Islam in Uganda : the Muslim minority, nationalism & political power
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Islam in Uganda : the Muslim minority, nationalism & political power
(Religion in transforming Africa / series eidtors, Barbara Bompani, Joseph Hellweg and Emma Wild-Wood)
J. Currey, 2022
- : James Currey hardback
- Other Title
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The Muslim minority, nationalism and political power
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
: James Currey hardbackFEUG||297||I21991718
Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [221]-234) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Examines the historical, political, religious, and social dynamics of Muslim minority status in Uganda, and important themes of pre- and post-colonial political community, religion and national identity.
Between 2012 and 2016 several Muslim clerics were murdered in Uganda: there is still no consensus as to who was responsible. In this book Joseph Kasule seeks to explain this by examining the colonial and postcolonial history of the Muslim minority and questions of Muslim identity within a non-Muslim state. Challenging prevalent scholarship that has homogenized Muslims' political identity, Kasule demonstrates that Muslim responses to power have been varied and multiple. Beginning with the pre-colonial political community in Buganda, and Muteesa I's attempted Islamization of the country using Islam as a centralizing ideology, the author discusses how the political status of Islam and Muslims in Uganda has been defined under successive regimes. Muteesa I's Islamization faltered when Christianity entered Buganda in the latter half of the 19th century, resulting in division between Muslim and Christian sections. The colonial period created a new type of political project that defined the Muslim question as one of representation, and Kasule discusses how this laid the foundation for a politics of Muslim containment within a predominantly Christian power. He examines contrasting urban-based Muslim organizations and rural expressions of Islam; tension between representative claims of Muslim leaderships within the demand for Muslim autonomy; and the rise of new reform groups. As these splits turned violent, 'new' Muslim 'publics' emerged around opposing centres of Muslim power which sought different resolutions to their minority situation.
East Africa (Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi): Makerere Institute of Social Research
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. Islam in Pre-Colonial Buganda
3. Muslim Communities in the Colonial Era
4. Milton Obote Founds his Muslim Alliance
5. Idi Amin Attempts to Islamize the State
6. Islamic Reform and Intra-Muslim Violence
7. NRM Statecraft and Muslim Subjects
8. Conclusion
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