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#1 [Permalink] Posted on 30th May 2017 10:45

Obituary: Mukhtar Masood


An eminent Alig famous for his contributions to Urdu literature


By Naved Masood for Twocircles.net

News has been received from across the border about the passing away of one of the prominent figures of Urdu literature, distinguished civil servant and a second generation Alig, Mukhtar Masood in Lahore on April 15, aged 90.

Mukhtar Masood was born in Aligarh on 7th June 1927. His father, Shaikh Ataullah of the Department of Economics was an expert on Iqbal (during his student days in Lahore, he was quite close to the philosopher-poet). Masood had his entire education in Aligarh, starting with the Minto circle, with a First class in B.A (1946) and topping the M.A Economics in 1948. He was counted among the brilliant students of his days, brilliant in academics; he was a keen debater and a familiar face and name in the literary circles of the campus which had then a galaxy of talent. As late Prof Nasim Ansari in a rejoinder, Jawabe dost writes, Masood was also an outstanding horseman who was captain of the Riding Club in 1946-47.

Shaikh Ataullah, being from the Western Punjab, naturally relocated to Pakistan with his family during the summer vacations of 1948. And that was a severance of physical ties with the AMU; he has written somewhere that in an unpartitioned country, he might have preferred to have spent his entire life in Aligarh as a teacher.

Masood took the first competitive examination for the Central and Superior Services of Pakistan (CSP), stood third in it, and became a Civil Servant in the newly emerged dominion in 1949. He had a steady rise in the service hierarchy holding key positions in the Punjab province and the federal government with an interlude as Secretary General of the Islamic Cooperation Council at Tehran during the late 1970s where he had occasion to witness the popular uprising against the Shah, his ouster and the initial tumultuous days of the Islamic revolution. He completed his career as a civil servant in 1985 as Federal Secretary, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of Pakistan. He was considered fairly close to General Ziaul Haq and was his informal adviser on many issues concerning Islamisation of various aspects of administration but he refrained from accepting any post-retirement assignment which provided him with prestige and stature among Pakistani intelligentsia.

Masood will, however, not be remembered for his contributions to the public services of his country; his real claim to fame is in the realm of Urdu letters. Like his Alig contemporary, Mushtaq Ahmad Yusufi, he was an infrequent writer but this moderate literary output resulted in Urdu prose of a distinct didactic style – a genre hitherto almost unknown to Urdu letters. His writings defy neat classification but in the opinion of this scribe, he was essentially an essayist straddling the realms of Philosophy, politics, religion and contemporary affairs at the same time. His form was distinct and, whether you agreed with some of his views (he could be a supremacist, ultra- nationalist and a blind fan of Islamic uprisings) or not, you could not dismiss them as mere flourishes of a pen. Being a Tar Bangla boy, it appears that he drew a leaf from his neighbour, Prof Rashid Ahmad Siddiqui.

His Awaz-i-Dost marks a watershed in Urdu prose and despite a certain inaccessibility of style, he managed to enthral the average reader with the way he presented his ‘take’ on political developments like establishment of Pakistan with the role of Aligarh therein, lives of Indian Muslims and the prospects of Islam in the second half of the last century etc. You have a person with definite views with complete command over narrative, language and style. Even when the reader looks askance at his views he would be fully engaged with Masood’s discourse. As a fellow civil servant, I always found his great certitudes to be rather disconcerting as one expects a senior public administrator to be clear-headed without letting go of self-doubt which is so necessary an ingredient in any analytical framework to parse ethical, moral, social and political dilemmas. His other works are Safar Nasib and Lauhe Ayyam. The former is an inordinately sympathetic (and hence uncritical) portrayal of the Irani revolution, while the latter is a rambling, yet paradoxically coherent account of the world around him. He has ensured an abiding presence in the pantheon of Urdu prose like his neighbour Rashid Ahmad Siddiqui.

I had one brief meeting with him in Delhi. Both of us found uncanny similarities in our lives. We had grown up in the same localities, studied in the same institutions and were the two individuals (between 1949 and 1977), to have joined the premier civil services of the two countries. A visitor from India who met him later, not only found that he remembered our brief meeting but he conveyed his happiness to me on learning that I too had made it to the top of the heap as a Secretary to the Union Government.



Aligarh – or rather the AMU campus – was part of his being and despite his rather marked patriotism and concerns with things Islamic on the global plain, he never made any bones about AMU being a paradise lost for him. In fact, until the very end his best friend remained in Aligarh – Prof Riazur Rahman Sherwani of the Arabic Department is happily in our midst at Habib Manzil. May he live a healthy and happy life, Amen.

