Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T08:14:39.508Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Inherited Charisma and Personal Qualities: Sayyids and religious reform in nineteenth century Multan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2020

DIEGO ABENANTE*
Affiliation:
University of [email protected]

Abstract

It has generally been acknowledged that Sayyids, through their real or imagined connection to the Prophet, have represented a key trans-regional dimension of Islam. In the Punjab, the status of the Ashraf has been reinforced by their role as custodians of the Sufi shrines. In the Multan region, Sayyids and Qureshis acted frequently as pir and sajjada nashin for many Sufi dargahs. Their position, however, did not go unchallenged. The Chishti Nizami revival in the late eighteenth and nineteenth century saw the growth of an alternative religious network that competed with older families both religiously and socially. This process directly challenged the idea of inherited charisma and the established social hierarchy. Although reform movements are often considered to represent a shift towards a universal dimension of Islam, connected symbolically to Arabia and to the figure of the Prophet, the Chishti Nizami revival in Multan can be seen rather as a vernacularisation of Islamic authority. The movement favoured the social ascent of local tribes and non-Arab Ashraf families. The alliance between these groups would become a stable feature in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and contributed to the social status of Sayyid families being questioned.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 “Surely there was a good example for you in the Messenger of Allah, for those who look forward to Allah and the Last Day and remember Allah much” (Quran 33:21).

2 Robinson, F., ‘The ‘Ulama of Farangi Mahall and their Adab’, in Moral Conduct and Authority: The Place of Adab in South Asian Islam, (ed.) Metcalf, B. (Berkeley, 1984), p. 152Google Scholar.

3 D. Lelyveld, ‘ashraf’ in Keywords in South Asian Studies, (ed.) R. Dwyer (School of Oriental and African Studies, London, 2005) https://www.soas.ac.uk/south-asia-institute/keywords/file24799.pdf, p. 5 (accessed May 2019); see also Lelyveld, D., Aligarh's First Generation: Muslim Solidarity in British India (Oxford, 1978), Chapter IIGoogle Scholar.

4 Jaffrelot, C., ‘Sanskritization vs. Ethnicization in India: Changing Identities and Caste Politics before Mandal’, Asian Survey 40, 5 (2000), p. 759CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

5 Titus, P., ‘Honor the Baluch, Buy the Pashtun: Stereotypes, Social Organization and History in Western Pakistan’, Modern Asian Studies 32, 3 (1998), p. 658CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

6 Bulliet, R. W., ‘Conversion to Islam and the Emergence of a Muslim Society in Iran’, in Conversion to Islam, (ed.) Levtzion, N. (New York, 1979), pp. 3233Google Scholar; Urban, E., ‘The Foundation of Islamic Society as Expressed by the Qur'anic Term mawla’, Journal of Qur'anic Studies 15, 1 (2013), pp. 2345CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

7 Caroe, O., The Pathans (London, 1958), pp. 78Google Scholar.

8 Robinson, F., ‘Technology and Religious Change. Islam and the Impact of Print’, Modern Asian Studies 27, 1 (1993), p. 238CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

9 Ibid., pp. 237–239.

10 Makdisi, G., ‘The Diary in Islamic Historiography: Some Notes’, History and Theory 25, 2 (1986), pp. 179181CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

11 The term has been introduced by Steuers, Cora Vreed-de, Parda. A Study of Muslim Women's Life in Northern India (Assen, 1968)Google Scholar; see also Metcalf, B., Islamic Revival in British India. Deoband, 1860–1900 (Princeton, 1982), p. 256CrossRefGoogle Scholar. The process is exemplified by the famous proverb: “The first year I was a butcher, the next a Shaikh; this year, if the prices fall, I shall become a Sayyid”, quoted in Blunt, E. A. H., The Caste System of Northern India (London, 1931), p. 184Google Scholar.

12 Boivin, M., Le Pakistan et l'Islam: Anthropologie d'une république islamique (Paris, 2015), p. 121Google Scholar.

13 See, for example, Srinivas, M. N., ‘The Dominant Caste in Ranpura’, American Anthropologist 61, 1 (1959), pp. 116CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Dumont, L., Homo Hierarchicus. The Caste System and its Implications (Chicago, 1970), pp. 192ffGoogle Scholar. See also Metcalf, Islamic Revival in British India, p. 256.

14 Lelyveld, ‘ashraf’, p. 6.

15 Imperial Gazetteer of India, Vol. II, Punjab (Calcutta, 1908), pp. 229–230 (henceforth IGI); Maclagan, E. D., Gazetteer of the Multan District 1901–02 (Lahore, 1902), pp. 126129Google Scholar (henceforth MDG 1901–02).

16 Ibid., p. 128.

17 For a discussion of the relevance of education and etiquette in Muslim culture, see especially Metcalf, Moral Conduct and Authority, and Lelyveld, Aligarh's First Generation.

