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File 53/1915 Part IV 'German War: Turkey; Caliphate etc' [‎227r] (450/481)

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The record is made up of 1 item (242 folios). It was created in 1915-1916. It was written in English. The original is part of the British Library: India Office The department of the British Government to which the Government of India reported between 1858 and 1947. The successor to the Court of Directors. Records and Private Papers Documents collected in a private capacity. .

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submit that our greatest danger lies in British statesmen and otlieials
eon using the idealsol intellectuals” withthoseof European revolutionaries
and liberals, and therefore according them a certain respect. The Moslem
intellectual uses the clothes of Europe, and he has lost belief in his creed,
but the hatred o! Christendom and lust lor the dominion of Islam as a
supieme political power remains, and he knows how to use the weapon of
fanaticism among a population whose percentage of literates is as low as it
is among the Indian Moslems.
If one may suggest a policy in words, I feel that our educational policy
in regard to Islam should be, among the upper class, to foster the studv of
the Moslem classic authors, historians, logicians, and theologians, and to
combine with modern education tire study of the history of the greater
Moslem dynasties, and the development of Mohammedan Sheri law ; while
among the poorer, to endeavour to impart with elementary education a real
understanding of the outlines of Islamic history.
This policy would do much to introduce a real patriotic religious feeling
among the poor, and do something to infuse the upper classes with a com
prehension of the true greatness of their forefathers. By such a policy we
should be at the root of the difficulty, by disentangling the confusion, of
thought at present arising in the minds of the upper classes through the
collision of the mass of ill-assimilated European education on the mass of
Asiatic tendency, tradition, and prejudice. Similarly among the masses we
should be preparing the way for the raising of a reasonable Moslem people
from the ignorance and confused superstition of to-day. It might even be
hoped that between the two would be produced a frugal and learned clergy
capable of giving the people such good as the Mohammedan religion can
offer.
SECTION III.
GENERAL SITUATION.
Political .—The general political situation arising out of the war between
the entente powers and the Ottoman Empire is really evolved out of the
efforts of Germany and Turkey to mobilise Islam against Great Britain and
Russia. It is necessary briefly to recapitulate the methods our enemies
pursue. *
(1.) Fomentation of Indian Moslem discontent and fanaticism.
(A) In Persia the working up of tribesmen and nationalists to rebellion
along the coast, private murder in the provincial capitals, pressure
on the government at the capital. ^
(3.) In Egypt the working of sympathy with the ex-Khedive and
nationalist revolutionarism.
(L) In Arabia :
a. Yemen, alliance with the Imam of Sana.
b. Nejd, subventioning of Ibn Reshid.
c. In the Kerbella area, playing on Shia fanaticism.
d. In Muscat, the fomentation of the rebellion against the Sultan
by means of native agents Non-British agents affiliated with the British Government. from East Africa.
This policy is worked by highly efficient agents on a well co-ordinated
plan, as may be judged from results. . .
As against this, we have certain strong positive factors and influences m
our favour, which may be enumerated as follows:
(T ) Discontent with Committee rule in Turkey itself.
(?\ The dislike of the clergy for the young Turks.
( 3 .) Arab dislike of Turks.
(A.) Disunion between Sunnis and Shias.

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Content

Part 4 consists of correspondence relating to the possible declaration of a caliphate in Arabia and is a continuation of part 3 (IOR/L/PS/10/525/1). The papers tell of the British assessment of the situation and the French attitude, as well as correspondence and negotiations with Ḥusayn bin ‘Alī al-Hāshimī, the Grand Sharif of Mecca. The file also discusses the British view of the proposed blockade of the Arabian ports in the Red Sea.

The file also includes a printed document (ff 25-242) marked 'secret' entitled 'Policy in the Middle East', which consists mainly of communications on the military situation in Mespotamia from Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Mark Sykes to the Director of Military Information.

The discussion over such matters is mostly between Sir Arthur Henry McMahon, the General Officer Commanding, Egypt, and the Commander-in-Chief, India.

Extent and format
1 item (242 folios)
Arrangement

The papers are arranged in approximate chronological order from the rear to the front.

Written in
English in Latin script
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File 53/1915 Part IV 'German War: Turkey; Caliphate etc' [‎227r] (450/481), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/10/525/2, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100054091590.0x00003c> [accessed 7 July 2026]

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