SUFI POETRY IN SOMALI

(Chris Devlin) #1

culture, gave rise to sedentary rural communities
The JAMAcAT provided convenient facilities
for learning and living which, as a result, attracted


many disciples from among the nomads. Moreover, the rural


32.

communities gave the novices access to religious literature


which in the circumstances of the nomadic environment


could only be obtained in their centres. In spite of the


rapid development of modern education in the rural areas,


in which religious instruction is included in the curriculum,


the Sufi communities continue to provide a high level of


religious teaching for the Somali pastoralists. They still


produce Islamic lawyers and theologians of good quality.


As a general rule, when some of the pupils acquire


the elements of Muslim theology and law, they return to


their nomadic life so as to preach Islam and attend to
the religious life of the nomadic communities. Others

continue to learn and receive advanced instruction in


Quranic exegesis, Muslim law, traditi~nal Islamic philo-


sophy and the doctrine and practice of the Sufis. In


other words, some pupils obtain a basic knowledge of the

Quran and the Islamic custom and practice (SUNNAH) and


become satisfied with that, while other pupils receive


more advanced instruction in these two fields and as a


result reach higher levels of learning, thus becoming
fit to be initiated into a Sufi orde~. Both groups are

generally regarded as men of religion (wadaaddo). How-


ever, those pupils who receive advanced instruction assume,


at the end of their studies, the title of shaikhs.
Some of the shaikhs after completing their studies at

home, travel to other Muslim countries and to the Holy


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