Indian Jamaat-e-Islami finally discards its longstanding pretence of being a 
benign religio-cultural organisation

By Sahil Khan, NewAgeIslam.com
Late last week, amidst much fanfare, a new political party, styling itself the 
‘Welfare Party of India’, was launched in New Delhi. It is the brainchild of 
India’s foremost Islamist outfit, the Jamaat-e Islami Hind, and most of its top 
office-bearers are senior Jamaat leaders. Politics is, however, not new to the 
Jamaat at all, for the Jamaat’s ideology is itself based on a distinctly 
political interpretation of Islam. It is premised on the centrality of the 
notion of the ‘Islamic state’, without which, it insists, Islam is 
‘incomplete’. Bringing the whole world under the rule of such a state or 
states, styled as the Caliphate, is central to the Jamaat’s vision of Islam.
In launching its political party (although careful not to project it as a 
Jamaat venture) the Indian Jamaat has finally discarded its longstanding 
pretence of being a benign religio-cultural organisation. Aware that floating 
the party would inevitably win it fierce criticism from some quarters, Jamaat 
leaders have been quick to disclaim direct involvement of the Jamaat. That 
claim, of course, has few takers, and critics will easily dismiss it as utterly 
hypocritical. It is common knowledge that the party has been set up at the 
Jamaat’s initiative and will function under its directions. Cautiously 
distinguishing the Jamaat from the Welfare Party might be a well-thought of 
move in order to give the party more room for manoeuvre and for making 
ideological compromises. Such a distinction might also help the Jamaat, if the 
need so arises, to distance itself from the party in case the party runs into 
trouble or goes out of control, in the same way as the
Jamaat was forced to disclaim any links with the Students’ Islamic Movement of 
India which it had helped set up when the latter was banned on the alleged 
grounds of fanning terrorism some years ago.
The formation of the WPI does not signal, as some might think, a shift in the 
Jamaat’s understanding of Islam or of the relationship between Islam and 
politics. After all, it has never distanced itself from its founder, Syed Abul 
Ala Maududi, whose politically-driven, and deeply fascist interpretation of 
Islam it still champions, as evidenced by the vast amounts of literature, 
including writings of Maududi himself, that it continues to publish in various 
languages. Maududi vehemently insisted that there was no distinction at all 
between Islam and politics or the state, claiming that the mission of the 
prophets was precisely to establish political power and thereby bring into 
being what he regarded as a divinely-ordered society. In his frighteningly 
Manichaean worldview, the whole of humanity was divided into two rival camps: 
the ‘friends of God’ (that is to say, ‘good’ Muslims like himself and others 
who shared his vision of Islam) and the
‘friends of the Devil’ (the rest of humanity). The former were soldiers of God 
in a cosmic war against the latter to establish global ‘Islamic’ rule, using 
force, if need be and in some circumstances, to bring the whole world under 
‘Islamic’ domination. Under no circumstances could Muslims turn their backs on 
what Maududi believed was this divinely-ordained duty.
Maududi’s politically-inflected Islam brooked no compromise with other 
ideologies and religions and their adherents. Islam (and his brand of it, at 
that) alone represented the truth, he insisted, while other belief-systems were 
patently false and were, by definition, opposed to God. Their followers were to 
be struggled against till they accepted Islamic supremacy. Democracy, 
secularism, nationalism and socialism, too, in his view, represented revolts 
against God, and Maududi vehemently denounced them as utterly anti-Islamic.
