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History of Sindh

Sindhu in Veda......

In the beginning was the word. The first recorded word was the Veda. And the Veda is just ecstatic about the Sindhu, the cradle of Indian civilization.

According to Veda ``Sindhu in might surpasses all the streams that flow.... His roar is lifted up to heaven above the earth; he puts forth endless vigor with a flash of light .... so other rivers roar into the Sindhu. As a warrior- king leads other warriors, so does Sindhu lead other rivers.... Rich in good steeds is Sindhu, rich in gold, nobly fashioned, rich in ample wealth.''

Sindhu is too alive and too divine to be `it'';
and so Sindhu is ``he''!

Sindh during Mahabharata..


King Jayadratha of Sindh was married to Kaurava princess, Dushhala. He was, therefore, all along on the side of the Kauravas --- and against the Pandavas. However, be it said to the credit of Jayadratha that he, like Dhritarashtra and Bhishma, opposed the disastrous game of dice between the Pandavas and the Kauravas
 

Indus Valley And The Islamic Golden Age​

By admin
January 22, 2022


The Islamic golden age was an era spanning the initial centuries of the rise of Islam when intellectual contact of Muslims with the world led to unrivaled gains in various sciences. The conquest of the Indus Valley in modern Pakistan stretched the Islamic frontiers inside South Asia which not only enlightened the Muslim world on its own but also served as the primary vehicle for the movement of knowledge from the rest of South Asia to the Islamic world.,,

The Sind-Hind Divide​

Early Islamic geography was a subject under constant evolution however, one notion that the Islamic geographers upheld initially was the division of South Asia into Sind and Hind with the former being the Indus valley and the latter being the rest of South Asia. The geographer Ibn Khordadbeh’s (820-912 CE) 9th-century description of ‘Sind’ (Indus Valley) covers portions of the Indus basin and much of modern Pakistan as his Sind was comprised of Makran, Turan, Al-Qiqan, Multan, and Sind.

Apart from Sind’s status both as a geographic entity and a strong kingdom before its conquest, the probable reason that the Muslims adopted such nomenclature to differentiate Sind and Hind would be to differentiate between the areas with a Muslim stronghold and those that lay beyond the frontiers of the Islamic world. This religious distinction is apparent in the early Muslim geographic book “Kitab Al Masalik Wa Mamalik” (The book of roads and countries) where the author differentiates between the portions under Muslim rule with that of the Non-Muslim portion of South Asia by employing the term “Sind-wal-Hind” (Sind and Hind). This notion appears to be strongly ingrained in the Islamic world since we see the 11th century chroniclers Utbi and Gardezi use the name “Sayhun” of the Jaxartes river for the Indus river since both “marked the frontier zone between the land of Islam and Paganism”.

The method of discovering the origin of figures in the Islamic world is through Nisbahs i.e. attached adjectives as surnames to depict the original homeland. For the people of the Indus Valley, this mainly pertained to ‘Sindi’, ‘Mansuri,’ ‘Deybali’, ‘Qusdari’, ‘Makrani’ etc. Though due to the vague early Islamic geography, the term Sindi was also at times applied to people within modern Afghanistan, just as the term ‘Hindi’ was applied to people of Sind in modern Pakistan.

Conquest Of Sind​

The initial Islamic advances upon Sind’s neighborhood coincided with the transition of Sind from the Buddhist Rai dynasty to the Hindu Chach dynasty with the battle of Rasil fought by the forces of the Caliph Umer (584-644 CE) in Sind marking the beginning. However, the conquest of Sind began nearly a century later in the era of the Umayyad Caliphate in 711 CE.

The conquest and fighting began at the port city of Deybul and slowly expanded north with a final success at the battle of Alor against Raja Dahir (633-712 CE) of Sind being most pivotal and leading to hefty amounts of booty and slaves. Due to the Muslim forces being too far away and in a completely alien land, the conquest of Sind was complex in nature. It heavily relied on using strong brutal force where necessary but also on the extension of peace treaties and the assimilation of local elements in civil and military administration for easy governance.

Though the policy for Non-Muslims varied from place to place and on the extent of cooperation, for ease of administration the Muslims adopted several surprising policies such as the extension of the Dhimmi (Protected Person) status to Hindus and Buddhists and equating them to the ’people of the covenant’. The Jizya tax was imposed upon Non-Muslims yet the Brahmins were exempted from it, who were also favored in retaining certain governmental posts. The famous sun temple of Multan was protected from destruction, but a mosque was created proximate to it. The mercantile Sindhi Buddhists largely cooperated with the Muslims both during and after the conquest due to ideological reasons and mercantile interests whereas the agrarian Hindus were unaffected by Islamic policies but most strongly affected was the Hindu ruling class which was deposed.

Theology and Literature​

The beginning of Islamic theological studies in Sind started swiftly after its conquest in 711 CE and soon after with the establishment of the city of Mansura upon the banks of the Indus river. Sind soon became a fountain for theological studies especially the Ahadith (Traditions of the Prophet). This new age of the study of the science of traditions was brought forth by 3 groups: Locals who resided and studied in Sind, Locals who traveled elsewhere in the Islamic world to attain knowledge, and war prisoners from Sind who had been settled elsewhere in the Islamic world.

