Introduction:
‘Popular’ Islam in Egypt
The first time I visited Tanta, in the heart of the Nile Delta, I was twenty years old. It was winter. It was not love at first sight: the town was dusty, sad, and dull; the weather was cold and damp. I knew nothing then of the saint, Sayyid al-Badawi, who was venerated there, nor of the pilgrimage, the famous mulid and the Sufis of the Delta.1 Since that time I have dedicated continuous research to all of these, and decades of inquiries have still not exhausted my curiosity or passion, or indeed, the very subject. The study of Badawi and the mulid of Tanta is not like writing a tidy monograph based upon accessible histories. It is more like casting off into a storm-tossed sea. There are hardly any sources, just some rare passages in old chronicles, some fevered hagiographies, ancient legends transcribed in the nineteenth century, stories passed down by oral tradition, and ranting diatribes. I had no real archives to go on, but I could and did visit the mulid continually over the years, as well as the surrounding countryside and its mausoleums. To have begun this field research at the threshold of my adult life contributed greatly to making me who I am. The promise made to friends, to whom this book is dedicated, and made to myself has to be kept: it is time to tell the tale of what was long the greatest pilgrimage in the Muslim world, a tale that belongs to the intimate heart of Egypt’s history.
An article on Tanta in the first edition of the French-language Encyclopédie de l’islam in 1934 presents the town as a hotbed of fanatics galvanized by the quasi-pagan cult of a saint of mythic proportions, the famous Sayyid al-Badawi (1200–76). The rather obscure life of this saint had, since the fifteenth century, led to the creation of the most remarkable legend of all Egyptian hagiographies. As for the mulid of Tanta, the majority of Western writers who had devoted a few lines to the subject simply saw it as the distant descendant of the ancient pilgrimage of Bubastis dedicated to the cat goddess Bastet, which was mentioned by Herodotus, and thus a scene of barely concealed paganism, mythology, and freakish phenomena. Over several centuries the mulid of Tanta, established in a rather modest little town, was recognized by the chroniclers themselves as the biggest in the Muslim world, bigger even than the Hajj to Mecca. It was also the most rowdy, scandalous funfair and a place of debauchery.
The first Orientalists who studied the mulid of Tanta were obsessed by this reputation and neglected to ask about the faith that had drawn and continued to draw so many Egyptians to the mausoleum of Badawi. What did the saint represent to them? What role did his brotherhood play in the cult? What exactly is this popular Egyptian Islam, of which even today the mulid of Tanta constitutes the most spectacular manifestation?
This Islam is not that of the Sufis, which is supposed to contrast with the scholarly Islam of the ulema, but rather that which constituted a shared culture for all up until the end of the nineteenth century and even into the interwar period. From the 1880s, the rupture caused by Islamic modernism and its success as the dominant discourse in the twentieth century have led many commentators and the Egyptians themselves to a mistaken reading of religious tradition, seen as a tissue of backward superstitions. Islamic modernism saw itself as an attempt to adapt Islam to the contemporary world, and it implied a rejection of tradition as lived, which was presented as sclerotic and burdened with useless dross, including the cult of saints. In reality, Egyptian ‘popular’ Islam (the Islam of ordinary people) is deeply and intimately shaped by Sufism, the quest for union with God, which since the thirteenth century—the very era of Badawi—had gradually formed itself into mystical brotherhoods, the turuq or paths. We are not contrasting here a sublime and pure ‘original’ Sufism with a degraded, bastardized version of the Sufi brotherhoods and coarse devotions. In both cases, we must clearly reject a two-tier model that supposes the existence of a popular rural illiterate Islam, that of the cult of saints, which is rejected and condemned by an Islam of the towns and of educated elites, that of the mosque and the jurist or of the mystical sheikh. Peter Brown’s essential work on the birth of the cult of saints in Christianity was of use to me as a starting point.2 He strongly rejects the ‘two-tier’ model, which sets a religion of the elites against a religion of the masses, who are supposedly more inclined to devotion to saints and more receptive to belief in miracles. This model leads nowhere in that it does not incorporate historical changes in which the authorities (bishops in the case of Christianity) played a central role in the creation and rapid expansion of the religion of the people.
One can see just what a specialist in the cult of Muslim saints might extract from Brown’s analyses, even if within a context of very different practices. Of course, Christian saints—qiddisun in Arabic—are not Muslim saints: the Muslim hagiographies call them salihun, the just, or awliya’, friends of God; and Sufism sees them as the successors to the prophets.3 For Muslims, sanctity (expressed by the root q-d-s) belongs in the strictest sense only to God. It is only proximity to God (walaya) that defines Islamic saintliness: the double meaning of the root w-l-y—which refers to links of proximity and intimacy as well as relations of protection and patronage—also evokes the twin faces of sanctity that look both toward God (walaya) and men (wilaya, which designates also the exercise of power). Another major difference from Christianity is that Muslim saints are considered as the successors of the prophets, and especially of the Prophet Muhammad, who in a way completes and concludes all previous prophetic forms. Thus sanctity is regarded more or less as accepting the model of Muhammad and proceeding within the light of Muhammad. In the hagiology drawn up by Muhyi al-Din Ibn ‘Arabi (d. 1240), all the typology and hierarchy of the saints grow out of this prophetic inspiration.
Despite the differences in terminology and theology between Christianity and Islam, the examples of the saintly man recognized during his lifetime and then venerated after his death are not irredeemably different. Powerful dynasties and ulema within Islam have also constantly favored the cult of saints, and the social and political authority of saints cannot be denied. Moreover, the two-tier model in Islam, ever-present in scholarly literature since the advent of modernism, cannot be defended historically. Religious science (‘ilm) and mystical understanding (ma‘rifa) are not in opposition. Many Sufis have been ulema, and not long ago almost all the ulema were Sufis. The cult of saints thrived in the town as in the field, and among the lettered as among the rustic. Naturally, there are Sufis and there are Sufis: some are educated and some are illiterate; some are the disciples of great mystics, others have simply followed their forefathers by joining a brotherhood as a child. One sheikh performed the dhikr—the remembrance of the name of God—in a low voice, while another was accompanied by pipes and drums. All the diversity of individual aspirations,