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2008, Religion Compass
Among Muslims across the African continent, there is a noticeable turn towards greater compliance with globalizing norms of Islamic behaviour. Beginning from this widespread observation, this article interrogates the changes that lie concealed under the veil of homogeneity. It identifies a complex pattern of identity formation and power politics, cultural conservativism, marginalized syncretism and symbolic exchange. The emergence of a public sphere has propelled the production of Muslim identity formation in the service of established elites and youth searching for an authentic approach towards Islam. But a turn to Islam also takes a conservative and isolationist turn that thrives in the context of the failure of modern schooling and economy, and provides a haven of dignified marginalization around the great cultures of the past. A syncretist approach to Islam and African cultures is pushed to the background. But there is reason to believe that such an approach thrives on the margins of the society. A global politics of identity and globalization provide the context for a continued exchange of Islamic symbols among Africans in general. The politics of resistance is accompanied by the politics of identity and global conflicts.
Abibisem: Journal of African Culture and Civilization, 2015
This paper examines the interplay of Islam and traditional African ideas, institutions and cultural practices. It reviews some cultural aspects of Islam and African traditions aiming to find-out how African cultural, i.e. religious, political, social and even linguistic values have either been accommodated by or have accommodated Islam. The framework involves the theories of inculturation, acculturation and enculturation. The method used was a critical analysis of some values of Africans and Muslims. Islam has accommodated and has been accommodated by some African traditions. Although, the two traditions have had some frictions such as the Muslim jihad which took away political power from some of the indigenous people, yet, they have generally coexisted peacefully as some African chiefs either became Muslims or African Muslims have become chiefs and sometimes even made Islam a state religion. The paper, therefore, concludes that Islam and African traditions have been friends and not foes.
De Gruyter eBooks, 2022
Islam has become one of the main themes of research in African studies in the last two decades. In academic engagement with West Africa, in particular, only a few topics have attracted more interest and contributions. Consequently, the literature has grown diverse, multidisciplinary and engaging, while examining topics such as pietism, gender relations, authority, activism and, increasingly, violence and security. On the ground, Islam is highly visible in the media and at the centre of public life because of so-called jihadi attacks on state institutions, widespread religious entrepreneurship, the emergence of new authoritative figures and a dynamic challenge to traditional power structures that shape the experiences of being Muslim. What can we learn from these developments? What dynamics do they draw attention to? What new and local research perspectives are they inspiring? What do these perspectives add? This volume is informed by these questions and adds to a history of academic engagement with Islam in West Africa. Inspired by a locally framed agenda, it offers the floor to scholars from the region, providing them with visibility and urging them to elaborate on their insights. As the initiators of major political entities (e.g. Ghana, Mali, Macina, Songhay, Sokoto), Muslim communities in West Africa have been shaped by their encounters with European imperialism, which organized their lands into possessions, protectorates, territories and then colonies. Imperialism was a process of social subjugation that led to the establishment of the modern state: an institution that subordinated political logic to its regulatory power. Prior to European imperialism, however, Muslim traders and scholars developed ties and connections across and beyond West Africa, illustrating the fact that Muslims have regularly engaged in educational networks, economic exchanges and cooperation beyond the confines of their polities. While historic ties with the Maghreb, Egypt and the Hijaz contributed to the making of Muslim West Africa, connections with modern
Journal of Islamic Studies and Culture, 2015
Most works dealing with Islam and Africa trace the roots of their connection to the first Hijra when two groups totaling more than 100 Muslims fled persecution in Mecca and arrived in the Kingdom of Axiom (modern-day Ethiopia) in 614 and 615 AD, respectively. A few works would begin with the story of Bilal ibn Rabah or Bilal al-Habashi, the former enslaved Ethiopian born in Mecca during the late 6 th Century (sometime between 578 and 583 AD) and chosen by Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) as the first Muezzin (High Priest, or Caller of the Faithful to prayer) of the Islamic faith. More recent sources would add the fact that the African/Black Saudi Arabian Sheikh Adil Kalbani is now the Imam of the Grand Mosque of Mecca. This chronology misses the African roots of Islam: i.e. the story of the Egyptian Hagar or Hājar (in Arabic), the second wife of Abraham or Ibrahim (in Arabic). It also misses the fact that Luqman The Wise, who wrote the 31 st Sura of the Qur'an, was an African. Today, Islam is practiced everywhere and has emerged as the fastest growing din (meaning in Arabic "way of life," as Islam is more than just a religion) in the world. The African flavor to Islamic practices is evident in the Americas, the Caribbean, and many European countries with significant concentrations of