New Era

Sufis strive to protect their heritage in war-torn Libya

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ZLITEN - Bullet holes scar the minaret of the Sufi mosque in Libya’s Zliten, but followers of the Muslim mystical tradition are working to renovate and preserve their heritage.

A handful of students sit crosslegge­d on the floor of the mosque in the Asmariya zawiya, transcribi­ng on wooden tablets as their teacher chants Koranic verses. Elsewhere in the complex, named for its 16th-century founder Abdessalam al-Asmar, scholars pore over old manuscript­s on theology and Islamic law.

The zawiya -- an Arabic term for a Sufi institute offering a space for religious gatherings, Koranic education and free accommodat­ion to travellers also includes a boarding school and a university.

Historian Fathi al-Zirkhani says the site is the Libyan equivalent of Cairo’s prestigiou­s Al-Azhar University, a global authority in Sunni Islam.

But despite Sufism’s long history across North Africa, Libya’s plunge into chaos after dictator Moamer Kadhafi was ousted in a 2011 revolt gave a free hand to militias.

They included hardline Islamists, who are deeply hostile to Sufi “heretics” and their mystical nighttime ceremonies aimed at coming closer to the divine.

“(Previously) dormant ideologica­l currents, with backing from abroad, took advantage of the security vacuum to attack the zawiyas,” Zirkhani said. In August 2012, dozens of Islamist militants raided the site, blowing up part of the sanctuary, stealing or burning books and damaging Asmar’s tomb.

But today, craftsmen are busily restoring terracotta tiles and repairing damage caused by the extremists.

The tomb is surrounded by scaffoldin­g but still bears its green silk cover, delicately embroidere­d with gold.

The zawiya hosts several hundred students, including many from overseas, who enjoy free food and lodging. “I came to Libya to learn Koran here,” said Thai student, Abderrahim bin Ismail, in faltering Arabic.

Houssein Abdellah Aoch, a 17-year-old from Chad wearing a long blue tunic, said he was working hard to commit verses to memory.

“I’m hoping to memorise the entire Koran then go home and become a religious teacher,” he said. When the call to prayer rings out, all rise and head through an arcaded courtyard to the mosque for noon prayers. It is a scene repeated daily for hundreds of years, but the zawiya has had a turbulent few decades.

Kadhafi, who ruled Libya with an iron fist for four decades after seizing power in a 1969 coup, was suspicious of the Sufis.

“He infiltrate­d the zawiya with his secret services, creating a climate of fear and mistrust,” said an employee, who asked to remain anonymous.

“Kadhafi chose to divide the Sufis to control them better.” But Kadhafi’s authoritie­s “loosened the strangleho­ld in the mid-1990s, which allowed the zawiyas to regain their autonomy,” he added.

After Kadhafi’s overthrow in 2011, another danger emerged. The attack in Zliten, on the Mediterran­ean coast east of Tripoli, was echoed across the country. Islamist militants used diggers and pneumatic drills to destroy numerous Sufi sites across Libya - attacks echoed in Iraq, Pakistan and elsewhere.

Zirkhani says the people who attacked the complex in Zliten were “extremists known to the state”. But in the chaos of postrevolt Libya, they have never been held to account. The zawiya has also suffered from a lack of funds as it seeks to rebuild and restore its treasures.

Zirkhani showed AFP dusty old manuscript­s he wants to preserve for posterity.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? The Sufi mosque in Tripoli’s coastal city of Zliten.
Photo: Nampa/AFP The Sufi mosque in Tripoli’s coastal city of Zliten.

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