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Friday, June 1, 2012

Kashmiriyat is a prototype for Hindustaniyat, Islam and Pluralism, NewAgeIslam.com

Islam and Pluralism
Kashmiriyat is a prototype for Hindustaniyat
Kashmiri Sufism, Islam and Hinduism
By Sultan Shahin, editor, NewAgeIslam.com

Born in the sandy dunes and hills of Arabian Desert 14 centuries ago, Islam has spread throughout the world. It now claims almost two billion followers. Wherever it has gone, it has acquired a local colour, while retaining its basic belief systems. Islam itself has encouraged this process. The Holy Quran exhorts its followers to believe in all the prophets of God, by whatever names they may now be known, who preceded Prophet Mohammad (peace be upon him).

In Islamic traditions the number of such seers, who brought messages from God, is put at 1,24,000, though only 25 names could be mentioned in the Quran. Thus while expressing belief in the oneness of God and the prophethood of Mohammad, a Muslim simultaneously expresses belief in all the previous messengers of God as well. It is natural that the Muslims have not felt obliged to distance themselves totally from their previous beliefs and practices even after conversion to Islam, at least to the extent these did not contravene their new Islamic beliefs. Indian Islam, therefore, naturally has its own indigenous flavour. And it finds its best expression in the Sufi way of life in the Kashmir valley.

http://newageislam.com/kashmiriyat-is-a-prototype-for-hindustaniyat/islam-and-pluralism/d/614


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