Preview

How Did The Shehu Lead To The Transformation Of Central Sudan?

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
905 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
How Did The Shehu Lead To The Transformation Of Central Sudan?
The Shehu was well mindful that he had to influence and educate men and women who would subscribe to his ideas and share his aspirations to produce an ummah that devoted to Islam in order to transform society. As he knew he could not rely on other scholars to achieve his purposes, he established his own ‘school’, taught his own students and generated his own community of scholars and teachers. It was through his students that he spread his message and the students will formed the inner core of the movement and carried the prosecution of jihad to successful end. The Shehu’s method that brought about the transformation of central Sudan by raising the generations covers the three areas which were the intellectual, the spiritual and the profound …show more content…
The Shehu advised his people to regard sleep not merely physical phenomenon but rather as a profound lesson which repeats itself daily. They should see sleep as a form of ‘death’ and their wakening as a form of ‘resurrection’. In other words, the thought of the hereafter should be paramount in their minds when going to bed. It could, in fact, be their last sleep. Therefore, they should go to bed in a state of purity, teeth brushed, and wudu performed. They should asked Allah forgiveness for all their sins and offer the supplication (dua) appropriate for going to bed. Kitab al-Farq, dealt with the questions of leadership. In both works, The Shehu pointed out the oppressive policies instituted by Hausa rulers, illegal taxations levied on common people, arbitrary confiscation of property, corruption by judges, perversion of the legal process, alteration of the sacred law to suit the interest of rulers and aristocrats, and large-scale corruption in government. The two collections also offered solutions on how to curb these …show more content…
The book is unique in two aspects. It is a book of practical, social and moral education which focuses its attention entirely on Hausa society with the sole object of rectifying its wrong deeds and guiding it aright. There is no theory in it. Everything it deals with was practiced by society. Secondly, it is a book of protest, albeit of a legal nature, and restrained. In a way it takes the lines of al-Barnawi’s Shurb al-Zulal, except that the Ihya was written by Usman and is a textbook of tajdid. Its thirty-three chapters deal with the three three fundamental issues of his message which are Iman, Islam and Ihsan. The regulation of life in general took twenty seven chapters. Both Iman and Ihsan have one chapter each, and one chapter is devoted to the Sunnah in its broader sense and one to innovations. Other titles are Tariq al-Janna which dealt with moral ideas, Wathiqat al-Ikhwan, call for intellectual excellence and social manifesto. Tanbih, in this book, says that the Shehu mobilized women and defended his actions in allowing women to attend his lectures, as justifiable and indeed, sanctioned by Islam. Bayan Wujub al-Hijra dealt with principles of warfare. While Irshad ahl al-Tafrit seeks to guide the extremists to the right understanding of the fundamentals of

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    Jesus And Mohammed Chart

    • 1279 Words
    • 6 Pages

    religion. The main purpose of this book was to show that Mohammed on the basis of his own…

    • 1279 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    There are many people that have difficulties with sleep and many studies that psychologists have researched to help explain this human behavior. In this assignment you will have the opportunity to do a study of your own on yourself!…

    • 825 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    1. Summary of the Islamic worldview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4…

    • 2411 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    For this assignment the cultural manifestations I selected to discuss as being important to our Unit’s success are Wasta, Deference to authority, and Tendency to seek compromise. Of course understanding all of the cultural manifestations are important to our unit’s success, but each region within the Middle East-North African (MENA) region will have their own variations based upon which branch of Islam is dominant in the region, what that region’s experience has been with the U.S. or a Western presence in general and numerous other factors such as the prevailing socio-economic factors of the region.…

    • 2253 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Insomnia began by first being referenced in the world’s oldest literary book, the Gilgamesh epic. In the book, the character, Gilgamesh, became mortal by making a transition from being constantly awake, to sleeplessness, and then to familiarity. In other ancient tales, sleeplessness and sleep played the difference in being immortal or mortal. In one ancient tale, the story of Chinese king Wu, the reason of his sleeping problems were because he never secured the heaven’s support. People back in the medieval time period in Europe, were not too worried about waking up in the middle of their sleep. During this period of time, having your sleep interrupted at night was a regular occurrence. The wrongdoers that were the reasoning of insomnia consisted of bedbugs, along with the fear of incendiarism, burglary, and political conspiracy.…

