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Waz Mahfil

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(Redirected from Tafsir-ul-Quran Mahfil)
Muslim scholar doing waz at a mahfil in 2024.

Waz Mahfil (alias: Waz, or Tafsir-ul-Quran Mahfil) is a traditional Islamic preaching event in Bangladesh that combines the Arabic words 'waz', meaning "giving advice", and 'mahfil', meaning "gathering". It is a gathering of Muslim devotees and common listeners for sermons on Islam, has long been one of the primary means of preaching Islam in Bangladesh. Waz Mahfils are typically held in open spaces, such as playgrounds, paddy fields, street corners, or public grounds, and usually last from evening until midnight.[1][2][3] It is the most popular medium of discussing teachings of Islam and Tafsir in the subcontinent especially in Bangladesh. However, apart from preaching Islam through Waz Mahfil, various political, social and contemporary issues of the country are also discussed here.[4][5][6] Ibrahim Ali Tashna is regarded as the founder of Waz Mahfil(previously known as Islamic Jalsa) in the country. In 1906, he organized Islamic Jalsa or Waz Mahfil in the open ground to spread Islamic knowledge among the common people. Thousands of people from far and wide used to attend the event he introduced. The news of this new type of event spread quickly in Sylhet and Assam region as a result, Waz Mahfil started being organized in different places.

Introduction

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Muslims attending Waz Mahfil in Lakshmipur 24 January 2020.

Mahfil has long been one of the primary means of preaching Islam in Bangladesh. Waz is originally an Arabic word meaning “giving advice” on what to do and what not to do about Islamic culture and practices, while the Arabic word Mahfil denotes assembly, gathering, meeting, or congregation. Waz Mahfil is usually held in tents erected in the open space, either in playgrounds or paddy fields after harvest in rural areas or at street corners and public grounds in cities, especially during winter. It usually begins in the evening and continues until midnight.[1][2][3] Several speakers, who are usually called Mufassir (an Arabic term meaning somebody who can authoritatively interpret the Qur'an) or Ulama, speak one after the other. The chief speaker for the day speaks last. The speakers are seated, together with guests of honors from socio-political leadership, on a slightly elevated stage. The male congregation assembles on the ground in front of the stage, which is covered with mats made out of bamboo, cotton, or rarely, straw. The female congregation is kept in different tents separated by a curtain from the male congregation. The size of the audience varies, depending on the popularity of the speakers, from several hundred to hundreds of thousands.[7]

History

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Waz has a long history in Islamic culture. Muhammad used to do Waz in front of his companions and ever since it has been a culture in Muslim societies around the world to spread Islamic education.[8][9] Waz Mahfil became a “regular feature of Muslim social life" in the late nineteenth century in the Indian subcontinent, particularly in Bengali Muslim society.[8] Waz Mahfil a peaceful religious assembly or meeting as opposed to the gathering or meeting called bahas, where a fierce debate is held between two or more groups on a contentious religious issue. In the late nineteenth century, Waz Mahfil was a significant break with the tradition of bahas.[8] The Waz Mahfil became popular in the late nineteenth century in the Bengal and played an effective medium of communication with the masses in rural areas.[8] Even the politicians joined the campaign to use this unique medium of mass communication.[8]

Muslim scholar doing waz in a mahfil.

Since the early 1980s, Waz Mahfil has become a forum of commentary on current affairs and thus more centered on ideology than on theology.[7] Initially, such congregations were usually organized by various mosques, madrasahs, and other religious institutions, like orphanages run by Islamic groups, ostensibly to raise funds for the particular institutions. But in the 1990s, various socio-Islamic organizations floated in the country organized such Waz Mahfil once a year, preferably during the winter.[7] The attendees of a Waz Mahfil are stimulated by the cultural construct of religion and these Waz Mahfil have emerged to be the most authoritative sources of the interpretation of Islam and its relevance in daily lives, creating an enormous influence of the medium on Bangladeshi culture and society.[7] Bangladesh's biggest Islam-based political party Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami's senior leader late Allama Delwar Hossain Sayeedi – a former parliamentarian was the most well-known speaker of Waz Mahfil in Bangladesh. He single-handedly transformed the nature of Waz Mahfil and gave it a socio-political significance in the 1980s and 1990s and through this medium helped popularize "political Islam" in Bangladesh.[7]

