Government perceptions of Cape Muslim exiles : 1652-1806

Bibliography: pages 79-84. === This essay examines how the Cape government thought and felt about certain prominent Muslims, exiled from present day Indonesia to that colony, in the period 1652 to 1806. It has both descriptive and analytic functions. Descriptively, it seeks to find out what these th...

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Main Author: Rafudeen, Mohammed Auwais
Other Authors: Tayob, Abdulkader
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17216
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-172162020-10-06T05:11:18Z Government perceptions of Cape Muslim exiles : 1652-1806 Rafudeen, Mohammed Auwais Tayob, Abdulkader Religious Studies Muslims - South Africa - History Free Blacks - South Africa - History Exiles - South Africa - History Bibliography: pages 79-84. This essay examines how the Cape government thought and felt about certain prominent Muslims, exiled from present day Indonesia to that colony, in the period 1652 to 1806. It has both descriptive and analytic functions. Descriptively, it seeks to find out what these thoughts and feelings were. Analytically, it seeks to explain why they came about. The essay contends that the way in which the exiles were perceived can only be understood by locating them in the wider Cape social, economic and political context. Accordingly, it describes elements of this context such as the Dutch colonial rationale, the Cape social structure, its culture and pertinent legal practices. Against this background, it then describes these perceptions. The description is general and specific. It examines perceptions of exiles in general by a study of the social class to which they belonged, namely the free blacks. It particularly focuses on the demography, the legal status and the economic position of this class. The final chapter of the essay is ties empirical backbone, being a specific and detailed examination of what the Cape government thought and felt about prominent individual exiles. As far as possible, it elicits all the evidence concerning these exiles, pertinent to the topic at hand, that is available in the prevailing historical literature. This essay's central thesis is that the exiles were peripheral to the concerns of the Cape government. Perceptions of individual exiles were nuanced and encompassed various attitudes, but at the core the exiles were not seen as important to their vital interests. The class to which the exiles belonged, the free blacks, were always at the demographic, legal, and economic margins of Cape society. The essay contends that the reason the exiles were peripheral in government perceptions was because of the general marginality of Muslims in the Cape context. They lacked numbers, and their role as a religious constituency was undermined by a society that subsumed such a constituency under various other concerns. The thesis is a departure from other studies on Cape Muslim history which this essay contends, tend to emphasise the "differentness" and centrality of the Muslim contribution. 2016-02-23T07:25:54Z 2016-02-23T07:25:54Z 1996 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17216 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Humanities Department of Religious Studies
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Religious Studies
Muslims - South Africa - History
Free Blacks - South Africa - History
Exiles - South Africa - History
spellingShingle Religious Studies
Muslims - South Africa - History
Free Blacks - South Africa - History
Exiles - South Africa - History
Rafudeen, Mohammed Auwais
Government perceptions of Cape Muslim exiles : 1652-1806
description Bibliography: pages 79-84. === This essay examines how the Cape government thought and felt about certain prominent Muslims, exiled from present day Indonesia to that colony, in the period 1652 to 1806. It has both descriptive and analytic functions. Descriptively, it seeks to find out what these thoughts and feelings were. Analytically, it seeks to explain why they came about. The essay contends that the way in which the exiles were perceived can only be understood by locating them in the wider Cape social, economic and political context. Accordingly, it describes elements of this context such as the Dutch colonial rationale, the Cape social structure, its culture and pertinent legal practices. Against this background, it then describes these perceptions. The description is general and specific. It examines perceptions of exiles in general by a study of the social class to which they belonged, namely the free blacks. It particularly focuses on the demography, the legal status and the economic position of this class. The final chapter of the essay is ties empirical backbone, being a specific and detailed examination of what the Cape government thought and felt about prominent individual exiles. As far as possible, it elicits all the evidence concerning these exiles, pertinent to the topic at hand, that is available in the prevailing historical literature. This essay's central thesis is that the exiles were peripheral to the concerns of the Cape government. Perceptions of individual exiles were nuanced and encompassed various attitudes, but at the core the exiles were not seen as important to their vital interests. The class to which the exiles belonged, the free blacks, were always at the demographic, legal, and economic margins of Cape society. The essay contends that the reason the exiles were peripheral in government perceptions was because of the general marginality of Muslims in the Cape context. They lacked numbers, and their role as a religious constituency was undermined by a society that subsumed such a constituency under various other concerns. The thesis is a departure from other studies on Cape Muslim history which this essay contends, tend to emphasise the "differentness" and centrality of the Muslim contribution.
author2 Tayob, Abdulkader
author_facet Tayob, Abdulkader
Rafudeen, Mohammed Auwais
author Rafudeen, Mohammed Auwais
author_sort Rafudeen, Mohammed Auwais
title Government perceptions of Cape Muslim exiles : 1652-1806
title_short Government perceptions of Cape Muslim exiles : 1652-1806
title_full Government perceptions of Cape Muslim exiles : 1652-1806
title_fullStr Government perceptions of Cape Muslim exiles : 1652-1806
title_full_unstemmed Government perceptions of Cape Muslim exiles : 1652-1806
title_sort government perceptions of cape muslim exiles : 1652-1806
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17216
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