QGD130007
QGD130007
QGD130007
QXGD6101
History, Society and Culture in Southeast Asia
Tittle
Discuss The Various Theories On
The Arrival Of Islam To Southeast Asia
Lecturer Name
Assoc. Prof. Dr. Jatswan S. Sidhu
Name
Farahwahida Bt Ariff
Matric Number
QGD130007
Date Of Submission
10 April 2014
Table Of Content
Content
Page
Table of Content
1.0
History
2.0
3.0
3.1
3.2
3.3
4.1
Trade activities
4.2
4.3
4.4
4.0
5.0
10
6.0
10
7.0
Conclusion
11
Reference
13
1.0
History
Before the arrival of Islam in Southeast Asia, the communities in the region are the
adherent of the Hinduism and Buddhism believed. The decline of Hindu and Buddhist
kingdoms such as Srivijaya and Majapahit from the fourteenth century stimulated the
rise of Islamic kingdoms in Sumatera, Malay Peninsula, and Java. Islam in Southeast
Asia has started and developed through marine trading activities. Because of the
strategic settlement and port in Southeast Asian, the urban areas like Aceh, Malacca,
Pasai, Brunei, Kerisik, Bangkok, Pattani and Makasar have facilitated and helped the
spread of Islam in the region.
By which Islam came to Southeast Asia, still been debated by the scholars. Although
there are several theories about the arrival of Islam in Southeast Asia, There are little
direct evidence available to support any particular theory. However, the arrival of Islam
in the Southeast Asia happened peacefully and followed the path of the trade networks
linking the region with South Asia, China and the Middle East, in which Muslim traders
and traveling preachers or holy men from these regions served as the main means of
transmission.1 The first confirmed of the existing a Muslim community in Southeast
Asia was came from the well-known traveler, Marco Polo, who stopped in north
Sumatra in 1292. Inscriptions and graves with Muslim dates was in others coastal areas
along the trade routes. A major development was the decision of the ruler of Melaka,
on the west coast of the Malay Peninsula, to adopt Islam around 1430.2
The time taken for conversion to Islam in the region also uncertain. Although there are
leftovers of archeological such as tombs which exist from earlier periods, Islam becomes
more clearly dominant in the region after 13th century, when the archeological found a
new kingdoms or sultanates along the important maritime trading routes. Most important
Islamic kingdom found in the Southeast Asia was the sultanate of Melaka, which was
founded around 1400 by a local prince who converted to Islam3. The sultanate was
established along the straits of Melaka and became the main and effective administration
entrepot for merchants traveling between India and China.
1 UC Regents
2
Barbara Watson Andaya
3
Sejarah Melayu compiled after 1500
Other important sultanates in Southeast Asia around the time of Melaka's ascendancy
included Aceh in northern Sumatra; Johor on the Malay Peninsula; the port cities of
Demak and Banten on the north coast of Java; the kingdom of Mataram in central Java;
and Ternate and Tidore in what is now Maluku. By the 16th century, Islam had also
spread into the Sulu archipelago, where an important sultanate was established, and the
island of Mindanao, in what is now the Philippines.4
2.0
In Southeast Asia, most of the areas spread Islam in peaceful and voluntary conversion
rather than conquest and force in spreading the faith. Almost all over the place in the
islands of the region, trading contacts paved the way for conversion. Muslim merchants
and sailors introduced the ideas and rituals of the new faith to local peoples and also
impressed on them how much of the known world had already been converted. Muslim
vessels also carried Sufis to various parts of Southeast Asia, where they were destined
to play a vital a role in spreading the religious. The first areas to be won to Islam in the
last decades of the 13th century were several small port centers on the northern coast of
Sumatra. From these ports, the religion spread in the following centuries across the Strait
of Malacca to Malaya.5
3.0
3.1
Other evidence used to support the theory that Islam came from Arab are the
converted of king and ruler. According to the Hikayat Raja-raja Pasai written
after 1350, Sheikh Ismail come from Makah by ship via Malabar to Pasai, where
he converted the ruler of the area, Merah Silau to Islam which latter adopted the
title of Malik al-Salih. About a century later, according to Sejarah Melayu
which has been compiled after 1500, the Malacca ruler was also converted to
5
Islam by a Sayyid Abd al-Aziz, an Arab from Jeddah6. The ruler, Parameswara,
adopted the name and title of Sultan Muhammad Shah.
