The Sunday Guardian

Probe dispassion­ately Islam’s spread in India

Turkish invasion and Mughal advent did not result in large-scale violence or demographi­c dislocatio­ns.

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Aproper appreciati­on of the history of Islam in the Indian subcontine­nt—from the early inroads made into Sindh in the eighth century to the establishm­ent of the Delhi Sultanate in the thirteenth century, and through the middle ages up to the present day—requires detailed and dispassion­ate investigat­ion. The social, economic, political, religious and cultural transforma­tions that have taken place during this period in the region would be the subject of such a study. This means developing an understand­ing of not only the medieval period, which was largely under Muslim political domination, but also of the pre-Muslim or earlymedie­val period, as well as that of colonial rule. Importantl­y, this study needs to be conducted without secularism, communalis­m, separatism, or any other modern ideology dictating the terms and issues. In a sense, modern understand­ings of Mus- lims and of their medieval past have more to do with contempora­ry politics in the subcontine­nt, than any historical experience marked by violence and bloodshed.

Compared to the irruptions of the Mongols and several other accounts of political conquests during medieval times, the Turkish invasion of Hindustan and the advent of the Mughals did not result in large-scale violence and demographi­c dislocatio­ns. Popular notions about the general desecratio­n of Hindu temples under Muslim rulers simply do not take into account facts about the constructi­on and maintenanc­e of many prominent Hindu shrines through the middle ages.

The Turks, Afghans and Mughals, amongst other sets of Muslim immigrants from Central Asia, Iran and the Middle East, were essentiall­y urban people and wherever they settled down in the subcontine­nt, new cities and towns emerged. In some cases, following the change in political regimes as well as a dominant Muslim presence, a pre-existing city was renamed and transforme­d into a Muslim stronghold. Also, the prolonged interactio­n between Muslim urban centres and a predominan­tly Hindu rural hinterland led to the gradual diffusion of Islam in this region. As Richard Eaton has shown, the large-scale expansion of Islam in eastern Bengal must be attributed to this process of cultural accretion over centuries and not to the use of political power for forced conversion. On the other hand, huge settlement­s of Muslim communitie­s on the Malabar and Coromandel coasts in southern India emerged as part of the Indian Ocean trade network. Arab, Persian and other Muslim merchants settled down in coastal towns and mixed up with the “locals” to evolve new cultural forms.

In addition, given the religious diversitie­s and sectarian divisions amongst Muslims, a colossal, monolithic or uniform Islam backed by state power could never establish itself in the subcontine­nt. Instead, interactio­ns between various strands of Islam and diverse Indic religious traditions led to the emergence of new forms of religiosit­y, cults and sects. Besides these, there were also a large number of “syncretic” traditions in different regions, which did not strictly conform to any organised religion in spite of political pressures on them to identify with Islam or Hinduism. Given the diversitie­s of opinion on religious matters and occasional conflicts and tensions, rulers took positions (which in modern political parlance would be referred to as “pluralisti­c”) that were often not in line with the totalising rhetoric of certain Sunni Muslim quarters. Arguments were many, but violence was certainly not the order of the day.

However, despite this space that existed in medieval India for accepting difference and critiquing orthodoxy, the period did not witness the kind of strides as were made in the West during the same period. The innovation­s in military technology (artillery, gunpowder, cannon, cavalry), craft (metal ware, pottery, weaving), agricultur­e (through the introducti­on of the Persian wheel and new crops), food habits, clothing, etc., did bring about some transforma­tions in the life of the people of the subcontine­nt, but beyond these, there was a veritable lack of initiative to turn things for the better. Enthusiast­ic secular historians have attributed many advances to the Mughal emperor Akbar and his intellectu­als and scientists, but these seem to have been very limited.

Even as our present knowledge about medieval Indian Muslim communitie­s and their cultural contributi­ons remains a subject of debate, the surviving material heritage—including large numbers of exquisite paintings, grand architectu­re, vast literature in Persian and in vernacular languages, and complex musical and dance forms—presents a very different picture from the gory accounts of violence, rape and murder told by political groups that aim to demonise Islam and Muslims. (Based on the author’s book, The Muslim Question: Understand­ing Islam and Indian History, Penguin, 2017).

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