One of the earliest figures from the Indus Valley to earn fame in the Islamic world was the historian Abu Mashar Al Sindi (d. 786 CE). Believed to be a slave from Sind, he traveled to Medina where he bought his freed and was patronized by the then Caliph. The famous 9the century biographer Ibn Nadim regularly quotes him for chronology in his famous book ‘Al Fihrist’ and also credits him to have written a ‘Kitab Al Maghazi’ (Book of Conquests) which was an exceptional book on the life of the prophet and his military campaigns. Abu Mashar’s works won him the title of ‘Imam Al-Fann’ (Leader of the art). His status amongst the intellectuals of the golden age can be estimated through his death where his funeral prayers were led by none other than the famous Caliph Harun Al Rashid himself.

The only one to surpass Abu Mashar in his theological knowledge was his own son Muhammad bin Abu Mashar Al-Sindi (765-861 CE). Muhammad’s tutoring by his father in Baghdad soon made him a scholar and theologian in his own right whose acclaim can be measured through his students who traveled to study under him from all over the Muslim world. Of the many students who went on to become famous traditionists, historiographers, and theologians, some of the most famous are reputed Islamic figures such as Abu Isa Al-Tirmidhi, Al-Tabari, Abu Hatim Al-Razi, Ibn Abi Al-Dunya.

The theologian Rija or Raja Al-Sindi (d. 837) traveled to the city of Isfarain in Persia and acquired high prestige in the study of Ahadith where his works and studies yielded him the title of ‘Rukn Min Arkan Al-Hadith’ (One of the Pillars of the Hadith). Rija’s grandson Muhammad (821-899 CE) was also an outstanding theologian and a much-celebrated author of a Mustakharaj, a sub narration, on the Hadith book Sahih Muslim.

Abu Ali Al-Sindi was one of the first figures from the Indus Valley to be recorded as a tutor of the famous Sufi Bayazid Al-Bistami (d. 848 CE) whose status amongst the Sufis makes him remembered as “Sultan Al-Arifeen” (King of Gnostics). Bayazid was known for his concept of Fanaa (self-annihilation) and it’s believed that Abu Ali Al-Sindi tutored Al-Bistami in this concept. Though the reason behind this is under strong debate within historians, it is believed for Al-Sindi to have been a Buddhist convert having studied the concept of Nirvana and thus imparted his knowledge to Al-Bistami.

The most famous of the Theologians with possible links to the Indus Valley is Imam Awzai (707-774 CE). Though his origins are debated upon and his name ‘Awzai’ is seen to be synonymous with an Arab tribe, certain historians believe the name to be a nisbah derived from the village Awza where he settled. The famous 10th-century historian Zura Al Damishqi also stated that Awzai was a descendent of war prisoners from Sind and that his name Awzai signified the village and not the tribe.

Regardless of his ancestry, Imam Awzai was a figure of legendary fame in the Islamic world who had received theological knowledge before his teen years and was deciding upon legal issues at the age of 13. As one of the most acclaimed Jurists and scholars of his time and a pioneer in the collection and compilation of traditions, he not only decided upon more than 7000 legal points but also wrote 2 books on Islamic jurisprudence. By the end of his acclaimed life, he had his own school of thought which enjoyed a strong position in Andalusia before eventually being superseded by other schools.


More than 70 other figures from the Islamic Golden age also exist bearing nisbahs linking them to the Indus Valley who were pioneers in theology and literature.

Warfare​

The history of military interactions between groups from modern Pakistan and the Islamic world predates the actual inclusion of the Indus valley into the Islamic caliphates due to the pre-existing connections of it and the Sassanian Empire. The Persian custom of recruiting foot soldiers, archers, and cavalry from the Indus Valley goes back to the Achaemenid era since we learn through Herodotus (484-485 BCE) of warriors of the Indus Satrapies present at the battles of Thermopylae and Marathon.

A similar pattern of recruitment was followed by the Sassanians where we learn of Emperors like Bahram V recruiting and settling large numbers from the Jatt community of the Indus valley across his empire. The soldiers amongst them were concentrated in Southwestern Persia and were employed both as soldiers in the Sassanid Armies and also serving to protect the roads and means of trade and transportation in Persia.

These groups were amongst the earliest to engage with the Muslim armies on behalf of the Sassanians and not only formed auxiliary units in the Sassanid armies for further support but were also charged with defending core Sassanid cities like Ahvaz. Though with the crushing defeats given to the Sassanid Empire at the hands of the Rashidun Caliphate, these jatts, known as Zutt in Arabic, were amongst the earliest in Persia to accept Islam and thus join with the Muslim armies in their further conquests. They were also later replenished with more of their men when the Indus Valley fell to the Ummayad Caliphate in 711 CE.
Zutts enjoyed a spot of significance in the early Islamic age which is evident since they were employed by the Caliph Ali (601-661 CE) for defending the city of Basrah and the royal treasuries during one of the most pivotal and politically significant battles of Islamic history i.e. Battle of the Camel (656 CE). They would find themselves a mention by the Byzantine historians as possibly the ‘Indians’ who were part of the forces in the armies of Thomas the Slav during his revolt (821-823 CE) against the Byzantine empire, possibly as a contingent of fine warriors sent by the Abbasid Caliph to Thomas as aid.

The historian Al-Tabbari (839-923 CE) in his 33rd volume also speaks of a warrior named Al-Sindi Ibn Bukhtashah leading the right flanks of the general Wasif Al-Turki in what was one of the earliest Muslim offensives into Anatolia in 862 CE, however the original homeland of the warrior isn’t properly known.

