‡ar bulusı.
Mu˛ammad al-∑ughayr Mu˛ammad al-Jaz √irı.
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Mu˛ammad Jalül A˛mad al-Jaz √irı.
fiUmar b. fiAlı b. Ibr hım al-‡ar bulusı.
fiAbd Rabbihi Mu˛ammad Mu˛ammad fiAbd al-Sal m al-
Misur tı [sic; Mißur tı] al-‡ar bulusı. He wrote by the
side of his signature ‘He is the greatest of liars’, meaning
by this the claimant of prophecy (al-mutanabbi√).
Yüsuf fiAbd al-Razz q, from the fiulama√ of Palestine.
Tawfıq Mu˛ammad al-Zaww tı, from Palestine.
A˛mad fiAlı ˘ammüda, from the fiulam √ of Palestine.
Mu˛ammad fiAbd Rabbihi al-Biny wı, a Palestinian student
at al-Azhar.
fiAbd All h Mu˛ammad al-Jar fiı, a Palestinian student at al-
Azhar.
Kh lid Khalıl Sir˛ n, a Palestinian at al-Azhar.
˘ mid Mu˛ammad fiAbd All h, from the fiulam √ of Palestine.
fiUmar Mu߆af al-Ward, from the fiulama√ of Syria.
Sulaym n fiAlı al-Jafibarı, from the fiulam √ of Palestine.
Shakıb Amın al-Khamm sh, from the fiulama√ of Palestine at
al-Azhar.
fiAlı ˘asan al-Qulqaylı, student at al-Azhar—Palestine.
A˛mad ˘asan al-B z, student at al-Azhar—Palestine.
Khalıl Abü Laban, from the Palestinian fiulam √ of al-Azhar.
The names of their excellencies, the Turkish fiulam √:
˘usnı Ibr hım: Transjordan (sharq al-Urdunn).
fiUmar fiAbd All h al-Qawq rı.
˘amıd Ily s al-Jarkı, from Transjordan.
Shukrı fiAbd al-Q dir al-Jarkı, from Transjordan.
A˛mad ˘ajj b al-An ∂ülı.
Mu˛ammad Mu˛ammad J njaj al-Büsafürı
[…]
57
57 The editor notes that at least one name is missing at this point and
suggests, Qawq zı.
The names of their excellencies, the fiulam √ of Afghanistan:
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[these two names are preceded by the words: ‘We testify
that he is an unbeliever in God Most High’].
Bakhıt Walı, shaykh of the hostel of the Afghans (riw q al-
Afgh niyya).
fiIm d al-Dın Mu˛ammad al-Afgh nı.
The names of their excellencies, the fiulam √ of Java:
Ism fiıl fiAbd al-Mu†allib.
al-˛ jj Mu˛ammad Nü˛.
fiAbd al-Ra˛m n Safiid.
Zayn al-fi◊bidın fiUmar.
Abü Bakr Mu˛ammad al-Ashfiarı.
˘ammür ˘irzayn.
Mukht r Zakariy √.
Fat˛ al-Ra˛m n.
al-˛ jj Mu˛ammad ˘umaydı.
The names of their excellencies, the fiulam √ of the Noble
Sanctuaries [al-˘aramayn al-sharıfayn, i.e. Mecca and
Medina]:
al-sayyid Yüsuf fiAlı al-Zaw wı al-Makkı.
al-sayyid ‡ hir fiAlı al-Zaw wı al-Makkı.
A˛mad fiAli al-Munıqı al-Makkı.
The signatures of the members of the Higher Sufi Council
58
in the Egyptian lands:
Shaykh of their excellencies the Ghunaymiyya Khalwatiyya
and member of the Higher Sufi Council, Mu˛ammad al-
Ghunaymı al-Taft z nı.
Principle shaykh of the Samm niyya Khalwatiyya and member
58 The editor gives al-majlis twice by mistake.
of the Higher Sufi Council in the Egyptian lands, Mu˛am-
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mad Ibr hım al-Jamal.
Shaykh of the Bayyümiyya †arıqa and member of the Higher
Sufi Council in the Egyptian lands, A˛mad Fa∂l Mu˛am-
mad fiAbd al-Ghanı.