Waz Mahfil was not exclusively meant for the propagation of religious ideals, rather the medium used by the Islamic leaders, politicians, and social leaders to encourage modern education.[8] Waz Mahfil was considered as one kind of pedagogical theatre where preachers teach the audience through scenes and gestures.[10] While Waz Mahfil is a dominant feature in the Bangladeshi preaching landscape, the social meaning of Waz Mahfil in Bangladesh has gone far beyond the sermon.[10] as it is manipulated for outright political mobilization, with preachers seen seeking vote for particular parties and speaking against particular parties in Waz Mahfil in Bangladesh.[10]

Digitalization

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With the availability of the Internet, the video-sharing website YouTube has emerged as a key platform for sharing video-recorded Waz Mahfil in Bangladesh. Millions of Bengali-speaking people from across the geographical boundary watch the video-recorded Waz Mahfil on YouTube. They also interact with them either by sharing the video-recorded Waz Mahfil or commenting on the video on social media. Waz Mahfil is still physically held in public places. Either the organizers or the various groups video-record them and upload them in their own YouTube channels. Centering around this practice, numerous YouTube channels have floated in the digital space. While digital communications, the social media, in particular, have taken the center stage of the people’s everyday communications in Bangladesh like any other parts of the world, YouTube has emerged as a key platform for this socioreligious practice at a time when the practice of in-person Waz Mahfil is on the wane, thanks to multiple reasons including obstruction/non-cooperation from the government agencies ever since a secular government came to power a decade ago in Bangladesh in 2009.

Either the organizers of the Waz Mahfil or any other group in association with the organizer or the chief speaker of the Waz Mahfil video-record the lectures or preaching of the main speaker and publish it on YouTube immediately after the program. They upload old videos of Waz Mahfil too. Nowadays it's been the practice of those YouTube channel owners that they go for live stream on YouTube with old Waz Mahfil too. It seems that both organized Islamic groups and/or random people are doing this practice frequently, either for spreading Islamic teachings as part of their religious duties and/or for earning some pennies out of this practice. Even if the number of attendees of the Waz Mahfil nowadays is a maximum of several thousand as evidenced in the uploaded Waz Mahfil videos, the recorded preaching of the same Waz Mahfil are viewed by millions of people over some time.[11]

References

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  1. ^ a b গনী, শাঈখ মুহাম্মাদ উছমান (11 December 2015). "দাওয়াতের অন্যতম পথ ওয়াজ মাহফিল". Prothom Alo. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
  2. ^ a b প্রতিবেদক, নিজস্ব. "কোরআন ও হাদিসে ওয়াজ মাহফিল : প্রেক্ষিত আমাদের সমাজ". DailyInqilabOnline (in Bengali). Retrieved 2022-11-28.
  3. ^ a b "শান্তির বাণী ছড়িয়ে দিন ওয়াজ মাহফিল থেকে". www.jugantor.com. Retrieved 2022-11-28.
  4. ^ "ওয়াজ মাহফিলের উপকারিতা". Barta24. Retrieved 2022-11-28.
  5. ^ "ওয়াজ মাহফিল: রাজনৈতিক আর বিদ্বেষমূলক বয়ান ঠেকাতে নির্দেশনা আর যা বলছে বক্তারা". বিবিসি বাংলা (in Bengali). 2022-11-25. Retrieved 2022-11-28.
  6. ^ "ওয়াজ মাহফিলের অনুমতি দিতে 'প্রশাসনের কড়াকড়ির' অভিযোগ". বিবিসি বাংলা (in Bengali). Retrieved 2022-11-28.
  7. ^ a b c d e Riaz, Ali (2010). Political Islam and Governance in Bangladesh (1st ed.). Routledge. pp. 51–144. ISBN 9780203845301.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Ahmed, Rafiuddin (1981). The Bengal Muslims, 1871-1906: A Quest for Identity. Oxford University Press. pp. 101–104. ISBN 9780195612608.
  9. ^ Hirschkind, Charles (July 1, 2009). The Ethical Soundscape: Cassette Sermons and Islamic Counterpublics. Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231138192.
  10. ^ a b c Stille, Max (May 14, 2020). Islamic Sermons and Public Piety in Bangladesh: The Poetics of Popular Preaching (1st ed.). Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 29–56. ISBN 9781838606008.
  11. ^ Ahmed, Abu Taib (January 10, 2024). "Digitalizing Religious Preaching: YouTube as a place for traditional Islamic preaching Waz Mahfil". AMCAP Journal of Media and Communication Studies (AMCAP-JMCS). 4 (1): 3.