Brace College Publishers, 1998).
Chiragh Ali
(1844–1895) 19th-century Indian
religious reformer and secularist thinker
Chiragh Ali was a Kashmiri Muslim who served in
the British government of north i
ndia
in his early
career. In 1877, he was appointed to the court of
the nizam (ruler) of Hyderabad, where he served as
the revenue and political secretary. He was a close
ally of s
ayyid
a
hmad
k
han
(d. 1898), the leading
advocate for modern Islamic reform in India after
the 1857 uprising against British rule that resulted
in the end of the m
Ughal
dynasty
and marked
the demise of Muslim rule in that land. Ali is best
known for books and essays that articulated the
Aligarh program for Islamic modernization in the
late 19th and early 20th centuries. He maintained
that the q
Uran
was authoritative in matters of
worship and morality but denied that it provided
an infallible blueprint for government or legisla-
tion. He objected to British Orientalists, Chris-
tian missionaries, and Muslim traditionalists who
claimed that Islam endorsed theocratic govern-
ment (the combination of religion and the state)
and that Islamic law was unchangeable. Instead,
he insisted that Islamic government and the
sharia
were largely human creations that adapted
to changing historical circumstances in different
localities. His interpretation of
Jihad
was that it
was a
defensive strategy used by m
Uhammad
and
the first Muslims when threatened with attack;
it was never intended to legitimate aggression in
the name of religion. He was critical of British
colonial rule in India, for he charged them with
having turned the country into a great prison—a
situation that would only bring about the “decay”
of the people. He called for political liberty and
thought it could best be achieved under the sov-
ereignty of the Ottoman
sUltan
, who at that time
was trying to resuscitate the Ottoman Empire in
order to hold off the European powers. This does
not mean that he wanted a return to the old ways
of Muslim rule in India, however. He charged that
traditional Islamic legal rulings concerning gov-
ernment, slavery, concubinage, marriage, divorce,
and the status of non-Muslims were not suited to
the needs of modern Muslims, and he called for
their revision or elimination. Ali recognized that
his views were controversial but believed they
provided a basis upon which Muslims could erect
a platform for progressive change and freethink-
ing in the modern era. His life’s work, therefore,
contributed significantly to the formation of the
modern Islamic liberal tradition in South Asia.
See also o
rientalism
; o
ttoman
dynasty
;
reneWal
and
reForm
movements
;
secUlarism
.
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