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Arabization

Baladas Ghoshal
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Baladas Ghoshal: The author is a Visiting Senior Fellow at Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi.

India Quarterly: A Journal of International Affairs, 2010, vol. 66, issue 1, 69-89

Abstract: For centuries Islam in Asia was renowned for its adaptability to local practices and tolerance of other religions. Over the past three decades, however, fundamentalists have tried to homogenize Islam, introducing new tensions. More than any other factor, what has fuelled conflicts and divided Muslims and others in otherwise tolerant and harmonious plural societies of Asia, is the slow but steady process of the transformation of Islam in the region, from a syncretic and inclusive Islam to a puritanical and exclusivist one under the influence of ideas, norms, practices, and finances flowing from the Arab world. The ‘Islam of the desert’ has made inroads across the Indian Ocean. This process of homogenization and regimentation—a process I would like to call the ‘Arabization’ of Islam—puts greater emphasis on rituals and codes of conduct than on substance, through the Wahhabi and Salafi creeds, a rigidly puritanical branch of Islam exported from, and subsidized by, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The internationalization of Islam drew Asian Muslims to the desert and brought the desert to them. Such ‘globalization of political Islam’ could threaten stability throughout Asia and the world. Unfortunately, too many proponents of any form of fundamentalism rely on it as a tool, not for inspiring spirituality, but for acquiring economic or political power.

Keywords: Arabization; Islam; syncretism; Islam of the desert (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2010
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