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POST-COLONIAL INDIA (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   179923


Jainism in Danger? Temple entry and the rhetoric of religion and reform in post-colonial India / Sethi, Manisha   Journal Article
SETHI, MANISHA Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract A bitter debate broke out in the Digambar Jain community in the middle of the twentieth century following the passage of the Bombay Harijan Temple Entry Act in 1947, which continued until well after the promulgation of the Untouchability (Offences) Act 1955. These laws included Jains in the definition of ‘Hindu’, and thus threw open the doors of Jain temples to formerly Untouchable castes. In the eyes of its Jain opponents, this was a frontal and terrible assault on the integrity and sanctity of the Jain dharma. Those who called themselves reformists, on the other hand, insisted on the closeness between Jainism and Hinduism. Temple entry laws and the public debates over caste became occasions for the Jains not only to examine their distance—or closeness—to Hinduism, but also the relationship between their community and the state, which came to be imagined as predominantly Hindu. This article, by focusing on the Jains and this forgotten episode, hopes to illuminate the civilizational categories underlying state practices and the fraught relationship between nationalism and minorities.
Key Words Jainism  Post-Colonial India 
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2
ID:   129882


Pashtunistan issue politics in Afghanistan, 1947-1952 / Bezhan, Faridullah   Journal Article
Bezhan, Faridullah Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract After the 1947 partition of India, the government of Afghanistan found an opportunity to reclaim the lands lost to British India as a result of the Durand Line agreement in 1983. These lands, known as Pashtinistan, were annexed to Pakistan. The issue of Pashtinistan's fate become the backbone of Afghanistan's foreign and domestic policies. This article explores the reasons for the Pashtunistan issue's significance to Afghanistan's royal family and how a policy of advancing Pashtun nationalism was conducted by the government, and what the issue meant for newly established political parties.
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