The relationship has experienced all the imaginable consequences
of a meeting of two of the greatest civilisations in human
history - animosity and alliance, coexistence and conquest
and perhaps the greatest exchange of ideas and knowledge
ever. Islam first came to Europe from the south through
Spain, which was ruled by Muslims from 711CE to 1492CE -
some seven hundred years! Sicily was governed by Muslims
for over two hundred years, between 831CE and 1091CE. Gibraltar
(Jabal Tariq - the rock of Tariq) is even named after the
Muslim general Tariq-al-Ziyad.
Over the centuries small, autonomous communities of Muslims
have existed in France, Germany, Switzerland and Southern
Italy. Muslims ruled the Balkans from 11th century onwards.
When the Ottoman Turkish Muslims came to power in the 14th
century they consolidated Islam in most of Eastern Europe
and the Balkans.
Islam brought to these lands a new and vibrant civilisation.
Many people embraced the new faith and contributed to the
enrichment and preservation of Islamic culture. Christians,
Muslims and Jews lived together in peace and harmony as
followers of the Abrahamic faith and Europe experienced
a truly golden era of tremendous prosperity and brilliant
scientific achievements.
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Islam in Britain
Of all the countries of Western Europe Britain has always
had a “special relationship” with the Muslim
world. Initially, Muslims landed on these Isles as explorers
and traders. Trade was so important to King Offa of Mercia,
a powerful Anglo-Saxon king of the 8th century famous for
building Offa’s dyke, that his coins have the inscription
of the declaration of faith of Islam (There is no god but
Allah) in Arabic. |
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Later the relationship was dominated by the Crusades and
the Brits played their part. For instance, the sacking of
the Muslim city of Lisbon in 1147 during which perhaps 150,000
Muslims were massacred, was largely the work of soldiers
from Norfolk and Suffolk. But England was the first country
in Europe where medieval images of Islam were later to be
challenged.
By the 14th century following the crusades and the introduction
of several Muslim cultural traditions into British life,
from the paisley to the arch to spices and the very concept
of chivalry, the Muslim world was admired and respected
for its scholarship and advances in all fields of knowledge.
Muslim scholarship such as that of Razi, Avicenna (Ibn Sina)
and Averroes (Ibn Rushd) formed the backbone of intellectual
and scholarly life in Britain.
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The
Ottoman Empire
From the 16th century onwards, Britain was closely engaged
with the Islamic world as the Ottoman Empire expanded
westwards through central Europe and the Mediterranean,
and Britain’s trade network expanded eastwards
to meet it. By the 1620Õs, the Turkish naval
presence had extended its reach into the waters of the
British Isles and there occurred various naval skirmishes
and raids inland. What was really worrying the Stuart
authorities was that some of these raids were being
led by Englishmen who had converted to Islam and “turned
Turk”. |
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During the reign of Elizabeth I there were considerably more
Englishmen living in North Africa than in all the nascent
North American colonies: 5,000 English converts were resident
in Algiers alone. British travellers in the East regularly
brought back tales of their compatriots who had “crossed
over” and were now prospering in Ottoman service.
One of the most powerful Ottoman eunuchs during the late
16th century, Hasan Aga, was the former Samson Rowlie from
Great Yarmouth, while in Algeria the “Moorish King’s
Executioner” turned out to be a former butcher from
Exeter called “Absalom” (Abd-us-Salaam). There
was also the Ottoman general known as “Ingliz Mustapha”;
in fact a Scottish Campbell who had embraced Islam and joined
the Janissaries.
In a great many cases, the Englishmen who converted to
Islam were not slaves but free merchants or Servants of
the Crown who were attracted by what they saw. Soon after,
trade with the Ottoman Empire began to flourish, and by
the end of the 17th century trade with Turkey accounted
for one quarter of all England’s overseas commercial
activity
The ambassador Sir Thomas Shirely warned that “conversation
with infidelles doeth mutch corrupte”, and that the
more time Englishmen spent in the lands of Islam, the closer
they moved to adopting the manners of the Muslims. Islam
overpowered the English by its power of attraction, not
by the sword; in 1606, even the British consul in Egypt,
Benjamin Bishop, converted and promptly disappeared from
public records.
