tion, 2001); Marshall G. S. Hodgson, “Al-Darazi and
206
AF
J:
East Africa
The Islamic religion first appeared in East Africa
during the lifetime of m
Uhammad
(ca. 510–632),
when he sent some of his followers to Abyssinia
(in modern Ethiopia) in order to escape Meccan
persecution. By the 10th century, Muslim mer-
chants had introduced their faith into Somalia.
During the next 500 years, Muslims carried their
religion down the East African coast along the
trade routes. Muslim communities were estab-
lished in many of the trading towns along the
coast and on several nearby islands. Because of
their involvement in international trade, coastal
Islamic communities often included Muslims
of Arab, Persian, and South Asian origin who
belonged to Shafii, Ibadi, Shii, and several other
Islamic groups.
Prior to the modern era, East African Islam
was mostly limited to the coast due to its associa-
tion with Muslim merchants, who did not tend to
travel inland. This limitation did not apply to the
northeastern regions, where small Muslim prin-
cipalities arose as buffer states between Muslim
Egypt and Christian Ethiopia, and in the region
of the modern nation of s
Udan
, where the sultan-
ates of Wadai, Dar Fur, and Sinnar held sway. In
these areas, Islam became the religion of the rul-
ing class but spread more slowly among common
people, who also clung to pre-Islamic practices.
Increasing ties with the Middle East and the rising
influence of Sufi orders led to a more widespread
Islamic adherence by people of the region between
the 16th and 18th centuries.
European colonial powers began to exert their
influence with the arrival of the Portuguese on the
East African coast during the 16th century. Portu-
guese support for Christians in the region led to
increased tensions with the Muslims. This situa-
tion was exacerbated by the triumph of European
colonialism
at the end of the 19th century. Colo-
nial rule actually served to spread Islam through-
out societies in which Muslim communities had
predated colonialism. Europeans extended trade
into the interior, opening new fields for Islamic
expansion. They also promoted Muslims into
positions of influence and created urban condi-
tions that favored the spread of Islam. However,
in areas that had been largely untouched by Islam
prior to the colonial era, Christian missionaries
experienced considerable success.
As a result, East Africa entered the era of inde-
pendent states as a region divided among Muslim,
Christian, and “traditional,” or indigenous, reli-
gious communities. This has often led to tension
E
between the different religious communities, as
evidenced by the long-standing civil war in Sudan
between the Islamic north and non-Muslim reb-
els in the south. In other countries, interfaith
relations have been more peaceful. For example,
Muslims in Kenya, Tanzania, and Malawi have
used a variety of nonviolent means to advance
their interests as minority religious communities
within secular nation-states. Tensions between
Sufi orders and various revivalist groups have also
affected the development of East African Islam,
with revivalists accusing Sufis of promoting non-
Islamic practices. In summary, Islamic communi-
ties in East Africa are marked by their diversity
and include Muslims from a wide variety of ethnic
backgrounds, sectarian loyalties, educational lev-
els, economic statuses, and political viewpoints.
See also c
hristianity
and
i
slam
; W
est
a
Frica
.
Stephen Cory
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