Islam in Punjab, India
Overview of the Role and Impact of Islam in Punjab, India
Islam is a minority religion in Punjab, India followed by 535,489 people constituting about 1.93 percent of the state population out of 27.7 million population as of 2011 census report.[ 1]
Islam has a strong historical presence in Punjab with many mosques , mausoleums and shrines. According to the 1941 census, Punjabi Muslims constituted approximately 38.4 percent of the population in the region that comprises the contemporary state of Punjab, India.[ a] With violence and religious cleansing accompanying the Partition of Punjab in 1947, the vast majority departed the region en masse , migrating westward to the region of Punjab that would fall on the western side of the Radcliffe Line , in the contemporary state of Punjab, Pakistan .[ 2]
In the current era, much of the Muslim population of Punjab consists of migrants from Uttar Pradesh , Jammu and Kashmir , Rajasthan , Delhi and Bihar etc.[ 3] The native Punjabi Muslims predominantly resides in Malerkotla district and Qadian town.[ 4]
History
Muslim Population in Punjab, India Year 1881 2,440,888 — 1901 2,898,114 +0.86% 1911 2,515,774 −1.40% 1921 2,686,598 +0.66% 1931 3,072,619 +1.35% 1941 3,748,410 +2.01% 1947 90,172 −46.27% 1951 110,160 +5.13% 1961 181,234 +5.10% 1971 252,688 +3.38% 1981 321,287 +2.43% 1991 390,077 +1.96% 2001 382,045 −0.21% 2011 535,489 +3.43% Source: Census of India [ b] [ c] [ d] [ e] [ f] [ a]
A photo of the Moorish Mosque in Kapurthala , India
Islam first arrived in the Punjab region following the conquest of Sindh by Muhammad bin Qasim in 712. The first permanent Muslim conquest of the Punjab was carried out by Mahmud Ghaznavi who made the whole of the Punjab a province of his empire with the headquarters at Lahore .
When the Ghaznavid Empire began to decline, the region was conquered by Muhammad Ghori . The conquest by Muhammad Ghori inaugurated a period of Muslim rule which lasted until the 18th century. The Mughals made most of East Punjab a part of the governorate of Sirhind .
The founder of the Ahmadiyya movement, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad , was born in Qadian, East Punjab in 1835.
According to the 1941 census, Muslims constituted approximately 38.4 percent of the population in the region that comprises the contemporary state of Punjab, India , numbering around 3.75 million persons.[ a] Following the Partition of Punjab , the population declined to 90,000 or 0.5% due to ethnic cleansing and large-scale mass migration of 3.66 million Muslims to Punjab, Pakistan in the violent events that have occurred during Partition .[ 14] [ 15]
Today, Muslims are scattered across East Punjab with small concentrations in the cities of Chandigarh , Hoshiarpur , Ludhiana , Malerkotla and Qadian . Malerkotla is the only municipality in Indian Punjab that has a Muslim majority.[ 16] The migrant Uttar Pradeshi Muslims and Bihari Muslims labourers living in industrial city of Ludhiana, Patiala and Jalandhar forms a large proportion of the Muslim population in the state.[ 17]
Geographical distribution
Colonial era
Muslims in the administrative divisions that compose the contemporary Punjab State, India region (1881–1941)
District or Princely State
1881[ 5] [ 6] [ 7]
1901[ 8] : 34
1911[ 9] : 27 [ 10] : 27
1921[ 11] : 29
1931[ 12] : 277
1941[ 13] : 42
Pop.
%
Pop.
%
Pop.
%
Pop.
%
Pop.
%
Pop.
