Rearticulating tradition in modern contexts: Islamic organizations in twentieth century Kerala By Abdul Majeed OP. Jawaharlal Nehru University. 2015
The thesis is a study of the formation of Islamic organizations in early twentieth-century Kerala, addressing certain sociological and anthropological questions. The aim is not to provide an exhaustive history of the formation and growth of these organizations but to delineate key issues central to understanding the continuous reconfiguration of religion in modern contexts. The thesis first outlines the conditions under which the organizations emerged, traces the concepts that leaders of Islamic organizations employed to press the need for organizing, and investigates major institutions that helped these organizations reach the common people. Theoretically, the study is informed by anthropological literature on tradition and modernity, which does not see these two as contradictory but explores their complex entanglements.
The thesis holds that to study religion in a specific period and place, one needs to pay attention to the conditions that make particular conceptions of religion possible, to the institutions and forces that shape these conceptions, and to the practices of religious actors who respond to these conditions, institutions, and forces. The imperative to classify people into different categories and administrative measures undertaken by the British government, such as the census, solidified boundaries around religious and caste groups, making communities a sphere of intervention and mobilization. Additionally, the project of codifying law for the subcontinent introduced legal interventions that delimited the sphere in which religious laws could be applied. One effect of this was that community, which had though previously shaped the social and personal lives of people, took on a different quality and came to be considered an important constituent of the emerging nation-state. This reconfiguration of religion and religious community is a major analytical frame through which the thesis explores the formation of Islamic organizations in Kerala. The first chapter attempts to map such historical shifts that enabled the emergence of organizations like the Samastha Kerala Jamiatul Ulama and the predecessor of the Kerala Nadwatul Mujahidin in early twentieth-century Kerala, which are reviewed in detail below.


