India, a land mass comprising of 1.2 billion people today
accounts for 17% of the world’s population with around 14% of Indians following
Islam. What most people don’t realize from this statistic is that, it means
that around 177 million Muslims live in India, making it the 3rd
largest Muslim populated country in the world after Indonesia and Pakistan.
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Islam's route to India - Click to enlarge |
Contrary to popular belief, there are not one but three main
routes that brought Islam to India. The most well-known among these was the
invasion coming in from Afghanistan and Uzbekistan around the 11th
century. These dynasties and their descendants form a large part of North India
and Pakistan as we know it today. The Mughals of India also trace their lineage
through Turkish-Mongol warriors who used this route. There are however lesser
known routes that outdated the Northern occurrence of Islam and this was
primarily through sea routes bordering the south western coast of India and
South eastern coast of India (via Sri Lanka known as Ceylon at the time). Even
before the advent of Islam, Arab and Middle Eastern sailors used to trade with Indian
ports on the Western Coast for spices and other amenities. Significant proof of this can be found in
early maps and documents that mention ports in Western India such as Manjarur (
Mangalore), Qaliqut (Calicut) and Kawlam (Kollam). Thus the route to India was
a well-known one.
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The Cheruman Perumal Mosque (7th century) as seen in 1905 on India's West Coast |
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Masjid Al-Abrar (7th century) in Sri Lanka |
Shortly after the rise of Islam in Saudi Arabia, the Prophet
(PBUH) sent missionaries to spread the word of Islam, and it is through this
initiative that Malik Deenar, a close companion of the prophet set out to
capturing the minds and hearts of Indians looking for an escape from the ugly
face of the caste system that was prevalent at the time. But it was not only
the lower castes who were mesmerized with the religion and its teaching. The Chera
king Cheruman Perumar who ruled parts of modern day Kerala, is considered by
many Islamic historians to be the first Muslim in India. The story of his
miraculous conversion to Islam and his visit to see the holy prophet can only
be speculated. However, historians relate that he changed his name to Tajuddin
and died on his voyage back from Makkah when his ship sank near the coast of
Oman due to severe weather. They support this theory by citing evidence
relating to a tomb in Oman that bears his name. Other accounts of this episode
state that Tajuddin was in fact a local Chieftain whose descendants would go on
to form the Zamorins of Calicut. In either case, the contingent, who escaped the
storm, reached the coasts of the Indian Subcontinent and Sri Lanka. From here
the contingent split, one focusing on the western coast of India and another
focusing on Ceylon, the name by which Sri Lanka was historically known. In Sri Lanka, Masjid Al Abrar located in the
town of Beruwala (loosely translated as ‘lower the sails’) is the first mosque
that was built a few years after the Sri Lankan contingent arrived. The Western
Indian contingent arrived on the Malabar plains and built their first mosque there,
today called the Cheruman Perumal Mosque in honor of the Chera King Cheruman
Perumal. A small settlement of Yemeni
Muslims also landed on the east coast of India during this time however, it was
much later around the 12th-13th centuries that an influx
of Muslims starting settling in the Eastern Coast of India primarily arriving
from Sri Lanka and the North India.
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KilaKarai Masjid (8th century) on India's East coast built by Yemeni Merchants |
One of the best evidences in my opinion of understanding how
Islam spread in any geographical area is to look at the Islamic schools of thought
that Muslims in these regions follow as of today. For the unaware, Sunni Muslims primarily follow one
of four schools of thought founded by theologians who interpreted the holy
books and put in place laws that govern Islamic society. These are interesting anthropological indicators
only because very rarely do Muslims over generations tend to change their
school of thought as in most cases; the school of thought is associated with
language, culture and customs. Accordingly, in the case of India and Sri Lanka,
it is clearly seen that in land areas close to the sea such as the coastal belts
of India, and Srilanka, ‘Shafism’ ,the school of thought propagated by Imam
Shafi is prevalent while in North and Central parts of India, ‘Hanafism’, a
school of thought propagated by Imam Abu Hanifa is the prevalent school of
thought. Similarly, in the case of the other sect of Islam i.e Shiaism that was brought from Persia, it is widely prevalent in the Northern parts of India while being almost absent from coastal areas. This trend is also seen among
other South East Asian Muslim countries such as Malaysia and Indonesia. It
follows from this that Indian Muslims who live along the coastal belt of India
especially the west have high chances of having an Arab /Middle Eastern lineage
whereas Muslims in the Northern part of India are most likely descendants
of Afghani – Uzbek or Persian Heritage.
In addition to the Northern Invasions and the sea trade
routes, we must not forget the contributions of one more channel that spread
Islam in India to a large extent i.e. Sufism. Sufism is said to have arrived in
India from Turkey and Iran (Persia) early in the 10th-11th
centuries and captured Indian audiences with its mysticism, peacefulness and
simplicity. To prove the point on how influential Sufism is, historians point
out that during the travels of Sufi Saint Moinuddin Chishti in the 12th
century, he is known to have convinced more than 90,000 followers to embrace
Islam! To put that in perspective, that’s equivalent to the population of an
entire city at the time!
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