Shaykh of the Sal miyya Sh dhiliyya †arıqa and member of
the Higher Sufi Council, Mu˛ammad Mu˛ammad Shayba.
The names of the fiulam √ of the Sudanese lands:
Mu˛ammad al-˘asan Mu߆af Bashır.
fiAbd al-Wahh b Mu˛ammad A˛mad Baqq rı.
A˛mad ‡ h al-Arabı.
al-J k A˛mad Mu˛ammad fiAlı.
Mu˛ammad al-fiAbb s.
Mu߆af al-‡ hir A˛mad.
Mu˛ammad Abü Bakr Mırghanı, Principal Shaykh of the
Mirghaniyya [sic] †arıqa in the Egyptian lands.
Mu˛ammad fiAwa∂, deputy of the Principal Shaykh of the
Mirghaniyya [sic] †arıqa in the Egyptian lands.
Fatw from the Mafihad al-fiilmı in Omdurman
ÊUÄ—œ ÂUÐ wLKFë Ê«œuë bNFÄ
rOŠdë sLŠdë §« rÐ
£ §« ‰uÝ— vKŽ ÂöÃ«Ë …öBÃ«Ë § bL(«
Âö???Ýô« ¡U???LK?Ž sÄ …—œU???Bë Èu???²???H?ë vKŽ U?MFK?Þ« b???I??? b???FÐË
vKŽË U?J¹d??ÄQÐ …u???³Më wŽb???Ä ÊQ??ý w Ád???O??̀Ë d¼“_« lÄU???'UÐ
b???L??×???Ä b??łU???Ä wðU???Ý a}???Aë …d???C??Š U?Mà t???Äb??Á Ícë »«u???'«
∫ wðüUÐ pÖ vKŽ VO$Ë UNFÄ w{UIë
sÄ ÊUÐ b???N??A?½ Ê«œu??ÃUÐ w?LKFë b???N??F?*« ¡U??LKŽ W???¾??O?¼ s×½
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5KÝd*«Ë ¡U??O?³?½ô« -U?š £ b?L??×?Ä U?MO?³½ b??FÐ …u?³?Më wŽb¹
‰U??łœË »«c?? u¼ ʬd?I?ë hMÐ
¡U??ł U??LKÂË u??I2Ë d??U??ÂË
s¹b½ Íc?ë o(« u?N?? t½Q??ý w Âö??Ž_« ¡U??LKFë ¡ôR¼ Èu??²??HÐ
c??³M¹ Ê√ qÁU??Ž qJà qÐ rK??Ä qJ?à UM²??×?O??B½Ë t??OKŽ §«
rKFOÝË U½“Ë t³¹–UÂ_ rOI¹ ôË ÁdNþ ¡«—Ë »«cJë «c¼ ‰uÁ
Æ ÁdÄ√ W³ÁUŽ »«cJë «c¼
uÐ√ t???³ðU??Â
≥ Ê«œu???ë ¡U??L?KŽ aO???ý rýU¼ b???L??Š√ rÝU???Ië
Æ ‡¼±≤¥π ÊU³Fý
Æ Ê«œuÃUÐ wLKFë bNF*UÐ 5Ý—b*« ¡ULKFë «¡UCÄ≈
›ì¤
Æ ÊUÄ—œ ÂUÐ wLKFë bNF*UÐ qOÂË rÝUIë uÐ√ bLŠ√
wL?KF?ë b???N????F?*UÐ ÊU????Ä—œ Â√ lÄU????−Ð ”—b?*« s¹eë u?Ð√ rO?¼«dÐ≈
Æ Ê«œuÃUÐ
Æ Ê«œuÃUÐ wLKFë bNF*UÐ ”—bÄ dÁU³Ã« bOë bL×Ä
Æ bNF*UÐ ”—bÄ wЫd²Ã« 5Äô«
Æ bNF*UÐ ”—bÄ wÃËe'« vÝuÄ
Æ Ê«œuÃUÐ wLKFë bNF*UÐ ”—bÄ §« b³Ž s¹eë
ÆÊ«œuÃUÐ wLKFë bNF*UÐ ”—b*« œuL;« b³Ž bL×Ä bÄUŠ
Æ Ê«œuÃUÐ wLKFë bNF*UÐ ”—b*« vOŽ s¹bë w×Ä
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Æ wLKFë Ê«œuë bNF0 ”—bÄ ÂUÄù« rO¼«dЫ
Æ wLKFë Ê«œuë bNF0 ”—bÄ dOAÐ ÊUL¦Ž
Æ Ê«œuÃUÐ wLKFë bNF*UÐ ”—bÄ vHDBÄ bL×Ä
Æ Ê«œuÃUÐ wLKFë bNF*UÐ ”—bÄ ÊUL¦Ž w×KBë bL×Ä
Æ Ê«œuÃUÐ wLKFë bNF*UÐ ”—bÄ ÍdÝuMë .dJë b³Ž
Translation
In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful.
