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Rebellion and Resistance in the Nineteenth-Century Middle East: Subalterns, Outlaws, and Radicals

Panel 123, sponsored byAssociation for the Study of Persianate Societies (ASPS), 2011 Annual Meeting

On Saturday, December 3 at 8:30 am

Panel Description
The long nineteenth-century saw the rise of states that sought to implement a series of centralizing measures aimed at extraction, political stability, or economic integration. The degree to which the state faced difficulty executing these policies and thereby displacing the local structure of power is the concern of each of the papers in this panel. Focusing on specific localities, they tackle significant and heretofore unexplored dimensions of resistance, rebellion, and violence in the social history of the region. The presentations range from the early to the late nineteenth century and address issues that situate their respective themes within the broader regional or world context. They, moreover, incorporate valuable original sources overlooked by the mainstream scholarship. The paper on organized resistance in Bareilly (in colonial North India) examines the ways in which the imposition of a municipal police tax led to an inter-communal protest in 1816. Challenging the mainstream scholarly narrative, it argues that the Hindu-Muslim collective action worked within and appealed to the authority of the colonial institutions before a military action resulted in armed confrontation and ultimately the demise of the movement. The presentation on the everyday forms of subaltern resistance in Qajar Iran analyzes a series of urban food protests that took place in Qajar Iran. It draws on extensive archival research in Iran, Turkey, Britain, and the US. Moving to eastern Anatolia, the paper on highway robbery demonstrates that the modernization of the transportation networks in the second half of the century did little to make this frontier region more “legible” to the Ottoman state. Forming alliances with local security forces, categories that were often byproducts of various modernization projects participated in these incidents with impunity and as an act of resistance to certain state policies.
Disciplines
History
Participants
  • Prof. James Grehan -- Discussant, Chair
  • Prof. Ranin Kazemi -- Organizer, Presenter
  • Ms. Fulya Ozkan -- Presenter
  • Dr. Waleed Ziad -- Presenter
Presentations
  • Dr. Waleed Ziad
    In 1816 in the town of Bareilly in north India, the imposition of a municipal police tax resulted in large-scale social protests. Hindu and Muslim townsmen appealed to Maulvi Mohamed Ewaz, a locally revered Sufi of the Naqshbandi Mujaddidi order. The Maulvi orchestrated a general protest involving coordinated shop closings, the dissemination of placards, public assemblies, and petitions to the magistrate’s office, which has been described in one British source as “one of these movements not altogether unknown in Western countries but little expected in the East.” Eventually, intimidation and military action resulted armed confrontations with townsmen rallying behind the Maulvi, who vowed to protect both the Muslim and Hindu faiths. Protesters took refuge in a Sufi shrine while the Maulvi summoned support from neighboring principalities. Eventually, the movement was crushed by a sipahi regiment. I will focus on two features of this short-lived protest: the role of the Maulvi and the mode of collective action. This incident reveals that Muslims and Hindus of Bareilly across social classes recognized both the political and spiritual authority of Maulvi Ewaz, whom the colonial administrators also acknowledged as the critical interlocutor. The popular role and authority of Maulvi Ewaz challenges prevailing notions of the orthodox Naqshbandiyya as advocates of communalism, a notion posited by S.A.A. Rizvi and subsequent historians on the basis of selective readings of theological works. My examination of the contemporary English and Persian narratives, court proceedings, and histories documenting the events of 1816 sheds light on the pivotal role played by Sufi shaykhs as social mobilizers and intermediaries between classes, religious groups, and colonial authorities. These sources have been supplemented by contemporary texts on the social milieu of Bareilly and its environs (Naqshbandi hagiographies, EIC gazeeteers, and local histories) to provide a comprehensive picture of social dynamics and explain the symbolic significance of the Muslim shrine as a sight for shared Muslim-Hindu resistance. While this incident has been interpreted by colonial sources as a reflection of Muslim intractability, a reappraisal of the contemporary accounts reveals that Maulvi Ewaz’s collective action worked within and appealed to the authority of established colonial institutions. I have considered the Maulvi’s protest in light of contemporary assessments of colonial rule written by his Naqshbandi pir Shah ‘Abd al-‘Aziz Dehlawi and contemporaries, to conclude that armed resistance even amongst the orthodox leadership was not perceived as either obligatory or as a preferred mode of action.
  • Prof. Ranin Kazemi
    This paper analyzes a series of urban food protests that took place in Qajar Iran. It draws on extensive archival research in Iran, Turkey, Britain, and the US.
  • Ms. Fulya Ozkan
    This paper will explore the phenomenon of highway-robbery in the context of the Trabzon-Erzurum-Bayezid road during the second half of the nineteenth century and early twentieth century. It will argue that the existence of better roads not only increased the state’s ability to control its territories, but also that of the highway-robbers to challenge the state’s authority. In the Trabzon-Erzurum region, there were a variety of actors who resorted to highway-robbery: fugitive soldiers, members of the Hamidian regiments, tobacco smugglers, and tribesmen. These people were not marginal members of the Ottoman society, but products of modern state institutions such as universal conscription, integrated market economy, commercialized agriculture, and sedentarization. Highway-robbers also formed alliances with local power holders, leading to further conflicts between the gendarmerie and military units. In addition, the central government sought other ways of fighting against highway-robbery: introducing an insurance policy for postal services, increasing the sedentary population in the region, building more khans and police stations along the road, extending the right to carry guns to the general populace, and employing watchmen along the road. Ironically, these policies in particular and a better road network in general did not lead to increased levels of security in the region but to its further militarization.