Al-Hajj Abdoulaye bin Mamadou Niasse
Al-Hajj
Abdoulaye (1845-1922) was one of the greatest scholars of the
Senegambia region in the early twentieth century. One time Jihadist and
subsequent farmer, he was the first to obtain the unlimited
authorization (ijaza mutlaqa) in the Tijaniyya in the Senegambia and was famous for his teachings on a wide range of Islamic sciences. The French commandant
in Nioro, Senegal, observed in 1898: “Abdoulaye is the leader of all
the marabouts of Rip and of Saloum, and is superior to all of them –
consequently, he enjoys a great authority over the masses” (Klein, p.
224).
Mamadou Niasse, the father of al-Hajj Abdoulaye, was also a marabout,
or Islamic scholar, who immigrated to the Saloum region from Djoloff
and founded his own village of Niacene in 1865. This was at the time of
the religious wars of al-Hajj Umar Futi, carried out in the Saloum
region by another Tijani, Ma Ba Diakhou. Abdoulaye would later
participate in the war as an advisor to Saer Maty, the son of Ma Ba who
assumed leadership of the movement after his father was assassinated by
French intrigue. He soon dissociated himself from the jihad however, and
devoted himself exclusively to teaching and farming. Like his father,
he also founded his own village, Taiba Niacene. But the memory of his
participation in the jihads, along with his growing local influence, was
too much for the new French-appointed rulers in the region. In 1900, he
and 200 of his disciples were forced to flee to Gambia by the
French-appointed governor, even as three villages belonging to his
followers, including Taiba Niacene and the central mosque and extensive
library therein, were burned to the ground. Abdoulaye only returned to
the Saloum region in 1910, when he installed himself finally in Kaolack,
probably only after the intervention of his friend, al-Hajj Malik Sy,
with the French authorities.
Al-Hajj Abdoulaye made several journeys abroad. He accomplished the
pilgrimage to Mecca as early as 1890. Other travels brought him to Fes,
Cairo and, according to Paul Marty, even Marseille, France. He is said
to have been given an ijaza by al-Azhar University during his stay in Egypt. In Fes, he was given an original manuscript of the Jawahir al-Ma’ani
in the handwriting of Sidi Ali Harazim, which had been in the
possession of Shaykh Ahmad Tijani himself for more than ten years. He
also met with Shaykh Ahmad Tijani in a waking vision and obtained some
of the Shaykh’s prayer beads from the head muqaddam of the Fes zawiya, Sidi al-’Arabi bin Muhibb. Besides the ijaza mutlaqa, he also came to Fes praying Allah that one of his children would become the ghawth al-zaman. Before he left the Tijani zawiya in Fes, he saw a vision of his young son Ibrahim in the courtyard and knew all his prayers had been answered.
First initiated into the Tijaniyya through the silsila of
al-Hajj Umar Futi at the hand of Shaykh Mamadou Diallo in 1875, al-Hajj
Abdoulaye became connected with some of the most eminent Tijani scholars
of his time. In Morocco, it was the renowned Shaykh Ahmad Sukayrij who
gave al-Hajj Abdoulaye the ijaza mutlaqa. Shaykh Sukayrij would
later mention al-Hajj Abdoulaye in one of his poems. Al-Hajj Abdoulaye
also also remained on excellent terms with Sharif Ahmad bin Saih of Ain
Maadi, Algeria (who visited him in Gambia and Senegal in 1909 and 1913),
and Muhammad Ould Cheikh of the influential Mauritanian Idaw Ali tribe.
He also remained in close correspondence with al-Hajj Malik Sy. When he first met Shaykh Sukayrij to request the ijaza mutlaqa,
the Moroccan Qadi informed him of a letter he had already received
from al-Hajj Malik requesting the same. Shaykh Sukayrij told al-Hajj
Abdoulaye to tell his friend and countryman to come to Fes in person the
same way he had done. Al-Hajj Abdoulaye responded that whatever he
himself was deserving of, his peer al-Hajj Malik was also deserving of
the same. As a result of this intervention and their long-time
friendship, al-Hajj Malik requested al-Hajj Abdoulaye to stay with him
in Tivaouane on his return from Fes. Marty in fact reports that he
stayed in Tivaouane for several years. During al-Hajj Abdoulaye’s time
in Tivaouane, according to Shaykh Hassan Cisse, al-Hajj Malik would
direct all requests for initiation into the Tijaniyya to his
distinguished guest.
Al-Hajj Abdoulaye had many children who continued his scholarly
mission. Aside from Shaykh al-Islam Ibrahim Niasse, his first son
Muhammad Khalifa Niasse was also a prolific author and scholar who
traveled widely. Among other things, Muhammad wrote a remarkable defense
of the Tijaniyya which has been translated into French by Ousmane Kane
in Triaud and Robinson (eds.), La Tijaniyya (Paris, 2000). But
it was one of his younger sons, Shaykh Ibrahim, who became the greatest
testament to al-Hajj Abdoulaye’s scholarly legacy.
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