Maulana Sheikh Muhammad al-Nasir Kabara (RA)
Life and Times
by. SANI BALA SHEHU
sanibalashehukano@yahoo.com sanibalashehu2004@yahoo.co.uk
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The Amirul Jaysh, Sheikh Nasir Muhammad Kabara (RA), Life and Times
Sheikh Nasir Muhammad Umar Kabara, a noted Islamic scholar and philsopher was born in 1912 in Guringuwa village outside Kano, Nigeria. His grandparents came from Kabara, a town under Timbucktu kingdom. His third generation grandfather - also from Kabara in Timbucktu - Mallam Umaru, also known as Mallam Kabara was the only one from the lineage to settle in Adakawa in Kano city, before moving on to what is now known as Kabara ward, named after him. He was an accomplished Sufi in Timbucktu before departing for Kano.
The first thing Mallam Kabara did on settling in Kabara ward was to establish a school in 1787, of a sort commonly referred as Zaure School where the outer entrance hall of his house was converted into an Islamic school. This school possibly among the oldest recorded schools in Kano is now part of the Darul Qadiriyya household of Sheikh Nasiru Kabara.
The youthful Nasiru was extremely enthusiastic in his search for knowledge. His first encounter with advanced Islamic learning system - long after he had graduated from the normal Allo (Qur'an read from wooden slates) schooling system, emerging extremely fluent in Arabic language, Islamic jurisprudance and Linguistics - was with Bad'ul Amli and Murshida, both treatises on Tauhidi; the unity of God. Next followed a voracious apepite for other books and soon he had completed his studies of Ahlari, Iziyya and Risala: all books necessary for a proper understanding of Islam. Because in Islam there is no concept of copyright, soon after the youthful Nasir was himself typesetting the Risala and Ishiriniya (book of poetry in praise of the Prophet) and selling them.
His learning process was essentially self-motivated, with of course appropriate encouragement from his main teacher: Mallam Natsugune. Consequently, the youthful Nasiru was a voracious searcher of Islamic knowledge, being far ahead of his contemporaries - indeed he was actually preaching to his classmates his advanced understanding of the meaning of the Quran; thus sowing the early seeds of his entry into Tafsir at such tender age.
In Kano of that era - 1920s - there were five advanced schools; essentially what can be considered pre-university schools now - where the young Nasiru used to go, on his own, to further his knowledge. These schools were:
1. The House of Deputy Imam of the City Central Mosque, located in the Daneji ward
2. The House of Mallam Ibrahim, Chief Judge of Kano at Yakasai ward
3. The House of Bichi Circuit Judge, Alhaji Musdafa at Kurawa ward
4. The House of Sheik Abdulkarim (Mallam Sambo) at Ciromawa ward
5. The House of Chief Imam of Zawiyya, Mallam Inuwa at Mayanka ward
These schools had extensive reference libraries containing collections obtained from various North African scholastic centers. All form the central core of Nasiru's thirst for further knowledge.
Even at that age, his acquisition of knowledge was more than rote learning; he questioned what he did not understand from his teacher; thus being extremely revolutionary in his understanding of Islamic knowledge. The traditional perception of the relationship between the pupil and the master in the Islamic schooling system rarely gives room for interactive acquisition of the knowlege. Nasir did not accept such didactic relationship, and consequently, with diffidence and respect, always requests for further elaboration of what he did not understand of what he learnt from his teachers - who themselves were only too willing to oblige the young scholar. This was not suprising, even in the "archaic" 1930s Kano, considering the fact that some of his other teachers were graduates of the Al-Azhar University in Cairo, the oldest university in Africa. Thus Nasiru Kabara combined two intellectual traditions: his Timbuctu ancestry when Timbuctu itself was a citadel of learnig in the Sudan; and his contact with visiting scholars and professors from Al-Azhar in the 1930s in Kano.
Among the local residents in Kano who joined the Qadiriyya at this time (1937) was a young lad, Muhammad Nasir Kabara, who was destined to bring great changes in the tariqa and not only to introduce the celebration of the birthday of Shaykh Abd al-Qadir al-Jilani, a festival which was not practiced by the North Africans, but also to carry the use of bandiri to every corner of Hausaland.
At the age of seventeen, Muhammad Nasir was really too young to be accepted as a member of the Qadiriyya but, as his grandfather, Mallam Nakabara - an extremely well learned Mallam - wished him to enter the order, Shaykh Sa'ad had a little choice but to give him the wazifa. Although a youth, Nasir was not only well read in classical Arabic literature and sciences but he was also conversant with the learning of Sufism and the works of the leading sufi scholars of the time.
When the Amir of Kano Abdullahi Bayero went on the hajj Nasir sent a letter through Wali Sulaiman to the Khalifa of the Qadiriyya, Shaykh Abu al-Hassan as-Sammani, the grandson of the founder of the Sammaniyya, asking him to give him an ijaza to become muqaddam of his own zawiya. The Shaykh was astonished to hear of such a highly learned youth and he sent a jubba and cap to Nasir together with a letter of appointment as a muqaddam. Although Nasir did not immediately separate himself from the community in Alfindiki, as Shaykh Sa'ad was still alive, his actions were regarded as innovations by the Arabs. In 1949 Nasir made the Hajj and met the new Khalifa, Shaykh Hashim and Shaykh Muhammad of Mauritania. On his return journey, he visited the Sudan, where he met with Shaykh Muhammad al-Fatih b. Shaykh Qarib Allah, Khalifa of the Sudanese Samaniyya. He also visited other Arab countries where he learnt many things concerning the hadra and bandiri organization. By 1950 Sheikh Nasir was in many ways far more versatile and eclectic than his teachers; and having successfully made Sufism acceptable to wider audience, he was thus able to make Qadiriyya penetrate into every part of the country.
Thus since about 1958 Nasiru Kabara has been considered the leader of all branches of Qadiriyya in Kano. The lines of authority within the leadership structure, however, may be viewed in terms of both the individuals whose authority extends over several branches and the particular patterns within each branch.
Nasiru Kabara received his original authority in Kuntiyya and Ahl al-Bayt from Ibrahim Nakabara, who was the dominant figure linking nineteenthand twentieth-century Qadiriyya in Kano. Ibrahim (ca. 1867-1941) was Fulani and his grandfather was originally from Katsina. He learned a wide range of subjects from his father: law, theology, literature, logic, and grammar. He learned astrology from Mahmud Kabara; law (the Mukhtasar) from the babban mallami, Abdurrahman al-Sayudi; and sufism (especially Qadiriyya) from his father and from Ibrahim of Zaria, who had come to Kano. By the age of thirty, he had become a legal adviser to Emir Aliyu. He was offered the position of alkali (judge) but refused on the conviction that mallams should not be involved in government. He did not travel outside Kano and continued his position as legal adviser under emirs Abbas, Usman, and Abdullahi Bayero. He was also the personal mallarn of Emir Usman. Ibrahim did not write books, although he did possess his own written commentaries on the Mukhtasar. His home in Kabara ward was a center of higher learning in Hausaland. One section of his compound was set aside for studies of theology and mysticism, and another section was set aside for studying law. He was not an ardent proponent of solitude (khalwa). Although there were other leaders of traditional Qadiriyya in Kano during this period, Ibrahim's authority was reinforced by his personal qualities of piety and knowledge and by his effectiveness as a teacher of mallams. He was not succeeded in this authority by his son but by his student Nasiru Kabara, who exhibited these same qualities.
Nasiru Kabara"was "given" to Ibrahim na Kabara as a child and grew up in his household. As a Fulani, Nasiru has had access to the Traditional Qadiriyya mallams in Kano. Through his abilities as a scholar and teacher, he became the likely heir to Ibrahim na Kabara."
During the period from 1935 to 1955, Nasiru was successful in establishing direct contact with the primary sources of Qadiriyya authority in Khartoum, Timbuktu, and Baghdad; and thus he became increasingly independent of Traditional Qadiriyya lines of authority. His trip to Baghdad in 1953 was a turning point in his career. It established his authority directly within the international headquarters of Qadiriyya; while in Baghdad he studied classical and modern aspects of Qadiriyya, and subsequently he introduced or interpreted much of this material for a Nigerian audience; his sole traveling companion to Baghdad was the wealthy merchant, Sanusi Dantata. As a result of the trip, Nasiru secured the financial support for his campaign to reform Qadiriyya and extend it to a mass level.
Upon his return from Baghdad, Nasiru opened his own Qadiriyya mosque and declined to attend the mosque of Muhammad Sidi. By 1956 most of the leadership and laity had aligned with Nasiru and a rapprochement was reached with Muhammad Sidi. During this period Nasiru traveled throughout northern Nigeria opening mosques and appointing muqaddams. He also nurtured his contacts in the Arab world, returning twice to Baghdad and visiting Khartoum, Cairo, Beirut, Damascus, Tehran, and Amman. In 1958 he was appointed headmaster of Shahuci judicial School and Library in Kano. In 1961 he opened his own Islamiyya Senior Primary School in Gwale ward and has continued teaching advanced subjects in his own home.
In 1949 Nasiru was appointed to the emir's Council of Advisers by Abdullahi Bayero. When Muhammad Sanusi became emir in 1954, however, Nasiru was replaced on the council by Reformed Tijani mallams. During the reign of Sanusi, Nasiru served as a legal consultant to the Northern Muslim Court of Appeal and continued as one of the two tafsir readers in the palace (q.v.). With the appointment of Ado Bayero as emir in 1963, Nasiru again became an adviser to the emir. Since 1963 he has been a member of the Kaduna Council of Mallams and has been on numerous local and regional committees, ranging from the Kano Native Authority Committee on Prostitution to the Northern Nigerian Special Committee on Education in Kano Province.
Despite his involvement as a government mallam, Nasiru Kabara has maintained a base of authority independent of the administrative structures in Kano and northern Nigeria. He has been largely responsible for making Qadiriyya acceptable to the common man, both Fulani and Hausa, and has been an important intermediary between the Fulani ruling class and the Hausa commoner. He has translated the theology and mysticism of Qadiriyya into the Hausa idiom.
In addition to the functions of initiation, training, and intermediation, the Qadiriyya leadership in Kano has responsibility for financing and organizing the various activities of the brotherhood and for communicating with all segments of the brotherhood, local and national. In the transformation of the brotherhood from an elite to a mass organization, a major leadership function has been the inspiration and administration of ritual.
Most of the Reformed Qadiriyya members do wuridi in groups led by an imam. The exact nature of the wuridi varies with the subgroup within Qadiriyya. The total time expended in each group would be about thirty minutes per day. Some Qadiriyya (Salamiyya) imams also lead bandiri sessions about twice a week in the evenings. During these group prayer sessions the leader-follower nexus is strongly reinforced, partly by the traditional relationship of an imam to those who "pray behind."
Reformed Qadiriyya has placed a special emphasis on group celebration of the founder's birthday (Mauludin Abdulkadir). This ceremony is specifically identified with Reformed Qadiriyya and was initiated in Kano by Nasiru Kabara in about 1959. It serves as a yearly meeting for brotherhood leaders and members from throughout northern Nigeria. Delegations from each of the major northern cities congregate in Kano for a full day of prayers and activities. The central feature of the day is a group procession, arranged by area delegations, from the home of Nasiru Kabara in the Jarkasa area of Kabara ward to the Kano Qadiriyya burial ground west of Kano City, where prayers are said over the graves of Kano Qadiriyya saints. The procession also serves as the only time in the year when men, women, and children all participate in the same worship service. The order of procession indicates roughly the hierarchy of authority within the Qadiriyya elite; there is an inner core of muqaddams who accompany Nasiru Kabara during this period.
From the patterns of authority and community withiin Qadiriyya in Kano several points may be summarized:
(1) Association with Qadiriyya in the nineteenth century was limited to Fulani mallams and administrators (who derived their authority from the leaders of the Fulani Jihad) and to North African Arabs (who did not integrate themselves religiously into the Kano Milieu).
(2) With the establishment of colonial rule, elements in the Kano Arab community reaffirmed their own spiritual links with North African sources of spiritual authority.
(3) Members of the Hausa mallam class began to associate with this renewed form of North African Qadiriyya and were rccruited into leadership positions within one generation.
(4) Part of the success of Qadiriyya in the Hausa sector was due to an emphasis on group worship and the focusing of activities within local mosques.
(5) The "legitimate" successor to the leadership of traditional Fulani Qadiriyya in Kano (Nasiru Kabara) affiliated with independent lines of Qadiriyya authority as a reinforcement of his "inherited" authority and sought to consolidate the Arab, Hausa, and Fulani sections of Qadiriyya.
(6) This was accomplished partly by extending Qadiriyya from an elite base to a mass base. In this process, the support of wealthy Hausa merchants was essential. On the mass level, Reformed Qadiriyya was also a rdection of emergizng Kano nationalism which demanded that religious authority be shifted from Sokoto and North Africa to Kano itself.
(7) Because of the mass base of Reformed Qadiriyya, it was no longer possible for the Qadiriyya elite to identify completely with the Kano ruling class. Thus, while brotherhood leaders might act as advisers to the ruling class, they have usually guarded their status as nongovernment mallarns.
(8) Perhaps as a consequence of the shift from an elite to a mass base, the brotherhood leadership became involved in two relatively new functions: the interpretation of doctrine for local use and the inspiration, through ritual and ceremony, of group and mass worship.
Doctrines of Authority and Community in Reformed Qadiriyya
Whereas Traditional Qadiriyya in Kano relied heavily on the nineteenth century Jihad writings as the major sources of Qadiriyya doctrine the leaders of Reformed Qadiriyya have themselves been prolific writers. Like the Fulani Jihad writers, the contemporary Qadiriyya writers are concerned to relate classical Islamic thought to local circumstances. In the interim period between the Jihad writings and the contemporary writings, there was "a dearth of Qadiriyya literature in Kano. None of the major leaders during this period, Ibrahim na Kabara, Ali Musa, Saad b. Ahmad, Sharif Garba, Sidi Muhammad, and Muhammad Sidi-wrote on Qadiriyya. The Reformed Qadiriyya movement, associated with Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali, has not only produced its own literature but has revived an interest in the Jihad classics," has introduced works on Qadiriyya from the Arab world," and has inspired local Hausa "praise poets" " to express themselves on brotherhood matters. Nasiru Kabara hase written about 150 works in all.
The amount of systematic theology in the writings of Nasiru Kabara has been minimal; his primary purpose seems to be to relate the history and elements of the brotherhood in terms understandable to contemporary Kano society and to stimulate an identification with the saints of the brotherhood. The writings of Ahmad b. Ali cover many of these same topics. There is no specific praise of the Shaziliyya way, as distinct from Qadiriyya, and much of the literature contains poems that are sung at worship gatherings. Another Reformed Qadiriyya leader in Kano, Adamu na Ma'aji (q.v.), seems mainly concerned with chains of authority and conditions of initiation."
The writings of brotherhood leaders such as Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali espouse the community and authority of Qadiriyya on two major grounds: affiliational (primarily on the basis of direct personal experience) and communal (primarily on the basis of loyalty to the nineteenth-century Jihad tradition). Within the category of affiliational appeal, there have been five areas of doctrinal exposition: the origins and spread of Qadiriyya, the elements and requirements of Qadiriyya, the benefits and blessings for those who follow Qadiriyya, personal praise of the Qadiriyya saints, and general preaching.