    • 342 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Sayyid Qutb has been one of the most notarized writers of Islamic fundamentalism this century. He has inspired many of the radical Islamic movements of the 1970s and 80s in the Middle East and Northern Africa, and his ideas of an Islamic society have been used again and again. Qutb has also influenced numerous generations of Egyptian and Arab intellectuals who seek to understand Islam as an ideology first and foremost, and as an ideology that leads to changes in the social order. Qutb wrote most of his influential political works in the 50s and 60s, while he was frustrated with Third World state of Egypt, and Qutb sought to reinvent Egypt within the context of Islam. He considered Islam ¿ political Islam especially ¿ to be the only alternative to the ñills of contemporary Muslim societies.î(1) Although QutbÍs writings incorporate many topics, including educational reform, philosophy and more, his most notable writings were those about Jahiliyyah, and his fear that Egypt was falling into the grips of a Western spirituality. Qutb felt that Islam was in danger of spiritual imperialism from the West and he sought first and foremost to preserve it. Qutb believed wholeheartedly in the supreme nature of Islam, and he felt that he needed to use radical political tactics to achieve his ends. He used his power and influence with the Muslim Brotherhood to promote his agenda. I argue that Qutb was above all a realistic political theorist (rather than a theologian or a philosopher), who would stop at nothing to see his vision realized.…

    • 1450 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    This paper will be presented in four parts. First is the overall commentary and critiques of Khaled Al-Quzahy about the book. Secondly, present other author who conducts a review of the same book. Thirdly, answer the following…

    • 1712 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    This book was a controversy in the past and not many people were opened to her ideas. “Edited and published by Sanger, who sought to educate and raise the consciousness of working women through a newspaper devoted to their specific needs” (Estherkatz). The main reason for her to write was to tell women that they are not alone and that there is a chance that they will have a better outcome in life. One important quote that Sanger used was “No Gods, “No Masters,” which meant to get the attention of middle class women and also the more educated people. This meaning focused on eliminating the unnecessary things in order to make things better.…

    • 1055 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Whether it may be the looming deadline of a final paper on the Civil Rights Movement or even simply to party and have fun; now and then, everyone has faced an event which has left them awake an entire night. While many might consider that abstaining from sleep once in awhile may not do much harm, this is far from the actual truth. Abstaining from sleep, regardless of frequency, can take a serious toll on one’s body from decreased learning capacity to anxiety, depression, and even bipolar disorder.…

    • 88 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    A theme that is repeatedly presented to us in this book is resistance. To be more specific, resistance by women against the new government that has been inaugurated. The new government taking over, making Iran an Islamic Republic results in the installment of numerous rules and regulations that oppress the female population. Nafisi’s thoughts are displayed when one her students says, “She resented the fact that her veil, which to her was a symbol of a sacred relationship to god had now become an instrument of power, turning the women who wore them into political signs and symbols” (Nafisi 103). The downgrading of women by the new regime makes Nafisi question her loyalty to her religion and results in her resisting by not wearing her veil. Not only this, but the regime preventing literature to be taught in Iran, especially work from the Western world causes Nafisi and her students to rebel by meeting in secrecy, despite the severe consequences that they would face if they got caught. When referring to meeting in secrecy, Nafisi says, “That room, for all of us, became a place of transgression” (Nafisi 8). For Nafisi and her female students, the room that they meet in had become an oasis for them as they are able to zone out from what was going on outside and spend quality time working on the one thing that they all enjoyed… literature. Iran in the 1970s and 80s consisted of a population of women that were very…

    • 1187 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Ancient Sudan (Nubia)

    • 1703 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Who are the Nubians? Nubians are people of northern Sudan and southern Egypt. Their history and traditions can be traced to the dawn of civilization. They settled first along the banks of the Nile from Aswan. Along the Nile, they developed one of the oldest and greatest civilizations in Africa until they lost their last kingdom five centuries ago. The Nubians remained as the main rivals to the homeland of Africa’s earliest black culture with a history that can be traced from 3800 B.C. onward through the monuments and artifacts. Ancient Nubia was a land of great natural wealth, gold mines, ebony, ivory and incense that its neighbors always prized. Sudan had remained the main homeland of Nubians through their long history, but many of its descendants is today’s Egypt. The majority of Nubians today is Sudanese with a population of slightly above 300,000 but are a minority in both countries. Nubians in both countries endured a lot of suffering from intentional overlooking to their history and culture. Historians have largely omitted Nubia, known today as Sudan, in favor of its splendid neighbor, Egypt simply of prejudice displayed by archaeologists. But Nubian art impacted Egyptian Art. Through Nubian history, culture, and its architecture, one can see how magnificent and powerful these group of people once were.…

