Majestic Writings of the Promised Messiah — Page 33
A Review of the Pakistani Government’s “White Paper”: Qadiyaniyyat—A Grave Threat to Islam [ 33 ] His brain had a treasure-house of words full of elo- quence and energy. When he wished to write, such a stream of measured and precise words would flow that it was beyond description. Those who did not know the late Maulav i N u r-ud-D i n—the first caliph—mistakenly think that Maulav i N u r-ud-D i n might have helped him in his writing, but from my personal knowledge I can say that the late H ak i m N u r-ud-D i n, compared to Mirz a , could not even write a few lines. Despite the fact that his literature occasionally had a flavour of Punjab i in it, yet it had a unique grandeur. It is a fact that one would get enraptured by reading some of his passages. Sayyed Mumt a z ‘Al i writes in Tehdh i b-e-Nisw a n (Lahore): The late Mirz a Sahib was a holy and noble personage. The force of his righteousness could subjugate even a hard-hearted person. He was an extremely erudite scholar, a dauntless reformer, and the epitome of noble deeds. Although, in the religious sense, I do not accept him as the Promised Messiah, yet his teachings and guidance did indeed breath new messianic life into the dead souls. ( Tehdh i b-e-Nisw a n , printed in Lahore, quoted in, Tash- hi dhul-Adhh a n, vol. 3, copy 10, p. 383, 1908) The paper Sa diqul-Akhb a r, Rewarhi, Bahawalpur, writes: Mirz a Sahib has silenced the opponents of Islam by giving a crushing rebuttal to their vulgar allegations with his powerful speeches and superb writings. He