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Mystic Synthesis in Java: A History of Islamization from the Fourteenth to the Early Nineteenth Centuries

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This important book analyzes the Islamization of the Javanese, the largest ethnic group in Indonesia, the nation with the largest Muslim population in the world. Java represents an important case study in Islam's spread from the Middle East to the far reaches of the globe. This process gave rise to contested senses of identity: What did it mean to be both Javanese and Muslim? For some Javanese, Hindu-Bhuddism and Islam were probably alternative, not mutually exclusive, sources of supernatural power. For others, cultural boundaries were clear and one must choose between being Javanese or Muslim. The greatest of these identities were reconciled in the early seventeenth century by the greatest of Java's kings, Sultan Agung. But his successors were less comfortable with this reconciliation and thus found themselves opposed by committed Muslims. These successor kings turned to the Dutch East India Company for support, alliance with Christians further feeding rebellion. Not until a century after Agung was a reconciliation of Islam and the court aristocracy — the epitome of what it meant to be Javanese — again achieved.

The result was a society deeply committed to Islam, observant of its ritual life, but admitting indigenous, non-Islamic, spiritual forces to the faith. Thus, after 400 years, was achieved the "mystic synthesis" of this book's title.

Mobilizing Javanese, Dutch, and other sources, Professor Ricklefs presents a book that should be read by anyone interested in the history of Islam, of Indonesia, or, as he puts it — of "societies that move across what we think of as boundaries" — for they take us closer to the question of what we are as human beings.

275 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2006

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M.C. Ricklefs

25 books27 followers
Merle Calvin Ricklefs

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