Muslim Brotherhoods in West African History

Mauro Nobili
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Abstract

Muslim Sufi brotherhoods (ṭuruq, sing. ṭarīqa) are ubiquitous in contemporary Islamic West Africa. However, they are relative latecomers in the history of the region, making their appearance in the mid-18th century. Yet, Sufism has a longer presence in West Africa that predates the consolidation of ṭuruq. Early evidence of Sufi practices dates to the period between the 11th and the 17th centuries. By that time traces of the Shādhiliyya and the lesser-known Maḥmūdiyya are available between the Atlantic Ocean and Lake Chad, but it was the activities of the Kunta of the Qādiriyya and of al-ḥājj ‘Umar of the Tijāniyya that led to the massive spread of Sufi brotherhoods in the region. The authority of leaders of ṭuruq did not disappear with the imposition of European colonialism. In fact, the power of those leaders who adjusted to the novel political situation further consolidated thanks to their role as mediators between their constituencies and the colonial government. Eventually, the end of the colonial period did not signal the decline of ṭuruq in West Africa. Conversely, during the postcolonial years, Sufi brotherhoods continued flourishing despite the secular nature of West African independent states and the increasing tension with a plethora of equally rising Salafi movements.
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西非历史上的穆斯林兄弟会
穆斯林苏菲兄弟会(ṭuruq,唱。ṭarīqa)在当代伊斯兰西非无处不在。然而,它们在该地区的历史上相对较晚,在18世纪中期才出现。然而,早在ṭuruq整合之前,苏菲派就已经在西非存在了很长时间。苏菲派实践的早期证据可以追溯到11世纪到17世纪之间。那时,在大西洋和乍得湖之间,Shādhiliyya和不太为人所知的Maḥmūdiyya的痕迹已经可以找到,但正是Qādiriyya的昆塔和Tijāniyya的al-ḥājj ' Umar的活动导致了苏菲派兄弟会在该地区的大规模传播。ṭuruq领导人的权威并没有随着欧洲殖民主义的强加而消失。事实上,那些适应新政治形势的领导人,由于他们在选民和殖民政府之间扮演调解人的角色,他们的权力进一步巩固了。最终,殖民时期的结束并没有标志着ṭuruq在西非的衰落。相反,在后殖民时期,尽管西非独立国家的世俗化,以及同样崛起的萨拉菲运动带来的大量紧张局势,苏菲兄弟会仍在继续蓬勃发展。
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