Bhaijaan
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The Deoband movement arose after the failed Indian Rebellion of 1857, when the Mughal Empire collapsed and British colonial control tightened. Many Indian Muslims saw this as both a political and moral defeat.
Scholars of Islamic law and theology believed that Muslim decline stemmed from moral weakness, ignorance of true Islam, and adoption of foreign (Western or Hindu) influences.
In 1866, scholars established Darul Uloom Deoband, an Islamic seminary in Deoband, a small town in Saharanpur district, Uttar Pradesh (India).
Its founders aimed to revive Islamic learning and preserve Muslim identity under British rule without direct political confrontation.
Core Doctrines and Beliefs
• Scriptural Purism: The movement stresses strict adherence to the Quran and Hadith, interpreted through the classical Hanafi school. Innovation (bid‘ah) in worship or belief is strongly rejected.
• Reform of Sufism: Deobandis retained Sufi spirituality, but stripped it of folk practices like shrine worship, music, and excessive veneration of saints. They emphasized personal reform and inner purification.
• Education: Central to their mission. The Dars-e-Nizami curriculum combines traditional Islamic sciences — Quran, Hadith, Fiqh (jurisprudence), Arabic, logic, and ethics while rejecting Western-style secular education.
• Non-political beginnings: Early Deobandis believed political power should follow moral reform, not precede it. They focused on education and personal piety, avoiding rebellion against the British. Later, some graduates engaged in politics, especially in movements against British rule.
• Social conservatism: They uphold conservative gender roles, oppose Western cultural influence, and promote modesty and discipline in public and private life.
Spread and Influence
• India and Pakistan:
After Partition in 1947, many Deobandi scholars migrated to Pakistan and established seminaries that shaped Pakistani religious thought.
• Afghanistan: Deobandi madrasas in Pakistan (especially in cities like Akora Khattak) educated many Afghan Taliban leaders, linking the movement to militant networks.
• Global reach: Deobandi institutions now exist in the UK, South Africa, Bangladesh, Nepal, and Indonesia, serving diaspora Muslims.
Controversies
• Connection to Militancy: While the original Deoband movement was nonviolent, several militant groups — notably the Taliban in Afghanistan and Sipah-e-Sahaba in Pakistan — trace ideological roots to Deobandi seminaries. These groups reinterpret Deobandi conservatism into political extremism, which the original seminary disavows.
• Conflict with Barelvi movement:
Deobandis have long-standing theological disputes with Barelvis, another South Asian Sunni movement.
Barelvis embrace Sufi shrine culture and celebrate the Prophet’s birthday, practices Deobandis call bid‘ah (innovation). This rivalry has fueled deep divisions among South Asian Muslims.
• Relationship with Wahhabism:
Western observers often conflate Deobandism with Wahhabism, but they differ: Deobandis follow the Hanafi school and maintain a form of moderated Sufism, unlike the puritanical Wahhabi rejection of Sufism.
Still, their mutual emphasis on “purifying” Islam has led to overlapping influences, especially via Saudi funding of South Asian madrasas.
• Political Ambiguity: Some Deobandi factions (e.g., Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam in Pakistan) engage in politics; others remain purely scholastic. This duality blurs the line between religious authority and political activism.
Ideological position in India :
Indian Deobandis advocate Islamic conservatism within a democratic, secular state. They promote Sharia-based personal ethics but do not seek an Islamic government. They oppose both religious extremism and cultural westernization. The Indian government regulates madrasas lightly compared to Pakistan. Deobandi schools operate independently but must meet basic administrative norms. Some states encourage modernization (math, English, computers), which Deoband has cautiously accepted.