Introduction
Kerala presents a unique challenge — and opportunity — for Islamic education administrators. It is one of India’s most educationally advanced states, with near-universal literacy and a Muslim population that has historically been deeply engaged with formal Islamic learning. At the same time, it has its own well-established Islamic education ecosystem, built around boards and organisations that are distinctly Keralite in character.
Into this landscape, Idara-e-Deeniyat — primarily a North Indian organisation rooted in the Deobandi, Hanafi tradition — operates a significant number of affiliated maktabs. Running a Deeniyat Kerala maktab effectively means navigating language differences, madhab differences, and the dominant presence of Samastha. This article explains how, and what it means in practice.
The Kerala Islamic Education Landscape
Kerala’s Muslim community (approximately 27% of the state’s population) has developed an exceptionally rich Islamic education infrastructure. Unlike most Indian states, Kerala has multiple well-organised boards operating in parallel:
| Board / Body | Tradition | Scale |
| SKIMVB (Samastha mainstream) | Sunni Shafi’i | 1M+ students; dominant statewide |
| SKSVB (Kanthapuram Samastha) | Sunni Shafi’i | Significant; strongest in north Kerala |
| Kerala Nadvathul Mujahideen | Islahi / Salafi | Significant — own school network |
| Wisdom Islamic Organisation | Independent Sunni | Strong in central/south Kerala |
| JIH-affiliated bodies | Mawdudi-influenced | Integrated schools |
| Idara-e-Deeniyat (affiliated centres) | Deobandi Hanafi | Specific communities |
This multiplicity means Kerala administrators must understand which system their maktab belongs to — and what that means for curriculum, madhab, and certification.
Where Deeniyat Operates in Kerala
Idara-e-Deeniyat’s presence in Kerala is significant but specifically situated. It is strongest among three types of communities:
Communities of North Indian origin. In Kerala’s urban centres — Kochi, Thiruvananthapuram, Kozhikode — Muslim families whose heritage traces to North India often feel more culturally connected to the Deobandi tradition and prefer Deeniyat-affiliated maktabs for their children.
Areas where Samastha is less established. In some parts of Kerala — particularly certain urban pockets and newer residential areas — the Samastha network has not yet established a strong presence, creating space for Deeniyat-affiliated maktabs.
Mixed-board communities. Some mosque committees run a Samastha-curriculum class for local Malayali children alongside a Deeniyat-affiliated class for families with North Indian backgrounds — using both systems in parallel.
Key Differences: Running a Deeniyat Maktab in Kerala vs North India
| Feature | North Indian Deeniyat Maktab | Kerala Deeniyat Maktab |
| Language of instruction | Urdu | Malayalam (often adapted) |
| Madhab of students | Hanafi (aligns with curriculum) | Shafi’i (conflicts with curriculum) |
| Community default | Deeniyat is the natural choice | Samastha is the community default |
| Teacher availability | Muallim-certified teachers common | Samastha-trained teachers more readily available |
| Certificate recognition | Widely recognised | Less recognised than Samastha certificate |
| Primary competition | Other Deeniyat maktabs | Samastha-affiliated madrasas |
These differences require deliberate adaptation — they cannot be ignored.
The Madhab Challenge: Hanafi in a Shafi’i State
This is the most important consideration for any Deeniyat maktab in Kerala. The standard Deeniyat curriculum is written for the Hanafi school of jurisprudence. The overwhelming majority of Kerala’s Muslims follow the Shafi’i madhab.
The practical differences matter in daily religious life:
| Fiqh Topic | Hanafi (Deeniyat standard) | Shafi’i (Kerala community practice) |
| Saying Ameen in prayer | Quietly | Aloud |
| Position of hands in prayer | Below navel | On chest |
| Niyyah (intention) | Mental only | Verbal (recommended) |
| Wudu — wiping socks (khuff) | Permitted | Conditions differ |
| Qunut in Fajr | Not standard | Standard practice |
Teaching Hanafi fiqh to children whose families practice Shafi’i fiqh creates confusion and can generate conflict at home. Children may be taught one method in the maktab and see a different method practised by their parents, imam, and community.
The recommended approach for Kerala administrators: Teach Shafi’i fiqh in practical subjects (wudu, namaz, fasting) while maintaining the Deeniyat curriculum structure for Quran, aqeedah, hadith, seerah, and the examination framework. This requires a teacher who understands both madhabs — not simply a Muallim-certified graduate with no exposure to Shafi’i fiqh.
The Language Challenge: Urdu Curriculum in a Malayalam Context
The standard Deeniyat textbooks are written in Urdu. In North India, Urdu is widely understood among Muslims and the books are used directly. In Kerala, Malayalam is the mother tongue of the vast majority of Muslims — and many younger Keralite teachers do not read Urdu fluently.
