Ethnic Identity, Religious
Fundamentalism and
Muslim Women In Sri Lanka
M.A. Nuhuman
1. Introduction:
An attempt is made in this paper to
trace the development of ethnic consciousness and religious fundamentalism
among Sri Lankan Muslims and the bearings of this development on Sri Lankan
Muslim women.*
At the outset, I should clarify the
use of the terms ethnic consciousness and fundamentalism. Both these terms are
very popular and controversial in the current socio-political discourse. There
are a number of definitions and disagreements about them. However, I use the
term ethnic consciousness to refer to the awareness of group identity of a
community, whether it be racial, national, tribal or religious aroused by
political motivation and confrontation with other communities. I use the term
fundamentalism to refer to a politico-religious phenomenon which emerges and
exists in a religious community, the existence of which is challenged by some
internal or external socio-political forces.
The core of fundamentalism, as
Dilip Hiro (1989: 1-2) states it, is "the effort to define the fundamentals
of a religious system and adhere to them." The form of fundamentalism
varies from religious revivalism to extremist political movements. Islamic
fundamentalism has acquired a derogatory meaning in the current Western
political discourse mainly because of the fundamentalist political resistance
against Western dominance in the Middle East. In this paper, however, I treat
fundamentalism as a historically determined political ideology which has its
roots in a specific socio-political environment of a religious community.
Ethnic identity and religious
fundamentalism are inseparable and the two sides of the same coin as far as Sri
Lankan Muslims are concerned. Before we consider the subject, the use of the
term Sri Lankan Muslims should be clarified. Because 'Muslims' is a cover term
which refers to a people who follow the religion of Islam, there is a confusion
as to whether the Sri Lankan Muslims are an ethnic community or a religious
community. According to Izeth Hussain (1993), since 'Muslim' is a religious
categorisation, "it is incorrect to regard the Sri Lankan Muslims as
constituting an ethnic group". Quadri Ismail (1995) too has argued that
the Sri Lankan Muslim identity has changed from a racial into a religious one
over the past few decades.
Traditionally and officially
Muslims of Sri Lanka were identified as five different ethnic communities
namely, Ceylon/Sri Lankan Moors, Indian/Coast Moors, Malays, Borahs and Memons.
The latter two groups are North Indian business communities settled in Sri
Lanka during the British rule and constitute less than 0.5% of the total Muslim
population. They speak Gujarati and Urdu for their in-group communication and
they are exclusively endogamous." Malays who settled in Sri Lanka came
from Java and Malay peninsular mostly during the Dutch period. They were
brought by the Dutch as either political exiles or to serve in their military
establishment (Hussainmiya 1990:38). They constitute 3.83% of the total Muslim
population and maintain their separate ethnic identity, though there is a
tendency to assimilate with local Muslims through 'inter-marriages.
The term Moors (or its Tamil
equivalent Sonakar) is not currently used by the Sri Lankan Muslims
(Ceylon/Coast Moors) to refer to themselves. I do not think that the community
as a whole ever used the term Moors to refer to themselves. It is a term first
used by the colonial rulers, and then by the non-Muslims to refer to these
communities. However, some sections of the Muslim elite were persistently using
this term to refer to themselves for their own class interest during the
colonial period and also after independence. But at present it is used only in
some academic discussions or in some official documents and in some already
registered bodies like ' the Moors Islamic Cultural Home' or streets names like
Moor Street, etc. Otherwise they are referred to as Sri Lankan Muslims. In this
paper, therefore, the phrase Sri Lankan Muslims is used in place of the word
Moors. If we say Muslims in Sri Lanka it may include the other sub ethnic
groups - Malays, Memons and Borahs, but with the adjective 'Sri Lankan' the
word 'Muslims' specifically refers to the major Muslim group who had formerly
been referred to as Ceylon Moors. The current socio-political situation of the
Muslims in Sri Lanka restricts the meaning of the phrase Sri Lankan Muslims.
This terminological shift is itself very significant in the development of
ethnic consciousness which co-related with religious fundamentalism among Sri
Lankan Muslims. Thus, in the Sri Lankan context it is clear that the Muslims
constitute not only a religious category but also an ethnic category. Hence,
the term Muslim is used to refer to both religion and ethnicity. The Indian
Muslims (the Coast Moors) are no longer a visible ethnic group in Sri Lanka.
Most of them returned to India due to citizenship problems and others gradually
assimilated into the Sri Lankan Muslim community.
2. The development of ethnic
consciousness:
Sri Lankan Muslims, the third
largest ethnic community in Sri Lanka, have been living in this country for
many centuries and were treated very well under the Sinhala kings during the
pre-colonial period. They were settled in the coastal commercial towns of Sri
Lanka (then Ceylon) during this period and engaged mainly in trade and
commerce. However, during the colonial period their very existence was
challenged by the colonial rulers - by the Portuguese first and then by the
Dutch who were bitter competitors of the Muslims in trade and they had to scatterdly
resettle in the interior country side with the help of the Sinhala kings and
engage in other occupations like agriculture, fishing and weaving for their
livelihood.[1]
Sri Lankan Muslims were merely a
silent cultural community until the beginning of the modern era, which is
marked by the semi-capitalist transformation of the Sri Lankan society which
had been taking place during the 19th century under British rule. During this
period, the traditional feudal system and the self-reliant village social
structure were gradually collapsing and a semi-capitalist social system based
on a newly introduced colonial economy was emerging, introducing some new
social class formations. The underdeveloped new colonial economy that replaced
the older self-reliant social system was not capable of adequately catering to
the needs of the newly emerged social classes, and this inevitably led to the
different communities competing with each other for their economic prosperity
on communal or ethnic lines. Thus, the history of modern Sri Lanka, beginning
with the latter half of the 19th century, is also the history of the
development of ethnic consciousness and conflict among the three major
communities namely the Sinhalese, the Tamils and the Muslims, who were living
in harmony throughout the pre-modern period except for some dynastic or royal
conflicts.