%
Amritsar District
413,207
46.26%
474,976
46.39%
408,882
46.43%
423,724
45.59%
524,676
46.97%
657,695
46.52%
Jalandhar District
358,601
45.42%
421,011
45.88%
357,051
44.52%
366,586
44.57%
419,556
44.46%
509,804
45.23%
Patiala State
321,354
21.9%
357,334
22.38%
307,384
21.84%
330,341
22.03%
363,920
22.39%
436,539
22.55%
Firozpur District
310,552
47.74%
447,615
46.72%
418,553
43.61%
482,540
43.94%
515,430
44.56%
641,448
45.07%
Hoshiarpur District
290,193
32.19%
312,958
31.62%
281,805
30.68%
289,298
31.19%
328,078
31.78%
380,759
32.53%
Gurdaspur District [ g]
286,224
47.37%
348,182
49.33%
304,860
48.67%
316,709
49.54%
367,388
50.78%
440,323
51.08%
Ludhiana District
213,954
34.57%
235,937
35.05%
176,043
34.04%
192,961
33.99%
235,598
35.03%
302,482
36.95%
Kapurthala State
142,974
56.6%
178,326
56.73%
152,117
56.73%
160,457
56.44%
179,251
56.59%
213,754
56.49%
Nabha State
50,178
19.16%
58,550
19.65%
46,032
18.5%
50,756
19.27%
57,393
19.96%
70,373
20.45%
Faridkot State
29,035
29.92%
35,996
28.82%
37,105
28.48%
44,813
29.74%
49,912
30.37%
61,352
30.79%
Malerkotla State
24,616
34.65%
27,229
35.13%
25,942
36.46%
28,413
35.37%
31,417
37.82%
33,881
38.45%
Total Muslims
2,440,888
36.94%
2,898,114
37.74%
2,515,774
36.83%
2,686,598
36.99%
3,072,619
37.83%
3,748,410
38.42%
Total Population
6,607,699
100%
7,679,645
100%
6,830,507
100%
7,262,881
100%
8,123,076
100%
9,757,161
100%
Modern era
#
District
Muslim
Population
1
Amritsar
0.50%
12,502
2
Barnala
2.20%
13,100
3
Bathinda
1.17%
16,299
4
Faridkot
0.51%
3,125
5
Fatehgarh Sahib
2.80%
16,808
6
Firozpur
0.34%
6,844
7
Gurdaspur
1.20%
958
8
Hoshiarpur
1.46%
23,089
9
Jalandhar
1.38%
30,233
10
Kapurthala
1.25%
10,190
11
Ludhiana
2.22%
77,713
12
Mansa
1.35%
10,375
13
Moga
0.94%
9,388
14
Muktsar
0.48%
4,333
15
Patiala
2.11%
40,043
16
Rupnagar
2.12%
14,492
17
Mohali
2.96%
29,488
18
Sangrur
10.82%
179,116
19
Nawanshehar
1.12%
6,829
20
Tarn Taran
0.34%
3,855
Punjab (Total)
1.93%
535,489
Language
Languages spoken among Punjab's Muslims (2011 Census)[ 18]
Languages
Percent
Urdu/Hindi
58.57%
Punjabi
41.43%
Out of 5.35 lakh Muslim population in the state as of 2011 census, only 2.21 lakh Muslims are native and speaks Punjabi as their mother tongue and rest 3.13 lakh speaks Hindustani language mainly Urdu .[ 19]
Trends
Decadal percentage of Muslims in Punjab, India [ 20] [ 21] [ 22] [ 23]
Year
Percent
Increase
1901 [ c]
37.74%
N/A
1911 [ d]
36.83%
-0.91%
1921 [ e]
36.99%
+0.16%
1931 [ f]
37.83%
+0.84%
1941 [ a]
38.42%
+0.59%
1947
0.5%
-37.92%
1951
0.63%
+0.13%
1961
0.82%
+0.19%
1971
0.93%
+0.11%
1981
1%
+0.07%
1991
1.18%
+0.18%
2001
1.57%
+0.39%
2011
1.93%
+0.36%
The Muslim percentage as total population have declined drastically from 38.38% in 1941 to 0.5% in 1947. But after Independence, Muslims have grown slightly from 0.63% in 1951 to 1.93% in 2011 census.[ 24]
See also
Notes
^ a b c d 1941 figure taken from census data by combining the total population of all districts (Jalandhar , Ludhiana , Firozpur , Amritsar , Hoshiarpur , and Gurdaspur (minus Shakargarh Tehsil )), and princely states (Kapurthala , Malerkotla , Faridkot , Patiala , and Nabha ) which are in the region that comprises the contemporary state of Punjab, India . See 1941 census data here:[ 13] : 42
^ 1881 figure taken from census data by combining the total population of all districts (Jalandhar , Ludhiana , Firozpur , Amritsar , Hoshiarpur , and Gurdaspur (minus Shakargarh Tehsil )), and princely states (Kapurthala , Malerkotla , Faridkot , Patiala , and Nabha ) which are in the region that comprises the contemporary state of Punjab, India. See 1881 census data here:[ 5] [ 6] [ 7]