Another
Malay
chronicle, the Hikayat Merong Mahawangsa, written after 1630, relates that
a certain Sheikh Abdullah Yamani came from Makkah and converted the
ruler, Phra Ong Mahawangsa, ministers and the people of Kedah to Islam. The
ruler adopted the name of Muzaffar Shah and title of Sultan. According
to the tarsilahs (silsila, genealogical links) of the Muslim kings of the
Sulu Sultanate in the Philippines, Islam was disseminated to this region in
the second half of the 8114th century by an Arab named Sharif Awliya Karim
al Makhdum, who came from Malacca in 782/1380. According to an
Acehnese chronicle, the progenitor of the sultans of the Sultanate of Aceh
was an Arab named Sheikh Jamal al-Alam, who was sent by the Ottoman Sultan
to convert the people of Aceh. Another Acehnese chronicle mentions an Arab
called Abdul Allah Arif who introduced Islam to the area in 506/1111.7
There are other additional evidence that has been used to show that the arrival of
Islam is directly from the Arabian. For example, most of the religious texts of
Malay language and writing style was influenced by the Arabic language in the
early stages such as the Hikayat Nabi Bercukur. There is no element of India
or China, which are identified in the book written by local scholars. This
evidence is further strengthened by demonstrating the influence of the Arabic
language and references of the Arabian Peninsula in local script in the
interpretation of the Quran, and the Hadith.
3.2
6
7
Sejarah Melayu
Azra
Inter-Arab trade with China indirectly creates relationships between China and
the Malay Archipelago. According to the Chinese people of Islam, that Muslim
Arabs have come to China during the reign of Emperor Tai Tsung dynasty Pang
around 627-650M.8
There are several theories that supports Islam coming to Southeast Asia region
from China. Emanual confident that Islam came from china, he provide such a
theory on the pretext that the Khan Fo or Canton (Guang Zhou) has been the
important business center that is well known among Muslim Arab traders since9th century AD. The movement of the traders was certainly occur and the Chinese
accept Islam. Continuous from this, China traders also conduct trade in Southeast
Asia which at the same time also presenting Islam to the people in the Southeast
Asia. This opinion was strengthened again with the support from S.Q. Fatimi
which further suggest that the mass transfer of Muslim traders who live in
Canton or Amoy to Southeast Asia take time around the year 876 AD.
Substantiate to this theory, in the year 878 AD, there was an uprising in Canton
which causes about 100 000 people were killed. Arab-Muslims then fled to
Kedah and Palembang. In the same entry Sung says that the advent of Islam to
Nature Malays through the South China Sea coast and carried by traders Muslim
traders from China in the early 977.9 The movement contributed to the spread of
Islam in the Southeast Asia.
Abdullah Ishak
Azhar Hj. Mad Aros
The similarities also can be seen in the used of China tiles, walls, stairs and a
pool of water in the mosque as well as the influence of red and yellow color on
the wooden doors and windows of the mosque.
3.3
Both tombstone has a physical similarities with gravestones in Gujarat. This led
to the conclusion that Islam reached the Southeast Asia in the early nineteenth
century and originated from Gujarat. This study was strongly supported by R.A.
Kern, W.F. Stutterheim and J. Gonda that Islam in the archipelago comes from
Gujarat. But this theory has a weakness for the establishment of kingdom of
Pasai in 1042M, Gujarat has not accepted Islam.11 Conversely, according to SQ
Fatimi, the arrival of Islam in the region was come from Bengal Coromandel.
Advent of Islam is done by the merchants from there. Bengal early Islam from
Gujarat and Malabar. Then, of course, the process of Islamization was done by
the province earlier this Islam. This opinion then was supported by the Arnold
in his book, The Muslim World. According to him, the trader of Bengal was
Shafie sect which is same sect in Southeast Asia.