With regard to the spread of Qadiriyy, Nasiru Kabara describes in Alnafahat the Qadiriyya shaykhs in history and the distribution of Qadiriyya among the continents of the world." In Naf' al-'ibad, he discusses the Qadiriyya caliphate throughout history. In Ithaf al-khald'iq he presents the genealogy of the founder, 'Abd al-Qadir, and a considerable amount of biographical data. He also mentions some of the successors of 'Abd al-Qadir in the contemporary world.
With regard 4o the requirements of Qadiriyya, Nasiru Kabara elabarates in Al-nafabdt the details and the nature of the brotherhood ceremonies." In the Naf' aVibad he describes the Qadiriyya daily voluntary prayers." In the Ithaf al-khald'iq he discusses the necessities and voluntary aspects of ablution, washing, taimama (symbolic washing with dust), prayer, prostration, giving of alms, fasting, pilgrimage, and other Islamic rituals for those who follow Qadiriyya. In Da'wat al-ghawth he elaborates on the conditions for following Qadiriyya.
With regard to the benefits of Qadiriyya, all of the above-mentioned writings refer to the personal satisfactions and blessings that accrue to those who follow Qadiriyya. Nasiru describes the "glorious benefits" for the followers of Qadiriyya and assures them of the best reward.
With regard to the praise of Qadiriyya saints, it is clear that instead of being a perfunctory gesture it is a culmination of the past that is directed into the brotherhood experience. In Naf al-'ibad, Nasiru inscribes the prayer he offered while at the tomb of 'Abd al-Qadir in Baghdad.
The praise of a primary saint, 'Abd al-Qadir, should not obscure the central fact of all the reformed brotherhoods: an individual is encouraged to do addu'a (al-du'a), that is, to pray directly to God. Nasiru exemplifies the passion and symbolism of such a prayer in the Subhdt al-anwar.
Finally, general preaching has always been a function of the religious authorities who try to induce conversions through individual volition. Such preaching is invariably in the vernacular language (in this case Hausa); and if it can be fashioned into poetry, it will be sung by minstrels near and far. Nasiru Kabara has been particularly successful in his general preaching.
Nasiru Kabara identified in the Subhat al-anwar, five branches of Qadiriyya in Hausaland, one of which is Usmaniyya. In various other works, he refers to Usmaniyya al-Fudawiyya and identifies himself with this branch. In the Naf al-'ibad he includes the prayer he read when he visited the tomb of Usman dan Fodio, and it is clear that he regards Muhammad Bello, son of Usman, as among the founders of Usmaniyya. Nasiru writes that he hopes to visit Bello at Wurno (the assumption being that Bello is not dead). While Nasiru does not include any reference to special ritual associated with Usmaniyya, it is clear that the Jihad leaders are considered to be of special importance. The continual identification of them with Qadiriyya is clearly intended to remind their descendants not to desert the "faith of their fathers." The Hausa poem by Ibrahim Makwarari (Begen Shehu Abdulkadir) is illustrative of the way in which Nasiru is regarded as the successor to the Jihad leaders.
With regard to the alleged doctrinal prohibition against change of brotherhood, there has been an attack on mallams who encourage such conversion, primarily those associated with Reformed Tijaniyya. The doctrinal basis of this attack is stated by Nasiru Kabara in Al-nalabat, where he suggests that the Tijani mallams are "fabricating" if they assert that one tariqa is better than another. He argues for a strict prohibition against leaving the Qadiriyya brotherhood, supporting his argument with verses from the Qur'an and traditions of the Prophet. He asserts that when a person has promised to do something religious, such as follow a brotherhood, he must keep that promise. He criticizes the Tijaniyya specifically for assuming it can convert persons from other brotherhoods, suggesting that this was not the policy of the original Tijani leaders and that the practice is a false modern innovation .
Publications
He has published well over 150 treatises and books explaining various aspects of Islamic philosophy, Arabic and Hausa linguistics. His writing career started quite early in his life in his youth. Perhaps not surprisingly, his first treatise was on Abdulkadir Jilani, the founder of the Qadiriyya Islamic Philosophical movement. His method of writing usually follows the medieval scholastic tradition widespread in the middle-east. Thus he combines commentary with critical appraisal. A classical example of his approach is provided in the intellectual conjectures-and-refutations arguments of Al-Ghazali in his Tahaful Falasafa, and Ibn Rushd's counter-commenterary, Tahaful Tahafut.
His writings follow a specified and characteristic pattern; beginning with the praise of God, then the rationale of the writing under consideration and the proposed title of the work., followed by an abstract and then the main exposition. An example is his exposition on arm positioning during prayers which he explained in Kan Ul Fasab. He started by priasing Shehu Abdulmahal-al-Shawani a leading exponent of Shafi'iyya movement which supports Saddlu (dropping the arms by the side during the standing portion of the prayer). He then brings a Prophetic tradition (Hadith) which shows the Prophet's support for such arm positioning. Subsequently, the then brings more Prophetic traditions which explained the stands of both Sadlu and Kablu (crossing the arms on the chest during the standing portion of the prayer).
In his various writings, Sheikh Nasiru Kabara has clearly brought out the concept of Kanawiyya, a connation of Kano as an intellectual entrepot in medieval Africa. Some of the books and treatises he has published are included below.
BIOGRAPHIE DE CHEIK NASIR KABARA KANO NIGÉRIA
Automatically translated into French thanks to WorldLingo
Al-Nasir Kabara (RA) de cheik Muhammad de Maulana
La vie et périodes
par. SANI BALA SHEHU
sanibalashehukano@yahoo.com sanibalashehu2004@yahoo.co.uk
+2348065872052. 08080626852 08073400690 08045208685 07029467896
l'Amirul Jaysh, cheik Nasir Muhammad Kabara (RA), cheik Nasir Muhammad
Umar Kabara de la vie et de périodes, un disciple islamique remarquable et philsopher ont été soutenus en 1912 dans le village de Guringuwa en dehors de Kano, Nigéria. Ses grand-pères sont venus de Kabara, une ville sous le royaume de Timbucktu. Son père de troisième génération - aussi de Kabara dans Timbucktu - Mallam Umaru, également connu sous le nom de Mallam Kabara était le seul de la lignée à arranger dans Adakawa dans la ville de Kano, avant de passer à ce qui est maintenant connu comme salle de Kabara, appelé après lui. Il était un Sufi accompli dans Timbucktu avant de partir pour Kano.
La première chose Mallam Kabara a fait sur arranger dans la salle de Kabara était de fonder une école dans 1787, d'une sorte généralement référée comme école de Zaure où le hall d'entrée externe de sa maison a été converti en école islamique. Cette école probablement parmi les écoles enregistrées les plus anciennes dans Kano est maintenant une partie du ménage de Darul Qadiriyya de cheik Nasiru Kabara.
Le Nasiru jeune était extrêmement enthousiaste dans sa recherche de la connaissance. Sa première rencontre avec le système de étude islamique avançé - long après qu'il ait reçu un diplôme du système scolaire normal d'Allo (Qur'an lu des ardoises en bois), émergeant extrêmement fluent dans la langue arabe, le jurisprudance islamique et la linguistique - était avec Bad'ul Amli et Murshida, les deux traités sur Tauhidi ; l'unité de Dieu. A après suivi un apepite vorace pour d'autres livres et bientôt il avait achevé ses études d'Ahlari, d'Iziyya et de Risala : tout réserve nécessaire pour un arrangement approprié de l'Islam. Puisque dans l'Islam il n'y a aucun concept de copyright, peu après le Nasir jeune lui-même composait le Risala et l'Ishiriniya (livre de la poésie dans l'éloge du prophète) et les vendait.
Son apprentissage était essentiellement très motivé, avec naturellement l'encouragement approprié de son professeur principal : Mallam Natsugune. En conséquence, le Nasiru jeune était un chercheur vorace de la connaissance islamique, étant lointain en avant de ses contemporains - en effet il prêchait réellement à ses camarades de classe son arrangement avançé de la signification du Quran ; de ce fait en semant les graines tôt de son entrée dans Tafsir à une telle offre vieillissez.
Dans Kano de cette ère - les années 20 - il y avait cinq écoles avancées ; essentiellement ce qui peuvent être considérées les écoles de pré-université maintenant - où le jeune Nasiru allait, tout seul, à autre sa connaissance. Ces écoles étaient :
1. La Chambre de député Imam de la mosquée centrale de ville, situé dans la salle 2
de Daneji. La Chambre de Mallam Ibrahim, juge en chef de Kano à la salle 3
de Yakasai. La Chambre du juge de circuit de Bichi, Alhaji Musdafa à la salle 4
de Kurawa. La Chambre de cheik Abdulkarim (Mallam Sambo) à la salle 5
de Ciromawa. La Chambre d'Imam en chef de Zawiyya, Mallam Inuwa à la salle de Mayanka que
ces écoles ont eu les bibliothèques étendues de référence contenir des collections a obtenu à partir de divers centres scolastiques africains du nord. Tous forment le noyau central de la soif de Nasiru pour davantage de connaissance.
Même à cet âge, son acquisition de la connaissance était davantage que l'étude par coeur ; il a interrogé ce qu'il n'a pas compris de son professeur ; de ce fait étant extrêmement révolutionnaire dans son arrangement de la connaissance islamique. La perception traditionnelle du rapport entre la pupille et le maître dans le système scolaire islamique donne rarement la pièce pour l'acquisition interactive de la connaissance. Nasir n'a pas accepté un tel rapport didactique, et par conséquent, avec la timidité et le respect, toujours demandes davantage d'd'élaboration de ce qu'il n'a pas compris de ce qu'il a appris de ses professeurs - de qui eux-mêmes étaient seulement trop disposés à obliger le jeune disciple. Ceci n'étonnait pas, même dans les années 30 « archaïques » Kano, vu le fait que certains de ses autres professeurs étaient des diplômés de l'université d'Al-Azhar au Caire, l'université la plus ancienne en Afrique. Ainsi Nasiru Kabara a combiné deux traditions intellectuelles : son ascendance de Timbuctu quand Timbuctu lui-même était une citadelle de learnig au Soudan ; et sien contact avec les disciples et les professeurs visitants d'Al-Azhar dans les années 30 dans Kano.
Parmi les riverains dans Kano qui s'est joint le Qadiriyya actuellement (1937) était un jeune homme, Muhammad Nasir Kabara, qui était destiné pour apporter de grands changements du tariqa et pour présenter non seulement la célébration de l'anniversaire d'Al-Jilani d'Al-Qadir de Shaykh Abd, un festival qui n'a pas été pratiqué par les Africains du nord, mais porter également l'utilisation du bandiri à chaque coin de Hausaland.
À l'âge de dix-sept, Muhammad Nasir était vraiment trop jeune pour être accepté en tant que membre du Qadiriyya mais, car son père, Mallam Nakabara - un Mallam instruit extrêmement bon - souhaité le pour écrire l'ordre, Shaykh Sa'ad a eu un petit choix mais pour lui donner le wazifa. Bien qu'une jeunesse, Nasir ait été non seulement dedans lues littérature et sciences arabes classiques bonnes mais il était également familier avec l'étude de Sufism et les travaux des principaux disciples de sufi du temps.
Quand Amir de Kano Abdullahi Bayero est allé sur le hajj Nasir envoyé une lettre par Wali Sulaiman au Khalifa du Qadiriyya, Shaykh Abu Al-Hassan comme-Sammani, le fils du fondateur du Sammaniyya, lui demandant de lui donner un ijaza pour devenir muqaddam de son propre zawiya. Le Shaykh était étonné d'entendre parler d'une jeunesse fortement instruite et il a envoyé un jubba et un chapeau à Nasir ainsi qu'une lettre de nomination comme muqaddam. Bien que Nasir ne se soit pas immédiatement séparé de la communauté dans Alfindiki, car Shaykh Sa'ad était encore vivant, ses actions ont été considérées comme des innovations par les Arabes. En Nasir 1949 fait le Hajj et rencontré le nouveaux Khalifa, Shaykh Hashim et Shaykh Muhammad de la Mauritanie. Sur son voyage de retour, il a visité le Soudan, où il a rencontré Al-Fatih B. de Shaykh Muhammad. Shaykh Qarib Allah, Khalifa du Samaniyya soudanais. Il a également visité d'autres pays arabes où il a appris beaucoup de choses au sujet de l'organisation de hadra et de bandiri. D'ici 1950 le cheik Nasir était de beaucoup de manières bien plus souples et éclectiques que ses professeurs ; et après avoir rendu avec succès Sufism acceptable pour des assistances plus larges, il pouvait ainsi transformer Qadiriyya pénétrer en chaque partie du pays.
Ainsi puisque Nasiru environ 1958 Kabara a été considéré le chef de toutes les branches de Qadiriyya dans Kano. Les lignes de l'autorité dans la conduite la structure, cependant, peut être regardée en termes d'individus dont l'autorité se prolonge au-dessus de plusieurs branches et des modèles de détail dans chaque branche.
Nasiru Kabara a reçu son autorité originale en Al-Bayt de Kuntiyya et d'Ahl d'Ibrahim Nakabara, qui était la figure dominante liant le vingtième-siècle Qadiriyya de nineteenthand dans Kano. Ibrahim (ca. 1867-1941) était Fulani et son père était à l'origine de Katsina. Il a appris un éventail de sujets de son père : loi, théologie, littérature, logique, et grammaire. Il a appris l'astrologie de Mahmud Kabara ; loi (le Mukhtasar) du mallami babban, Al-Sayudi d'Abdurrahman ; et sufism (particulièrement Qadiriyya) de son père et d'Ibrahim de Zaria, qui était venu à Kano. Par l'âge de trente, il était devenu un conseiller juridique à l'émir Aliyu. Il a été offert la position de l'alcali (juge) mais refusé sur la conviction que des mallams ne devraient pas être impliqués dans le gouvernement. Il n'a pas voyagé en dehors de Kano et n'a pas continué sa position en tant que conseiller juridique sous des émirs Abbas, Usman, et Abdullahi Bayero. Il était également le mallarn personnel de l'émir Usman. Ibrahim n'a pas écrit des livres, bien qu'il ait possédé ses propres commentaires écrits sur le Mukhtasar. Sa maison dans la salle de Kabara était un centre plus haut de l'étude dans Hausaland. Une section de son composé a été mise de côté pour des études de la théologie et du mysticisme, et une autre section a été mise de côté pour étudier la loi. Il n'était pas un partisan ardent de solitude (khalwa). Bien qu'il y ait eu d'autres chefs de Qadiriyya traditionnel dans Kano pendant cette période, l'autorité d'Ibrahim a été renforcée par ses qualités personnelles de piété et de connaissance et par son efficacité en tant que professeur des mallams. Il n'a pas été réussi à cette autorité par son fils mais par son étudiant Nasiru Kabara, qui a exhibé ces mêmes qualités.
Nasiru Kabara " « a été donné » à Na Kabara d'Ibrahim en tant qu'enfant et a grandi dans son ménage. Comme Fulani, Nasiru a eu accès aux mallams traditionnels de Qadiriyya dans Kano. Par ses capacités en tant qu'un disciple et professeur, il est devenu l'héritier probable à Na Kabara d'Ibrahim. «
Pendant la période de 1935 à 1955, Nasiru était réussi en établissant le contact direct avec les sources primaires d'autorité de Qadiriyya Khartoum, Timbuktu, et à Bagdad ; et il est devenu ainsi de plus en plus indépendant des lignes de Qadiriyya de l'autorité traditionnelles. Son voyage vers Bagdad en 1953 était un tournant dans sa carrière. Il a établi son autorité directement dans les sièges sociaux internationaux de Qadiriyya ; tandis qu'à Bagdad il étudiait les aspects classiques et modernes de Qadiriyya, et plus tard lui a présenté ou a interprété beaucoup de ce matériel pour une assistance nigérienne ; son compagnon de déplacement unique vers Bagdad était le négociant riche, Sanusi Dantata. En raison du voyage, Nasiru a fixé l'aide financière pour sa campagne à la réforme Qadiriyya et la prolonge à un niveau de masse.
