The Prague Post - Bangladesh mystic singers face Islamist backlash

EUR -
AED 4.306856
AFN 77.711435
ALL 96.6361
AMD 447.361782
ANG 2.099662
AOA 1075.394579
ARS 1704.294082
AUD 1.770295
AWG 2.110917
AZN 2.005017
BAM 1.958609
BBD 2.362187
BDT 143.432006
BGN 1.956234
BHD 0.442095
BIF 3467.77264
BMD 1.172732
BND 1.516174
BOB 8.104414
BRL 6.458585
BSD 1.172782
BTN 105.082996
BWP 16.496656
BYN 3.446943
BYR 22985.5403
BZD 2.358692
CAD 1.614034
CDF 2655.064863
CHF 0.93241
CLF 0.02719
CLP 1066.669732
CNY 8.257496
CNH 8.250701
COP 4502.269252
CRC 585.724921
CUC 1.172732
CUP 31.077389
CVE 110.421457
CZK 24.312427
DJF 208.841456
DKK 7.471421
DOP 73.463464
DZD 152.117402
EGP 55.815926
ERN 17.590975
ETB 182.194198
FJD 2.678165
FKP 0.876
GBP 0.877004
GEL 3.154673
GGP 0.876
GHS 13.469971
GIP 0.876
GMD 86.196305
GNF 10251.437886
GTQ 8.986657
GYD 245.365567
HKD 9.1252
HNL 30.897305
HRK 7.533159
HTG 153.7705
HUF 386.871253
IDR 19612.76408
ILS 3.758194
IMP 0.876
INR 105.006053
IQD 1536.403138
IRR 49401.320328
ISK 147.213301
JEP 0.876
JMD 187.654288
JOD 0.831454
JPY 184.553364
KES 151.177306
KGS 102.55556
KHR 4706.568421
KMF 493.720346
KPW 1055.441417
KRW 1732.464732
KWD 0.360228
KYD 0.977402
KZT 606.914765
LAK 25400.773858
LBP 105023.312388
LKR 363.111398
LRD 207.582354
LSL 19.674209
LTL 3.462772
LVL 0.709373
LYD 6.357007
MAD 10.749902
MDL 19.854963
MGA 5333.511594
MKD 61.568211
MMK 2462.539291
MNT 4164.850513
MOP 9.399839
MRU 46.935102
MUR 54.121387
MVR 18.130742
MWK 2033.664165
MXN 21.099196
MYR 4.781237
MZN 74.949594
NAD 19.674713
NGN 1712.879934
NIO 43.160787
NOK 11.89246
NPR 168.132794
NZD 2.036114
OMR 0.450907
PAB 1.172737
PEN 3.949462
PGK 4.989154
PHP 68.793606
PKR 328.586273
PLN 4.20796
PYG 7867.980444
QAR 4.275622
RON 5.088925
RSD 117.377558
RUB 94.286458
RWF 1707.648697
SAR 4.398893
SBD 9.546173
SCR 16.056028
SDG 705.396175
SEK 10.876582
SGD 1.514917
SHP 0.879852
SLE 28.260452
SLL 24591.600589
SOS 669.042264
SRD 45.081562
STD 24273.177377
STN 24.535182
SVC 10.261452
SYP 12967.019711
SZL 19.672209
THB 36.851333
TJS 10.807221
TMT 4.116288
TND 3.432835
TOP 2.823657
TRY 50.203768
TTD 7.960211
TWD 36.962743
TZS 2925.964839
UAH 49.589409
UGX 4195.015476
USD 1.172732
UYU 46.045242
UZS 14098.856501
VES 327.442389
VND 30857.501487
VUV 142.369685
WST 3.271174
XAF 656.873724
XAG 0.017642
XAU 0.00027
XCD 3.169365
XCG 2.113677
XDR 0.815972
XOF 656.887747
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.638002
ZAR 19.623612
ZMK 10555.991785
ZMW 26.53437
ZWL 377.619112
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    80.22

