A sweeping and authoritative historical narrative, Caravans of Faith: Islam's 1,300-Year Journey Across the Sahel offers readers a profound look at the intersection of religion, commerce, and statecraft in West Africa. Edited by Hichem Karoui and the GEW Social Sciences Group, this book explores how the Sahel—the vast ecological corridor between the Sahara Desert and the African savannah—became a vibrant crucible of Islamic civilization.
The narrative reveals how Islam was integrated into the fabric of Sahelian life over centuries. Rather than a story of simple conquest, this is a history of adaptation. The book begins with the indigenous, pre-Islamic societies that mastered the harsh environment, detailing the complex networks of gold and salt trade. It then tracks the arrival of Muslim merchants, the austere reforms of the Almoravid movement, and the political genius of the Ghana, Mali, and Songhai Empires. Readers will walk the streets of medieval Timbuktu and Djenné, discovering an era where mud-brick mosques served as epicenters of law, science, and manuscript production.
The book transitions seamlessly into the modern age, offering a nuanced examination of Sufi brotherhoods, 19th-century jihadi movements, and the profound disruptions of European colonialism. By charting the transition into post-colonial independence, Caravans of Faith provides crucial context for the challenges facing the Sahel today. It offers an unflinching look at the environmental crises of drought and famine, the emergence of militant insurgencies, and the inspiring, ongoing fight to protect the region's rich heritage of Islamic manuscripts from destruction.
Perfect for history enthusiasts, academics, and global citizens, Caravans of Faith proves that the Sahel's history is not just regional, but a vital chapter in the story of global civilization.
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