God's Terrorists

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God's Terrorists Page 34

by Charles Allen


  Edward Rehatsek, ‘The History of the Wahhabys in Arabia and in India’, in Journal of the Bombay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. XIV, 1878–80

  Frederick Roberts, Forty-One Years in India; from Subaltern to Commander-in- Chief, 1897

  James Routledge, English Rule and Native Opinion in India, from Notes taken in 1870–74, 1874

  Edward Alexander Samuells, Remarks on Mr William Tayler’s ‘Brief Narrative of Events’, 1858

  Sayyid Mubarak Shah, ‘Narrative of Sayyid Mubarak Shah’, OIOC Mss. Eur. B138

  Shah Ismail Shaheed, Taqwiyat-ul-Iman, 1827, translated as Strengthening of the Faith by Mir Shahamat Ali, with a preface by Ghulam Rasool Mehr, undated

  William Tayler, Our Crisis; Or Three Months at Patna during the Insurrection of 1857, 1858

  —— Brief Narrative of Events Connected with the Removal of Mr Tayler from the Commissionership of Patna, 1857

  —— Veritas Victrix; being Letters and Testimonials Relating to the Conduct of W. Tayler in the Indian Mutiny, undated

  —— Thirty-Eight Years in India, 1878

  —— Justice in the Nineteenth Century: an Appeal to British Honour, 1885

  Muhammad Jafar Thanesari, Kala Pani: Tarikh e Ajeeb (The Black Water: a Strange Story),1884; translated and published as In Exile (A Strange Story), 1964

  Capt. L. J. Trotter, William Tayler of Patna: a Brief Account of his Splendid Services, his Cruel Wrongs, and his Thirty Years’ Struggle for Justice, 1887

  —— Life of the Marquess of Dalhousie, 1895

  Sir Robert Warburton, Eighteen Years in the Khyber, 1879–98, 1898

  James Wilson, Why was Lord Mayo Assassinated? 1872

  H. C. Wylly, From the Black Mountain to Waziristan, 1912

  G. J. Younghusband, The Story of the Guides, 1908

  India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Central Asia: secondary and modern sources (post-1947)

  Anon., ‘The Striving Sheik: Abdullah Azzam’, in Naidaul Islam Magazine, July–September 1996

  Aziz Ahmad, ‘Political and Religious Ideas of Shah Wali-ullah of Delhi’, in Muslim World, Vol. LII, 1, 1962

  —— Studies in Islamic Culture in the Indian Environment, 1967

  —— Studies in Islamic Culture in the Indian Environment, 1967

  —— Islamic Modernism in India and Pakistan, 1857–1964, 1967

  —— An Intellectual History of Islam in India, 1969

  Khaled Ahmad, ‘The Grand Deobandi Consensus’, in The Friday Times of Pakistan, 4/2/2000

  Qeyamuddin Ahmad, The Wahabi Movement in India, 1966; revised 1994

  Akbar S. Ahmed, Pukhtun Economy and Society, 1980

  —— Millennium and Charisma among Pathans, 1980

  Hamza Alawi, The Rise of Religious Fundamentalism in Pakistan, undated

  Charles Allen, Soldier Sahibs: the Men who Made the North-West Frontier, 2000

  Fredrick Barth, Political Leadership Among Swat Pathans, 1959

  A. K. Biswas, Unsung Martyrs of 1857, 2000

  Jason Burke, Al-Qaida: in the Shadow of Terror, 2003

  Sir Olaf Caroe, The Pathans, 1958

  H. Chattopadhyaya, ‘Mutiny in Bihar,’in Bengal Past and Present, Vol. LXXIV, Part II, 1955

  —— Insurgency of Titu Mir, 2002

  S. B. Chaudhuri, Civil Disturbances during the British Rule in India, 1955

  John K. Cooley, Unholy Wars: Afghanistan, America and International Terrorism, 2000

  Saul David, The Indian Mutiny, 2002

  Mahasweta Devi, Titu Mir, 2000

  Mahasweta Devi, Titu Mir, 2000

  Christine Dobbin, Islamic Revivalism in a Changing Peasant Economy: Central Sumatra, 1784–1847, 1983

  Balkhi Fasihuddin, Wahabi Movement, 1983

  Sir W. K. Fraser-Tytler, Afghanistan, 1950

  Alexander Igantenko, ‘Ordinary Wahhabism’, in Russian Journal, International Eurasian Institute for Economic and Political Research, 27 December 2001

  Lawrence James, The Making and Unmaking of British India, 1997

  Lawrence James, The Making and Unmaking of British India, 1997

  Lawrence James, The Making and Unmaking of British India, 1997

  Ibrahim Kalin, ‘Sayyid Jamal Al-Din Muhammad bin Safdar al-Afghani, 1838–1897’,www.cis-ca.org/voices, 6 Jan. 2004

