Tejashwi Yadav pays tribute to Abdul Qayyum Ansari on birth anniversary
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav on Wednesday, 1 July 2026, paid tribute to freedom fighter and social reformer Abdul Qayyum Ansari on his birth anniversary, honouring his legacy of opposing the Two Nation Theory and championing the cause of the marginalised in Bihar.
Context
In his post, Tejashwi Yadav described Ansari as 'Baba-e-Qaum' (father of the community) and 'Marhoom' (the late), offering what he called 'khiraj-e-aqidat' — a tribute of reverence. He wrote that Ansari 'dedicated his life to social justice and the welfare of the poor and the deprived,' and that he 'did exemplary work for the improvement of education in Bihar during that era.'
The post was accompanied by two images, underscoring the commemorative nature of the tribute. Yadav tagged the occasion with #TejashwiYadav, #Bihar, and #RJD.
Policy Backdrop
Abdul Qayyum Ansari was a prominent freedom fighter who founded the Momin Conference in the 1930s as a platform to mobilise Muslim weavers — particularly from the Ansari biradari — against the partition movement. The Momin Conference's resolutions in the 1940s explicitly rejected the demand for Pakistan, advocated joint electorates, and pushed for social reforms for backward Muslim communities.
Ansari's opposition to the Two Nation Theory — the ideological basis for the partition of British India — made him a significant figure in the secular, composite-nationalism tradition. His work in Bihar focused particularly on expanding education access for marginalised and weaving communities at a time when such access was severely limited.
Stakeholders and Impact
Ansari's legacy is most directly felt among Muslim weavers and extremely backward caste communities in Bihar, who formed the core constituency of the Momin Conference. His emphasis on education and social upliftment for the poor and the deprived continues to resonate in debates around minority welfare and backward-community representation in the state.
Bihar opposition leaders have periodically commemorated pre-partition Muslim figures who championed secularism and anti-communal politics, signalling continuity with social-justice traditions. Such tributes form part of the broader political conversation among parties seeking support from Yadav, Muslim, and extremely backward caste voters in the state.
What's Next
The tribute comes at a time when Bihar's education budget allocations and minority scholarship schemes are under scrutiny ahead of the next fiscal cycle. Rival parties are likely to respond with their own positioning on minority welfare and backward-community education during the upcoming assembly session.
Ansari's birth anniversary commemoration by a senior opposition leader signals that his legacy of secular, social-justice politics will remain a reference point in Bihar's competitive electoral discourse in the months ahead.