Abdullah Chakralwi -

Chakralwi was a voracious reader of Western philosophy, law, and political science. He saw the British Raj not just as a political enemy, but as a legal phenomenon. He understood that colonialism wasn't just about armies; it was about replacing one system of justice (Islamic) with another (Anglo-Muhammadan law). This hybrid "Anglo-Muhammadan" law was, in his eyes, a Frankenstein’s monster—neither truly Islamic nor truly just.

He argued that in Islam, sovereignty belongs solely to Allah, but that sovereignty is delegated to the community ( Ummah ) to interpret and implement through Ijma (consensus) and Ijtihad (independent reasoning). Therefore, he said, the parliament—the elected representatives of the people—is the final authority on what is "Islamic," not a council of unelected clerics. abdullah chakralwi

This is the story of the man who tried to make Islam practical again. Born in the town of Chakwal (in present-day Punjab, Pakistan) in 1885, Abdullah Chakralwi was a product of the classical Dars-i-Nizami curriculum—the same rigorous course of study that produced the great ulama of South Asia. He mastered the Quran, Hadith, logic, and philosophy. But unlike many of his peers, he didn't stop there. Chakralwi was a voracious reader of Western philosophy,

Chakralwi, however, saw a trap. He argued that the clerics' version of Islam was essentially a medieval monarchy dressed in religious robes. In a famous counter-proposal, he introduced the doctrine of This hybrid "Anglo-Muhammadan" law was, in his eyes,