Islam is not only the leading religion in the Senegambia region,
but also one of the world’s leading religions. The religion was
founded by the Prophet Mohammed in Saudi Arabia. Today the
followers of Islam number hundreds of millions and are to be
found in all parts of the world.
Muslims form the bulk of the population in the Middle East,
Northern Africa, and certain areas of the Far East. Many
countries in East, Central and West Africa, including The Gambia
and Senegal, have predominantly Muslim populations. The Prophet
Mohammed, who founded the religion of Islam, was born in about
AD 571 in Mecca and belonged to the Quarish tribe. Islam traces
its founder’s descent to Ismail and Abraham.
Mohammed’s father. Abdulla Ibn Abdul Mutalib, died before the
Prophet was born. His mother, Amina, also died when he was six
years old: Mohammed was first taken care of by his paternal
grandfather, Abdul Mutalib. After his grandfather’s death,
Mohammed was now taken care of by his uncle, Abu Talib. At the
age of twelve, Mohammed accompanied his Uncle on a trip to
Syria. This trip to Syria afforded the future founder of Islam
the opportunity of learning much about different peoples and
their religions in the Middle East, chiefly Christianity and
Judaism.
Mohammed as a youth spent much of his time attending to flocks
in the desert for his uncle. During this period Mohammed was so
dutiful that he earned the titel Al-Amin, meaning “the
trustworthy”.
To supplement his meagre income, Mohammed accepted a job with
Khadija who was a prosperous lady of the Quarish tribe. Khadija
placed Mohammed in charge of the caravant travelling from Mecca
to Syria. Winning the esteem and affection of Khadija, Mohammed
married her. Mohammed and Khadija were blessed with two boys and
four girls, but all died young except a daughter Fatoumatta.
Unlike most of his countrymen in his day, Mohammed was a very
religious man and believed in only one God. He often retired to
a cave near Mecca at the foot of Mount Hira for prayer and
meditation. On one such occasion he felt he had a call from God
or Allah. This was at a time when everybody else in Arabia
believed and prayed to many Gods.
Mohammed, therefore, had a very difficult task preaching in
Mecca, a city with as many as 365 gods. Mohammed faced bitter
opposition to his mission of denouncing polytheism and idolatry.
However, Mohammed would soon win to his side a number of
followers including his wife khadija, Abu Bakr, a nobleman and
an influential Meccan, the Prophet’s cousin, Ali and a freed
slaved called Zaid.. The persecution of his followers started
and many of these people fled to Ethiopia for refuge.
After Khadija’s death in 619 and the death of the Prophet’s
uncle, Abu Talib, the following year, Mohammed found his life in
danger. It was for this reason that on 20 June 622 he escaped
with his faithful follower, Abu Bakr, to Medina, a city to the
north of Mecca.
He was welcomed in this city and gained many disciples there.
Mohammed built the first Muslim mosque in medina and started to
propagate his religion. Mohammed’s flight to Medina, known as
Hijra, is generally regarded as the beginning of Islam, and is,
therefore, a very important landmark in Islamic history.
In fact the Muslim calendar starts from that date. Soon after
the Hijra, the Meccans decided to pursue Mohammed to Medina.
This resulted in a war which lasted for ten years. After this
long conflict the Muslim forces consisting of only 700 men
finally inflicted a decisive defeat on the Meccan army of 24,000
men, a defeat that inspired the followers of Mohammed and
persuaded the vast majority of people in Arabia that God had, in
deed, sent the Prophet to convert his people.
Having defeated the enemy, Mohammed returned to Mecca and from
then on people flocked to embrace Islam in their thousands.
These followers of Mohammed would then launch a crusade outside
Arabia to propagate and spread the new religion.
Within the first century after the Prophet’s death in 632, Islam
would spread to many lands. The religion had by now reached
India and the whole of Northern Africa had become Muslim.
The Coming of Islam to The Gambia
We have already seen how Islam was first brought to the people
of West Africa by North African traders on the Trans-Saharan
routes, and it early established a base in the Southern termini
of those routes.
In the eleventh century the ruler of Futa Toro was converted to
Islam. In the same century; the puritanical Almoravid movement
made its appearance among the Berber tribes of Southern
Mauritania. Although the Almoravid directed most of their
efforts to the North of Mauritania they left a strongly Muslim
imprint on the area, and Mauritanian Muslims introduced Islam to
many areas South of the Senegal river including what is today
The Gambia.
By the fifteenth century, there were marabouts attached to most
of the chiefs’ courts in The Gambia region. These early converts
prayed for the chiefs and served as court secretaries. As a
reward for their services, they received land and were permitted
to found their own villages.
By the seventeenth century, the Muslim villages had become
substantial islands. The Muslim communities supported Koranic
schools, kept fast during the month of Ramadan and followed the
Islamic dietary laws. Although Islam first took hold in the
chiefly entourages, if increasingly found its greatest success
among the free peasantry.
Reasons for the success of Islam
Before the arrival of Islam, religion was a complete way of life
among the people of The Gambia. The religion of these early
Negroes was a combination of many factors. Usually there was a
chief good, creator of all things, who was normally tied into
the descent group by having especially created the first
ancestor.
Since they struggled against a hostile environment, natural
objects were also venerated as lesser deities. This led to a
belief in a pantheon of gods: god of the sky; god the earth; god
of the animal world.
The rulers of these early Negroes were believed to possess
divine powers through their descent from deified ancestors, who
were worshipped and consulted by the people through oracles.
Each god had his own cult; each cult its own secrets, shrines
and priests. Each god was the centre of import ceremonies and
the recipient of sacrifices. Each cult played a vital role in
the working of the whole social system, and served as a source
of political and religious authority.
