Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:794Hits:19994074Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID132963
Title ProperMadrasa reforms and Islamic modernism in Bangladesh
LanguageENG
AuthorBano, Masooda
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The old project of modernizing madrasas has acquired a new zeal in South Asia after September 2011, whereby madrasa reform programmes became an acknowledged soft tactic of the war on terror. With 9000 Aliya (reformed) madrasas, the Bangladesh madrasa modernization programme has been identified as a potentially useful model for the neighbouring states of Pakistan and India who have made slower progress in implementing similar programmes. In this paper I argue that, although the Aliya madrasa system in Bangladesh has succeeded in integrating secular subjects in the madrasa curriculum, in reality this modernization project has failed in its underlying ambition to generate a 'modern discourse' on Islam-a discourse that is compatible with the demands of western modernity. The right to speak for Islam is still primarily exercised by the 'ulama and graduates of the Qoumi (unreformed) madrasas. Aliya madrasas today compete with the secular schools not with Qoumi madrasas. The growth of the Aliya madrasa system in Bangladesh, instead of bearing testimony to the popular appeal of the modernization agenda, demonstrates the preference of Muslim parents for increased Islamic content in the school curriculum
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol.48, No.4; Jul.2014: p.911-939
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies Vol.48, No.4; Jul.2014: p.911-939
Key WordsSchool Curriculum ;  Madrasas ;  South Asia ;  Bangladesh ;  Islamic Education ;  Religious Education ;  Modernization Agenda ;  Madrasa Reform ;  Islamic Modernism ;  Madrasa System