Who Killed Liberal Islam?

by Hasan Suroor

  • Category Non-Fiction
  • Format Hardcover
  • Imprint Rupa
  • Price 595
  1. ISBN: 978-93-5333-593-9
  2. Pages: 256 pages
  3. Date: 1st August 2019

ABOUT THIS BOOK

Provocative, insightful, and passionately argued, this book attempts to bring some perspective
to an increasingly polarized debate on the crisis of liberalism among Indian Muslims. It raises
some profound issues at the heart of the crisis fuelled on the one hand by the growing influence of Wahhabism on Indian Islam—and on the other, by the rise of aggressive right-wing Hindu nationalism which has alienated even moderate Muslims.
The book takes head-on the fundamental question: Is liberalism and Islam compatible or mutually exclusive? In doing so, it examines the way Islam is being preached and practiced both in India and abroad, to find answers to such niggling questions as: Who is a ‘good Muslim’? What constitutes the Muslim identity? Why do Muslims across the world remain silent instead of raising their voice for reform of regressive practices such as stoning?
The decline of liberal Islam in India, it argues, flows from the wider crisis in Islam globally.
Upholding the syncretic ‘Ganga-Jamni tehzeeb’ that characterized Indian Islam, it tries to bring
back the emphasis on liberal values of acceptance and inclusivity. It also dissuades secularists against trying to push through sweeping reforms in India before the community is ready for it, warning of a possible hardline backlash as in Turkey and Iran.
Who Killed Liberal Islam? offers a much-needed corrective to the self-serving narratives on both
sides of a divisive debate, and seeks to help concentrate minds on finding a way through the crisis.

AUTHOR OF THE BOOK

Hasan Suroor is a journalist and writer. A former Press Fellow and Visiting Fellow of Wolfson
College, Cambridge University, he is a well-known name in India and abroad.
During a career spanning over four decades, Suroor has been the UK correspondent at The Hindu till recently. He has written extensively for Indian and international publications on issues relating to Muslims and the crisis in global Islam.
His previous publications include India’s Muslim Spring: Why Is Nobody Talking About It? (2014),
and Making Sense of Modi’s India (2016).
He divides his time between London and Delhi.