By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
The GenerationThe GenerationThe Generation
  • USA
    USA
    Show More
    Top News
    Dad charged with murder after 10-year-old son dies in rollover crash, TX officials say
    September 4, 2023
    Claudia Goldin wins 2023 Nobel economics prize
    October 11, 2023
    Marijuana Smoke May be Harmful to Health, Can Affect Your Heart
    November 2, 2023
    Latest News
    Fed Governor to File Lawsuit Against Trump’s Attempt to Remove Her
    August 29, 2025
    Trump Expands 50% Steel and Aluminum Tariffs to Include 407 Additional Product Types
    August 20, 2025
    COVID-19 Vaccines Urged for Infants and Toddlers by AAP, Clashing with RFK Jr.
    August 23, 2025
    Trump Seeks Ukraine Deal with Putin
    August 23, 2025
  • New York
    New York
    Show More
    Top News
    Bangladeshi Actor achieve international in US
    October 26, 2023
    NY District Cancels Classes After Multiple Fights Break out at Same Time at High School
    November 24, 2023
    Winter Weather Arrives As NYC Migrant Crisis Worsens
    December 20, 2023
    Latest News
    Bronx Gun Violence Continues — One Dead, Two Injured in Apartment Shooting
    August 27, 2025
    Governor Hochul Tells Trump: No Need for National Guard in NYC”
    August 27, 2025
    32-year-old pedestrian killed in hit-and-run in the Bronx
    August 29, 2025
    Calls Grow for Full McGuinness Blvd Redesign Amid Bribery Scandal
    August 29, 2025
  • Politics
    Politics
    Show More
    Top News
    Joe Biden Plans To Ban Logging In US Old-growth Forests In 2025
    December 26, 2023
    Donald Trump Ranked As Worst US President In History, With Joe Biden 14th
    February 29, 2024
    Lawmakers Say They Should Analyze Protests Response
    May 31, 2024
    Latest News
    Trump Administration Sues New York Over Sanctuary City Policies
    August 29, 2025
    Cuomo Campaign Denies Bombshell Report About Trump’s Influence in the NYC Mayoral Race
    August 23, 2025
    California Republicans Sue to Hold up Democratic Redistricting Plan
    August 23, 2025
    New York City Public Schools Tout Highest Test Scores in More Than A Decade
    August 15, 2025
  • World
    World
    Show More
    Top News
    Arab League slams Israel siege of Gaza, demands aid for Gazans
    October 12, 2023
    Bangladesh hands over humanitarian aid to Palestine
    October 31, 2023
    Hezbollah’s anti-ship missiles bolster its threat to US navy
    November 9, 2023
    Latest News
    Japanese Climber, 102, Sets Mount Fuji Record
    August 29, 2025
    Families Leave Gaza City After Night of Bombardment, Israelis Protest
    August 29, 2025
    Mexico Denies Claims of Joint Operation with US Drug Agency
    August 20, 2025
    What Are The Details of Gaza Ceasefire Deal Hamas has Accepted and Israel is Considering?
    August 20, 2025
  • Finance & Business
    Finance & Business
    Show More
    Top News
    How Banks And The Fed Are Preparing For A US Default – And Chaos To Follow
    September 3, 2023
    Corporate Greed is not to Blame for High Inflation, SF Fed Says
    June 16, 2024
    Latest News
    Corporate Greed is not to Blame for High Inflation, SF Fed Says
    June 16, 2024
    How Banks And The Fed Are Preparing For A US Default – And Chaos To Follow
    September 3, 2023
  • EpaperNew
Search
  • About Us
  • Our Awards
  • My Bookmarks
  • Opinion
  • Crime
  • Science & Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Economy
  • Fashion
  • Election
  • Feature
  • Charity
  • Literature
  • Security
  • US & Canada
  • Nature
  • Cooking
Copyright @2023 – All Right Reserved by The Generation.
Reading: Rabindranath Tagore’s Engagement With Islamic Culture And Muslims
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
The GenerationThe Generation
  • USA
  • New York
  • Politics
  • World
  • EpaperNew
Search
  • Crime
  • Economy
  • Election
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • US & Canada
  • Finance & Business
  • Charity
  • Cooking
  • Fashion
  • Feature
  • Literature
  • Nature
  • Science & Technology
  • Security
  • Sports
Follow US
  • About Us
  • My Bookmarks
Copyright @2023 – All Right Reserved by The Generation.
Literature