Sur son retour de Bagdad, Nasiru a ouvert sa propre mosquée de Qadiriyya et a refusé d'aller à la mosquée de Muhammad Sidi. Par 1956 plus de la conduite et des laïcs avait aligné avec Nasiru et un rapprochement a été atteint avec Muhammad Sidi. Pendant cette période Nasiru a voyagé dans toutes les mosquées nordiques d'ouverture du Nigéria et des muqaddams de nomination. Il a également consolidé ses contacts dans le monde arabe, retournant deux fois à Bagdad et Khartoum, le Caire, Beyrouth, Damas, Téhéran, et Amman visitants. En 1958 il a été nommé directeur d'école et de bibliothèque juridiques de Shahuci dans Kano. En 1961 il a ouvert sa propre école primaire aînée d'Islamiyya dans la salle de Gwale et a continué d'enseigner les sujets avançés dans sa propre maison.
En 1949 Nasiru a été nommé au Conseil de l'émir des conseillers par Abdullahi Bayero. Quand Muhammad Sanusi est allé bien à l'émir en 1954, cependant, Nasiru a été remplacé sur le conseil par les mallams reformés de Tijani. Pendant le règne de Sanusi, Nasiru servi de conseiller juridique à la cour de l'appel musulmane nordique et continué en tant qu'un des deux lecteurs de tafsir dans le palais (q.v.). Avec la nomination de l'agitation Bayero comme émir en 1963, Nasiru est encore allé bien à un conseiller à l'émir. Depuis 1963 il a été un membre du Conseil de Kaduna de Mallams et a été sur de nombreux comités locaux et régionaux, s'étendant du comité indigène d'autorité de Kano de la prostitution au comité spécial nigérien nordique de l'éducation dans la province de Kano.
En dépit de sa participation comme mallam de gouvernement, Nasiru Kabara a maintenu une base de l'indépendant d'autorité des structures administratives Kano et au Nigéria nordique. Il a été en grande partie responsable de rendre Qadiriyya acceptable pour l'homme commun, Fulani et Hausa, et a été un intermédiaire important entre la classe régnante de Fulani et l'homme du peuple de Hausa. Il a traduit la théologie et le mysticisme de Qadiriyya en idiome de Hausa.
En plus des fonctions du déclenchement, de la formation, et de l'intermédiation, la conduite de Qadiriyya dans Kano a la responsabilité du financement et d'organiser les diverses activités de la confrérie et de communiquer avec tous les segments de la confrérie, des gens du pays et du national. Dans la transformation de la confrérie d'une élite à une organisation de masse, une fonction importante de conduite a été l'inspiration et l'administration du rituel.
La plupart des membres reformés de Qadiriyya font le wuridi dans les groupes menés par un imam. La nature exacte du wuridi change avec le sous-groupe dans Qadiriyya. Tout le temps dépensé dans chaque groupe serait environ trente minutes par jour. Quelques imams de Qadiriyya (Salamiyya) mènent également des sessions de bandiri environ deux fois une semaine en soirées. Pendant les ces derniers groupez les sessions de prière que la connexion de chef-disciple est fortement renforcée, en partie par la relation traditionnelle d'un imam à ceux que « priez derrière. »
Qadiriyya reformé a placé une considération particulière sur la célébration de groupe de l'anniversaire du fondateur (Mauludin Abdulkadir). Cette cérémonie est spécifiquement identifiée avec Qadiriyya reformé et a été lancée dans Kano par Nasiru Kabara dans environ 1959. Il sert de réunion annuelle aux chefs et aux membres de confrérie dans l'ensemble du Nigéria nordique. Les délégations de chacune des villes nordiques principales rassemblent dans Kano pendant un plein jour des prières et des activités. Le dispositif central du jour est un cortège de groupe, disposé par des délégations de secteur, de la maison de Nasiru Kabara dans la région de Jarkasa de la salle de Kabara à l'enterrement de Kano Qadiriyya rectifié à l'ouest de la ville de Kano, où les prières sont dites au-dessus des tombes des saints de Kano Qadiriyya. Le cortège sert également de la seule fois par année où les hommes, les femmes, et les enfants tous participent au même service de culte. L'ordre du cortège indique rudement la hiérarchie de l'autorité dans l'élite de Qadiriyya ; il y a un noyau intérieur des muqaddams qui accompagnent Nasiru Kabara pendant cette période.
Des modèles du withiin Qadiriyya d'autorité et de communauté dans Kano plusieurs points peuvent être récapitulés :
(1) l'association avec Qadiriyya au dix-neuvième siècle a été limitée aux mallams de Fulani et les administrateurs (qui ont dérivé leur autorité des chefs du Fulani Jihad) et aux Arabes africains du nord (qui ne s'est pas intégré religieusement dans le milieu de Kano).
(2) avec l'établissement de la règle coloniale, les éléments dans la communauté arabe de Kano ont réaffirmé leurs propres liens spirituels avec des sources africaines du nord d'autorité spirituelle.
(3) les membres de la classe de mallam de Hausa ont commencé à s'associer à cette forme remplacée de Qadiriyya africain du nord et étaient rccruited dans des positions de conduite à moins d'une génération.
(4) une partie du succès de Qadiriyya dans le secteur de Hausa était due à une emphase sur le culte de groupe et au centre des activités dans les mosquées locales.
(5) le successeur « légitime » de la conduite de Fulani traditionnel Qadiriyya dans Kano (Nasiru Kabara) filiale avec les lignes indépendantes de l'autorité de Qadiriyya comme un renfort à lui « a hérité » de l'autorité et l'a cherché à consolider les sections d'Arabe, de Hausa, et de Fulani de Qadiriyya.
(6) ceci a été accompli en partie en prolongeant Qadiriyya d'une base d'élite à une base de masse. Dans ce processus, l'appui des négociants riches de Hausa était essentiel. Au niveau de masse, Qadiriyya reformé était également un rdection du nationalisme de Kano d'emergizng qui a exigé que l'autorité religieuse soit décalée Sokoto et d'Afrique du Nord à Kano lui-même.
(7) en raison de la base de masse de Qadiriyya reformé, il n'était plus possible que l'élite de Qadiriyya identifie complètement avec la classe régnante de Kano. Ainsi, alors que les chefs de confrérie pourraient agir en tant que les conseillers à la classe régnante, ils ont habituellement gardé leur statut en tant que mallarns non gouvernementaux.
(8) peut-être par suite du passage d'une élite à une base de masse, la conduite de confrérie est devenue impliquée dans deux fonctions relativement nouvelles : l'interprétation de la doctrine à l'utilisation locale et à l'inspiration, par le rituel et la cérémonie, du groupe et du culte de masse.
Les doctrines de l'autorité et de la Communauté dans Qadiriyya reformé
tandis que Qadiriyya traditionnel dans Kano s'est fondé fortement sur les dix-neuvième écritures de Jihad de siècle comme sources principales de doctrine de Qadiriyya les chefs de Qadiriyya reformé elles-mêmes ont été les auteurs prolifiques. Like the Fulani Jihad writers, the contemporary Qadiriyya writers are concerned to relate classical Islamic thought to local circumstances. In the interim period between the Jihad writings and the contemporary writings, there was "a dearth of Qadiriyya literature in Kano. None of the major leaders during this period, Ibrahim na Kabara, Ali Musa, Saad b. Ahmad, Sharif Garba, Sidi Muhammad, and Muhammad Sidi-wrote on Qadiriyya. The Reformed Qadiriyya movement, associated with Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali, has not only produced its own literature but has revived an interest in the Jihad classics," has introduced works on Qadiriyya from the Arab world," and has inspired local Hausa "praise poets" " to express themselves on brotherhood matters. Nasiru Kabara hase written about 150 works in all.
The amount of systematic theology in the writings of Nasiru Kabara has been minimal; his primary purpose seems to be to relate the history and elements of the brotherhood in terms understandable to contemporary Kano society and to stimulate an identification with the saints of the brotherhood. The writings of Ahmad b. Ali cover many of these same topics. There is no specific praise of the Shaziliyya way, as distinct from Qadiriyya, and much of the literature contains poems that are sung at worship gatherings. Another Reformed Qadiriyya leader in Kano, Adamu na Ma'aji (q.v.), seems mainly concerned with chains of authority and conditions of initiation."
The writings of brotherhood leaders such as Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali espouse the community and authority of Qadiriyya on two major grounds: affiliational (primarily on the basis of direct personal experience) and communal (primarily on the basis of loyalty to the nineteenth-century Jihad tradition). Within the category of affiliational appeal, there have been five areas of doctrinal exposition: the origins and spread of Qadiriyya, the elements and requirements of Qadiriyya, the benefits and blessings for those who follow Qadiriyya, personal praise of the Qadiriyya saints, and general preaching.
With regard to the spread of Qadiriyy, Nasiru Kabara describes in Alnafahat the Qadiriyya shaykhs in history and the distribution of Qadiriyya among the continents of the world." In Naf' al-'ibad, he discusses the Qadiriyya caliphate throughout history. In Ithaf al-khald'iq he presents the genealogy of the founder, 'Abd al-Qadir, and a considerable amount of biographical data. He also mentions some of the successors of 'Abd al-Qadir in the contemporary world.
With regard 4o the requirements of Qadiriyya, Nasiru Kabara elabarates in Al-nafabdt the details and the nature of the brotherhood ceremonies." In the Naf' aVibad he describes the Qadiriyya daily voluntary prayers." In the Ithaf al-khald'iq he discusses the necessities and voluntary aspects of ablution, washing, taimama (symbolic washing with dust), prayer, prostration, giving of alms, fasting, pilgrimage, and other Islamic rituals for those who follow Qadiriyya. In Da'wat al-ghawth he elaborates on the conditions for following Qadiriyya.
With regard to the benefits of Qadiriyya, all of the above-mentioned writings refer to the personal satisfactions and blessings that accrue to those who follow Qadiriyya. Nasiru describes the "glorious benefits" for the followers of Qadiriyya and assures them of the best reward.
With regard to the praise of Qadiriyya saints, it is clear that instead of being a perfunctory gesture it is a culmination of the past that is directed into the brotherhood experience. In Naf al-'ibad, Nasiru inscribes the prayer he offered while at the tomb of 'Abd al-Qadir in Baghdad.
The praise of a primary saint, 'Abd al-Qadir, should not obscure the central fact of all the reformed brotherhoods: an individual is encouraged to do addu'a (al-du'a), that is, to pray directly to God. Nasiru exemplifies the passion and symbolism of such a prayer in the Subhdt al-anwar.
Finally, general preaching has always been a function of the religious authorities who try to induce conversions through individual volition. Such preaching is invariably in the vernacular language (in this case Hausa); and if it can be fashioned into poetry, it will be sung by minstrels near and far. Nasiru Kabara has been particularly successful in his general preaching.
Nasiru Kabara identified in the Subhat al-anwar, five branches of Qadiriyya in Hausaland, one of which is Usmaniyya. In various other works, he refers to Usmaniyya al-Fudawiyya and identifies himself with this branch. In the Naf al-'ibad he includes the prayer he read when he visited the tomb of Usman dan Fodio, and it is clear that he regards Muhammad Bello, son of Usman, as among the founders of Usmaniyya. Nasiru writes that he hopes to visit Bello at Wurno (the assumption being that Bello is not dead). While Nasiru does not include any reference to special ritual associated with Usmaniyya, it is clear that the Jihad leaders are considered to be of special importance. The continual identification of them with Qadiriyya is clearly intended to remind their descendants not to desert the "faith of their fathers." The Hausa poem by Ibrahim Makwarari (Begen Shehu Abdulkadir) is illustrative of the way in which Nasiru is regarded as the successor to the Jihad leaders.
With regard to the alleged doctrinal prohibition against change of brotherhood, there has been an attack on mallams who encourage such conversion, primarily those associated with Reformed Tijaniyya. The doctrinal basis of this attack is stated by Nasiru Kabara in Al-nalabat, where he suggests that the Tijani mallams are "fabricating" if they assert that one tariqa is better than another. He argues for a strict prohibition against leaving the Qadiriyya brotherhood, supporting his argument with verses from the Qur'an and traditions of the Prophet. He asserts that when a person has promised to do something religious, such as follow a brotherhood, he must keep that promise. He criticizes the Tijaniyya specifically for assuming it can convert persons from other brotherhoods, suggesting that this was not the policy of the original Tijani leaders and that the practice is a false modern innovation .
Publications
He has published well over 150 treatises and books explaining various aspects of Islamic philosophy, Arabic and Hausa linguistics. His writing career started quite early in his life in his youth. Perhaps not surprisingly, his first treatise was on Abdulkadir Jilani, the founder of the Qadiriyya Islamic Philosophical movement. His method of writing usually follows the medieval scholastic tradition widespread in the middle-east. Thus he combines commentary with critical appraisal. A classical example of his approach is provided in the intellectual conjectures-and-refutations arguments of Al-Ghazali in his Tahaful Falasafa, and Ibn Rushd's counter-commenterary, Tahaful Tahafut.
His writings follow a specified and characteristic pattern; beginning with the praise of God, then the rationale of the writing under consideration and the proposed title of the work., followed by an abstract and then the main exposition. An example is his exposition on arm positioning during prayers which he explained in Kan Ul Fasab. He started by priasing Shehu Abdulmahal-al-Shawani a leading exponent of Shafi'iyya movement which supports Saddlu (dropping the arms by the side during the standing portion of the prayer). He then brings a Prophetic tradition (Hadith) which shows the Prophet's support for such arm positioning. Subsequently, the then brings more Prophetic traditions which explained the stands of both Sadlu and Kablu (crossing the arms on the chest during the standing portion of the prayer).
In his various writings, Sheikh Nasiru Kabara has clearly brought out the concept of Kanawiyya, a connation of Kano as an intellectual entrepot in medieval Africa. Some of the books and treatises he has published are included below.
BIOGRAFÍA DE JEQUE NASIR KABARA KANO NIGERIA
Automatically translated into Spanish thanks to WorldLingo
Al-Nasir Kabara (RA) de jeque Muhammad de Maulana
Vida y épocas
por. SANI BALA SHEHU
sanibalashehukano@yahoo.com sanibalashehu2004@yahoo.co.uk
+2348065872052. 08080626852 08073400690 08045208685 07029467896
el Amirul Jaysh, jeque Nasir Muhammad Kabara (RA), jeque Nasir Muhammad
Umar Kabara de la vida y de las épocas, erudito islámico conocido y philsopher fueron llevados en 1912 en la aldea fuera de Kano, Nigeria de Guringuwa. Sus abuelos vinieron de Kabara, una ciudad bajo reino de Timbucktu. Su abuelo de la tercera generación - también de Kabara en Timbucktu - Mallam Umaru, también conocido como Mallam Kabara era el único del linaje a colocar en Adakawa en la ciudad de Kano, antes de mover encendido a qué ahora se conoce como sala de Kabara, nombrado después de él. Él era un Sufi realizado en Timbucktu antes de salir para Kano.