Ethnic consciousness seeks a
separate ethnic identity for a community, based on its cultural ideology and
traditional mythology. The Sinhalese sought their identity in Buddhism and
their imaginative historical mythology and the Tamils sought their identity
first in Hinduism especially in Saivaism and later in their glorious linguistic
and cultural heritage. Similarly, Sri Lankan Muslims sought their identity in
Islam and their glorious Islamic historical past. Hence, religious revivalism
was common among these communities during the late 19th century and it was also
a process of the modernisation of Sri Lankan societies during that period.
Sri Lankan Muslims became an
ethnically conscious and politically motivated community during the late 19th
century because of the revivalist movements. According to the 1881 census there
were 193,000 Muslims in Sri Lanka. They were a closed and traditional society
and were comparatively backward in economy and modern education. However, there
was a tiny elitist group which included the mercantile class and the emerging
educated middle class centred mainly around Colombo and Kandy. It was this
elitist group which was ethnically sensitive and politically motivated and led
their community into the modern era through their revivalist activities. The
Turkish, Egyptian and Indian revivalist and political movements were sources of
inspiration to them. This period can be considered the first phase of the
development of ethnic identity coupled with religious fundamentalism among Sri
Lankan Muslims. Like their Christian, Buddhist and Hindu counterparts, the
Muslim elites too used journalism as a powerful instrument to create ethnic
awareness among the community. About fifteen journals and newspapers were
published by Muslims during the late 19th and early 20th Century in Tamil and
English.[2]
These journals played a major role in formulating a religiously oriented ethnic
ideology of Sri Lankan Muslims.
M.C. Siddi Lebbe (1838 - 1898), a
lawyer by profession and a leading figure of the revivalist movement was the
articulate representative of this ideology. He started his journal Muslim Nesan
in 1882 and edited it for several years and was author to several books
including the first Sri Lankan Tamil novel "Asanbey Sarithiram" ( the
story of Asanbey) published in 1885 which represents his cultural ideology, He
was very conscious of the religion and education of Sri Lankan Muslims and
wanted to bring his community into the modern era through secular education
provided in English. He realised that without English education, his community
would not get its share in public life and would not advance further.
However, the Muslim community was
not willing to enter into the modern education system introduced in the19th
century, for several reasons. One was that most of the schools were established
and controlled by the Christian missionaries. The traditional and conservative
Muslims had the fear that English education may lead their children to
Christianity, as they witnessed in Sinhalese and Tamil communities.[3]
Hence, Siddi Lebbe wanted to establish separate schools for Muslims as did the
Buddhist and Hindu revivalists. His dream was realised in November 1884 with
the establishment of the first Muslim English school in this country - 'AL
Madurasathul Khairiyyatul Islamiah' in Colombo.
Siddi Lebbe, his friends and
followers got moral and intellectual support, and the community feeling was
deepened with the arrival of the Egyptian exiles in the late 19th century.
Arabi Pasha (1839 - 1911), the Egyptian nationalist rebel leader, Muhmood Samy
Baroudi, the revolutionary nationalist poet and some other fellow rebels, most
of them in their early forties and their family members arrived in Colombo on
10th of January 1883. They were well received by the local Muslims. A large
number of them gathered at the Colombo Jetty to receive the exiles and Siddi
Lebbe made the welcome speech. Though the exiles did not participate in the
local politics as they expected to be, they intellectually inspired the local
Muslims and involved in community development activities. As Vijaya Samaraweera
(1979) pointed out the 'inspirational leadership' of Arabi Pasha was one of the
contributing factors to the establishment of the first Muslim school in Colombo
in 1884, nearly two years after his arrival. The Egyptian exiles were in Sri
Lanka for nearly two decades. Arabi Pasha departed to Egypt on 18th September
1901 at the age of 61 "to die in his dear homeland and that his bones be
buried in peace".[4]
But the two decades were a very important period in the development of ethnic
consciousness among Sri Lankan Muslims.
In 1891 the Muslim Educational
Society was formed in Colombo and 'AI-Madurasathul Zahira', a modern school for
Muslims was established in the next year. In the subsequent years some more
schools were established, or attempted to be established, in Colombo, Kandy, Gampola,
Kurunegala, Badulla, Galle and Matara for Muslim boys as well as for girls.
Though progress in Muslim education in this period was very slow, it was
strongly emphasised that "in order to take the proper place among our
fellow country men we should educate our children " [Ceylon Mohammedan, 3
January 1901 - quoted in Vijaya Samaraweera 1979].
Ethnic consciousness developed
among Muslims also in reaction to the Sinhala and Tamil hostilities towards
them during the late 19th and early 26th centuries. The Sinhala upper class
felt that the alien Muslims and some other foreigners were dominating the
external and internal trade, and because of this, the Sinhalese - 'the sons of
the soil' - were in a disadvantageous position. Kumari Jayawardena (1984, 1990)
gives some details about the situation in trade in this period. According to
her, by 1880 the Pettah trade was dominated by 86 Chetty and 64 Muslim firms
and at the beginning of the twentieth century the external trade (the export
and import) was dominated by seven leading Borah firms. The retail trade was
also dominated largely by Muslims in the urban as well as in the rural areas.
Thus, the Sinhala bourgeoisie faced severe competition from the minority Muslim
community and they agitated against it. Anagarika Dharmapala, a veteran
Buddhist revivalist leader was at the forefront of this agitation. He carried
out a campaign directly against the Muslims. In 1915 just before the riots
against Muslims began, he stated, " The Mohammaden, an alien people by Shylockian
method, became prosperous like the Jews. The Sinhalese sons of the soil, whose
ancestors for 2358 years had shed rivers of blood to keep the country free from
alien invaders... are in the eyes of the British only vagabonds... The alien
South Indian Muhammedan comes to Ceylon sees the neglected villager, without
any experience in trade... and the result is that the Mohammedan thrives and
the son of the soil goes to the wall" (Kumari Jayawardena 1990: 24.)