Rabindranath Tagore’s Engagement With Islamic Culture And Muslims

Published June 13, 2024
Share
10 Min Read
SHARE

Tuesday, May 14, 2024
Year : 2, Issue : 20

by Mohammad A. Quayum

The English poet W.B. Yeats once expressed his profound admiration for Rabindranath Tagore, describing him as “someone greater than any of us”. Similarly, after meeting the poet at an event in Cambridge, UK, Francis Cornford, granddaughter of Charles Darwin, remarked, “I can now imagine a powerful and gentle Christ, which I never could before”. Despite such acclaim for his polymathic genius, Tagore often attracted broadsides from various factions, including, in his own words, “political groups, religious groups, literary groups [and] social groups”.
Some of this vitriol has come from his home turf, where several critics have accused him of religious bias, branding him a Hindu nationalist, a hierophant of a Hindu-centric India and a Hindu extremist who held an intrinsic bias towards Muslims. However, this view seems specious, given Tagore’s lifelong aspiration for global unity of humanity and engagement with Islamic culture and Muslims in a spirit of inclusivity and good fellowship.

A proponent of the principles of Advaita (non-duality of creation) and Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam (the world is one family), Tagore rejected narrow-minded ideologies of all forms that restricted the individual’s personal growth and rendered them “unfit for citizenship of the world.” In Fireflies, he condemned sectarianism in a deprecatory trope:
“The Sectarian thinks
That he has the sea
Ladled into his private pond.”

Critics who accuse Tagore of Hindu chauvinism and antipathy towards Muslims fail to appreciate his non-traditional Hindu background as a Brahmo and his fiery critique of Hindu formalism in his work. They also overlook that Tagore made significant efforts to unite Hindus and Muslims to create a Mahajati in India. For example, he established an Islamic Studies Department at Visva-Bharati University in 1927 and a Chair of Persian Studies in 1932. He also admitted Muslim students, including the renowned writer Syed Mujtaba Ali, right after founding the university in 1921. Moreover, he maintained amicable relationships with various Muslim writers and intellectuals of his time, took compassionate actions to alleviate the hardships of his Muslim tenants in East Bengal (now Bangladesh) while managing their family estates, and publicly honoured the religion and prophet Muhammad in national media outlets on Muslim festive occasions.

In a lecture at Oxford University in 1930, Tagore explained that his sensibility was shaped by “a confluence of three cultures, Hindu, Mohammedan and British.” The influence of Islamic culture began on him early, as he was raised in a Persianate ambience, surrounded by Muslim food and dress. Many of his family members wore “Mussalman type of Achkan and Jibba”, and Tagore’s earliest surviving photo from age 10 shows him wearing a Jibba robe like Iranian royalty.

Tagore was born into a Brahmo Samaj family, a progressive Hindu sect founded by Rammohun Roy after being influenced by Islamic monotheistic ideals. Roy received his early education in a Muslim madrasa, where he mastered Arabic and Persian, enabling him to study the Qur’an, Islamic jurisprudence, Islamic philosophy and classical Sufi poetry in their original languages. Subsequently, he authored a long essay in Persian, “Tuhfat al-Muwahiddin”, in which he vehemently criticised Hindu idolatry and superstition, concurrently advocating their reform from an Islamic perspective. The movement’s reliance on the Qur’an and Sufi literature was so profound that a Brahmo missionary named Girish Chandra Sen was the first to translate the Qur’an into Bangla, who also used Sufi poetry to impart ethical and spiritual teachings to the Brahmo Samaj adherents.

Tagore and his father, Debendranath Tagore, were fervent champions of Sufi literature. Debendranath, proficient in Arabic and Persian, revered Diwan-i-Hafiz as a sacred book and recited it regularly as part of his midnight meditations. Influenced by his father, Tagore also became intoxicated with it. During his visit to Iran and Iraq in 1932, Tagore spent an entire week in Shiraz to honour the mausoleums of two eminent Sufi poets, Saadi and Hafiz, declaring himself a natural successor to these Sufi saints.

During his visit, Tagore profusely praised the Islamic civilisation in Iran and Iraq. In an address to the Armenians, he applauded Iran for its “message of brotherhood, of freedom, of federation in the task of establishing peace and goodwill”. He also lauded the people and lifestyle in Iraq, acknowledging how profoundly Islam and Muslims have contributed to the Indian civilisation. He urged an audience of Iraqi writers to send more people of faith to India to help alleviate its ongoing ethnic and religious feuds by uniting different communities under the banner of fellowship and love, transcending petty factionalism.

