The Afghan Martyrs — Page 136
people received from the previous kings. . . . . . . . He liked to curse the Ulemas and their teachings. \I Included among these charges was the clarion call which had summoned men to wars before, which that fIrst man over the threshold of the Arg Palace had heard in his heart as he praised God and felt the bullet "The actions of Amanullah. . . . . . . . are centered on the short life of a few days in this temporary world and are based on selfIsh motives. He did not care for the progress of religion which leads to everlasting life. " This was the objectionable conduct of the person who had had helpless Ahmadis stoned to death on the charge that, God forbid, they had rebelled against the Islamic Law and had therefore expelled themselves from the pail of Islam. Clearly his own conduct was wholly against the Islamic Law. In the end, exiled and in a state of complete helplessness, Amaanulla Khan died in Switzerland and, charged with having martyred some Ahrnadis by stoning them to death, was presented before the Almighty. Comments of the Press on the Steadfastness Displayed by Hadhrat Moulyi Neymatulla the Martyr An Arya newspaper, Parkaash, in its issue of 21 st September 1924 published: "In spite of our deep rooted differences with Ahmadis we congratulate them as, for the sake of his faith, one of their Jamaat 136