Rudolph Ware

Jihad of the Pen


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      Copyright © 2018 by

      The American University in Cairo Press

      113 Sharia Kasr el Aini, Cairo, Egypt

      420 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10018

       www.aucpress.com

      First published in hardback in 2018

      This electronic edition published in 2019

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

      ISBN 978 977 416 863 5

      eISBN 978 1 61797 872 2

      Version 1

      Table of Contents

       Acknowledgments

       Introduction: The Sufi Scholarship of Islamic West Africa

       Zachary Wright

       Rudolph Ware and Muhammad Shareef

       Part 2: Shaykh ‘Umar al-Futi Tal

       Amir Syed

       5 Introduction

       6 “A Reminder for the Seekers and Success for the Students” (Tadhkirat al-mustarshidin wa falah al-talibin)

       7 The Lances of the Party of the Merciful against the Throats of the Party of the Accursed (al-Rimah hizb al-rahim ‘ala nuhur hizb al-rajim)

       8 The Vessel of Happiness and Assistance for the Weak (Safinat al-sa‘ada li-ahl du‘f wa-l-najada)

       Part 3: Shaykh Ahmadu Bamba Mbacké

       Rudolph Ware

       9 Introduction

       10 “The Valiant One” (al-Sindid)

       11 Pathways of Paradise (Masalik al-Jinan)

       12 “Gifts of the Benefactor in Praise of the Intercessor” (Mawahib al-nafi‘ fi mada’ih al-shafi‘)

       Part 4: Shaykh Ibrahim bin ‘Abdallah Niasse

       Zachary Wright

       13 Introduction

       14 “The Spirit of Etiquette” (Ruh al-adab)

       15 The Removal of Confusion (Kashif al-ilbas)

       16 “The Jeweled Letters” (Jawahir al-rasa’il)

       17 Poetry for the Prophet (from Dawawin al-sitt)

       Conclusion: The Prophet, the Qur’an, and Islamic Ethics

       Rudolph Ware

       Notes

       Bibliography

       Acknowledgments

      We would like to acknowledge the many scholars, both Muslim ‘ulama’ and Western academics, who have made accessible the Islamic scholarly tradition of West Africa to a wider readership. They are too many to name here, but this work would not have been possible without their efforts.

      For previous source-work on Shehu ‘Uthman bin Fudi, we are grateful for the efforts of Mervyn Hiskett, Murray Last, and John Hunwick. We also acknowledge the direct assistance of ‘A’isha Bewley and Muhammad Shareef in preparing the section on Ibn Fudi.

      For prior work on the writings of al-Hajj ‘Umar Tal, we acknowledge the work of Bernd Radtke, John Hunwick, Said Bousbina, and Muhtar Holland. We also thank Kamal Husayni for making available to us unpublished drafts of Holland’s translations of sections of the Rimah. We are grateful to Imam Fode Drame and Sillah Drammeh for offering translation advice on difficult passages from al-Hajj ‘Umar’s writing.

      Earlier work with the writings of Serin Touba Ahmadu Bamba deserving mention includes that of Cheikh Babou, Bachir Mbacké, and Sana Camara.

      For the writings of Shaykh Ibrahim Niasse, we are thankful for the previous translation and analytical work of Shaykh Hasan Cissé, Ousmane Kane, Rüdiger Seesemann, and Fakhruddin Owaisi. The explanations provided by Imam Cheikh Tijani Cissé in various interviews were also indispensable in fully understanding the writing of Shaykh Ibrahim.

      For useful feedback with this manuscript at various stages, we thank Robert Launay, Brannon Ingram, Rebecca Shereikis, Oludamini Ogunnaike, Mauro Nobili, and Matthew Schumann. We are also grateful to our anonymous reviewers for their useful comments, and to Tarek Ghanem, Lucy Hanna, and the entire staff at AUC Press for believing in this project from the start and seeing it through.

      We thank all of our families for putting up with yet another writing project. Wa akhir da‘wa’ina inna l-hamd li-Lah rabb al-alamin.

       Introduction

       The