10
11
S.M.N. al-Attas, 1972, Islam dalam Sejarah dan Kebudayaan Melayu Cited by Hazriey
4.0
4.1
Trade activities
Main factor contribute to the spread of Islam is through trade activities by Arab
traders, Chinese and Indians who have long established a major trading port in
Southeast Asia. Beside a good relationships with local merchants, the purity and
behavior of Muslim merchants attract local people to mix with them. The traders
also set up a center for discussion about Islam around the village. Because of
their honesty and integrity, many of them has been awarded the position of Shah
Bandar.
4.2
4.3
4.4
Missionaries, preachers, and scholars sent to teach them about Islam. The
kingdom of Johor-Riau has sought recapture Malacca from the Portuguese in
order to avoid the Malacca to the spread of Christianity. At the time of Sultan
Iskandar Muda Mahkota Alam, Acheh be a powerful palce in Southeast Asia and
has been known as the Serambi Makah. King of Pattani, King Phaya Tu Nakpa
have embraced Islam and used Sultan Mahmud Shah as his name. Islam also
established in Brunei through its role as an important trade center in Borneo.
There also the evidence discovery of the tombstone in Champa in 1039M.
5.0
Population
Muslim
Population
Brunei Darussalam
415,717
67%
278,530
Cambodia
15,205, 539
4% (est.)
608,622
Indonesia
251,160,124
88%
221,020,909
Laos
6,981,166
1%
69,811
Malaysia
29,628,392
60%
17,777,035
Myanmar
55,167,330
15% (Est.)
8,275,099
Philippines
105,720,644
10% (Est.)
10,572,064
Singapore
5,460,302
16%
873,648
Thailand
67,448,120
10%
6,744,812
10
Vietnam
92,477,857
0.1% (Est.)
92,478
629,665,191
42%
266,313,008
Total muslim
population in
southeast asia
Table 1. Muslim Population In Southeast Asia
Source : CIA Factbook & www.islamicpopulation.com
6.0
Conclusion
Before the arrival of Islam in Southeast Asia, the communities in the region are the
adherent of the Hinduism and Buddhism believed. The arrival of Islam in the Southeast
Asia happened peacefully and followed the path of the trade networks linking the region
with South Asia, China and the Middle East. There is no exact theory to prove the date
of the arrival of Islam as well as the first to accept Islam in the Southeast Asia region,
scholar agreed that there are three theories advent of Islam in the Southeast Asia, which
are Islam is directly from the Arabian, Islam came from china and also Islam first came
from India. However, historians such as Snouck Hugronje, Syed Muhammad Naquib
al -Attas, and many more suggest that islam came to southeast asia is around 7th and
8th century and it was spread by the missionaries when the trading activity is carried
out.
Theory Islam came to Southeast Asia is directly from Arab was state by Sir John
Cramford which was support by Professor Syed Muhammad Naquib al-Attas. There are
a lot of evidence has been used to support the theory such as the existing of Muslim
village in 7th AD in Java, the converted of ruler and the influence of language and writing
style in the local literature.
Second theory accept by the scholar is Islam came to the Southeast Asia from China.
Theory state by Emanuel Gadinho Eredia and SQ Fatimi was support by the movement
of people and also the founding of inscription stone in Terengganu. Other evidence used
to support the theory was the common elements of Chinese architecture with local
architectural elements in the archipelago.
11
Lastly, theory Islam came from India was state by Snouck Hurgronje. Islam reached
Southeast Asia by the fourteenth century via the Indian subcontinent, edging from
Sumatra, in present-day Indonesia, onward: Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei, Singapore,
parts of the Philippines, and Thailand. Muslim minorities can now be found in every
state in the region. Southeast Asias 206 million Muslims represent 18 per cent of the
global total.12
Nowadays, Islam is most widely practiced religion in Southeast Asia with nearly half of
the region population adhere the religious. The theory Islam came to Southeast Asia is
directly from of Arabia as the first origin was maintained by Malaysia and Indonesian
scholars in a conference in 1963 which has concluding that according to sources which
they had, Islam entered for the first time in Indonesia in 7th century and start to emerged
in 15th to 18th century.
12
Greg Fealy, Islam in Southeast Asia: Domestic Pietism, Diplomacy and Security
12
Reference
13