Medicine​

South Asia’s ancient reputation as one of the strongholds of medicinal sciences and its position as the primary region for procurement of medicinal herbs was what initiated intellectual contact between the Abbasid Caliphate and the Indus Valley as well as South Asia and helped usher Islamic sciences into a new age. It was the party sent by Yahya Al-Barmaki (d. 806 CE) to the Indus Valley to procure medicinal Herbs and study South Asia which led to further contacts and resulted in a delegation of native non-muslim scholars and proponents of sciences from Sind/Indus Valley carrying Sanskrit books and treatises to Baghdad upon invitation of the Barkamid Vizirs. In the field of Medicine, 2 names stand prominently apart: those of Ibn Dahn and Mankah.

Ibn Dahn was an erudite scholar of medicine who was appointed as the chief physician of the Abbasid Hospital (Bimaristan) and was the chief of the medicinal school of Baghdad. Of the multiple medicinal texts that he wrote and translated into Arabic, some worth mentioning includes a book on 404 diseases and their symptoms, on medicinal herbs, on the descriptions of snakes and the medicines to their poisons, on dealing with pregnancies and another on diseases primarily contracted by women, on multiple forms of poison, on diseases of animals and another on diseases faced only by children.

Though perhaps the greatest exchange of medicinal knowledge took place when the scholar Mankah translated the 2 most significant ancient compendiums of Sanskrit medicinal knowledge; The compendium of Sushruta at the behest of Caliph Harun Al Rashid (763-809 CE) and the Compendium of Charaka, both of which held immense significance in the Ayurvedic medicine of South Asia. The former was composed by an excellent physician in the city of Kashi in modern India whereas the latter was compiled by an exceptional physician who studied and practiced in the ancient city of Taxila, adjacent to Pakistan’s modern capital. These texts which dealt with a wide range of phenomena pertaining to surgery, medicine, and poisons helped the early Muslim physicians greatly in expanding their understanding of the medicinal world.

Astronomy​

Another character of primary importance from the delegation of Sind was the astronomer known as Kankah who worked both in the courts of Caliph Harun Al-Rashid and Caliph Al-Mamun (786-833 CE).

Though Kankah’s contributions varied into multiple fields, his greatest gift to the Islamic world was the passage of the most detailed and efficient work on South Asian astronomy to the Muslim astronomers.

According to certain historians, it was at the behest of Harun Al Rashid that Kankah was ordered to get the Brahma Siddhanta, one of the finest mathematical and astronomical works of South Asia by the Indian mathematician Brahmagupta, translated into Arabic..........

The astronomer Al-Fazari (b. 746) is known for having shouldered the responsibility of helping translate the texts, which in its final forms yielded the greatest astronomical work of the Islamic golden age, a work given the Arabic name ‘Zij Al Sind-Hind’. The Zij Al Sind-Hind of Al-Fazari was a text created by the union of South Asian, Persian, and Greek astronomical knowledge and enjoyed legendary prominence amongst astronomers and mathematicians alike. Being employed and studied by Muslims from the banks of Euphrates to the Spanish coasts, it would go on to “produce over the centuries the spectacular tradition of Arabic Astronomy”.

The great polymath Al-Khwarizmi (780-850 CE) responsible for the Algebra also created a version of the Sindhind from Al-Fazari’s. A Berber polymath named Abbas Ibn-Farnath carried it to Spain where it would go on to greatly affect the Christian world. Another Spanish polymath’s upgraded version of the Sindhind would be translated by Aberland of Bath (1080-1152 CE) into Latin and taken to benefit Christian Europe.

Another Spanish polymath would utilize the SindHind in the creation of his book which would be employed for important tasks such as finding the direction of Mecca, establishing times of prayer, and inquiring about the visibility of the moon to use for the Islamic Calendar. SindHind’s significance in the Islamic world can be measured from the fact that even in the late 12th century the Jewish polymath Ben Ezra was known for creating a Hebrew translation of a commentary of the SindHind in Spain and another Spanish Jew Petrus Alphonsi would carry it to England in the same era.

Apart from the passage of the Brahma Siddhanta, Kankah is believed to have written at least 4 books on astronomical knowledge named: The Book of Nativities, The Book of Namudar for the Ages, The Great Book of Conjunctions, and the Small book of Conjunctions. Kankah would go on to occupy a position of great reverence amongst the Muslim world, to the point that many legends and myths would be attributed to him over time.

Centuries later, the polymath Al-Biruni would employ the same trigonometric methods refined by the polymaths in the court of Caliph Al Mamun to measure the circumference of the earth at Nandana in modern Pakistan.

Mathematics​

Perhaps the largest benefit that the Muslims received at the creation of the Zij Al Sind-Hind was their introduction to the numbering system of South Asia known to the Arabs as Arqam al Hindi or the Indian numerals. The Indian numerals were based on the decimal notation system which was a base 10 system where counting was concrete and not abstract in nature like its contemporary systems. One of the oldest written manuscript of the Indian numeral system was discovered in 1881 in the village of Bakhshali in today’s north western Pakistan.

Pioneer Muslim polymaths adopted and worked on the Indian numeral system, not only deriving much benefit from it but also trying to perfect it for better efficiency. The famous Polymath Al-Khwarizmi’s 8th-century work “Addition and Subtraction in Indian Arithmetic” not only aided the Muslims but its translation into Latin and movement into Europe ushered the West into a new age of mathematical knowledge.

Multiple pioneer Muslim polymaths such Al-Uqudisi, Abu’l Wafa, and Al-Nasawi would prepare manuscripts and treatise’ on Indian numerals and by the 12th century, the Muslim world was saturated completely with the new numbering system as was the West acclimating to it, changing every aspect of life from study to trade and ushering in a new age.