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Dr Henry Stubbe
By the sixteenth and seventeenth century Islam and the Muslim
world was part of the elite in society. The 1st British
Muslim whose name survives in an English source, The Voyage
Made To Tripoli (1583) was a “son of a yeoman of our
Queen’s Guard ... his name was John Nelson."
The universities of Oxford and Cambridge established Chairs
of Arabic in the 1630’s, and scholars in Britain relied
heavily on translations from Arabic in the fields of mathematics,
astronomy and medicine throughout the mediaeval period and
the Renaissance. A rendering of the Qur’an in English
was produced by Alexander Ross in 1649. Although much had
been said against Islam, the Prophet Muhammed and Muslims
in general, in England there appeared to be the first indications
of a more balanced view
Dr Henry Stubbe is the first European Christian to write
favourably of Islam. He was educated at Westminster and
Oxford, and worked as a physician in Warwick, and as personal
physician to King James. His biographer Anthony Wood described
him as “the most noted person of his age that these
late times have produced.” He was also a scholar,
who had mastered Latin, Greek and Hebrew, and was fully
conversant with the new critical scholarship on the Bible.
Putting all these gifts together, and thanks to his friendship
with Pococke, the Laudian Professor of Arabic in Oxford,
he wrote a book, which for the nineteenth century would
have been advanced, but which for the seventeenth is positively
astounding. Just the title alone gives some hint of this:
“An Account of the Rise and Progress of Mahometanism,
and a Vindication of him and his Religion from the Calumnies
of the Christians.”
The book was never published but at least six manuscripts
were circulated in a more or less clandestine fashion. No
fewer than three of them were preserved in the private library
of the Revd John Disney, who at the beginning of the 19th
century shocked the established church by publicly converting
to Unitarianism.
Dr Stubbe died in 1676, after being accused of heresy,
and spending some time in prison.
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British India
The British East India Company, which was formed in 1600,
wanted to cash in on the profitable spice trade of the East.
But competition from the Dutch drove the company to India,
which was ruled by a powerful Muslim dynasty, the Mughals.
As a rich and sophisticated civilisation, India was at the
centre of a vast network of trade.
From a few trading centres, called factories, the East
India Company built up a profitable pattern of trade. This
had a revolutionary effect on British economy and society.
In the 18th century it became more powerful and had its
own army, which it used to conquer territories.
As the Mughal empire declined, the company gradually extended
British rule over a large part of India. British control
of India, through trade, conquest and colonization, resulted
in a gradual migration of many classes of Indians to Britain,
including servants, sailors and students. The intermingling
of Indian and British ideas, religions and ways of life
led to a vibrant multiculturalism of the East India Company.
However, that was not to last after the rise of the Victorian
Evangelicals and the coming of the Memsahibs.
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The
Munshi
Many young British men went to India as employees
of the Company in search of fortune. They returned
to Britain as a new class of rich men, the “Nabobs”,
and brought their Indian servants with them. British
families employed Indian nannies, called ayahs, to
look after their children during the long voyage back
to Britain. Once in England, the nannies were discharged
and left to make their own way home. Some were able
to get back, others were left stranded.
Queen Victoria became Empress of India in 1877, but
she never went there. In 1887, after her Golden Jubilee,
several Indian servants and their wives joined the
royal household. Abdul Karim, the munshi (teacher),
was the Queen’s favourite. He later became her
secretary. The Queen took lessons in Hindustani from
him and encouraged ladies at court to do the same.
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Abdul Karim received the title of “Companion of the
Indian Empire”, a great honour. All this attention given
to an Indian servant horrified the court and, after Queen
Victoria’s death, Abdul Karim was sent back to India.
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Mahomed’s
Baths
There were also a number of Muslim businesses
in the nineteenth century, of which one of the best
known was the fashionable "Mahomed’s Baths"
on the sea front in Brighton by Sake Deen Mahomed. He
was born in Patna in India in 1759. In 1784 Mahomed
came to Britain with Captain Baker, an officer in the
East India Regiment. He settled in Cork, Ireland, where
he met his future wife, Jane, with whom he eloped to
get married. His book, Travels of Dean Mahomet, was
published in Ireland in 1794. It describes the conquest
of India by the East India Company from an Indian point
of view. |
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From Cork, Mahomed moved to London, where he ran a coffee
house. Later he went to Brighton, a popular health resort.