Praise be to God and blessing and peace upon the Mes-
senger of God, May God bless him and grant him peace.
Thereafter: We have seen the fatw put out by the fiulam √
of Islam at the Azhar Mosque and elsewhere concerning the
matter of the person claiming prophethood (nubuwwa) in Amer-
ica and the reponse which Shaykh S ttı M jid al-Q ∂ı sent to
us together with it. We reply to this as follows:
We, the association of the fiulam √ of the Mafihad al-fiilmı
of the Sudan, testify that whoever claims prophethood after
our Prophet, Mu˛ammad, May God bless him and grant him
peace, the seal of the prophets and messengers according to
the text of the Qur√ n (bi-naßß al-Qur√ n) is a liar (khadhdh b)
and a charlatan (dajj l) and an unbeliever (k fir) and an abom-
ination (mamqüt).
All that is in the fatw of these learned fiulam √ is the
truth, which we profess before God.
59
It is our counsel to
every Muslim, indeed, to every person of sound mind, to
reject the assertion of this liar and not to give his lies any
weight. This liar shall know the outcome of his deeds.
59 Reading fialayhi from the facsimile; the text has fi.l.h.
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Its scribe: Abü ’l-Q sim A˛mad H shim, shaykh of the
fiulam √ of the Sudan.
60
3 Shafib n 1349 hijriyya
61
The fiulam √ who teach at the Mafihad al-fiilmı of the
Sudan have co-signed it:
62
A˛mad Abü ’l-Q sim, deputy at the Mafihad al-fiilmı at Om-
durman.
Ibr hım Abü ’l-Zayn, teacher at the Omdurman mosque at
the Mafihad al-fiilmı of the Sudan.
Mu˛ammad al-Sıd al-B qir, teacher at the Mafihad al-fiilmı of
the Sudan.
al-Amın al-Tur bı, teacher at the Mafihad.
63
Müs al-Jazülı, teacher at the Mafihad.
al-Zayn fiAbd All h, teacher at the Mafihad al-fiilmı of the
Sudan.
˘ mid Mu˛ammad fiAbd al-Ma˛müd, teacher at the Mafihad
al-fiilmı of the Sudan.
Mu˛yı ’l-Dın fis
Ibr hım al-Im m, teacher at the Mafihad al-fiilmı of the Sudan.
fiUthm n Bashır, teacher at the Mafihad al-fiilmı of the Sudan.
Mu˛ammad Mu߆af , teacher at the Mafihad al-fiilmı of the
Sudan.
Mu˛ammad al-∑ala˛ı fiUthm n, teacher at the Mafihad al-fiilmı
of the Sudan.
fiAbd al-Karım al-Nüsirı, teacher at the Mafihad al-fiilmı of
60 Born 1275/1858-59, d. 1934; he was appointed shaykh al-fiulam √ or
President of the Board of Ulema in 1912. On his life and writings, see
ALA,
I
, 290-1.
61 24 December 1930.
62 The editor notes that the signature to the first name is missing.
63 A member presumably of the Tur bı family.
the Sudan.
