JKKNIUJSS

Sufism in the Hill Areas of Nepal Himalaya: The Inaudible Heartbeat of Religious Mysticism

Keywords:
Lived religion, Himalayan Muslims, Religious pluralism, Ritual practice, Cultural syncretism
Abstract

This article presents an ethnographic analysis of the presence and adaptation of Sufism in Nepal's hill regions, a context largely neglected in anthropological studies of South Asian Muslim communities. Existing scholarship has focused primarily on Muslims of the Terai plains, leaving the lived religious practices and cultural negotiations of Himalayan Muslim populations understudied. Addressing this gap, the study explores how Sufi traditions were historically introduced into the hill regions and how they have been reworked through everyday interactions with local ecologies, belief systems, and multi-ethnic social formations. Based on long-term qualitative fieldwork incorporating participant observation, oral histories, ritual documentation, and local historical narratives, the article examines ritual practices, healing practices, dhikr gatherings, and shrine-centred devotional activities as sites of religious meaning. The findings demonstrate that Sufi practices function as embodied and relational forms of religiosity that facilitate interreligious interaction, shape local Muslim identities, and sustain cultural syncretism within plural social settings. Despite contemporary transformations linked to migration, modernisation, and reformist Islamic movements, Sufi ethics and ritual practices continue to structure moral life and social cohesion in the hill communities. The article contributes to anthropological debates on lived religion, minority adaptation, and the cultural production of religious pluralism in the Himalayan region.

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Published
04/20/2026
Section
Articles