Footprints in Time: Reminiscences of a Sindhi Matriarch

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$43.62 - $50.81
UPC:
9780195478907
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Hardcover
Publication Date:
7/22/2012
Author:
Ghulam Fatima Shaikh
Language:
english
Edition:
1

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Product Overview

Ghulam Fatima Shaikh's saga spans two continents and two centuries. She witnessed the most momentous events of history of the subcontinent and lived to tell the tale. She was born in the late nineteenth century as Nandini Kripalani, in a wealthy, traditional Hindu household. She witnessed the conversions of many members of her family to Islam and the consequent litigations. Fatima endured the frequent absences of her father, a distant but romantic figure, for whom she does not conceal a sneaking admiration. Later, after marriage, she followed her husband's trail into unknown lands where she faced financial constraints, the First World War, famine, sicknesses and dislocation, but most of all a yearning for her loved ones. She coped with all these tribulations with remarkable grit, and survived to narrate this saga, with remarkable clarity at the age of 75 before she died in 1981.

This memoir provides a first-hand account of what conversion from Hinduism to Islam meant in practice; and its impact on Sindhi society from the late nineteenth century onwards. It contains intriguing information about what it was like to be a family that spanned the Hindu-Muslim divide, and how individual members coped with the challenges and pressures generated by conversion taking place within its ranks.

Sindhi Muslims were caught up in the Khilafat agitation of the period spanning the First World War and its immediate aftermath. This memoir presents an intimate picture of how this could affect one family, to the extent that husband, wife, and children eventually left Sindh. Through the prism of the author's description of life in various parts of the Ottoman, stretching from Madinah to Adana as well as many other places, we gain a profound understanding of an ordinary life, albeit from the perspective of what was perhaps not an ordinary family. We gain a clearer sense of what the Ottoman Empire 'meant' to Muslims of the subcontinent and how far some of them were prepared to go to support its continued existence.

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