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Fatw from the mufti of the Sudan
rOŠdë sLŠdë §« rÐ
vKŽ ÂöÃ«Ë …öBÃ«Ë ÁbŠË § bL(«
ÁbFÐ w³½ ô sÄ
n¹d?A?ë d¼“_« ¡U?LKŽ …œU??ë t?³?²? U??Ä ÒwÃ≈ l— b?I? ∫b??FÐ U?Ä√
w²?ë ‰«u???Áô« XF???³???²?ðË Æ r¼d???O???̀Ë Ê«œu????ë ¡U???LK?Ž q{U???_«Ë
¨ Á«uŽœ v?KŽ tÄU?Á√ ÎU½U¼dÐ UN?O b?ł√ rK …u³Më wŽb* X³?½
vÃ≈ ÃU?²% ô YO?×Ð W?L}?Á ôË UNà vMF?Ä ô W?IHKÄ ‰«u?Á√ w¼ qÐ
Æ œ—
…d rIK¹ ÈuF¹ sÄ ÊUÂ uÃË
bIMë sÄ vK̀√ ÷—_« d `³_
W????O½¬d????I?ë U¹ü« s?Ä d¼“_« ¡U????LK?Ž …œU????ë t????³????²???? U????Ä Ê√ v?KŽ
Æ t²¹«bNÐ §« Áôuð s* wHJ¹ t½S W¹u³Më Y¹œUŠ_«Ë
-U?š b?L×?Ä U½b?O?Ý bFÐ …u?³Më wŽb?¹ sÄ Ê« ‰uIë Í—U?B?ÁË
§« WM?Fà t???O?KŽ d????U??? »«c??? t?½S??? 5K?Ýd*« ÂU????Ä≈Ë 5O???³?Më
Æ 5FLł√ ”UMÃ«Ë WJzö*«Ë
ÂuÞd??)UÐ —d?Š Íd¼“_« q?O?ŽU??L?Ý≈ W??O½«œu??ë —U¹bë w²?H??Ä
±π≥∞ d³L¹œ ≤∏ o«uÄ ‡¼ ±≤¥π ÊU³Fý ∏ bŠ_« Âu¹ w
Æ
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Translation
In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful.
Praise be to God Alone, and blessing a peace be upon
whom after him there is no prophet.
Thereafter: that which the scholars of the noble Azhar,
the most worthy scholars of the Sudan and others have written
has been brought to my attention. I have studied the words
attributed to him who claims prophethood and have not found
in them any proof by which he has established his claim.
They are concocted sayings with no meaning and no value
and as such require no rebuttal.
64
‘If everyone who barked, swallowed a stone, the stones
of the Earth would be worth more than coinage!’
65
However, what the scholars of Al-Azhar have written of
Qur√ nic verses and Prophetic ˛adıth, that is sufficient for
those whom God favours with His guidance.
The gist of the matter is that whoever claims prophethood
after our master, Mu˛ammad, the seal of the prophets and the
imam of the messengers, is an unbelieving liar, upon him be
the curse of God and His angels and all people.
Mufti of the Sudanese Domains
Ism fiıl al-Azharı
Written at Khartoum on Sunday 8 Shafib n 1349 hijriyya,
corresponding to 28 December 1930 m[ıl diyya].
Fatw from al-Azhar
błUÄ wðUÝ bOë q{UHë …dCŠ
64 This would seem to imply that Ism fiıl al-Azharı had read the Holy
Koran of Noble Drew Ali, which is quite possible. He would certainly
have been able to read English.
65 An unidentified line of poetry, meaning that there is no need to take
fools seriously.
