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1.
Corners of Timbuktu
[Photographs
from southing.com, & U.S Library of congress] |
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If the River Niger
bursts its banks, more damage will be caused |
2.
Floods damage ancient
Timbuktu
[BBC
NEWS,Tuesday,9 September,2003]
Heavy rains have destroyed at least 180 ancient mud buildings in the Unesco-designated
world heritage city of Timbuktu.
The floods have also caused the deaths of at least four people in central
Mali. Timbuktu has a poor drainage system meaning that some 30mm of
water that fell on the city some two weeks ago had nowhere to go, and soaked
into the brittle, hard earth-built walls and foundations.
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3.
Islam in Mali
[By
WIKIPEDIA]The
Great Mosque of Djenné, the largest mud brick building in the world, is
considered the greatest achievement of the
Sudano-Sahelian architectural style. The first mosque on the site was
built in the 13th century; the current structure dates from 1907. Along with
the city of
Djenné, it was designated a World Heritage site by UNESCO
Muslims
currently make up approximately 90 percent of the population of
Mali, the largest country in
West Africa. The bolaka majority of
Muslims in Mali are Sunni. |
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It is estimated that
Kanoute has spent almost a year's salary to buy the mosque. |
4. Kanoute Saves Spanish
Mosque
[By
IslamOnline (IOL)]
MADRID — Malian Muslim footballer Frederic Kanoute, the striker of Spain's
Seville FC, has saved the only mosque in the southern Spanish city of
Seville from closure.
Kanoute has paid 510,860 euros (some $700,000) so that fellow Muslims in
Seville would not find themselves without a mosque, reported Agence France-Presse
(AFP) Thursday, December 13.
The privately owned mosque was due to be sold after a contract to use the
premises by the local Muslim population had expired.But Kanoute stepped in
to purchase the building.The 30-year-old striker has not made any comment on
the matter. |
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5. Mansa Musa, King of Mali
[By
Aisha R. Masterton]
King Mansa Musa is famous for his Hajj journey, during which he stopped off
in Egypt and gave out so much gold that the Egyptian economy was ruined for
years to come. Mansa Musa was the great-great-grandson of Sunjata, who was
the founder of the empire of Mali. His 25-year reign (1312-1337 CE) is
described as “the golden age of the empire of Mali” (Levztion 66). While
Sunjata focused on building an ethnic Malinke empire, Mansa Musa developed
its Islamic practice. He performed his Hajj in 1324.
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6. Saving Mali's written
treasures
[By
Justin Pearce BBC News website, Johannesburg
]
People around the world know the name Timbuktu but few know where it is,
or why a town now in northern Mali has achieved such fame.
In the 16th Century, the town was a centre of Islamic learning with links
extending as far as Spain in the north and Central Asia in the east. "We are
looking at an earlier phase of globalisation in the region," Dr Shamil
Jeppie of the University of Cape Town, who is part of a joint South African
and Malian project to preserve the vast intellectual heritage of Timbuktu.
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Image of the Broadway staging of ‘Sunjata, The Lion King’ |
7. Sunjata: A Muslim Hero
in 13th Century Africa
[By
Aisha R. Masterton,
IslamOnline
(IOL)]
Sunjata, the founder and mansā (king) of Mali, Empire of the Malinke, is
said to have fought his decisive battle against Susu Sumanguru in 1240. Just
over one hundred years later, Ibn Battuta visited Mali, by which time it had
become a predominantly Muslim region.
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8.
The Tomes of Timbuktu
[by
Alan Huffman, Washington Post]
A dusty
haze mutes the horizon in Timbuktu during the dry season, so on this
mid-December evening the sun simply fades away without setting. Dusk settles
upon the wide, sandy streets and mud-bricked alleys, and the city, without
streetlights, descends into the darkness of the desert. Silhouettes drift past
lamp-lit windows, and the fires of street-side clay ovens send shadows dancing
up the walls. Children materialize from the darkness, run up and clasp the hands
of strangers, then disappear.
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Camel caravans used to carry gold across the Sahara |
9.
Timbuktu - city of
legends
[By
the BBC's Joan Baxter ,Timbuktu, northern Mali]
The fabled city of Timbuktu is not a myth - it does indeed exist
- in northern Mali, on the edge of the Sahara desert.
These days, it pretty much lives up to its reputation as "the end
of the world" but once upon a time, it was the centre of important trade routes.
Muslim merchants took gold north from West Africa to Europe and the Middle East
and returned with salt and other goods.
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