ID | 152348 |
Title Proper | Communities of mourning |
Other Title Information | negotiating identity and difference in Old Delhi |
Language | ENG |
Author | Menon, Kalyani Devaki |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In this article, I examine how Old Delhi’s Shias construct community across religious and sectarian lines to live with others in contemporary India. I focus on the Islamic month of Muharram, when Shias ritually mourn the death of Imam Husain and his companions at the Battle of Karbala. Often a period marked by sectarian violence and tension in South Asia, here I focus on everyday attempts to bridge difference, diffuse tensions, and enable broader understandings of community amongst Old Delhi’s Muslims, and between Muslims and Hindus. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted amongst diverse groups of Muslims residing in Old Delhi, I examine how religious practices and narratives during and immediately after Muharram, provide an arena for new ways of positioning Shias in Old Delhi, and in India today. I argue that Shii rituals and narratives during Muharram, while marking religious and sectarian distinctions, simultaneously enable forms of identity that challenge exclusionary constructions of community and nation and allow Old Delhi’s diverse communities to live with difference in contemporary India. |
`In' analytical Note | Contemporary South Asia Vol. 25, No.1; Mar 2017: p. 23-37 |
Journal Source | Contemporary South Asia Vol: 25 No 1 |
Key Words | Pluralism ; India ; Shias ; Muharram ; Islam |