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LINKING GLOBAL CITIES; TRACING LOCAL
PRACTICES
Islamic literature and networks in the South-Western Indian Ocean, 1800-2000
Linking global cities; tracing local practices
Islamic literature and networks in the South-Western Indian Ocean, 1800-2000
NFR PROJECT 178634/V20
2007-2010
The religion of Islam is the paramount unifying feature of the port cities
of the western Indian Ocean. In the past decade, a series of studies have
viewed the Indian Ocean rim as a global world linked through persistent
cultural contact, the religion of Islam and, later, the emergence of European
colonialism. These studies have applied the concept of translocality,
both as overarching research perspective and as reference to empirical
realities. Furthermore, they have analyzed movements of people, goods
and ideas between the port cities of the Indian Ocean, specifically with
a view to the inter-civilizational encounters and ensuing cultural change.
The result is the emerging field of Indian Ocean studies, which in turn
address the ongoing debate on globalization.
Through detailed study of new sources deriving from northern Mozambique
and coastal South Africa, this new project will fill lacunae in the empirical
knowledge about Swahili regional identity and the spread of Islam through
networks of learning. The project, funded by the Research Council of Norway,
will produce fresh knowledge about Islamic literature and learning in
South-Eastern Africa and link the missing cities in a string of ports
and work towards a completion of a chain.
Linking the missing cities in a string of
ports around the Indian Ocean; towards the completion of the chain:
Within the field of Indian Ocean studies, much scholarly attention has
been devoted to the Swahili coastal cities of Kenya and Tanzania, particularly
the cities of Zanzibar, Mombasa and Lamu. These studies have linked
the coastal cities to the wider Indian Ocean context through analyses
of religious development, family links, material culture, legal structures,
consumer patterns etc. The northern tier of the Swahili cultural belt
(the Somali ports of Brawa and Mogadishu) is also gradually becoming
the object of study from the point of view of translocality and trans-oceanic
inter-connections.
However, the southern part of the East African coast remains very much
understudied from this perspective. This is especially so for northern
coastal Mozambique, historically and presently an integral part of the
Swahili – and Muslim – cultural world.
The interconnections between the coastal mainland of Mozambique and
other centres of learning in the Indian Ocean (in particular the Comoro
Islands), have yet to be studied, as was pointed out in a recent article
by Prof. E.A. Alpers: “[…] Although there has been some
work done on the Islamic learned networks of northern East Africa, with
extensions down to the Comoros, nothing of this sort has yet been attempted
for the networks of the Mozambique Channel. It should be.”
This is even more true for the South African cities of Durban and Cape
Town. In both cities, Muslim communities have long-standing historical
ties to the Islamic societies of the East African coast as well as to
the ports of South Arabia. The so-called “Zanzibaris” of
Durban are one example, while the Cape Town Alawi tariqa (Sufi brotherhood)
sees Zanzibar and Hadramawt as its origin and point of spiritual reference.
However, no studies have been undertaken which focus on the regional
and trans-oceanic networks of these communities.
As a consequence of these rather significant lacunae, variations in
local practices in relation to wider social, cultural and political
influences have not been studied in a translocal, comparative perspective.
The overall objective of this project is to provide the lacking components
that will make such perspectives possible. Concretely, the project will
locate and publish new sources deriving from areas where no such preliminary
work has been done (i.e. Northern Mozambique and, to a lesser extent,
South Africa). An important goal of this project is to enable future
studies whereby Islamic societies and Islamic ideological developments
in present day South-Eastern Africa may be analyzed in a wider historical
and geographical context.
People:
Ass. Prof/Researcher Anne K. Bang,
University of Bergen
Prof. R. Sean O’Fahey, Department
of History, University of Bergen
Elke Stockreiter, School of
Oriental and African Studies/University of Bergen
Prof. Abdul Sharif, Zanzibar Indian Ocean Research Institute
Ass. Professor Jeremy Prestholt, University of California, San Diego,
USA
The Southern Tier of the Da’wa. Sufi
reformism in South-Eastern Africa in the Indian Ocean context, 1880-1980:
The southern cities of Durban and Cape Town have both significant Muslim
populations. The Islamic presence dates back 300 years, and is closely
connected to the shipment of slaves from Dutch East India (Indonesia)
to the Cape Colony and labour immigration to Durban. However, by the
late 1800, the Muslim communities of both cities were closely tied in
with the network of Sufi brotherhoods (Alawiyya, Shadhiliyya and Qadiriyya),
a network that extended to Mozambique and the Comoro islands, through
to Zanzibar and onwards to the Arabian Peninsula. By that time, this
was a network with a missionary outlook (da’wa; call, summons
to the word of God), very much concerned with issues of reform, and
in particular educational reform.
The question remains as to how the South African communities came to
be incorporated into this network. By investigating the travel-patterns
of itinerant preachers, their writings and their contact with other
networks, a picture can be constructed of this southernmost extension
of the Sufi reform movement sweeping the Indian Ocean. These patterns
can be re-constructed by a combination of sources: immigration and hajj
(pilgrimage) records from the National Archives of South Africa, travel
accounts in Arabic/Swahili in private ownership in South Africa, Mozambique,
Zanzibar and Hadramawt, studies of the certificates of learning delivered
by teachers, colonial records from the British administration of Zanzibar,
Mombasa, Lamu, Cape Town, Durban and Aden, all in the India Office,
London.
The coastal belt – including Cape Town and Durban - will thus
be viewed as a part of a complex network extending to the centres of
Islamic learning in Arabia and fluctuating with the impact of colonialism,
nationalism and – in the South African context – apartheid.
These processes will be analyzed in relation to similar processes taking
place in other regions of the Indian Ocean.
People:
Ass. Prof/Researcher Anne K. Bang,
University of Bergen
ADMINISTRATIVE CENTRES:
Unifob
Global
University of Bergen
Nygårdsgaten 5
N- 5015 Bergen
Norway
Phone: + 47 55 58 93 00
Fax: + 47 55 58 98 92
Email
Centre for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies
University of Bergen
Nygårdsgaten 5
N-5015 Bergen
Norway
Phone: +47 55 58 26 47
Fax: + 47 55 58 98 91
Email
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