Maududi is regarded as one of the pillars of modern ‘political Islam’ or 
Islamism, and is recognised as having exercised a major influence on Islamist, 
including radical ‘jihadist’, thinking and politics all across the world. After 
laying the foundation of the Jamaat-e Islami in 1941, he migrated to Pakistan 
in the wake of the Partition, leaving behind a branch of his outfit in 
independent India to carry on the struggle to establish an ‘Islamic polity’ 
based on his particular version of Islam. In Pakistan, Maududi and the 
Pakistani Jamaat, which was transformed into a political party, played a 
leading role in whipping up support for the establishment of an ‘Islamic state’ 
of their dreams. As numerous Pakistani writers have documented, they crusaded 
against not just other versions of Islam, such as popular Sufi traditions, but 
also against progressive trends in Pakistani society, including peasants’ and 
women’s struggles, and the
fledgling communist movement. They vehemently denounced liberal and democratic 
voices, and crusaded against equal rights for Pakistan’s beleaguered non-Muslim 
minorities, all in the name of Maududi’s authoritarian and deeply despotic 
interpretation of Islam.
Pakistan’s ruling elites, particularly the regime of the military dictator Zia 
ul-Haq, actively courted the Jamaat in order to fend off rivals and clamp down 
on democratic struggles. The Jamaat soon emerged as the vanguard of fascism in 
Pakistan. It was, and remains, one of the major channels of anti-Indian and 
anti-Hindu hatred in Pakistan, and the major ideological force behind what it 
regards as a divinely-blessed jihad against ‘infidel’ rule in Kashmir. Yet, 
despite the Jamaat’s considerable influence in Pakistan, it has miserably 
failed in successive elections in the country (that is, on the rare occasions 
when they are held), simply because most Pakistanis, despite being Muslims, do 
not subscribe to Maududi’s understanding of their faith and would loathe to 
live under a repressive regime that the Jamaat wishes to establish in the name 
ofhukumat-e ilahiyah or ‘divine rule’.
The Jamaat-e Islami also exists as separate political parties in Bangladesh and 
Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir, where their political course has been no 
different from the Pakistani Jamaat. The Jamaat in undivided (pre-1971) 
Pakistan was viscerally opposed to the creation of Bangladesh, and its frontal 
organisations played a key role in killing vast numbers of pro-independence 
Bengali freedom fighters, Hindus and Muslims, backing the Pakistani Army in the 
wake of the liberation struggle launched by the Mukti Bahini. For the 
Bangladeshi Jamaat, like its Pakistani counterpart, anti-Indian hysteria is 
almost an article of faith, and it has consistently opposed all leftist, 
progressive voices and even liberal and democratic trends in Bangladesh, 
branding these as wholly ‘anti-Islamic’. In Indian administered Jammu and 
Kashmir, too, the Jamaat’s brand of Islam has been pressed into the service of 
an extremely regressive social agenda at the same
time as the Jamaat there considers the on-going militant struggle against 
Indian rule as nothing short of a divinely-approved jihad against the 
‘infidels’.
The course of the Jamaat as a political party in Pakistan, Bangladesh and 
Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir, which seems uniformly reactionary (to 
put it mildly), poses important questions for what the newly-floated Welfare 
Party of India, a Jamaat-e Islami Hind front, would mean for the Indian 
Muslims, for their understandings of Islam and for India as a whole. If the 
history of the Jamaat-e Islami and its political involvement in other parts of 
South Asia is any indicator, the answers to these pressing questions do not 
seem encouraging at all, to say the least.
The course of Maududi’s heirs in India has not been all that different from 
those elsewhere in South Asia. Given that, following the Partition, the Indian 
Muslims were transformed into a heavily-reduced and insecure minority, it was 
but natural that, in contrast to Muslim-majority Pakistan, the Indian Jamaat 
chose to stay aloof from active politics. Like its Hindu counterpart, the RSS, 
the Indian Jamaat sought to camouflage its politically-driven understanding of 
religion by claiming the seemingly innocuous label of a ‘cultural 
organisation’. While sharing the same broad understanding of Islam as 
represented by the Jamaat in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Jammu and Kashmir, the 
Indian Jamaat adopted a different, seemingly ‘apolitical’, strategy to achieve 
the same goals.