18 On the overall process, see Jones, K.W., Socio-Religious Reform Movements in British India (Cambridge, 1989)Google Scholar.

19 Oberoi, H., The Construction of Religious Boundaries. Culture, Identity and Diversity in the Sikh Tradition (Chicago, 1984), pp. 139148Google Scholar.

20 Ansari, S., ‘Sind’, Encyclopaedia of Islam, IX (Leiden, 1997), p. 634Google Scholar; Bausani, A., Islam in India: Tipologia di un contatto religioso (Rome, 1973), p. 6Google Scholar. On Shah Shams Sabzwari, see Chand, H., Tarikh-e-Multan (Multan, 1884), p. 85Google Scholar; Multani, F., Awliya-e-Multan (Multan, 1980), pp. 189193Google Scholar; Khan, H. Ali, Constructing Islam on the Indus. The Material History of the Suhrawardi Sufi Order, 1200–1500 AD (Cambridge, 2016), pp. 5895Google Scholar.

21 Gaborieau, M., ‘Les ordres mystiques dans le sous-continent indien: Un point de vue ethnologique’, in Les ordres mystiques dans l'Islam. Cheminement et situation actuelle, (eds.) Popovic, A. and Veinstein, G. (Paris, 1990), p. 106Google Scholar.

22 H. Ali Khan, Constructing Islam on the Indus, pp. 169–241. One of the most important Shiʿi Sayyid families of Multan is the Gardezi. On this family see Chand, Tarikh-e-Multan, pp. 72–74; Gardezi, S. A. H., Tarikh-e-Multan (Multan, 1990), pp. 49ffGoogle Scholar; Maclagan, E. D., Gazetteer of the Multan District 1923–24 (Lahore, 1926), pp. 107108Google Scholar (henceforth MDG 1923–24); Griffin, L. H. and Massy, C. F., Chiefs and Families of Note in the Punjab, Vol. II (Lahore, 1910), pp. 313316Google Scholar.

23 IGI, p. 744.

24 Shah Gardezi was apparently not connected to any Sufi lineage and in the late nineteenth century the shrine had a mainly Shiʿi following. Chand, Tarikh-e-Multan, pp. 72–83; Ansari, S., Sufi Saints and State Power: The Pirs of Sind, 1843–1947 (Cambridge, 1992), pp. 1720CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Multani, Awliya-e-Multan, pp. 29–47, 81–86, 97–102.

25 MDG 1901–02, pp. 128–132.

26 Ibid., pp. 94–98.

27 Maclagan, R., ‘Fragments of the history of Mooltan, the Derajat, and Buhawulpoor, from Persian MSS’, Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal II, 17 (1848), pp. 559560Google Scholar.

28 MDG 1901–1902, pp. 133–141.

29 Gilmartin, D., Blood and Water: The Indus River Basin in Modern History (Oakland, 2015), pp. 2732, 91–96CrossRefGoogle Scholar; R. Eaton, ‘The Political and Religious Authority of the Shrine of Baba Farid in Pakpattan, Punjab’, in Moral Conduct and Authority, (ed.) Metcalf, pp. 341–345. See also Abenante, D., ‘Islam, Irrigation and Religious Identity: Canal Colonies and Muslim Revivalism in Multan’, in Colonialism, Modernity and Religious Identity: Religious Reform Movements in South Asia, (ed.) Beckerlegge, G. (Oxford, 2008), pp. 5356Google Scholar.

30 Emerson, H. W., Final Settlement Report of the Multan District (Lahore, 1921), p. 2Google Scholar.

31 Eaton, ‘The Political and Religious Authority’, pp. 333–356.

32 Chand, Tarikh-e-Multan, pp. 513–514.

33 MDG 1923–24, p. 139.

34 Some of these narratives were gathered by the British authorities during the preparation for the district gazetteers (see E. Maclagan, ‘Notes on Village Names and History’, ca. 1900, manuscript, District Records Room, Multan).

35 Andrew, W. P., The Indus and Its Provinces. Their Political and Commercial Importance Considered in Connexion with improved means of communication (Karachi, 1986; First edition 1858), pp. 145148Google Scholar.

36 Maclagan, E. D., ‘The travels of Fray Sebastian Manrique in the Panjab, 1641’, Chapter LXVII, Journal of the Panjab Historical Society 1, 2 (Lahore, 1912), p. 151Google Scholar; see also Tavernier, J. B., Travels in India, translated from the 1676 French edition by V. Ball, vol. 1 (London, 1976; First edition 1889), pp. 9091Google Scholar; Bayly, C. A., Rulers, Townsmen and Bazaars: North Indian society in the age of British expansion, 1770–1870 (Cambridge, 1983), p. 160Google Scholar.