Conclusion

With the rise of the Habbarid dynasty in the Indus valley, much of the theological work and the custom of theological contacts with Persia and Arabia was abandoned and a similar blow was dealt with intellectual contact between the two regions with the vane of the influence of the Abbasid caliphate.

Though both theological and intellectual contacts between the Muslim world and the Indus Valley alongside the rest of South Asia would witness a new age with the turn of the 12th century when contacts between the Muslims and South Asia would begin again and Islamic dynasties would renew the translation of local works.

 
BC 810 : Egyptian Emperor Sume Rames attacked Sindh
BC 326-325: Alexander the Great stormed through the Indus Valley,
BC 313 : Buddhism was popularized in Sindh during emperor Ashoka's period.
AD 280-500 : Persian rule.
AD 550-711:
(i) Rai Sahiras and his son Rai Sahasi ruled Sindh and formed Rai Dynasty.
(ii) Chach succeeded the Rai and founded Brahman Dynasty.
(iii) Raja Dahar (Chach's son) took over from Chander (Chach's brother). Raja Dahar ruled Sindh for several years..
AD 711-1026 : Sindh was invaded by a 17-year old Arab General, Muhammad Bin Qasim, establishing the Arab rule for next 305 years.
AD 1026-1350 : Soomro Dynasty ruled Sindh for 300 years.
AD 1054 : Soomras faced ruinous invasion by Mahmood Ghaznavi and Allauddin Khilji
AD 1351 : The rise of the Samma Dynasty in Sindh.
AD 1521-1554 : Arghun Rule was established in Sindh by Shah Beg. He was a descendant of Changez Khan.
AD 1554-1591 : General Mirza Isa Beg found Tarkhan Dynasty in Sindh (Turks in origin) after the death of Shah Hassan Arghun.
AD 1555 : Portuguese sacked Thatta, a bustling metropolis of Sindh.

 
Khan Bahadur Hssanally Effendi

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Hassanally Effendi was born on 14th August 1830 in a respectable family of Akhunds in Hyderabad, Sindh. While still very young, he lost his father and was brought up by his elder brother. According to the tradition of his family, he was enrolled in a local maktab to read holy Quran and learn Arabic and Persian. After completion of this traditional education, he got a job in the office of the Deputy Collector of Naushehro. There he developed friendship with one of his Christian colleague who encouraged him to learn English.

By that time, a vast majority of Muslims had kept themselves aloof from everything related to English, including their language. But, Hassanally held a different point of view. He thought that there was immense wealth of literature and knowledge in English, which ought to be untapped for the intellectual and material progress of the Muslims. He was of the view that the language was merely means of communication and it had nothing to do with the acts of those who spoke it. Hence,
he devoted his leisure hours in learning English and acquired proficiency in it. As he came across great works of English literature, he became very fond of reading, which became his hobby.

This was the time when river Indus served as means of transportation, as roads had yet not been developed and land routes were insecure. The British established ‘Indus-Flotilla’ a system of transportation based on a special type of boats. The town of Jherrick, a river-port some sixty miles north of Karachi, emerged as the headquarters of the Indus Flotilla. This establishment had a core permanent staff as to keep an account of the incoming and outgoing quantities of goods. Hassanally was offered a job, which he joined as it offered him relatively more time for his passion: reading English literature.

Sometime in the mid 1860s when Hassanally was about thirty-five he met Mr. Middleton, the chief judge of the highest court in the province of Sindh called the ‘Saddar Court.’ The judge had arrived for crossing Indus by a ferry. However, the judge decided to spend the night at port and to cross the river the following day. After dinner when everybody retired, he saw Hassanally reading an English book by the dim light of an oil lamp. After the introductions were over, a conversation ensued. The judge was pleasantly surprised to know about the grasp of Hassanally on a variety of subjects. He was even more surprised to know that the person he was talking to was a Muslim.

The judge needed a person at his court who knew local languages and was well versed with Muslim customs and practices, as the court faced immense difficulties in understanding the contents of applications filed by Muslims in local languages. He had been looking for a person to assist the court especially in the matters relating to Muslims but was unable to find such a person as there was not even a single English-knowing Muslim available for that job in the entire province. But now in Hassanally he found a perfect match for his need and offered him immediately an appointment in his court at Karachi on almost double of Hassanally’s existing salary. He accepted the offer and shifted to Karachi to assume his new responsibilities.

As they started working together, Hassanally impressed the judge with his legal acumen and grip over the finer points of law to such an extent that the judge got him special permission to practice law without even having a formal qualification in law. This proved to be a turning point in Hassanally’s life.

This was the time that there was not even single Muslim advocate except him in the entire Sindh. Most of the lawyers in Sindh were Hindus while some of them were Christians and Zoroastrians. In these circumstances he had no support base and had to prove his worth against well-established lawyers. But, he took it as a challenge and devoted each ounce of his energy to his new profession. His interest and devotion towards his job earned him respect in the legal fraternity and he was offered the most prestigious position of the Public Prosecutor of Sindh. The distinction of his appointment was that he was the first non-European lawyer in Sindh to be appointed to that position. Another distinction was that he held that office for fourteen years, setting a record.


Hassanally was a man of rare talents. He had a fairly good knowledge of foreign languages like Persian, Arabic, English, Turkish, Latin and French. He offered prayers regularly at proper times throughout his life. After mosques at Sindh Madressah were constructed, Hassanally made it a point to offer Friday prayers every week regularly there, the routine that he observed till his departing from this world.