Offerings were made not only to the gods but also to appease or
exorcise evil spirits. There were some beliefs in an after life
which was viewed as an extension of life itself. And yet with
the arrival of Islam, which regarded such traditional religious
practices as profane, the majority of Gambians had embraced the
religion which today is the dominant religion in the country.
The early spread of Islam in The Gambia area was the result of a
number of factors, some social, some political and some
economic.
The fact that the process of early conversion took place in the
trading cities is significant. In these trading cities lived
different peoples, removed from their own closed village
societies where the success of the harvest was held to depend on
fertility rites and sacrifices to the local gods.
In their non-traditional setting, these city dwellers were de-tribalised
in a religious sense and thus more open to the influence of a
new religion which seemed adapted to their urban way of life. To
them, Islam must have seemed very much like the cut of traders
and Allah the God of merchants.
The acceptance of Islam was also facilitated by the nature of
traditional religions of the people. New cults were founded for
newly identified gods. Although they were people who believed in
many gods, all of them acknowledge the existence of a supreme
God. This must have made the Islamic introduction’ of the
worship of one God unobjectionable.
Although Islam did not have rituals like sacrifices to local
gods or consulting oracles, its own rituals could be interpreted
in terms of local cult practices. Such practices were such
things like the five daily prayers, the yearly fasting and the
required procedures for the slaughter of animals.
Such types of rituals including the sale of amulets to protect
the owner against evil spirits and ill- health could be equated
in non- Muslim minds with traditional religious sacrifices, the
consultation of oracles and ancestor worship which played an
important role in their own religions.
As long as Islam did not attempt to destroy indigenous cults,
there was no objection to it. In deed studies of modern
Islamisation of West African peoples have shown the Muslim
clerics do not discredit existing customs and traditional
religious institutions but infiltrate them and change their
nature.
There were also a number of more positive factors that
contributed to the acceptance of Islam by the peoples of The
Gambia area. These factors were mainly non-religious.
As was pointed out earlier on, Muslims were associated with the
wealthy traders who brought goods essential to the local
economies and contributed in the increase of military power.
Early Trans-Saharan traders also told impressive stories of the
Islamic civilizations in their own home countries which
undoubtedly gave practical expression to the Islamic God.
The mode of dress of these early Muslims, their new architecture
with impressive mosques and their possession of luxury goods
added to the prestige of the Islamic religion. Their literacy in
Arabic greatly enhanced this prestige for the non-literate
peoples assigned important supernatural qualities to the written
word.
The spread of Islam was also facilitated because of its appeal
to traditional rulers. Once a rule accepted the religion, his
influence and authority were usually sufficient to impose it
upon at least the ruling classes of his state.
Acceptance of Islam by the readitional rulers, and observance of
Islamic religious ceremonies brought them the political support
of the urban Muslim communities who were influential for their
role in commerce and for their literacy. This spread of Islam in
the towns offered a new and necessary base for imperial unity.
Not only would Islam form a bond between the ruler and all his
Muslim subjects, but his political authority would be further
reinforced by the Islamic teaching which imposed obedience to a
just Muslim ruler on all Muslims irrespective of ethnic or
racial background.
For these reasons rulers were quick to see the advantage of
adopting an “international” religion in place of a local one.
The cult of the Almighty Allah became in time the personal
religion of an almighty earthly ruler.
The Effects of the Spread of Islam
The most obvious effect of the spread of Islam among the people
of The Gambia was the introduction a new foreign religion.
Islam’s monotheism and the idea that the souls of the dead and
departed do not participate in human affairs were completely new
to the societies into which they were introduced.
With the doctrines of Islam also came rituals and customs
equally strange to the peoples. The introduction of Islam not
only meant the profession of one God- Allah, but also the
introduction of the Ramadan fast, the building of mosques and
the pilgrimage to Mecca.
Not only did converts obey Muslim regulations on ablutions on
the slaughter of animals for food and on the seclusion of women,
they also adopted Islamic styles of dress, architecture, as well
as reading and writing in Arabic.
With Islam came a new and important form of education whereas
traditional education was purely local and concerned with
initiating the young into knowledge of local custom, their
duties within local society and the skills they needed for their
livelihoods, Islamic studies covered an international field of
theology, law, politics, history, geography and the nature
sciences. In this way, Islam also introduced the are of academic
criticism.
It may be difficult, however, to estimate the exact religious
impact of Islam on the peoples of The Gambia or the people of
the Sudan, in general. Early travellers and historians commented
favorably on the standard of Islamic piety, scholarship and some
features of government in the important trading cities.
On the other hand these travellers and historians recorded the
continuance of traditional customs and ceremonies unacceptable
to Islam. Possibly the efforts of Muslims to adapt traditional
customs and practices of Islamic purposes had the opposite
effect and it Islam that became assimilated into basically
non-Muslim systems and institutions.
It certainly seems that Islam in The Gambia valley before 1800
was little more than an imperial cult of great prestige existing
side by side with cults to other-gods. Few rulers escaped the
need to draw their power and legitimacy from traditional
religions; many people must have both worshipped in the mosque
and sacrificed to local deities.
It was mainly for this reason, as we shall see, that nineteenth
century Gambian Jihadists like Maba Diakhou and Foday Kabba
Dumbuya castifated nominally Muslim rulers for the travesty of
Islam practiced in their states and waged the Soninke-Marabout
Wars that raged in The Gambia through out the nineteenth century
placing Islam on a new foundation.
Source :
http://observer.gm/africa/article/2008/3/27/islam-in-the-gambia-the-foundation-of-islam |