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Introduction: The Shi‘a in South Asia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 May 2014

FRANCIS ROBINSON*
Affiliation:
Royal Holloway, London and Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies, [email protected]

Extract

The Shi‘i communities of South Asia, roughly 60 million people, represent, after those of Iran, the second largest grouping of Shi‘as in the Muslim world. Until recently our knowledge of them has not matched their numbers. Indeed, they, and here I refer to the Twelver Shi‘as rather than the Isma‘ilis, have suffered from the paradox of being both highly visible but in scholarly terms largely invisible. Where the Shi‘a live in South Asian towns and cities, arguably, no community has been more visible or more audible: visible because of their great processions at Muharram; and audible, certainly at Muharram, but also throughout the year in their majalis, as they recount the events of Karbala, often transmitting them by loudspeaker to the muhalla.

Type
Introduction
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 2014 

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References

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12 Hyder, Reliving Karbala.

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17 Purohit, Aga Khan Case, p. 4.

18 Ibid. , pp. 111–32.

19 Ruffle, ‘Karbala in the Indo-Persian Imaginaire’.

20 Metcalf, Barbara D., Islamic Revival in British India: Deoband 1860–1900, (Princeton, 1982)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Robinson, Francis, ‘Religious Change and the Self in Muslim South Asia since 1800’, in Robinson, Francis, Islam and Muslim History in South Asia (Delhi, 2000), pp. 105121 Google Scholar and Robinson, FrancisOther-Worldly and This-Worldly Islam and the Islamic Revival’, in Robinson, Francis Islam, South Asia and the West (Delhi, 2007), pp. 171188 Google Scholar.

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31 D’Souza, Shia Women, p. 20.

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