Dudu Miyan
Faraizi Movement, Indian Rebellion of 1857 |
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Muḥsin ad-Dīn Aḥmad (1819–1862), better known by his nickname Dudu Miyān, was a leader of the
Early life
Ahmad was born in 1819, to a
Movement
After the death of Shariatullah, Miyan led the movement to a more radical, agrarian character and was able to create an effective organizational structure.[citation needed] In his view land belonged to those who worked it. He established his own administrative system, and appointed a khalifa (leader) for each village. His policy was to create a state within the British-ruled state. He organised the oppressed peasantry against the oppressive landlords.[2] In 1838, Miyan called upon his followers not to pay revenue to zamindars. Indigo Kuthis, were frequently attacked and ransacked by raiyats.[3] In retaliation, the landlords and indigo planters tried to contain Miyan by instituting cases against him. In 1838, 1844, 1847 he was arrested several times but released because he became so popular irrespective of religion with the peasantry that in those cases, courts seldom found a witness against him.[4]
Death
At the time of the
References
- ^ ISBN 9780521249867. Retrieved May 4, 2018.)
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link - ISBN 90-04-09497-0.
In Dudu Miyan's view, land belong to those who exploited it ... His administrative reforms entailed the division of Faraidi settlement areas into small units ... In each of the village units Dudu Miyan appointed a unit khalifah ... Dudu Miyan developed what amounted to a virtual parallel government to that of the British ... [The Faraidi movement's] primary political goal was to protect the helpless Muslim masses from the miserable conditions created by despotic and capricious zamindars of rural Bengal.
- ^ "The Faraizi Movement". ImportantIndia.com. December 11, 2013. Archived from the original on June 27, 2018. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
- ISBN 978-0-521-09783-3.