Tagore maintained cordial relationships with numerous Muslim writers and intellectuals of his time, including Dr Muhammad Shahidullah, Kazi Nazrul Islam, Kazi Abdul Wadud, Shahid Suhrawardy, Golam Mostafa, Jasimuddin, Syed Mujtaba Ali, Muhammad Mansooruddin, Bande Ali Miyan and Sufia Kamal. He invited Dr Shahidullah and Abdul Wadud to deliver lectures at his institutions in Santiniketan, appointed Suhrawardy as the Nizam Professor at Visva-Bharati and Syed Mujtaba Ali, who had a PhD from a German university, first as a professor of the German language and then as a professor of Islamic culture.

Nazrul was first introduced to Tagore by Shahidullah. At their first meeting, Tagore invited Nazrul to stay back at Santiniketan, but Nazrul, a maverick and a bohemian, refused to. However, he later became an enthusiastic exponent of Rabindra Sangeet. He also dedicated his anthology of poems, Sanchita, to “Poet-Emperor, Rabindranath Tagore”. In return, Tagore dedicated his dance-drama “Basanto” to Nazrul. After Tagore’s death, Nazrul became so distraught that he composed several poems honouring his icon, including the long elegy “Rabihara” and “Salam asta Rabi.”
All the Muslim writers in Tagore’s circle have paid glowing tributes to Kabiguru, but none more than Poet Golam Mostafa. He described Tagore as a Muslim at heart and stated categorically, “We did not find any hostility towards Islam in the vast literature produced by Tagore. On the contrary, there is so much of Islamic content and ideals in his writings that he can be called a Muslim without hesitation.”

Tagore spent 10 years from 1890 to 1901 in Shelaidah, Kushtia, looking after their family estates in East Bengal. During this period, he had the opportunity to engage closely with Bengali Muslim culture. His boatman and retainer, Abdul Majhi, and most of the 3000 tenants working on their land were Muslims. This daily interaction with Muslim families helped the young poet understand and appreciate their way of life and traditions.

Tagore’s respectful embrace of the Muslim community is evident in many of his works but most incisively in a letter written in 1931, affirming, “As far as the country itself is concerned… we cannot deny the fact that the Mussulmans are our close relations… I love [my Mussulman tenants] from my heart because they deserve it”. To mitigate their hardships, Tagore administered various measures, including reforming the estate judiciary system, establishing a bank, a school and several industries.
In 1935, Tagore wrote the Foreword to a book, A Simple Guide to Islam’s Contribution to Science and Civilisation, by Maulvi Abdul Karim. In it, he explained that although Muslims and Hindus have been living together in Bengal for centuries, they were still hostile towards one another because of their widespread ignorance and apathy towards each other’s culture. His solution was a mutually sympathetic understanding of their values and traditions and an enduring fellowship rooted in love, empathy and trust – a vision Tagore cherished and championed much through his life and works.

Author is a Flinders University, Australia, has published one authored, two translated and three edited books, as well as several articles and book chapters on Rabindranath Tagore.

You Might Also Like

Shameless

Shameless

Feral

Chronicles of a Limerent Object

Content Warning: Brief Mentions of Child Abuse and Domestic Violence

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp Copy Link Print
Previous Article Guess Which Huge Biden Lie CNN Refused To Fact-Check
Next Article Kristi Noem banned by two more Native tribes in South Dakota

Stay Connected

1.2kFollowersLike
13kFollowersFollow
1.2kFollowersFollow
1.4kSubscribersSubscribe

Latest News

Bronx Gun Violence Continues — One Dead, Two Injured in Apartment Shooting
New York August 27, 2025
Governor Hochul Tells Trump: No Need for National Guard in NYC”
New York August 27, 2025
Japanese Climber, 102, Sets Mount Fuji Record
World August 26, 2025
Families Leave Gaza City After Night of Bombardment, Israelis Protest
World August 26, 2025
Fed Governor to File Lawsuit Against Trump’s Attempt to Remove Her
USA August 26, 2025

Quick links

  • About Us
  • Our Awards
  • My Bookmarks

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Editor
Sadia J. Choudhury
Executive Editor
Shah J. Choudhury, Mubin Khan & Salman J. Choudhury
Member of Editor’s Board
Husneara Choudhury, Fauzia J. Choudhury, Santa Islam & DevRaj A. Nath.

A Ruposhi Bangla Entertainment Network

By

Office Address
New York Office:
70-52 Broadway 1A, Jackson Heights, NY-11372, United States.
Contact
Tel: +1 (718) 496-5000
Email: info@thegenerationus.com
newsthegeneration@gmail.com
The GenerationThe Generation
Follow US
Copyright @2023 – All Right Reserved by The Generation.