Without exaggeration it can be asserted that Mukhtar Masood was amongst the most precious jewels in the crown of the AMU (in fact MAO College and AMU put together), and one would be more than happy if the current leaders of the institution who rejoice on the University securing high ratings in accreditation, pause and worry why AMU is not very likely to produce another Mukhtar Masood.

Mukhtar Sahib, Khuda hafiz from another Masood from your mohalla who, while differing with you on so many issues, could not help admiring you.
Source : TCN
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#2 [Permalink] Posted on 30th May 2017 10:48
Mukhtar Masood Sahab said good bye to this world about six weeks ago but I feel like breaking down bitterly even now.

He was a man, Aligarh man, who felt for Muslim Ummah more dearly than most of the people I know.

Naved Masood is also a retired civil servant but from India.
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#3 [Permalink] Posted on 8th June 2017 12:39
How Centuries Disappear?


Mukhtar Masood describes the sentiments churning in his mind during the construction of the Minaret of Pakistan. Between this minaret and the minarets of the nearby Mughal Mosque, the Badshahi Mosque of Lahore there is a short distance but inbetween you have a Sikh Gurudwara and a camp of the British. The biggest separation between the two is of several centuries.

Where did these centuries disappear? Below is my translation of his description - a description in which he has most poignantly, pugnaciously and pungently put his finger on the most raw weakness of us Muslims.

"When Mosques become desolate and Madarsas lightless, when struggle is replaced by inaction and truth by mythology, when self interest takes precedence over country and expediency over community, when Muslims fear death and love this world then centuries disappear just like that."
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#4 [Permalink] Posted on 16th November 2018 07:09
Mukhtar Masood was a typical, prototype Aligarian.

I look up to him for guidance in matters related to Muslims.

recently some of my friends and I myself have been perusing two of his books - Loh-e-Ayyam (Diary) and Harf-e-Shauq (Labour of Love).

I have not gone through these completely so it will be premature to comment on the contents but one of my friends has finished the second book and I can repeat is observations.

It turns out that one of the main problems that I have been pinning my hopes upon him to solve could not be solved by him.

The problem is about the status of Indian Muslims in the scheme of things according to Muslim League. Late Mukhtar Masood had no worthwhile suggestion on this issue. Muhammed Ali Jinah had stopped visiting Aligarh in the count down to partition. A wise man. The most astute lawyer knew very clearly that the Muslims of India would end up paying a high price for partition and he took this precaution to not leave Aligarh at the spotlight.

Even then Punjab saw massive internecine killings following partition and India has been witnessing the so called communal riots incessantly that are in effect pogroms against Muslims.

Yet there have been people who still think Muslim League ideology is the way forward for Muslims of India. My last hope in this regard was late Mukhtar Masood and now that we have his word on it I feel I must settle with the view that Muslim League ideology can no more serve the Muslims of India.

I suppose I should have concluded the same long back. I had but then there were friends like Professor Ariful Islam Sahab and late Engineer Ahmed Saleem Peerzada Sahab. They had a very firm faith in the Muslim League ideology.

I suppose I am finally clear on this point.
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#5 [Permalink] Posted on 17th November 2018 09:09
Awaz-e-Dost Part - 1


Minar-e-Pakistan

His by far most famous book is Awaz-e-Dost, Voice of Friend.

The title has been taken from a Persian couplet by Maulana Rumi and the couplet in itself has a very haunting and mystic epiphany of strong proportions.

The book contains two parts. First one an article about the Minar-e-Pakistan. The second part contains sketches of some prominent personalities.

Here I begin with my notings on the margins of the book.

(1) Urdu has some gems in its bag that will never be available to English. (Remember translation is a recreation.)

(2) Learn Urdu to get a glimpse of the reality that is exclusively Urdu.

(3) An English told Maulana Shauqat Ali about Sir Syed Ahmed : Do not go on his innocent face and loyalty - with fruition of his movement the days of the British Empire in India will be numbered. He is the biggest rebel of India.

(4) He is worried about the future (of Pakistan and Muslims).

(5) His longings for the past.

(6) (P.24-25) When mosques become desolate and Madarsas without enlightenment, when Jihad is replaced by inaction and truth by mythology, when self-interest takes precedence over the community, when Muslims fear death and love life then centuries disappear just like that.

