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The Embers of Allah PDF

263 Pages·2014·14.56 MB·English
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Durham E-Theses The Embers of Allah: cosmologies, knowledge, and relations in the mountains of central Bosnia HENIG, DAVID How to cite: HENIG, DAVID (2011) The Embers of Allah: cosmologies, knowledge, and relations in the mountains of central Bosnia, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/915/ Use policy Thefull-textmaybeusedand/orreproduced,andgiventothirdpartiesinanyformatormedium,withoutpriorpermissionor charge,forpersonalresearchorstudy,educational,ornot-for-pro(cid:28)tpurposesprovidedthat: • afullbibliographicreferenceismadetotheoriginalsource • alinkismadetothemetadatarecordinDurhamE-Theses • thefull-textisnotchangedinanyway Thefull-textmustnotbesoldinanyformatormediumwithouttheformalpermissionofthecopyrightholders. PleaseconsultthefullDurhamE-Thesespolicyforfurtherdetails. AcademicSupportO(cid:30)ce,DurhamUniversity,UniversityO(cid:30)ce,OldElvet,DurhamDH13HP e-mail: [email protected]: +4401913346107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk 2 Abstract The Embers of Allah: cosmologies, knowledge, and relations in the mountains of central Bosnia This thesis is a study of living Islam and Muslims’ lifeworlds in the margins of the postsocialist world, in the mountains of central Bosnia. Its main scope is an analysis of the scales of relatedness and the domains of knowledge traditions that assemble Muslims’ lifeworlds as tangible, coherent and meaningful social forms. In doing so, the thesis draws inspiration from the Barthian anthropology of knowledge to shed light on ‘what a person employs to interpret and act on the world’. A knowledge tradition, here understood as a local cosmology, is a product of multiple persons and relations that create the context in which knowledge and bodies of knowledge are produced and sustained. Therefore, I argue that it is a knowledge tradition that informs a ‘meaningful agency’ in the flow of everyday sociality and that continues to be Islam in the Bosnian mountains. In particular, I suggest that Muslim life in the mountains is lived along four complementary meaningful contexts, that is relatedness, spatiality, temporality and ritual. Relatedness embraces multifaceted processes of ‘living together’ that (re)fabricate, relate and extend Muslim persons through sharing of substances, memories, identity and divinity (chapters 3 and 4). The flow of everyday sociality between persons who ‘live in proximity’ is tapestried from day-to-day forms of exchange such as hospitality, intimacy and mutuality between neighbours, and enacted within two overlapping spheres, that is immediate (komšiluk) and extended neighbourhood (mahala) (chapters 5 and 6). The lifeworlds of Muslims as well as the flow of the everyday in the mountains are orchestrated and punctuated by particular rhythms embracing multiple forms of time reckoning and calendars, and orchestrating various agricultural and religious activities and practices (chapter 7). Ritual is a mode of appropriation of personal or communal good luck, fortune, blessing and well-being (chapters 6, 7 and 8), and cuts across the spheres of intimacy and proximity and embraces Muslims’ lifeworlds, well-being of the house, the land and the persons with the sacred landscape and divinity. Throughout the thesis I argue that our research in the post-Yugoslav regions needs to take into account local knowledge traditions as a serious matter of concern, and situate the war atrocities or postsocialist transformations within the larger analytical scales entwining cultural continuities and historicities with social, political and economic breakdowns. In doing so, I show that the ways Bosnian Muslims value and conceive of being a Muslim are primarily focused on cultural creativity, knowledge, morality and domains that inform, shape and (re)create their lifeworlds and cosmologies, and through which Bosnian Muslims exchange, communicate, validate and understand their religious experiences and imagination in the context of turbulent social, economic and political transformations. 1 The Embers of Allah: cosmologies, knowledge, and relations in the mountains of central Bosnia David Henig A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Anthropology Department of Anthropology Durham University Dr Stephen M. Lyon, Supervisor Dr Iain R. Edgar, Supervisor 2011 2 Table of Contents List of illustrations ............................................................................ 7 Acknowledgement ............................................................................ 11 Chapter One Introduction ...................................................................................... 14 The Gift of the night .................................................................................. 14 The Argument ............................................................................................ 17 Bosnia, marginality and the work of imagination ...................................... 18 Bosnia and history: a bird’s eye view .......................................................... 20 Fin de l’époque?: Bosnia and a postsocialist perspective ................................ 25 The postsocialist religious question and Bosnia ......................................... 28 Living Islam in Bosnia ................................................................................ 30 Plan of thesis .............................................................................................. 31 Chapter Two Methodological Framework ................................................................... 33 Region and fieldwork ................................................................................. 34 Constructing the field site ........................................................................... 36 The region: authenticity and tradition ....................................................... 37 The village .................................................................................................. 38 The alchemists of the soul: dervishes ......................................................... 40 Methods and methodology ........................................................................ 40 Fieldwork and reflexivity ............................................................................ 46 Positionality ................................................................................................ 46 Historicity ................................................................................................... 47 Conclusion .................................................................................................. 