  Narahari Kaviraj, Wahabi and Farazi Rebels of Bengal, 1982

  N. R. Keddie, ‘Sayyid Jamal al-Din al-Afghani’, in Ali Rehnema, ed., Pioneers of Islamic Revival, 1994

  Muhammad Asif Khan, The Story of Swat: as told by the Founder, Miangul Abdul Wadud Badshah Sahib to Muhammad Asif Kahn, undated (as quoted in Singer)

  Muin-ud-Din Ahmad Khan, Titu Mir and his Followers in British Indian Records, 1977

  Krishan Lal, ‘The Sack of Delhi 1857–58 as witnessed by Ghalib’, Bengal Past and Present, Vol. LXXIV, Part II, 1955

  Christina Lamb, Waiting for Allah: Pakistan’s Struggle for Democracy, 1991

  Kamal Matinuddin, The Taliban Phenomenon: Afghanistan 1994–1997, 1999

  Barbara D. Metcalf, Islamic Revival in British India: Deoband 1860–1900, 1989

  —— ‘“Traditionalist” Islamic Activism: Deoband, Tablighis and Talibs’, SSRC website, 2002

  A. W. Miangul, The Story of Swat, 1962

  Seyyed Vali Reza Nasr, ‘Mawdudi and the Jama’at-i Islami: the Origins, Theory and Practice of Islamic Revivalism’, in Ali Rehnema, ed., Pioneers of Islamic Revival, 1994

  Taufiq Ahmad Nizami, Muslim Political Thought and Activity in India during the First Half of the Nineteenth Century, 1969

  David Omissi, ed., Indian Voices of the Great War: Soldiers’ Letters 1914–18, 1999

  David Page, Editorial, Kipling Journal, September 2004

  D. Pal, The North-West Frontier 1843–1947, 1949

  M. Burhanuddin Qasmi, Darul Uloom Deoband: a Heroic Struggle against the British Tyranny, 2001

  Tariq Rahman, ‘The Madrassa and the State of Pakistan’, in Himal South Asian Magazine, February 2004

  —— ‘Madrassas: Religion, Poverty and the Potential for Violence in Pakistan’, in IPRI Journal, Vol. V, No. 1, Winter 2005

  Ahmed Rashid, Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil and Fundamentalism in Central Asia, 2000, republished as Taliban: the Story of the Afghan Warlords, 2001

  —— Jihad: the Rise of Militant Islam in Central Asia, 2002

  Francis Robinson, Islam and Muslim History in South Asia, 2000

  —— The Ulama of Farangi Mahal and Islamic Culture in South Asia, 2001

  S. A. A. Rizvi, ‘The Breakdown of Traditional Society,’ in Cambridge History of Islam, Vol. II, 1970

  Surendra Nath Sen, Eighteen Fifty-Seven, 1957

  Yoginder Sikand, ‘Madrassa Education in South Asia’, in QualandarMagazine, www.islaminterfaith.org

  —— Islamist Militancy in Kashmir: the Case of the Lashkar-i-Tayyeba, 2003

  André Singer, Lords of the Khyber, 1984

  Eric Stokes, The Peasant Armed: the Indian Revolt of 1857, 1986

  Percy M. Sykes, A History of Afghanistan, 1940

  Percy M. Sykes, A History of Afghanistan, 1940

  Murray Titmus, Islam in India and Pakistan, 1960

  Various, ‘Primer: A Guide to Religious and Extremist Groups in Pakistan’, in The Virtual Information Center, 8 February 2002

  Rahimullah Yusufzai, ‘Wrath of God: Osama bin Laden lashes out against the West’, in Time Magazine, 11 January 1999

  Muhammad Qasim Zaman, ‘Modernity and Religious Change in South Asian Islam’, in Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, Series 3, Vol. XIV, Part 3, 2004

  General and reference: primary and secondary sources (post-1947)

  Hamid Algar, An Introduction to Islam, 2000

  Jason Burke, ‘Making of the World’s Most Wanted Man,’ in The Observer Focus Special, 28 October 2001

  —— Al-Qaeda: Casting a Shadow of Terror, 2003

  —— Al-Qaeda: Casting a Shadow of Terror, 2003

  Caleb Carr, The Lessons of Terror: A Hi
story of Warfare against Civilians, 2002

  Peter Clarke, The World’s Religions: Islam, 1998

  John K. Cooley, Unholy Wars: Afghanistan, America and International Terrorism, 2nd ed, 2000