In private life also, Hassanally observed proper routine throughout his life. In summer as well as in winter, he used to get up at five o’ clock in the morning. After having bath and offering prayers he used to read holy Quran. After that he went for a morning walk, where the news of the day was read to him. At nine o’clock he would engage himself in learning a foreign language and after that he would dress up and had his breakfast.

Hassanally did not allow any serious work to interfere with his sleep, which he considered the restorer of consumed energy. A full night’s rest always made him look fresh again in the morning and ready to go through the duties of the day with renewed vigor. This schedule helped him a lot not only keeping him healthy throughout his life, but also enabled him to contribute extraordinarily towards the causes he had chosen for himself to work for.

These habits greatly helped him in establishing himself in his profession. Once established, Hassanally directed his energies towards the greater cause of the welfare of his Muslim brethren, not only in Sindh and India but much beyond that. He founded an association under the name of ‘Anjuman-e-Islam’ and was elected its president. The main objective of the association was to help Muslims during the period of their sufferings, safeguard their rights and spread education amongst them.
At that time, a noted Hindu Lawyer Mr. Dayaram Jethamal had also organized an association known as ‘Sindh Sabha’ with the objectives of the promotion of education amongst Sindhis. Hassanally joined that association also without any prejudice and was elected as its Vice President.

Hassanally’s dream to establish Sindh Madressatul Islam come true on 01 September 1885, when Sindh Madressatul Islam was formally opened... A ceremony was arranged to mark the beginning of the institution, to which he invited a couple of friends and well wishers. Hassanally spoke for about two hours in that function in which he described the social and economic conditions of the Muslims of Sindh and the measures that he and his friends were taking to improve them.

By 1895, Hassanally Effendi and his friends in cause had turned the institution of Sindh Madressatul Islam into a center of excellence. It consisted of a high school, three primary branches of Sindhi, Urdu and Gujrati. In this institution, the Quran classes and religious instructions were taught regularly. A group of highly dedicated teachers had converted themselves in a spirited team around the dream of Hassanally Effendi. The institution had already started producing the generations of educated Sindhi Muslims, with the first batch of six students passing the examination conducted by the University of Bombay in 1892.\

Having achieved his objectives successfully Hassanally breathed his last in the afternoon of 20th August 1895, at Hassanally Hall located on the McLeod Road (presently known as I.I. Chundrigar Road) of Karachi. At first it was contemplated that he should be buried in the compound of Sindh Madressah. But it was noted that he had always desired that he should be buried in the garden of his Hyderabad residence, known as Effendi Baugh. Respecting his desire his body was taken in a special train from Karachi to Hyderabad, where he was laid to rest amidst thousands of his friends, family members, teachers and students of SMI. Former President Mr. Asif Ali Zardari is a maternal great grandson of Khan Bahadur..

May Allah bless his noble soul!

Courtesy: Hassanally Effendi (1830-1895): The Founder of Sindh Madressatul Islam by Dr Muhammad Ali Shaikh

Siraj Effendi.
 

Indus Valley And The Islamic Golden Age​

By admin
January 22, 2022


The Islamic golden age was an era spanning the initial centuries of the rise of Islam when intellectual contact of Muslims with the world led to unrivaled gains in various sciences. The conquest of the Indus Valley in modern Pakistan stretched the Islamic frontiers inside South Asia which not only enlightened the Muslim world on its own but also served as the primary vehicle for the movement of knowledge from the rest of South Asia to the Islamic world.,,

The Sind-Hind Divide​

Early Islamic geography was a subject under constant evolution however, one notion that the Islamic geographers upheld initially was the division of South Asia into Sind and Hind with the former being the Indus valley and the latter being the rest of South Asia. The geographer Ibn Khordadbeh’s (820-912 CE) 9th-century description of ‘Sind’ (Indus Valley) covers portions of the Indus basin and much of modern Pakistan as his Sind was comprised of Makran, Turan, Al-Qiqan, Multan, and Sind.

Apart from Sind’s status both as a geographic entity and a strong kingdom before its conquest, the probable reason that the Muslims adopted such nomenclature to differentiate Sind and Hind would be to differentiate between the areas with a Muslim stronghold and those that lay beyond the frontiers of the Islamic world. This religious distinction is apparent in the early Muslim geographic book “Kitab Al Masalik Wa Mamalik” (The book of roads and countries) where the author differentiates between the portions under Muslim rule with that of the Non-Muslim portion of South Asia by employing the term “Sind-wal-Hind” (Sind and Hind). This notion appears to be strongly ingrained in the Islamic world since we see the 11th century chroniclers Utbi and Gardezi use the name “Sayhun” of the Jaxartes river for the Indus river since both “marked the frontier zone between the land of Islam and Paganism”.

The method of discovering the origin of figures in the Islamic world is through Nisbahs i.e. attached adjectives as surnames to depict the original homeland. For the people of the Indus Valley, this mainly pertained to ‘Sindi’, ‘Mansuri,’ ‘Deybali’, ‘Qusdari’, ‘Makrani’ etc. Though due to the vague early Islamic geography, the term Sindi was also at times applied to people within modern Afghanistan, just as the term ‘Hindi’ was applied to people of Sind in modern Pakistan.

Conquest Of Sind​

The initial Islamic advances upon Sind’s neighborhood coincided with the transition of Sind from the Buddhist Rai dynasty to the Hindu Chach dynasty with the battle of Rasil fought by the forces of the Caliph Umer (584-644 CE) in Sind marking the beginning. However, the conquest of Sind began nearly a century later in the era of the Umayyad Caliphate in 711 CE.

