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Usman dan Fodio

From Wikipedia
Usman dan Fodio
human
Ein sex anaa gendermale Edit
Ein country of citizenshipSokoto Caliphate Edit
Name wey dem give amOsman Edit
Noble titlesultan Edit
Ein date of birth15 December 1754 Edit
Place dem born amMaratta Edit
Date wey edie1817 Edit
Place wey edieSokoto Edit
SiblingAbdullahi dan Fodio Edit
KiddieAbu Bakr Atiku, Muhammadu Bello, Nana Asma’u Edit
Languages edey speak, rep anaa signEnglish, Arabic, Hausa, Fula Edit
Writing languageHausa, Fula, Arabic Edit
Ein occupationwriter, philosopher, poet Edit
Position eholdSultan of Sokoto Edit
Ethnic groupFula people Edit
Religion anaa worldviewIslam Edit

Shehu Usman dan Fodio pronunciation (Arabic: عثمان بن فودي, romanized: ʿUthmān ibn Fūdī; full name; 15 December 1754 – 20 April 1817).[1] (Uthman ibn Muhammad ibn Uthman ibn Saalih ibn Haarun ibn Muhammad Ghurdu ibn Muhammad Jubba ibn Muhammad Sambo ibn Maysiran ibn Ayyub ibn Buba Baba ibn Musa Jokolli ibn Imam Dembube`)[2] na he be a Fulani scholar, Islamic religious teacher, poet, revolutionary den a philosopher wey found de Sokoto Caliphate wey na he rule as ein first caliph.[3]

After dema successful revolution, na de "Jama'a" give am de title Amir al-Mu'minin (commander of de faithful). Na he reject de throne wey na he continue ein calling to Islam.

Born insyd Gobir, na Usman be descendant of de Torodbe clans of urbanized ethnic Fulani people wey dey live insyd de Hausa Kingdoms since de early 1400s.[4] For insyd ein early life, Usman be well educated for Islamic studies den, wey na he begin dey preach Sunni Islam thru out territories wey later cam be parts of independent Nigeria den Cameroon. Na he wrep more dan a hundred books wey concern religion, government, culture den society. Na he develop a critique for existing African Muslim elites for wat na he cam see as dema greed, paganism, violation of de standards of de Sharia.[5]

Na Usman form an Islamic religious den social revolution wey spread from Gobir thru out modern Nigeria den Cameroon. Na dis revolution cam influence oda rebellions across West Africa den beyond. For 1803, na he found de Sokoto Caliphate wey na ein followers pledge allegiance to am as de Commander of de Faithful (Amīr al-Muʾminīn). Na Usman den cam declare jihad against de Hausa kings wey na he defeat dem. Under Usman ein leadership, de caliphate cam expand into present-day Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Southern Niger den most of de Northern Nigeria. Na Ɗan Fodio cam decline much of de pomp of rulership, den while he dey develop contacts plus religious reformists den jihad leaders across Africa, na he soon cam pass actual leadership of de Sokoto state to ein son, Muhammed Bello.[6][7]

Na he encourage literacy den scholarship, give women den men, den chaw of ein daughters cam emerge as scholars den writers. Ein writings den sayings cam be much quoted today, wey dem dey affectionately refer to am as Shehu for Nigeria. Na sam followers dey consider ɗan Fodio as a mujaddid, a divinely sent "reformer of Islam". Na Shehu dan Fodio ein uprising cam be a major episode of a movement wey dem dey describe as de jihad insyd de 17th, 18th den 19th centuries.[8] Na he follow de jihads successfully waged for Futa Bundu, Futa Tooro den Fouta Djallon between 1650 den 1750, wey na he cam lead to de creation of those three Islamic states. For ein turn, de Shehu cam inspire a number of later West African jihads, wey include those of Seku Amadu, founder of de Massina Empire den Omar Saidou Tall, founder of de Toucouleur Empire, wey na he marry one of ɗan Fodio ein granddaughters.

Early life

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Lineage den kiddie time

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Usman Danfodio dey belong to de generation of wandering scholars wey na dem start dey settle insyd Hausaland since de 1300-1400s, sam 400–500 years before de Jihad.[9][10] Na de Sheikh ein ancestors be Toronkawa wey na dem migrate from Futa Tooro insyd de 1300s under de leadership of Musa Jokollo. Musa Jokollo be de 11th grandpoppie of de Shehu. Na der be 11 generations between Musa Jokollo den Shehu Danfodio.