§« W???L????Š—Ë rJ?OKŽ Âö????ë
rJ?ëR???Ý vK?Ž ÎUЫu???−??? Æ b????FÐË Æ
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Ícë u¼ t½√Ë t?O¾?−0 œuŽu*« w³?Më t½√ wŽb¹ Îöł— ÊUÐ oKF?²*«
Âö?????ÝS?Ð fO?à tK?³?????Á ÊU????? Íc?ë Âö?????Ý_« Ê√Ë v??????O?????Ž tÐ d?????ÒA?Ð
Æ `O×
§« b?³?Ž sÐ bL?×?Ä U½b?OÝ b?FÐ …u?³Më vŽœ« sÄ q Ê√ ∫ b?O?H½
ʬd?Ië hMÐ d?U?ÂË UFD?Á »–U u?N? rýU¼ sÐ VKD*« b?³?Ž sÐ
t½Q?ý qł tÃu?I?Ð Âö?ë …ö?Bë t?OKŽ w³M?ë nË Ícë .dJë
-U?šË §« ‰uÝ— tMJÃË rJ?ÃUł— sÄ b?Š√ UÐ√ b?L×?Ä ÊU U?Ä˚
Æ ˝5O³Më
d?HJÐ rJ×¹ Ê√ ô≈ t²K×½Ë t?³¼c?Ä ÊU U?LN?Ä ÎULK?Ä l¹ ôË
bÁË «c¼ nOÂ Æ `O× ÂöÝSÐ fOÃ t½√ ÂöÝô« w ‰uI¹ sÄ
rJ?à XKL???Â√ Âu???O?ëvÎUM?¹œ ÁœU???³???Fà §« t???O???{—
˝UM¹œ Âö??Ý_« rJ?à XO?{—Ë w?²?L??F½ r?JOKŽ XL9√Ë r?JM¹œ
Êu*U?Fë e?−?ŽË W?FÞU?ë tðU¹¬ XMO?³?ðË WF?ÞUI?ë tMO¼«dÐ XÄU?ÁË
Æ Îôu³IÄ ÎUMFDÄ tO «Ëb−¹ Ê√ ÎUFOLł
lL?²??¹ ô ‚u?Q?Ä Ë√ d?U?? sŽ ô« —b?Bð ô …u?Žbë Ác¼ q?¦?L?
Æ tÐ œ«b²Ž« ôË tK¦* UH²Ã« ö t½uMł w t—Uý sÄ ô« tÃ
±≥µ∞ …dšô« ÈœULł ≤π
±π≥± d³Lu½ ±∞
d¼“ô« lÄU'« aOý
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Official Translation of the al-Azhar fatw
The Reverend Sayed Sati Majid.
May the Peace and Blessings of Allah be with you. In
reply to your inquiry concerning a man who claims to be the
promised prophet whose advent Jesus Christ proclaimed and
asserts that the Islam which existed prior to him is not the
true Islam, we hereby inform you that whosoever claims
prophethood after the prophet Mohammed son of Abdullah,
son of Abdul-Muttalib, son of Hashim, is postively an imposter
and a disbeliever in the very text of the Holy Quran which
says of the Prophet, on whom be peace:
‘No man from among you can claim Mohammed for a
parent, but he is the Apostle of Allah and the seal of the
Prophets’.
No Moslem is there, whatever his sect or creed, but would
readily condemn to apostasy and disbelief whosoever says of
Islam that it is not true Islam which the Lord has pleased to
give unto mankind as signified in the verse:
‘This day have I perfected your Religion for you and
completed mine favours upon you and chosen Islam of all
other religions, to be the accepted religion unto Me’.
The truth and clear signs of Islam have been definitely
established and the learned men have failed to find a reasonable
criticism whereby to assail it.
Such a claim, therefore, could only be made by an unbe-
liever or a mentally-deranged person, and only those of like
mentality would follow him.
No importance, therefore, should be attached to him and
he should be completely ignored.
Sheikh Al-Jamii-Al-Azhar (sig.)
66
Issued at Cairo on the tenth of November, 1931.
The above is a true translation of the original Fatwa in
66 The shaykh al-Azhar in 1931 was Mu˛ammad al-A˛amadı al-∆aw hırı
(1930-35); Sonya Qurr fia, Ta√rıkh al-Azhar fı alf fi m, Cairo 1968,
420.
Arabic.
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[illegible signature]
[seal]
(b) Some Letters to S ttı M jid
(1) Shiy kha, opp. p. 49.
3 Nimick [Place]
Wilk[insburg, Pa]
Dec. 17, 1928
Respectable Father Sheich of Islam of America.
Rev. Majid Mohommad.
Hon. Sir,
We your children of the Moslem faith write you these
few lines to inform you that we are well and are doing very
well at the time present. Our Membership is still increasing.
