| Return Create A Forum - Home | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| know the way | |
| https://knowtheway.createaforum.com | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| Return to: EVIDENCE OF TRUTH | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| #Post#: 20-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Legacy Of Islam In Yoruba Land | |
| By: Captshittu Date: July 28, 2017, 5:09 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| LEGACY OF ISLAM IN YORUBALAND | |
| Islam came to Oyo Empire in 14th century during the reign of | |
| Mansa Musa in Mali and subsequently conversion to Islam by some | |
| Yorubas. It was popularly called �Esin Imale� � religion brought | |
| by the Malian people. However, some people erroneously | |
| translated �Esin Imale� as �hardened religion to practise�. | |
| According to Akinjogbin (1971), Islam had come to the ancient | |
| Yoruba Kingdom of Oyo by the 14th century through trans-Saharan | |
| trade. The origin of the word �Yoruba� has been traced to Arabic | |
| writers such as Ahmad Baba (1627 in his mi�raj al-su�ud) and | |
| Muhammed Bello (1837 in his infaq al-maysur) both of whom were | |
| reported among the earliest to name the people in Oyo �yariba�, | |
| �yaruba�, �yarba� at a time when they are still referring to | |
| themselves by their diverse ethnic identities (Ogunbiyi, 2003). | |
| Yoruba people were earlier, before the advent of Islam, called | |
| �karo o ji re� while a lot of people were recognized by | |
| dialectal affiliation e.g Egba, Ijesa, Ife people etc. | |
| The first mosque was built in Oyo-Ile in 1550. Islam was | |
| established in Iwo in 1655, spread to Iseyin in 1760, Saki in | |
| 1790, Osogbo in 1889 while Ibadan, Abeokuta, Ijebu-Ode, Ikirun | |
| and Ede knew about Islam before Fulani Jihad (Gbadamosi, 1978). | |
| Islam came to Lagos in 18th century while the first mosque was | |
| built in 1774. | |
| In Yoruba cultural analysis of Ifa divinity, every new born baby | |
| was taken to Ifa for future consultation popularly called | |
| �Ikosejaye�. A new dimension to Ifa prediction was a strange | |
| corpus of Ifa called �Odu Imale� which was exclusively preserved | |
| for a new born baby that will later accepted and practised Islam | |
| (see Gbadamosi, 1978). For instance, Oba Aliyu Oyewole | |
| (1795-1820), the seventh Akinrun of Ikirun was reported during | |
| �Ikosejaye� that he will practised Islam despite the fact that | |
| he was born into traditional belief. Yet, the prediction came to | |
| pass and Islam became a well-known religion in Ikirun during his | |
| tenure so much so that he introduced Shariah Court in Ikirun | |
| just like Shariah was also practised in Ijebu-ode, Iwo, Iseyin | |
| among other places before colonial master cum missionary came in | |
| 1842 and abolished the Islamic judicial system. | |
| The case of Ibadan during the reign of Iba Oluyole is also worth | |
| mentioning when Ifa predicted the coming of Muslim clerics and | |
| the warning that they should be honoured and accommodated. It | |
| came to pass and the Ibadan Generalissimo, Aare Latoosa, during | |
| this time has problem of having a male child among his numerous | |
| wives. Yet, Ifa directed him to seek divine intervention in the | |
| hands of Muslim clerics which he sought and his prayer was | |
| answered (Gbadamosi, 1978). He, therefore, became the first | |
| Muslim Oba in Ibadan. He compensated the clerics by building a | |
| Central Mosque beside his palace. It is the replica of this | |
| �divine� assistance that led to the building of Central Mosques | |
| beside palaces in Yorubaland even within the premise of Ake | |
| palace in Egbaland. | |
| Islam revolutionized Yoruba socio-cultural evolution so much so | |
| that | |
| Yoruba were taught how to read and write by the Malian Muslim | |
| traders in Arabic language. Yoruba history, for the first time, | |
| was documented in Arabic language while child-naming conventions | |
| were borrowed from Islamic tradition. The modes of dressing in | |
| cultural Yoruba were largely inherited from Muslims traders. | |
| Islamic tradition standardized the excessive polygamous marriage | |
| in Yoruba and curtailed the culture of mal-treating women as | |
| mere slaves and appendages. Societal culture, like �Ojude-Oba� | |
| among others in Ijebu-Ode, were established after the legendary | |
| warrior, Balogun Kuku accepted Islam and became Muhammed Bello | |
| Kuku. | |
| SOURCES | |
| I. A. Akinjogbin, �The Expansion of Oyo and the Rise of Dahomey | |
| 1600-1800,� in History of West Africa, 2 vols., ed. J. F. | |
| Ade-Ajayi and M. Crowder (London: Longman, 1971), | |
| I. A. Ogunbiyi: The Search For A Yoruba Orthography Since The | |
| 1840s: Obstacles To The Choice Of The Arabic Script, Sudanic | |
| Africa, 14, 2003, 77-102 | |
| J.F. Ade-Ajayi: How Yoruba was reduce to writing, Odu 8 | |
| K. Dike: Opening Remarks in Hunwick J. O. Report of a Seminar | |
| on the Teaching of Arabic in Nigeria, Ibadan and Kano, 1965. | |
| J. Hundwick: West Africa, Islam and the Arab World Studies in | |
| Honour of Basil Davidson. Princeton: Markus Wiener Publishers, | |
| 2006. | |
| T.G.O. Gbadamosi: The Growth of Islam among the Yorub[truncated | |
| by WhatsApp] :-X | |
| ***************************************************** |