La primera cosa Mallam Kabara hizo en colocar en la sala de Kabara era establecer una escuela en 1787, de una clase referida comúnmente como escuela de Zaure en donde el hall de entrada externo de su casa fue convertido en una escuela islámica. Esta escuela entre las escuelas registradas más viejas de Kano ahora es posiblemente parte de la casa de Darul Qadiriyya de jeque Nasiru Kabara.
El Nasiru joven era extremadamente entusiástico en su búsqueda para el conocimiento. Su primer encuentro con el sistema que aprendía islámico avanzado - largo después de que él hubiera graduado del sistema escolar normal de Allo (Qur'an leído en pizarras de madera), emergiendo extremadamente fluido en lengua árabe, jurisprudance islámico y lingüística - estaba con Bad'ul Amli y Murshida, ambos tratados en Tauhidi; la unidad del dios. Siguió después un apepite voraz para otros libros y pronto él había terminado sus estudios de Ahlari, de Iziyya y de Risala: todo reserva necesario para una comprensión apropiada del Islam. Porque en Islam no hay concepto del copyright, pronto después del Nasir joven sí mismo componía tipo del Risala y del Ishiriniya (libro de la poesía en la alabanza del profeta) y los vendía.
Su proceso de aprendizaje era esencialmente self-motivated, con por supuesto el estímulo apropiado de su profesor principal: Mallam Natsugune. Por lo tanto, el Nasiru joven era investigador voraz del conocimiento islámico, siendo lejano delante de sus contemporáneos - él predicaba de hecho realmente a sus classmates el suyo comprensión avanzada del significado del Quran; así sembrando las semillas tempranas de su entrada en Tafsir en tal edad blanda.
En Kano de esa era - los años 20 - había cinco escuelas avanzadas; esencialmente qué se pueden considerar las escuelas de la pre-universidad ahora - donde el Nasiru joven iba, en sus el propios, a más futuro su conocimiento. Estas escuelas eran:
1. La casa de diputado Imam de la mezquita central de la ciudad, situado en la sala 2
de Daneji. La casa de Mallam Ibrahim, principal juez de Kano en la sala 3
de Yakasai. La casa del juez del circuito de Bichi, Alhaji Musdafa en la sala 4
de Kurawa. La casa de jeque Abdulkarim (Mallam Sambo) en la sala 5
de Ciromawa. La casa de principal Imam de Zawiyya, Mallam Inuwa en la sala de Mayanka que
estas escuelas tenían bibliotecas extensas de la referencia el contener de colecciones obtuvo de varios centros escolásticos africanos del norte. Todos forman la base central de la sed de Nasiru para el conocimiento adicional.
Incluso en esa edad, su adquisición del conocimiento era el aprender más que de memoria; él preguntó lo que él no entendía de su profesor; así siendo extremadamente revolucionario en su comprensión del conocimiento islámico. La opinión tradicional de la relación entre la pupila y el amo en el sistema escolar islámico da raramente el sitio para la adquisición interactiva del conocimiento. Nasir no aceptó tal relación didáctica, y por lo tanto, con el diffidence y el respecto, siempre pedidos la elaboración adicional de lo que él no entendía de lo que él aprendió de sus profesores - de quién ellos mismos estaban solamente demasiado dispuesto a obligar al erudito joven. Esto no sorprendía, incluso en los años 30 “arcaicos” Kano, en vista del hecho de que algunos de sus otros profesores eran graduados de la universidad del al-Azhar en El Cairo, la universidad más vieja de África. Así Nasiru Kabara combinó dos tradiciones intelectuales: su ascendencia de Timbuctu cuando Timbuctu sí mismo era una ciudadela del learnig en el Sudán; y el suyo contacto con los eruditos y los profesores que visitan del al-Azhar en los años 30 en Kano.
Entre los residentes locales en Kano que ensambló el Qadiriyya en este tiempo (1937) era un chaval joven, Muhammad Nasir Kabara, que era destinado traer grandes cambios en el tariqa y no sólo introducir la celebración del cumpleaños del al-Jilani del al-Qadir de Shaykh Abd, un festival que no fue practicado por los africanos del norte, pero también llevar el uso del bandiri a cada esquina de Hausaland.
En la edad de diecisiete, Muhammad Nasir era realmente demasiado joven ser aceptado como miembro del Qadiriyya pero, pues su abuelo, Mallam Nakabara - un Mallam docto extremadamente bien - deseado lo para incorporar la orden, Shaykh Sa'ad tenía una pequeña opción pero para darle el wazifa. Aunque una juventud, Nasir era no sólo adentro leídas literatura y ciencias árabes clásicas bien pero él era también entendido con aprender de Sufism y los trabajos de los eruditos principales del sufi del tiempo.
Cuando el Amir de Kano Abdullahi Bayero fue en el jadye Nasir enviado una letra con Wali Sulaiman al Khalifa del Qadiriyya, al-Hassan de Shaykh Abu como-Sammani, el nieto del fundador del Sammaniyya, pidiendo que él le dé un ijaza para hacer muqaddam de su propio zawiya. El Shaykh estuvo asombrado oír hablar de una juventud tan altamente docta y él envió un jubba y un casquillo a Nasir junto con una letra de la cita como muqaddam. Aunque Nasir no se separó inmediatamente de la comunidad en Alfindiki, pues Shaykh Sa'ad todavía estaba vivo, sus acciones fueron miradas como innovaciones por los árabes. En Nasir 1949 hecho el jadye y satisfecho el Khalifa, el Shaykh Hashim y el Shaykh nuevos Muhammad de Mauritania. En su viaje de vuelta, él visitó el Sudán, en donde él satisfizo con el al-Fatih B. de Shaykh Muhammad. Shaykh Qarib Allah, Khalifa del Samaniyya sudanés. Él también visitó otros países árabes en donde él aprendió muchas cosas referentes a la organización del hadra y del bandiri. Antes de 1950 el jeque Nasir estaba de muchas maneras lejos más versátiles y eclécticas que sus profesores; y con éxito haciendo Sufism aceptable a audiencias más anchas, él podía así hacer que Qadiriyya penetra en cada parte del país.
Así puesto que Nasiru cerca de 1958 Kabara se ha considerado el líder de todos los ramas de Qadiriyya en Kano. Las líneas de la autoridad dentro de la dirección la estructura, sin embargo, se puede ver en términos de individuos que autoridad extiende sobre varios ramas y los patrones del detalle dentro de cada rama.
Nasiru Kabara recibió su autoridad original en el al-Bayt de Kuntiyya y de Ahl de Ibrahim Nakabara, que era la figura dominante que ligaba el vigésimo-siglo Qadiriyya del nineteenthand en Kano. Ibrahim (ca. 1867-1941) era Fulani y su abuelo era originalmente de Katsina. Él aprendió una amplia gama de temas de su padre: ley, teología, literatura, lógica, y gramática. Él aprendió la astrología de Mahmud Kabara; ley (el Mukhtasar) del mallami babban, al-Sayudi de Abdurrahman; y sufism (especialmente Qadiriyya) de su padre y de Ibrahim de Zaria, que había venido a Kano. Por la edad de treinta, él había hecho asesor jurídico a Emir Aliyu. Le ofrecieron la posición del álcali (juez) pero fueron rechazado en la convicción que los mallams no se deben implicar en el gobierno. Él no viajó fuera de Kano y no continuó su posición como asesor jurídico bajo emirs Abbas, Usman, y Abdullahi Bayero. Él era también el mallarn personal de Emir Usman. Ibrahim no escribió los libros, aunque él poseyó sus propios comentarios escritos en el Mukhtasar. Su hogar en la sala de Kabara era un centro más arriba de aprender en Hausaland. Una sección de su compuesto fue puesta a un lado para los estudios de la teología y del mysticism, y otra sección fue puesta a un lado para estudiar ley. Él no era un autor ardiente de la soledad (khalwa). Aunque había otros líderes de Qadiriyya tradicional en Kano durante este período, la autoridad de Ibrahim fue reforzada por sus calidades personales de la piedad y del conocimiento y por su eficacia como profesor de mallams. A su estudiante Nasiru Kabara lo no tuvo éxito en esta autoridad por su hijo sino, que exhibió estas mismas calidades.
Nasiru Kabara " “fue dado” a na Kabara de Ibrahim como niño y creció para arriba en su casa. Como Fulani, Nasiru ha tenido acceso a los mallams tradicionales de Qadiriyya en Kano. Con sus capacidades como un erudito y profesor, él hizo el heredero probable a na Kabara de Ibrahim. “
Durante el período a partir de 1935 a 1955, Nasiru era acertado en establecer el contacto directo con las fuentes primarias de la autoridad de Qadiriyya en Khartoum, Timbuktu, y Bagdad; y él hizo así cada vez más independiente de las líneas tradicionales de Qadiriyya de la autoridad. Su viaje a Bagdad en 1953 era un momento crucial en su carrera. Estableció su autoridad directamente dentro de las jefaturas internacionales de Qadiriyya; mientras que en Bagdad él estudió aspectos clásicos y modernos de Qadiriyya, y posteriormente lo introdujo o interpretó mucho de este material para una audiencia nigeriana; su compañero que viajaba único a Bagdad era el comerciante rico, Sanusi Dantata. Como resultado del viaje, Nasiru aseguró la ayuda financiera para su campaña a la reforma Qadiriyya y la extiende a un nivel total.
Sobre su vuelta de Bagdad, Nasiru abrió su propia mezquita de Qadiriyya y declinó atender a la mezquita de Muhammad Sidi. Antes de 1956 la mayor parte de la dirección y el laity habían alineado con Nasiru y un acercamiento fue alcanzado con Muhammad Sidi. Durante este período Nasiru viajó a través de mezquitas norteñas de la abertura de Nigeria y los muqaddams el designar. Él también consolidó sus contactos en el mundo árabe, volviendo dos veces a Bagdad y Khartoum que visitaba, El Cairo, Beirut, Damasco, Tehran, y Amman. En 1958 lo designaron director de la escuela y de la biblioteca judiciales de Shahuci en Kano. En 1961 él abrió su propia escuela primaria mayor de Islamiyya en la sala de Gwale y ha continuado enseñando temas avanzados en su propio hogar.
En 1949 Nasiru fue designado al consejo de los emir de consejeros por Abdullahi Bayero. Cuando Muhammad Sanusi hizo emir en 1954, sin embargo, Nasiru fue substituido en el consejo por los mallams reformados de Tijani. Durante el reinado de Sanusi, Nasiru servido como consultor legal al tribunal de apelación musulmán norteño y continuado como uno de los dos lectores del tafsir en el palacio (q.v.). Con la cita de la dificultad Bayero como emir en 1963, Nasiru sintió bien otra vez a un consejero al emir. Desde 1963 él ha sido un miembro del consejo de Kaduna de Mallams y ha estado en los comités locales y regionales numerosos, extendiéndose del comité nativo de la autoridad de Kano sobre la prostitución al comité especial nigeriano norteño sobre la educación en la provincia de Kano.
A pesar de su implicación como mallam del gobierno, Nasiru Kabara ha mantenido una base de la independiente de la autoridad de las estructuras administrativas en Kano y Nigeria norteño. Él ha sido en gran parte responsable de hacer Qadiriyya aceptable al hombre común, Fulani y Hausa, y ha sido un intermediario importante entre la clase predominante de Fulani y el Hausa mas comunes. Él ha traducido la teología y el mysticism de Qadiriyya al idioma del Hausa.
Además de las funciones de la iniciación, del entrenamiento, y de la mediación, la dirección de Qadiriyya en Kano tiene responsabilidad del financiamiento y de organizar las varias actividades de la fraternidad y de comunicarse con todos los segmentos de la fraternidad, del local y del nacional. En la transformación de la fraternidad de una élite a una organización total, una función importante de la dirección ha sido la inspiración y la administración del ritual.
La mayor parte de los miembros reformados de Qadiriyya hacen wuridi en los grupos conducidos por un imam. La naturaleza exacta del wuridi varía con el subgrupo dentro de Qadiriyya. El tiempo total expendió en cada grupo sería cerca de treinta minutos por día. Algunos imams de Qadiriyya (Salamiyya) también conducen sesiones del bandiri alrededor dos veces una semana por las tardes. Durante éstos agrupe las sesiones del rezo que el nexo del líder-seguidor se refuerza fuertemente, en parte por la relación tradicional de un imam a los a que “ruegue detrás.”
Qadiriyya reformado ha puesto un énfasis especial en la celebración del grupo del cumpleaños del fundador (Mauludin Abdulkadir). Esta ceremonia se identifica específicamente con Qadiriyya reformado y fue iniciada en Kano por Nasiru Kabara en cerca de 1959. Sirve como reunión anual para los líderes y los miembros de la fraternidad a través de Nigeria norteño. Las delegaciones de cada uno de las ciudades norteñas principales se juntan en Kano por un día completo de rezos y de actividades. La característica central del día es una procesión del grupo, dispuesta por las delegaciones del área, del hogar de Nasiru Kabara en el área de Jarkasa de la sala de Kabara al entierro de Kano Qadiriyya molido al oeste de la ciudad de Kano, donde están dichos los rezos sobre los sepulcros de los santos de Kano Qadiriyya. La procesión también sirve como la última vez en el año en que los hombres, las mujeres, y los niños todos participan en el mismo servicio de la adoración. La orden de la procesión indica áspero la jerarquía de la autoridad dentro de la élite de Qadiriyya; hay una base interna de los muqaddams que acompañan Nasiru Kabara durante este período.
De los patrones del withiin Qadiriyya de la autoridad y de la comunidad en Kano varios puntos pueden ser resumidos:
(1) La asociación con Qadiriyya en el diecinueveavo siglo fue limitada a los mallams de Fulani y los administradores (quiénes derivaron su autoridad de los líderes del Fulani Jihad) y a los árabes africanos del norte (quién no se integró religioso en el entorno de Kano).
(2) Con el establecimiento de la regla colonial, los elementos en la comunidad árabe de Kano reafirmaron sus propios acoplamientos espirituales con las fuentes africanas del norte de la autoridad espiritual.
(3) Los miembros de la clase del mallam del Hausa comenzaron a asociarse a esta forma renovada de Qadiriyya africano del norte y eran rccruited en posiciones de la dirección dentro de una generación.
(4) La parte del éxito de Qadiriyya en el sector del Hausa era debido a un énfasis en la adoración del grupo y a enfocarse de actividades dentro de mezquitas locales.
(5) El sucesor “legítimo” a la dirección de Fulani tradicional Qadiriyya en Kano (Nasiru Kabara) afiliado con las líneas independientes de la autoridad de Qadiriyya como un refuerzo el suyo “heredó” autoridad y la intentó consolidar las secciones del árabe, del Hausa, y de Fulani de Qadiriyya.
(6) Esto fue lograda en parte ampliando Qadiriyya de una base de la élite a una base total. En este proceso, la ayuda de los comerciantes ricos del Hausa era esencial. En el nivel total, Qadiriyya reformado era también un rdection del nacionalismo de Kano del emergizng que exigió que la autoridad religiosa esté cambiada de puesto de Sokoto y de África del norte a Kano sí mismo.