This ideological agitation burst
out into anti-Muslim riots in 1915 in which several hundred people died.
Although the immediate reason for the riots was religious provocation near the
Gampola Mosque, it was the inevitable reflection of the communal tensions
created by the socio-economic development of that time. Muslims were severely
affected by the riots. The British rulers imposed martial law to suppress the
riots and arrested several Sinhala Buddhist leaders who had a hand in the
riots. The government's reaction to the riots was criticised by Buddhists as
well as by Tamil leaders especially by Ponnambalam Ramanathan, a Tamil
aristocrat and a long time member of the Legislative Council. Ramanathan
persuaded the British rulers to release the Sinhalese leaders and in turn the
members of Sinhalese elite celebrated the event and pulled the cart on which
Ramanathan was seated through the Colombo streets.[5]
Understandably, these events made the Muslim elites feel helpless between the
two major competing communities and to rely on themselves for their political
future. Thus, the anti-Muslim sentiment of the Sinhalese and the 1915 riots and
the behaviour of the Tamil leadership had a lasting impact in consolidating the
Muslim identity.
Since Muslims were emerging as a
politically conscious minority, they had to safeguard their socio-political
interests from the Tamils also who were not only numerically the largest, but
also socially, a powerful minority in this country. This trend led the Muslims
to seek a strong separate identity for themselves which could totally
differentiate them from the Tamils apart from the fact that Muslims are also
linguistically Tamil. This was evident in the debate on the ethnology of
Muslims which was going on in the 1880s and after.
The debate was started by
Ponnambalam Ramanathan in 1885. He stated in a legislative council debate on
the Muslim Marriage Registration Ordinance, that Muslims were ethnologically
Tamils though they follow a different religion. Later, he substantiated his
thesis academically in a paper he read at the Royal Asiatic Society (Ceylon
Branch) in 1888 on 'the Ethnology of Moors of Ceylon'. His contention was
bitterly resented and the Muslim elites reacted to it angrily. They thought
that it was a plot to prevent their separate representation in an expanded
Legislative Council. They rejected Ramanathan's thesis and tried to establish
their own separate ethnological identity tracing their origin from the Arabs,
specifically from the glorious Hashimite clan of Prophet Mohamed. Several
Muslim elites, including Siddhi Lebbe, expressed their views in the debate.
Siddhi Lebbe wrote a series of articles on the history of Ceylon Muslims in his
paper Muslim Nesan from September 1885. The Muslim views got a comprehensive
form with the publication of "A criticism of Mr. Ramanathan's Ethnology of
the Moors of Ceylon" later in 1907 by I.L.M. Abdul Azees, a disciple of
Siddhi Lebbe and a Muslim ideologue who formed the Moor Union in 1900 and was
also its founder-president.
In modern Sri Lankan history, we
observe that each major ethnic group has created its own historiography in
accordance with its ethnic ideology disregarding any scientific or objective
methodology.[6] The Sri
Lankan Muslim elite also did the same thing. Although they had a mixed origin
and a close connection with the Tamils linguistically and to some extent
culturally, they sought pure Arabic origin and tried to disown their linguistic
and cultural affinity with Tamils due to the competition they faced with them
in the socio-political domain.
We can see a distinct contrast in
this respect between the Tamil speaking Muslims of Tamil Nadu and Sri Lanka.
Both these communities speak Tamil as their mother tongue. However, the Tamil
Nadu Muslims never hesitated to call themselves Tamils because they are
linguistically Tamil. But calling a Tamil speaking Sri Lankan Muslim a Tamil
has become a social taboo, because the historical experiences of these
communities are different. In Tamil Nadu, unlike in Sri Lanka, the Muslim
community did not face any major challenge from the Tamil majority,
economically and politically, since the Muslims were not a competing community
in Tamil Nadu.
A Sri Lankan Muslim is provoked
when he hears a respectable Tamil Nadu Muslim calling himself a Tamil in a
public meeting.[7] Similarly,
for Tamil-speaking Hindus and Muslims in Tamil Nadu, it is very difficult to
understand the conflict between Tamils and Muslims in Sri Lanka, because they
knew only the Hindu - Muslim conflicts. In the Indian context, the contrast is
between Hindus and Muslims, which is clearly based on religion. But in the Sri
Lankan context, the contrast is between Tamils and Muslims. This contrast is
not between the same categories of religion as in Hindus and Muslims or of
language as in Sinhala and Tamil but between two different categories of
language and religion. This clearly shows that the ethnicity of Sri Lankan
Muslims is not defined by language also in the case of the Sinhalese and
Tamils, but by religion. That is why Sri Lankan Muslims have been giving more
importance to their religion than to their language.
As we have seen so far, a strong
foundation was laid for a separate Muslim identity during the pre-independence
period in Sri Lanka. The underdeveloped colonial economy, the emergence of new
social classes, and the introduction of communal representation in political
organisations were the major factors contributing to this development. The
identity consciousness deepened and institutionally recognised throughout the
post independent period and the whole Sri Lankan society was communalised due to
the socio-political crisis the country experienced during this period. Two
major Muslim political leaders, Sir Razik Fareed in the 1940s and the 1950s and
Dr. Baddiudeen Mahmood in the 1960s and the 1970s made significant
contributions to institutionalise the Muslim identity in Sri Lanka.
3. The emergence of a new political
leadership:
In this section I would like to
focus briefly on a new development of Muslim identity and the emergence of a
new Muslim political leadership in Eastern Sri Lanka in the 1980s and after.
The Sri Lankan Muslim political leadership had its base in the Western province
for a long time because the Muslim mercantile class and the educated elites
were centered on that province. Although nearly 30 % of the total Muslim
population of this country is concentrated in the East, and they are the
economically strong majority in the Ampara district, they did not seek a strong
ethnic identity and a political leadership till the late 1930s because their
socio-political situation did not demand such a development. They were mostly
engaged in agriculture in a feudal setting and in petty trades. They did not
enter the modern education system and produce an educated middle class elite.