(7) Good fortune is when your duties coincide with the desires of your heart. George Bernard Shaw

(8) If Pakistan is rising up to the occasion then so what? Why should Abdullah get high in someone else's marriage? (This question can now be answered - future of the Ummah of Rasoolallah SAW is associated with Pakistan, get involved in it.)

(9) Pledge and Post : Pledge - to make Pakistan work. Post - duty an an engineer.

(10) Building of brick and stones or building a new world?

(11) As a member for the committee to design and build the Minaret of Pakistan the author begins by recounting the history of minarets in general. this is his unique style. He begins with massive home work on his job and he tells us about it.

(12) Then he slowly eases into the history of creation of Pakistan.

(13) There creative misture of imagination and reality.

(14) Location : Iqbal Park. City - Lahore.

(15) The architecture of pyramids is in contrast with the environment around it.

(16) You do not raise memorials of living things like Pakistan.

(17) Pyramids - hard, absorbing, sharp corners. Desert - Soft, shining, smooth circles.

(18) Why ninth minaret? (Four each of the two mosques - one new and another old)

(19) Commemorative minaret at the site of the original function in which Pakistan was proposed.

(20) Symbolism associated with Minar-e-Pakistan

(21) Defence Tower

(22) Walls : Bosporus, South France, China

(23) More about the Great wall of China

(24) The anecdotes that he brings in have importance of their own.

(25) Fine patch on rough cloth

(26) Light House

(27) Dedication of old light house keepers not needed anymore

(28) Modern life has driven away bravery from many parts, no - it has made it redundant.

(29) Look at the asian lands from Siberia to sri Lanka - latter looks like God's tear in the ocean.

(30) Stand in sri Lanka, look north ward and then declare that asia is spread in your feet from there to Siberia.

(31) Few more meanderings about minarets and towers.

(32) Once in a foreign land we become oblivious to our own reality.

(33) Towers of European Churches and Cathedrals

(34) Other historical towers like Eiffel.

(35) TV Towers

(36) Tower top restaurants

(37) Umayyad Mosque Minaret in Damascus

(38) Leader of minarets

(39) Khiva, samarqand, bukhara

(40) In Andalusian land the minarets ceased to be while in central asia these have decayed.

(41) Babar to Alamgir - minarets of heads of fallen soldiers

(42) Lord Lytton, Collector Pollack, Sir Syed, Ayed Mehmood, Iqbal, Khairi Brothers

(43) Aligarh : January 2, 1877

(44) Muslim Minority Institution

(45) My own observation : Why has my brain become like a boil on the body of the world? Why does it pain so much still? These illustrious ancestors of ours did so much for us that no pain should have come my way, our way.

(46) To some extent this meaning of Aligarh is scary for an Indian Muslim. (Sorry guys I can not investigate it immediately!)

(47) During British Rule freedom looked like an idle dream. (To be continued)



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#6 [Permalink] Posted on 27th November 2018 14:49
(48) There are some points leading to the creation of Pakistan that are not well known to us in India. But then the events have a different meaning for us than the Muslims of Pakistan.

(49) Then he recounts some Congress activity that is not so innocent.

(50) In April 1947 MK Gandhi said that he did not understand the purpose of Pakistan.

(51) Savarkar speech over - riots begin. (He said that Pakistan was like suicide for Hindus.

(52) Munje : Let Jinnah go to the land he considers his home.

(53) Minorities in Bihar had to vacate pockets of their population.

(54) Yesterday the indirect helpers of Pakistan were called Shriddhanad, Savarkar and Munje, today these are Mukherjee and Tandon and tomorrow these will be called Madhok and Golwalkar.

(55) Cripps Mission fails and the Viceroy lord Emery declares that India is one geographical entity.

(56) Cabinet Mission declares Pakistan impractical in 1946. Last Viceroy comes to India - Mr Jinnah can come and talk to me but the decision will be mine.

(57) British wanted to rule India and Gandhi Muslims. We shall allow neither, they might take a shot.

(58) Organizations against creation of Pakistan : All India Muslim Majlis, Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Hind.

(59) There is an oblique reference to Maulana Ataullah Shah Bukhari

(60) More Opposition : Majlis-e-Ahrar, Khaksar Party

(61) Students joining Pakistan movement

(62) Critics of students movement

(63) Master Tara Singh's antics

(64) First martyr of Pakistan movement

(65) Final floor of the minaret

(66) On Kashmir

(67) Some people are great only for a day. Rest of their life they spend climbing down.