(7) Debido a la base total de Qadiriyya reformado, era no más posible que la élite de Qadiriyya identifique totalmente con la clase predominante de Kano. Así, mientras que los líderes de la fraternidad pudieron actuar pues los consejeros a la clase predominante, ellos han guardado generalmente su estado como mallarns nongovernment.
(8) Quizás como consecuencia de la cambio de una élite a una base total, la dirección de la fraternidad llegó a estar implicada en dos relativamente nuevas funciones: la interpretación de la doctrina para el uso local y la inspiración, con ritual y ceremonia, del grupo y de la adoración total.
Las doctrinas de la autoridad y de la comunidad en Qadiriyya reformado
mientras que Qadiriyya tradicional en Kano confió pesadamente en las diecinueveavo escrituras de Jihad del siglo como las fuentes principales de la doctrina de Qadiriyya los líderes de Qadiriyya reformado ellos mismos han sido escritores prolíficos. Like the Fulani Jihad writers, the contemporary Qadiriyya writers are concerned to relate classical Islamic thought to local circumstances. In the interim period between the Jihad writings and the contemporary writings, there was "a dearth of Qadiriyya literature in Kano. None of the major leaders during this period, Ibrahim na Kabara, Ali Musa, Saad b. Ahmad, Sharif Garba, Sidi Muhammad, and Muhammad Sidi-wrote on Qadiriyya. The Reformed Qadiriyya movement, associated with Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali, has not only produced its own literature but has revived an interest in the Jihad classics," has introduced works on Qadiriyya from the Arab world," and has inspired local Hausa "praise poets" " to express themselves on brotherhood matters. Nasiru Kabara hase written about 150 works in all.
The amount of systematic theology in the writings of Nasiru Kabara has been minimal; his primary purpose seems to be to relate the history and elements of the brotherhood in terms understandable to contemporary Kano society and to stimulate an identification with the saints of the brotherhood. The writings of Ahmad b. Ali cover many of these same topics. There is no specific praise of the Shaziliyya way, as distinct from Qadiriyya, and much of the literature contains poems that are sung at worship gatherings. Another Reformed Qadiriyya leader in Kano, Adamu na Ma'aji (q.v.), seems mainly concerned with chains of authority and conditions of initiation."
The writings of brotherhood leaders such as Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali espouse the community and authority of Qadiriyya on two major grounds: affiliational (primarily on the basis of direct personal experience) and communal (primarily on the basis of loyalty to the nineteenth-century Jihad tradition). Within the category of affiliational appeal, there have been five areas of doctrinal exposition: the origins and spread of Qadiriyya, the elements and requirements of Qadiriyya, the benefits and blessings for those who follow Qadiriyya, personal praise of the Qadiriyya saints, and general preaching.
With regard to the spread of Qadiriyy, Nasiru Kabara describes in Alnafahat the Qadiriyya shaykhs in history and the distribution of Qadiriyya among the continents of the world." In Naf' al-'ibad, he discusses the Qadiriyya caliphate throughout history. In Ithaf al-khald'iq he presents the genealogy of the founder, 'Abd al-Qadir, and a considerable amount of biographical data. He also mentions some of the successors of 'Abd al-Qadir in the contemporary world.
With regard 4o the requirements of Qadiriyya, Nasiru Kabara elabarates in Al-nafabdt the details and the nature of the brotherhood ceremonies." In the Naf' aVibad he describes the Qadiriyya daily voluntary prayers." In the Ithaf al-khald'iq he discusses the necessities and voluntary aspects of ablution, washing, taimama (symbolic washing with dust), prayer, prostration, giving of alms, fasting, pilgrimage, and other Islamic rituals for those who follow Qadiriyya. In Da'wat al-ghawth he elaborates on the conditions for following Qadiriyya.
With regard to the benefits of Qadiriyya, all of the above-mentioned writings refer to the personal satisfactions and blessings that accrue to those who follow Qadiriyya. Nasiru describes the "glorious benefits" for the followers of Qadiriyya and assures them of the best reward.
With regard to the praise of Qadiriyya saints, it is clear that instead of being a perfunctory gesture it is a culmination of the past that is directed into the brotherhood experience. In Naf al-'ibad, Nasiru inscribes the prayer he offered while at the tomb of 'Abd al-Qadir in Baghdad.
The praise of a primary saint, 'Abd al-Qadir, should not obscure the central fact of all the reformed brotherhoods: an individual is encouraged to do addu'a (al-du'a), that is, to pray directly to God. Nasiru exemplifies the passion and symbolism of such a prayer in the Subhdt al-anwar.
Finally, general preaching has always been a function of the religious authorities who try to induce conversions through individual volition. Such preaching is invariably in the vernacular language (in this case Hausa); and if it can be fashioned into poetry, it will be sung by minstrels near and far. Nasiru Kabara has been particularly successful in his general preaching.
Nasiru Kabara identified in the Subhat al-anwar, five branches of Qadiriyya in Hausaland, one of which is Usmaniyya. In various other works, he refers to Usmaniyya al-Fudawiyya and identifies himself with this branch. In the Naf al-'ibad he includes the prayer he read when he visited the tomb of Usman dan Fodio, and it is clear that he regards Muhammad Bello, son of Usman, as among the founders of Usmaniyya. Nasiru writes that he hopes to visit Bello at Wurno (the assumption being that Bello is not dead). While Nasiru does not include any reference to special ritual associated with Usmaniyya, it is clear that the Jihad leaders are considered to be of special importance. The continual identification of them with Qadiriyya is clearly intended to remind their descendants not to desert the "faith of their fathers." The Hausa poem by Ibrahim Makwarari (Begen Shehu Abdulkadir) is illustrative of the way in which Nasiru is regarded as the successor to the Jihad leaders.
With regard to the alleged doctrinal prohibition against change of brotherhood, there has been an attack on mallams who encourage such conversion, primarily those associated with Reformed Tijaniyya. The doctrinal basis of this attack is stated by Nasiru Kabara in Al-nalabat, where he suggests that the Tijani mallams are "fabricating" if they assert that one tariqa is better than another. He argues for a strict prohibition against leaving the Qadiriyya brotherhood, supporting his argument with verses from the Qur'an and traditions of the Prophet. He asserts that when a person has promised to do something religious, such as follow a brotherhood, he must keep that promise. He criticizes the Tijaniyya specifically for assuming it can convert persons from other brotherhoods, suggesting that this was not the policy of the original Tijani leaders and that the practice is a false modern innovation .
Publications
He has published well over 150 treatises and books explaining various aspects of Islamic philosophy, Arabic and Hausa linguistics. His writing career started quite early in his life in his youth. Perhaps not surprisingly, his first treatise was on Abdulkadir Jilani, the founder of the Qadiriyya Islamic Philosophical movement. His method of writing usually follows the medieval scholastic tradition widespread in the middle-east. Thus he combines commentary with critical appraisal. A classical example of his approach is provided in the intellectual conjectures-and-refutations arguments of Al-Ghazali in his Tahaful Falasafa, and Ibn Rushd's counter-commenterary, Tahaful Tahafut.
His writings follow a specified and characteristic pattern; beginning with the praise of God, then the rationale of the writing under consideration and the proposed title of the work., followed by an abstract and then the main exposition. An example is his exposition on arm positioning during prayers which he explained in Kan Ul Fasab. He started by priasing Shehu Abdulmahal-al-Shawani a leading exponent of Shafi'iyya movement which supports Saddlu (dropping the arms by the side during the standing portion of the prayer). He then brings a Prophetic tradition (Hadith) which shows the Prophet's support for such arm positioning. Subsequently, the then brings more Prophetic traditions which explained the stands of both Sadlu and Kablu (crossing the arms on the chest during the standing portion of the prayer).
In his various writings, Sheikh Nasiru Kabara has clearly brought out the concept of Kanawiyya, a connation of Kano as an intellectual entrepot in medieval Africa. Some of the books and treatises he has published are included below.
BIOGRAFIA DELLO SCEICCO NASIR KABARA KANO NIGERIA
Automatically translated into Italian thanks to WorldLingo
Al-Nasir Kabara (RA) dello sceicco Muhammad di Maulana
Vita e periodi
da. SANI BALA SHEHU
sanibalashehukano@yahoo.com sanibalashehu2004@yahoo.co.uk
+2348065872052. 08080626852 08073400690 08045208685 07029467896
il Amirul Jaysh, lo sceicco Nasir Muhammad Kabara (RA), lo sceicco Nasir Muhammad
Umar Kabara di periodi e di vita, un erudito islamico celebre e philsopher sono stati sopportati in 1912 nel villaggio fuori di Kano, Nigeria di Guringuwa. I suoi grandparents sono venuto da Kabara, una città sotto il regno di Timbucktu. Il suo nonno della terza generazione - anche da Kabara in Timbucktu - Mallam Umaru, anche conosciuto come Mallam Kabara era quello unico dal lineage da depositarsi in Adakawa nella città di Kano, prima di passare a che cosa ora è conosciuto come quartiere di Kabara, chiamato dopo lui. Era un Sufi compiuto in Timbucktu prima di partire per Kano.
La prima cosa Mallam Kabara ha fatto sulla sedimentazione nel quartiere di Kabara era di stabilire una scuola in 1787, di una specie fatta riferimento comunemente come scuola di Zaure in cui il corridoio di entrata esterno della sua casa è stato convertito in scuola islamica. Questa scuola possibilmente fra le più vecchie scuole registrate in Kano ora fa parte della famiglia di Darul Qadiriyya dello sceicco Nasiru Kabara.
Il Nasiru youthful era estremamente entusiastico nella sua ricerca di conoscenza. Il suo primo incontro con il sistema imparante islamico avanzato - lungo dopo che si fosse laureato dal sistema scolastico normale di Allo (Qur'an colto dalle ardesie di legno), emergendo estremamente fluente nella lingua araba, in jurisprudance islamico e nella linguistica - era con Bad'ul Amli e Murshida, entrambi i trattati su Tauhidi; l'unità del dio. Dopo ha seguito un apepite voracious per altri libri e presto aveva terminato i suoi studi di Ahlari, di Iziyya e di Risala: tutto prenota necessario per una comprensione adeguata dell'Islam. Poiché nell'Islam non ci è concetto del copyright, presto dopo il Nasir youthful egli stesso stava componendo il Risala e il Ishiriniya (libro di poesia nell'elogio del Prophet) e stava vendendoli.
Il suo apprendimento era essenzialmente self-motivated, con naturalmente incoraggiamento adatto dal suo insegnante principale: Mallam Natsugune. Di conseguenza, il Nasiru youthful era un ricercatore voracious di conoscenza islamica, essendo lontano davanti ai suoi contemporanei - effettivamente realmente stava predicando ai suoi classmates suo comprensione avanzata del significato del Quran; così seminando i semi in anticipo della sua entrata in Tafsir a tale età tenera.
In Kano di quell'era - gli anni 20 - ci erano cinque scuole avanzate; essenzialmente che cosa possono essere considerate scuole dell'pre-università ora - dove il Nasiru giovane ha usato andare, sui suoi propri, ad ulteriore la sua conoscenza. Queste scuole erano:
1. La Camera del delegato Imam del Mosque centrale della città, situato nel quartiere 2
di Daneji. La Camera di Mallam Ibrahim, giudice principale di Kano al quartiere 3
di Yakasai. La Camera del giudice del circuito di Bichi, Alhaji Musdafa al quartiere 4
di Kurawa. La Camera dello sceicco Abdulkarim (Mallam Sambo) al quartiere 5
di Ciromawa. La Camera di Imam principale di Zawiyya, Mallam Inuwa al quartiere che di Mayanka
queste scuole hanno avute vaste biblioteche di riferimento contenere le collezioni si è verificata dai vari centri scolastici africani del nord. Tutti formano il nucleo centrale di sete del Nasiru per ulteriore conoscenza.
Anche a quell'età, la sua aquisizione di conoscenza era più dell'imparare a memoria; ha interrogato che cosa non ha capito dal suo insegnante; così essendo estremamente rivoluzionario nella sua comprensione della conoscenza islamica. La percezione tradizionale del rapporto fra la pupilla ed il padrone nel sistema scolastico islamico dà raramente la stanza per aquisizione interattiva della conoscenza. Nasir non ha accettato tale rapporto didattico e conseguentemente, con diffidence e rispetto, sempre richieste per ulteriore elaborazione di che cosa non ha capito di che cosa ha imparato dai suoi insegnanti - di chi essi stessi erano soltanto troppo disposto a obbligare l'erudito giovane. Ciò non stava sorpresendo, neppure nei 1930s “archaic„ Kano, tenendo conto del fatto che alcuni dei suoi altri insegnanti erano laureati dell'università di Al-Azhar a Cairo, nella più vecchia università in Africa. Così Nasiru Kabara ha unito due tradizioni intellettuali: la sua ascendenza di Timbuctu quando Timbuctu in se era un citadel di learnig nel Sudan; e suo contatto con gli eruditi ed i professori di visita da Al-Azhar nei 1930s in Kano.
Fra i residenti locali in Kano che si è unito il Qadiriyya attualmente (1937) era un lad giovane, Muhammad Nasir Kabara, che era destinato portare i cambiamenti grandi nel tariqa e non solo introdurre la celebrazione del compleanno di Al-Jilani di Al-Qadir di Shaykh Abd, un festival che non si è esercitato in dagli Africani del nord, ma anche trasportare l'uso del bandiri ad ogni angolo di Hausaland.
All'età di diciassette, Muhammad Nasir era realmente troppo giovane essere accettato come membro del Qadiriyya ma, poichè il suo nonno, Mallam Nakabara - un Mallam istruito estremamente buono - desiderato lui per entrare nell'ordine, Shaykh Sa'ad ha avuto una scelta piccola ma per dargli il wazifa. Anche se una gioventù, Nasir era non solo letteratura e le scienze arabe classiche dentro colte buone ma era inoltre conversant con imparare di Sufism e gli impianti degli eruditi principali di sufi del tempo.
Quando il Amir di Kano Abdullahi Bayero è andato sul hajj Nasir trasmesso ad una lettera con Wali Sulaiman al Khalifa del Qadiriyya, Al-Hassan di Shaykh Abu come-Sammani, il nipote del fondatore del Sammaniyya, chiedentegli di dargli un ijaza per trasformarsi in in muqaddam del suo proprio zawiya. Lo Shaykh è stato stupito di sentire parlare una gioventù altamente istruita ed ha trasmesso un jubba e una protezione a Nasir insieme ad una lettera dell'appuntamento come muqaddam. Anche se Nasir immediatamente non si è separato dalla Comunità in Alfindiki, poichè Shaykh Sa'ad era ancora vivo, le sue azioni sono state considerare come le innovazioni dagli arabi. In Nasir 1949 reso al Hajj e venuto a contatto di il nuovi Khalifa, Shaykh Hashim e Shaykh Muhammad della Mauritania. Sul suo viaggio di ritorno, ha visitato il Sudan, in cui ha incontrato Al-Fatih B. di Shaykh Muhammad. Shaykh Qarib Allah, Khalifa del Samaniyya sudanese. Inoltre ha visitato altri paesi arabi in cui ha imparato molte cose riguardo all'organizzazione di bandiri e di hadra. Entro 1950 lo sceicco Nasir era in molti sensi molto più versatili ed eclettici che i suoi insegnanti; e con successo rendendo Sufism accettabile ai pubblici più larghi, poteva così trasformare Qadiriyya penetrare ogni parte del paese.
