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Frontier of Faith: Islam in the Indo-Afghan Borderland

Sana Haroon

January, 2008
Cloth, 320 pages,
ISBN: 978-0-231-70013-9
$34.50

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Frontier of Faith examines the history of Islam-especially that of local mullahs, or Muslim clerics-in the North-West Frontier. A largely autonomous zone straddling the boundary of Pakistan and Afghanistan, the Tribal Areas was established as a strategic buffer zone for British India, and the resulting autonomy allowed local mullahs to assume roles of tremendous power. After Partition in 1947, the Tribal Areas maintained its status as an autonomous region, and for the next fifty years the mullahs supported armed mobilizations in exchange for protection of their vested interests in regional freedom. Consequently the Frontier has become the hinterland of successive, contradictory jihads in support of Pashtun ethnicism, anti-colonial nationalism, Pakistani territorialism, religious revivalism, Afghan anti-Soviet resistance, and anti-Americanism. Considering this territory is said to be the current hiding place of Osama bin Laden, there couldn't be a better time for a sourcebook detailing the intricacies of the Pakistan-Afghanistan borderlands today and the function of the mullahs and their allies.

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About the Author

Sana Haroon received her BA from Yale University and her Ph.D. from the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. She was awarded the Isobel Thornley fellowship and the Past and Present postdoctoral fellowship at the Institute of Historical Research, Senate House, and her current research interests focus on the rise and institutionalization of Deobandi Islam in the madrassas of northwest Pakistan.

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