They had a cordial relationship with the Tamils, the other major ethnic
community of that area and did not face any severe competition in economy and
politics from them.
However, with the introduction of
universal franchise in 1931 under the Donoughmore constitution the situation
had been gradually changing. The Eastern Muslims too were becoming more and
more ethnically conscious, and gradually entering into the modern education
system and politics. It is evident in the formation of Kalmunai District Muslim
Association in 1936 at Kalmunai. It was formed to consolidate the Muslim
awareness and to
protect their interest in public
life.
P.M. Macbool Alim, the president of
the Association published a booklet in 1937 entitled 'Muslimkalukkoor
vignaapanam' (a call for Muslims) in which he emphasises the following four
points).[8]
1) The unity of the Muslims of the
region 'for their political victory, 2) their economic advancement, 3) the
importance of modern education for Muslim males and females and 4) the
employment opportunities for Muslims in the government sector. This obviously
shows that they had come of age. During the post-independence period Eastern
province Muslims seriously engaged in political battles for seats in
parliament. Political opportunism, coupled with the scarcity of land, and
economic competition created a mood of suspicion and hostility between Muslims
and Tamils in the region and led even to some violent clashes in the 1950s and
60s. Later developments resulted in ethnic segregation of these communities to
a certain extent.
In 1974 the Sri Lankan government
introduced a system of standardisation for the University entrance examination
(that is G.C.E. A/L) and a special quota for the backward districts by which
the Eastern province youths both Tamils and Muslims were greatly benefited
while the
Jaffna Tamil youths were badly
affected. The introduction of this new system paved the way for better
opportunities in higher education for Muslims and created a new professional
class and an educated elite among them. They are the more ethnically sensitive
and opinion making social groups. These groups were the base for the new Muslim
political leadership in the East and they formed a Muslim political party the
Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) in 1980.
The need for a separate Muslim Political
party was felt even two decades before in the East, especially in the Ampara
District. The All Ceylon Islamic United Front was formed in 1960 by Mr. M.S.
Kariappar, a popular Muslim politician of that time for his immediate political
benefit, but the party did not succeed because there was no strong social base
as such at that time. But in the 1980s the situation was entirely different.
The development of the Tamil militancy in the North and East and their hostile
attitudes towards Muslims since 1985 created a strong insecure feeling among
Muslims, and intensified their ethnic sentiments. Tire SLMC under the
charismatic leadership of M.H.M. Ashraff sparked off this sentiment by its
verbal militancy with some spiritual colouring and became a major political
force in the East specially in the Ampara District. After the first provincial
council election held in 1987 the SLMC almost monopolised Muslim politics in
the East and also emerged as one of the major forces in Sri Lankan national
politics too. Thus, the last decade marks the highest stage in the development
of Muslim consciousness in Sri Lanka.
4. Religious awareness and the rise
of fundamentalism:
As I have mentioned earlier in this
paper, the ethnicity and religion of Sri Lankan Muslims are inseparable and
they had a reciprocal impact on the development of each other. It was widely
felt in the late 19th century by the Muslim elites that religious awareness and
spiritual development were necessary for the social mobility of the Muslim
population in Sri Lanka. Until the middle of the 20th century, Sri
Lankan Muslims mostly depended on South India for their traditional religious
education and they had to go to Kelakkarai or Kayalpattinam to be trained in
Islamic scholarship and to become Ulammas. However, the first Arabic college in
Sri Lanka to train Sri Lankan Muslims in traditional Islamic scholarship was
established in 1884 at Weligama by Seyid Mohamed Ibnu Ahmed Lebbe (1817 - 1898)
popularly known as Maahppillai Lebbe Alim, an influential South Indian Muslim
scholar who had a far reaching impact on the development of a kind of
conservative traditional Islamic scholarship particularly a South Indian
variety of it in Sri Lanka. Subsequently several Arabic colleges were
established in Galle (1892), Kinniya (1899), Maharagama (1913) and Matara
(1915) and hundreds of Alims were produced by these colleges. They were
responsible for preaching Islam and to develop religious consciousness among
Muslims. However, the South Indian version of Islam, which can be characterised
as more ritualistic, was criticised later by the more fundamentalist Islamic
movements during the post-independence period through which the Sri Lankan
Muslims underwent a process of what we may call a cultural purification or
Islamization.
Most of the revivalist leaders of
the late 19th century who were on a double track, that is modernisation and
Islamization, were also responsible for the development of religious awareness
among Muslims. They thought that Islam should be the foundation for any
modernisation process. Siddi Lebbe was a good example of this. He wrote several
articles and books on Islam and spiritualism. His book 'Asrarul Alam' deals
entirely with Islamic spiritualism. He also published a journal 'Gnanatheepam'
(the light of wisdom) dedicated to religious affairs in 1892. While his 'Muslim
Nesan' tried to politicise the Muslim community, 'Gnanatheepam' and his
religious writings tried to give it a spiritual foundation. The beginning of
the post-independence period also marks the second phase of the development of
Islamic awareness among Sri Lankan Muslims.
Two important Islamic organisations
were established in Sri Lanka in the mid-50s of this century. They are the
Jamaat e Islami and the Tableq Jamaat movements. Jamaat e Islami, a
fundamentalist organisation founded by Maulana Abulala Maududi in India in 1941
has become a strong religious and political movement in Pakistan during the
last two decades. Although Jamaat e Islami had been functioning in Sri Lanka
from 1947 it was officially established here in 1954 with the idea of
Islamising the Muslim community in all its social aspects. It has attracted a
considerable portion of the educated middle class and youths and has a few
branches and numerous study circles Islandwide with more than 10,000
sympathisers. Jamaat e Islami as a well organised establishment has its own
publication and propaganda machinery. Unlike the Pakistani 'head quarters', the
Jamaat e Islami in Sri Lanka so far has not participated directly in politics, but
is deeply involved in religious and other socio-cultural activities.
