| Candrodaya Why isn't anybody listening?
 
  
 Joined: 09 Jun 2023
 Posts: 643
 
 
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				|  Posted: Sun Aug 20, 2023 10:50 am    Post subject: Shades and boxes. |   |  
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				| There is an interesting manusript Ambar Hussaini - commentary on the gita by a Muslim poet named Ambar Hussain. See: interesting manuscripts
 
 Another all together different case is in Punjab, a brahmana clan that is half muslim/half hindu:
 
 
 .full text here-> 	  | Quote: |  	  | Perhaps the most intriguing case of Hindu veneration of Imam Hussain
 
 is to be found among the small Hussaini Brahmin sect, located mostly
 
 in Punjab, also known as Dutts or Mohiyals. Unlike other Brahmin
 
 clans, the Hussaini Brahmins have had a long martial tradition, which
 
 they trace back to the event of Karbala. They believe that an ancestor
 
 named Rahab traveled all the way from Punjab to Arabia and there
 
 developed close relations with Imam Hussain. In the battle of Karbala,
 
 Rahab fought in the army of the Imam against Yazid. His sons, too,
 
 joined him, and most of them were killed. The Imam, seeing Rahab's
 
 love for him, bestowed upon him the title of Sultan or king, and told
 
 him to go back to India. It is because of this close bond between
 
 their ancestor Rahab and Imam Hussain that the Hussaini Brahmins got
 
 their name.
 
 
 
 After Rahab and those of his sons who survived the battle of Karbala
 
 reached India, they settled down in the western Punjab and gradually a
 
 community grew around them. This sect, the Hussaini Brahmins,
 
 practised an intriguing blend of Islamic and Hindu practices, because
 
 of which they were commonly known as `half Hindu, half Muslim'. A
 
 popular saying about the Hussainis has it thus:
 
 
 
 Wah Dutt Sultan,
 
 Hindu ka dharm
 
 Musalman ka iman,
 
 Adha Hindu adha Musalman
 
 
 
 Oh! Dutt the king
 
 With the religion of the Hindu
 
 And the faith of the Muslim
 
 Half Hindu, half Muslim)
 
 
 
 But there is also another version of how the Dutts of Punjab came to
 
 be known as Hussaini Brahmins. One of the wives of Imam Hussain, the
 
 Persian princess Shahr Banu, was the sister of Chandra Lekha or Mehr
 
 Banu, the wife of an Indian king called Chandragupta. When it became
 
 clear that Yazid was adamant on wiping out the Imam, the Imam's son
 
 `Ali ibn Hussain rushed off a letter to Chandragupta asking him for
 
 help against Yazid. When Chandragupta received the letter, he
 
 dispatched a large army to Iraq to assist the Imam. By the time they
 
 arrived, however, the Imam had been slain. In the town of Kufa, in
 
 present-day Iraq, they met with one Mukhtar Saqaffi, a disciple of the
 
 Imam, who arranged for them to stay in a special part of the town,
 
 which even today is known by the name of Dair-i-Hindiya or `the Indian
 
 quarter'.
 
 
 
 Some Dutt Brahmins, under the leadership of one Bhurya Dutt, got
 
 together with Mukhtar Saqaffi to avenge the death of the Imam. They
 
 stayed behind in Kufa, while the rest returned to India. Here they
 
 built up a community of their own, calling themselves Hussaini
 
 Brahmins, and although they did not convert to Islam they kept alive
 
 the memory of their links with Imam Hussain.
 
 
 
 The Hussaini Brahmins believe that Krishna had foretold the event of
 
 the Imam's death at Karbala in the Gita. According to them, the
 
 Kalanki Purana, the last of eighteen Puranas, as well as the Atharva
 
 Veda, the fourth Veda, refer to Imam Hussain as the divine incarnation
 
 or avatar of the Kali Yug, the present age. They hold Imam Ali, Imam
 
 Hussain's father, and son-in-law and cousin of the Prophet Muhammad,
 
 in particular reverence, referring to him with the honorific title of
 Om Murti.
 
 
 
 The Hussaini Brahmins, along with other Hindu devotees of the Muslim
 
 Imam, are today a rapidly vanishing community. The younger generation
 
 abandoning their ancestral heritage, often now seen as embarrassingly
 
 deviant. No longer, it seems, can a comfortable liminality be
 
 sustained, and ambiguous identities seem crushed under the relentless
 
 pressure to conform to the logic of neatly demarcated `Hindu' and
 
 `Muslim' communities
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