Publication

29 Dec 2006

This paper is the first of two which address the often sharply differing situations faced by Shi'ites in Southeast Asia. The author explains that political events such as the Iranian nuclear crisis and the unsettled fate of post-Saddam Iraq have resulted in a renewed interest in the Shi'ite dimension of Islam in Southeast Asia. He argues that a better understanding of Shi'ite Islam - a minority among Southeast Asian Muslims - might be beneficial in order to arrive at a more differentiaed picture of contemporary Southeast Asian Islam. This paper focuses on facets of Shi'ite Islam in Singapore and Malaysia.

Download English (PDF, 52 pages, 398 KB)
Author Christoph Marcinkowski
Series RSIS Working Papers
Issue 121
Publisher S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS)
Copyright © 2006 S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS)
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