Mahomed opened his Vapour Baths and Shampooing (massaging)
Establishment in 1815. At first he was met with prejudice
and medical opposition and patients stayed away. He then offered
free treatment to some patients and they found that his remedies
worked where others had failed. Soon, the rich and fashionable
from all over Britain and Europe flocked to Mahomed’s
baths, and doctors sent their patients to him. King George
IV appointed Mahomed as his personal “Shampooing Surgeon”
in 1822, an appointment which William IV continued. Mahomed
was a generous man and even treated the poor free of charge.
In 1822, Mahomed’s medical book, Shampooing or Benefits
Resulting from the Use of Indian Medical Vapour Bath, was
published. His success influenced others to set up shampooing
baths in Brighton.
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Lascars
For many centuries Arabs traded by sea with China,
Malay, India, African and Mediterranean coasts. They established
communities from Zanzibar to Bombay. In the course of conquering
and colonising these territories, Britain hired many people
from foreign seafaring communities - Arabs came from Yemen
and Indians from Bengal, Gujarat. Punjab and Sind. They
were called Lascars and by 1842 some three thousand of them
visited British ports annually. Between 1830 and 1903 some
forty thousand foreign seamen sailed with British war and
merchant ships, most spending some time in British ports,
either in transit or discharged. They stayed with those
of the same nationality and language in authorised boarding
houses.
Seamen of all nationalities often worked for low pay and
long hours in terrible conditions. Lascars often suffered
under cruel officers and became distraught and diseased.
Many did not brave the journey home and sought better and
safe jobs on shore. Some worked in the booming dockyards
or opened small shops while the new railways led others
to industries in the North. However most were illiterate
and became street sweepers, beggars and peddlers in London's
dockland areas of Shadwell, Wapping and Poplar. Living conditions
were deplorable - often eight to a room, with many dying
of starvation and exposure.
Thomas Clarkson fought against slavery and in 1822 he investigated
the plight of the Lascars. Writing to the government achieved
little, and Christian charities could not afford to provide
refuge until 1855 when Maharaja Dulup Singh became a Christian
and donated £500. More donations followed including
£300 from Queen Victoria and £5,000 from visiting
Indian princes.
On June 3rd 1857 the Strangers home was opened on West
India Dock Road, Limehouse, and London. It sheltered two
hundred and became a centre for the rehabilitation of destitute
Lascars.
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Salter
Street
Joseph Salter was a missionary in the Chapel Street
district of London (now Edgware Road) in 1853. He
helped many Muslims and became interested in their
religion and culture. In the late 1850s he befriended
the Nawab of Surat in Paddington and the Queen of
Oude (India) in Marylebone. He learned about Islam
from them and from the many merchants and students
of law and medicine visiting London.
In 1857 he was appointed to the Strangers Home. The
home became a national institution and seamen disembarking
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would travel straight there! In sixteen years some sixteen
thousand Lascars visited the homes and over thirteen hundred
were fed and clothed. The home survived until 1935, when it
was converted into flats and named West India House by Stepney
Borough Council.
For thirty-nine years Joseph Salter served the community
of Lascars as helper and teacher. Glimpses of his life can
be obtained from his diaries “The Asiatic in England”
and “The East in The West”. All that remains
however, is a street named after him in the East End of
London.
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Zawiyahs
By the 1890s politicians and industrialists began to be
concerned with the plight of seamen. In 1911 Havelock Wilson
led seamen into a national union and strike action against
their deplorable conditions. Cheap foreign labour was attacked
for costing British jobs and by 1912 some 9,000 foreign
seamen lost their jobs. The unions insured that those remaining
had better pay and conditions.
More foreign seamen settled down and started small businesses.
Small communities began to grow in Liverpool, Cardiff and
Tyneside. They were mainly Arabs from Yemen. By 1948 there
were some 850 Muslims in Tyneside. Many married local women
some of whom converted to Islam. They looked after their
homes and children while their husbands were at work or
at sea. They worked in shops and improved understanding
with the local people.