  M. S. Doran, ‘Gods and monsters’, in How Did this Happen? Terrorism and the New War, 2001

  John L. Esposito, Islamic Revivalism, 1985

  —— The Islamic Threat: Myth or Reality?,1999

  —— Unholy War: Terror in the name of Islam, 2002

  ——ed., Oxford Encyclopaedia of the Modern Islamic World, 1995

  Reuven Firestone, Jihad: the Origin of Holy War in Islam, 1999

  Terry Gambill, ‘Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi: a Biographical Sketch,’ in The Jamestown Foundation Terrorism Monitor, Vol. 2, Issue 24, 16 December 2004

  H. A. R. Gibb & J. H. Kramers, Shorter Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1953

  G. F. Haddad, ‘Ahmad Ibn Taymiyya: A Brief Survey’, in Living Islam, http://www.livingislam.org, 2002

  Yvonne Haddad, ‘Muhammad Abduh: Pioneer of Islamic Reform’, in Ali Rehnema, ed., Pioneers of Islamic Revival, 1994

  T. P. Hughes, Dictionary of Islam, 1895

  Giles Kepel, Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam, 2002

  Bernard Lewis, What Went Wrong? The Clash between Islam and Modernity in the Middle East, 2002

  MEMRI, ‘Al-Hayat Inquiry: the City of Al-Zarqaa in Jordan – Breeding Ground of Jordan’s Salafi Jihad Movement’, in Special Despatch, 17 January 2005

  Rudolf Peters, Jihad in Classical and Modern Islam, 1996

  Oliver Roy, Global Islam: the Search for a New Ummah, 2004

  Raj Pruthi, Encyclopedia of Jihad, Vols II & IV, 2002

  Samir Raafat, ‘Ayman Al-Zawahri: the World’s Second Most Wanted Man’, in Feature Article, http://egy.com/people

  Malise Ruthven, Islam in the World, 1998

  —— Fundamentalism: the Search for Meaning, 2001

  —— A Fury for God: the Islamist Attack on America, revised edition 2004

  Edward Said, Orientalism, 1978

  John O. Voll, ‘Muhammad Hayat al-Sindi and Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab: an Analysis of an Intellectual Group in Eighteenth Century Medina’, in Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, Vol. 38, No. 1, 1975

  —— ‘Foundations for Renewal and Reform: Islamic Movements in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries’, in The Oxford History of Islam, 1999

  Benjamin Walker, Foundations of Islam: the Making of A World Faith, 1998

  Index

  11 September 2001

  aal as-Sheikh (Family of the Sheikh)

  Aal-Shaikh, Sheikh Muhammad bin

  Ibrahim

  Abbott, James

  Abdali, Ahmad Shah

  Abdul Aziz, Shah

  Abdul Hai, Shah

  Abdul Hamid, Sultan

  Abdul Haq

  Abdul Haq, Maulana

  Abdul Rahman

  Abdullah (Patha assassin)

  Abdullah Ali, Amir

  death, descendants

  Abdullah, Caliph

  Abdullah, Prince

  Abdur Rahman, Amir

  ad Dawa lil Tawhid (Call to Unity)

  Ad-Dajjal

  Aden

  Adye, Colonel John

  Afghan Colony

  Afghanistan

  Russian (Soviet) involvement

  mujahedeen

  frontier area

  British invasion,

  Afghan War

  Second Afghan War

  nation-state created

  neutrality ended

  Third Afghan War, ulema,

  site of jihad

  Wahhabi

  involvement, madrassahs

  rise of Taliban

  Afghans, radicalised

  Afridis, Akahel

  Agra

  Ahl al-Kitab

  Ahl-i-Hadith

  Ahmad, Muhammad

  Ahmad, Nizamuddin

  Ahmadullah, Maulvi

  becomes Wahhabi

  leader, avoids arrest

  arrest and trial, death

  Ahmadzais

  Akbar, Emperor

  Akbari Ali

  Akora Khattack

  Al Mujaheed (The Holy Warrior)

  Aleppo

  Alexander the Great

  Alexander, Mr

  Algeria

  Ali brothers, see Inayat

  Ali; Wilayat Ali Ali Masjid

  Ali Pasha

  Ali, Caliph

  Aligarh

  Al-Ikhwan (The Brotherhood), extreme form of Wahhabism

  Allahabad

  Allen, George

  Allenby, Lord

  All-India Muslim League

  al-Maqdisi, Sheikh Muhammad

  al-Mukhtar, Hashiya radd

  Al-Muwahhidun (Unitarians)

