Introduction by Frances W. Pritchett
It's a pleasure
to make this
sturdy old veteran textbook publically available. I thank Ree DeDonato,
Director of the Humanities and History Division at Butler Library, and
my friends at the Columbia University Press, for making it possible.
Muslim
Civilization in
India was edited by Ainslie T. Embree, my mentor and friend at
Columbia
University for many years. He created it out of the author's 712-page History
of Muslim Civilization in India and Pakistan (Lahore: Institute of
Islamic Culture, 1993 [1961), by removing most of the notes and many
specialized
passages, leaving a kind of bare-bones account. Prof. Ikram himself
explains
the extent of Prof. Embree's contribution in *his
own preface*.
Because the book
is forty
years old now, it does feel dated in some ways. Beyond the superficial
ones (in 1964, there was an "East Pakistan" instead of a "Bangladesh),
the main one that I notice is the frequent essentialization of "Hindu"
and "Muslim," and the tendency to read back twentieth-century
nationalism
into centuries in which it really seems pretty irrelevant to people's
thinking
and behavior. I'll confine myself to just a few examples.
When Muhammad bin
Qasim fights
Raja Dahar's troops in Sind in 712, the Sindhi troops are referred to
as
"the Hindu army" (p. 7), even though, as Ikram himself points out,
southern
Sind was "largely Buddhist" (p. 9), religious tensions played a major
role
in Dahar's defeat, and there's no evidence whatsoever that Dahar's army
was organized along religious lines. Ikram quotes with apparent
approval
R. C. Majumdar's description of local Buddhists' hostility to Dahar as
"treachery," and his characterization of the readiness of Dahar's
chiefs
and courtiers to change sides as "base betrayal" (p. 9)-- although in
view
of Dahar's behavior as Ikram describes it, an eagerness for regime
change
would hardly be surprising. Similarly, when speaking of the readiness
of
Jats and Meds to enlist with the newcomers, he quotes Elliot and
Dowson,
who describe this action as having a "moral effect in dividing national
sympathies, and relaxing the unanimity of defense against foreign
aggression"
(p. 9).
This kind of
loaded vocabulary--
"treachery," "base betrayal," "dividing national sympathies,"
"unanimity
of defense against foreign aggression"-- obviously raises tremendous
problems.
Is it necessarily "base" or "treacherous" to cease to obey someone who
has conquered you by force and treats you badly? Can there be "national
sympathies" where there's not only no "nation," but nobody has even
invented
the concept of a nation? Can there be a sense of "foreign aggression"
when
one doesn't have a sense of a "nation" that is being aggressed against,
and when "foreigners" live all around, just beyond one's own
local
area? All the evidence of South Asian history over time goes to show
that,
with very few and brief exceptions, the subcontinent was a place much
more
like Europe than like, say, France: it was full of mutually distrustful
clans and groups and city-states, and when larger dynasties claimed
regional
control, their power was never more than swiss-cheesey, with lots of
internal
holes. Going right back to the Arthashastra, this is the vision
of politics that we see: lots of small statelets, constantly jostling
for
power, always ready to attack each other or fend off an attack. Borders
shifted back and forth over time, loyalties changed readily according
to
local and individual political advantage. What else would we expect?
The
same things were happening in Europe and so many other places. It
doesn't
make sense to castigate people for not feeling what we decide, with
hindsight,
that they should have felt.
Another
conspicuous example
occurs at the beginning of Chapter 3. Ikram tells us that after Mahmud
Ghaznavi's death "Hindu India enjoyed a respite from foreign invasion
for
a century and a half." (He thus assumes that there was some single
entity
called "Hindu India" at the time, and that it had a shared notion of
"foreignness.")
He goes on: "This did not lead, however, to national consolidation, and
a number of principalities grew up in different parts of the
subcontinent."
He seems to consider that "national consolidation" (in the twelfth
century!)
would have been expected in such a situation. It's also misleading to
say
that regional kingdoms "grew up," as though this were some new
development
instead of completely business-as-usual in South Asia. He seems
surprised
at this continued localization of concern, and seeks to explain it:
"Perhaps
the relative freedom from Muslim raids during the first part of the
twelfth
century made them forget their perilous position" (p. 37). Of course,
most
South Asian rulers were demonstrably (and quite sensibly) much more
concerned
to avert a "perilous position" vis-a-vis their immediate neighbors of
whatever
religious persuasion, than to fend off abstract ideological dangers.
Ikram basically
knows this,
but his mental vocabulary of "Hindu" and "Muslim" tends at times to
oversimplify
his historical thinking-- as does his temporal position, writing as he
was in the decades immediately after Partition. He makes it quite clear
that he admires the tolerant pluralists on both sides; but still, for
him
the sides are mostly pretty fixed. (For some examples of how modern
historians
and social critics have gone beyond his categories, see Romila Thapar,
*"Somanatha and Mahmud"*; or
Sanjay
Subramaniam, *"Golden Age
Hallucinations"*;
or Pankaj Mishra,*"The
Invention of the Hindu"*, to name only a few.) I could also offer a
number of cases in which newer research has discredited some of his
discussion
of "Hindi" and "Urdu," including the polarization of good Delhi versus
bad Lucknow so carefully created in Chapter 20. (Fortunately, nowadays
*much better
materials*
are available.)
Even so, this
textbook is
very helpful as an example of some of the solid and influential work of
his generation of historians, and as a basic overview for people coming
to the field afresh and wanting some background. In the present online
version, typos have been corrected; punctuation has also been adjusted
in some cases for better readability. Diacritics, which originally
appeared
only in the Glossary, have been omitted. The original text, while it
made
gallant efforts to be consistent in transliteration, didn't entirely
succeed:
we find both "Abdul Samad Khan" and "Abdus Samad"; both "wazir" with a
"w" and "vakil" with a "v"; both "tauba" and "tawbar." The use of
italics
for Indian words is also idiosyncratic in the extreme: sometimes
italics
appear, most often they don't, and I couldn't figure out any real
logic.
So I basically haven't tried to straighten all this out, nor have I
sought
to import source footnotes from the original, longer work, even where
some
appeared to be needed. This was always a work for students and
intelligent
general readers, not for specialists, and such it remains. It provides
a good solid going-over in outline form of the main times, places, and
people, and offers a jumping-off point for further study.