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Author | Ved Prakash Upadhyay |
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Language | Sanskrit |
Subject | Discussion of the presence of the Islamic prophet Muhammad as the Hindu avatar of Kalki in the Hindu scriptures (Kalki Purana, Vedas and Bhavashi Purana, etc.) |
Publisher | Saraswati Vedanta Prakash Sangha |
Publication date | 1969 |
OCLC | 1199095831 |
Kalki Avatar and Muhammad is a Sanskrit-language book by Ved Prakash Upadhyay.[1][2] In 1969 Saraswati Vedanta Prakash Sangghha published the book.[3][4][5] This book is a discussion of the presence of the Islamic prophet Muhammad as the Hindu avatar of Kalki in the Hindu scriptures (Kalki Purana, Vedas and Bhavishya Purana, etc.).[6][7][8]
Islamic criticism
Bangladeshi Islamic scholar Abubakar Muhammad Zakaria, who has conducted advanced research and studies on Hinduism at the Islamic University of Madinah in Saudi Arabia, criticized the book, saying that Narasimha is described in verse 127 of the 20th volume of the Atharveda. Not the main body of the Atharvaveda, it claims that it is an anticipatory portion and subsequent connections, and claims that prophecies of the Prophet Muhammad in Hindu scriptures were used by Hindus to make their scriptures acceptable to Muslims. is a clever attempt. Beginning with Akbar's attempt to flatter Emperor Akbar by writing the Alupanishad, he claims that the Bhavishya Purana is completely fabricated and man-made with Hindu references. In addition, all Hindu scriptures, including the Vedas, are claimed to be adaptations of the beliefs of the Shetanga Aryans, descendants of Noah's son Jephthah from Iran, a native of India. Hermit or Black is the Dravidian religion. Belongs to Noah's son Ham, Indian regional indigenous religions. and professes to adopt a new form in Buddhist admixture, and says that since the Hindu texts do not contain the monotheism of God or Allah, it is in no way consistent. An Arabic form of the original tenets of Islam, rather the pagan Advaita Vedanta philosophy of Wahdat-ul-Wujud or Sufism, arose and as Hinduism established itself as a conformist and syncretistic doctrine from the Islamic point of view. All Hindu scriptures are not inspired and man-made Arya literature and the theory that this book attributed Kalki to Muhammad, he claimed, was a false and deceitful attempt.[9]
Ziya-ur-Rahman Azmi in his book "Darast fi Il-Ihudiyyah Wal-Masihiya Wadiyan-ul-Hind" ( A Study on Judaism, Christianity and Indian Religion) states that there are two explanations behind the prophecies in Hinduism about the emergence of Islam. One could be that the time of Aryan migration was during the time of Hazrat Ibrahim (peace be upon him), during his time another prophet came to India, under whose guidance these prophecies are included, or as many Hindus say it was copied from Rigveda. Another theory is that, according to Sultan Mubeen, professor of Sanskrit at Shibli College, they are Hindu inventions and later additions, added by Hindus to please Muslim rulers, such as Kalki. Puranas and Bhavishya Puranas, which contain many Islamic prophecies. Azmi argues that most of the Hindu scriptures were translated into Arabic during the reign of Caliph Ma'mun ibn al-Rashid at Bait al Hikmat, but none of them were authored. Time has written something about these prophecies in one of his books. For example, al-Biruni's "Ma llihnd min muqulat al-muqulat fi al-aql wa marjula" by Al-Biruni (Tahqiq ma lilhind min maqqula al-maqqula fi al-aql wa marzula) and two other Arabic translations of Hindu scriptures, none of them. Regarding the author of the book, Ved Prakash Upadhyay, in which these prophecies are mentioned, Azmi said that although he claimed to confirm these prophecies in the book, he himself did not accept Islam.[10][11]
References
- ↑ Malik, Dr Ahmad; Mehdi Hashmi Qureshi, Afrasiab. END TIMES (What could happen in the world tomorrow). (Center for Global and Strategic Studies, Islamabad). pp. 13, 274, 275. ISBN 9789699837142. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
- ↑ الحافي, د عمر; البصول, السيد علي. "البشارات بنبؤة محمد في الكتب الهندوسية المقدسة". The Jordanian Journal of Islamic Studies. Al al-Bayt University. 9 (1): 2, 12. Retrieved 2 September 2022.
- ↑ "Muhammad in Hindu scriptures". Milli Gazette. Archived from the original on 2019-01-07. Retrieved 2014-11-06.
- ↑ The common bases for Hindu-Muslim dialogue. Twocircles.net. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
- ↑ "Prophet Muhammad in Hindu Scriptures". Milli Gazette. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
- ↑ HANDRIK ALIM MASHURI, -. "KALKI AWATARA DALAM PERSPEKTIF DR. PANDIT VED PRAKASH UPADDHAY DALAM BUKU MUHAMMAD IN THE HINDU SCRIPTURES" (PDF). Sultan Syarif Kasim II State Islamic University. Sultan Syarif Kasim II State Islamic University. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ↑ Naeem, Dr Hafiz Muhammad. "محمدﷺ بحیثیت خاتم النبین: پنڈت وید پرکاش اپادھیائے کی تحقیقات کا مطالعہ: Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) as the Final Messenger: A Critical Analysis of Pandit Ved Prakash Upaddhya's point of view". Al-Idrak Journal. 2 (1): 176− 192. ISSN 2789-3227.
- ↑ روحانی, سیدمحمد. "جایگاه و کارکرد منجی موعود هندو در متون پورانه". انتظار موعود (in فارسی). Noormags. 61 (18): 129–151. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
- ↑ "প্রশ্ন : হিন্দু ধর্মে ভবিষ্যৎবাণী কোথায় থেকে আসলো? শাইখ প্রফেসর ড. আবু বকর মুহাম্মাদ যাকারিয়া". YouTube. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
- ↑ الرحمن, أعظمى، محمد ضياء. دراسات في اليهودية والمسيحية وأديان الهند والبشارات في كتب الهندوس (in العربية). مكتبة الرشد،. pp. 703–708. Retrieved 14 August 2022.
- ↑ الرحمن, أعظمى، محمد ضياء. دراسات في اليهودية والمسيحية وأديان الهند والبشارات في كتب الهندوس (in العربية). مكتبة الرشد،. pp. 703–708. Retrieved 14 August 2022.