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Abstract
This paper explores
the role played by an Islamic cleric, Shaykh Mass
Kah, in the dissemination of Islamic teaching and
its practice in the Senegambia. It analyzes the
role religious leaders played in the Senegambia
after the demise of Islamic kingdoms that militant
Islamic leaders attempted to build during the
second half of the nineteenth century. Examining
the life history of Mass Kah within this time
period shows how religious leaders like him
remained central in the everyday lives of local
communities, their followers, and those who sought
their blessings. Given the pivotal role of Islam
in the Senegambia during the militant revolutions
between Muslims and non-Muslims or nominal Muslims
(those who practice the religion in name only) of
the nineteenth century, the clerics emerged as new
leaders in positions of social and political
authority. Islam offered the people a social,
cultural, and political opportunity to replace
their autocratic overlords. By foregrounding the
meaningfulness of the change that was brought by
the peaceful transition to Islam during the
colonial period, the paper examines how the “new”
faith was widely internalized by the peasantry,
who were impressed with the numerous
demonstrations of miracles by Muslim clerics.
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Bala S. K.
Saho is a Ph.D. candidate, Department
of History, Michigan State University. His
research focuses on nineteenth and early twentieth
century Islamic, colonial, and gender history in
the Senegambia region.
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