Rahimtulla M Sayani
(1847-1902) President - Calcutta, 1896

Rahimtulla M. Sayani was born in Kutch on April 5, 1847. He belonged to
a Khoja Muslim Family which subsequently of repudiated the discipleship of
the Aga Khan. Born in humble circumstances, Sayani achieved public
eminence and professional excellence in the field of law by hard work and
perseverance.
He began his public life as an elected member of the Bombay Municipal
Corporation (1876) and was elected President of the Corporation in 1888.
and the Sheriff of Bombay in 1885.
Sayani served a long spell as a legislator. He was elected to the
Bombay Legislative Council (1880-90 and 1894-96) and the Imperial
Legislative Council (1896.98).
Sayani was appointed by the Government in 1874 as a member of the
Commission to consider the laws of interstate and testamentary succession
in the Khoja community. He was associated with the Indian National
Congress since its inception and was one of the two Indian Muslims who
attended its first session in 1885. He was a member of the committee
formed by the Congress in 1886 to consider the question of Public
Services. He was one of the representatives from Bombay on the Congress
Executive Committee (Indian Congress Committee) formed in 1899. He
presided over the 12th annual session of the Congress held at Calcutta in
1896. His presidential address hailed by a contemporary journal as the
"best delivered so far" was notable for the close attention it paid to the
economic and financial aspects of the British rule in India.
Sayani urged the Muslims to join the Congress which he regarded as
representing "all that is loyal and patriotic, enlightened and
influential, progressive and disinterested." Enumerating Muslims'
objections to joining the Congress, he refuted them point by point. An
advocate of Western education, Sayani considered it particularly essential
for the Muslim.
- Qeyamuddin Ahmed
That we should endeavour to promote personal intimacy and friendship
amongst all the great communities of India, to develop and consolidate
sentiments of national growth and unity, to weld them together into one
nationality, to effect a moral union amongst them, to remove the taunt
that we are not a nation, but only a congeries of races and creeds which
have no cohesion in then and to bring about stronger and stronger friendly
ties of common nationality.
From the Presidential Address - Rahimtulla M. Sayani I.N.C.
Session, 1896, Calcutta. |