Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:780Hits:19976312Skip 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
 

ID169121
Title ProperReligious change in a minority context: transforming Islam in Sri Lanka
LanguageENG
AuthorMihlar, Farah
Summary / Abstract (Note)Scholarly work exists on how Muslim minority positioning affects identity and politics, but what is less known is its impact on religion. Sri Lanka’s 9% Muslim population, the country’s second largest minority, has undergone a series of recent changes to religious identity, thinking and practice, which have been shaped by its relationship to the dominant and warring ‘ethnic others’. As Sri Lanka plunged deeper into armed conflict in the 1990s, Muslims experienced significant shifts in religious thinking and practice, identifying strictly with a more ‘authentic’ Islam. After the war ended in 2009, Muslims became the target of majoritarian Sinhala-Buddhist violence, resulting in a reinterpretation of Islam and a counter process of change. Using the Sri Lankan Muslim case study to engage with scholarly critiques of majority–minority binaries, this article analyses how religious change is brought about through the interjection of minority status with ethno-nationalisms and conflict. Its focus on Islam in Sri Lanka contributes to area studies and to Islamic studies, the latter through a rare analysis of Islamic reform in a Muslim minority context.
`In' analytical NoteThird World Quarterly Vol. 40, No.12; 2019: p.2153-2169
Journal SourceThird World Quarterly Vol: 40 No 12
Key WordsConflict ;  Sri Lanka ;  Ethno-Nationalism ;  Islamic Reform ;  Muslim Minorities ;  Identity and Wahhabism


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text