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Senegal: The Islam of Sufi Orders
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10179 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
8 / 1986 |
2,143 Words |
| Author
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Nikki R. Keddie Nikki R. Keddie, author and photographer, is a professor of
history at UCLA. |
The Republic of Senegal is a small but influential country at the extreme west of Africa. It has a population of six million people, of whom almost 90 percent are Muslim. The balance is made up of either Christians or animists. Islam in Senegal has a special character in that it is overwhelmingly represented by Sufi orders, to which the vast majority of the Muslim population owe allegiance.
Individual adherents to these orders become members by inheritance and by paying allegiance to a sheikh or marabout. In some cases adherents learn a supplementary prayer formula peculiar to the order. Male members usually meet regularly, and devotion to the order and its sheikhs is often the primary loyalty of its members, although feelings of Senegalese nationalism and identity are also strong today.
In Senegal, hierarchies within the order take the place of the learned "orthodox" Islamic leaders, or ulama, who are important in Middle Eastern Islam. Recently though, with a growing Middle Eastern Muslim influence in Senegal, more orthodox type of Islamic education and intellectual is appearing. To date, however, there is neither a Middle Eastern type of ulama nor a significant demand for the enforcement of Islamic law. To many Senegalese Islam is what the orders say it is, although the orders themselves are becoming increasingly learned in Islamic orthodoxy. The orders also have a major political and economic influence.
Islam had been gradually introduced to Senegal by traders and missionaries since the eleventh century, and the three major orders developed during the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries. Islam gained power more rapidly
... (1997 of 13182 Characters)
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