Further reading: Michael Gilsenan, Recognizing Islam:
Religion and Society in the Modern Arab World (New
York: Random House, 1982); Edward Reeves, The Hid-
den Government: Ritual, Clientelism, and Legitimation
in Northern Egypt (Salt Lake City: University of Utah
Press, 1990); Edward Westermarck, Ritual and Belief in
Morocco. 2 vols. (New York: University Books, 1968).
Barelwi, Sayyid Ahmad
(Bareilly,
Brelwi)
(1786–1831) militant religious revivalist
leader in North India
Sayyid Ahmad Barelwi was born to a prominent
family of
sayyid
s (descendants of m
Uhammad
) in
Awadh province in northern i
ndia
. After moving
to d
elhi
, where he studied with the son of the
Muslim reformer Shah Wali Allah (d. 1762), he
served in the cavalry of a Muslim ruler in central
India for seven years (1811–18). In 1822, Sayyid
Ahmad went on the
haJJ
to m
ecca
. When he
returned to India, he combined reformist Islamic
ideas with his military experience to launch a
movement that quickly migrated from Delhi to
Bengal and ultimately to a
Fghanistan
, Kashmir,
and the Punjab in northwest India.
At a time when the Mughal Empire was in
its death throes, Sayyid Ahmad and his disciples
sought to bring Muslims back to what he thought
was the true Islam and lead them to greatness
by way of a
Jihad
against the British, who were
becoming more and more powerful at this time. In
his teachings, he called upon Muslims to give up
un-Islamic idolatrous practices and return to the
simple monotheism of the q
Uran
and Muham-
mad. He condemned Muslim participation in
Hindu social and religious practices, worship at
saint shrines, and Shii veneration of the imams.
He and his followers thought of themselves as
following the path of the first Muslims under
Muhammad’s leadership, and many believed that
Sayyid Ahmad was the “renewer” (mujaddid)
of the age. Some even considered him to be the
awaited m
ahdi
(Muslim messiah). Sayyid Ahmad’s
opponents labeled him a “Wahhabi,” a follower of
the puritanical Saudi form of Islam, but he did not
consider himself as such. He was more a follower
of the teachings of Shah Wali Allah of Delhi than
Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab (d. 1792), the
founder of the so-called Wahhabi movement in
Arabia during the 18th century.
Sayyid Ahmad decided to mount his jihad
against the British from a base in northwest India.
In 1826, after gathering recruits from the region
K 92
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |