This paper tries to analyse the millenarian response of the Bantenese to the Western colonization from an anthropological perspective. The hisÂtory of Banten at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century was marked by various indigenous unrest, rebellion, and resistance against the colonial power. In 1888, several religious leaders of Sufi brotherhoods and community leaders in Cilegon, Banten led a revolt against the Dutch colonial government. This uprising was provoked by the Dutchâs trade regulation, a new economic system, and was fuelled by enduring religious sentiments against the Dutch. While most scholÂars frame the event as a religious or social political movement, this study focuses on to what some of the Bantenese Muslims perceived as âunjustâ social situations of the colonized world: poverty, inequality, religious restriction, social and political marginalization.
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