^ a b 1901 figure taken from census data by combining the total population of all districts (Jalandhar , Ludhiana , Firozpur , Amritsar , Hoshiarpur , and Gurdaspur (minus Shakargarh Tehsil )), and princely states (Kapurthala , Malerkotla , Faridkot , Patiala , and Nabha ) which are in the region that comprises the contemporary state of Punjab, India. See 1901 census data here:[ 8] : 34
^ a b 1911 figure taken from census data by combining the total population of all districts (Jalandhar , Ludhiana , Firozpur , Amritsar , Hoshiarpur , and Gurdaspur (minus Shakargarh Tehsil )), and princely states (Kapurthala , Malerkotla , Faridkot , Patiala , and Nabha ) which are in the region that comprises the contemporary state of Punjab, India . See 1911 census data here:[ 9] : 27 [ 10] : 27
^ a b 1921 figure taken from census data by combining the total population of all districts (Jalandhar , Ludhiana , Firozpur , Amritsar , Hoshiarpur , and Gurdaspur (minus Shakargarh Tehsil )), and princely states (Kapurthala , Malerkotla , Faridkot , Patiala , and Nabha ) which are in the region that comprises the contemporary state of Punjab, India . See 1921 census data here:[ 11] : 29
^ a b 1931 figure taken from census data by combining the total population of all districts (Jalandhar , Ludhiana , Firozpur , Amritsar , Hoshiarpur , and Gurdaspur (minus Shakargarh Tehsil )), and princely states (Kapurthala , Malerkotla , Faridkot , Patiala , and Nabha ) which are in the region that comprises the contemporary state of Punjab, India . See 1931 census data here:[ 12] : 277
^ Does not include Shakargarh Tehsil , which was awarded to Pakistan as part of the Radcliffe Line .
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^ a b "Census of India, 1881 Report on the Census of the Panjáb Taken on the 17th of February 1881, vol. II" . 1881. p. 14. JSTOR saoa.crl.25057657 . Retrieved 7 April 2024 .
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^ a b "Census of India 1901. [Vol. 17A]. Imperial tables, I-VIII, X-XV, XVII and XVIII for the Punjab, with the native states under the political control of the Punjab Government, and for the North-west Frontier Province" . 1901. JSTOR saoa.crl.25363739 . Retrieved 10 March 2024 .
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^ a b "Census of India 1921. Vol. 15, Punjab and Delhi. Pt. 2, Tables" . 1921. JSTOR saoa.crl.25430165 . Retrieved 17 February 2024 .
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^ a b India Census Commissioner (1941). "Census of India, 1941. Vol. 6, Punjab" . JSTOR saoa.crl.28215541 . Retrieved 19 January 2023 .
^ Krishan, Gopal. "Demography of the Punjab (1849-1947)" (PDF) . Journal of Punjab Studies . 11 (1). Center of Sikh and Punjab Studies, University of California Santa Barbara : 77–89.
^ "Has Pak's Hindu population dropped sharply?" . The Times of India .
^ "A renewed hate campaign" . Frontline . 18 (11). 2001.
^ "Punjab Population by Religion | Hindu Population in Punjab | Sikh Population in Punjab" .
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Punjab's Muslims: The History and Significance of Malerkotla
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Punjab's Muslims: The History and Significance of Malerkotla
^ "Muslims are dotting Punjab Landscape once again" .
^ "District wise Religious Composition of Population in Punjab in 1981, 1991, 2001" . Archived from the original on 7 August 2020. Retrieved 18 August 2020 .
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