Notable works

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Na Danfodio wrep more dan a hundred books wey dey concern Economy, History, Law, Administration, Women's rights, government, culture, Politics den society. Na he wrep 118 poems insyd Arabic, Fulfulde, den Hausa languages.[11]

Na Balogun (1981, PP. 43-48) compile a list of 115 works thru various sources.[12] Notable among ein works dey include;[13]

  1. Usul al-`Adl (Principles of Justice)
  2. Bayan Wujub al-hijrah `ala’l-`ibad7 (description of de obligation of migration for People).
  3. Nur al-Ibad (Light of the Slaves)
  4. Najm al-Ikhwan (Star of the Brothers)
  5. Siraj al-Ikhwan (Lamp for the Brothers)
  6. Ihyā’ al-sunna wa ikhmād al-bid’a (De revival of the Prophetic practice and obliteration of false innovation)
  7. Kitab al-Farq (Book of the Difference)
  8. . Bayan Bid`ah al-Shaytaniyah (Description of the Satanic innovations)
  9. Abd Al-Qādir b. Mustafā (ten questions put into verse by ‘Uthmanb. Fūdī insyd one of ein non-Arabic poems.)
  10. Ādāb al-‘ādāt
  11. Ādāb al-ākhira
  12. ‘Adad al-dā’i ilā al-dīn
  13. Akhlāq al-mustafā
  14. Al-abyāt ‘alā ‘Abd al-Qādir al-Jīlānī
  15. Al-ādāb.
  16. Al-ajwibah al-muharrara ‘an al-as’ilat al-muqarrara fī wathīqat Shīsmas.
  17. ‘Alāmāt almuttabi‘in li sunna rasūl Allāh min al-rijāl wa-al-nisā’
  18. Al-amr bi-al-ma’rūf wa-al-nahy an al-munkar (enjoining the good and forbidding the evil)
  19. Al-amr bi-muwālāt al-mu’minīn wa-al-nahy ‘an muwālāt al-kāfirīn.
  20. Al- ‘aql al-awwal.
  21. Al-dālī li-Shaikh ‘Uthmān.
  22. Al-farq baina ‘ilm usūl al-dīn wa baina ‘ilm al-kalām.
  23. Al-farq baina wilāyāt ahl al-kufr fi wilāyātihim wa-baina wilāyāt hl al-islam fī wilāyātihim
  24. Al-fasl al-awwal
  25. Al-hamzīyah
  26. Al-jāmi’.
  27. Al-jihād
  28. Al-khabar al-hādī ilā umūr al-imām al-mahdī

References

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  1. Hunwick, John O. 1995. "Arabic Literature" in Africa: the Writings of Central Sudanic Africa, pp.
  2. Last, Murray. Genealogy of Shaikh Uthman b Fodiye and some Scholars related to him (PDF). Premium Times.
  3. I. Suleiman, The African Caliphate: The Life, Works and Teachings of Shaykh Usman Dan Fodio (1757–1817) (2009).
  4. T. A. Osae & S. N. Nwabara (1968). a Short history of WEST AFRICA A.D 1000–1800. Great Britain: Hodder and Stoughton. p. 80. ISBN 0-340-07771-9.
  5. "Karanta Cikakken Tarihin Shehu Usman Dan Fodio : Abubuwan da Yakamata Ku sani dangane da Rayuwar Mujaddadi Shehu Usman Dan Fodio" (in English). Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  6. "Usman Dan Fodio's Biography". Fulbe History and Heritage (in English). 17 March 2016. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
  7. Beek, W.E.A.van (1988). The Quest for Purity. Berlin: Mouton.
  8. "Suret-Canale, Jean. "The Social and Historical Significance of the Fulɓe Hegemonies in the Seventeenth, Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries." In Essays on African History: From the Slave Trade to Neocolonialism. translated from the French by Christopher Hurst. C. Hurst & Co., London., pp. 25–55". Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  9. Last, Murray. "The Sokoto Caliphate".
  10. Lapidus, Ira M. A History of Islamic Societies. 3rd ed. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2014, p. 469.
  11. "Poems written by Usman dan Fodio (and others)". Endangered Archives Programme (in English). Retrieved 2024-06-11.
  12. Islahi, Abdul. (2008). Shehu Uthman Dan Fodio and his economic ideas.
  13. Akintola, Ameer. (2023). Shaykh ‘Uthman bn Fodio : A Short History.
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