Report on Sufism as a Mediating Force in South Asia, Held at Connecticut College on October 13-14, 2011

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Report on Sufism as a Mediating Force in South Asia, Held at Connecticut College on October 13-14, 2011 The American Institute for Sri Lankan Studies, in conjunction with Connecticut College, sponsored a symposium on Sufism as a Mediating Force in South Asia, which was held at Connecticut College in New London, CT. Intellectually, the symposium followed from an earlier AISLS workshop held in Colombo in November 2010, where one of the themes was how Sufism mediates among other forms of Islam in Sri Lanka. This symposium broadened the inquiry to cover all of South Asia to see what sorts of comparative insights could emerge. The event, which was convened by Frank Korom (Boston University) and Sufia Uddin (Connecticut College), was open to the public. Approximately 60-75 people attended the plenary lecture on Thursday evening, and anywhere between 30 and 45 were present at any given time during the proceedings on Friday. The audience consisted of Connecticut College professors and undergraduates, members of the general public in the New London area, and a small number of academics who came from further afield. The event was designed to appeal to both specialists and newcomers to the study of Islam. The symposium began with a plenary lecture delivered by Vasudha Narayanan of the University of Florida concerning the interface between Islam and Hinduism on the level of popular piety. To illustrate this, she used examples from Tamil literature, and she also showed a number of pictures of sites in Tamil Nadu, India, where both Hindus and Muslims utilize the same sites for religious and ritualistic purposes. The following morning Andre Wink of the University of Wisconsin- - Madison discussed the role and function of Sufis in the Indus Valley, in what is now Pakistan. His presentation, illustrated with maps and slides of various Sufi shrines, focused on the early modern period, what he termed the age of anxiety, which was a time of uncertainty for people of all faiths. Wink argued, counter to many scholars who have written about conversion to Islam in South Asia, that Sufis were the ones who

comforted people s anxiety, which gradually made Islam appealing to many people who were desperately looking for something to which to cling. He also addressed the political and economic role of Sufis, many of whom established hereditary estates that made them very powerful in the socio- economic arena. His talk set the mood for the remainder of the historical papers delivered during the morning session. Lindsey Harlan, of Connecticut College, gave a paper about legends concerning the interaction between Rajasthani warrior heroes and Muslim saints who died in battle. Her lecture drew on oral history and ballads as well as ethnographic observation. She claimed that even though the annual martyrdom anniversaries are held for the Hindu heroes of Rajasthan, the deceased Muslim saints are also included in the observance because they died noble deaths in battle. Therefore, they are also remembered. The last paper of the morning session was delivered by Thibault d Hubert, who teaches Bengali at the University of Chicago. He focused on Sufi manuscripts from the Bengali region. These texts are in Bengali but written in Arabic script, a common phenomenon in South Asian Muslim communities. He argued that using Arabic script allowed Bengali Muslims to forge their own identities, even though they shared many linguistic and literary traits. Thus, he opined that not much research is being done on the pre- modern literature of the region, which is his area of specialization. He ended by suggesting that to really understand medieval Bengal, as well as the Islamization of the region, we need to go back to the texts to understand the fusion of two distinct world views. After a break for a bountiful lunch there was an afternoon session that focused more on contemporary and ethnographic issues. The first paper was by Dennis McGilvray of the University of Colorado (Boulder). McGilvray discussed his decades of research in the Tamil speaking regions of south India and Sri Lanka. His presentation was an anthropological tour down the coasts of Sri Lanka and Tamil Nadu to explore the 2

transnational links forged by Sufis among merchant and trading communities, not to mention seafarers. His paper set the stage for the third presentation of the afternoon that will be described below. The second paper was by Carla Bellamy, who teaches at Baruch College. Her paper focused on a shrine in north India named Husain Tekri, where both Hindus and Muslims go to get healed of various maladies, both physiological and psychological. Her paper was micro- ethnographic in the sense that she focused more specifically on the experiences of a few select women who came to the shrine to solve familial problems. This gave her presentation a more personalized feel, and was much appreciated by many of the students in the room. Lastly, Susan Schomburg of Bates College presented ethnographic material from her doctoral dissertation in which she surveyed a number of shrines in Tamil Nadu. The talk introduced the audience to a number of lesser- known shrines in south India about which very little is known. Each paper was followed by a period of questions and answers, and there were ample opportunities over meals and in the hallways during coffee breaks for informal conversation between the audience members and the presenters. Although there are no formal plans to publish the presentations together, some individual panelists plan to send their papers to Asian Ethnology. In conclusion, feedback from the audience showed that event served its purpose well. It introduced localized versions of Islam practiced in South Asia to an audience that was not very familiar with the region or with Islam as it is practiced there. It also stimulated the discussion of Islam on the Connecticut College campus, where a program to study global Islam is currently being established. 3