Within increasing stability and growing families the Yemenis
tackled their Islamic needs. Many followed the Sufi traditions
of the Allow and Shadhilli Tariqas. They made contributions
from the community to set-up Zawiyahs (small mosques) for
all. A Zawiyah occupied part of a house where around fifty
Muslims could pray together. Here the rites of Nikah (marriage),
aqikah (birth,), khita (circumcision) and janazah (funeral)
were performed and the festivals of Eid celebrated. Islam
was taught to the old and young in small classes. Needy
Muslims found shelter in the Zawiyahs which became the heart
of the community. Bonds of friendship and kinship were formed
there and some intermarriage also took place.
Women brought stability and family life to the community.
They were often outcasts from their own families for marrying
Muslims. Shiekh Al-Hakimi was the imam of the Cardiff Zawiyaha.
One woman said, " ... before the Sheikh came we felt
we were only Arab wives, but after his arrival we felt differently.
We felt better. We had our own religion and priest and we
are proud of it." The Sheikh set up visiting and nursery
facilities for women. The zawiyah was a source of strength
and comfort for them and they returned that strength to
the community. They raised their children as good Muslims
and helped them adjust to the wider community. Three children
by English mothers went to Al-Azhar in Egypt to study Islam
- the community paid their expenses!
Sheikh Al-Hakimi died in 1934 in Cardiff and was succeeded
by Sheikh Ahmad. He became politically active and had much
contact with the government over the future of Yemen. His
local community supported him but refugees and expatriates,
who placed politics before religion, undermined him. He
finally left the country.
The two world wars broke up the close-knit communities
of Cardiff and Tyneside as many Yemenis went to work in
the munitions factories of Sheffield, Birmingham and elsewhere.
In the 1950s many Muslims arrived from other countries with
different traditions and slowly zawiyahs declined in importance.
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Quilliam
William Henry Quilliam of Liverpool had the largest
advocacy practice in the North. His ancestor, John Quilliam,
was at the helm of the victory at Trafalgar. In 1882
he visited Southern France to recover from overwork
and crossed over to Algeria and Morocco. There he learned
about Islam and in 1887 he became a Muslim. He returned
to Liverpool in 1889 to spread Islam as Sheikh Abdullah
Quilliam. Converts included his sons, prominent scientists
and professionals. His mother was a Methodist activist
until 1893 when at the age of 63 she converted. Local
Muslims called her Khadijah (Mother of the Faithful).
With them Quilliam set up a prayer and meeting room
in Mount Vernon Street. |
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He published three editions of the Faith of Islam, which was
subsequently translated into thirteen languages. He became
famous throughout the Islamic world.
The Sultan of Turkey made him Sheikh-ul-Islam of Britain.
and his son became British Consul General in Turkey. The
Sultan of Morocco made him an Alim and the Shah of Persia
appointed him a Consul.
The Sultan of Afghanistan sent him a gift of £2,500.
Quilliam used this to set up the Islamic Institute and Liverpool
Mosque in Broughton Terrace, Liverpool. A hundred Muslims
could pray there. The khutbah (sermon) was in Arabic and
English. A printing press started publishing The Crescent,
a weekly and the monthly Islamic Review.
At the time there were almost two thousand illegitimate
births annually in Liverpool and many women turned to the
Institute for help. In 1896 Quilliam founded the Medina
Home
to care for children and find them Muslim Foster families.
The Institute started a Muslim College with courses for
Muslims and non-Muslims in arts, science and law. Teachers
included
Professor Haschem Wilde and Professor Nasrullah Warren.
A weekly Debating and Literary Society attracted non-Muslims.
They were also invited to the Institute for prayers and
sermons on Sunday. There was singing from Quilliam’s
collection of Hymns for English speaking Muslims. These
meetings brought a hundred and fifty non-Muslims to Islam
by 1896. Quilliam always faced opposition, arguing for,
amongst other things, muezzins and the cessation of British
interference in Sudan. As his success increased, the level
of harassment worsened. Parts of the Church and media were
quite antagonistic. Finally he left for the East in 1908,
and his absence led to the decline of the Institute and
Mosque.