    0%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    15.25

    -0.98%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0050

    23.295

    +0.02%

  • GSK

    0.5400

    48.83

    +1.11%

  • BP

    0.7200

    34.03

    +2.12%

  • NGG

    0.4550

    76.845

    +0.59%

  • AZN

    1.0500

    91.66

    +1.15%

  • VOD

    0.0950

    12.895

    +0.74%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    56.91

    -0.23%

  • RIO

    0.8900

    78.52

    +1.13%

  • RELX

    0.2200

    40.87

    +0.54%

  • BCE

    0.1400

    22.99

    +0.61%

  • BCC

    -3.0000

    74.7

    -4.02%

  • CMSD

    0.0090

    23.289

    +0.04%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.43

    0%

Bangladesh mystic singers face Islamist backlash
Bangladesh mystic singers face Islamist backlash / Photo: Md Abu SUFIAN JEWEL - AFP

Bangladesh mystic singers face Islamist backlash

Sufi singer Jamal has spent decades devoted to his craft but now fears for his future as hardline Islamists gain ground in post-revolution Bangladesh.

Text size:

Conservative Muslim groups regard Sufism as deviant, opposing its mystical interpretation of the Koran.

The movement is highly popular in Muslim-majority Bangladesh, but followers say they have faced unprecedented threats since the ouster of former prime minister Sheikh Hasina in August last year following a mass uprising.

Hasina took a tough stand against Islamist movements during her autocratic 15-year rule, and since her ouster, Islamist groups have become emboldened, with security forces stretched.

At least 40 Sufi shrines have come under attack in the past few months, according to official figures, with vandalism, arson and other violence linked to Islamist hardliners.

Other estimates put the number at twice as high.

Musical performances, once a mainstay at Sufi shrines, have sharply declined.

"It's been difficult for the last one-and-a-half decades but after August 5 things have deteriorated significantly," said Jamal, on the sidelines of a musical gathering at a centuries-old shrine in Dhaka.

"We used to perform in 40 programmes per season but now it's down to 20 due to resistance from some people," added the 50-year-old.

In addition, Bangladesh's ascetic minstrels, Baul folk singers who wander on foot from town to town singing and begging for alms, are also feeling the heat.

While separate from Sufis, they are also branded heretics by some Islamists.

Sardar Hirak Raja, general secretary of the Bangladesh Baul and Folk Artists Association, said more than 300 musical performances had to be cancelled since last year because of pressure from Islamist hardliners.

"The Sufi singers are in crisis because there aren't enough programmes," he told AFP.

- 'Inappropriate music' -

In northern Bangladesh's Dinajpur this year, a vigilante group vandalised a popular shrine, accusing it of hosting "inappropriate music".

Similar disruptions have been reported across the country.

Many of these attacks have been claimed by "Tauhidi Janata" (people of faith), an umbrella group of Muslim radicals who insist music is forbidden in Islam.

Hefazat-e-Islam -- a platform of religious seminaries also accused of mobilising people to attack shrines -- said it opposed musical gatherings.

"A group of people gather at shrines, consume cannabis and hold music fests, all of which are prohibited in our religion," said its general secretary, Mawlana Mamunul Haque.

Experts say the conflict between codified Islam and its mystical offshoots goes back far into the past.

"Sufi singers and Bauls have been attacked repeatedly over the past decade but such incidents have become more frequent now," said Anupam Heera Mandal who teaches folklore in the state-run Rajshahi University.

"Since they rarely file complaints, the crimes committed against them often go unpunished."

Bangladesh's interim government, headed by Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus, has been criticised for going soft on the alleged vandals, with police making only about 23 arrests so far.

Mostofa Sarwar Farooki, who heads the country's cultural affairs ministry, downplayed the threat, calling the scale of the violence "relatively low".

"Whenever a festival is cancelled, we help the organisers hold it again," Farooki told AFP.

- 'More powerful now' -

But critics say the measures are insufficient.

"For mystical singers, the lyrics are not just words -- they carry knowledge. Through music, they spread this philosophy," said Faisal Enayet, a marketing graduate and Sufi music enthusiast.

"Some people are trying to silence them."

Sufi singer Shariat Bayati, whom Islamist groups have in the past targeted with police complaints, said the harassment continued.

"I couldn't hold a programme in my courtyard last March," he said. "Those who filed the cases are more powerful now and they keep threatening me."

Mystic practitioners, however, say they are turning to their core beliefs to weather the storm.

"For mystic singers, it's imperative to overcome anger," Fakir Nahir Shah, one of the country's best-known Bauls, said at a recent gathering of ascetics in Kushtia, widely celebrated as Bangladesh's cultural capital.

"Modesty is the path we've deliberately chosen for the rest of our lives."

B.Barton--TPP