Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Prologue
- Chapter 1 The Deoband Madrassah Movement: Research Context
- Chapter 2 Origin of the DMM: Seeds of a Counterculture
- Chapter 3 The DMM in United India: Activist Countercultural Trends
- Chapter 4 The DMM in Pakistan: Countercultural Politics and Extremism
- Chapter 5 Deobandi Islam: Countering Folk Islam and Popular Custom
- Chapter 6 The DMM versus Mainstream Society: Viewpoints of Deobandi Journals and Students
- Epilogue
- Appendix I The Deobandi Stance vis-à-vis Muslim Groups other than the Barelwis
- Appendix II Countercultural Exposition of the Deobandi Taliban
- Appendix III Interview Guide
- Glossary of Islamic Terms
- References
- Index
Chapter 5 - Deobandi Islam: Countering Folk Islam and Popular Custom
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2015
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Prologue
- Chapter 1 The Deoband Madrassah Movement: Research Context
- Chapter 2 Origin of the DMM: Seeds of a Counterculture
- Chapter 3 The DMM in United India: Activist Countercultural Trends
- Chapter 4 The DMM in Pakistan: Countercultural Politics and Extremism
- Chapter 5 Deobandi Islam: Countering Folk Islam and Popular Custom
- Chapter 6 The DMM versus Mainstream Society: Viewpoints of Deobandi Journals and Students
- Epilogue
- Appendix I The Deobandi Stance vis-à-vis Muslim Groups other than the Barelwis
- Appendix II Countercultural Exposition of the Deobandi Taliban
- Appendix III Interview Guide
- Glossary of Islamic Terms
- References
- Index
Summary
On the ideological level, a counterculture is a set of beliefs and values which radically reject the dominant culture of a society and prescribe a sectarian alternative. On the behavioural level, a counterculture is a group of people who, because they accept such beliefs and values, behave in […] radically nonconformist ways.
Kenneth Westhues, Society's Shadow: Studies in the Sociology of Countercultures (1972, 9–10)The objective of this chapter is to highlight the conflict between the DMM and the majority of Muslims in Pakistan. Unlike the previous chapters that identified the presence of countercultural tendencies in the history of the DMM, this chapter presents a direct comparison of the values and practices of folk Islam with those of Deobandi Islam. The chapter elaborates how the DMM has employed the theology of Islam to condemn and castigate the established religious and sociocultural beliefs and practices of mainstream Muslim society in Pakistan.
As mentioned in the introduction to this book, a large majority of Pakistani Muslims follow folk Islam – a charitable version of Islam broadly linked to spiritual and sufi traditions. For this work, folk Islam represents mainstream Muslim society, whereas the Deobandi sect, followed by about 20 per cent Pakistani Muslims, epitomizes a counterculture. The current chapter identifies the most prominent beliefs and practices of folk Islam as well as popular customs that have been condemned by the Deobandis. The chapter not only presents the arguments of Deobandi scholars in this regard but also compares their views with the perspectives of non-Deobandi ulama, mostly from the Barelwi sect that generally represents folk Islam in Pakistan. The latter viewpoint has been included to highlight the justification and continuation of these beliefs and practices by the majority of Pakistani Muslims.
For this discourse on the DMM's countercultural approach, the views and fatawa of three prominent Deobandi scholars – Ashraf Ali Thanvi (1863–1943), Abdul Haq (1912–88) and Yousaf Ludhianvi (1932–2000) – have been selected to represent the Deobandi persuasion.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Deoband Madrassah MovementCountercultural Trends and Tendencies, pp. 119 - 154Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2015