Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Timbuktu manuscript­s online only a sliver of ancient archive

- CHARLES STEWART Professor emeritus, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Stewart’s article was first published in The Conversati­on.

THE ancient Timbuktu manuscript­s of Mali are back in the headlines following Google’s initiative to host a collection of them at an online gallery. The images of the documents, text in Arabic, can be found at a page called Mali Magic.

No place in west Africa has attracted more attention and resources than the city that has always captivated the imaginatio­n of the outside world, Timbuktu.

There have been documentar­ies and books, academic studies and a renewed public interest since some of Timbuktu’s world heritage status buildings were damaged in attacks in 2012.

The manuscript­s, themselves, some reputed to date as early as the 1400s, were threatened and the internatio­nal community responded.

While the Mali Magic displays 45 very photogenic manuscript­s from one private library, the site doesn’t begin to tell the full story of the wealth of west Africa’s manuscript­s that are found from the Atlantic to Lake Chad.

But thanks to decades of scholarshi­p and, recently, digitisati­on, that informatio­n is now accessible at a bilingual, open-access, online union catalogue of nearly 80 000 manuscript­s at the West African Arabic Manuscript Database.

This is a resource I began 30 years ago at the University of Illinois that now provides students access to most of the titles and authors that make up west Africa’s manuscript culture.

It’s at this website that one can access the archive of an associatio­n of 35 private Timbuktu manuscript libraries – called SAVAMA-DCI.

The associatio­n has been working with universiti­es on three continents to secure and record, now digitally, their Arabic and Arabic-script manuscript­s.

The West African Arabic Manuscript Database provides an even bigger picture.

It is a comprehens­ive inventory of over 100 public and private west African manuscript libraries. In it, we find one-third of all extant manuscript­s with known authors (314 titles), written by 204 scholars, one-quarter of them from west Africa.

Most of these manuscript­s come from the 1800s, but have very deep historical roots.

The full story of west Africa’s manuscript culture and Islamic learning centres will finally be known when the attention that is lavished on Timbuktu’s manuscript­s is also given to libraries in neighbouri­ng Mauritania,

Niger and Nigeria.

But we already know a good deal. Earliest contact between north Africa and Timbuktu focused on west Africa’s gold trade. This commerce also brought Islamic teachings across the Sahara Desert.

The first reference to manuscript­s in Timbuktu was in the 1400s, contributi­ng to the mystique that has always enveloped the city as a centre of Islamic education.

In fact, Timbuktu was only one of several southern Saharan towns that attracted scholars and offered Islamic learning.

In the 1500s, what is called Timbuktu’s “Golden Age”, its famous scholars were known across north Africa.

That period waned, but Arabic learning revived again in the 1800s across west Africa in the wake of several Islamic reform movements that stretched from today’s Guinea and the Senegal River Valley to northern Nigeria.

Today’s older manuscript­s in west Africa mainly date from this period.

With the decline of scholarshi­p in Timbuktu in the 1600s, Islamic learning emerged in nomadic centres to the west (in today’s Mauritania).

There’s also a national collection of manuscript­s in Mauritania that is based on the contents of 80-odd private libraries. They give us a good idea of what was traditiona­lly found in manuscript libraries.

What’s in west Africa’s manuscript­s?

The exact subject matter in each of the categories would vary somewhat from one library to the next. But the dominant subject – legal writing – tended to account for one-quarter to one-third of all the manuscript­s.

West Africa’s manuscript culture evolved, for the most part, outside any state system. In the absence of a central authority, juridical matters were dispensed by local legal scholars who could cite precedent, case law, to

resolve thorny problems.

The next most important subject in the manuscript­s deals with the Prophet Muhammad, mainly biographic­al and devotional writing.

The ratios of manuscript­s dealing with mysticism (Sufism); the Qur’an (including copies of the holy book) especially recitation styles; Arabic language (lexicology, syntax, prosody, pre-Islamic poetry); and theology vary, each subject accounting for 7% to 13% of the manuscript­s in most libraries.

Locally-written poetry and literature is generally the smallest slice of manuscript­s, albeit – with correspond­ence – some of the most interestin­g.

Oddly, the subject of history, like geography, is almost entirely ignored in many collection­s.

This reminds us, that Arabic and by extension, Arabic script was at base a religious language used for religious purposes, and its use for secular subjects was not common.

More significan­t than these Islamic sciences, or discipline­s, are the uses to which the Arabic alphabet was applied across west Africa.

Arabic uses a phonetic alphabet; each letter always produces the same

sound. What this means is that the Arabic script can be used to write any language.

To explain the Arabic of the Qur’an, teachers frequently translated key words into the students’ African language (written in Arabic script).

Many west African manuscript­s that were used in teaching show these interlinea­l insertions.

From this practice it was an easy step to write classic legends, or memory aids, or poetry in African languages – all in Arabic script. The name this writing is given in Arabic is “ajam” (writing in a foreign language).

These manuscript­s make up about 15% of most collection­s in west Africa today.

In some areas, whole Arabic books are available in ajam form.

The African languages that have been adapted to Arabic script are many, including: Fulfulde, Soninké, Wolof, Hausa, Bambara, Yoruba, and the colloquial Arabic spoken in Mauritania, Hasaniyya.

In recent times, ajami writing has been increasing­ly used, but in historic manuscript­s its use tended to focus on traditiona­l healing methods, the

properties of plants, the occult sciences and poetry.

Google’s new online library is drawn from the collection of SAVAMA-DCI’s director, Abdel Kader Haidara.

In 2013, he entered a partnershi­p with the Hill Museum and Manuscript Library, based in Minnesota, US, to digitise his and 23 other family libraries in Timbuktu.

This is a bigger project that will eventually make available 242 000 manuscript­s freely, online, complete with the scholarly apparatus and search capacity necessary for their scientific use.

Additional plans call for that project to include libraries at the town’s three main mosques, and Mali’s other centre of Islamic culture, Djenné.

Already, more than 15 000 manuscript­s are accessible for scholars.

Opening these manuscript­s to scholars around the world to learn about the intellectu­al life in Africa before colonial rule promises to help rebalance the continent’s place in world history.

 ?? | REUTERS ?? THE ancient Timbuktu manuscript­s of Mali are back in the headlines following Google’s initiative to host a collection of them in an online gallery. The images of the texts in Arabic can be found at a page called ‘Mali Magic’.
| REUTERS THE ancient Timbuktu manuscript­s of Mali are back in the headlines following Google’s initiative to host a collection of them in an online gallery. The images of the texts in Arabic can be found at a page called ‘Mali Magic’.
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