    • 1703 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Life of Sudan

    • 1433 Words
    • 6 Pages

    During the mid-1980s Sudan were involved in the Civil War. Due to the Civil War, the Sudanese villages and homes were destroyed by man in military uniform; the war was going on between the North and the South Sudan. However, this caused many different problems in their homelands. On the other hand, many people were killed and many children became forced out. Most of the children had to experienced different types of hardships. Such as seeing their parents dye in front of their face, being shot at and trying to found a way to safety. Most children was about 4 to 10 years olds. The children was running and walking for about five to eight months without food and waters. Some of the children died due to starvation, getting shot, drowning and getting attacked by an wild animals. In addition, most children’s had become refugees at the Kakuma Refugee camp. However, spending their time at the camp the United States government demand that the young boys to come to America. After being demand to come to America the young boys were giving many opportunities to get a job, housing and get and education, many took advantage of these opportunities. A young man named Jacob Atem was one of those who took advantage of all the opportunities.…

    • 1433 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    I. Foreword Pakistan is a country where religion – here Islam – plays an imminent role. More then 98% of its population belong to one of the Sunnite or Shia sects. 2 Important to know is also that more then 60% of its population is illiterate. Also out of the Mullahs, the religious leaders, many are not able to read or write! They just now a little of the Holy Qur’an by hearth and that is enough to play an important role in the village which can not be challenged by an ordinary man or woman because of lack of knowledge. Once the Islamic prayer “Rabbe sidni ilma” (God give me knowledge) was embedded in the thinking of the society. Today it seems that religion and politics are misused in Pakistan to keep the people shut their mouths. Since the take-over by the military dictator Zia ul Haq in 1977, the rate of illiteracy has risen. Also governments which were voted for after 1988 through the Pakistani voters were not able or willing to improve this situation. Even when Benazir Bhutto, the daughter of Zulifkar Ali Bhutto who was hanged by Zia, was Premier Minister, nothing changed to the positive in this matter – although she promised to do something and many women had put their trust and hope in her! One achievement of culture is its literature. Books play an important part in culture! Not only are they written records of the history of a nation but also give on traditions to the next generation. School textbooks are therefore a very powerful tool to give on information which form the children in their thinking and in their (future) behaviour. “Since 1988, Aurat Foundation [Aurat = Women], with the collaboration of UNICEF, has been working on textbooks from the perspective of portrayal of women.” 3 Ruquia Jafri worked on this topic and published the result of her analysis in “Gender Bias in Pakistani School Textbooks” which was updated in September 1994. She pointed out that…

    • 11425 Words
    • 46 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Role Of Hazrat Umar

    • 772 Words
    • 4 Pages

    His personal name was ‘Umar, Faruq was his title, and Ibn Al-Khattab, his family name. He was born in 581 AD in Mecca, and belonged to a noble family of the Quraish. He was a renowned businessman and used to lead trade delegations to Syria and Iraq. Hazrat umar farooq (RA) was one one of the respectful personality in muslim ummah. Hazrat Umar (RA) is considered one of the best role models for Muslims from different aspects. All the roles…

    • 772 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Kufar: Blasphemy

    • 585 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Kufar , a tragic and shocking story in which the writer deftly uncovers the disgusting faces of the hypocrate known as Peer/Pirs (Sain, Mullanah, Jigirdar ), who present themselves as the conduit between Allah and people (illiterate and ignorant people) . They are playing a curtail role in defacing the values and image of Islam not to only at national but international level. Islam is a balanced religion with balanced rights for everyone, but Alas these Peers and Jigidaars are becoming successful in deliberately molding Islamic rules according to their own desires and wishes. In this book, Tehmina Durrani comprehensively explains the way women rights and actual status given to them by Islam are being abandoned and misused. The writer persistently tries to attain the attention of the reader to the fact that this is not the Islam that our Prophet Hazrat Muhammad S.A.W (P.B.U.H) gave us and we must struggle together to stand against the injustice done by these so-called divine figures and If we don't we will difinetly ruin our image not only as a muslim but as a human.…

    • 585 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays