• *> • • * - *• * INDJVIDUAL RESEARCH REPORTS 67 THE SAGHANUGHU AND THE SPREAD OF MALIKI LAW: a provisional note. Ivor Wilks from Niger into the Voltaic region, Throughout the month of May, 1966 an Institute of African Studies team, consisting of Mr. J . J. Holden, al-Hajj Uthman b. Ishaq Boyo, Mr. Cleophas Futuri, and myself, was able to work in Northern Ghana, Upper Volta, and Niger. In June we spent a further week continuing inquiries in the Sunyani-Wenchi area. Mr. Holden was engaged in following up his work upon 19th century Islamic movements in the area, with especial reference to the Zabarima incursions whilst I was concerned primarily with further study of the spread of Maliki law in the same area, and particularly with the Saghanughu agency in this process. In the course of the expedition, however, we were able to obtain field data on other but related matters: on the jihad of al-Hajj Mahmud Karantaw, on Musa Sari, on the Fulani of Sey, on the Baghayughu of Wagadugu and Yendi; and - not obviously related - were able to examine the vast iron-smelting site at Numudaga, near Bobo- Dioulasso. All field notes are being deposited in the Library of the Institute of African Studies, and a number of Arabic works which we were able to borrow for copying have been accessioned in the IASAR series. It will take considerable time to work through the data obtained. The following provisional note is intended therefore to do no more than indicate the main lines of the study of the spread of Maliki law ob INDIVIDUAL RESEARCH REPORTS which i sought to further in the course of these field trips, i have to acknowledge my deep indebtedness ro al-Hajj Uthman b. Ishaq Boyo for his invaluable assistance not only in the course of these journeys, but over many years, and of course to the Institute of African Studies for its financial support. Since 1962 I have been able to examine some forty West African asnad (sing, sanad), chains of authority for the transmission of learning. All are written in Arabic script and language. All are from Ghana, Ivory Coast, Mali or Upper Volta. Xerox copies of many of them are accessioned in the Arabic Collection, institute of African Studies, University of Ghana - IASAR/49; 50; 141; 142; 162; 163; 175; 232; 295, 33b; 339; 427; 436-9; 444, Others I was able to copy in the field* The asnad, often referred to colloquially as salasil, ^sing. silsilai, constitute a scholar's ijaza, or licence to teach. Upon the satisfac- tory completion of the study of a given work, the student receives a copy of, or is allowed to copy, his teacher's sanad, to which his own name is then added. Such asnad o\ salastl are valued according to the esteem in which are held the teachers whose names appear in if. In consequence, a student who has read, for example, Imam Malik's Muwatta1 over a period of many months may subsequently spend two or three further months in re-reading it from a more famed teacher, in order to obtain a sanad through the latter. Ideally, asnad should incorporate assessments of the qualities of the various teachers named: cilm al-rifalat. The West African asnad that I have seen sometimes give some incTication or the esteem accorded to this or that figure; one is simply mucallim, another is al-shaykh, al-wali, al-faqih, etc., etc. In general, however, an outstanding teacher tends rather to rSe remembered In unwritten tradition, or else commemorated in independent works, often in verse'(e.g. t ASAR/ 18; 95; 352). The keeping of such asnad is a tradition of some antiquity in West Africa: Ahmad Baba ai-Tinbukti (d. 1627^, for example, is reported as having passed on "the chain of authority of the MalikT law school" to Abu Abdallah Muhammad b . Yacqub of Marrakush. . . Nevertheless, the practice might appear to have been restricted in its observance: that is, 1. See J . O. Hunwick, BSOAS, XXVII, 3, 1964, p.585. INDIVIDUAL RESEARCH REPORTS 69 in the forty asnad I have examined, the chains all converge upon one Muhammad a I-Mustafa b cAbbas Saghanughu, who flourished in the mid-18th century, and whose grave at Boron in the northern Ivory Coast is still a considerable centre