Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/8328
Title: The Intoxicated Malangs in Pakistan an Anthropological Study of Folk Religion
Authors: Chaudhry, W.
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: University of Kelaniya
Citation: Chaudhry, Waheed 2015. The Intoxicated Malangs in Pakistan an Anthropological Study of Folk Religion. Heritage as Prime Mover in History, Culture and Religion of South and Southeast Asia, Sixth International Conference of the South and Southeast Asian Association for the Study of Culture and Religion (SSEASR), Center for Asian studies of the University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka. (Abstract) p.114.
Abstract: It is only recently that the phenomenon of pirs (saints) and shrines, in the context of the Indo-Pakistani sub-continent has caught the attention from Western Scholars of Islam. Still it is often considered as a deviation from true Islam, and is usually passed over in silence in the various introductions to Islam, which usually only deals with ‘High Islam’ or the ‘Big Tradition’. Some work has been done, though by scholars from the sub-continent, or by Western Islamists and anthropologists. Even in these studies, little attention has been pain to the malangs, a group of Sufis who are totally devoted to the service to God; but who do not operate under the hierarchies of living pirs and their successors. Instead they claim to have direct contact with God or with a dead pir. Very often they are not attached to a certain shrine, but wander from shrine to shrine at the direct command of God or the dead pir. The following study gives a brief introduction to the system of shrines, and a discussion of the malangs, especially those at the shrine of Bari Iman in the neighbourhood of Islamabad. The study is based on a field study which the author made on the occasion of the annual Urs celebration at this shrine.
URI: http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/8328
ISBN: 978-955-4563-47-6
Appears in Collections:SSEASR 2015

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