48 3 Chapter Three ‘Household retreated?’: Practice and reassessment of the domestic domain ...................................................................................................... 49 Zadruga reassessed ....................................................................................... 50 Joint family household reassessed and contextualised ................................ 54 The kuća in the mountains of central Bosnia ............................................. 58 The house as economy: Bosnian kuća embedded 60 Fission and reproduction of the house in Brdo: an outline of recurrent processes and emergence of social forms ................................................... 65 Joint households and the dynamics of fission ............................................. 65 A biography of the house: case study of the dynamics of the fission ........ 69 Inheritance and marriage patterns ............................................................. 72 The land and the kuća as a process ............................................................ 75 Conclusion .................................................................................................. 76 Chapter Four About the house: towards a general cosmology of life ..................... 78 The kuća in the mountains ......................................................................... 80 The gender of the house: inner experience ............................................... 84 Socialisation ................................................................................................ 91 Names, persons and substance ................................................................... 94 Pedagogies of muslimness .......................................................................... 97 The land(scape) and the making of relatedness ......................................... 104 The genealogy of the land ......................................................................... 104 The polytropic character of the land and its value(s) ................................. 106 Extended relatedness: of biography and agency of trees ........................... 111 Conclusion .................................................................................................. 114 Chapter Five Beyond the house: komšiluk reassessed ............................................... 116 Komšiluk disputed ........................................................................................ 118 Komšiluk in the mountains of central Bosnia .............................................. 124 4 The rhythms of komšiluk: hospitality, guesthood and compassion .............. 126 Conclusion .................................................................................................. 136 Chapter Six Halal money: mahala and spheres of moral economy ....................... 138 Mahala: an overview ................................................................................... 139 Mahala in the mountains of central Bosnia ................................................ 141 Communal participation: beyond mahala ................................................... 143 Cooperation and mutuality: mahala as multiplied spheres of moral 144 economy ..................................................................................................... Komšiluk and cooperation ............................................................................ 145 Mahala ......................................................................................................... 152 Halal money and the morality of exchange ............................................... 155 Halal exchange ........................................................................................... 157 Moral economy and ritual: kurban bajram .................................................... 160 Kurban bajram in the mountains of central Bosnia ...................................... 161 The rhythms of kurban bajram in Brdo ........................................................ 163 The power of exchange networks .............................................................. 170 Conclusion .................................................................................................. 174 Chapter Seven The rhythms of Islam ............................................................................. 176 Time and anthropology ............................................................................. 177 Seasonal morphologies: vegetative cycles and agricultural management .. 179 Winter period ............................................................................................. 180 Summer period .......................................................................................... 185 Morphology of the summer period: ritual calendar .................................. 186 Islamic rhythms .......................................................................................... 190 Everyday rhythms ....................................................................................... 191 The life cycle rhythms ................................................................................ 195 Religious rhythms ....................................................................................... 199 5 Conclusion .................................................................................................. 206 Chapter Eight Sacred landscapes contested .................................................................. 208 Holy sites in the Balkans: a theoretical overview ........................................ 210 Pilgrimage, contests and anthropology ...................................................... 213 Sacred landscape in Bosnia ........................................................................ 214 Karići ......................................................................................................... 215 Karići as a spiritual cradle .......................................................................... 220 The pilgrimage ........................................................................................... 221 Sacred sites in the making: contested meanings ......................................... 222 Prayers for rain: conversations and discontent in the mountains ............... 228 Recasting the sacred landscape? ................................................................. 231 Instead of conclusion: holy sites and appropriations of fortune ................ 237 Conclusion ........................................................................................ 240 Bibliography ............................................................................................. 