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Woking
Mosque
Before 1914 the chief centres of organised British Islam
were Liverpool, London and Woking. London’s transient
community of Muslims, mainly students from India, was
growing. An Islamic Society existed from 1907. This
was the successor to the Pan-Islamic Society which itself
had taken over from Anjuman-i-Islam, founded in 1886.
The Society issued a monthly journal, Light of the World,
and reprinted Dr Stubbe’s Rise and Progress of
Mohammadanism. A fund was set up for Muslim soldiers,
widows and orphans of the wars. Its patrons included
Balfour, Lloyd George and Chamberlain. A central mosque
was planned based on the mosque which served thirty
thousand Muslims in Paris. The Nizam of Hyderabad donated
£60,000 but sadly the project was not completed. |
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In 1884 Dr Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner, an Orientalist and traveller
born in Budapest in 1840, left his post as Principal of Punjab
University, where he had been for 20 years and came to England.
As a linguist, his great ambition was to create an institute
for Oriental learning and literature in the form of an Islamic
University. In 1889 Professor Leitner built the mosque with
money from Her Highness the Begum Shah Jahan, ruler of the
Bhopal State, after whom the mosque was named. Publicly he
denied that its purpose was to promote Muslim activity though
it became a major centre for Muslims and helped many come
to Islam.
After his death in 1899, it declined in importance until
the arrival of Khwaja Kamal-ud-Din, a brilliant scholar
and barrister from what is now Pakistan who was inspired
to spread Islam. In 1912 he came to Richmond, Surrey and
started publishing the Islamic Review. In 1913 he repaired
and revived the Woking Mosque and started the Woking Muslim
Mission, a body set up to aid new Muslims. In that same
year, in December, a member of the House of Lords, the eleventh
Baron Headley, announced that he was a Muslim. Headley was
not the first peer to do so. Lord Stanley of Alderley, an
uncle of Bertrand Russel, had become a Muslim half a century
earlier. Headley was a civil engineer and had worked in
India. He had learnt about Islam in 1896 and converted,
taking the title Sheikh al-Farooq, remarking, "The
intolerance of one set of Christians towards the other sects
holding some different form of the same faith disgusted
me." He threw himself into the activities of the British
Muslim movement. He wrote frequently in the Islamic Review
and performed the pilgrimage with Kamal-ud-Din in 1923.
Headley’s conversion drew the attention of the curious
British public to Islam, not as the wild religion of half-civilised
mullahs and mahdis, but as a faith that might be personally
relevant to British individuals.
The Mission and Mosque brought many to the fold of Islam,
especially from the middle and upper classes of British
society. Converts included Professor Mustafa Leon, Stanley
Musgrave, Khalid Sheldrake and Yeha en-Nasr Parkinson. Lectures
and discussions were held in hotels and homes with prominent
Muslims and non-Muslims. On the birthday of Muhammad (pbuh)
a hotel was hired for a lecture on his life (seerah). Due
to the World Wars political activities were avoided and
those difficult times led many to search for a higher meaning
of life.
By 1924 there were an estimated one thousand converts.
In 1935 the Mosque refuted suggestions of Ahmadiya or Qadiyani
breeding and declared itself of the Hanafi tradition.
Woking became a social centre of British Islam, an essential
port of call for foreign Muslim dignitaries. Visitors included
Indian princes, King Abdullah of Jordan, the Sultan of Sokota
(Nigeria) and the family of King Saud of Arabia. The Islamic
Review gave regular news of conversions with reports from
the press on Islam. It kept its readers informed of activities,
religious and social. Articles explained points of the faith
and of Islamic law. It was also around this time that two
of the most widely used English translations of the Qur’an
were written.
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Pickthall
Marmaduke Pickthall was born in 1860, the son of a Reverend,
in Suffolk. His immediate family background was solidly
professional middle class. He went to Palestine, Syria
and Egypt as a young man, where he learned Arabic. Everywhere
he travelled he identified with the people of the country
through language and dress. During his two years in
Palestine he was unimpressed by the European Christian
community there, whom he found too frequently snobbish
and sectarian, but he was tempted to embrace Islam.
