| 
 
            | Qadianis flee Maulana Muhammad Alis 
                  challenges to debate |  
 
 From the beginning of the Split in 1914, Maulana Muhammad Ali repeatedly 
          tried to get the Qadiani leader Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmud Ahmad to agree 
          to a debate with him over the issues of disagreement. These issues are 
          summarised in the table below: 
          
         
           
            | Lahore Ahmadiyya Beliefs 
  | Qadiani Beliefs (coined by Mirza Mahmud Ahmad,
 today represented by Mirza Tahir Ahmad)
 
  |   
            | Every person professing the Kalima Shahada is a Muslim. | Anyone who does not believe in Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad is a 
              non-Muslim. |   
            | Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad never claimed to be a prophet. | Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad was a prophet. |  But the Qadiani leader always evaded entering a debate or discussion 
          of any kind. 
         In the last decade of his life, Maulana Muhammad Ali made his most 
          strenous and sustained final attempts, for six years, to bring the Qadianis 
          into debate. He presented the differences between the two parties in 
          a crystal clear way, putting them in sharp contrast against each other. 
          But the evasion of the Qadianis proved conclusively that their beliefs 
          have no foundation whatsoever. Below we give details of these events. 
 In April 1940, Maulana Muhammad Ali challenged the Qadianis to a written 
          debate, with or without judges, on the issues under dispute. In May 
          1940 he announced:  
          "Remember well that it is on the issue of kufr and 
            Islam that the Qadianis will flounder. Their position on this issue 
            is entirely weak and unsound. The ground has been cut away from under 
            their feet. No Qadiani knows what is his belief about this. They say: 
            `There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah', 
            but in practice they have cancelled this Kalima. It is obvious 
            that if the Kalima is not abrogated, how can those who profess 
            it be called kafir and outside the pale of Islam? And if 
            those who do not accept Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, while professing 
            the Kalima, are kafir then this Kalima 
            is abrogated. But the Qadianis do not take either of these positions 
            clearly, or proclaim it plainly and boldly. The reason is that they 
            have no belief on this question. When talking to anyone, they express 
            that belief which suits the listener. On this question, and on the 
            question of the khilafat, the Qadianis cannot take any stand.  
          "Remember, we will not let them get away. Either they have to 
            enter the field of combat and prove that all Muslims on earth are 
            kafir and expelled from Islam, or they have to admit defeat, 
            and acknowledge that according to the Quran, Hadith, and the teachings 
            of the Promised Messiah every person professing the Kalima 
            is a Muslim ... and this is what we want because our aim is reform. 
            The root of the difference between us is the issue of kufr and 
            Islam. Once that is settled, the issue of prophethood [whether Hazrat 
            Mirza claimed to be a prophet or not] can be solved in one instant." Proposals for written debate The Maulana proposed, at that same time, that each side would put to 
          the other an agreed number of questions or objections, and the replies 
          to these would be published in the newspapers of both sides. The readers 
          would then make up their own minds, and there would be no further time-wasting 
          debates between the two groups. He added that if Mirza Mahmud Ahmad wishes to have judges to the debate, 
          then the Maulana would nominate five judges all of them from among 
          the Qadianis. Mirza Mahmud Ahmad rejected this offer, and dared 
          not accept having even his own followers as judges, as nominated by 
          the Maulana. He said:  
          "In the matter of religious beliefs, I am not prepared to accept 
            the verdict of my own wife or sons or brothers. The question of my 
            beliefs is for me. Why should I accept someone else's judgment?" But he was not being asked to adopt the decision of the judges 
          as his personal beliefs. The debate and the ruling of the judges would 
          show to the general public which side's case was proved true. Any individual 
          was free to adopt whatever belief he liked. Every Qadiani invited to judge As Mirza Mahmud Ahmad refused to accept this proposal, Maulana Muhammad 