African Muslims. Using Transnational Theory, this paper analyzes the challenges African-centered Muslims face in these majority-Christian states in terms of the concept of the sovereign state and the difficulties that this poses. Thus, the following aspects are examined: (a) defining new Africancentered Muslim actors, (b) modes of change African-centered Muslims encounter, (c) factors impacting success of African-centered Muslims, and (d) challenges for the role of the state in dealing with African-centered Muslims. Before doing all this, however, it makes sense to begin with a brief discussion of Transnational Theory, with its attendant concept transnationalism, and Africancentrism for the theoretical grounding of this essay. As I state in my essay titled "A Time Series Analysis of the African Growth and Opportunity Act: Testing the Efficacy of Transnationalism" (Bangura, 2009), transnationalism is defined as the heightened interconnectivity between people around the world and the loosening of boundaries between countries. The concept of transnationalism is credited to Randolph Bourne, an early 20 th Century writer, who used it to describe a new way of thinking about intercultural relationships. Scholars of transnationalism seek to show how the flow of people, ideas, and goods between regions has increased the relevance of globalization. They argue that it makes no sense to link specific nation state boundaries with, for instance, migratory labor forces, transnational corporations, international
Contesting Islam in Africa examines the experiences of “returnee” scholars, an emerging class of elites trained in Saudi and Egyptian theological universities, and their role in educational initiatives and the reconfiguration of Muslim identity in Ghana between 1920 and 2010. Based on oral interviews and significant archival work in Ghana and at the National Archives in London, the book addresses three questions: How did the returnee scholars conceptualize and rationalize local politics and Muslim life in a pluralistic society where Muslims are a minority? How did Ghana’s colonial and post-colonial governments react to the transnational spaces constructed by Muslims generally? And, given the returnee educational imperative, what has been the Saudi and Egyptian influence on the formulation of Muslim culture in Ghana? The book also explores the influence of local mallams, in particular Alhaji Yussif Soalihu (Afa Ajura), who was indefatigable as he almost single-handedly spread Wahhabism in Ghana. For any meaningful understanding of reform Islam and the “returnee” scholars in Ghana, its essential to appreciate the many facets of the life of Afa Ajura. The activities of Afa Ajura and his literate assistants created public controversy and sometimes led to open confrontation with religious adversaries, the Tijaniyya fraternity. These activities redefined intra-religious conflagration and turned Afa Ajura into a religious phenomenon. The many violent confrontations that ensued also attracted the attention of external actors not only interested in spreading reform Islam, but also interested in integrating Ghanaian Muslims into the wider world of Islam. This book argues that Salafism/Wahhabism was and in many ways remains a homegrown religious phenomenon that benefitted primarily from preexisting splits within the northern Ghanaian Muslim community. It also argues that transnational Salafism/Wahhabism and Middle Eastern and North African contact—especially through education and outreach programs—only provided the ideological justification and the grammar for reinterpreting the common good and for reconfiguring local social and political sensibilities. “The influence of Wahhabism in sub-Saharan Africa remains one of the least-investigated areas in African studies at a time when tensions, mistrust and religious conflicts have increased. By examining the role of the returnee ulama (Muslim scholars) and their organizations in creating new Muslim identities modeled on their Arab funders, in stark contrast to the Africanized versions of Islam practiced by their own parents, grandparents or relatives at home, the book promises to shed new light on the changing face of Islam in traditionally peaceful and tolerant Muslim societies of sub-Saharan Africa.” — Fallou Ngom, PhD., Associate Professor of Anthropology & Director of the African Language Program, African Studies Center, Boston University “The study of Islam in Africa has not attracted a lot of scholarly attention because the focus has tended to be on the colonial project in Africa. The great moment in the manuscript is when the author asks this question: 'How do we explain the intensity of these clashes – Muslim against Muslim – in a religiously plural country where Islam remains a minority religion?' This is an important question because the tendency has been to see conflict between Muslims and non Muslims and yet this book promises to provide a totally different type of analysis. The manuscript provides insightful overview of some of the tensions in the past, by looking at conflicts that have occurred in the past. … Using lucid and great narrative, analytical and interpretative style, the author takes on a rich array of issues that have not attracted a lot of attention in African history. It is a project that deploys primary and secondary sources in a remarkable manner. It will be a useful addition to literature on the spread of Islam in Africa. It is likely to have a great impact on our knowledge of Islam in West Africa in general and Ghana in particular.” — Maurice Amutabi, PhD, Associate Professor, The Catholic University of Eastern Africa, Nairobi, Kenya This book is part of the African World Series, edited by Toyin Falola, Frances Higginbotham Nalle Centennial Professor in History, University of Texas at Austin.
