Islamic Polarisation and the Politics of Exclusion in Ghana: Tijaniyya and Salafist Struggles over Muslim Orthodoxy

IF 0.3 4区 哲学 0 RELIGION Islamic Africa Pub Date : 2019-06-12 DOI:10.1163/21540993-01001006
Y. Dumbe
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引用次数: 22

Abstract

This article explores how the revival of the Tijaniyya and the Salafi movement shaped public discourse about Islam in Ghana. Examining the debates which characterised the religious sphere in the 1990s re-democratisation, the article highlights the power struggle which shaped the relations between the contending Muslim groups. It argues that the recognition of the Tijaniyya movement as a representative for all Muslims during Ghana’s re-democratisation in the 1990s emboldened its sympathisers to adopt repressive measures against the Salafi minority. While the local success of Salafism was often linked to locally specific forms of ethnic, political or generational self-assertion, the shared experience of political disadvantage during this period led to a consolidation of Salafi activities at the national level. Thus, as the Tijaniyya influence was politicised by Government, the ensuing conflicts between Sufi and Salafi groups also led to a politicisation of Salafism from below. Illustrating that intra-Muslim debates and disagreements cannot be divorced from their political context, this study demonstrates that learning to be Muslim in Ghana is deeply embedded in political, ethnic, and intergenerational dynamics.
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伊斯兰教的两极分化和加纳的排斥政治:提贾尼亚和萨拉菲斯特对穆斯林正统的斗争
本文探讨了Tijaniyya和萨拉菲运动的复兴如何塑造了加纳关于伊斯兰教的公共话语。文章检视了1990年代再民主化时期宗教领域的辩论,强调了权力斗争塑造了穆斯林团体之间的关系。它认为,在20世纪90年代加纳重新民主化期间,承认Tijaniyya运动是所有穆斯林的代表,鼓励了其同情者对萨拉菲派少数民族采取镇压措施。虽然萨拉菲主义在当地的成功往往与当地特定形式的种族、政治或世代的自我主张联系在一起,但这一时期共同的政治不利经历导致萨拉菲主义在国家一级的活动得到巩固。因此,随着Tijaniyya的影响被政府政治化,随之而来的苏菲派和萨拉菲派之间的冲突也导致萨拉菲派自下而上的政治化。说明穆斯林内部的辩论和分歧不能脱离他们的政治背景,这项研究表明,在加纳学习成为穆斯林深深植根于政治、种族和代际动态。
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来源期刊
Islamic Africa
Islamic Africa RELIGION-
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
25.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Islamic Africa publishes original research concerning Islam in Africa from the social sciences and the humanities, as well as primary source material and commentary essays related to Islamic Studies in Africa. The journal’s geographic scope includes the entire African continent and adjacent islands.
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