Also you will find enclosed the letter which we were supposed
to send you and tonight we are mailing you twelve (12) letters
which we were to make out and send to you. Thanking you
for the many kind words that you spoke to us when you were
in our presence. We also pray for your success in your long
journey. I will close by saying God be with you.
Yours truly
Elijah Mohommed
67
(2) Shiy kha, opp. p. 55
516 Singer Place,
Pittburgh, Pa.,
Feb 29, 1932
Asalam u-alaikum
67 This is not the Elijah Muhammad, who in 1928 was living in Hamtramck,
a predominantly Polish suburb of Detroit (see Clegg, An Original
Man, 15) but probably the same as Mohammed Elias, the author of
letter 5 below. We thank Dr Knut S. Vikør for his assistance in clarifying
this issue.
Rev Magid Mohammad
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Kind father I am writing to you in regards [sic] to my
health. Also the family. I guest [sic] you think we have forgotten
you, but we still have you in mind, and speak of you so often.
Also Mr. Mohammad S.L. Deen. We have been looking [for-
ward] to get a letter from you, giving us some information
about the convention that was held over their [sic] a short
while ago. You and Mr. E.L. Deen promissed to let us know
the outcome of the convention. I did not chance to visit the
Cleveland & New York branches, owing to the fact money is
so very scarce in the country, it is very diffecult to travel.
Never the less I will make a special effort to visit them this
spring. The muslams in Pittsburgh are still pressing forward.
We desire the good wishes and prayers of the muslams over
there.
(3) Shiy kha, opp. p. 58
516 Singer Place,
S.E. Pittsburgh Pa
May 18, 1932
The Sheikh El-Sayid Majid
Peace be upon you
Dear Father:
We gladly received your letter and [I] am delighted to
know that you are wo[rking for] the interest of the society
over [there]. We are trying to do all that we can do here
although you must know that everything is very slow over
here at the present time.
Now Father those books which you were talking about I
would like for them to be translated in English as much as
possible.
I received the magazine and I am very much pleased
with it. I am trying to get subscribers, as many as I can.
I am still expecting those papers from the Government
you told me you were going to send.
Father the idea of establishing a trade between Sudan,
Egypt, Abyssinia is very pleasing and I have four men in
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mind who I think will be able to take care of the matter.
I am expecting to go to Cleveland on Sunday the 29th of
May. I am also [expecting] a hearing from New York at most
any time.
Now just as soon as I make this [trip] I will write to you.
I am sorry to say that there is very [little] money in the
treasure just at this time, but we will try and send you [just?]
as soon as possible something towards the expense.
Well I guess we will close. All friends members send to
you their Salam u aleykum.
We all send our assalam u alaikum to Muhomed [E.] El
Deen.
E.L. Martin Pres.
Helena Kleely Sec. per.
(4) Shiy kha, opp. p. 61
Bissmal Arrahaman Arrahem
516 Singer Place
Pittsburg Pa
Jan. 18, 1933
[…] Sayed S. Majid Mohomed
Sheikh of Al Islam of the U.S.A.
Dear Sir,
I have not heard from you for a long time so I thought I
would write you a few lines to see how you are getting on.
We have not been getting any mail, I mean letters, from
you but we have been getting the magizines [sic] every week.
Now Father about the magizine, we would like [them] to be
translated. There are so many Muslims who would like to
read them in English. Especially this month’s issue ‘Rahadam’.
Now Father we would like for you to pay strict attention
to this letter as it is very important and we need your advice.
Now to explain the condition first. We have had a very
good Branch of Muslims in a little town called Bradock,
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Penn., and have been doing very well until Mooree James
68
heard about our good success. Then he came out there and
done every thing he could do to disturb the peace of the
Society, to such an extent that he has partly broke up the
branch and are [sic] causing the members to fight among
themselves.
Father I am sure you remember this Mooree James. How-
ever he has been [voted?] out of the Society [(3) three years]
ago on account of the disturbance he kept in the Society.
