The Umma and the Dawla: the Nation State and the Arab Middle East * By TAMIM AL-BARGHOUTI

2009 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 434-436
Author(s):  
A. El-Affendi
1998 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Qasim Zaman

The “foreignness” of Islam in India is a familiar theme in the rhetoric of contemporary-Hindu fundamentalism. The numerical majority of Hindus in India is taken to mean that the nation-state ought to be founded on ideals and institutions defined as authentically “Hindu”, that India is the land of the Hindus, and that it must be ruled only by them. This ideology evidently leaves little room for non-Hindus, but especially so for Muslims, who ruled large parts of the Indian subcontinent for several centuries and who still constitute a sizeable minority in India. It is argued, for instance, that as the ruling elite in India, Muslims not only exploited the Hindus, they never even thought of themselves as “really” Indian and should not consequently be considered as such. For all the centrality of the Muslim Other to constructions of Hindu fundamentalism, the appeal and success of the latter is predicated on the systematic exclusion, if not the expulsion, of Muslims from the Hindu nation-state.


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