“…Others have made critical assessments of the religious (and ethnic) status‐based personal law systems and religious legal pluralism more generally, which exist in postcolonial polities throughout the Middle East and Africa (Charrad, ; Mamdani, ; Sezgin, ). But Mahmood (, p. 124) makes the additional claim that this logic is internal to the ideology of the nation‐state itself insofar as any minority identity “by virtue of its religious, cultural or ethnic difference from the majoritarian culture, represents a departure from majoritarian norms.” She finds the same logic at work in political liberalism because it, too, installs a public‐private division between the personal and the political (Mahmood, , p. 135; see Karayanni, ) . The creation of a secular civil code of personal law and fragmented religious status‐based systems of legal pluralism, allegedly institute the same division between public and private, facilitating the modern state's prerogative to regulate domestic and sexual relations and to construct the private sphere (Mahmood, , p. 135) .…”