He was dissuaded by the Shaykh al Ulama of the Umayyad
mosque in Damascus. "Wait till you are older",
the old man advised, "and have seen again your
native land. You are alone among us, so are our boys
alone among the Christians. God knows how I should feel
if any Christian teacher dealt with a son of mine otherwise
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Pickthall was a novelist and between 1903 and 1921 he published
nine novels set in Syria, Palestine, Egypt, Yemen and Turkey.
He also wrote six novels set in England, and short stories
mainly about the Near East published in three collections.
E.M. Forster wrote of him in 1921 that he is “the only
contemporary English novelist who understands the Nearer East”.
Pickthall also travelled to Turkey, where he learned Turkish
from the Imam of Goztepe. He met with progressive Imams and
saw that there was no conflict between modernization and Islam.
He saw Turkey as the hope of the Islamic world and suggested
that the Turks should recognise their Islamic heritage rather
than attempt to pose as Europeans and that Arabic not French
should be their second language.
Upon returning to England Pickthall was getting more and
more involved with eastern politics Pickthall was against
the evangelical propaganda that was hostile to Turkey and
was angry that European powers were taking advantage of
her. The Treaty of Berlin was supposed to uphold Turkish
territorial integrity. Turkey was made to honour her obligations
under the Treaty but the European powers made no effective
protest when Bosnia and Herzegovina were annexed by Austria,
Bulgaria declared her independence, Italy invaded the province
of Tripoli and the Balkan Christian states invaded European
Turkey.
Pickthall wrote frequently against the injustices done
to Turkey and became an active official of the Anglo-Ottoman
Society, founded in January 1914. In August that same year
Britain went to war with Germany and throughout the war
he wrote articles advocating consideration for Turkey’s
case, stressing the tradition of tolerance in the Ottoman
Empire; although a patriotic Tory this stance alienated
him from his fellow countrymen somewhat. He also repudiated
the idea that Balkan Christians could claim special protection
from Britain by virtue of their being Christians. His talents
as a linguist and as an authority on Syria, Palestine and
Egypt could have been used but his reputation as “a
rabid Turcophile” prevented him from being offered
a job with the Arab Bureau in Cairo, a job that went instead
to T.E. Lawrence.
During the war he became aware that the cause of Turkey
was the object of Muslim concern everywhere as the collapse
of the Turkish Empire threatened the Khilafah. He knew that
Islam was the basis of the Ottoman Empire and he was impressed
by the Young Turks who were inspired by a reforming Islam
that demanded education, social improvement and improving
the status of women. He saw that this was all in accordance
with the Prophet’s example and teaching.
In the summer and autumn of 1917 he gave a series of talks
to the Muslim Literary Society in Notting Hill, West London,
on “Islam and Progress”. During the last talk
of the series, on 29 November 1917, he declared openly and
publicly his acceptance of Islam. The lecture hall was crowded.
He argued that Islam alone was a progressive religion. Other
religions were unfit to claim that their tenets countenanced
progress. Pickthall took on the name Muhammed and immediately
became one of the pillars of the British Islamic community.
He was Acting Imam of the London mosque, the Muslim Prayer
House in Camden Hill road, Notting Hill for a while. He
led the prayers at Woking for Id al Fitr in June 1919. At
the same time he pursued his Islamic political concerns
and in October 1919 chaired a day of Prayer for the Khaliph
at the Muslim Prayer House. In his address he attacked the
Western powers for presuming to decide who should be the
Khaliph.
He felt a special responsibility as leader of British Muslims
and was even critical of the behaviour of foreign Muslim
students in England. He wrote prolifically on different
aspects of Islam in the nineteen years between his public
embracing of Islam and his death. In the course of his sermons
and addresses he recited verses of the Qur’an in Arabic.
He also rendered them into English. This piecemeal translation
became the fragments from which he constructed his last
major work.
He shifted his political interests from Turkey to India
after the First World War. During the war he came into contact
with young Muslims, mainly from India, who worshipped at
the mosque in London. In 1920 he went to India with is wife,
initially writing for the Bombay Chronicle and then later
in 1925 he went to work for the Nizam of Hyderabad. India
was to be his home for the next fifteen years and true to
form he studied Urdu in his spare time.
