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Bibliography 2: #BIB39855

Key BIB39855
Reference type Journal Article
Title Aga Khan or Ayatullah : The Choice for the Khojas in the Nineteenth Century
Journal Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society
Author Rajani, Kumail
Year2025
Epub date2 2025/12/04
ISSN 1356-1863
Abstract The Khojas are a caste-based community that emerged in the fourteenth century across Sindh, Kutch, and Kathiawar. For centuries, they maintained a distinct identity that blended Hindu and Islamic traditions, which resisted rigid classification within either religious framework. The nineteenth century, however, brought profound change through two major schisms that reshaped their religious and social identity. The first, rooted in disputes over the authority of the Aga Khan, culminated in the 1866 Aga Khan Case and prompted some to align with Sunni Islam. The second, a theological rupture, led to the rise of Isna Ashari Khojas. This shift was influenced by Twelver Shiʿi mujtahids in Najaf and Karbala, who, through Indian Shiʿi ʿulamāʾ and mullās, reshaped Khoja religious identity. This article explores the central role of Twelver Shiʿi networks and their transregional reach in shaping this transformation. It focuses on how changes in legal identity, religious authority, and migratory patterns across Bombay, Zanzibar, and the shrine cities of Iraq contributed to the emergence of a distinct Isna Ashari Khoja identity. In doing so, it situates Khoja transformations within a wider historical context of religious affiliation and social organisation across South Asia and East Africa.
Notes Bahá'í Faith: pp. 13, 21 regarding Siyyid Mustafa Rumi's conversion of the Shaykhi, Siyyid Muhammad, ot the Bahá'í Faith.
Language English
Keywords AGA KHAN; AYATOLLAHS; ISMAILISM; KHOJAS; SHIAH; INDIA; MUSTAFA RUMI, SIYYID
URL https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/7A2C5F89C468D79F0AA303816F0EF373
DOI 10.1017/S1356186325101296
Pages 1–21
File attachments internal-pdf://0344159676/Rajani - Aga-Khan-Ayatullah - JRAS ser3 (2025).pdf
Database provider Cambridge University Press
Name of database Cambridge Core

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