“The Life and work of Jalal-ud-din Rumi” by Afzal Iqbal
Since the comments under the post “Arya Dharm” have grown to be too numerous and lengthy, I am creating this related post on the topic of the above book, which I have referred to in my comments under the “Arya Dhram” allegations post.
As this post is itself lengthy, I have now moved it off the main page to a comment on this page.
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Zahid Aziz
From Zahid Aziz:
I have before me the 1983 edition of The Life and work of Jalal-ud-din Rumi by Afzal Iqbal (The Octagon Press, London, ISBN: 0 86304 033 0).
What is the repute of Rumi? In the Foreword of this book we are told:
This, of course, is the same Sir Muhammad Iqbal whose two or three pamphlets against the Ahmadiyya Movement are widely reproduced by the anti-Ahmadiyya groups!
I now quote from the author’s Introduction (all bolding is mine):
This, then, is the man about whom our anti-Ahmadiyya poster (The Pleezing One) declares so casually that he is prepared at a stroke to reject his writings!
Afzal Iqbal continues:
Then Afzal Iqbal continues about his own book:
One of the passages Afzal Iqbal deals with (p. 299-103) is also on a website. Please see this link, and read particularly from the line: “The worried wife reaches the door and opens it”. The wife disturbs her husband and their maid having sexual intercourse, and the husband stands up and pretends that he was saying prayers!
It is in the last chapter of this book, entitled Latin Translation of the Mathnawi, that Afzal Iqbal refutes the suggestion by Nicholson that certain passages in Mathnawi contain such explicit sexual descriptions that he did not translate them into English but rather into Latin. Afzal Iqbal writes:
I am quoting Afzal Iqbal’s response because the general principles underlying them can be applied to writings of Hazrat Mirza sahib which, of course on quite different grounds, are considered objectionable. People are merely projecting their own inhibitions when they find so-called objectionable statements in his books.
Further on he writes as follows. While reading, please bear in mind the kind of misrepresentations carried out against Hazrat Mirza sahib:
To show an example of the kind of story by Rumi that Afzal Iqbal deals with, I have scanned in pages 295 to 298, where the example begins in the middle of page 295 with the paragraph: The Maidservant and the Ass …
Click here to view the pages as a pdf file.