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09-05-2024

Islam and social changes among university-going urban youth in Bangladesh

Author: Bulbul Siddiqi

Published in: Contemporary Islam

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Abstract

There have been marked differences between many urban youths and the older generation in practising Islam in Bangladesh. In the contemporary expression of Islam, many urban youths in Bangladesh adopt an approach where they are inclined to explain various Islamic discourses in a modernistic way through adopting an Islamic code of life. Simultaneously negating the traditional idea of the incompatibility of Islam with modernity is also an essential phenomenon in this discourse. ‘Self-conscious sense of collective identity’ and the concept of belonging to a global Islamic community is motivating many of these contemporary urban youths in Bangladesh to search for the ‘pure’ form of Islamic practices. These new manifestations eventually affect their urban social sphere while they either reject many traditional Islamic norms or adopt ‘more authentic’ Islamic norms. Thus, this qualitative paper argues that the expression of Islam among many urban youths has to be seen as an adaptive strategy in an ongoing struggle to make sense of Islamic life in a more complex, modern and Westernised world.

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Footnotes
1
Abu Ameenah Bilal Philips (popularly known as Bilal Philip (b 1947) is a Jamaican-Canadian Islamic scholar. He adopted Islam in 1972 and established himself as one of the influential global preachers who runs an online Islamic University (Cusi and Berghout, 2023; Duderija, & Rasool, 2019). He studied Islam in Saudi Arabia and received a PhD from Wales. He is also thought to be heavily influenced by Salafism (Roald, 2012).
 
2
Nouman Ali Khan is a Pakistani-American Islamic scholar and linguist. Like Mufti Menk, his followers come from the younger generation in the contemporary world. He is one of the most influential Western academics among Muslims worldwide (Akmal et al., 2020; Wardani and Setiawan, 2019). He is an expert on Quranic Studies and the founder of the Bayyinah Institute (Wardani and Setiawan, 2019).
 
4
A traditional mass congregation, where a ‘religious scholar’ is invited to talk and interpret various aspects of Islam, is very popular among the masses in both urban and rural areas of Bangladesh.
 
5
Shab e Barat is the 15th night of the Shabaan month of the Arabic calendar. It is observed as a night of salvation and divine blessings. Hence, many Muslims prefer to spend the night praying (Siddiqi, 2018).
 
6
A famous charismatic Sufi leader whose shrine is located in the northern part of India and has a huge number of followers in South Asia and beyond.
 
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Metadata
Title
Islam and social changes among university-going urban youth in Bangladesh
Author
Bulbul Siddiqi
Publication date
09-05-2024
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Contemporary Islam
Print ISSN: 1872-0218
Electronic ISSN: 1872-0226
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11562-024-00559-8

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