Which he started right after you left the Country […]
69
(5) Shiy kha, after p .66
Aslam—Ulaickom
In the name of the most merciful God
Said Majid Mohammed
21 Nimick Place
Wilkinsburg, Pa
Sept. 11, 1935
Kind Father,
We are writing you in regards to our health and in the
interest of the African Moslems Welfare Society all are very
good. We wrote you several months ago answering the letter
we received from you and in the meantime we were looking
for a reply to this same letter. We spoke to you in regards to
the translation of some books. You mentioned in your letter
the cost of this translation
70
but we did not quite understand
if […] was in Egyptian figures. So, please provide us these
figures in English so as we can respond in […] possible. We
are under the impression that you have been very busy […]
68 The editor of Shiy kha reads Müdı (i.e. Moody) James, but the name
is clearly given below.
69 Unsigned and incomplete, but from the handwriting it must be from
E.L. Martin.
70 Probably a reference to S ttı M jid’s project to publish a translation
of the Gospel of St. Barnabas.
we have received no reply. We are searching the newspapers
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every day to see what the outcome will be in the Ethiopians
and Italians dispute. We sympathize for these people as we
are a part of them and do hope and pray that these matters
will be settled without any injury to these peoples and that
great country. We hope some day that we shall be able to
return back to our home land Africa, Inshalah. I would be
glad if we could colonize in or near Abyssinia as we feel that
we need a colony. Others are colonizing there or near there
and we would like to do the same. We are still working in the
interest of Islam and expect by the help of Allah to continue.
We also hope and pray for your success with the people
there. You spoke of a convention and we feel that a convention
between the two groups would be very necessary. If you still
have this in mind please give us a long notice and we shall
prepare to meet you all over there Inshalah. Father, if you can
possibly find time please write us at […] and don’t forget the
names that I sent you for changing. Hoping and praying to
hear from you soon.
Yours Truly
Mohammed Elias
71
(6) Shiy kha, after p. 71.
From the context the following letter would appear to be from S ttı
M jid, writing from Egypt, but the poorness of the English by contrast
to his other English-language letters is striking.
My Dear Sons
You mentioned in your letter the last one who called by
the name of the moslems after me, the brother ‘Ali Hassan El
Hadi’.
This man I know him well, so I advise you to care much
for him till I come and be generous to him as he got a white
hand on Islam and had good previous services but deeply
71 The name is illegible, reconstructed from the Arabic translation; A˛mad,
Shiy kha, 71: Mu˛ammad Ily s.
regret, he served more over than 30 years and did his best to
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shelter those who emigrated from Moslems to there.
So, please do every assist to him till I return back.
But the names who entered in Islam, I will introduce
their names to Ulemas of Azhar to choose good names for
them to be mercied by them too.
And began by this, the great professor El Cheikh El Hag
Abdel Samad Diab, who always applause to Allah for your
progress.
The names are written inside this letter, so I beg to ask to
register their names in the Register book of the Association
by Arabic and english, also their names before entering the
Islam as they can know each other.
We are working continuously to write the word of Moslems
day and night and my idea is no unity without a society to
collect all are spread here and there. At last we have decided
to establish a society by the name of ‘ISLAMIC UNITY
ASSOCIATION or the ISLAM MEN’. The association has
been established. As the situation of this beloved Society in
the biggest place of Islam and has its branches. Its residence
in Al Azhar College ‘Mosque’ in Cairo.
This mosque, is the largest one religious collect in it all
different nations of each race. Chinese, Indian, Japanese, Iran,
Arabic, African Russian Turkish, Moroccan all approve Allah
is one and trust in his Prophet and all do what Allah sends to
him of the sacred book (The Koran) of which no lies come
out of it all.
But your election of good respected members.
(7) Letter to Khan Bahadur A˛mad fiAl √ al-Dın
72
(Shiy kha,
opp. p. 73).
Mawlana Khan Bahadur Ahmed Alaadine
Sir,
With most respect, applicant,
72 We have been unable to identify him.
Sayed Magid Mohamed,
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Mawlana,
I lived in Northern America a period of 30 years arising
[sic] the Islamic Religion.
Nearly 45 thousands have entered the faith of the Amer-
icans,
73
and when I saw many Indians and Afghanistan[is], I
erected a society
74
there under the name of ‘African Moslem
Welfare Society of America’ United of Moslems.
