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Islam on the Move: Tablighi Jama'at in Southeast Asia is a book authored by Farish A. Noor, examining the Tablighi Jamaat movement within the context of the Deobandi tradition. [1] Published in 2012 by Amsterdam University Press , the book scrutinizes the global impact of the movement, presenting insightful analyses of Tablighi Jamaat discourse ...
The emergence of Tablighi Jamaat also coincided closely with the rise of various Hindu revivalist movements such as Shuddhi (purification) and Sanghatan (consolidation) launched in the early twentieth century to reconvert Hindus who had converted to Islam and Tablighi Jamaat has been called a "missionary offshoot" of the revivalist Deobandi movement of India.
Islam, Youth, and Modernity in The Gambia: The Tablighi Jama'at is an ethnographic account examining the Tablighi Jama'at movement within The Gambia.Authored by Marloes Janson and published by Cambridge University Press in 2013, the book investigates the intricacies of Tablighi members' lives, presenting insights into how the movement shapes established Islamic practices, authority structures ...
Under Ilyas's son and successor, Muhammad Yusuf Kandhlawi (1917–1965), the Tablighi Jamaat expanded worldwide and became a transnational organisation. [10] The Nizamuddin Markaz became the world headquarters (Aalami Markaz). According to a commentator, it is "the heart circulating blood through the body" for the Tablighi Jamaat organisation. [11]
File:Cover of Inside the Tablighi Jamaat.webp; File:Cover of Islam on the Move.webp; File:Cover of Islam, Youth, and Modernity in the Gambia- The Tablighi Jama'at.jpg; File:Cover of Resisting Regimes - Myth, Memory and the Shaping of a Muslim Identity.jpg
Ijtema is the annual three-day congregation of Tablighi Jamaat (TJ). It has a strong appeal to South Asian Muslims and its diaspora. The immediate concern of TJ is the moral reform of individuals and purification of the self, often described, as ‘making Muslims true Muslims’: Muslims should go back to the basic principles of their faith to follow strictly the commandments of Islam in their ...
In 1954, after the Bengali Tabhlighi Jamaat movement officially started their activities in Dhaka, East Bengal, [1] the first Ijtemas were organized by them at Haji Camp in Chittagong (1954) [13] and in Siddhirganj, Narayanganj (1958), [13] followed by Ijtemas at the old venue of Ramna Race Course in Dhaka in 1960, 1962 and 1965. [1]
In his youth, he undertook the Hajj to Mecca, where he met Muhammad Yusuf Kandhlawi, the leader of Tablighi Jamaat, a Deobandi missionary organisation. Kandhlawi was reportedly so impressed with Patel's faith that he prayed in front of the Kaaba to ask Allah to make Patel "the instrument for winning the whole of Britain to Islam". [2]