The history of
generosity to foreigners in Africa goes along
way. In 1331, Ibn Battuta, a learned Moroccan traveler, Islamic jurist and scholar,
during a visit to Mogadishu ,
was accorded the best form of hospitality by being fed, clothed, and
entertained for free. Perhaps, had he paid visit to any European land, he would
either have been held captive as a slave indefinitely or he would have been
killed right away. In his famous Rihla or travels, Ibn Battuta reported, “we
stayed there for three days, food being brought to us three times a day,
following their custom. On the fourth day, which was a Friday, the qadi and
students and one of the sheikh’s viziers came to me, bringing a set of robes,
these [official] robes of theirs consist of a silk wrapper which one ties round
his waist in place of drawers (for they have no acquaintance with these), a
tunic of Egyptian linen with an embroidered border, a furred mantle of
Jerusalem stuff, and an Egyptian turban with an embroidered edge. They also
brought robes for my companions suitable to their position. We went to the
congregational mosque and made our prayers behind the maqsura [private
box for the sultan]. When the sheikh came out of the maqsura I saluted
him along with the qadi; he said a word of greeting, spoke in their tongue with
the qadi, and then said in Arabic “you are heartily welcome, and you
have honored our land and given us pleasure.” [i]
Ibn Battuta’s hosts never turned out to be the apes, beasts,
and baboons recorded in many obnoxious European accounts of Africa .
Instead, he found people who were resilient, affectionate, modern, and
perceptive of travelers’ needs, punctilious, and above all religious and not
blasphemous as the Europeans would have us believe. Ibn Battuta was a guest to
a Somali sheikh (Islamic scholar) and a qadi (magistrate) both of who
observed all the values, creeds, and customs of Islamic way of life especially
in reference to etiquettes relating to hosting guests or visitors. Even before
disembarking ship, Ibn Battuta and his companions or crew, were accorded a high
degree of respect on board ship. Ibn Battuta was accorded the respect reserved
for a doctor of the law. He became a guest of the sheikh and not the guest of
an ordinary man or woman. Born in Tangiers ,
Morocco in the
year 1304 C.E., Ibn Battuta descended from the Lawati Berber tribe in a family
of lawyers and judges. The full name of this dedicated lone-traveler was Abu
Abdullah Muhammad Ibn Abdullah Al Lawati Al Tanji Ibn Battuta; he died about
1368 or 1369. In a period spanning 29 years, Ibn Battuta covered approximately
75,000 miles by ship and on dhows, on horseback, on foot, and riding donkeys
and camels to mostly Muslim lands. He traveled three times the distance covered
by the celebrated European discoverer and explorer Marco Polo!
In reference to past African political organizations, contemporary
scholars and writers often use the terms stateless society and segmentary
society. Far from the truth, Africans enjoyed elaborate hierarchy of
officials and bureaucratic apparatus in the management of their daily affairs. Between
the years 800-1500 C.E., great kingdoms, empires, and city-states flourished in
sub-Saharan Africa with scrupulous trade routes traversing the massive Sahara
desert culminating in the profusion of immense wealth to West Africa, North
Africa, Middle East, and Europe in what came
known as the trans-Sahara trade routes. Whether in the coastal plains or in the
lush hinterlands, Africans executed complex and organized central governments
ruled by powerful kings with administrative divisions overseen by prominent
figures representing the head of state.
Long before the birth of Islam, a mighty kingdom existed in
Ghana (not related to the modern state of Ghana). Even before the Islamic Hijra
in 622 C.E. (Common Era), as many as twenty-two kings ruled Ghana . As
reported by Al-Bakri, a mid-eleventh century Spanish-Cordovan traveler, the seat
of the Kingdom of
Ghana was at
Koumbi-Saleh-a flourishing city containing elaborate buildings and over a dozen
mosques. During its height of power—from the ninth to the twelfth century—as
many as fifteen thousand to twenty thousand people populated the city of
Koumbi-Saleh. [ii]
To maintain order in the kingdom and protect the city and
the state from external aggression and to safeguard the trade routes from marauding
hooligans and highway robbers, the Kingdom
of Ghana had as many
two-hundred thousand well-armed and well-trained armies of warriors. To support
such a large army, the administration in Koumbi-Saleh levied taxes on trade caravans
passing through the kingdom. During this period in time, the headwaters of the Niger , Gambia ,
and Senegal
rivers contained the largest deposits of gold. The demand for economic
development and dwindling resources in the eastern hemisphere lured merchants
in the Mediterranean basin and the Islamic world to the vast resources that was
available in the kingdom
of Ghana . In exchange for
gold and other precious minerals, trans-Saharan merchants from as far as Europe
and Arabia brought in horses, cloth,
manufactured wares, and salt-a crucial commodity that was in short supply in
the tropics. Besides Koumbi-Saleh, other prominent trading towns were Timbuktu in present-day Mali , Gao, Jenne, and Niani. Never
at time has the history of the African continent been contrasting as European
explorers of the past envisaged. Instead, Africa
enjoys a history full of intricate governance, distinct civilization, elaborate
terra-cotta craftsmanship, magnificent trade routes and abundance of wealth,
and endless stories.
[i] H.A.R. Gibb, trans. The Travels of Ibn Battuta, A.D.
1325-1354, 4 vols. Cambridge :
Hakluyt Society, 1958-94, 2:374-77.
[ii] Jerry H. Bentley and Herbert F. Ziegler, Traditions
and Encounters: A Global Perspective on the Past, Volume 1: From the Beginning
to 1500, The McGraw Hill Companies, Inc., 1221 Avenue of the Americas, New
York, NY 10020, 388-89.
No comments:
Post a Comment