This essay discusses some of the recent trends in the scholarship on Islam and Africa that contribute to a more nuanced understanding of the historical relationship between African Muslims and the global ecumene of believers. Rather than looking at the faith as an insular African phenomenon, this piece examines the links between Africans and the wider community of believers across space and time. Such an approach has important ramifications for our understanding of the dynamics of Islam. However, it also challenges many of the assumptions underpinning the geographic area studies paradigm that has dominated the academy since the Second World War. This essay suggests the adoption of a more fluid approach to scholarly inquiry that reimagines our largely continental attachment to regions in favor of a more intellectually agile methodology where the scope of inquiry is determined less by geographic boundaries and more by the questions we seek to answer.
Apard Elodie (ed.), 2020
At the crossroads of major trade routes and characterised by intense human circulations, the area that encompasses northern Nigeria and southern Niger is a privileged space to study transnational religious dynamics. Islam is, indeed, an essential feature of this region assuming today new forms in terms of discourses, practices, and modes of dissemination. In order to capture their changing complexity and diversity, regional Islamic dynamics need to be observed from both sides of the Niger-Nigeria border, where religious patterns echo each other but also obey different socio-political injunctions. While studying the processes of religious renewal and mutation, it is necessary to pay attention to the varied forms these processes take, to their direct and indirect effects and to the channels of transmission used. An interdisciplinary team of seven researchers from Niger, Nigeria, France and the United Kingdom was set up to conduct this transnational study; all authors carried out ethnographic fieldwork in both countries while constantly exchanging, comparing and discussing their respective findings with each other. Thus, this book provides first-hand material collected in the field, that contributes to enrich the reflexion on contemporary transformation dynamics in the Islamic landscapes of Niger and Nigeria, but also reflects the relevance of a transnational and comparative approach of these phenomena. Finally, it showcases the collaborative work of African and European scholars from Francophone and Anglophone countries - a type of scientific partnership rarely encountered.
Who did and does claim to know and represent West African Islam? Who claims to have authority of representation and based on what justification? What kind of Islamic reformist movements have emerged in the West African landscape and specifically in Burkina Faso and Mali? And how do they conceive of themselves and their understanding of an orthodox and normative Islam? Discursive formations provided by Islamic reformist movements, social anthropology and former colonial authorities seem to have influenced each other, because each of these entities – throughout the history of the last two centuries – has claimed to know and/or represent West African Islam to differing degrees. That Islam has been part of West African societies for many centuries is historically attested. However, as both M. Saul and K. Langewiesche have shown, within colonial discourse and the anthropological study of West African religion in the 20th century, focus has often been laid on indigenous religion, considering everything Islamic rather secondary or syncretistic. Genuine West African religion, the story goes, can only be indigenous. "Islam noir" is at best a "soft" and watered- down version of orthodox Islam. A similar discursive strategy can be observed with regard to certain Islamic reformist movements, noteably those that have been calling for a "purified" Islam and that have been influenced by Wahhabiyya ideals. With regard to both Burkina Faso and Mali, the articles by Idrissa and Schulz allow for a comparison of the the interplay between a colonial ideology, social anthropology and different Islamic movements and actors.
In order to understand the present problems in Islamic Africa one is obligated to have a deep comprehension of its history. No prognosis about Islamic Africa can be formulated about it except after understanding the cultural, spiritual, political and social factors that underpin its history. The fact is that Islam was the foundation of the emergence of the most enlightened period in African history and civilization. Under Islam, Africa produced an exhaustive, matchless, fresh and succulent civilization, able to unite diverse ethnicities while showing regard for the distinctive personalities of each. Islam contributed to the civilization and development of Africa, and Africa contributed to the dissemination and preservation of Islam.
Contemporary Islam
Canadian Journal of African Studies / Revue canadienne des études africaines, 2008
Since more than half a century, West Africa is witnessing the emergence of movements called, according to the places, “wahhabites”, “salafists” or “isalists”. These movements were formerly characterized by their literal reading of Islamic texts, their tendency to preach a return to the sources of the beginning of Islam, and by a purification of practices inscribed in the bodies through the wearing of the beard or specific dress codes (such as wearing black dress and integral veil for women) practices such as praying crossed arms. They are characterized as well by their refusal of ostentatious ceremonies and their critics of soufi’s islam influence. If their implantation in West Africa encountered some violents conflicts, fifty years later, their conception of Islam has been diffused within public discourses of the islamic elits. Through Burkina Faso case, we aim in this paper to describe how, despite its plurality, Islamic public sphere takes a language more and more “religiously correct”, tending to homogenize religious discourses and practices. This leads to a kind of consensus around discourses and markers which used to be reffered to wahhabiyya communities. This phenomenon, symptomatic of the city, tells us that reformism like the wahhabiyya one has been transformed gradually into a reformism which I propose to call “generic”.
