Islam and State-Building in a Tribal Society Afghanistan: 1880—1901
In: Modern Asian studies, Band 12, Heft 2, S. 269-284
ISSN: 1469-8099
The foundation of a State in Afghanistan by the Pashtun tribesmen in 1747 posed the question of a religious policy. The issue was not that of proselytism. Most of the Afghans did adhere to one or another form of Islam and the followers of other creeds did not even constitute one percent of the population. But the Islam adhered to by the tribesmen did not have Shari'a (Islamic Law) as its judicial basis and no religious tradition enforced allegiance to monarchs.