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Center Conversation, Number 28
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Muslims in Hindu Nationalist India
A Conversation with Asghar Ali Engineer and Paul R. Brass
By Timothy Samuel Shah
Posted: Friday, April 30, 2004


CENTER CONVERSATIONS


At a seminar held at the Ethics and Public Policy Center on January 20, 2004, two experts on religious conflict in South Asia discussed the possible impact of increasing religious militancy -- both Hindu and Muslim -- on the Indian democratic state. The speakers were the Indian scholar and activist Asghar Ali Engineer and the American scholar of Indian politics Paul R. Brass. Their remarks in the edited transcript that follows lead to a lively discussion with other participants. Moderator Timothy Samuel Shah is a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center specializing in South Asia. The seminar co-sponsor was INFEMIT, a network of Third World theologians and activists led by Vinay Samuel, and funding was generously provided by Fieldstead and Company.

To read this Center Conversation in PDF format, click the icon to the right.

Latest Publication
Center Conversations, Number 17
Hindu Nationalism vs. Islamic Jihad: Religious Militancy in South Asia
A Conversation with Cedric Prakash, Teesta Setalvad, Kamal Chenoy, Sumit Ganguly, Sunil Khilnani, and Jonah Blank

On June 10, 2002, the Ethics and Public Policy Center sponsored a conference in which six experts on South Asia discussed the impact of increasing religious militancy—Hindu as well as Islamic—on geopolitical stability and religious freedom in the subcontinent. Co-sponsoring the conference was INFEMIT, a network of Third World theologians and activists led by Dr. Vinay Samuel. In the edited transcript that follows, each of the six experts makes brief remarks. Then other conference participants join them in a lively discussion. Moderator Timothy Samuel Shah is a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center specializing in South Asia. 

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