A Critical Review of the Pamphlet, 'Fateh-e-Qadian' — Page 62
62 A critical Review of the Pamphlet—‘f a te h -e-Qadian’. . . the soul of that boy spoke to me under divine direction and I heard his words as revelation: ِ وا ا اا That is: My time has now arrived. I shall fall upon the earth from Allah and from His hands and then shall proceed towards Him. After this he says: This is amazing that Jesus [ Hadrat ‘ I s a as ] spoke in the cradle, but this boy spoke twice in the belly. From the above text, it is clear that the reference to the talk of the boy who was still in the belly was not equated with the talk of a child walking about and speaking with a physical tongue. On the contrary, it was clearly stated to be a revelation which God had sent down to the Promised Messiah as. Thus, it was to be taken as a narrative from the soul of the child. His sentence is worth consideration: The soul of that boy spoke to me under divine direction It is strange why—if [Musht a q] Chisht i had read this book—did he not ponder over this sentence. Everyone who is blessed with insight understands that visions and revelations relate to the spiritual world. If at all times one measures them in terms of the material world, the outcome may well be laughable. In Islamic literature, one finds many experiences of holy men, which are vouchsafed visions and revelations, in which the people who have died — and have even