37 Andrew, The Indus and Its Provinces, p. 148.

38 Chand, Tarikh-e-Multan, pp. 82–83.

39 Ibid.

40 During the reign of Akbar the subah of Multan extended into southern Punjab, part of Baluchistan and northern Sindh. See Allami, A. F., Ain-i-Akbari, Vol. III (Calcutta, 1939), p. 329Google Scholar; Dasti, H. F., Multan: A Province of the Mughal Empire (1525–1571) (Karachi, 1998), pp. 8384Google Scholar; Durrani, A. M. K., History of Multan (From the Early Period to 1849 A.D.) (Lahore, 1991), pp. 4147Google Scholar.

41 Ibid.

42 Ansari, Sufi Saints and State Power, pp. 29–35; see also Liebeskind, C., Piety on its Knees. Three Sufi Traditions in South Asia in Modern Times (Delhi, 1998), p. 273Google Scholar.

43 Gardezi, Tarikh-e-Multan, p. 376; ‘Copies of certificates and testimonials of Makhdum Pir Sayed Mohammad Sadruddin Shah Gilani and his ancestors’ (n.d., Gilani Library, Multan).

44 Metcalf, Islamic Revival in British India, p. 256.

45 Nizami, K. A., ‘Chishtiya’, Encyclopaedia of Islam XX (Leiden, 1997), pp. 5157Google Scholar; Siddiqui, M. Zameeruddin, ‘The resurgence of the Chishti silsilah in the Punjab during the eighteenth century’, Indian History Congress, proceedings of the thirty-second session (New Delhi, 1971), pp. 408412Google Scholar; Gilmartin, D., Empire and Islam: Punjab and the Making of Pakistan (Berkeley, 1988)Google Scholar; Kamran, T. and Shahid, A. K., ‘Shari'a, Shi'as and Chishtiya Revivalism: Contextualising the Growth of Sectarianism in the Tradition of the Sialvi Saints of the Punjab’, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 24, 3 (2014), pp. 481482CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

46 Siddiqui, ‘The resurgence of the Chishti silsilah’, pp. 408–412; on the spread of the Chishti Nizami order in the Multan region, see also Shackle, C., Nur-e-Jamal (Multan, 1984), pp. 812Google Scholar; Shackle, C., The Teachings of Khwaja Farid (Multan, 1978), pp. 414Google Scholar.

47 R. Eaton, ‘The Political and Religious Authority of the Shrine of Baba Farid in Pakpattan, Panjab’, in Moral Conduct and Authority, (ed.) Metcalf, pp. 333–356.

48 M. S. Jamali, Zuhur-e-Jamal (Multan, n.d.), pp. 36–37.

49 Rose, H. A., Lesser known tribes of North West India and Pakistan, based on the census report of 1883 and 1892, vol. 1 (reprint New Delhi, 1991), pp. 2526Google Scholar; Wikeley, J., Panjabi Musalmans (New Delhi, 1991, First edition 1915), pp. 5051Google Scholar.

50 See Shackle, Nur-e-Jamal, pp. 14–15.

51 Wikeley, Panjabi Musalmans, p. 51.

52 Durrani, Multan under the Afghans, pp. 165–168.

53 Ibid.

54 MDG 1923–24, pp. 46–47, 111–114.

55 Maclagan, ‘Fragments of the history of Mooltan, the Derajat, and Buhawulpoor’, pp. 559–560.

56 IGI, pp. 2–13.

57 David Gilmartin has argued that the Baluchis of the Lower Indus were the first to attempt artificial irrigation on a large scale, anticipating the canals of the Multani Pathans. See Gilmartin, Blood and Water, pp. 28–40. See also Abenante, ‘Islam, Irrigation and Religious Identity’, pp. 53–56.

58 For example, Chand (Tarikh-e-Multan, pp. 85–100) writes of offerings of animals and breeding products for the dargahs of Pir Ghaib Bukhari at village Halalvaja, and of Qazi Muhammad Issa at Khanpur, both in the Shujabad tehsil.

59 The reference here is to the association between sedentarisation and change of religion developed by Richard Eaton with reference to Bengal and Punjab. See Richard Eaton, ‘The Political and Religious Authority’, pp. 345ff; and Eaton, Richard, ‘Who are the Bengal Muslims? Conversion and Islamization in Bengal’ in Essays on Islam and Indian History, (ed.) Eaton, R. (Oxford, 2000), pp. 249275Google Scholar.

60 D. Gilmartin, ‘Shrines, Succession, and Sources of Moral Authority’, in Moral Conduct and Authority, (ed.) Metcalf, p. 335; Khan, U. Kamal, Fuqaha-e-Multan (Multan, 1984), p. 30Google Scholar.

61 On this point, see Nizami, K. A., Religion and Politics in India during the Thirteenth Century (reprint, New Delhi, 2002), chapter VIGoogle Scholar; K.A. Nizami, “The Suhrawardi Silsilah and Its Influence on Medieval Indian Politics”, Medieval India Quarterly III, 1–2. (July-October 1957), pp. 109–143.