The conquest and fighting began at the port city of Deybul and slowly expanded north with a final success at the battle of Alor against Raja Dahir (633-712 CE) of Sind being most pivotal and leading to hefty amounts of booty and slaves. Due to the Muslim forces being too far away and in a completely alien land, the conquest of Sind was complex in nature. It heavily relied on using strong brutal force where necessary but also on the extension of peace treaties and the assimilation of local elements in civil and military administration for easy governance.

Though the policy for Non-Muslims varied from place to place and on the extent of cooperation, for ease of administration the Muslims adopted several surprising policies such as the extension of the Dhimmi (Protected Person) status to Hindus and Buddhists and equating them to the ’people of the covenant’. The Jizya tax was imposed upon Non-Muslims yet the Brahmins were exempted from it, who were also favored in retaining certain governmental posts. The famous sun temple of Multan was protected from destruction, but a mosque was created proximate to it. The mercantile Sindhi Buddhists largely cooperated with the Muslims both during and after the conquest due to ideological reasons and mercantile interests whereas the agrarian Hindus were unaffected by Islamic policies but most strongly affected was the Hindu ruling class which was deposed.

Theology and Literature​

The beginning of Islamic theological studies in Sind started swiftly after its conquest in 711 CE and soon after with the establishment of the city of Mansura upon the banks of the Indus river. Sind soon became a fountain for theological studies especially the Ahadith (Traditions of the Prophet). This new age of the study of the science of traditions was brought forth by 3 groups: Locals who resided and studied in Sind, Locals who traveled elsewhere in the Islamic world to attain knowledge, and war prisoners from Sind who had been settled elsewhere in the Islamic world.

One of the earliest figures from the Indus Valley to earn fame in the Islamic world was the historian Abu Mashar Al Sindi (d. 786 CE). Believed to be a slave from Sind, he traveled to Medina where he bought his freed and was patronized by the then Caliph. The famous 9the century biographer Ibn Nadim regularly quotes him for chronology in his famous book ‘Al Fihrist’ and also credits him to have written a ‘Kitab Al Maghazi’ (Book of Conquests) which was an exceptional book on the life of the prophet and his military campaigns. Abu Mashar’s works won him the title of ‘Imam Al-Fann’ (Leader of the art). His status amongst the intellectuals of the golden age can be estimated through his death where his funeral prayers were led by none other than the famous Caliph Harun Al Rashid himself.

The only one to surpass Abu Mashar in his theological knowledge was his own son Muhammad bin Abu Mashar Al-Sindi (765-861 CE). Muhammad’s tutoring by his father in Baghdad soon made him a scholar and theologian in his own right whose acclaim can be measured through his students who traveled to study under him from all over the Muslim world. Of the many students who went on to become famous traditionists, historiographers, and theologians, some of the most famous are reputed Islamic figures such as Abu Isa Al-Tirmidhi, Al-Tabari, Abu Hatim Al-Razi, Ibn Abi Al-Dunya.

The theologian Rija or Raja Al-Sindi (d. 837) traveled to the city of Isfarain in Persia and acquired high prestige in the study of Ahadith where his works and studies yielded him the title of ‘Rukn Min Arkan Al-Hadith’ (One of the Pillars of the Hadith). Rija’s grandson Muhammad (821-899 CE) was also an outstanding theologian and a much-celebrated author of a Mustakharaj, a sub narration, on the Hadith book Sahih Muslim.

Abu Ali Al-Sindi was one of the first figures from the Indus Valley to be recorded as a tutor of the famous Sufi Bayazid Al-Bistami (d. 848 CE) whose status amongst the Sufis makes him remembered as “Sultan Al-Arifeen” (King of Gnostics). Bayazid was known for his concept of Fanaa (self-annihilation) and it’s believed that Abu Ali Al-Sindi tutored Al-Bistami in this concept. Though the reason behind this is under strong debate within historians, it is believed for Al-Sindi to have been a Buddhist convert having studied the concept of Nirvana and thus imparted his knowledge to Al-Bistami.

The most famous of the Theologians with possible links to the Indus Valley is Imam Awzai (707-774 CE). Though his origins are debated upon and his name ‘Awzai’ is seen to be synonymous with an Arab tribe, certain historians believe the name to be a nisbah derived from the village Awza where he settled. The famous 10th-century historian Zura Al Damishqi also stated that Awzai was a descendent of war prisoners from Sind and that his name Awzai signified the village and not the tribe.

Regardless of his ancestry, Imam Awzai was a figure of legendary fame in the Islamic world who had received theological knowledge before his teen years and was deciding upon legal issues at the age of 13. As one of the most acclaimed Jurists and scholars of his time and a pioneer in the collection and compilation of traditions, he not only decided upon more than 7000 legal points but also wrote 2 books on Islamic jurisprudence. By the end of his acclaimed life, he had his own school of thought which enjoyed a strong position in Andalusia before eventually being superseded by other schools.


More than 70 other figures from the Islamic Golden age also exist bearing nisbahs linking them to the Indus Valley who were pioneers in theology and literature.

Warfare​

The history of military interactions between groups from modern Pakistan and the Islamic world predates the actual inclusion of the Indus valley into the Islamic caliphates due to the pre-existing connections of it and the Sassanian Empire. The Persian custom of recruiting foot soldiers, archers, and cavalry from the Indus Valley goes back to the Achaemenid era since we learn through Herodotus (484-485 BCE) of warriors of the Indus Satrapies present at the battles of Thermopylae and Marathon.

A similar pattern of recruitment was followed by the Sassanians where we learn of Emperors like Bahram V recruiting and settling large numbers from the Jatt community of the Indus valley across his empire. The soldiers amongst them were concentrated in Southwestern Persia and were employed both as soldiers in the Sassanid Armies and also serving to protect the roads and means of trade and transportation in Persia.