In 1928 the Nizam gave Pickthall special leave of absence
on full pay for two years in order to complete his translation
of the Qur’an. It was the first translation by a Muslim
whose first language was English. During his leave from
Hyderabad he consulted scholars in Europe and in Egypt.
The title of the work he finally published in 1930 was
“The Meaning of the Glorious Koran” as he said,
" ... the Qur’an cannot be translated. That is
the belief of old fashioned shiekhs and the view of the
present writer". It was published by A.A.Knopf of New
York in December 1930 and Allen and Unwin published it in
England in 1939. It was itself to be translated into Turkish,
Portugese, Urdu and Tagalog.
During the 1930s he suffered from malaria and in 1935,
after ten years in the Nizam’s service, Pickthall
retired and returned with his wife to England.
He died on 19 May 1936 and was buried at the Muslim cemetery
in Woking. His translation of the Qur’an, first printed
in the United States in 1930, has since been reprinted several
times in the UK, the USA, India, the UAE and Libya.
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Yusuf Ali
Abdullah
Yusuf Ali was born in 1872 to a Bohra family of Surat,
his father was a local police chief ennobled by the
Raj for his services. He was educated first in a Bombay
Muslim school set up along semi-modern lines, and
then in a Scottish missionary college. A remarkable
academic aptitude allowed him to take his first degree
at the age of 19, whereupon he won a scholarship to
study law at Cambridge. Three years later, with is
second degree in his pocket, he triumphed as one of
the few “natives” to pass the examinations
for the elite Indian Civil Service. He returned to
India where he was appointed a magistrate in Saharanpur
in the United Provinces and then at Bareilly. He met
the likes of Sir Sayyid Ahmed Khan who impressed upon
him the need for young Muslim leaders of calibre.
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He returned to Britain
in 1900 and married an Englishwoman, Teresa Shalders.
He grew in popularity as a spokesman for Indian Muslims,
winning a medal for his lectures to the Royal Society
of Arts, and being hailed in the Times as a “very
talented member of the Indian Civil Service and a
representative of the great Mohammedan community.”
The Muslim Literary Society was started in 1916 with
Yusuf Ali as president. Very much a child of his time,
he was very loyal to the British Empire. During the
first world war he volunteered for service with the
Crown, and was sent on various propaganda missions
to whip up support for the Allied cause, and to publicise
the thousands of Indian Muslims who were then being
mown down on the Somme and Vimy Ridge. The result
was a CBE awarded in 1917.
The War ended with the Versailles Conference, whose
British delegation included Yusuf Ali. He then took
up a position of lecturing firstly at SOAS and then
at the new Osmania University in Hyderabad, and practised
as a barrister in Lucknow. He churned out several
books on India, and in such spare time as he enjoyed
also threw himself into the campaign against independence
and partition, becoming an arch-rival to his old Bombay
school friend, Jinnah. He later accepted Iqbal’s
offer of headmastership of Islamia College in Lahore,
after Muhammed Asad apparently withdrew his application.
In this great Muslim metropolis, Yusuf Ali was able
to pull together his thoughts on the Qur’an,
jotted down in his cabin during his innumerable sea
voyages. The distinguished scholar and printer Shaykh
Muhammed Ashraf, was delighted to become his publisher,
and in 1934 the first instalment of his Quranic translation
appeared in the bookshops of Lahore.
Yusuf Ali represented Islam at the World Congress
of Faiths in Oxford in 1937 and wrote extensively
on the need for religious harmony and understanding.
He spent his declining years in London defending the
Allied cause for the Ministry of Information, and
speaking at interfaith gatherings. But the institutions
that Yusuf Ali supported were collapsing around him.
The refusal of the Western dominated League of Nations
to defend Ethiopia against Mussolini’s invasion,
and the growing militancy of Zionism, finally opened
Yusuf Ali’s eyes. The case for Muslim autonomy
in India seemed increasingly compelling in the light
of the growing Hindu chauvinism of the Congress party.
Yusuf Ali died in extreme poverty in London in 1953,
and was buried near Pickthall in the Muslim cemetery
in Woking.
