'People are God', Third World Internationalism and Chinese Muslims in the Making of the National Recognition in the 1950s
Yin, Z
Date: 26 March 2019
Article
Journal
Turkish Journal of Sociology
Publisher
Istanbul University Department of Sociology
Publisher DOI
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Abstract
This paper investigates the role of Islam, particularly the Chinese Muslim scholars’
participation in the nation-building of the People’s Republic of China. It also looks at the
political narrative of the CCP on Islam in the context of the Chinese revolution. Antiimperialism
and socialist construction were the two primary political ...
This paper investigates the role of Islam, particularly the Chinese Muslim scholars’
participation in the nation-building of the People’s Republic of China. It also looks at the
political narrative of the CCP on Islam in the context of the Chinese revolution. Antiimperialism
and socialist construction were the two primary political goals allowing people to
be politically engaged and consequently creating a common ground for recognition. Hence,
religion was considered as merely another form of ideology which needs to be incorporated
into the political mission leading toward human liberation. The internationalist support of the
anti-colonial struggles in the Arab World also played a crucial role in the formation of the
national recognition in the 1950s. The reports on the Chinese political support towards the Arab
world presented the Arab people as a unity with their revolutionary spirit rooted in Islamic
religious tradition and inspired by their recent history of being oppressed by colonialism.
Chinese
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