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Journal of Islamic Studies Advance Access published online on March 18, 2008

Journal of Islamic Studies, doi:10.1093/jis/etn002
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© The Author (2008). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

lhringAbd al-haqq Dihlawi, an Accidental Revivalist: Knowledge and Power in the Passage from Delhi to Makka

Scott Kugle

Henry Martyn Institute for Islamic Studies, Inter-Religious Dialogue and Conflict Resolutions, Hyderabad, India

E-mail: skugle1{at}swarthmore.edu


   Abstract

lhringAbd al-Haqq Muhaddith Dihlawi (d. 1642) was a renowned Islamic reformer in Mughal Delhi. His life is well documented in hagiographic and biographic records. This study argues that lhringAbd al-Haqq's mature endeavour to reform society, through revival of the study of scriptural sciences and moderation of Sufi practice, did not arise solely from within his person nor purely in reaction to his South Asian environment. Rather, he was an inter-regional, multi-lingual Sufi–scholar whose mature efforts at reform were built on the legitimacy, scholarship and discipline that he acquired earlier in his travels to the Hijaz and through his training under Shaykh lhringAbd al-Wahhab Muttaqi (d. 1592). lhringAbd al-Haqq's mature vision is an outcome of his discipleship in ‘the Muttaqi method’, which can be traced to Shaykh lhringAli Muttaqi (d. 1567–8), who was both a hadith scholar and Sufi master.


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