Haqiqatul-Wahi (The Philosophy of Divine Revelation) — Page 357
POSTSCRIPT-SIGN NUMBER 125 357 missionary. This Sign was manifested in the year 1884 CE. Under the same reference, the Postal Register can be examined and under the same reference, my deposition in the Summary Court, Amritsar can be traced. In case the Hindu witnesses refuse to testify, they may be obliged to speak the truth under oath. This prophecy is recorded on pages 469¹ and 470 of Barahin-e-Ahmadiyya and the names of these Āryas are referred to. If those people did not happen to be the eyewit- nesses to this prophecy, it doesn't stand to reason that they should have remained silent for so long despite being extremely hostile. Why did they remain silent from 1884 CE until now, 1906 CE, despite the knowl- edge that in my books and pronouncements I have repeatedly written their names as witnesses? It was their right to refute all the testimo- nies concerning them as recorded in Barāhīn-e-Aḥmadiyya. It must be remembered that three Hindus are mentioned in Barāhīn-e-Ahmadiyya as witnesses of the prophecies: first of all is Lālah Sharampat Khatrī, second is Lālah Malāwāmal Khatrī, and third is Bishandās Brahman. Wherever the term Āryas occurs in Barāhīn-e-Aḥmadiyya these alone are meant; others too are meant elsewhere. Furthermore, this prophecy contains an English sentence which is also a Sign in my favour as I do not know English at all. By stating this prophecy in Urdu, Arabic, and English, God has fully laid bare its intent. It is a great Sign indeed, but only for those whose eyes are not blinded by prejudice. 125. [ONE HUNDRED-TWENTY fifth] sign—Let it be clear that the Sign of Pandit Lekh Rām's death is among the awe-inspiring and majestic Signs. My books, Barakātud-Du'ā, Karāmātuṣ-Ṣādiqīn, and A'ina-e-Kamālāt-e-Islām are the basic sources of the fundamental prophecy about it, in which it was foretold that within six years Lekh Rām would depart from this world as a result of an assassination, and the day of his assassination would be the very next day after Ïd; that 1. This reference text appears in Rūḥānī Khazā'in, vol. 1, page 559-561, published in 2008. [Publisher]