Così poiché Nasiru circa 1958 Kabara è stato considerato il capo di tutti i rami di Qadiriyya in Kano. Le linee di autorità all'interno della direzione la struttura, tuttavia, può essere osservata in termini di sia individui di cui l'autorità si estende sopra parecchi rami che i modelli di particolare all'interno di ogni ramo.
Nasiru Kabara ha ricevuto la sua autorità originale in Al-Bayt di Ahl e di Kuntiyya da Ibrahim Nakabara, che era la figura dominante che collega il ventesimo-secolo Qadiriyya del nineteenthand in Kano. Ibrahim (ca. 1867-1941) era Fulani ed il suo nonno proveniva originalmente da Katsina. Ha imparato una vasta gamma degli oggetti dal suo padre: legge, teologia, letteratura, logica e grammatica. Ha imparato l'astrologia da Mahmud Kabara; legge (il Mukhtasar) dal mallami babban, Al-Sayudi di Abdurrahman; e sufism (particolarmente Qadiriyya) dal suo padre e da Ibrahim di Zaria, che era venuto a Kano. Dall'età di trenta, era diventato un consigliere legale a Emir Aliyu. È stato offerto la posizione dell'alcali (giudice) ma è stato rifiutato sulla convinzione che i mallams non dovrebbero partecipare al governo. Non ha viaggiato fuori di Kano e non ha continuato la sua posizione come consigliere legale sotto i emirs Abbas, Usman e Abdullahi Bayero. Era inoltre il mallarn personale di Emir Usman. Ibrahim non ha scritto i libri, anche se ha posseduto i suoi propri commenti scritti sul Mukhtasar. La sua sede nel quartiere di Kabara era un centro più su di imparare in Hausaland. Una sezione del suo residuo è stata messa per gli studi sulla teologia e sul mysticism e un'altra sezione è stata messa per studiare la legge. Non era un fautore ardent di solitude (khalwa). Anche se ci erano altri capi di Qadiriyya tradizionale in Kano durante questo periodo, l'autorità del Ibrahim è stata rinforzata dalle sue qualità personali di piety e di conoscenza e dalla sua efficacia come insegnante dei mallams. Non è stato riuscito a questa autorità dal suo figlio ma dal suo allievo Nasiru Kabara, che ha esibito queste stesse qualità.
Nasiru Kabara " “è stato dato„ al Na Kabara del Ibrahim come bambino e si è sviluppato in su nella sua famiglia. Come Fulani, Nasiru ha avuto accesso ai mallams tradizionali di Qadiriyya in Kano. Con le sue abilità come un erudito ed insegnante, è diventato l'erede probabile al Na Kabara del Ibrahim. “
Durante il periodo da 1935 a 1955, Nasiru riusciva in la stabilizzazione del contatto diretto con le fonti primarie di autorità di Qadiriyya a Khartoum, Timbuktu e Bagdad; ed è diventato così sempre più indipendente dalle linee di Qadiriyya di autorità tradizionali. Il suo viaggio a Bagdad in 1953 era una svolta nella sua carriera. Ha stabilito la sua autorità direttamente all'interno delle sedi internazionali di Qadiriyya; mentre a Bagdad lo ha studiato le funzioni classiche e moderne di Qadiriyya e successivamente ha introdotto o interpretato molto di questo materiale per un pubblico nigeriano; il suo solo compagno mobile a Bagdad era il commerciante ricco, Sanusi Dantata. Come conseguenza del viaggio, Nasiru ha assicurato il contributo finanziario per la sua campagna alla riforma Qadiriyya e lo estende fino un livello totale.
Sul suo ritorno da Bagdad, Nasiru ha aperto il suo proprio mosque di Qadiriyya ed ha rifiutato di assistere al mosque di Muhammad Sidi. Da 1956 più della direzione e del laity si era allineato con Nasiru e un rapprochement è stato raggiunto con Muhammad Sidi. Durante questo periodo Nasiru ha viaggiato durante i mosques nordici di apertura della Nigeria e muqaddams di nomina. Inoltre ha consolidato i suoi contatti nel mondo arabo, rinviante due volte a Bagdad e Khartoum di visita, Cairo, Beirut, Damasco, Tehran ed Amman. In 1958 è stato nominato headmaster della scuola e della biblioteca giudiziarie di Shahuci in Kano. In 1961 ha aperto la sua propria scuola primaria maggiore di Islamiyya nel quartiere di Gwale ed ha continuato ad insegnare gli oggetti avanzati nella sua propria sede.
In 1949 Nasiru è stato nominato al Consiglio dei emir dei consiglieri da Abdullahi Bayero. Quando Muhammad Sanusi si è trasformato in in emir in 1954, tuttavia, Nasiru è stato sostituito sul consiglio dai mallams riformati di Tijani. Durante il regno di Sanusi, Nasiru servito da consulente legale presso la Corte d'Appello musulmana nordica e continuato come uno dei due lettori del tafsir nel palazzo (q.v.). Con l'appuntamento di Ado Bayero come emir in 1963, Nasiru ha stato bene ancora ad un consigliere al emir. Dal 1963 è stato un membro del Consiglio di Kaduna di Mallams ed è stato sui comitati locali e regionali numerosi, varianti dal comitato natale di autorità di Kano di prostituzione al comitato speciale nigeriano nordico di formazione nella provincia di Kano.
Malgrado la sua partecipazione come mallam di governo, Nasiru Kabara ha effettuato una base dell'indipendente di autorità dalle strutture amministrative Kano ed in Nigeria del Nord. È stato in gran parte responsabile del rendere Qadiriyya accettabile all'uomo comune, sia Fulani che Hausa ed è stato un mediatore importante fra il codice categoria di regolamento di Fulani ed il Hausa più comuni. Ha tradotto la teologia ed il mysticism di Qadiriyya in idioma del Hausa.
Oltre che le funzioni dell'inizio, dell'addestramento e del intermediation, la direzione di Qadiriyya in Kano ha responsabilità di finanziamento e dell'organizzazione delle attività varie della fratellanza e della comunicazione con tutti i segmenti della fratellanza, del local e del cittadino. Nella trasformazione della fratellanza da un'elite ad un'organizzazione totale, una funzione importante di direzione è stata l'ispirazione e la gestione del rituale.
La maggior parte dei membri riformati di Qadiriyya fanno il wuridi nei gruppi condotti da un imam. La natura esatta del wuridi varia con il sottogruppo all'interno di Qadiriyya. Il tempo totale consumato in ogni gruppo sarebbe circa trenta minuti al giorno. Alcuni imams di Qadiriyya (Salamiyya) inoltre conducono circa due volte le sessioni di bandiri una settimana nelle sere. Durante il questi raggruppi le sessioni che di preghiera il nesso del capo-seguicamma è rinforzato fortemente, parzialmente dal rapporto tradizionale tra un imam e coloro che “preghi dietro.„
Qadiriyya riformato ha disposto un'importanza particolare sulla celebrazione del gruppo del compleanno del fondatore (Mauludin Abdulkadir). Questa cerimonia specificamente è identificata con Qadiriyya riformato ed è stata iniziata in Kano da Nasiru Kabara in circa 1959. Serve da riunione annuale per i capi ed i membri della fratellanza durante dalla Nigeria del Nord. Le delegazioni da ciascuna delle città nordiche principali congregate in Kano per un giorno completo delle preghiere e delle attività. La caratteristica centrale del giorno è un procession del gruppo, organizzato dalle delegazioni di zona, dalla sede di Nasiru Kabara nella zona di Jarkasa del quartiere di Kabara alla sepoltura di Kano Qadiriyya macinata ad ovest della città di Kano, in cui le preghiere sono dette sopra le tombe dei san di Kano Qadiriyya. Il procession inoltre serve da l'unica volta durante l'anno in cui gli uomini, le donne ed i bambini tutti partecipano allo stesso servizio di culto. L'ordine del procession indica approssimativamente la gerarchia di autorità all'interno dell'elite di Qadiriyya; ci è un nucleo interno dei muqaddams che accompagnano Nasiru Kabara durante questo periodo.
Dai modelli del withiin Qadiriyya della Comunità e di autorità in Kano parecchi punti possono essere ricapitolati:
(1) L'associazione con Qadiriyya nel diciannovesimo secolo è stata limitata ai mallams di Fulani e coordinatori (chi hanno derivato la loro autorità dai capi del Fulani Jihad) ed agli arabi africani del nord (chi non si è integrato religioso nell'ambiente di Kano).
(2) Con l'istituzione della regola coloniale, gli elementi nella Comunità araba di Kano hanno riaffermato i loro propri collegamenti spiritosi con le fonti africane del nord di autorità spiritosa.
(3) I membri del codice categoria del mallam del Hausa hanno cominciato a associarsi con questa forma rinnovata di Qadiriyya africano del nord ed erano rccruited nelle posizioni di direzione all'interno di una generazione.
(4) La parte del successo di Qadiriyya nel settore del Hausa era dovuto un'enfasi su culto del gruppo e la focalizzazione delle attività all'interno dei mosques locali.
(5) Il successore “legittimo„ alla direzione di Fulani tradizionale Qadiriyya in Kano (Nasiru Kabara) affiliated con le linee indipendenti di autorità di Qadiriyya come un rinforzo di suo “ha ereditato„ l'autorità ed ha cercato di consolidare le sezioni dell'arabo, del Hausa e di Fulani di Qadiriyya.
(6) Ciò è stata compiuta parzialmente estendendo Qadiriyya da una base dell'elite fino una base totale. In questo processo, il supporto dei commercianti ricchi del Hausa era essenziale. Al livello totale, Qadiriyya riformato era inoltre un rdection di nazionalismo di Kano del emergizng che ha richiesto che l'autorità religiosa è spostata da Sokoto e dall'Africa del nord a Kano in se.
(7) A causa della base totale di Qadiriyya riformato, per l'elite di Qadiriyya non era più possibile identificare completamente con il codice categoria di regolamento di Kano. Quindi, mentre i capi della fratellanza potrebbero fungere da i consiglieri al codice categoria di regolamento, hanno custodito solitamente la loro condizione come mallarns non governativi.
(8) Forse in conseguenza dello spostamento da un'elite ad una base totale, la direzione della fratellanza è stato implicata in due relativamente nuove funzioni: interpretazione della dottrina per uso locale e l'ispirazione, con il rituale e la cerimonia, del gruppo e del culto totale.
Le dottrine di autorità e della Comunità in Qadiriyya riformato
mentre Qadiriyya tradizionale in Kano ha contato pesante sulle diciannovesime scritture di Jihad di secolo come le fonti principali della dottrina di Qadiriyya i capi di Qadiriyya riformato essi stessi sono state produttori prolifici. Like the Fulani Jihad writers, the contemporary Qadiriyya writers are concerned to relate classical Islamic thought to local circumstances. In the interim period between the Jihad writings and the contemporary writings, there was "a dearth of Qadiriyya literature in Kano. None of the major leaders during this period, Ibrahim na Kabara, Ali Musa, Saad b. Ahmad, Sharif Garba, Sidi Muhammad, and Muhammad Sidi-wrote on Qadiriyya. The Reformed Qadiriyya movement, associated with Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali, has not only produced its own literature but has revived an interest in the Jihad classics," has introduced works on Qadiriyya from the Arab world," and has inspired local Hausa "praise poets" " to express themselves on brotherhood matters. Nasiru Kabara hase written about 150 works in all.
The amount of systematic theology in the writings of Nasiru Kabara has been minimal; his primary purpose seems to be to relate the history and elements of the brotherhood in terms understandable to contemporary Kano society and to stimulate an identification with the saints of the brotherhood. The writings of Ahmad b. Ali cover many of these same topics. There is no specific praise of the Shaziliyya way, as distinct from Qadiriyya, and much of the literature contains poems that are sung at worship gatherings. Another Reformed Qadiriyya leader in Kano, Adamu na Ma'aji (q.v.), seems mainly concerned with chains of authority and conditions of initiation."
The writings of brotherhood leaders such as Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali espouse the community and authority of Qadiriyya on two major grounds: affiliational (primarily on the basis of direct personal experience) and communal (primarily on the basis of loyalty to the nineteenth-century Jihad tradition). Within the category of affiliational appeal, there have been five areas of doctrinal exposition: the origins and spread of Qadiriyya, the elements and requirements of Qadiriyya, the benefits and blessings for those who follow Qadiriyya, personal praise of the Qadiriyya saints, and general preaching.
With regard to the spread of Qadiriyy, Nasiru Kabara describes in Alnafahat the Qadiriyya shaykhs in history and the distribution of Qadiriyya among the continents of the world." In Naf' al-'ibad, he discusses the Qadiriyya caliphate throughout history. In Ithaf al-khald'iq he presents the genealogy of the founder, 'Abd al-Qadir, and a considerable amount of biographical data. He also mentions some of the successors of 'Abd al-Qadir in the contemporary world.
With regard 4o the requirements of Qadiriyya, Nasiru Kabara elabarates in Al-nafabdt the details and the nature of the brotherhood ceremonies." In the Naf' aVibad he describes the Qadiriyya daily voluntary prayers." In the Ithaf al-khald'iq he discusses the necessities and voluntary aspects of ablution, washing, taimama (symbolic washing with dust), prayer, prostration, giving of alms, fasting, pilgrimage, and other Islamic rituals for those who follow Qadiriyya. In Da'wat al-ghawth he elaborates on the conditions for following Qadiriyya.
With regard to the benefits of Qadiriyya, all of the above-mentioned writings refer to the personal satisfactions and blessings that accrue to those who follow Qadiriyya. Nasiru describes the "glorious benefits" for the followers of Qadiriyya and assures them of the best reward.
With regard to the praise of Qadiriyya saints, it is clear that instead of being a perfunctory gesture it is a culmination of the past that is directed into the brotherhood experience. In Naf al-'ibad, Nasiru inscribes the prayer he offered while at the tomb of 'Abd al-Qadir in Baghdad.
The praise of a primary saint, 'Abd al-Qadir, should not obscure the central fact of all the reformed brotherhoods: an individual is encouraged to do addu'a (al-du'a), that is, to pray directly to God. Nasiru exemplifies the passion and symbolism of such a prayer in the Subhdt al-anwar.
Finally, general preaching has always been a function of the religious authorities who try to induce conversions through individual volition. Such preaching is invariably in the vernacular language (in this case Hausa); and if it can be fashioned into poetry, it will be sung by minstrels near and far. Nasiru Kabara has been particularly successful in his general preaching.
Nasiru Kabara identified in the Subhat al-anwar, five branches of Qadiriyya in Hausaland, one of which is Usmaniyya. In various other works, he refers to Usmaniyya al-Fudawiyya and identifies himself with this branch. In the Naf al-'ibad he includes the prayer he read when he visited the tomb of Usman dan Fodio, and it is clear that he regards Muhammad Bello, son of Usman, as among the founders of Usmaniyya. Nasiru writes that he hopes to visit Bello at Wurno (the assumption being that Bello is not dead). While Nasiru does not include any reference to special ritual associated with Usmaniyya, it is clear that the Jihad leaders are considered to be of special importance. The continual identification of them with Qadiriyya is clearly intended to remind their descendants not to desert the "faith of their fathers." The Hausa poem by Ibrahim Makwarari (Begen Shehu Abdulkadir) is illustrative of the way in which Nasiru is regarded as the successor to the Jihad leaders.