          Ali wrote a leaflet in December 1940 entitled Each and Every Qadiani 
          invited to become judge. In this, he explained to them the standpoint 
          taken by Hazrat Mirza sahib, in allowing his followers to say the funeral 
          prayers for other Muslims, and challenged any Qadiani to deny these 
          plain facts. He writes:  
          "I repeat these points regarding which I am prepared to make 
            each and every Qadiani an arbiter:  
            (1) There are four rulings of the Promised Messiah, two from the 
              years 1907 and 1908, allowing us to say the funeral prayers of a 
              non-Ahmadi. (2) Hazrat Mirza sahib never ruled that funeral prayers for non-Ahmadis 
              were disallowed. (3) Hazrat Mirza sahib's practice was not contrary to his rulings, 
              but according to them. (4) Till the split in 1914, all Ahmadi communities used to hold 
              funeral prayers for non-Ahmadis when required. If there is not even a single Qadiani who can deny these four facts, 
            then no one can deny that the present position of the Qadianis is 
            opposed to the position of the Promised Messiah." This and other efforts to bring the Qadianis into debate were all rejected 
          by them. Leaders to address each other's gathering Prior to the annual gathering (Jalsa) of December 1941, Maulana 
          Muhammad Ali invited Mirza Mahmud Ahmad to address the Lahore Ahmadiyya 
          community at its gathering, in return for the Maulana addressing the 
          annual gathering of the Qadianis, so that each community could hear 
          the arguments presented by the leader of the other. Mirza Mahmud Ahmad 
          replied that he could only allow the Maulana to speak on the days after 
          the Qadiani Jalsa, and not during it. The Maulana rejected 
          this, as the gathering would have dispersed by then, and he would not 
          be able to address the whole Jama`at. But he still left open his invitation 
          to Mirza Mahmud Ahmad to speak at the Lahore Jalsa. There was 
          no response to this. Qadianis challenged to take oath When these efforts lasting two years did not bear fruit, in 1944 Maulana 
          Muhammad Ali proposed another means of resolving the dispute. He wrote:  
          "The Qadianis believe that before the year 1901 Hazrat Mirza 
            Ghulam Ahmad denied claiming to be a prophet, and believed Muslims 
            to be Muslims, but that in 1901 he changed his claim to prophethood 
            and started calling Muslims as kafir. Let us decide whether 
            Hazrat Mirza sahib changed his claim or not. Let 
            just one man from the whole of the Qadiani community make a statement 
            on oath as follows: `In the year 1901, my belief regarding 
            the prophethood of Hazrat Mirza sahib changed'. From our side, 
            seventy men made a statement on oath (in 1915) that in the year 1901 
            the idea never even entered their minds that Hazrat Mirza sahib had 
            changed his claim. "If the Qadianis cannot find anyone else, let Mirza Mahmud Ahmad 
            himself make this statement under oath." The Maulana went one step further and invited Mirza 
          Mahmud Ahmad to make the statement under oath that his beliefs, as expressed 
          on page 35 of his book A'inah Sadaqat, were the beliefs held 
          by Hazrat Mirza sahib. The scanned image of that page from the original 
          Urdu book is shown below, along with the English translation of the 
          relevant passage as published by the Qadianis themselves:  
          
             
              | Page 35 
                of A'inah-i Sadaqat, View of entire Urdu page.
 | Qadianis' own English translation of relevant 
                extract as given in their book The Truth about the Split, 
                Rabwah, 1965, pages 55-56. |   
              |  | "(1) ... the belief that Hazrat Mirza Ghulam 
                Ahmad was actually a Nabi; (2) the belief that he was the 
                Ahmad spoken of in the prophecy of Jesus referred to in 
                the Holy Quran in 61:6; and (3) the belief that all those so-called 
                Muslims who have not entered into his [Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad's] 
                bai`at formally, wherever they may be, are 
                Kafirs and outside the pale of Islam, even though 
                they may not have heard the name of the Promised Messiah. That 
                these beliefs have my full concurrence, I readily admit." |    The Maulana himself would state under oath that those beliefs of Mirza 
          Mahmud Ahmad were opposed to the beliefs of Hazrat Mirza sahib. 
