Muslim modernity in South Asia is well-studied, if by this one means the changes wrought in Muslim society from circa 1757, largely in response to colonialism, changes that accelerated from the late nineteenth century. Scholars have amply documented transformations in Muslim religious, political, social, and cultural life. Indeed, the scholarship has, in some cases, been so persuasive that aspects of our understanding of Muslim modernity seem to be settled, almost historical truisms. Among these aspects are the genesis and genealogy of Islamic reform, its centrality to Muslim religious life, and its particular impact on women;Footnote 1 the importance of the ‘ulama, not only as teachers but as protectors of the faith;Footnote 2 the outsize influence of institutions—schools such as the Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental (MAO) College in Aligarh, madrasas such as Deoband, and political parties such as the Muslim League—and of the men who spearheaded them;Footnote 3 and the importance of print culture for the dissemination of ideas to new and expanding Muslim publics, some even constituted as ‘Islami pabliks’.Footnote 4
The richness of this field and the quality of its scholarship notwithstanding, the four articles in this Forum complicate in important ways accepted understandings of these themes. Individually, the articles reconsider the genealogy of Islamic reform, opening new perspectives on dominant reformist orientations; interrogate conceptualizations of modern Islam by leading intellectual and religious figures, allowing us to re-evaluate those figures and the institutions they represent; scrutinize an illiterate Muslim woman’s access to wealth and her command of resources, defying not only the centrality of the written record upon which most histories rely, but also narratives of Muslim women’s increasing containment to the domestic sphere; and examine the significant roles played by women in shaping Islam as practised in India today through Quranic exegesis, showing how some Muslim women appeal to the state to combat conservative ‘ulama who have been empowered in post-colonial India (as elsewhere in the Indian subcontinent) as the arbiters of Islam. Collectively, the Forum offers new perspectives on themes that have been central to an understanding of Muslim modernity in South Asia, particularly Islamic reform and women’s agency.
Muhammad Qasim Zaman’s ‘Law and Sufism in modern South Asia: A changing relationship’ analyses the mystical and legal thought of Shah Wali Allah (d. 1762). Wali Allah is considered foundational to modern transformations in South Asian Islam and is seen as the intellectual forebear of the dominant Deobandi paradigm of reformed Islam.Footnote 5 Wali Allah’s central role in the genealogy of Deoband’s reformed Islam is anchored in those aspects of his thought that came to define the Deobandi orientation—an emphasis on Quran and hadith, for example. Zaman’s article complicates this rather neat picture, however, by examining those aspects of Wali Allah’s thought that were sidelined, if not completely rejected, by Deobandi scholars. Focusing on the influential twentieth-century Deobandi scholar and Sufi Ashraf ‘Ali Thanawi (d. 1943), Zaman shows how Thanawi deliberately circumscribed the generative relationship between Sufism and the law in Wali Allah’s thought. The article unsettles the genealogy of modern reform further by suggesting that Wali Allah’s understanding of the relationship between Sufism and the law may be a more appropriate foundation for the Barelawi orientation, which is often thought to be irreconcilably at odds with Deobandi Islam, not least because of the polemics the Barelawis and the Deobandis have directed at each other. Understanding how Wali Allah is a forebear for both Deobandi and Barelawi orientations complicates our view of reform and of the various orientations of modern Islam that are too often placed in discrete silos. Zaman’s article offers one additional contribution in highlighting that an understanding of Sufism that was central to Wali Allah’s thought in the eighteenth century was, by the twentieth century, unmistakably delimited and refashioned. The broader implication of the argument is that in delimiting Sufism, Deobandi scholars such as Thanawi were delimiting an earlier conceptualization of Islam itself.
The modern conceptualization of Islam is more overtly the foundation of a debate examined by SherAli Tareen in his article, ‘The theological foundations of Muslim modernism and traditionalism in South Asia’. Here, Tareen focuses on an exchange between Muhammad Qasim Nanautvi (d. 1877), one of the Deoband Madrasa’s founders, and Sayyid Ahmad Khan (d. 1898), who established the MAO College (later to be known as Aligarh Muslim University).Footnote 6 Rejecting easy labels of the former as a traditionalist alim (cleric) and the latter as an Islamic modernist (as Khan is often characterized in scholarly literature), Tareen’s article examines their exchanges on theology, hermeneutics, and normative Islam, and illuminates new aspects of the interaction between these ‘two most influential rationalities of Islam in modern South Asia’. Beyond providing a close reading of a set of letters the two exchanged, Tareen illustrates that while Khan drew on the same sources of authority as the ‘ulama, his modernism fundamentally diminished their role, deprivileging juridical reasoning and the scholarly interpretive apparatus that was Deoband’s conduit to refashioning Muslim practice. The pivot that Tareen highlights, Khan’s use of ‘traditional sources and arguments of authority’, while circumscribing a role for the ‘ulama—men who saw themselves as the upholders of how those sources were to be interpreted—illuminates Khan’s efforts to delimit the sphere of religion in conditions of colonial modernity.