A second edition of his Quranic translation appeared
almost at once, and then a third in 1938 in both Lahore
and New York. The text rapidly outstripped Pickthall’s
rival version, perhaps because of its extensive notes.
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A Growing
Community
The whole of Europe was occupied with the
massive task of reconstructing after the war, and
there were labour shortages everywhere. The school
leaving age had been raised, and women who had worked
in factories during the war were encouraged to return
to being housewives and mothers. The government positively
encouraged immigration initially from Europe but then
also from Ireland and the New Commonwealth.
Following partition in 1947, many people were uprooted.
Millions of people crossed the border between Pakistan
and India and many were made homeless. Some young
men were attracted to the many new jobs in industry
and services in Britain and often came at the invitation
of employers in line with Government policy. From
the 50s to the 70s, there was a tremendous influx
of Muslim immigrants.
The decline of Britain as the seat of power and wealth
in the colonies was rapid but the relationship with
former colonies had grown over many years and remained
strong. Hence immigration was a natural activity,
especially in these prosperous years. Most immigrants
came with the intention of returning though many stayed
on.
The majority came from rural areas of the subcontinent,
their main motive for immigrating was economic - many
jobs paid thirty times as much as in Pakistan and
India. However it is important to note that most came
from areas with a long tradition of migration. From
Pakistan they came from Azad Kashmir, the Northwest
Frontier and parts of Punjab, areas that the British
Army and merchant navy had long recruited from.
Most Indian Muslims came from three districts in
Gujarat - Baroda, Surat and Bharuch. These migrants
did not come from the scheduled castes or tribal peoples.
They were highly literate and included traders and
professionals. They too had a long tradition of migration,
especially to British colonies in East Africa. Almost
95% of Bangladeshis come from the north-eastern district
of Sylhet. Many of them came to Britain via Calcutta
in West Bengal as cooks and galley hands on merchant
ships. There were Sylheti restaurant workers in London
as early as 1873. Over the years Sylhetis have come
to dominate the market for South Asian cuisine and
run the majority of the seven thousand outlets where
customers spend hundreds of millions of pounds.
Another group of South Asians fled from oppressive
nationalist regimes in East Africa. Entire communities
were expelled especially from Kenya and Uganda. Many
uprooted families came to Britain as refugees and
settled. In 1981 there were a hundred and fifty thousand
South Asians of East African origin of whom 15% were
Muslims.
Doctors found work in the newly established NHS.
Others worked on the buses and railways. Many more
obtained jobs in textile mills, foundaries and factories,
which required a supply of cheap low-skilled labour,
especially for night shifts. This explains why large
Asian communities developed in London and in the industrial
towns of the Midlands like Wolverhampton and Coventry,
and the textile towns in Lancashire, Yorkshire and
Strathclyde like Bradford and Glasgow. Here, their
much-needed labour helped to rebuild industries and
keep services going.
There are also older established communities of Turks,
Egyptians, Iraqis and Yemenis (who date as far back
as the 1880s). During the 1950s and 1960s Iranians,
Palestinians and Sudanese also arrived. Many Arabs
have congregated in and around London, but the majority
came in the 1980s. Many Malaysians now study and work
in Britain and they contribute much to the Islamic
life on this isle. And as we have seen there are many
Muslims of European descent some of whom have played
a leading role in the Muslim community. Together this
ethnic mix has played a full part in shaping the British
Muslim identity of today.
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References
Islam in Britain: 1558-1685
Nabil Mattar
Cambridge University Press
1997
Marmaduke Pikthall, British Muslim
Peter Clark
1986
Quartet Books
Searching for Solace, A Biography of Abdullah Yusuf
Ali Interpreter of the Qur’an
M A Sherif
1994
Islamic Book Trust
Roots of the Future, Ethnic Diversity in the Making
of Britain
1996
Commission for Racial Equality
Ayahs, Lascars and Princes: Indians in Britain 1700-1947
Rozina Visram
1986
Pluto Press
The History of the Asian Community in Britain
Rozina Visram
1995
Wayland Publishers
Discovering Islam, Making Sense of Muslim History
and Society
Akbar S. Ahmed
1988
Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd
Q-News
back issues 1993-2000
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