246 6 List of illustrations Map 2.1 Map of the region where the fieldwork was conducted ..................................... 36 Picture 2.1 The Stećak gravestone in the village/The valley ............................................. 38 Picture 2.2 Collecting oral histories .................................................................................. 43 Picture 3.1 Stone markers/Fences .................................................................................... 58 Picture 3.2 Shifts in the architecture and materiality of the brick houses/Old wooden sheep sheds are still in use ................................................................................................. 60 Picture 3.3 Workers on strike (March 2009) ..................................................................... 61 Figure 3.1 The gendered economic model of ‘milked money’ ........................................ 64 Map 3.1 Kinship and residence: agnatic groups and the houses in the Upper mahala ..... 67 Figure 3.2 Overview of the house units in the Upper mahala ........................................... 67 Figure 3.3 A case study of spatio-agnatic clustering ......................................................... 69 Figure 3.4 Formalised processes of land distribution, inheritance and marriage 74 procedures ......................................................................................................................... Figure 3.5 Marriages in the village - overview .................................................................. 74 Figure 3.6 The developmental dynamics of Zahid’s kuća ................................................ 76 Picture 4.1 Locally made ćilim and the house symbolism ................................................. 82 Picture 4.2 A shelf of purity ............................................................................................. 83 Picture 4.3 Freshly made bread ........................................................................................ 85 Figure 4.1 Name giving practice: ancestor and living persons ......................................... 95 Picture 4.4 Situated learning in practice .......................................................................... 97 Picture 4.5 The gender of the house: a Muslim peasant family in the 1950s .................. 99 Picture 4.6 Ramadan in the village mosque: mekteb .......................................................... 101 Picture 4.7 Selim’s calligraphic practice .......................................................................... 103 Figure 4.2 A genealogy of the land .................................................................................. 105 Map 5.1 The boundaries of komšiluk ................................................................................ 125 Picture 5.1 Sijelo ................................................................................................................ 129 Picture 5.2 Dženaza (funeral) unites Muslims from surrounding villages .......................... 133 Map 6.1 Spatial and symbolic boundaries of the village mahale ....................................... 142 Picture 6.1 Akcija in Brdo .................................................................................................. 144 7 Picture 6.2 Moba: cooperative work and unanimous help between neighbours .............. 147 Figure 6.1 Hay making actor-by-actor data matrix .......................................................... 147 Figure 6.2 Network model of mutual help with the komšiluk .............................................. 148 Figure 6.3 Actor-by-actor data matrix of interactions within the komšiluk ........................ 149 Figure 6.4 A network model of the komšiluk ...................................................................... 151 Figure 6.5 A network model of interactions within mahala ................................................. 153 Picture 6.3 Exchange of help/Cooperation ..................................................................... 154 Figure 6.6 Generalised scheme of the halal exchange ...................................................... 158 Picture 6.4 Hospitality in the making/Barjam namaz (prayer) ........................................... 164 Picture 6.5 Rams, sacrifice and the poetics of manhood ................................................. 165 Picture 6.6 The practice of sacrifice ................................................................................. 165 Picture 6.7 The practice of sacrifice II. ............................................................................ 166 Picture 6.8 Implicit meanings embodied .......................................................................... 166 Picture 6.9 Cutting kurbani ................................................................................................ 169 Figure 7.1 Winter period according to Islamic calendar .................................................. 182 Figure 7.2 Winter period summarised .............................................................................. 184 Figure 7.3 Morphology of summer season ...................................................................... 188 Figure 7.4 Summer period summarised ........................................................................... 189 Picture 7.1 Islamic healer advertising her service in a local magazine ............................. 198 Picture 8.1 Šehitluci/Kurban kamen ...................................................................................... 215 Picture 8.2 Karići today ..................................................................................................... 217 Picture 8.3 Karići in the 1960s .......................................................................................... 218 Picture 8.4 Anti-Ajvatovica graffiti ................................................................................... 220 Picture 8.5 Presentation of a Turkish folklore group that performed during Ajvatovica in 2009 .............................................................................................................................. 224 Picture 8.6 Bosnian and Turkish Islamic elites in local newspapers ................................. 235 Picture 8.7 A mosque built thanks to a donation from the United Arab Emirates .......... 236 Picture 8.8 Hajdar-dede Karić’s tomb .............................................................................. 238 8

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relations in the mountains of central Bosnia. This thesis is a study of living Islam and Muslims' lifeworlds in the margins of the postsocialist world, in the mountains of central Bosnia. Its main . The alchemists of the soul: dervishes .
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