Nigerian Muslims simulate war, pray for peace

28 Jun, 2004

The proud horsemen of the Sokoto Caliphate strained to rein in their skittish steeds as the horns blared and the sun beat down from a cloudless blue sky onto the parched earth of the field of honour.
Nearby the black-turbanned camel riders found it easier to control their placid mounts as the beat of the war drums mounted in intensity, and the wailing voices of thousands of Muslim pilgrims rose in song.
The Grand Durbar called to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Shehu Usman Dan Fodio's jihad to unite the Islamic emirates of west Africa deliberately recalled his skill in war, but Nigerians see in his legacy a hope for peace.
For while the first caliph's campaign was led by 25,000 desert warriors, the inheritance he left to an empire spanning 650,000 square kilometres (250,000 square miles) was one of learning, tolerance and the rule of law.
Nigeria's modern day ruler, President Olusegun Obasanjo, a southern Christian on Sunday donned the turban of a northern Muslim lord and mounted a nomad's warhorse. As he and Sultan Muhammadu Maccido Abubakar III rode through the dust and the wildly cheering crowds, an army of sword-wielding infantrymen, drum-beating camel riders and splendidly robed horsemen surged behind them.
Each royal house from the three dozen emirates united during Dan Fodio's long ride to victory was represented in the multi-coloured tunics worn by dozens of tribes - Hausa, Fulani and Touareg - from across the region. Proud as they are, the warriors bowed respectfully as the passed the bicentary durbar's guests of honour; 200 traditional rulers, the presidents of Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Ghana and envoys from as far as distant Senegal.
Dust from the parade ground was mixed with acrid black smoke as volleys of musket fire rang out among the revellers, who had come to renew two centuries of allegiance to the sultan, ruler of this ancient Nigerian city.
The pomp and pageantry might seem out of place in a modern African republic which is home to 130 million people, only half of them Muslim, and as the continent's largest oil exporter dependent on the 21st century world economy. But many Nigerians feel they need to return to the values promoted by Dan Fodio, whose caliphate rescued the region from the whims of local feudal lords and built a society built on learning, Sharia law and social equality.
With today's Nigeria and other parts of the caliph's former west African realm sinking deeper into poverty and beset by corruption, lawlessness and ethnic strife, Sultan Maccido feels his countrymen should look to the past.
"For our part we will continue to preach peaceful co-existence irrespective of our religious and or cultural differences," the monarch told the crowd.
Both the sultan and Obasanjo lamented a recent upsurge in violence between Nigeria's Muslims and Christians - which has left hundreds dead in the past two months alone - and called for peace and understanding.
Then they mounted their horses, draped in the extravagant finery of desert notables, and followed by footmen supporting white, brocaded canopies.
Around them the crowd roared with approval, waving their weapons in a display that recalled a battle fought on the very same field in 1903 when Sultan Attahiru I took on the British Empire in the Battle of Gingiwa.
The sultan's brave last stand cost him his temporal power, as his lands were carved up by British and French colonisers, but his successors continued to serve as spiritual leaders under empire, dictators and latterly elected rule.

Read Comments