Strategies used by Kerala Deeniyat maktabs:
- Using Malayalam translations of Deeniyat materials where available
- Teaching Islamic content in Malayalam while keeping Arabic elements (Quran, duas, fiqh terminology) in Arabic
- Hiring bilingual teachers (Urdu/Arabic and Malayalam)
- Using Samastha or other Kerala-produced books for Malayalam-medium content while retaining Deeniyat for the examination framework
Before opening, clarify:
- Will you teach in Malayalam, English, or both?
- Which versions of Deeniyat materials are available in Malayalam?
- Will you supplement with Samastha or other Kerala-produced resources for certain subjects?
Having clear answers to these questions before the first day prevents confusion for both teachers and students.
The Samastha Relationship
Samastha is the dominant Islamic education body in Kerala with enormous community trust. A Deeniyat-affiliated maktab operating in Kerala will often be compared to — or competing for students with — a Samastha-affiliated madrasa in the same area.
Key implications:
- Parents may ask why you are using Deeniyat rather than Samastha
- Your maktab’s Deeniyat certificate may carry less weight locally than a Samastha certificate
- Teachers trained in the Samastha system are more readily available in Kerala than Muallim-certified Deeniyat graduates
- Some families will prefer the Shafi’i-aligned Samastha curriculum on principle
This is not necessarily a conflict — many communities support both. But it requires transparency with parents about what your maktab offers and why, rather than assuming families will not notice or care about the difference.
For a fuller picture of how Kerala’s multiple boards interact, see Kerala’s Multiple Islamic Education Boards: Samastha, Wisdom, Deeniyat and More.
The Deeniyat Kerala Administrative Structure
Idara-e-Deeniyat has a state-level office in Kerala that coordinates affiliated maktabs across the state. This office:
- Processes affiliation applications from Kerala-based maktabs
- Coordinates the annual examination system for Kerala students
- Issues marksheets and certificates
- Provides or facilitates access to teaching materials
- Offers periodic teacher training sessions
Maktab administrators in Kerala should connect with the Deeniyat Kerala state office rather than the Delhi head office for most operational matters. The state office will be more familiar with the specific challenges of running Deeniyat in a Malayalam-speaking, Shafi’i context.
Practical Guidance for Kerala Administrators
Hire locally qualified teachers. In Kerala it is often more practical to hire a Samastha-trained graduate who is willing to work within the Deeniyat framework than to find a North India-trained Muallim who does not speak Malayalam. Subject knowledge and local language ability matters more than the specific qualification pathway.
Address language proactively. Do not assume Urdu-medium materials will work. Decide your language of instruction and materials approach before opening — not after the first week of confused students.
Be transparent with parents about certification. Explain clearly what a Deeniyat certificate is, how it differs from a Samastha certificate, and what its value is in terms of further Islamic education. Transparency builds trust.
Adapt fiqh teaching to the local madhab. The most practical approach is to teach Shafi’i fiqh in practical subjects while maintaining the Deeniyat curriculum structure for everything else. Document this clearly for the mosque committee and teacher before the year begins.
Deeniyat and Hifz in Kerala
Hifz (full Quran memorisation) carries great community prestige in Kerala. Deeniyat-affiliated maktabs in Kerala may run:
- Nazra classes (Quran reading to completion) — the most common programme
- Basic Hifz support — helping motivated students memorise shorter surahs or Juz Amma alongside Deeniyat studies
For full Hifz programmes, most Kerala families enrol children in dedicated Hifz schools. In Kerala Hifz circles, the term Aamuktha (completed/finalised portion) is used alongside pan-Indian terms Sabak, Dhor, and Manzil. Teachers supporting Hifz students in Kerala should be familiar with both sets of terminology.
For more on Hifz tracking terminology across India, see Hifz and Quran Memorisation in India.
Conclusion
Running a Deeniyat maktab in Kerala requires navigating three interconnected challenges: a Hanafi curriculum in a Shafi’i community, Urdu-medium materials in a Malayalam-speaking context, and a dominant Samastha system that most families default to. Administrators who understand and actively address these dynamics — adapting fiqh teaching, choosing the right language of instruction, and being transparent with parents — can run effective, respected maktabs in Kerala even alongside established Samastha competition.
On the operational side, the challenges of managing student records, tracking Quran progress in Kerala’s mixed terminology (Sabak, Dhor, Manzil, Aamuktha), and communicating with parents in Malayalam are real.
Ilmify handles both North Indian and South Indian Quran tracking terminology — including Aamuktha — and supports Malayalam-medium parent communication. Built for the practical realities of mosque-based Islamic education across India. Explore Ilmify →