I came to my home Sudan to visit my family. I brought
with me papers to advise the High […] in 1929 of erecting a
mosque there.
I have ordered to pass all spots for [consoling?] Moslems.
I am determined to visit Hyderabad.
As all Moslem nations love your person so I beg to ask
to help us financially to enable me to return back to America
as I left behind me agents there.
I am in need for that expenses of travelling to America.
Allah keeps your person as a defend [sic] for moslems.
(8) Letter from S ttı M jid to the Civil Secretary,
75
the Sudan
Government (Shiy kha, opp. p. 75).
The Civil Secretary,
Sudan Government
Sir
Your kindness for the suffering people does not make
any […] what kind of people or from what tribe.
All your kindness and generousness all over the world
for the weak men in U.S.A. is encouraging me to put down
the following application for special consideration.
73 Apparently in margin, ‘millions’. The ms appears to be a draft of
letter or translation with various corrections between the lines.
74 On line, ‘published’.
75 The Civil Secretary was the ‘Prime Minister’ of the British
administration of the Sudan. For much of the 1930s the position was
held by Sir Douglas Newbold.
76 A district just south of Khartoum, now known simply as Shajjara.
Most of our relatives, who lived at Gordon Tree,
76
are
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suffering much trouble from humble and uninhabitable houses,
so I should be grateful if you kindly pay attention to the
attached application with special consideration.
Awaiting your reply I remain
your obedient servant,
Sati Magid Sati Mohamed
(9) Shiy kha (after p. 79).
All praise is done to Allah the Lord of the world and Iraq,
and Salam on the Sir of prophets and Messenger.
In the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful.
Dear Sons,
Member of the Islamic Benevolent African Society in
North America. I do send to you my Slam and those who are
faithful of the East specially those who are residing in Egypt,
Sudan, Palestine, Hagadj
77
and Irak. Best wishes from the
Learned of the Islamic Religion who work day and night, for
the benefit of this religion.
Best wishes to you and all of your home Natives full of
Faith and to all your neighbourhood who are justfully follow
the right and the injust to be away.
I do repeat my wishes from a heart full with confidence
and heartly love and to all population of the United States.
Best wishes to [all] of our respect religion of whom chosed
by Allah to his creatures.
That is the true religion written in Bible and Zabour,
Angel
78
and Coran before the priests and months [sic, ‘monks’]
change in whom every prophet been ordered to inform each
of his nation by their tongue.
It has been informed that our prophet Mohamed graced
and prayed by Allah for him, that he is the first the creature
77 Persumably the Hijaz.
78 Injıl, that is the New Testament.
created from his light and for him created all creatures and
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look the world from them.
79
‘And when Allah made a Covenant through the prophets’.
Certainly what I given you of Book and wisdom—then an
apostle comes to you verifying that which is with you, you
must believe in him, and you must aid him. He said: Do you
affirm and accept my compact in the matter? They said: Then
bear witness and I too am of the bearily of witness with you.
Whoever, therefore turnaback after this, this is that are
the transgressors. It is then other than Allah’s [religion] that
they seek to follow and to Him [surrender those who are in
the heavens]
80
and the earth willingly or unwillingly and to
Him shall they be returned. Say: We believe in Allah and
what has been revealed to us and what was revealed to Abraham
and Ismail and Isac and Jacob and the tribes and what was
given to Moise and Jesus and to the Prophets from their Lord,
we do not make a distinction between any of them and to
Him do we submit and whoever desires a religion other than
Islam, it shall not be accepted from him and in the there after
he shall be one of the losers.
How shall Allah gindle [sic, guide] a people who disbe-
lieved after their believing and after they had borne witness
that the apostle was true and very clear arguments had comets
[sic, come to] them and Allah does not gindle the injust people.
79 A reference to the doctrine of nür mu˛ammadı or the ‘Mu˛ammadan
Light’, created by God before the cosmos.
80 Reconstructed from the Arabic translation; Ahmad, Shiy kha, 82.
81 Ahmad (Shiy kha, 82-3) gives an Arabic translation of the remainder
of this khu†ba.
[…]
81
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