( Extracted from Abdulaziz
Y. Lodhi and David Westerlund African
Islam in Tanzania ).
The earliest concrete evidence of
Moslem presence in East Africa is the foundation of a mosque in Shanga
on Pate Island where gold, silver and copper coins dated AD 830 were found
during an excavation in the 1980's. The oldest intact building in East
Africa is a functioning mosque at Kizimkazi in southern Zanzibar dated
AD 1007. It appears that Islam was widespread in the Indian Ocean area
by the 14th century. When Ibn Battuta from Maghreb visited the East African
littoral in 1332 he reported that he felt at home because of Islam in the
area. The coastal population was largely Moslem, and Arabic was the language
of literature and trade. The whole of the Indian Ocean seemed to be a "Moslem
sea". Moslems controlled the trade and established coastal settlements
in South East Asia, India and East Africa.
Islam was spread mainly through trade
activities along the East African coast, not through conquest and territorial
expansion as was partly the case in West Africa, but remained an urban
littoral phenomenon for a long time. When the violent Portugese intrusions
in the coastal areas occured in the 16th century, Islam was already well
established there and almost all the ruling families had ties of kinship
with Arabia, Persia, India and even South East Asia owing to their maritime
contacts and political connections with the northern and eastern parts
of the Indian Ocean. In the end of the 17th and beginning of the 18th centuries
the coastal Moslems managed to oust the Portugese with the help of Omani
Arabs. These Arabs gradually increased their political influence until
the end of the 19th century when European conquerors arrived at the coast
of East Africa.
During the time when the Omanis dominated
the coast politically, the spread of Islam intensified also in the interior
of East Africa. Trade contacts with peoples in the interior, especially
the Nyamwezi, gained importance and places like Tabora in Nyamwezi territory
and Ujiji at Lake Tanganyika became important entrep"ts in the ever-increasing
trade in slaves and ivory. Many chiefs, even in parts of Uganda, converted
to Islam and cooperated with the coastal Moslems. Trade served to spread
not only Islam, but also the language and culture we call Swahili. Before
the establishment of German East Africa in the 1880's the influence of
the Swahilis or coastal people was mainly limited to the areas along the
caravan routes and around their destinations.
The great expansion of Islam in the
interior of Tanganyika began during the German colonial era. After having
conquered the coastal area the Germans started hiring Swahilis as civil
servants thus creating a cadre of literate Swahilis who accompanied the
Germans into the interior. These subordinate administrators, akida, and
Moslem soldiers are an important part of the explanation of why Islam spread
so much faster in the areas controlled by the Germans than in territories
occupied by the British (Kenya and Uganda). The Germans established a government
school system along the coast with Swahili as the language of instruction,
in contrast to the missionary schools in the interior which used the vernaculars.
Even if many Moslems cooperated with
the Germans, there were also large groups who were not benefitted by colonial
rule and who were more or less openly oppositional. These groups were primarily
found in the poorer sections of the rural population and were attracted
to the activities of the Sufi orders. Several orders were active during
and after the German era, the most important being the Qadiriyya and Shadhiliyya.
Many Sufis played an important role in the Maji Maji uprising (1905-07)
against the Germans. The name Maji Maji refers to powerful water (Sw. maji
= water) which was thought to give protection against the German weapons.
The traditional African ideas of Kinjikitile, the leader of the uprising,
were to an extent intertwined with Sufi ideas. Even if our knowledge of
Sufi expansion in German East Africa is very limited, the fact remains
that Sufi influence was an important factor in the expansion of Islam.
After World War I, when the British
took control over Tanganyika, the growth of Islam decreased somewhat. The
British system of local government, Indirect Rule, favoured local chiefs
rather than Moslems from the coast. Ever-increasing missionary activities
as well as the establishment of Christian schools promoted the employment
of Christians. Moslems were gradually alienated from the administration
and the political scene. From the time around World War II the influence
of reformist and anti-colonial movements increased, and during the 1950's
Pakistani Moslem preachers regularly visited eastern and southern Africa
to promote Moslem renewal and to revive political consciousness among Moslems.
This was a reaction to colonial oppression and the increased Christian
influence in society. Moslems thus exerted great influence over the independence
movements. When the Tanganyika African National Union (TANU) was founded
in Daressalaam in 1954, coastal Moslems played an important role. Even
in spheres where Islam played a minor part Moslems could hold strategic
positions in TANU. The Christian reactions to the independence movement
were mixed; many local and Western church leaders discouraged their followers
from joining the movement.
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