 Following Maududi, early post-47 Indian Jamaat leaders insisted that secular 
democracy was sheer anathema, and advised Muslims to abstain from any activity 
that might strengthen such a ‘godless’ ideology and a polity based on it. 
Jamaat members were forbidden from voting or to standing in elections. They 
regarded government employment, working for a state that was not ‘Islamic’, as 
‘un-Islamic’ for this would only lend legitimacy to such a state. They saw 
government schools as calculated to lead Muslims astray from Islam and 
advocated ‘Islamic schools’ in their place. Critics regarded this as tantamount 
to ‘self-marginalisation’, but the Jamaat believed that this was a truly 
‘Islamic’ strategy to preserve the Muslims’ faith, in a context that was seen 
as ‘anti-Islamic’.
The Indian Jamaat never gave up its dream of an ‘Islamic’ state in India, 
though. Through its missionary work, it hoped that the dominant Hindus would 
realise what it regarded as the veracity of Islam, and if the majority of 
Indians were won to the faith, the ‘Islamic state’ would come into being on its 
own.  Another focus of the Indian Jamaat was on the dissemination of its 
ideology among the Indian Muslims, many of who it thought of as hardly ‘true’ 
Muslims simply because they did not subscribe to its brand of Islam. If Muslims 
were to embrace the Jamaat’s version of Islam, it hoped, the struggle to 
establish an ‘Islamic’ state or social order in India would be greatly 
facilitated. This task was to be undertaken through setting up a vast chain of 
schools, institutes, and publishing houses that produced huge amounts of 
Jamaat-style literature, particularly tracts and tomes by Maududi.  At the same 
time, the Indian Jamaat, like its
counterparts elsewhere in South Asia, kept up a steady opposition to liberal, 
democratic and leftist tendencies among Muslims. Thus, it continues to 
vehemently oppose reservations for Muslims on the basis of caste (for ‘low’ 
caste Muslims, who form the majority of the Indian Muslim population), and, 
like most other ‘Islamic’ organisations, denounces efforts to reform Muslim 
Personal Law to ensure gender justice and equality. While constantly appealing 
for  true ‘democracy’ in India (this being one of the major rationales for the 
Welfare Party of India), the Indian Jamaat has thus been consistently opposed 
to the internal democratisation of the larger Indian Muslim community in the 
name of a monolithic and authoritarian understanding of Islam.
Not everyone within the Indian Jamaat agreed on the need to stay aloof from 
active political assertion, in terms of party politics, though this remained a 
generally-held position till the recent formation of the Welfare Party. The 
Jamaat’s students’ wing, the Students Islamic Movement of India, for instance, 
began distancing itself somewhat from the Jamaat from the 1980s in the face 
both of Islamist assertion globally and Hindutva aggression within India. 
Following the destruction of the disputed mosque/temple structure in Ayodhya in 
1992 and the ensuing massacre of Muslims, the SIMI called for Muslims to engage 
in what it called jihad. When the Government of India stepped in to ban the 
SIMI, Jamaat leaders hurriedly denied any links with it, while at the same time 
criticising the Government (and rightly so) for turning a blind eye to Hindu 
terrorist outfits.
Increasingly, from the early 1990s onwards, voices began being heard within the 
Jamaat for it to take a more overt political role in the face of the perceived 
helplessness of Muslims at the hands of a hostile state and Hindu chauvinists. 
The floating of the new political party by the Jamaat thus represents a shift 
in terms of the Indian Jamaat’s strategy in the face of a transformed political 
context. Yet this does not necessarily mean a transformation of its overall 
ideology. Given the Jamaat’s particular understanding of Islam, which many 
other Muslims do not accept, it is not surprising that the move has provoked 
considerable debate, including visceral opposition, in Muslim circles.
Sahil Khan is a regular columnist for NewAgeIslam.com.
URL: 
http://newageislam.com/NewAgeIslamIslamAndSpiritualism_1.aspx?ArticleID=4500
 





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