At the same time, the dispute at the heart of Tareen’s article is related to a meta-discourse about what Islam should look like and what role it ought to play in the modern world. We should recall that while scholars today recognize Khan as a theologian (among other designations), he was not educated in a madrasa, and was never a member of the ‘ulama.Footnote 7 Tareen’s article brings to the fore Khan’s ability, nonetheless, to challenge the most renowned theologians of his age, and to lay claim to the mantle of protector of the faith in colonial India. Historiography today has largely ceded this role to reformist ‘ulama and revivalists, seeing Sayyid Ahmad’s Khan historical significance in his advocacy of Muslim loyalty to the British after the Rebellion of 1857–1858, his role in Muslim education, and as an intellectual forebear of the ‘two-nation theory’.Footnote 8 Tareen’s article reminds us that the conceptualization of modern Islam in colonial India was a contested space with a multiplicity of voices, while showing the texture of the arguments and claims made.
With Julia Stephens’ contribution, ‘Material modernities: Tracing Janbai’s gendered mobilities across the Indian Ocean’, the Forum turns attention to questions of gender and Islam. Stephens’ article examines the life and activities of Janbai Topan (d. 1934), the wife of successful trader Tharia Topan (d. 1891), who worked between Gujarat and East Africa. By using a micro-historical approach and, given Janbai’s illiteracy, drawing together a history that relies on material objects as much as written records, Stephens makes important contributions to understandings of gender and Muslim modernity by showing how an illiterate woman used her marriage to enjoy social mobility, influenced her husband’s business fortunes from the domestic sphere, and used colonial law to insist on her right to dispose of property. The Janbai that emerges in this article sits uncomfortably with scholarly emphases on reform’s impact in the late-colonial period as increasingly circumscribing women to the domestic sphere.Footnote 9 Stephens also makes important methodological contributions by pushing scholars of Muslim modernity to think beyond print, unearthing a remarkable archive of sources that helps us see that Janbai was not a historical anomaly.
In the final article, ‘Muslim feminism as Islamic modernism: Women’s activism in India between the Quran and the Constitution’, Justin Jones shifts our focus from the colonial to the post-colonial period with his analysis of Muslim women’s organizations. The article tells an important story about the trajectories of Muslim feminism in contemporary India, tracing activism from the 2000s by the All India Muslim Women’s Personal Law Board and the Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan, activism that addresses a purported failure of Islamic modernism to provide gender justice and social progress. Jones focuses in particular on these organizations’ investments in the interpretation of religious texts. With this article, Jones expands the range of institutions that have been the grounds for telling the story of Muslim modernity and offers important insights into when these organizations choose to direct themselves to the ‘ulama and when they choose to direct themselves to the state. As Jones suggests, the ‘harnessing of the Indian Constitution is perhaps the most striking element within this form of Muslim feminism’, where Muslim feminists draw an equivalence between the values of the Quran and those of the Indian Constitution.
Jones illuminates important episodes in the history of Indian feminism and Muslim modernity. He also points to a possible broader legacy of Muslim feminist activism in the parallels between the practices employed by these women’s organizations over the past few decades and the more recent forms of Muslim civil activism, such as that in the wake of the Citizenship Amendment Act of 2019. His article also intersects in important ways with Stephens’ in that both show women creating space for themselves with new instruments and resources. Stephens emphasizes Janbai’s use of colonial mechanisms of the law such as powers of attorney and colonial courts to actualize her aims; Jones highlights the importance of informal shari‘a courts, led exclusively by female qazis (religious judges), in promoting feminist interpretations of the Quran and Islamic law in contemporary India.
Each of the articles in this Forum presents a dense web of arguments. Here, I have endeavoured to pull at the threads that underscore their interventions in the study of Muslim modernity, threads that tie them together despite their discrete topics. Given the breadth of a subject such as Muslim modernity in South Asia, refining our understanding of it—and reflecting rather than flattening its complexity—can only be a collective enterprise. The workshop where the articles in this Forum were initially shared was just such a collective endeavour.Footnote 10 The workshop included not only the participants represented in this Forum, but also an interdisciplinary group of interlocutors: Kathryn Babayan (History), Juan Cole (History), Gaurav Desai (English), Humeira Iqtidar (Political Theory), Webb Keane (Anthropology), Alexander Knysh (Islamic Studies), Farina Mir (History), and Mrinalini Sinha (History). The engagement of these colleagues was generous and generative, and their contributions enrich each of the articles here. One hopes that the publication of this Forum will continue a constructive conversation and inspire additional research on the many aspects of Muslim modernity in South Asia. As these articles suggest, despite the remarkable quality of existing scholarship, this is a field that can be made richer still, and one to which we can still bring new perspectives.
Acknowledgements
It has been a great pleasure to work with Muhammad Qasim Zaman in co-editing this Forum. My thanks to him and Will Glover for reading an earlier version of this Introduction.
Competing interests
The author declares none.