These groups were amongst the earliest to engage with the Muslim armies on behalf of the Sassanians and not only formed auxiliary units in the Sassanid armies for further support but were also charged with defending core Sassanid cities like Ahvaz. Though with the crushing defeats given to the Sassanid Empire at the hands of the Rashidun Caliphate, these jatts, known as Zutt in Arabic, were amongst the earliest in Persia to accept Islam and thus join with the Muslim armies in their further conquests. They were also later replenished with more of their men when the Indus Valley fell to the Ummayad Caliphate in 711 CE.
Zutts enjoyed a spot of significance in the early Islamic age which is evident since they were employed by the Caliph Ali (601-661 CE) for defending the city of Basrah and the royal treasuries during one of the most pivotal and politically significant battles of Islamic history i.e. Battle of the Camel (656 CE). They would find themselves a mention by the Byzantine historians as possibly the ‘Indians’ who were part of the forces in the armies of Thomas the Slav during his revolt (821-823 CE) against the Byzantine empire, possibly as a contingent of fine warriors sent by the Abbasid Caliph to Thomas as aid.

The historian Al-Tabbari (839-923 CE) in his 33rd volume also speaks of a warrior named Al-Sindi Ibn Bukhtashah leading the right flanks of the general Wasif Al-Turki in what was one of the earliest Muslim offensives into Anatolia in 862 CE, however the original homeland of the warrior isn’t properly known.

Medicine​

South Asia’s ancient reputation as one of the strongholds of medicinal sciences and its position as the primary region for procurement of medicinal herbs was what initiated intellectual contact between the Abbasid Caliphate and the Indus Valley as well as South Asia and helped usher Islamic sciences into a new age. It was the party sent by Yahya Al-Barmaki (d. 806 CE) to the Indus Valley to procure medicinal Herbs and study South Asia which led to further contacts and resulted in a delegation of native non-muslim scholars and proponents of sciences from Sind/Indus Valley carrying Sanskrit books and treatises to Baghdad upon invitation of the Barkamid Vizirs. In the field of Medicine, 2 names stand prominently apart: those of Ibn Dahn and Mankah.

Ibn Dahn was an erudite scholar of medicine who was appointed as the chief physician of the Abbasid Hospital (Bimaristan) and was the chief of the medicinal school of Baghdad. Of the multiple medicinal texts that he wrote and translated into Arabic, some worth mentioning includes a book on 404 diseases and their symptoms, on medicinal herbs, on the descriptions of snakes and the medicines to their poisons, on dealing with pregnancies and another on diseases primarily contracted by women, on multiple forms of poison, on diseases of animals and another on diseases faced only by children.

Though perhaps the greatest exchange of medicinal knowledge took place when the scholar Mankah translated the 2 most significant ancient compendiums of Sanskrit medicinal knowledge; The compendium of Sushruta at the behest of Caliph Harun Al Rashid (763-809 CE) and the Compendium of Charaka, both of which held immense significance in the Ayurvedic medicine of South Asia. The former was composed by an excellent physician in the city of Kashi in modern India whereas the latter was compiled by an exceptional physician who studied and practiced in the ancient city of Taxila, adjacent to Pakistan’s modern capital. These texts which dealt with a wide range of phenomena pertaining to surgery, medicine, and poisons helped the early Muslim physicians greatly in expanding their understanding of the medicinal world.

Astronomy​

Another character of primary importance from the delegation of Sind was the astronomer known as Kankah who worked both in the courts of Caliph Harun Al-Rashid and Caliph Al-Mamun (786-833 CE).

Though Kankah’s contributions varied into multiple fields, his greatest gift to the Islamic world was the passage of the most detailed and efficient work on South Asian astronomy to the Muslim astronomers.

According to certain historians, it was at the behest of Harun Al Rashid that Kankah was ordered to get the Brahma Siddhanta, one of the finest mathematical and astronomical works of South Asia by the Indian mathematician Brahmagupta, translated into Arabic..........

The astronomer Al-Fazari (b. 746) is known for having shouldered the responsibility of helping translate the texts, which in its final forms yielded the greatest astronomical work of the Islamic golden age, a work given the Arabic name ‘Zij Al Sind-Hind’. The Zij Al Sind-Hind of Al-Fazari was a text created by the union of South Asian, Persian, and Greek astronomical knowledge and enjoyed legendary prominence amongst astronomers and mathematicians alike. Being employed and studied by Muslims from the banks of Euphrates to the Spanish coasts, it would go on to “produce over the centuries the spectacular tradition of Arabic Astronomy”.

The great polymath Al-Khwarizmi (780-850 CE) responsible for the Algebra also created a version of the Sindhind from Al-Fazari’s. A Berber polymath named Abbas Ibn-Farnath carried it to Spain where it would go on to greatly affect the Christian world. Another Spanish polymath’s upgraded version of the Sindhind would be translated by Aberland of Bath (1080-1152 CE) into Latin and taken to benefit Christian Europe.

Another Spanish polymath would utilize the SindHind in the creation of his book which would be employed for important tasks such as finding the direction of Mecca, establishing times of prayer, and inquiring about the visibility of the moon to use for the Islamic Calendar. SindHind’s significance in the Islamic world can be measured from the fact that even in the late 12th century the Jewish polymath Ben Ezra was known for creating a Hebrew translation of a commentary of the SindHind in Spain and another Spanish Jew Petrus Alphonsi would carry it to England in the same era.