(68) Only one hero

(69) This essay was written in 1968 - he did not foresee 1971

(70) Final summary - some people opposed Pakistan

Or in this essay he describes his experience as a member of the committee that was given the task to build the Minar-e-Pakistan. He goes on a detour about the history of minarets itself and then history of creation of Pakistan and tells us about the main points particularly about the people and parties opposed to the very idea of Pakistan.

This essay is first part of the book Awaz-e-Dost. The second part, the longer one, is about some personalities.

Main push of MM's ideas is Aligarh and Pakistan. His approach is to use thorough academic preparation before any significant task though he himself was a bureaucrat. His disposition is completely Muslim if not out rightly Islamic and I say it just to make a finer distinction. I love him because of these qualities.
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#7 [Permalink] Posted on 27th November 2018 15:19
I know that for a believer the real motivation to act is the hereafter but my impression is that Rasoolallah SAW did not shun the worldly motivations too. What worldly motivations are there at our disposal today? I need lots of them. Do you have some? I am sorry that I have to ask like that after dumping so much of academics on your heads but I do seek your indulgence too for the sake of Allah SWT.

I ask this because of the following reason. In Rasoolallah SAW's time it was 13 years of preparation and 10 years of action and boom! We have an Islamic Empire.

Today let us take an example. Around 1860 the central Asian Muslim lands disappear into the Russian belly. When do these come out? After 1989.

Another example Islam is completely destroyed in Spain 500 hundred years ago. Till today we have no effective toe hold in the European continent.

Third example - India becomes independent in 1947. Muslims, even after more than seven decades Muslims do not have a very honourable deal.

Of course this does not mean there are no good news. Pakistan, even Bangladesh, Gulf oil, Deoband, Tablighi Jama-at and the like can be called a set of good news.

But then we have the Palestine problem, western encroachment on Islamic world, the devastation in the Gulf and the like are no small problems. Muslim Ummah needs to do a lot even to get a normal life - let alone a glorious life on par with the rest of the world.
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#8 [Permalink] Posted on 27th November 2018 15:25
Maripat wrote:
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Seems like a great book! Wish to get hold of it.
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#9 [Permalink] Posted on 28th November 2018 08:29
Awaz-e-Dost: Part-II: Qahat-ur-Rijal


Urdu is a strange language. The subtitle of second and longer part of his book Awaz-e-Dost is Qahat-ur-Rijal. Word translation would be Drought of People. Strangely the number of people is exploding and yet he has to talk of a drought. Indeed he begins this part with this conundrum. Clearly the hint is that though there is population explosion but useful people are really rare.

And don't we feel the same drought in our own times? I am feeling this drought myself. That is true that I have taken a very small project for myself. I just want to do academic work on the Encroachment Theory and its local form in India and that is all. I have also realized that I can not do it alone and I need help and I can not think of people whom I can request or even beg to chip in.

Those of you who read me please do not under estimate your abilities and please come forward to take up this responsibility.

We have to work out the issues related to theological encroachment. Though the combined work of people like late Maulana Rahmatullah Kairanwi RA and Dr Wazir Khan RA, Shaikh Ahmed Deedat RA, Dr Zakir Naik, Shabir Ally, Ustad Ali Ataei have more or less all that was needed but things still have to be wound up.

Then we have to delineate the encroachment on the social space - this will need a good sociologist to work out the nuances. At the moment I can not provide even starting clues to this very significant area in which Muslim society the world over is under occupation. Let us get this subtle point clear. There is encroachment and then there is its extreme form - occupation. Our sociological space is under occupation.

Then there is the encroachment upon our cultural space. Luckily the Arabs, the people whom Allah SWT chose for spreading His last communication, did not have much of this so called cultural burden but culture is something that is the best a society has to offer to others. And we do have a myriad Islamic cultures the world over. (For the record Qawwali, Urs, Sufi Dance and Bollywood can by no stretch of imagination be classifies as Islamic culture and I would not be worried about the health and fate of these distraction - let those who think of these as Islamic culture worry about these.) But it also does not mean that we Muslims have no issues here. Sadly on this sector we shall not be able to criticize any external agencies because culture is something that you imbibe voluntarily. Yet I strongly feel that in my paradigm of approaching the problems of Ummah we have to pay serious attention to this part.

Next comes the encroachment upon the economic space. Like film, music and Babri Masjid this looks like a field that is impossible to solve. Yet the matter of fact is that Muslim intellectuals have been working a lot on this angle. I would personally like some concerned Muslim economist to take a stock of the situation and assure the Muslim Ummah that they can take it out of the clutches of the Zionist Riba based paradigm.

