The Vice President of India Shri M. Hamid
Ansari has said that ours,
regrettably, is an age in which the ‘spectre of Islam’ seems to haunt many
minds in different parts of the world. An artificial construct of an
existential threat has taken the place of serious study of religion and culture
in time and space. Addressing at the book release function of the book series
titled “Islam in South Asia” edited by Prof.
Mushirul Hasan here today, he said that the publication of these volumes on
Islam in South Asia is therefore timely. Roughly 480 million
Muslims of the world, out of a global total of around 1.57 billion, live in South Asia. For almost a thousand years they have
interacted with other faiths and cultures. Their experience is distinctive,
their contributions noteworthy. A deeper study of these would help dispel many
of the myths and stereotypes that have been developed or imbibed thoughtlessly.
Following is the text of the Vice President’s address:
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“A ‘book release’ is a very mundane
expression that does little justice to the intellectual, and physical,
endeavour involved in the writing or compiling a book. ‘Unveiling’ is a nicer,
more anticipatory, term. It signals a movement from the unknown to the known.
Having settled this definitional matter, at least to
my satisfaction, let me say I am delighted to be associated with today’s function.
Professor Mushirul Hasan needs no
introduction to this, or any other, audience. His eminence as a historian is in
no need of commentary. His ability to delve into the nuances of intellectual
history and culture, to explore marginalised voices, adds a dimension to the
understanding of a period of our history in which new challenges disrupted
traditional patterns of life and induced agonising adjustments.
What we have
before us today is not a single volume but a set of six. This in itself is
somewhat unique. These, taken together, contain what Ibn Khaldun would have
described as ‘unusual knowledge and familiar if hidden wisdom’. Together they
provide a wide cross section of views emanating from or relating to Muslims and
Muslim communities in South Asia over a span of two
centuries. It is history of a dialogue between the realm of religious symbols
and the world of everyday reality, and of the interaction between them. The
compilation is thematic and each theme is narrated eloquently through a diversity
of voices. The editor’s introductions to each of the volume need to be read
carefully because they spell out the approach. His purpose is to uncover
important, often overlooked, facets of Muslim thought and practice in South Asia and to
portray the diversity of views on a very wide range of societal interests.
Ours, regrettably, is an age in which the
‘spectre of Islam’ seems to haunt many minds in different parts of the world.
An artificial construct of an existential threat has taken the place of serious
study of religion and culture in time and space. The publication of these
volumes on Islam in South Asia is
therefore timely. Roughly 480 million Muslims of the world, out of a global
total of around 1.57 billion, live in South Asia. For almost a thousand years they have interacted
with other faiths and cultures. Their experience is distinctive, their
contributions noteworthy. A deeper study of these would help dispel many of the
myths and stereotypes that have been developed or imbibed thoughtlessly. A
century earlier the poet Akbar Allahabadi’s looked at it despondingly and
sought divine correctives:
Be-had woh khafa hain Akbar
se aur uski dua ye hai ki un-hain
Allah baseerat aisi de apni
ghalti ko dekh sakain
Professor Mushirul Hasan’s approach is more
practical: I am confident his six volumes would help the quest for this baseerat.”
SK/RS