62 Shackle, Nur-e-Jamal, pp. 14–15.

63 Government of India, Census of India, 1901, Vol. XVII, “The Punjab, its feudatories, and the North-West Frontier Province”, pp. 156–157. It is noteworthy that the British, who were generally aware of the dangers represented by waves of Islamic reform and of ‘wahabi’ tendencies, in this case, having recognised the local roots of the movement were not apparently alarmed by it.

64 Abenante, ‘Islam, Irrigation and Religious Identity’; Emerson, H. W., Customary Law of the Multan District (Lahore, 1924), pp. 13, 54, 74Google Scholar.

65 Jamali, Zuhur-e-Jamal, p. 30.

66 Ibid.

67 Ibid., pp. 35–38. It is also worth emphasising that in his refusal to accept the Punjabi custom of choosing his family's pir as his own spiritual guide, Jamal was closer to the reformist view. For Deobandi ‘ulama, for example, the choice of a pir had to be made individually, and on the basis of the religious and human qualities of the shaikh; see the suggestions on finding a spiritual master in Metcalf, B., Perfecting Women: Maulana Ashraf Ali Thanawi's Bihishti Zewar (Berkeley, 1990), pp. 199203CrossRefGoogle Scholar. The mystical experience of the dream, however, would not have probably been accepted by a Deobandi.

68 See Shackle, C., The Teachings of Khwaja Farid (Multan, 1978)Google Scholar; D. Matringe, ‘Écoute ce que dit Bullhe Šāh: la tradition orale de la poésie soufie en panjabi aujourd'hui’, Le Monde Musulman Périphérique, Lettre d'Information 11 (1991), pp. 22–31; Matringe, D., ‘“The Future has come near, the past is far behind”: A Study of Šaix Farid's Verses and their Sikh Commentaries in the Adi Granth’, in: Islam and Indian Regions, (eds.) Dallapiccola, A. L. and Avé-Lallemant, S. Zingel (Wiesbaden, 1993), pp. 417443Google Scholar.

69 Shackle, Nur-e-Jamal, pp. 41–47.

70 Metcalf, Perfecting Women.

71 Robinson, F., “Religious change and the self in Muslim South Asia since 1800”, South Asia 1 (1997), pp. 46Google Scholar.

72 Metcalf, Perfecting Women, pp. 222–230.

73 Jamali, Zuhur-e-Jamal, pp. 36–37; see also Shackle, Nur-e-Jamal, pp. 15ff; D. Abenante, “Nineteenth century Sufi reform and religious boundaries in south-western Punjab”, 18th European Conference on Modern South Asian Studies, Lund, 6–9 July 2004.

74 Jamali, Zuhur-e-Jamal, p. 16.

75 Ibid., pp. 22–23; see Metcalf, B., ‘Maulana Ashraf ‘Ali Thanawi and Urdu literature’, in Urdu and Muslim South Asia: Studies in honour of Ralph Russel, (ed.) Shackle, C. (Delhi, 1991), pp. 93100Google Scholar.

76 Jamali, Zuhur-e-Jamal, p. 23.

77 Ibid., pp. 22–23. Compare, again, Ashraf ‘Ali Thanwi's discourse on the constant need to fight against the lower self in Metcalf, Perfecting Women.

78 Shackle, Nur-e-Jamal, p. 10; Jamali, Zuhur-e-Jamal, pp. 35–36.

79 Ibid., pp. 22–23.

80 Ibid., pp. 46–47.

81 Ibid., p. 47.

82 Ibid., p. 46

83 See Chand, Tarikh-e-Multan, pp. 22–24.

84 Jamali, Zuhur-e-Jamal, pp. 48–49.

85 Ibid., p. 49. This is the only instance where the miraculous power of the saint is directly represented as a manifestation of God, rather than of the saint himself.

86 Ibid.

87 Ibid., p. 46;

88 Shackle, Nur-e-Jamal; C. Shackle, ‘Urdu as a Sideline: the Poetry of Khwaja Ghulam Farid’, in Urdu and Muslim South Asia, (ed.) Shackle, pp. 78ff.

89 Compare with Shackle, C., ‘The Pilgrimage and the Extension of Sacred Geography in the Poetry of Khwaja Ghulam Farid’, in Socio-cultural Impact of Islam in India, (ed.) Singh, D. A. (Chandigarh, 1978), pp. 159170Google Scholar.

90 Kamran and Shahid, ‘Shariʿa, Shiʿias and Chishtiya Revivalism’, pp. 492ff.

91 Chand, Tarikh-e-Multan, p. 62.

92 Kamal Khan, Fuqaha-e-Multan, p. 44.

93 Ibid., pp. 51–54.