With regard to the alleged doctrinal prohibition against change of brotherhood, there has been an attack on mallams who encourage such conversion, primarily those associated with Reformed Tijaniyya. The doctrinal basis of this attack is stated by Nasiru Kabara in Al-nalabat, where he suggests that the Tijani mallams are "fabricating" if they assert that one tariqa is better than another. He argues for a strict prohibition against leaving the Qadiriyya brotherhood, supporting his argument with verses from the Qur'an and traditions of the Prophet. He asserts that when a person has promised to do something religious, such as follow a brotherhood, he must keep that promise. He criticizes the Tijaniyya specifically for assuming it can convert persons from other brotherhoods, suggesting that this was not the policy of the original Tijani leaders and that the practice is a false modern innovation .
Publications
He has published well over 150 treatises and books explaining various aspects of Islamic philosophy, Arabic and Hausa linguistics. His writing career started quite early in his life in his youth. Perhaps not surprisingly, his first treatise was on Abdulkadir Jilani, the founder of the Qadiriyya Islamic Philosophical movement. His method of writing usually follows the medieval scholastic tradition widespread in the middle-east. Thus he combines commentary with critical appraisal. A classical example of his approach is provided in the intellectual conjectures-and-refutations arguments of Al-Ghazali in his Tahaful Falasafa, and Ibn Rushd's counter-commenterary, Tahaful Tahafut.
His writings follow a specified and characteristic pattern; beginning with the praise of God, then the rationale of the writing under consideration and the proposed title of the work., followed by an abstract and then the main exposition. An example is his exposition on arm positioning during prayers which he explained in Kan Ul Fasab. He started by priasing Shehu Abdulmahal-al-Shawani a leading exponent of Shafi'iyya movement which supports Saddlu (dropping the arms by the side during the standing portion of the prayer). He then brings a Prophetic tradition (Hadith) which shows the Prophet's support for such arm positioning. Subsequently, the then brings more Prophetic traditions which explained the stands of both Sadlu and Kablu (crossing the arms on the chest during the standing portion of the prayer).
In his various writings, Sheikh Nasiru Kabara has clearly brought out the concept of Kanawiyya, a connation of Kano as an intellectual entrepot in medieval Africa. Some of the books and treatises he has published are included below.
BIOGRAPHIE DES SCHEICHS NASIR KABARA KANO NIGERIA
Automatically translated into German thanks to WorldLingo
Maulana Scheich Muhammad Al-Nasir Kabara (RA)
Leben und Zeiten
durch. SANI BALA SHEHU
sanibalashehukano@yahoo.com sanibalashehu2004@yahoo.co.uk
+2348065872052. 08080626852 08073400690 08045208685 07029467896
das Amirul Jaysh, Scheich Nasir Muhammad Kabara (RA), Leben-und Zeit-
Scheich Nasir Muhammad Umar Kabara, ein notierter islamischer Gelehrter und philsopher wurden 1912 im Guringuwa Dorf außerhalb Kano, Nigeria getragen. Seine Großeltern kamen von Kabara, eine Stadt unter Timbucktu Königreich. Sein drittes Erzeugung Großvater - auch von Kabara in Timbucktu - in Mallam Umaru, in alias Mallam Kabara war das einzige von der Abstammung, zum in Adakawa in der Kano Stadt zu vereinbaren, bevor er an zu bewog was jetzt als Kabara Bezirk bekannt, genannt nach ihm. Vor der Abreise für Kano er war ein erreichtes Sufi in Timbucktu.
Die erste Sache Mallam Kabara tat auf dem Vereinbaren im Kabara Bezirk war, eine Schule 1787, einer Art herzustellen, die allgemein als Zaure Schule verwiesen wurde, in der die äußere Eingang Halle seines Hauses in eine islamische Schule umgewandelt wurde. Diese Schule vielleicht unter den ältesten notierten Schulen in Kano ist jetzt Teil des Darul Qadiriyya Haushalts des Scheichs Nasiru Kabara.
Das jugendliche Nasiru war in seiner Suche nach Wissen extrem enthusiastisch. Sein erstes Treffen mit dem vorgerückten islamischen erlernensystem - lang, nachdem er vom normalen Allo (Qur'an gelesen von den hölzernen Schiefern) Schulsystem graduiert hatte, tauchend extrem fließend in der arabischen Sprache, im islamischen jurisprudance und in der Linguistik auf - war mit Bad'ul Amli und Murshida, beide Abhandlungen auf Tauhidi; die Einheit des Gottes. Folgte zunächst einem unersättlichen apepite für andere Bücher und bald hatte er seine Studien von Ahlari, von Iziyya und von Risala durchgeführt: alles meldet notwendiges für ein korrektes Verständnis des Islams an. Weil im Islam es kein Konzept von copyright gibt, bald nach dem jugendlichen Nasir selbst setzte das Risala und das Ishiriniya (Buch von Poesie im Lob des Prophets) und verkaufte sie.
Sein Lernprozeß war im Wesentlichen, mit selbstverständlich passender Ermutigung von seinem Hauptlehrer self-motivated: Mallam Natsugune. Infolgedessen war das jugendliche Nasiru ein unersättlicher Forscher des islamischen Wissens und war vor seinen Zeitgenossen weit - in der Tat predigte er wirklich zu seinen Mitschülern seins vorgerücktes Verständnis der Bedeutung des Quran; die frühen Samen seiner Eintragung in Tafsir an solchem zartem Alter so, säend.
In Kano dieser ära - zwanziger Jahre - es gab fünf vorgerückte Schulen; im Wesentlichen was jetzt gelten können als Voruniversitätsschulen - wo das junge Nasiru verwendete, auf seine Selbst, zu weiterem zu gehen sein Wissen. Diese Schulen waren:
1. Das Haus des Abgeordneten Imam der Stadt-zentralen Moschee, gelegen im Daneji Bezirk
2. Das Haus von Mallam Ibrahim, Hauptrichter von Kano an Yakasai Bezirk
3. Das Haus des Bichi Stromkreis-Richters, Alhaji Musdafa an Kurawa Bezirk
4. Das Haus des Scheichs Abdulkarim (Mallam Sambo) an Ciromawa Bezirk
5. Das Haus von HauptImam von Zawiyya, Mallam Inuwa am Mayanka Bezirk, den
diese Schulen umfangreiche Bezugsbibliotheken hatten, Ansammlungen zu enthalten, erreichte von den verschiedenen afrikanischen gelehrten Nordmitten. Alle bilden den zentralen Kern von Durst Nasirus für weiteres Wissen.
Sogar an diesem Alter, war sein Erwerb des Wissens mehr als auswendiges Lernen; er fragte, was er nicht von seinem Lehrer verstand; in seinem Verständnis des islamischen Wissens extrem revolutionär so seiend. Die traditionelle Vorstellung des Verhältnisses zwischen der Pupille und dem Meister im islamischen Schulsystem gibt selten Raum für wechselwirkenden Erwerb des Wissens. Nasir nahm nicht solches didaktisches Verhältnis und infolgedessen, zum Schüchternheit und zum Respekt, immer Anträge für weitere Ausarbeitung von an, was er nicht verstand, von was er von seinen Lehrern erlernte - von wem selbst nur zu bereit waren, den jungen Gelehrten zu verbinden. Dieses überraschte, nicht sogar in den „veralteten“ dreißiger Jahren Kano, in Betracht der Tatsache, daß einige seiner anderen Lehrer Absolvent der Al-Azhar Universität in Kairo waren, in der ältesten Universität in Afrika. So kombinierte Nasiru Kabara zwei intellektuelle Traditionen: sein Timbuctu Geschlecht, als Timbuctu selbst eine Zitadelle von learnig im Sudan war; und seins Kontakt mit Besuchsgelehrten und Professoren vom Al-Azhar in den dreißiger Jahren in Kano.
Unter den lokalen Bewohnern in Kano, das verband, war das Qadiriyya diesmal (1937) ein junger junger Mann, Muhammad Nasir Kabara, der, große änderungen im tariqa zu holen und bestimmt war die Feier des Geburtstages des Shaykh Abd Al-Qadir Als-Jilani nicht nur vorzustellen, ein Festival, das nicht von den Nordafrikanern geübt wurde, aber, den Gebrauch des bandiri zu jeder Ecke von Hausaland auch zu tragen.
Am Alter von siebzehn, war Muhammad Nasir wirklich zu jung, als Mitglied des Qadiriyya angenommen zu werden, aber, da sein Großvater, Mallam Nakabara - ein extrem wohles gelehrtes Mallam - ihn gewünscht worden, zum des Auftrages, Shaykh Sa'ad einzutragen eine kleine Wahl aber ihm des wazifa zu geben hatte. Obgleich eine Jugend, Nasir nicht nur wohle gelesene innen klassische arabische Literatur und Wissenschaften aber war, er war auch mit dem Lernen von Sufism und den Arbeiten der führenden sufi Gelehrten der Zeit conversant.
Als das Amir von Kano Abdullahi Bayero auf den Hajj Nasir ging, das einen Buchstaben durch Wali Sulaiman zum Khalifa des Qadiriyya, Shaykh Abu Al-Hassan wie-Sammani geschickt wurde, der Enkel des Gründers des Sammaniyya, ihn bitten, ihm ein ijaza zu geben, um muqaddam seines eigenen zawiya zu werden. Das Shaykh war erstaunt, von solch eine in hohem Grade gelehrte Jugend zu hören und er schickte Nasir ein jubba und eine Kappe zusammen mit einem Buchstaben der Verabredung als muqaddam. Obgleich Nasir nicht sich sofort von der Gemeinschaft in Alfindiki trennte, da Shaykh Sa'ad noch lebendig war, wurden seine Tätigkeiten als Innovationen von den Arabern angesehen. Nasir 1949 gebildet den Hajj und getroffen dem neuen Khalifa, dem Shaykh Hashim und dem Shaykh Muhammad von Mauretanien. Auf seiner Rückholreise besichtigte er den Sudan, in dem er Shaykh Muhammad Al-Fatih B. traf. Shaykh Qarib Allah, Khalifa des sudanischen Samaniyya. Er besichtigte auch andere arabische Länder, in denen er viele Sachen hinsichtlich sind der hadra und bandiri Organisation erlernte. Bis zum 1950 war Scheich Nasir in vielen Weisen weit vielseitiger begabt und eklektisch als seine Lehrer; und Sufism annehmbar erfolgreich, bildend für breitere Publikum, war er folglich in der Lage, Qadiriyya eindringen zu lassen in jedes Teil des Landes.
So, da Nasiru ungefähr 1958 Kabara als den Führer aller Niederlassungen von Qadiriyya in Kano gegolten hat. Die Instanzenwege innerhalb der Führung Struktur kann in den Einzelpersonen ausgedrückt jedoch angesehen werden deren Berechtigung über einigen Niederlassungen und den Einzelheitmustern innerhalb jeder Niederlassung verlängert.
Nasiru Kabara empfing seine ursprüngliche Berechtigung Kuntiyya und Ahl im Al-Bayt von Ibrahim Nakabara, der die dominierende Abbildung war, die nineteenthand Zwanzigstjahrhundert Qadiriyya in Kano verbindet. Ibrahim (ca. 1867-1941) war Fulani und sein Großvater war ursprünglich von Katsina. Er erlernte eine breite Strecke der Themen von seinem Vater: Gesetz, Theologie, Literatur, Logik und Grammatik. Er erlernte Astrologie von Mahmud Kabara; Gesetz (das Mukhtasar) vom babban mallami, Abdurrahman Al-Sayudi; und sufism (besonders Qadiriyya) von seinem Vater und von Ibrahim von Zaria, der zu Kano gekommen war. Durch das Alter von dreißig, war er ein juristischer Berater zu Emir Aliyu geworden. Ihm wurde die Position des Alkalis (Richter) angeboten aber auf der überzeugung abgelehnt, daß mallams nicht in Regierung mit einbezogen werden sollten. Er reiste nicht außerhalb Kano und setzte seine Position als juristischer Berater unter emirs Abbas, Usman und Abdullahi Bayero fort. Er war auch das persönliche mallarn von Emir Usman. Ibrahim schrieb nicht Bücher, obgleich er seine eigenen schriftlichen Kommentare auf dem Mukhtasar besaß. Sein Haus im Kabara Bezirk war eine Mitte von in Hausaland stark erlernen. Ein Abschnitt seines Mittels wurde für Studien der Theologie und des Mystizismus beiseite gesetzt, und ein anderer Abschnitt wurde für das Studieren des Gesetzes beiseite gesetzt. Er war nicht ein leidenschaftlicher Antragsteller der Einsamkeit (khalwa). Obgleich es andere Führer von traditionellem Qadiriyya in Kano während dieser Periode gab, wurde Berechtigung Ibrahims durch seine persönlichen Qualitäten der Frömmigkeit und des Wissens und durch seine Wirksamkeit als Lehrer von mallams verstärkt. Er wurde nicht mit dieser Berechtigung von seinem Sohn aber von seinem Kursteilnehmer Nasiru Kabara gefolgt, der diese gleichen Qualitäten ausstellte.
Nasiru Kabara " wurde zu Ibrahim Na Kabara als Kind „gegeben“ und aufwuchs in seinem Haushalt. Als Fulani hat Nasiru Zugang zu den traditionellen Qadiriyya mallams in Kano gehabt. Durch seine Fähigkeiten als Gelehrten und Lehrer, wurde er der wahrscheinliche Erbe zu Ibrahim Na Kabara. „
Während der Periode von 1935 bis 1955, Nasiru war erfolgreich, wenn, direkten Kontakt mit den Primärquellen der Qadiriyya Berechtigung in Khartoum, in Timbuktu und in Baghdad herstellend; und folglich wurde er in zunehmendem Maße Unabhängiges der traditionellen Qadiriyya Instanzenwege. Seine Reise nach Baghdad 1953 war ein Drehpunkt in seiner Karriere. Es stellte seine Berechtigung direkt innerhalb der internationalen Hauptsitze von Qadiriyya her; während in Baghdad er die klassischen und modernen Aspekte von Qadiriyya und nachher studierte, ihn führte ein oder deutete viel dieses Materials für ein nigerisches Publikum; sein alleiniger reisender Begleiter nach Baghdad war der wohlhabende Kaufmann, Sanusi Dantata. Resultierend aus der Reise befestigte Nasiru die finanzielle Unterstützung für seine Kampagne an Verbesserung Qadiriyya und verlängert sie auf ein Massenniveau.
Nach seiner Rückkehr von Baghdad, öffnete Nasiru seine eigene Qadiriyya Moschee und sank, sich die Moschee von Muhammad Sidi zu sorgen. Durch 1956 am meisten der Führung und des laity hatte mit Nasiru übereingestimmt und eine Annäherung wurde mit Muhammad Sidi erreicht. Während dieser Periode reiste Nasiru in Nordnigeria öffnung Moscheen und Ernennen muqaddams. Er ernährte auch seine Kontakte in der arabischen Welt und zweimal ging nach Baghdad und BesuchsKhartoum, Kairo, Beirut, Damaskus, Tehran und Amman zurück. 1958 wurde er Rektor Shahuci der Gerichtsschule und der Bibliothek in Kano ernannt. 1961 öffnete er seine eigene Islamiyya ältere Primärschule im Gwale Bezirk und ist fortgefahren, vorgerückte Themen in seinem eigenen Haus zu unterrichten.