South Asian Sufism: Further Readings Ahmed. A. The Sufi and the Sultan in Pre- Mughal Muslim India. Der Islam 38 (1962): 142-153. Ansari, S. 1992. Sufi Saints and State Power: The Pirs of Sind, 1843-1947. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Askari, S. H. A Fifteenth-Century Shattari Sufi Saint of North Bihar. Journal of the Bihar and orissa Research Society 37 (1951): 66-82. Chittick, W. C. Notes on Ibn Arabi s Influence in India. Muslim World 82 (1992): 218-241. Digby, S. 1986. The Sufi Shaykh as a Source of Authority in Medieval India. In M. Gaborieau (ed.) Islam et Société en Asie du Sud. Paris: L École de Hautes Études. Eaton, R. M. 1973. The Court and the Dargah in the Seventeenth Century Deccan. Indian economic and Social History Review 10 (1973): 50-63.. 1974. Sufi Folk Literature and the Expansion of Indian Islam. History of Religions 14/2: 117-127.. Sufis of Bijapur: 1300-1700. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Ernst, C. From Hagiography to Martyrology: Conflicting Testimonies to a Sufi martyr of the Delhi Sultanate. History of Religions 24 (1985): 308-327. Ewing, K. Politics of Sufism: Redefining the Saints of Pakistan. Journal of Asian Studies 42/2 (1983): 251-268.. 1984. Sufi as Saint, Curer, and Exorcist in Modern Pakistan. In E. V. Daniel & J. F. Pugh (eds.) South Asian Systems of Healing. Leiden: Brill.. The Dream of Spiritual Initiation and the Organization of Self Representations among Pakistani Sufis. American Ethnologist 17 (1990): 56-75. Gaborieau. M. 1983. The Cult of Saints among Muslims of Nepal and Northern India. In S. Wilson (ed.) Saints and Their Cults.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Green, N. 2003. Migrant Sufis and Sacred Space in South Asian Islam. Contemporary South Asia 12/4: 493-509. Haq, M. E. 1975. A History of Sufism in Bengal. Dacca: Asiatic Society of Bangladesh. 4

Khan, G. M. The Naqshabandi Saints of Sind. Journal of the Research Society of Pakistan 13/2 (1976): 19-47. Korom, Frank J. 1985. Pakistani Folk Culture: A Select Annotated Bibliography. Islamabad: Lok Virsa. Islam, Riazul. 2002. Sufism in South Asia: Impact on Fourteenth Century Muslim Society. Karachi: Oxford University Press. Kokand, M. Y. 1983. Sufi Presence in South India. In C. W. Troll (ed.) Islam in India, Volume 2. Delhi: Vikas Publishing. Kunhali, V. 1980. Sufi Saints of Malabar. In S. Devahuti (ed.). Bias in Indian Historiography. Delhi: D. K. Publishing House. Lewis, P. 1985. Pirs, Shrines and Pakistani Islam. Rawalpindi: Christian Study Centre. Liebeskind, C. 1998. Piety on its Knees: Three Sufi Traditions in South Asia in Modern Times. Delhi: Oxford University Press. Mayer, A. Pir and Murshid: An Aspect of Religious Leadership in West Pakistan. Middle Eastern Studies 3 (1967): 160-169. McGilvray, D. B. 2004. Jailani: A Sufi Shrine in Sri Lanka. In I. Ahmad & H. Reifeld (eds.) Lived Islam in South Asia: Adaptation, Accommodation and Conflict, pp. 273-289. Delhi: Social Science Press Nizami, K. A. Impact of Sufi Saints on Indian Society and Culture. Islamic Culture 58 (1984); 31-54. Pastner, S. L. 1984. Feuding with the Spirit among the Zikri Baluch: The Saint as Champion of the Despised. In A. S. Ahmed & D. M. Hart (eds.). Islam in Tribal Societies, from the Atlas to the Indus. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. Rafiqi, A. Q. 1972. Sufism in Kashmir from the Fourteenth to the Sixteenth Century. Varanasi: Bharatiya Publishing House. Rashid, A. Some Chishti Saints of Bengal. Proceedings of the Pakistan Historical Conference 2 (1952): 207-216. Rizvi, A. A. A. 1983. A History of Sufism in India. Delhi: Munshiram. 5