04.05.2013 Views

Ahmadiyah Telanjang Bulat di Panggung Sejarah

Ahmadiyah Telanjang Bulat di Panggung Sejarah

Ahmadiyah Telanjang Bulat di Panggung Sejarah

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Pembahasan Ahma<strong>di</strong>yyah<br />

3 DR. Surendra Nath Sen's 1857, The Great Raising of<br />

1857, Delhi The Publication Division, 1958, hal. 32.<br />

(Ghalib, the famous Urdu poet who was in Delhi at the<br />

time mounfully writes: here there is a vast ocean of<br />

blood before me, GOD alone knows what more I have still<br />

to behold. Thousands of my friends <strong>di</strong>ed. Whom should I<br />

remember and to whom should I complain? Perhaps none is<br />

left even toshed tears on my death. And again in<br />

Dastambu: GOD alone know the number of persons who were<br />

hanged. The white men on their entry started killing<br />

helpless and innocent persons. Zahir Dehivi in his<br />

Dastan-i-Ghadar. The English sol<strong>di</strong>ers shot down<br />

whosover they met on the way. Mian Muhammad Amin<br />

Panjakush an excellent writer, Moulvi Imam Buksh Sabhin<br />

along with two sons, Miar Niaz Ali and the persons of<br />

Kucha Chelan 1400 in number were arrested and taken to<br />

Raj Ghat Gate. They were shot dead and their dead<br />

bo<strong>di</strong>es were thrown into the Jamuna).<br />

4 idem no. 8, hal. 31: (General Wilson had strictly<br />

forbidden violence against women and children. But<br />

where is sol<strong>di</strong>ers who obeys the <strong>di</strong>ctates of mercy at<br />

the moment of victory? The city was sacked and people<br />

were in<strong>di</strong>scriminately butchered by British sol<strong>di</strong>ers who<br />

thirsted for vengeance as well as by In<strong>di</strong>an<br />

mercenaries. On September 21, Griffiths, an English<br />

Observer who has recorded the scene, found the street<br />

deserted and silent. Dead bo<strong>di</strong>es of sepoys and city<br />

inhabitants lay scattered in every <strong>di</strong>rection, poisoning<br />

the air for many days and raising astench which was<br />

unbearable).<br />

5 Beatrice Pitney Lamb, In<strong>di</strong>a a world in transition,<br />

hal. 66 (the british suppression of the revolt was<br />

fully barbaric many In<strong>di</strong>ans were hanged for no reason<br />

other than the fact; some In<strong>di</strong>ans were even shot from<br />

the mouths of cannons.)<br />

6 Syed Sharifud<strong>di</strong>n Pirzada, Evolution of Pakistan,<br />

Lahore The All Pakistan Legal Decision, hal. 17, 1963:<br />

(On the 21st. September 1857, Bahadur Shah surrendered<br />

to Hudson. The Emperor was treated like a vile<br />

criminal. He was miserably lodged and every Englishmen<br />

or women who passed through Delhi could at his or<br />

pleasure in trude on his privacy without the least<br />

pretence of leave to cast scornful glance at him.<br />

Griffiths who saw him on the 22nd. September writes,"<br />

Sitting cross-legged on a cushion placed on a common<br />

native charpon or bed ... not a word came from his<br />

lips, in silence he sat day and night, with his eyes<br />

cast on the ground, .. while two stalwart European<br />

sentries, with fixed bayonets stood on either sides.<br />

They orders given were that on any attempt at a rescue<br />

file:///D|/elite-ebook/me<strong>di</strong>a.isnet.org/islam/<strong>Telanjang</strong>/PeristiwaDramatis.html (4 of 5)14/05/2006 21:48:17

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!