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The madrassa system has been the source of traditional Islam providing the inspiration for
intellectual philosophy. In South Asia, they have been actively involved in maintaining the
traditional Islam and providing a cultural alternative. South Asian Muslims found in Madrassas,
the centre of classical Islamic studies keeping the orthodox culture intact. Madrassa have been
the torch bearer of conservative values within Islam and at times worked as reactionary forces
against the “cultural invasion” from other religious traditions, especially Hinduism in South
Asia.
Post 9/11, the once little known educational institutions became a significant part of the public
discourse, thanks to media coverage. But in this, hysterical coverage the most pertinent question
remained unanswered. Why some of these Islamic educational institutions have been
transformed drastically? Rather, a simplistic, readymade, and already known answer has been
repeated over time, while ignoring the actual spirit of these madrassas being rooted in the
historical unveiling of Islamic spirituality.
However, following the collapse of Islamic self-confidence that accompanied the deposition of
the last Mughal Emperor, Bahadur Shah Zafar, disillusioned scholars founded an influential
madrassa at Deoband, a 100 miles north of the former Mughal capital in Delhi. Feeling that they
were pushed against the wall, the madrassa's founders reacted against what they saw as the
degenerate ways of the old elite. The Deobandimadrassa, therefore, went back to Quranic basics
and rigorously stripped out anything “Hindu” or “European” from the curriculum. Founded in
1866 byMaulanaQasimNanautavi and Maulana Rashid Gangohi, the school did take part in the
freedom struggle against the British. Since the departure of the British, Indian Deobandis
remained apolitical while Pakistani Deobandis got into politics. In the same way, it rejected any
state influence.
That role in the colonial period was not overtly political. The brutal repression of the so-called
Mutiny of 1857 against the British had fallen very hard on north Indian Muslims. In the
aftermath, the `Ulema, not surprisingly, adopted a stance of a-political quietism. As the Indian
nationalist movement became a mass movement after World War I, the Deobandileadership did
something of an about turn. They were never a political party as such, but, organized into the
Association of the `Ulema of India (Jamiat `Ulema-i Hind). Thus threw in their lot with Gandhi
and the Indian National Congress in opposition to British rule. Deobandi histories written before
1920 insisted that the Ulema did not participate in the anti-colonial rebellion of 1857. However,
the histories written after independence, give freedom-fighters pride of place.
In the aftermath of Soviet interventions into Afghanistan and Islamic revolution in Iran 1979, a
kind of "surrogate" competition emerged between Saudis and Iranians, each side patronizing
religious institutions which fueled sectarian violence. The surge in the number of madrasas in
the 1980s coincided with the ideology of Jihad in Afghanistan due to Russian intervention that
resulted in the influx of millions of Afghan refugees. The madrasas located along the frontier
frequently provided the only available education. One school in particular, the Madrasa
Haqqaniya, in AkoraKathaknear Peshawar, trained many of the top Taliban leaders. These
students (talib; plural, taliban) were indoctrinated by many of the core Deobandireformists
viiencouraged by Arab and Uzbek volunteers in Afghanistan. Deobandis followed Saudi-Wahabi
injunctions including rigorous concern with fulfilling rituals; opposition to custom laden
ceremonies like weddings and pilgrimage to shrines, and a focus on seclusion of women as a
central symbol of a morally ordered society. Theirs was, according to Ahmed Rashid, “an
extreme form of Deobandism, which was being preached by Pakistani Islamic parties in Afghan
refugee camps in Pakistan." 1 This focus on a fairly narrow range of shari'a law, which
emphasized strict ritual, was something the Taliban shared with other Deobandimovements,
while the severity of the Taliban indoctrination made them known to the world as inhuman and
terrorist.
DarulUloomDeoband India,on the other hand, forbade their students from going to fight with the
Taliban in Afghanistan. The clerics drew an important boundary line between theologically
conservative views and political violence. A successful story of Muslim education in India is
DarulUmoor, a one-year institute for madrassa graduates in the southern state of Mysore. There,
religious students supplement their education with English literature and comparative religion
before returning to their communities to teach in madrassas and preach in mosques. Many
observers agree that local, Muslim-run projects like this one are essential if Muslims are to
genuinely integrate into the Indian mainstream.
