Ethnic Influences On The Mujahidin 1831-1901
The Jihad Movement In South Asia (Volume No. 2) Pages: 298 Category: Politics Books, English Books This volume offers a rigorous and original contribution to the study of Islamic revivalist movements in South Asia. Challenging the assumption that the Mujahidin movement ended with Sayyid Ahmad Barailvi’s death, it traces the movement’s persistence, reorganization, and evolving engagement with colonial power and local communities. Foregrounding indigenous perspectives often sidelined in colonial and statist narratives, the author highlights how cultural belonging, religious conviction, and regional solidarities shaped the movement’s trajectory. Without romanticizing, the work critically explores the Mujahidin’s strategic shifts and internal complexities. Rooted in local knowledge, linguistic access, and historical intimacy, this book exemplifies intellectually honest and ethically grounded scholarship. A vital addition to debates on religion, resistance, and historical memory in South Asia, it marks a significant step in cultivating critical, regionally informed research. — Tariq Rahman HEC Distinguished National Professor Emeritus Grounded in the intricate local dynamics of the Afghan borderland, Dr. Naseem Khattak offers a compelling perspective on post-Sayyid Ahmad Barailvi’s Jihad Movement. Based on historical details, she brings clarity to a complex and under researched chapter of South Asian history. — Prof. Husnul Amin Director, National Institute of Pakistan Studies, Quaid-i-Azam University Islamabad Contrary to the tendency to focus upon the singular career of Sayyid Ahmad Barailvi, Naseem Khattak’s work is an immensely valuable contribution to our understanding of the history of the Jihad Movement for its careful reconstruction of the events and fortunes of the movement that followed in the wake of Sayyid Ahmad Barailvi’s death in 1831. Furthermore, previous discussions of the Jihad Movement tended to rely upon reductive appeals to the Movement’s fanaticism or to the recalcitrance of the Pukhtanah in the Indo-Afghan borderlands. What makes Khattak’s work so refreshing, however, is that she roots herself in the perspective of the local inhabitants of the borderland regions, and this in turn offers her analysis a depth and insight that is sorely needed. By not simply writing about the borderlands but instead rooting her historical perspective in the borderlands, Khattak argues convincingly that the post-1831 Jihad Movement only rarely engaged in a full and collaborative manner with the borderland Pukhtanah. Rather, the leaders of the Jihad Movement too quickly strove to assert their authority over and against the local inhabitants, thereby destabilizing any prospective partnerships from the beginning. — William E. B. Sherman Associate Professor, Department of Religious Studies, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Author of Singing with the Mountains: The Language of God in the Afghan Highlands (Fordham 2024)
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