Tableeq Jamaat, comparatively a
more conservative and fundamentalist international organisation which was also
founded in India, was established in Sri Lanka in 1953 and has been fast
developing here for the last two or three decades. The Tableeq movement unlike
Jamaat e Islami concentrates only on religious activities particularly to get
people involved in religious rituals like everyday prayers. Tableeq Jamaat, a
very rigid sectarian organisation, has a large membership from the big business
community to the wage labour class and from the highly educated intellectuals
to uneducated farmers. They have their own code of conduct and wear their own
special attire. They are very fanatic in religious affairs and are likely to
become an endogamous religious sect in the future.
Another fundamentalist organisation
is worth mentioning here. It is Jam iyyathu Ansaris Sunnathul Muhammatiyya
(here after Jam iyya) which has its headquarters at Paragahadeniya in the
Kurunegala district. The Jam iyya movement was founded in 1947 by Abdul Hameed
AI Bakry (1909-1976), popularly known as Dharvesh, the native of
Paragahadeniya. Though Jam iyyathu is not an island-wide organisation, it has
strong holds in several places in this country especially in Kurunegala and
Kalmunai.[9] Abdul Hameed
gained his knowledge of Islamic theology at several Arabic colleges in Sri
Lanka, South and North India and finally in Saudi Arabia. He spent more than a
decade in Mecca learning Arabic, Islamic theology and Sharia. He returned to
his native village in 1947 with the reformist spirit and a deep 'knowledge of
orthodox Islam which was branded by hostile traditional native Islamic scholars
as 'Wahabism', a Saudi Arabian version of fundamentalism.
Abdul Hameed was very intolerant of
what he regarded as un-Islamic practices of fellow Muslims in this country. He
accepted only the Quran and the Sunna of the Prophet for religious sanctions
and rejected all the customary folk religious practices from shrine worship to
religious feasts as shirk and fit'at. He and his disciples went to the extent
of destroying some shrines in his village and a case was filed against them in
the District Court in 1948. He acquired many disciples but also made enemies
during his religious campaign in the 1950s. Public religious debates were held
in several places and one of the debates ended in violence at Kalmunai in 1951.
Abdul Hameed founded an Arabic
college at Paragahadeniya which has become one of the largest Islamic
Institutions in this country. He also started a propagandist journal Unmai
Udayam (the Dawn of the Truth) in 1955 and was its chief editor for a long
period. He was allowed to settle in Mecca with his family by King Abdul Azeez
bin Abdul Rahman in 1971 and
passed away there in 1976. The
followers of the Jam iyya movement have become a distinct religious sect with
in the Sri Lankan Muslim community. They have their own mosque and religious
institutions. They differ from the other members of the community basically in
their ritualistic religious practices and beliefs like many other
fundamentalist groups.'
The impact of these organisations
on the process of Islamization of Sri Lankan Muslim community, apart from the
socio-political developments that I discussed earlier, is very great. They
played a very significant role in the development of religious awareness and in
deepening the ethnic consciousness and in almost creating a cultural
homogeneity among Sri
Lankan Muslims during the past two
or three decades, although there is a serious ideological difference between
them. The development of religious awareness among Sri Lankan Muslims is
discernible in the extensively increased number of mosque goers during the past
few decades and also in the increase of the number of mosques in rural as well
as in the urban areas. It is also discernible in the renovation and expansion
of mosques almost in all cities and in many villages in order to accommodate
more people who come to pray, especially for Jumma prayers on Fridays.
5. Towards cultural purification:
The development of religious and
ethnic consciousness led the Muslims to seek a separate cultural identity based
on the fundamentals of their religion, Islam, to establish themselves as a
distinct ethnic community in order to differentiate themselves from the other
Sri Lankans especially from Tamils with whom they share the same language,
Tamil, and other cultural features.
At first, the Muslims especially
the Colombo based Muslim elites wanted to disown their mother tongue, Tamil and
to adopt Arabic or some other alien language. They believed, or pretended to
believe, that Arabic is or should be their mother tongue, although very few Sri
Lankan Muslims could understand Arabic and no one used Arabic for their day to
day communication.[10]
Siddhi Lebbe wrote in 1884 in his
paper 'Muslim Nesan' that "Muslims should try to adopt Arabic as their
home language. If Portuguese and Dutch who lived in Ceylon can forget their mother
tongue and speak English why we can't forget Tamil and make Arabic our mother
tongue" ( Ameen, 1990 p. 175). Siddhi Lebbe forgot the fact that the
mother tongue is not a language that is chosen or learned, but is inherited or
acquired. However, two years later Siddhi Lebbe changed his mind and put
forward a four language policy for Muslims which was later advocated by many of
his followers including A.M.A. Azeez after him. Siddhi Lebbe wrote in the same
paper in 1886 that "we should learn Arabic since, Qur’an, our religious
scripture is in Arabic, we should learn Tamil because we speak Tamil and who
does not know it will become as a blind, we should learn English since it is
the official language and we should also learn Sinhala because the majority of
the people of this country speak it" (Ameen, 1990 :174). Here, too, we
notice that he has given the first place to Arabic because it is the language
of their religion, and Islam is the primary marker of their ethnic identity.
Although Sri Lankan Muslims do not
speak Arabic, they consider it to be sacred and also use it as an inalienable
cultural symbol. One important use of Arabic by Muslims is to name the members
of their community and their social institutions. Sri Lankan Muslims
exclusively use Arabic for their personal names. This was not so rigid half a
century ago. Then there were
three types of Muslim personal
names:
1) purely Tamil names,
2) Tamil Arabic or Arabic - Tamil
blend names and
3) purely Arabic names.