Asgar Ali Engineer, head of an interfaith organization in Mumbai states, “Indian Deobandis and
Pakistani Deobandis are quite different. Islam is in the majority over there. The Ulema have been
politicized, they want and they use Islam. There is a very interesting phenomenon here (India).
The Deobandis here are attacking terrorism and militancy. Deobandis have held largest
demonstrations in India against terrorism. They are puritan otherwise and against Sufism, but in
the Indian environment, their behavior is very different.” 2
On the other hand, in Pakistan, study of madrassas in Pakistan, gives us a totally different
picture, while most of them are nonviolent, that does not mean that they are apolitical. As
compared to Indian Deobandi Madrassas, if we just focus on Pakistani Deobandi madrassas and
include Jamaat-i-Islami’sAhle Hadith madrassas as well, it appears that Deobandi and JI
madarsassas are more inclined towards politics, they have political affiliations. The Barelviesdo
not focus much on their political tradition. 3
The issue however remains that the preservation of a distinct Muslim identity is one of the
principal concerns of the madrassas. This theological hardening however, does not lead to an
embrace of militancy in India. In addition to forbidding participation in holy war abroad, Indian
Deobandileaders specifically condemn violent jihad at home, saying Muslims have a compact to
live in peace and harmony with others that cannot be broken unless they are actively persecuted
in matters of faith. Deobandis in India insist that it is possible, within a pluralistic India, to
practice rigorous Islam and send their children to religious schools without being opposed to the
state.
1 Ahmed
Rashid, “Taliban: Islam, Oil and the New Great Game in Central Asia”, New Haven, Yale Univeristy-2000
p-88
2
Asghar Ali Enginner quoted in Tom Heneghen, Faith World: Religion, Faith and Ethics, Reuter , April 27, 2009
available at http://blogs.reuters.com/faithworld/2009/04/27/religion-and-politics-in-bewilderingly-diverse-india/
accessed on August 8, 2011
3
Amir Rana, Mapping the madrassa mindset- Conflict and Peace Studies, Volume 2,Number-1 Jan-Mar , Pakistan
Institute of Peace Studies, 2009.
viiiFor Indian Deobandis, the Indian madrassas are not a part of mainstream politics through any
political linkage unlike their Pakistani counterparts. More importantly, they are not yet a part of
the transnational Pan-Islamic network of Al-Qaeda, as seen by the 9/11 attacks and after.
At most they are reactions to domestic problems caused by bad governance and accentuated by
petty vote bank politics as seen in states like UP, Bihar and J &K. Hence, it can be safely said
that madrassas in India continue to provide Islamic knowledge and tradition rather than political
Islam.
Argument about the Deobandi being the violent sect of Islam is too simplistic. Though it is fair
to state that violent expression did find its roots in pre-Independence India, the very fact that the
Deobandi Madrassa split in to two, between those who wanted to continue imparting religious
knowledge and preserving Muslim identity and those who took up arms first against British, then
Soviets and now Americans declaring Jihad. It is unfortunate that in all three examples, the rank
and file for Jihad were provided by the people from the mountains. This however does not prove
that it is a particular people who are inherently violent as the leadership for all these expeditions
was first from Sayid Ahmed of Rae Brailly, then Maulana Mehmoodul Hasan of Deoband, then
General Zia who endorsed it and used the Deobandis. The construction of the “threat” from
outside powers was mainly based on political interests than religious ideologies. Political and
military intrusion by the west was on strategic basis and not to wipe out particular religion from
the area as it was conceived and presented by successive Muslim leadership of pre independence
India and later of Pakistan. The threat to Islam was so constructed that convinced the tribesman
who have been always ready to lay their life in the name of God while the real purpose was and
is power politics. |
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