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Religious Conversion as a ‘Winding Pathway’: Experience of Balik-Islam and Muslim–Christian Relations in the Southern Philippines

ABSTRACT Within the context of Islamic revival and the influx of overseas workers, the number of Christian converts to Islam in the Philippines, called ‘Balik-Islam’, has increased since the 1970s. This study focuses on Balik-Islam individuals’ everyday religious practices and explores Muslim–Christian relations in the southern Philippines. Based on ethnographic fieldwork, it reveals that Balik-Islam people viewed conversion from Christianity not as a detached experience but as a continuous experience in the ‘dalan’ (pathway) of seeking a true religion, and they continued to engage in a daily exchange of information with other religions. This perception was formed by observing the interaction between leaders and participants in daʿwa (missionary activities) seminars held by the Balik-Islam organization. This article posits that religious practices and the sense of belonging to Islam or Christianity have fluctuated among Balik-Islam people because they have faced difficulties in practising Islam due to various factors, including adaptation to different life habits and relations with Christian family members. Thus, the conversion experience in Balik-Islam is a continuous but winding path. It embodies alternative interreligious relations that are distinct from ecumenical coexistence, which sees religious boundaries as evident, or coexistence through hybrid and creative rituals.

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Ireland and Islam: James O’Kinealy and Wahhabism in India

ABSTRACT The purpose of this article is to explore James O’Kinealy’s (1838–1903) contribution to scholarship around Islamic movements in India, while a functionary of the Indian Civil Service (ICS) from 1862 to 1899. It seeks to recover from obscurity a little-known personage and his involvement in significant episodes in the history of Islam and British colonialism in India. O’Kinealy’s situatedness as an Irish Catholic in the ICS, and how this influenced his approach to Islam and his study of Wahhabism, will be closely examined. Serving the same imperial system in India that prevailed in Ireland presents a complex and entangled history. O’Kinealy’s background, it will be argued, influenced his activities as a senior official in the colonial administration. His writings (and translations), directed towards preserving the status quo against the fear of Muslim revolt, evidence a nuanced perspective when set against that of his ‘Anglicist’ contemporaries. Juxtaposing his approach and attitudes against that of the influential colonialist and scholar, W.W. Hunter (d.1900), will highlight his discreet approach and serve to foreground the intricate nature of this history. Though his publications are few, O’Kinealy’s work is unique, and represents one of the earliest engagements with the Wahhabi movement in the English language.

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