          The Maulana added that if, in his oath, Mirza Mahmud Ahmad invoked God's 
          punishment upon himself in case of making a false statement, the Maulana 
          would also say the same thing about himself in his oath. But there was 
          no response to this. Shortly afterwards, Mirza Mahmud Ahmad wrote an article denouncing 
          Maulana Muhammad Ali as "a coward and a liar" and predicting 
          that the curse of God would "strangle him like a liar" and 
          that "the curse of his fabrication will descend upon him and he 
          will die the death of liars". In reply, the Maulana prepared a 
          statement for Mirza Mahmud Ahmad to answer, which was as follows:  
          "I repeat my allegations in clear words:  
            (1) Mirza Mahmud Ahmad has made a false statement 
              and committed a fabrication against the Promised Messiah 
              that in 1901 he changed his claim in this way that, while previously 
              denying a claim to prophethood, he now made a claim to prophethood 
              himself, and cancelled his former writings of several years containing 
              denials of a claim to prophethood. (2) Mirza Mahmud Ahmad has made a false statement 
              and committed a fabrication against the Promised Messiah 
              that he (Hazrat Mirza sahib) used to say that he did not know the 
              correct meaning of the term 'prophet' until the year 1901. (3) Mirza Mahmud Ahmad has made a false statement 
              and committed a fabrication against the Promised Messiah 
              that around the year 1901 it used to be said among the circle of 
              followers of the Promised Messiah that his previous beliefs about 
              prophethood (i.e. his denials of claiming to be a prophet) were 
              not correct. If Mirza Mahmud Ahmad has the courage, he can hold a debate with 
              me about these allegations. I will appoint persons from among his 
              own followers as the arbiters. If he wishes, he can hold a mubahila 
              after the debate, that is to say, he would take an oath, invoking 
              Divine punishment upon himself in case of making a false statement, 
              testifying that his beliefs as given on page 35 of A'inah Sadaqat 
              are in agreement with the beliefs of the Promised Messiah; and I 
              will take a similar oath, testifying that his beliefs are entirely 
              opposed to the beliefs of the Promised Messiah. However, a debate 
              will be necessary before the mubahila. "If Mirza Mahmud Ahmad remains silent even now, I will continue 
            to repeat these accusations until his followers are moved to ask him 
            to clear himself from these charges." This statement was printed in the form of a block in Paigham Sulh 
          in every issue from 2 August to the end of October 1944, but Mirza Mahmud 
          Ahmad could not pluck up the courage to reply. On 9 March 1945, and again on 8 August 1945, Maulana Muhammad Ali reminded 
          Mirza Mahmud Ahmad of his invitation to hold a mubahila. He told 
          him that he had been announcing for one year that "Mirza 
          Mahmud Ahmad has made a false statement and committed a fabrication 
          against the Promised Messiah". The Maulana called on him 
          to appoint Sir Zafrullah Khan, or anyone else from among his own followers, 
          as a judge and to give him proof that his beliefs were the same as those 
          of Hazrat Mirza sahib. The Maulana also challenged him to take legal 
          action against him for defamation. He wrote:  
          "I have no wish whatsoever to humiliate Mirza Mahmud Ahmad, 
            nor am I at all seeking to ruin him. But I cannot tolerate the humiliation 
            of the religion of Islam or the ruination of the true teachings of 
            the Promised Messiah. My demand is not a difficult one. It is that 
            Mirza Mahmud Ahmad make a sworn statement that in the year 1901 he 
            changed his belief as to whether or not the Promised Messiah was a 
            prophet, or else he should desist from this fabrication against the 
            Promised Messiah that he changed his belief in 1901." However, things continued unchanged, and in August 1946 Maulana Muhammad 
          Ali issued an announcement which summarised the preceding events:  
          "1. We and the Qadianis both agree that when Hazrat Mirza Ghulam 
            Ahmad claimed to be the Promised Messiah in 1891, he denied claiming 
            to be a prophet. He gave his claim as that of being a muhaddas 
            (non-prophet who receives revelation), declared prophethood as having 
            ended with the Holy Prophet Muhammad, and denounced as an imposter 
            and liar anyone claiming prophethood after the Holy Prophet. The disagreement 
            between us and the head of the Qadianis is that we hold that the Promised 
            Messiah adhered to this position till he died (in 1908), but the Qadiani 
            head writes that the Promised Messiah changed his belief in 1901, 
            laying claim to be a prophet and opening the door of prophethood after 
            the Holy Prophet Muhammad. "2. It is obvious that the burden of proof regarding the change 
            in claim in 1901 lies upon the Qadiani leader. I have invited Mirza 
            Mahmud Ahmad, again and again, to a debate on this issue. I went so 
            far as to say that I would nominate some of his own followers as judges 
            of the debate. But he does not respond. "3. Seventy of us, including myself, made a sworn declaration 
            (in 1915) that we had taken the pledge to join the Movement before 
            1901, and the belief which we held at the time of our pledge, namely, 
            that prophethood ended with the Holy Prophet Muhammad, was the belief 
            we unchangingly held till death of Hazrat Mirza sahib. He did not 