Same goes about commerce and finance.

Then we need an expert who can enlighten us about encroachment upon our space related to business and industry.

I personally would like to restrict myself to encroachment upon scientific space. Yet I do need some one who is a technocrat who can enlighten us about encroachment upon our technological space. In this sector we can be sure that there can not be a well defined personal space but we should still be able to analyze the issue of encroachment upon our technological share and again I am afraid this time too we might not have external agencies to put the blame upon.

Of course the most crucial of all spaces under encroachment the most critical is the political space. Luckily I feel that by now Ummah has got high enough level of consciousness about the issues and even the trio of Imran Khan, RT Erdugan and Mahathir Muhammed will be enough to change the world perspective and attitude towards Islam. Of course first of all I need political analysts who can analyze this problem academically. the second step will be to find channels to approach the bureaucrats and explain the issues to them so that these worthies of Muslim world can be apprised of what they have to do.

Guys (and of course girls) let me tel you most of the time the problem is to simply tell the people in power what to do - that is all. Of course there are times where you have to do enormous amount of convincing but some times you need no convincing at all.

I suppose brothers and sisters here get the import of what I am hinting. Come forward to be part of this exercise. On my part for many months and even years I am getting the idea to communicate to advocate AG Noorani, writer Mahmood Mamdani and Mufti Taqi Usmani Sahab these ideas so as something can be done about these issues.

At the moment I have no resources to do that but I suppose we do not need massive resources for the academic part or even in the later part where it will be a matter of canvassing. Apart from that I had in my mind this new breed of Muslim public figures like so many of these young Shaikhs - to rope them in. Then there was this list of about 144 Muslim scholars writing to the Pope several years ago about co-operation between Muslims and Christians. This time it is not about co-operation but about complains.

But I got to come to the ground now. It is these type of people that we need today and Mukhtar Masood is talking about famine and drought of these type of people.

In the next post I shall list the people listed by MM in this part of his book, IA.
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#10 [Permalink] Posted on 28th November 2018 19:21
The main issue seems to be a clear understanding of the 'root cause' of our failures. My feeling is that we failed primarily in the fields of 'EDUCATION and TRAINING' (Taleem o Tarbiyyat) and ECONOMY and that lead to our failure in other fields.

On another thread,I posed a question,as to how will Syedena Mahdi defeat his adversaries ?(despite being fully aware of the response I will get).The purpose of posing this question was to point out the importance of education and training in the fields of science and technology as no leader can possibly work in a vaccume and the nation too have to show some degree of readiness to meet the challenge.

The same goes for economy. Unless we have an independent economy we simply can not have an independent foreign policy (or even our internal policies), we will remain dependent on others for running our day to day affairs leave alone creating an atmosphere suitable for tapping our potentials for any constructive activity,nor would we be able to shed this perpetual inferiority complex eating our bones....

Once we fix our education and our economies,we may then be able to focus on other avenues you mentioned,and to our surprise,we may find half the work already done.

For example,the issue of 'theological/ideological' encroachment would be solved by proper education,the social/cultural encroachment is directly or indirectly associated with Tarbiyyat and economic security.Political and geographical encroachment is directly related to good economy (both war time and peace time) and so on....

May Allah swt bless us all,Ameen
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#11 [Permalink] Posted on 29th November 2018 06:42
I love your response brother ALIF. I'll respond with details later on.
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#12 [Permalink] Posted on 7th June 2020 08:25
An AMU Vice Chancellor


Muhammed Ali Muhammed Khan, Raja of Mehmudabad was first VC of AMU.

(Those of you who have seen a movie called Dedh Ishqiya have seen his magnificent palace.)

Mukhtar Masood has recounted a very heart breaking story, from Muslim point of view, involving him.

Sometime after the partition he migrated to Pakistan.

The people in Pakistan expected that he'll play a role in accordance with his status in setting the the things right in the newly created state.

What did Raja Sahab do? A: Nothing. He simply withdrew from public life.

A mighty Muslim tragedy.

This reminds me of the lesser known Mughals after Alamgir Aurangzeb. They came one after another and every single one of them was useless and worthless and incompetent and incapable.

Muslim India saw decline and decline.

Clearly history depends excessively on individuals.

Get up on your feet and prepare to do your bit of role in the scheme of things.

And you can not even wish to do it if Allah SWT does not want it.

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