Today, there are over 500 million Muslims throughout the Indian
subcontinent (India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh), making it one of the
largest population centers of Muslims in the world. Since Islam first
entered India, it has contributed greatly to the area and its people.
Today, numerous theories about how India came to be such a largely
Muslim land exist. Politically, some (such as the Hindutva movement in
India) try to make Islam seem foriegn to India, by insisting it only
exists because of invasions by Arab and Persian Muslims. The truth,
however, is far from that.
The Earliest Muslim Indians
Even before the life of Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) in the
600s, Arab traders were in contact with India. Merchants would regularly
sail to the west coast of India to trade goods such as spices, gold,
and African goods. Naturally, when the Arabs began to convert to Islam,
they carried their new religion to the shores of India. The first mosque
of India, the Cheraman Juma Masjid, was built in 629 (during the life
of Prophet Muhammad) in Kerala, by the first Muslim from India, Cheraman
Perumal Bhaskara Ravi Varma. Through continued trade between Arab
Muslims and Indians, Islam continued to spread in coastal Indian cities
and towns, both through immigration and conversion.
Muhammad bin Qasim
The first great expansion of Islam into India came during the Umayyad
Dynasty of caliphs, who were based in Damascus. In 711, the Umayyads
appointed a young 17 year old man from Ta’if to extend Umayyad control
into Sindh: Muhammad bin Qasim. Sindh is the land around the Indus River
in the Northwestern part of the subcontinent, in present-day Pakistan.
Muhammad bin Qasim led his army of 6,000 soldiers to the far eastern
reaches of Persia, Makran.
He encountered little resistance as he made his way into India. When
he reached the city of Nerun, on the banks of the Indus River, he was
welcomed into the city by the Buddhist monks that controlled it. Most
cities along the Indus thus voluntarily came under Muslim control, with
no fighting. In some cases, oppressed Buddhist minorities reached out to
the Muslim armies for protection against Hindu governors.
Despite the support and approval of much of the population, the Raja
of Sindh, Dahir, opposed the Muslim expansion and mobilized his army
against Muhammad bin Qasim. In 712, the two armies met, with a decisive
victory for the Muslims. With the victory, all of Sindh came under
Muslim control.
It is important to note, however, that the population of Sindh was
not forced to convert to Islam at all. In fact, for almost everyone,
there was no change in day-to-day life. Muhammad bin Qasim promised
security and religious freedom to all Hindus and Buddhists under his
control. For example, the Brahman caste continued their jobs as tax
collectors and Buddhists monks continued to maintain their monastaries.
Due to his religious tolerance and justice, many cities regularly
greeted him and his armies with people dancing and music.
Patterns of Conversion
The successive waves of Muslim armies penetrating into India followed
much the same pattern. Leaders such as Mahmud of Ghazni and Muhammad
Tughluq expanded Muslim political domains without altering the religious
or social fabric of Indian society.
Because pre-Islamic India was entirely based on a caste system in
which society was broken into separate parts, conversion to Islam
happened in a step-by-step process. Often, entire castes would convert
to Islam at a time. This would happen for many different reasons. Often,
however, the equality Islam provided was more attractive than the caste
system’s organized racism. In the caste system, who you are born to
determines your position in society. There was no opportunity for social
mobility or to achieve greater than what your parents achieved. By
converting to Islam, people had the opportunity to move up in society,
and no longer were subservient to the Brahman caste.
Buddhism, which was once very popular in the subcontinent, slowly
died out under Muslim rule. Traditionally, when people wanted to escape
the caste system, they would move to the major population centers and
convert to Buddhism. When Islam became an option, however, people began
to convert to Islam instead of Buddhism, while still leaving the caste
system. The myths of Islam violently destroying Buddhism in India are
simply false. Buddhists were tolerated under Muslim rule and no evidence
exists that shows forced conversions or violence against them.
Wandering teachers also had a major role in bringing Islam to the
masses. Muslim scholars traveled throughout India, making it their goal
to educate people about Islam. Many of them preached Sufi ideas, a more
mystical approach to Islam that appealed to the people. These teachers
had a major role in bringing Islam to the masses in the countryside, not
just the upper classes around the Muslim rulers.
Did Islam Spread by Force?
While some claim that Islam’s huge population in India is a result of
violence and forced conversion, the evidence does not back up this idea
at all. Although Muslim leaders replaced Hindu kings in most areas,
society was left as is. Stories of forced conversion are very few and
often not credible enough to warrant academic discussion.
If Islam spread through violence and warfare, the Muslim community
today in India would exist only in the areas closest to the rest of the
Muslim world. Thus only the western part of the subcontinent would have
any Muslim population at all. What we see instead is pockets of Islam
throughout the subcontinent. For example, Bangladesh and its 150
million Muslims are in the far east, separated from other
Muslim-majority areas by Hindu lands in India. Isolated communities of
Muslims exist also exist in western Myanmar, central India, and eastern
Sri Lanka. These communities of Muslims are proof of Islam spreading
peacefully throughout India, regardless of whether or not a Muslim
government existed there. If Islam spread by force as some claim, these
communities of Muslims would not exist.
Conclusions
Islam is an integral part of India and its history. As the Indian
subcontinent remains today a multi-ethnic and multi-religious place, it
is important to understand the position Islam has in the region. The
political claims that some making regarding Islam as if it is an
invading religion and foriegn to the people of India need to be defied
with the truth of Islam’s peaceful spread throughout India.
Ref: http://lostislamichistory.com/how-islam-spread-in-india/
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