of pilgrimage. documents from elsewhere in West Africa . I know of no other corpus of comparable I append a typical sanad for reference, that of Abd al-Rahman b. Shaykh Harrnd Tarawiri of Wa, in northern Ghana. Somewhat paradoxically, the forty asnad, whether for Imam Malik's Muwattp1, for clyad's al-ShifO', foral-Suyuti's Tafsir, etc., all run back to Imam^alik: that is, they are chains of teachers as such, rather than chains for the transmission of a specific work. The chains, however, are obviously incomplete. From Imam Malik to Muhammad al-Mustafa Saghanughu, inclusively, the asnad list the names of nineteen teachers*', - an insufficient number to span about ten centuries. The early parts of the chains, from Imam Malik b. Anas (d.796) to cAbd al-Rahman b. al-Qasim (d.806/7) to cAbd al-Salam Sahnun (d.854/5), are well known: they represent the spread of Imam Malik's teachings from Madina through Egypt to Qairawan, where Sahnun became qad7 in 848. probably at this point that the break occurs: I incline to associate such figures as Shaykh S7sa Kuru and Shaykh Turu Kuru with late medieval Mali - with the period when Mansa Sulayman (d. 1360) "brought lawyers of the Maliki school to his country1 - while al-Hajj Salim Sliwari, Muhammad Buni, and cUmar Fufana are well rememberea1 Malian culama' of the 15th to 16th centuries. From the mid-16th century cUmar Fufana to the mid-18th century Muhammad al-Mustafa Saghanughu transmission occurs through seven Saghanughu teachers, and one Tarawiri (Traore'), indicating the important position in the teaching field that the Saghanughu came to occupy in this period (and suggesting, incidentally, that the average age gap between a student and his teacher - a 'teaching generation1 - was of the order of twenty-five years.) It is 2. | exempt from this remark the Tijaniyya and Qadariyya chains, which are common, but of a quite different character. 3. A few have eighteen or twenty: such variations are often clearly due to a copyist's error. 4. A l- Umarl, Masaiik al-Absar, ch.10. •4 * • ** r 70 ^ S«n>d of Malam cAbd aj-Rahman bt Harold Taraviri, of Va 71 INDIVIDUAL RESEARCH REPORTS 'Saghanughu' is a nisba or identification name used by members of a Dyula lineage strongly represented in the northern and western Ivory Coast, and in western Upper Volta. To this day the Saghanughu retain their strong attachment to learning, providing numerous communities with imams, qadis, muftis, etc, and so forming one of the major components of the culama' class in the region. Indeed, I am indebted for much of the material in this note to al-Hajj Muhammad Marhaba Saghanughu, mufti of Bobo-Dioulasso whose knowledge of the spread of Maliki law in western West Africa - backed by the resources of his splendid library - is unexcelled. The special status of the Saghanughu is acknowledged by the Malinke griots, who classify them among the five original Muslim lineages of the Mande world. They are to be regarded as a specialized 'clerical1 lineage existing in symbiotic relationship with other Dyula groups whose association, historically, has been with commerce (Malinke dyula, 'trader1). The Dyula trading corporations of Mali, From the 14th century onwards, systematically extended the range of their activities and founded such southerly centres as Boron and Kong in the northern Ivory Coast, and Bi u (Begho) in Ghana, and there can be little doubt that the Saghanughu followed the traders in a religious and juristic capacity. The Ta'rikh al-Sudan suggests, for example, the presence of Saghanughu shaykhs as far south as Bicu by the end of the 15th century". Earlier, in 1352, Ibn Battuta had visited the Malian town of Zaghari, lying north of the Niger in the Jenne region, and found it: "large and inhabited by black traders called Wanjarata. With them are a certain number of white men who belong to the schismatic and heretical sect known as the Ibadites; they are called Saghanaghu". 5. See G. Dieterlen, Africa XXVII, 2, 1957, p.125. 6. See Monteil's corrections, Bull. I FAN, B XXVII, 3-4, 1965 p.490. The identification of al-Sacadi's Bitu with Bi u is one for which I intend to argue in a future paper. 