The first two types of personal names
have gradually disappeared and the third type has now become exclusive due to
the ethnic and religious consciousness and the process of cultural
purification. In the earlier period Arabic personal names too were mostly
nativised; that is the Arabic phonological patterns were assimilated according
to the Tamil phonological patterns. For example, the following female personal
names Katheesa Umma, Semilattumma, Seyinampu and Mukkulattu are the nativised
forms of Katheeja, Jameela, Zainab and Um Kultum respectively. This type of
nativisation gradually ceased and at present the Muslim personal names are
pronounced and written as closely as to the Arabic originals.
The naming of social institutions
in Arabic has also become an increasing cultural phenomenon among Sri Lankan
Muslims. There is a tendency noticeable in the last few decades to use Arabic
to name their schools, homes, business institutions and journals. For example,
in the Amparai District 50 out of 95 Muslim schools have been renamed with an
Arabic title within the last two decades as in Kalmunai Zahira college,
Maruthamunai Al-Manar Vidyalaya, and Ninthavur Al-Ashrak Vidyalaya. Before this
tendency arose, Muslim schools were named as Government Muslim Boys/
Girls/Mixed schools with their place names.
This renaming tendency is more
noticeable in the urban areas than in the remote rural areas. For example, in
the urban Kalmunai education district 15 out of 18 Muslim schools have been
renamed, whereas in the Potuvil area only one out of 8 schools has been
renamed.[11] This is a
clear indication of the identity consciousness of the urban middle class elites
and the trend of cultural purification or Islamisation among them. Most of the
traditional and folk cultural practices have been gradually eliminated through
this process of cultural purification from the early post-independence period.
For example, folk theatre was a popular cultural performance among Muslims in the
Eastern province and also in the Mannar and Puttalam areas at the eve of
independence and also a little after that. This was an influence by the
traditional folk plays (Naattukkuuttu) of the Tamils. A number of South Indian
Islamic folk plays (Ali Paatusha Naadakam, Appaasi Naadakam and Thaiyaaru
Sulthaan Naadakam) were performed on the rural stage. Some artists, all males,
who participated in these plays am still living in the Ampara district.
However, these performances were considered un-Islamic by the newly emerged
religiously conscious groups and disappeared later. Likewise, the observance of
the folk religious practices and marriage customs also disappeared or was
reduced or became unpopular since they were considered to be un-Islamic.
The question whether a cultural
practice is Islamic or un-Islamic became very important and was seriously
discussed and sometimes provoked violence among various religious groups and
even individuals throughout this period. Various sects and groups have
developed their own interpretation of Islam and they sincerely believe and try
to prove that only their interpretation is truly Islamic and try to impose it
in practice. The development of ethnic and religious consciousness among
Muslims had its impact especially on Muslim women for the last hundred years in
this country positively as well as negatively. It is discussed briefly in the
next section.
6. Gender segregation and
subordination:
It can be argued from a historical
perspective that Islam, the Qur’an and the Sunna of the Prophet had given more
rights and near-equality to the Muslim women than the women in other
communities in that historical period. However, it is also true that Muslim
women have been deprived of those rights and subordinated by men under the male
dominated social system throughout the historical periods like any women who
live under patriarchy all over the world. Sri Lankan Muslim women are no
exception to this universal phenomenon.
Till the beginning of the
revivalist period the existence of the Sri Lankan Muslim women was unknown in
public life. They were confined to their homes. Only the revivalists wanted to
bring them out of that segregation and challenged the conservative traditional
social attitudes and practices. They thought that educating their women was a
must for the upward social mobility of the community and tried to open separate
schools for Muslim girls to provide modern education to them. Siddhi Lebbe was
the main propagandist of female education of that time. This was a positive
trend among ethnically motivated, educated Muslim men and political leaders
throughout the modern period although there was a strong negative attitude
towards female education among the conservative majority till the end of the
1940s.
The last hundred years in the
history of Muslim education shows a slow but gradual and steady growth in the
education of Muslim girls, although the ethnic ratio is still in a low state.
The literacy rate of the Muslim women in 1921 was only 6%, but it has been
raised to 75.5% at present. It is a fairly satisfactory development in
comparison with the 82.5% of the overall
female literacy rate in Sri Lanka.
In 1942 only one Muslim female student entered the University of Ceylon.
However, for the last ten years more than a hundred Muslim girls have been
entering from many parts of Sri Lanka to the universities for several fields of
study including medicine and engineering. It is noteworthy in this context
that, according to the Universities Grants Commission Report, 32% of the total
Muslim students who got admission to the universities for the academic year
1990/1991 were female students.
This is evidence that the rise of
fundamentalism has never been an obstacle to Muslim female education. Instead
it has become an incentive, since the education of Muslim women is not against
the fundamentals of Islam. It is now socially accepted that Muslim girls should
be educated although, some fundamentalist individuals are against sending
Muslim girls for higher studies. However, there are certain socio-cultural
factors which retarded the progress of Muslim female education.[12]
The employment of educated Muslim
women was not socially accepted until the beginning of the post-independence
period and even today it is not favourably considered by the conservative
sections of the community and certain fundamentalist groups especially the
Tabliq Movement. However, religion has not been a strong preventive factor of
female employment since socio-economic factors have been more dynamic than
religion in this respect. Until recently, employment for Muslim women was
socially restricted only to the teaching profession. There was only one Muslim
female teacher in 1944 in this country. However, with the growth of educational
opportunities for Muslim women, the number of Muslim female teachers has been
gradually increasing for the last fifty years. According to the 1991 School
Census Report there are 5635 Muslim women in the teaching profession at present
and 440 of them are graduate teachers. A separate teachers' training college
for Muslim women was opened at Aluthgama in 1948. They were also admitted to
the Addalachenai Muslim teachers college as co-trainees with males from 1970s.'
Muslim girls in considerable
numbers have been willingly seeking various other employment opportunities for
the last ten or fifteen years both in the public and private sectors due to the
growth of their educational opportunities and the economic condition of the
individual families. This is a significant advancement in the progress of
Muslim women. There is another significant development in the opportunities for
employment for Muslim women in the Middle East from 1975. Thousands of Muslim
women from the low income groups have been migrating to the Middle East as
cheap-labour house maids from almost every village and city for the last twenty
years.[13]
This has nothing to do with the process of Islamization or ethnic awareness.
Arab employers prefer Muslim house maids, and the economic conditions of these
women compel them to migrate leaving their families in Sri Lanka. None of the
fundamentalist movements can prevent this female migration even though they do
not approve of it.
Female migration for employment has
far-reaching social and cultural implications both positive and negative. On
the positive side, it grants freedom of movement and power of decision making
and a leading role in the family for Muslim women to a certain extent which are
against the fundamentalist doctrine. A recent study by Ameen (1995) reveals
that most of the women decide on their own to go abroad as housemaids in the
hope of earning some money for their future betterment. However, family
disorganisation, the increasing divorce rate among them and the rather
contemptuous social attitudes towards them are some of the negative aspects,
and these have to be seriously considered.
In my opinion, the ideology of
ethnic identity and religious fundamentalism does not have any serious negative
impact upon Muslim women as far as their education and employment opportunities
are concerned. Rather, it has played a positive role in educating Muslim women for
the past hundred years which has inevitably led them to seek various employment
opportunities. Changing socio-political realities and increasing pressure for
finding means of economic survival pushed many women to seek available
employment avenues. Here, Muslim women, like women from other communities,
coped with the burden of managing household affairs, bringing up children and
earning income for family upkeep. The conflicting roles allotted to women need
to be highlighted.
Although mobility (limited in some
sense) was approved of for economic reasons there were restrictions on women's
decision making role within the household, for instance, consent to marriage.
More and more women start working outside the home as a new form of resistance
to family controls and imposed norms. However, ethnic identity and
fundamentalism played an important role in gender segregation and the
subordination of Muslim women in various socio-cultural institutions. It is
well known that Sri Lankan Muslim women are heavily dominated by male
chauvinistic ideology than are the women of the other communities in this
country although the degree of domination varies according to the social class
of the women.
A great majority of
religion-conscious Muslim men believe that they are custodians of their women,
and according to their ideology they have religious sanction for their belief.
No religiously sensitive Muslim male accepts the concept of the equality of
women. To them it is un-Islamic. This ideology of male supremacy leads to the
subordination of women and the suppression of their identity and the
development of their individual personality to a considerable extent.
In many ethnically conscious
societies, the subordinated women become one of the symbols of ethnic identity,
and the male dominated cultural ideology is imposed upon them and they are
expected to behave according to this cultural ideology. Sri Lankan Muslim women
too represent this situation. They have to accept female segregation and
subordination to gain a respectable place in their social system. Islamic
attire for women, 'purdah' or 'hijab' popularly known as 'fardah', is a
manifestation of the ideology of female segregation and subordination which is
an inherent feature of fundamentalism. There is no compulsorily prescribed
Islamic dress for Muslim men. However, most of the religiously sensitive men
wear a white lace cap as their ethnic symbol. The red Turkish fez was an
identity symbol for many of the upper class Muslim men from the late 19th
century to the middle of this century. Wearing the fez even became a big social
issue in 1905 when the Chief Justice denied M.C. Abdul Cader, the first Muslim
Advocate the right to wear his fez in the High Courts. The Muslim community
protested and won their case. However, wearing a cap is not religiously
obligatory for Muslim men. They are only required compulsorily to cover only
the middle part of their body; that is between the navel and the knees.
For Muslim women it is obligatory
to cover their whole body except the face, hands and feet because of their
gender and sexuality. However, there is no prescribed Islamic dress for women.
Nevertheless, Sri Lankan Muslim women did not observe purdah, the
fundamentalist Islamic dress for women, until very recently. Traditionally they
covered their heads with the head piece of their sari like the North Indian
Hindu women who came under the influence of the Mogul culture and it was
considered satisfactory for Muslim women to cover their heads with their sari
when they appeared in public places. The educated and employed Muslim women did
not observe even this practice. However, the situation has changed after 1985
because of the mounting ethnic tension and the rise of fundamentalism into a
higher stage due to the spread of the ethnic conflict into the Muslim community
and the oppression of Muslims by the Tamil militancy in the North and East on
the one hand and the international Islamic resurgence motivated by the Iranian
Islamic revolution on the other.
Due to this new development, after
1985 Sri Lankan Muslim women were compelled to wear hijab and it has become the
school uniform for Muslim girls in all the Muslim schools except in the primary
classes. The Muslim girls who attend non-Muslim schools also have to observe
this. Anonymous letters were sent to certain schools in the Ampara district by
some fundamentalist militant organisations threatening female teachers who are
not observing hijab to expect severe punishment for their un-Islamic behaviour,
and all employed Muslim women were psychologically compelled to wear hijab. In
the universities only a few Muslim girls were covering their heads in the
1970s. But during the last ten years it has become obligatory to observe hijab
and at present almost all the female Muslim students are observing it. Most of
the male students and some fundamentalist organisations are vigilant about
this.
Even though most of these women
suffer from headaches and have other health problems due to hijab, especially
during the peak of the summer season, it has become an obligatory social
practice for both upper and middle class Muslim women. It has even become a
status symbol for the upper class women in the urban areas. Hence, the
imposition of hijab can be considered a fundamentalist victory over Sri Lankan Muslim
women. However, a few highly educated westernised Muslim women who live in
cosmopolitan cities like Colombo can afford not to observe hijab. Women from
lower income groups who are outside the domination of fundamentalism can also
behave in this way.
Another area under the influence of
fundamentalism is that of performing arts like music, dance, drama and the
film. According to the Sri Lankan version of fundamentalism these are
un-Islamic and the fundamentalists are particularly against the women's
participation in any performing arts and Sri Lankan Muslim women are denied the
opportunity to develop their talents in the field of fine arts, through which
the human personality and perception can be developed. Only girls under the age
of ten are allowed to participate in cultural performances on the school or
public stage.