  Al-Qaeda

  al-Qahtani, Muhammad

  al-Qayyim al-Jawziyah

  al-Salaf al-Salih

  al-Utabi, Juhaiman

  al-Wahhab, Muhammad ibn Abd, and

  ibn Saud family

  resigns as imam, descendants, continuance of

  his teachings

  history of, Deobandi

  view of, theology presented as

  Protestantism, Taliban

  conform to teachings

  al-Wahhab, Sulayman ibn Abd

  al-Zarqawi, Abu Musab

  al-Zawahri, Ayman

  Amanullah Ali

  Amanullah, Amir

  Amazais

  Amb, Khan of

  Amballa, and Wahhabi trials

  Ambeyla Campaign

  Ambeyla Pass

  Eagle’s Nest, Crag

  Picquet

  Amir Khan, Nawab

  Amir-ul-Momineen

  Amritsar, Massacre

  Andaman Islands

  Aneiza tribe

  Ansar-i-Islam, approvers

  Arab League

  Arab Revolt

  Arabia

  appearance of Al-Ikhwan, Syed

  Ahmed’s followers arrive, map

  spiritual conquest, divisions

  within, assumes Arab identity

  Muhammad Ishaq’s exile in

  gripped by

  Wahhabism, desert crossings

  unification as Saudi

  Arabia, British

  involvement in, Indian links with, Wahhabi veterans

  in

  Arabic

  Arab-Israeli war (1973)

  Arabs, ‘Arabs’

  Arafat, Yasser

  Aramco

  Argyll, Duke of

  Army of Retribution

  Army of the Indus

  Arrah

  Artaiba

  Artawiyyaa

  Asar Mahshar (Signs of the Last

  Day)

  Ataturk, Kemal

  Attock

  Aurangzeb, Emperor

  Austria-Hungary

  Austrians

  Azimgargh

  Azzam, Ibrahim

  Azzam, Sheikh Abdullah

  Babrhai Mullah

  Badakshan

  Badshah, Sahib Miangul Abdul

  Wadud

  Badshah Shah Alam, Emperor

  Baghdad

  Bahadur, Khan

  Bahadur Shah, Emperor

  Bahrain

  Baiat al-Imam

  baiat

  Bajour

  Bajourees

  Bakht Khan, Subedar Muhammad

  Balakot, battle of

  Baluchistan

  Bamian

  Bangladesh

  Bannu

  Barakat (Palgrave’s companion)

  Bard, battle of

  Bareilly

  Barrackpore

  Bashir Ahmad Khan

  Basra

  Batalvi, Maulvi Muhammad Husain

  Bay of Bengal

  Bazar

  Becher, Major

  Bedouin

  Belgium

  Bell, Gertrude

  Bellew, Dr Henry, description of mullahs


  Benares

  Bengal, beginning of

  British rule, Christian

  missionaries in, Titu Mir’s

  revolt, weavers join

  Wahhabis, becomes province

  during Sepoy Mutiny

  Wahhabi networks

  Bengal Civil Service

  Bengal Native Infantry, and

  Sepoy Mutiny

  mutinous 55th

  Regiment

  Beni Temin tribe

  Berar

  Bharatpore

  Bhopal

  Bihar

  Wahhabi networks

  bin Baz, Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah

  bin Hanbal, Ahmad

  bin Laden, Muhammad

  bin Laden, Osama

  Wahhabism

  turns against Wahhabi

  establishment, alliance with

  Taliban, assumes

  leadership, interpretation of

  Islam

  bin Rahmatullah, Miskin

  Binnori, Maulvi Mohammad Yusaf

  Black Mountains

  Blavatsky, Madame

  Blood, General Bindon

  Bokhara, Emir of

  Bolan Pass

  Bombay

  Boyle (engineer)

  British

  consolidate rule

  indigo planters, intervention in

  Afghanistan, jihad

  against

  length

  of dominion, opinions of

  Muslims, failure against

  dervishes, casualties

  courage, and Ibn Saud

  armed struggle

  against, in Egypt

  British Empire

  British Iraq petroleum Company

  Buddhists

  Buner, tribes

  topography, Syed Ahmad takes

  refuge in, influence

  of Akhund of Swat

  appearance of ‘the Mad

  Fakir’, map

  Fanatics expelled

  Bunerwals

  Burckhardt, J. H.

  Burden, Lieutenant

  Burdwan

  Burjan, Hajji Mullah

  Burke, Edmund

  Burke, Jason

  Burma

  Burrendo

  Burton, Sir Richard

  Bushire

  Butcher, Flora

  Buxar

  Cairo, Al-Aqsa

  mosque, Al-Azhar

  University

  Calcutta

  during Sepoy Mutiny

  murder of Justice Norman

  Sunni convocation

  Canning, Lord

  Carnac, Charles

  Carnatic

  Caroe, Sir Olaf

  Cawnpore

  Central Asian Society

  Ceylon

  Chakdara

  Chamarkand

  Chamberlain, Brigadier (later Major-

  General) Neville

  Chamla valley

 

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