Apart from the passage of the Brahma Siddhanta, Kankah is believed to have written at least 4 books on astronomical knowledge named: The Book of Nativities, The Book of Namudar for the Ages, The Great Book of Conjunctions, and the Small book of Conjunctions. Kankah would go on to occupy a position of great reverence amongst the Muslim world, to the point that many legends and myths would be attributed to him over time.

Centuries later, the polymath Al-Biruni would employ the same trigonometric methods refined by the polymaths in the court of Caliph Al Mamun to measure the circumference of the earth at Nandana in modern Pakistan.

Mathematics​

Perhaps the largest benefit that the Muslims received at the creation of the Zij Al Sind-Hind was their introduction to the numbering system of South Asia known to the Arabs as Arqam al Hindi or the Indian numerals. The Indian numerals were based on the decimal notation system which was a base 10 system where counting was concrete and not abstract in nature like its contemporary systems. One of the oldest written manuscript of the Indian numeral system was discovered in 1881 in the village of Bakhshali in today’s north western Pakistan.

Pioneer Muslim polymaths adopted and worked on the Indian numeral system, not only deriving much benefit from it but also trying to perfect it for better efficiency. The famous Polymath Al-Khwarizmi’s 8th-century work “Addition and Subtraction in Indian Arithmetic” not only aided the Muslims but its translation into Latin and movement into Europe ushered the West into a new age of mathematical knowledge.

Multiple pioneer Muslim polymaths such Al-Uqudisi, Abu’l Wafa, and Al-Nasawi would prepare manuscripts and treatise’ on Indian numerals and by the 12th century, the Muslim world was saturated completely with the new numbering system as was the West acclimating to it, changing every aspect of life from study to trade and ushering in a new age.

Conclusion

With the rise of the Habbarid dynasty in the Indus valley, much of the theological work and the custom of theological contacts with Persia and Arabia was abandoned and a similar blow was dealt with intellectual contact between the two regions with the vane of the influence of the Abbasid caliphate.

Though both theological and intellectual contacts between the Muslim world and the Indus Valley alongside the rest of South Asia would witness a new age with the turn of the 12th century when contacts between the Muslims and South Asia would begin again and Islamic dynasties would renew the translation of local works.


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Caliph Harun Al-Rashid And The Sindhi Buddhists​


By admin
January 20, 2022

Islamic traditions from the early centuries of the rise of Islam are rich with tales of interactions between Muslims and other religious groups that they encountered during their expansions. One such tale is of an 8th century interaction between the Caliph of the Islamic world and the Buddhist community of Sind from modern Pakistan.

Of Caliph Harun Al-Rashid and the Buddhists of Sind.

During the era that is known as the “Golden age of Islam”, it was a norm for the court of the Abbassid caliph in Baghdad to house people from the Indus Valley in modern Pakistan. Many theologians, physicians, mathematicians and men of high knowledge travelled to Baghdad to help with the translation of treatises on various subjects.

One tale is narrated such that once in the court of the great caliph Harun Al-Rashid, a messenger from a Buddhist king in Sindh appeared. Much to everyone’s surprise he did not ask for anything or make demands but rather put up a challenge to the Caliph. A challenge in the domain of theology.

The king’s message read that he had heard that there was no truth in the caliph’s religion and that it was spread by the sword. So if there was any truth in it, he should send a scholar who could debate with the King’s own men of religious knowledge and acumen and prove it to them that the Caliph’s religion is based on the truth. Thus a scholar from the courts of the caliph in Baghdad made the tedious journey and arrived in Sindh. The debate commenced and during the continuous clash of beliefs the Buddhist scholar questioned the concept of omnipotency by asking if god being all powerful could create another god. The muslim scholar, taken by surprise, couldn’t offer an answer and thus thus the local king declared both the Buddhist scholar and Buddhism to have been the true path to follow.

As news of the defeat reached Baghdad, The caliph summoned all his scholars who all failed in answering the question until from amongst the congregation a young boy stood and said that the objection is baseless. If god creates an entity like himself, it would still be god’s creation. But god is no one’s creation. It would be an insult to himself to create an entity like himself. It is the same as asking it god sleeps? Or eats? Or is ignorant? He cannot do any of these since these are similar insults to his dignity. The entire congregation was satisfied with the boys answer and it was decided that another older scholar would be sent to Sind to once again initiate the debate this time taking help from the boys wise answer.

Now 2 versions of the events which followed exist:

According to one, the debate once again took place and reached the same juncture but this time the Muslim scholar’s answer and wit left the Buddhist scholar completely befuddled in debate to the point that the Buddhist king openly accepted Islam.

Another version speaks that the most significant of Buddhist scholars had a spy sent out to inquire of the incoming Muslim scholar and upon discovering that he was a man of merit and knowledge, he had the Muslim poisoned before he could ever reach Sind for the debate.

The actual chances of such an event happening in history are bleak not only because these events were narrated centuries after the era of the Abbasids but also because Sind’s Buddhist ruling class has been deposed much before the Umayyad conquest of Sind. However Such tales narrate for us the nature of interactions between Muslims and other groups in the early centuries of Islam.

Much to the surprise of Pakistanis, the Muslims of the early caliphates and the Buddhists and Hindus of the Indus Valley had a large amount of intellectual and theological contact. The contact intensified during and after the Barmakid Vizirs and during the era of multiple caliphs. The contact waned with the loss of the caliphate’s control over Sind in 871 CE and the coming of the Habbarid when contact shifted from Baghdad to the Red Sea.
 

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