Akhbare Islamia Explained

Akhbare Islamia
আখবারে এসলামীয়া
Editor:Naimuddin
Editor Title6:-->
Founder:Mahmud Ali Khan Panni
Firstdate:April 1884
Country:Bengal Presidency
Based:Tangail, Bengal Presidency, British Raj
Language:Bengali

Akhbare Islamia (Bengali: আখবারে এসলামীয়া||Islamic newspaper) was a late 19th-century Bengali-language magazine. It was published monthly, and funded by the Zamindars of Karatia in Tangail, in present-day Bangladesh. The magazine mainly discussed subjects relating to the Sharia (Islamic law), Islamic theology, biographies of Muslims, Islamic culture as well as contemporary social and religious issues.[1]

History

The Akhbare Islamia was founded in April 1884 by Hafez Mahmud Ali Khan Panni, the erstwhile zamindar (feudal lord) of Karatia. The magazine was edited by Mohammad Naimuddin, a Muslim theologian and poet. It was published until 1894 and restarted publication in April 1896 with a different format. However, it was permanently disbanded not long after.[1]

Content

The magazine was part of an Islamic revival in Bengal that promoted orthodox Islam and discouraged religious syncretism that was common among Bengali Muslims. The movement was fundamentalist in nature that discouraged secular books and music.[2] It had legal disputes with its contemporary The Ahmadi, a secular Muslim magazine, regarding the killing of cows and Hanafi-Lamazhabi dialogue.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Ahmed, Wakil. Akhbare Islamia.
  2. Book: Mahua Sarkar. Visible Histories, Disappearing Women: Producing Muslim Womanhood in Late Colonial Bengal . 2010. Duke University Press. 9780822389033. 99. en.
  3. Ahmed, Wakil. Ahmadi, The.