2019年度第3回白山人類学研究会
The Expansion of Tabligh Jama'ah and its Influence on the Religious Belief of Bajo People

Dr. Benny Baskara(Lecturer, Department of Anthropology, Halu Oleo University, Kendari, Indonesia / Visiting Scholar, Center for Southeast Asian Studie, Kyoto University)

Commentator: Makibi Nakano(Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto Univiersity)

□日時 2019年7月29日(月)18:15〜
□場所 東洋大学白山キャンパス 8305教室(8号館3階)
       (地下鉄東京メトロ本駒込駅、または都営地下鉄白山駅)
       http://www.toyo.ac.jp/access/hakusan_j.html        
□Abstract
 Tabligh Jama’ah is a sect of Islam originating in India which has rapidly spread and developed in Southeast Asia, including Indonesia. The spread of the Tabligh Jama’ah in Indonesia even already reach remote areas to indigenous people and marginalized ethnic groups, which one of them is the Bajo people. Therefore, this paper wants to analyze the expansion of Tabligh Jama’ah movement to the Bajo people and its impact to their religious belief.
   The Bajo people are the most distantly dispersed and widespread indigenous ethnic group in Southeast Asia, known widely as “sea people” because of their marine based livelihoods. Because of their fluid identity and vast mobility, their socio-cultural sphere is characterized by syncretism and symbiosis. This is true also for Bajo religious belief, which developed as a form of syncretism and symbiosis between their indigenous beliefs and Islamic belief.
   The impact of the Bajo people’s acceptance to the Tabligh Jamaah’s teaching mainly is the change in their religious belief, which is more predominantly by Tabligh Jamaah’s teachings, and the syncretism and symbiosis in their indigenous belief is no longer appear. The life of the Bajo people also becomes more fatalists because of the influence from the Tabligh Jamaah’s teachings.







白山人類学研究会世話人
代表:松本誠一
運営委員: 山本須美子 長津一史 箕曲在弘 左地亮子 寺内大左
お問い合わせは、研究会事務局hakusanjinrui=gmail.com(=を@にかえてください) まで。
東洋大学社会学部社会文化システム学科 〒 112-8606 東京都文京区白山5-28-20 TEL 03-3945-7439 FAX 03-3945-7626
Copyright 2008 (c) Department of Socio-Cultural Studies, Toyo University.
All Rights Reserved. 無断転載を禁ず