Canadian Journal of African Studies, 2010
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religions, 2016
The human quest for the meaning of life is an unending one marked by undulating landscapes. In order to confront the flux of experience generated by this quest for meaning, the human embraces science, morality, politics and religion. Religion is said to provide the basis for transcendental values which give humans succour after the physical and material struggles have ended. At the same time, religion also uses the observable social world as the starting point for the embrace of transcendental values. In this essay, an attempt is made to examine the interconnectedness of modernity (which has its basis in the social world), Islam (which provides the human with transcendental values) and an African culture (which serves as a nexus of modernity and Islam). The essay is basically an exercise in analysis whereby the readers are made to draw some compelling inferences.Keywords: Modernity, Islam, African culture, Values, Human happiness
The Journal of African History, 2014
This essay discusses some of the recent trends in the scholarship on Islam and Africa that contribute to a more nuanced understanding of the historical relationship between African Muslims and the globalecumeneof believers. Rather than looking at the faith as an insular African phenomenon, this piece examines the links between Africans and the wider community of believers across space and time. Such an approach has important ramifications for our understanding of the dynamics of Islam. However, it also challenges many of the assumptions underpinning the geographic area studies paradigm that has dominated the academy since the Second World War. This essay suggests the adoption of a more fluid approach to scholarly inquiry that reimagines our largely continental attachment to regions in favor of a more intellectually agile methodology where the scope of inquiry is determined less by geographic boundaries and more by the questions we seek to answer.
The history of Islamic studies in sub-Saharan Africa is as old as the history of Islam in the region itself, and this dates back to the 4th/5th AH10th/11th CE –century. Barring some minor variables, the philosophy, curricula, institutions, and goals of Islamic studies had historically remained the same in all Muslim societies; the discipline is intended to produce spiritual guides, moulders of public morality, and custodians of the intellectual tradition of Islam. Colonialism in sub-Saharan Africa, which spanned the period between the 18th and the 20th centuries, affected the concept, scope, curricula, teacher-student relationships, women education, public and state policies, attempts at reforms and other aspects connected with Islamic studies at all levels. My paper will give a brief analysis of this as a prelude to my investigation into the main theme. “Faced with the challenge of modernity, many Muslims today, rather than accommodate themselves to the age-old fudges … have resorted instead to a kind of textual puritanism. . . . naive literal readings are soldered onto modern preoccupations with the menaces of Zionism, globalisation, and feminism…” (Netton 2006: 127-28). Modernism and Globalisation are just two of several contemporary ideational concepts that have affected the entire philosophy and operation of Islamic studies in the last few years, not only in sub-Saharan Africa, but throughout the Muslim world. The inroad made by salafism from the second half of the 14thAH/20thCE century, the 1979 Iranian Islamic Revolution, the outbreak of liberal democracy which saw the withering of authoritarian regimes and the introduction of modernist, globalist values, the availability of new media facilities for teaching, learning and general information, and finally, the aftermath of the 2001/9/11 cataclysm in the US, have all thrown up new challenges for Muslim societies. The challenges provoked the process of repackaging and reorientation of the philosophy, contents and utilitarian values of Islamic studies at formal and informal levels, viz, at madrasas, intermediate centres of study, and tertiary institutions among others. For my presentation, I intend to take Nigeria as an example and illustrate the specific responses of the Muslim society and the State to these developments. The new media facilities have produced e-learning and e-muftis and the latter are not necessarily experts in the traditional Islamic sciences from which the authority of the traditional ‘ulamā’ derived in the first place. On the whole, it will be established that Islamic studies, as a field of inquiry and engagement in sub-Saharan Africa, has always responded to changing circumstances, and has, through local, cultural dynamics, mediated the shortcomings of Western models to suit local environments. My paper will be divided into 2 parts. Part One will be historical. It will give an account of the origins and development of Islamic studies from the earliest times till the emergence of contemporary challenges of modernity and globalisation. The second part will situate the responses of the Nigerian intellectual tradition to these challenges and will suggest ways for further improvement within a global context.
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