How Afghans define themselves in relation to Islam

The Islamic institutions of shari'at (law, in the keeping of 'ulama or religious scholar), tariqat (spiritual exemplars, often Sufi), and qawm (tribe, and more generally relations of codescent) and their particular configuration among Ghilzai/Ghiljai tribesmen in eastern Afghanistan are th...

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Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Anderson, Jon W. (Auteur)
Type de support: Imprimé Article
Langue:Anglais
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Publié: Institute of International Studies, University of Californiarnia 1984
Dans: Revolutions & rebellions in Afghanistan
Année: 1984, Pages: 266-287
Sujets non-standardisés:B Afghanistan Volksgruppe / Ethnische Bevölkerungsgruppe Islam
B Groupe ethnique
B Afghanistan
B Islam
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Résumé:The Islamic institutions of shari'at (law, in the keeping of 'ulama or religious scholar), tariqat (spiritual exemplars, often Sufi), and qawm (tribe, and more generally relations of codescent) and their particular configuration among Ghilzai/Ghiljai tribesmen in eastern Afghanistan are the subjects of this study. Ghilzai and their subdivisions in the region between Kabul and Kandahar are a portion of the population of southern Afghanistan and western Pakistan who are the locally called "Afghans". (DÜI-Asd)
ISBN:0877251576
Contient:In: Revolutions & rebellions in Afghanistan