            change his belief about prophethood in 1901. "4. For more than thirty years we have been demanding that seventy 
            members of the Qadiani community make the sworn statement that they 
            took the pledge before 1901 believing that Hazrat Mirza sahib claimed 
            to be a muhaddas, but that in 1901 they changed their belief 
            and started to believe that he was a prophet because in that year 
            they discovered that he had changed his belief. But the entire Qadiani 
            community has been silent for thirty years. "5. I then had recourse to the last resort allowed in Islam, 
            namely, that Mirza Mahmud Ahmad should undertake a mubahila 
            with me, as to whether Hazrat Mirza sahib changed his belief about 
            prophethood in 1901. But he still remained silent. "6. However, some followers of Mirza Mahmud Ahmad keep on asking 
            if I am prepared to enter into a mubahila with Mirza Mahmud 
            Ahmad. To dispel all doubts, I announce again the following. "7. I am prepared to hold a debate with Mirza Mahmud Ahmad on 
            the question whether the Promised Messiah changed his belief in 1901, 
            and I am prepared to appoint as judges persons from among his own 
            followers only, one of them being Sir Zafrullah Khan. "8. By having judges, it will not imply that Mirza Mahmud Ahmad 
            must personally accept their verdict and change his own beliefs. But 
            the misconception in people's minds will be cleared. If he considers 
            it beneath his dignity to have judges, I will withdraw this condition, 
            and hold an unconditional debate with him, whether it is in a public 
            gathering or by written papers. He can impose any condition. My only 
            proviso is that the topic of the debate will be restricted to the 
            question whether Hazrat Mirza sahib changed his belief in 1901 or 
            not. "9. I am prepared to hold a mubahila on this issue with 
            Mirza Mahmud Ahmad, if he so wishes. The Mubahila can be between 
            just himself and me, or other people from both sides can be included 
            who joined the Movement before 1901. "If Mirza Mahmud Ahmad wants to propose a different date than 
            1901 as the time of the alleged change of claim, I am ready to hold 
            a debate and mubahila with reference to that date. "I want Mirza Mahmud Ahmad to reply to this announcement personally." There was no reply from Mirza Mahmud Ahmad. However, one of his followers, 
          Seth Abdullah Ala-Din of Secandarabad challenged Maulana Muhammad 
          Ali to take an oath about his beliefs, and call for Divine retribution 
          upon himself in case of making a false declaration. The Seth 
          demanded that the oath be taken in the words he proposed, and he predicted 
          that if the Maulana took the oath then within a year he would 
          be punished by the hand of God Himself, in a manner entirely above human 
          involvement. Maulana Muhammad Ali took the oath, in exactly the words formulated 
          by the Seth, in his speech to the annual gathering of the Ahmadiyya 
          Anjuman Isha`at Islam Lahore on 25 December 1946:  
          "I, Muhammad Ali, head of the Lahore Ahmadiyya 
            Jamaat, do swear that my belief is that Hazrat Mirza [Ghulam Ahmad] 
            sahib of Qadian is a Mujaddid and the Promised Messiah, but 
            not a prophet, nor can any person become a kafir or excluded 
            from the fold of Islam by denying him. This was also the belief of 
            Hazrat Mirza sahib. "O God, if I have uttered falsehood in 
            this oath taken in Thy name, then send upon me from Thyself such exemplary 
            punishment as has no human hand in it, and from which the world would 
            learn how stern and terrible is God's retribution for one who deceives 
            His creatures by swearing falsely in His name." (Paigham Sulh, 11 December 1946 and 15 January 1947) Having taken this oath, the Maulana lived till October 1951, continuing 
          his service of Islam as before. During this period, he thoroughly revised 
          the first edition of his premier work, the English translation and commentary 
          of the Holy Quran, and died shortly after finishing the proof reading 
          of the new edition. Earlier, in 1944 the Qadiani and Lahore-Ahmadi communities of Data, 
          in the district of Hazara (the North West Frontier Province), came to 
          a mutual agreement to ask their respective leaders, i.e. Mirza Mahmud 
          Ahmad and Maulana Muhammad Ali, to make sworn declarations, both using 
          the same form of wording, to affirm their respective stand-points about 
          Hazrat Mirza sahib's beliefs. Maulana Muhammad Ali accepted the demand, 
          and published the following statement:  
          "I, Muhammad Ali, head of the Lahore Ahmadiyya Jamaat, knowing 
            Allah Almighty to be witness to this, Who holds my life in His hands, 
            do swear that to my knowledge the belief of the Promised Messiah from 
            1901 to 1908 was that a person not believing in him is still a 
            Muslim and within the fold of Islam, and his denier is not a kafir 
            or excluded from the fold of Islam. The same has also been my 
            belief, from 1901 till this day, on the basis of the belief of the 
            Promised Messiah."  
          (Paigham Sulh, 21 September 1944) Mirza Mahmud Ahmad was required to take the same oath, but substituting 
          the following words to express his stand-point: " that to my knowledge 
          the belief of the Promised Messiah from 1901 to 1908 was that a person 
          not believing in him is a kafir and excluded from the fold of Islam." 
          He refused to make this sworn statement, yet the Qadianis kept on repeating 
          this belief. |