What Is a Madrasa?
What Is a Madrasa? is a book authored by Islamic scholar and intellectual Ebrahim Moosa. The book is a blend of autobiography, advocacy, ethnography, and history and gives an insider perspective of the Deobandi madrasas in the Indian subcontinent. It was published by University of North Carolina Press in April 2015.[1]
Authors | Ebrahim Moosa |
---|---|
Language | English |
Publisher | University of North Carolina Press |
Publication date | April 2015 |
Pages | 304 |
ISBN | 978-1-4696-2013-8 |
Overview
The book consists of four parts,[2] and is a blend of autobiography, advocacy, ethnography, and history.[3] The purpose of the book is to provide an insider perspective of the Deobandi madrasas in the Indian subcontinent.[4]
Moosa has presented his six-year account of being in the madrasa system in the first part.[4] The section concludes with examples about how the Hanafi legal precedent was used as a counterintuitive during the colonial period by senior Deobandi scholars such as Ashraf Ali Thanwi and Muhammad Qasim Nanautawi.[4] The second part is titled History and Contexts, in which Moosa uses biographical approach towards reaching social, political and historical contexts that surround the formation of the madrasa network in India and Pakistan.[4] It outlines the history of familial and theological differences that helped in the formation and development of the Ahl-i Hadith, Barelwi and the Deobandi schools.[5]
Moosa "focuses on debates and practices regarding the categorization and substance of knowledge” in the third part of the book, which has been titled Politics of Knowledge.[5] The part concludes with "unravelling the complexity of Islamic and modern epistemology."[6] As contended by the author, Islamic epistemology is "entangled between modern binaries", and makes no explicit division in disciplines of knowledge.[6]
The fourth part Madrasas in Global Context deals with addressing the negative image of madrasas created by media.[6] Moosa concludes this part with two letters: one to the U.S. policymakers and the second to his former teachers at the madrasa.[7] In the former letter, he argues for the suspension of drone program and other U.S. policies which are aimed at shaping Muslim societies and Islamic orthodoxies, and in the latter, he has urged to his teachers to make certain reforms in the madrasa system.[7] This part is heavily critical of both the media narratives about madrasas, government policies concerning madrasas, and also "the decline in intellectual sophistication of madrasa culture, and the administrators within madrasas who are either unwilling or incapable of leading reform efforts."[3]
References
- "What Is a Madrasa? By Ebrahim Moosa". The University of North Carolina Press. Retrieved 22 April 2023.
- Kashani 2016, p. 566.
- Mirza 2019, p. 272.
- Pervaiz 2017, p. 118.
- Kashani 2016, p. 567.
- Pervaiz 2017, p. 119.
- Kashani 2016, p. 568.
Bibliography
- Kashani, Maryam (2016). "What Is a Madrasa? By Ebrahim Moosa". Journal of the American Academy of Religion. 84 (2): 566–568. doi:10.1093/jaarel/lfw004. JSTOR 43900208.
- Pervaiz, Mohammed (February 2017). "What is a Madrasa? by Moosa Ebrahim". Review of Middle East Studies. 51 (1): 118–120. doi:10.1017/rms.2017.5. JSTOR 26374457. S2CID 164333335.
- Mirza, Mahan (2019). "What is a Madrasa? by Ebrahim Moosa". The 500 Most Influential Muslims. Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Centre. p. 272.
Further reading
- Khan, Sabith (2019). "What Is a Madrasa? by Ebrahim Moosa (review)". Journal of Education in Muslim Societies. Indiana University Press. 1 (1): 66–68.