7. Ed. Defremery and Sanguinetti, ivY pp.394-5. * *• INDIVIDUAL RESEARCH REPORTS 72 The Wanjarara traders are, of course, the Dyula, who are still widely known by the alternative name Wangara. The structural resemblance between the mid-14th century community of Zaghari, where Saghanaghu Ibadites lived in association with Wangara traders, and present communities such as Kong, where Saghanughu culama' co-exist with the Dyula traders, suggests strongly that fbn Battuta's Saghanaghu and the modern Saghanughu are one and the same - early Ibadite affiliations having been relinquished under pressure of West African Maliki orthodoxy. It may or may not be of significance, that while Ibn Battuta's white Ibadites must certainly have been of Maghribi background, "fn at least one extent version of their tradition (IASAR/246) the Saghanughu attach their genealogies to Andalusian Ummayad ones. In the second half of the 18th century the Saghanughu appear to have entered inot a particularly dynamic phase of activity, and the impact of their teaching became felt in many communities throughout the Voltaic region. Symptomatic of this was the establishment of new Saghanughu imamates: that of Kong by cAbbas b. Muhammed al-Mustafa (died 1801), of Bobo-Dioulasso by Sacid b. Muhammad al-Mustafa in 1*774/5, and later, of Dar al-lslam (Upper Volta) by Mahmud b. Ibrahim b. Muhammad al-Mustafa rn 1849/50. To the Saghanughu teachers in such centre6 came students from other towns, from Bonduku, Buna, Bando, Wa, Safane and the like. Completing their studies, with their licences to teach, they returned to their towns, opened schools, and taught new generations of students to whom they in turn issued asnad. In this way new teaching dynasties arose, like the Bamba culama' of Banda, the limit!"of Bonduku, and the Tarawiri of Wa. This process may be reconstructed in detail through a study of the proliferation of the chains of transmission from the time of Muhammad al-Mustafa onwards , though field data are necessary for the introduction of a geographical dimension, since the asnad seldom note the teachers' towns. The important part played by the Saghanughu in the spread of Maliki teachings in the later 18th and 19th centuries is, then, clear. Their relationship, however, to the 19th century Islamic revolutionary movements - 8. For Imam Sacid of Wa, who studied in Kong c. 1800, see my note in Research Review, Inst. of African Studies, Legon, I I, 2, 1966, pp.65-6. 9. I am currently investigating the possibility of the use of a computer in this exercise. •*. . 73 INDIVIDUAL RESEARCH REPORTS to the mujahidun of the region - remains to be assessed. There are certainly suggestive links. Thus al-Hajj cUmar al-rxiti is creditably said to have studied carud, qafiya, man'tiq and bayan (prosody, rhyme, logic and eloquence) under Ibrahim b. Muhammad al-Mustafa Saghanughu (d. 1825/6) in Bobo-Dioulasso , while Muhammad a I-Abyad b. AbfBakrb. Muhammad al-Mustafa taught Muhammad Koranfaw whose son and pupil al-Ha|j Mahmud created the Muslim state of Wahabu. The problem of the availability of Maliki teachings - of the availability of the actual books and of scholars to expound them - has always been a pressing one for West African Muslim communities. While all members of a society, as individuals, may correctly observe the prayers, the fast, etc., the society as such can only regulate its affairs in accordance with Islamic precepts in so far as it has access to the sources of law, and to expositions of them. On the basis of field work carried out between 1962 and 1966 I hope to be able to give some account of the Saghanughu agency in the spread of Maliki teachings, and to attempt an assessment of the sociological importance of this for select West African Muslim - and non-Muslim - commu- nities. 10. Al-Hajj Umar al-Futi is said to have assisted in the construction of the mihrab of the Saghanughu mosque in Bobo-Dioulasso, which is still preserved though the reminder of the building has been reconstructed. The Fulani poetical biography of al-Hajj cUmar, by Muhammad Aliyu Tyam, also refers to a visit to Kong.