In the mid-1970s when aesthetic
education was introduced in the school curriculum Badiuddin Mahmood, the then
Education minister and widely accepted Muslim political leader who contributed
much to the development of Muslim education in this country, introduced the
concept of Islamic music and dance and appointed Muslim women to teach these
aesthetic subjects in Muslim schools. However, he had to face strong protests
from fundamentalist circles for his initiative and it was abandoned
immediately. In this context Muslim women's participation in film and drama is
ruled out. A few years ago some tele-dramas were produced with Muslim female
characters and telecast over the Rupavahini, the national television station.
They were stopped later due to fundamentalist pressure. However, the
fundamentalists are not against women's participation in radio broadcasting
since it is a non-visual medium; and as a result we have a few talented Muslim
female radio artists.
Sri Lankan fundamentalists are not
willing to take into consideration the cultural practices in the Islamic world
even in Iran. It is well known that the Islamic fundamentalist Iran has become
one of the finest film producing countries in the world and has produced
several talented actresses, female singers, painters and even film directors.
However, the Sri Lankan fundamentalists, who have their own interpretation of
Islam and who are suffering from a minority complex have the fear that if they
allow their women to get out of their control Muslim society as a whole will
collapse. The fundamentalist interpretation of Islam is always in favour of
male domination and beneficial to the male. The interpretation of polygamy is a
good example of this. Polygamy is a pre-Islamic practice in the male dominated
Arabian society and exists in many patriarchal communities all over the world.
According to an anthropological survey 75% of the world communities, small and
large, practise polygamy (Murdock, 1957). It is a form of social institution,
favourable to men, and allows a man to have many wives at a time. It came into
practice at a particular historical period of social evolution.
Although Islam did not abolish this
pre-Islamic practice of polygamy, it imposed a severe restriction on it. It
prevents a man irrespective of his wealth and social position to have not more
than four wives at a time, and also imposes a condition that he should treat
his wives equally. Islam also advises a man not to marry a woman if he cannot
give her both material and physical satisfaction. This was obviously a
progressive step at a time when men were enjoying supreme power over women.
This clearly shows that the spirit of Islam is not in favour of polygamy,
though it allows it with restrictions. However, fundamentalists interpret Islam
in favour of polygamy and defends polygamous practises as inherent nature and
the inalienable right of human male and even go to the extent to say that it is
necessary for the advancement of human civilisation.
The fundamentalists who follow the
Shia doctrine not only defend polygamy but also practice Mut'a, the temporary
marriage which is also a pre-Islamic practice that can be considered as
legitimised prostitution in the modern sense. However, in Sri Lanka although it
is religiously admitted and there are some isolated cases, polygamy is not a
socially acceptable practice among Muslims and the indigenous cultural
tradition of Sri Lankan Muslims is non in favour of the fundamentalist attitude
in respect of polygamy. It is interesting that Sri Lankan fundamentalists,
though they defend polygamy on principle, are also monogamous in practice due
to the local tradition with a few exceptions. However, some fundamentalists
propagate polygamy for their own benefit.
Another area of fundamentalist
interpretation in favour of male domination is the Islamic personal law which
covers marriage, divorce and inheritance. Fundamentalists all over the Islamic
world consider this to be an inalienable part of Shariah which is divine in
nature and oppose any modern rational interpretations and change in order to
give equal status to women.
Maulana Abdul Kalam Azad (1980:
351-4), a rational interpreter of the Qur’an usefully differentiates Deen from
Sharia in his book Dharjumanul Qur’an. According to him, Deen represents the
basic principles and value system of Islam which are universal and Sharia
represents the laws and code of conducts of Islamic communities which are not
universal and vary time to time and place to place according to the historical
and social conditions of the Muslim communities. This is evident in the
existence of different schools (Madhhabs) and interpretations of Sharia. For
example, according to the Hanafi school a woman can divorce her husband only on
the ground of sexual impotency. But Shafi and other schools permit her to ask
for divorce on several other grounds also. According to the Shafi school which
is practised in Sri Lanka, a woman cannot be appointed as a judge to a Quazi
Court, and this is strictly followed here. However, in Pakistan where the
Hanafi school is practised a woman can be appointed as Quazi and also in
Indonesia, where the Shafi school is in practice. However, Sri Lankan
fundamentalists are rigid and are not in favour of any significant change in
Muslim personal law. It is a paradoxical situation that the fundamentalists do
not allow Muslim women to be appointed as Quazis in their Sharia Courts while
there are some Muslim women already working as judges and lawyers in Sri Lankan
civil courts.
7. Conclusion:
In conclusion, I would say that the
ideology of ethnic identity and fundamentalism has its roots in particular socio-political
conditions which are local and global that activate and intensify ethnic
tension and religious awareness in a plural society, and they have adverse
effects not only on women who are passive and inarticulate under male
domination but also on women who are assertive and independent. Ethnic and
fundamentalist tension can be neutralised only through some political process
which would grant equal and democratic rights to each community in that society
to enable them to develop independently with mutual interaction. This is a
precondition for the gender equality. These can be achieved only in an
ethnically neutralised society, allowing full and equal participation of women
in the socio-political arena and in economic production. However, women who live
in Islamic societies face some specific problems pertaining to these societies.
In an Islamic society, religion has a major role to play not only in one's
personal and spiritual life but also in the whole range of social affairs and
there is a strong tradition of male-dominated interpretation of Islam which
legitimises gender inequalities and the subordination of women.
However, it should be insisted that
Islam, the Qur’an and the Sunna, can be interpreted in favour of gender
equality and women's participation in public life. Only a modern interpretation
of Islam in favour of gender equality can give an ideological and religious
foundation for the emancipation of Muslim women from male domination in
under-developed Muslim societies. Feminists in the Islamic world are now
engaged in this ideological discourse which has shed new light on Islamic
thinking. However, Muslim women have a long way to go before they achieve
emancipation.