1949 wurde Nasiru zum Rat der emirs der Berater von Abdullahi Bayero ernannt. Als Muhammad Sanusi emir 1954 jedoch wurde wurde Nasiru auf dem Rat durch verbesserte Tijani mallams ersetzt. Während der Herrschaft von Sanusi, Nasiru gedient als zugelassener Berater zum moslemischen Nordgericht des Anklangs und als einer der zwei tafsir Leser im Palast (q.v.) fortgesetzt. Mit der Verabredung des Aufhebens Bayero als emir 1963, stand Nasiru wieder einem Berater zum emir. Seit 1963 ist er ein Mitglied des Kaduna Rates von Mallams gewesen und ist auf den zahlreichen lokalen und regionalen Ausschüssen gewesen und gereicht vom Kano gebürtigen Berechtigung Ausschuß für Prostitution bis zu dem nigerischen speziellen Nordausschuß für Ausbildung in der Kano Provinz.
Trotz seiner Miteinbeziehung als Regierung mallam, hat Nasiru Kabara eine Unterseite des Berechtigung Unabhängigen der administrativen Strukturen in Kano und in Nordnigeria beibehalten. Er ist für das Bilden von Qadiriyya annehmbar für den gemeinen Mann, Fulani und Hausa groß verantwortlich gewesen und ist ein wichtiger Vermittler zwischen der Fulani regierenden Kategorie und dem Hausaeinfachen bürger gewesen. Er hat die Theologie und das Mystizismus von Qadiriyya in das Hausaidiom übersetzt.
Zusätzlich zu den Funktionen der Einführung, des Trainings und des Intermediation, hat die Qadiriyya Führung in Kano Verantwortlichkeit für Finanzierung und das Organisieren der verschiedenen Tätigkeiten der Bruderschaft und für das Verständigen mit allen Segmenten der Bruderschaft, des Einheimischen und des Staatsangehörigen. In der Umwandlung der Bruderschaft von einer Auslese zu einer Massenorganisation, ist eine Hauptführungfunktion die Inspiration und die Leitung des Rituals gewesen.
Die meisten verbesserten Qadiriyya Mitgliedern tun wuridi in den Gruppen, die durch ein imam geführt werden. Die genaue Natur des wuridi schwankt mit der Untergruppe innerhalb Qadiriyya. Die Gesamtzeit, die in jeder Gruppe verbraucht wurde, würde ungefähr dreißig Minuten pro Tag sein. Etwas Qadiriyya (Salamiyya) imams führen auch bandiri Lernabschnitte ungefähr zweimal eine Woche in den Abenden. Während dieser gruppieren Sie Gebetlernabschnitte, welche die Führernachfolger Verbindung stark verstärkt wird, teils durch das traditionelle Verhältnis eines imam zu denen, die „beten Sie nach.“
Verbessertes Qadiriyya hat eine besondere Betonung auf Gruppe Feier des Geburtstages des Gründers (Mauludin Abdulkadir) gesetzt. Diese Zeremonie wird spezifisch mit verbessertem Qadiriyya gekennzeichnet und wurde in Kano von Nasiru Kabara ungefähr 1959 eingeleitet. Es dient als jährliche Sitzung für Bruderschaftführer und -mitglieder von in Nordnigeria. Delegationen von jeder der Hauptnordstädte versammeln sich in Kano für einen vollen Tag von Gebeten und von Tätigkeiten. Die zentrale Eigenschaft des Tages ist eine Gruppe Prozession, geordnet von den Bereich Delegationen, vom Haus von Nasiru Kabara im Jarkasa Bereich des Kabara Bezirks zur Kano Qadiriyya Beerdigung, die westlich von Kano Stadt gerieben wird, in der Gebete über den Gräbern Kano Qadiriyya der Heiliger besagt sind. Die Prozession dient auch als das einzige mal im Jahr, als Männer, Frauen und alle Kinder am gleichen Anbetungservice teilnehmen. Der Auftrag der Prozession zeigt ungefähr die Hierarchie der Berechtigung innerhalb der Qadiriyya Auslese an; es gibt einen inneren Kern von muqaddams, die Nasiru Kabara während dieser Periode begleiten.
Von den Mustern von Berechtigung und Gemeinschaftwithiin Qadiriyya in Kano können einige Punkte zusammengefaßt werden:
(1) wurde Verbindung mit Qadiriyya im 19.jahrhundert auf Fulani mallams und Verwalter begrenzt (wer ihre Berechtigung von den Führern des Fulani Jihad ableiteten) und zu den afrikanischen Nordarabern (wer sich nicht fromm in die Kano Umgebung integrierte).
(2) mit der Einrichtung der Kolonialrichtlinie, versicherten Elemente in der Kano arabischen Gemeinschaft ihre eigenen geistigen Verbindungen mit afrikanischen Nordquellen der geistigen Berechtigung nochmals.
(3) fingen Mitglieder der Hausa mallam Kategorie an, mit dieser erneuerten Form von afrikanischem Nordqadiriyya zu verbinden und waren rccruited in Führungpositionen innerhalb eines Erzeugung.
(4) lag der Teil des Erfolges von Qadiriyya im Hausasektor an einem Hauptgewicht auf Gruppe Anbetung und an der Fokussierung von Tätigkeiten innerhalb der lokalen Moscheen.
(5) der „gesetzmaßige“ Nachfolger zur Führung von traditionellem Fulani Qadiriyya in Kano (Nasiru Kabara) angeschlossen mit unabhängigen Linien der Qadiriyya Berechtigung, wie eine Verstärkung von seiner Berechtigung „übernahm“ und suchte, die Araber-, Hausa- und Fulaniabschnitte von Qadiriyya zu vereinigen.
(6) wurde dieses teils vollendet, indem man Qadiriyya von einer Ausleseunterseite auf eine Massenunterseite verlängerte. In diesem Prozeß war die Unterstützung der wohlhabenden Hausakaufleute wesentlich. Auf dem Massenniveau war verbessertes Qadiriyya auch ein rdection von emergizng Kano Nationalismus, das verlangte, daß fromme Berechtigung von Sokoto und von Nordafrika zu Kano selbst verschoben wird.
(7) wegen der Massenunterseite von verbessertem Qadiriyya, war es nicht mehr möglich für die Qadiriyya Auslese, vollständig zu kennzeichnen mit der Kano regierenden Kategorie. So während Bruderschaftführer dienen konnten, als Berater zur regierenden Kategorie, sie normalerweise ihren Status als nongovernment mallarns geschützt haben.
(8) möglicherweise als Folge der Verschiebung von einer Auslese zu einer Massenunterseite, wurde die Bruderschaftführung in zwei verhältnismäßig neuen Funktionen beteiligt: die Deutung der Lehre für lokalen Gebrauch und die Inspiration, durch Ritual und Zeremonie, der Gruppe und der Massenanbetung.
Lehren der Berechtigung und der Gemeinschaft in verbessertem Qadiriyya
, während traditionelles Qadiriyya in Kano schwer auf den 19.jahrhundert Jihad Schreiben als die Hauptquellen der Qadiriyya Lehre die Führer von verbessertem Qadiriyya beruhte, sind selbst reiche Verfasser gewesen. Like the Fulani Jihad writers, the contemporary Qadiriyya writers are concerned to relate classical Islamic thought to local circumstances. In the interim period between the Jihad writings and the contemporary writings, there was "a dearth of Qadiriyya literature in Kano. None of the major leaders during this period, Ibrahim na Kabara, Ali Musa, Saad b. Ahmad, Sharif Garba, Sidi Muhammad, and Muhammad Sidi-wrote on Qadiriyya. The Reformed Qadiriyya movement, associated with Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali, has not only produced its own literature but has revived an interest in the Jihad classics," has introduced works on Qadiriyya from the Arab world," and has inspired local Hausa "praise poets" " to express themselves on brotherhood matters. Nasiru Kabara hase written about 150 works in all.
The amount of systematic theology in the writings of Nasiru Kabara has been minimal; his primary purpose seems to be to relate the history and elements of the brotherhood in terms understandable to contemporary Kano society and to stimulate an identification with the saints of the brotherhood. The writings of Ahmad b. Ali cover many of these same topics. There is no specific praise of the Shaziliyya way, as distinct from Qadiriyya, and much of the literature contains poems that are sung at worship gatherings. Another Reformed Qadiriyya leader in Kano, Adamu na Ma'aji (q.v.), seems mainly concerned with chains of authority and conditions of initiation."
The writings of brotherhood leaders such as Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali espouse the community and authority of Qadiriyya on two major grounds: affiliational (primarily on the basis of direct personal experience) and communal (primarily on the basis of loyalty to the nineteenth-century Jihad tradition). Within the category of affiliational appeal, there have been five areas of doctrinal exposition: the origins and spread of Qadiriyya, the elements and requirements of Qadiriyya, the benefits and blessings for those who follow Qadiriyya, personal praise of the Qadiriyya saints, and general preaching.
With regard to the spread of Qadiriyy, Nasiru Kabara describes in Alnafahat the Qadiriyya shaykhs in history and the distribution of Qadiriyya among the continents of the world." In Naf' al-'ibad, he discusses the Qadiriyya caliphate throughout history. In Ithaf al-khald'iq he presents the genealogy of the founder, 'Abd al-Qadir, and a considerable amount of biographical data. He also mentions some of the successors of 'Abd al-Qadir in the contemporary world.
With regard 4o the requirements of Qadiriyya, Nasiru Kabara elabarates in Al-nafabdt the details and the nature of the brotherhood ceremonies." In the Naf' aVibad he describes the Qadiriyya daily voluntary prayers." In the Ithaf al-khald'iq he discusses the necessities and voluntary aspects of ablution, washing, taimama (symbolic washing with dust), prayer, prostration, giving of alms, fasting, pilgrimage, and other Islamic rituals for those who follow Qadiriyya. In Da'wat al-ghawth he elaborates on the conditions for following Qadiriyya.
With regard to the benefits of Qadiriyya, all of the above-mentioned writings refer to the personal satisfactions and blessings that accrue to those who follow Qadiriyya. Nasiru describes the "glorious benefits" for the followers of Qadiriyya and assures them of the best reward.
With regard to the praise of Qadiriyya saints, it is clear that instead of being a perfunctory gesture it is a culmination of the past that is directed into the brotherhood experience. In Naf al-'ibad, Nasiru inscribes the prayer he offered while at the tomb of 'Abd al-Qadir in Baghdad.
The praise of a primary saint, 'Abd al-Qadir, should not obscure the central fact of all the reformed brotherhoods: an individual is encouraged to do addu'a (al-du'a), that is, to pray directly to God. Nasiru exemplifies the passion and symbolism of such a prayer in the Subhdt al-anwar.
Finally, general preaching has always been a function of the religious authorities who try to induce conversions through individual volition. Such preaching is invariably in the vernacular language (in this case Hausa); and if it can be fashioned into poetry, it will be sung by minstrels near and far. Nasiru Kabara has been particularly successful in his general preaching.
Nasiru Kabara identified in the Subhat al-anwar, five branches of Qadiriyya in Hausaland, one of which is Usmaniyya. In various other works, he refers to Usmaniyya al-Fudawiyya and identifies himself with this branch. In the Naf al-'ibad he includes the prayer he read when he visited the tomb of Usman dan Fodio, and it is clear that he regards Muhammad Bello, son of Usman, as among the founders of Usmaniyya. Nasiru writes that he hopes to visit Bello at Wurno (the assumption being that Bello is not dead). While Nasiru does not include any reference to special ritual associated with Usmaniyya, it is clear that the Jihad leaders are considered to be of special importance. The continual identification of them with Qadiriyya is clearly intended to remind their descendants not to desert the "faith of their fathers." The Hausa poem by Ibrahim Makwarari (Begen Shehu Abdulkadir) is illustrative of the way in which Nasiru is regarded as the successor to the Jihad leaders.
With regard to the alleged doctrinal prohibition against change of brotherhood, there has been an attack on mallams who encourage such conversion, primarily those associated with Reformed Tijaniyya. The doctrinal basis of this attack is stated by Nasiru Kabara in Al-nalabat, where he suggests that the Tijani mallams are "fabricating" if they assert that one tariqa is better than another. He argues for a strict prohibition against leaving the Qadiriyya brotherhood, supporting his argument with verses from the Qur'an and traditions of the Prophet. He asserts that when a person has promised to do something religious, such as follow a brotherhood, he must keep that promise. He criticizes the Tijaniyya specifically for assuming it can convert persons from other brotherhoods, suggesting that this was not the policy of the original Tijani leaders and that the practice is a false modern innovation .
Publications
He has published well over 150 treatises and books explaining various aspects of Islamic philosophy, Arabic and Hausa linguistics. His writing career started quite early in his life in his youth. Perhaps not surprisingly, his first treatise was on Abdulkadir Jilani, the founder of the Qadiriyya Islamic Philosophical movement. His method of writing usually follows the medieval scholastic tradition widespread in the middle-east. Thus he combines commentary with critical appraisal. A classical example of his approach is provided in the intellectual conjectures-and-refutations arguments of Al-Ghazali in his Tahaful Falasafa, and Ibn Rushd's counter-commenterary, Tahaful Tahafut.
His writings follow a specified and characteristic pattern; beginning with the praise of God, then the rationale of the writing under consideration and the proposed title of the work., followed by an abstract and then the main exposition. An example is his exposition on arm positioning during prayers which he explained in Kan Ul Fasab. He started by priasing Shehu Abdulmahal-al-Shawani a leading exponent of Shafi'iyya movement which supports Saddlu (dropping the arms by the side during the standing portion of the prayer). He then brings a Prophetic tradition (Hadith) which shows the Prophet's support for such arm positioning. Subsequently, the then brings more Prophetic traditions which explained the stands of both Sadlu and Kablu (crossing the arms on the chest during the standing portion of the prayer).
In his various writings, Sheikh Nasiru Kabara has clearly brought out the concept of Kanawiyya, a connation of Kano as an intellectual entrepot in medieval Africa. Some of the books and treatises he has published are included below.
BIOGRAFIA DO SHEIK NASIR KABARA KANO NIGÉRIA
Automatically translated into Portuguese thanks to WorldLingo
Al-Nasir Kabara do Sheikh Muhammad de Maulana (RA)
Vida e épocas
por. SANI BALA SHEHU
sanibalashehukano@yahoo.com sanibalashehu2004@yahoo.co.uk
+2348065872052. 08080626852 08073400690 08045208685 07029467896
o Amirul Jaysh, Sheikh Nasir Muhammad Kabara (RA), Sheikh Nasir Muhammad
Umar Kabara da vida e das épocas, um scholar Islamic notável e philsopher foram carregados em 1912 na vila fora de Kano, Nigéria de Guringuwa. Seus grandparents vieram de Kabara, uma cidade sob o reino de Timbucktu. Seu avô da terceira geração - também de Kabara em Timbucktu - Mallam Umaru, conhecido também porque Mallam Kabara era único do lineage a se estabelecir em Adakawa na cidade de Kano, antes de mover-se sobre a o que é sabido agora como a divisão de Kabara, nomeado após ele. Era um Sufi realizado em Timbucktu antes de partir para Kano.
A primeira coisa Mallam Kabara fêz em estabelecir-se na divisão de Kabara era estabelecer uma escola em 1787, de uma sorte consultada geralmente como a escola de Zaure onde o salão de entrada exterior de sua casa foi convertido em uma escola Islamic. Esta escola possivelmente entre as escolas gravadas as mais velhas em Kano é agora parte da casa de Darul Qadiriyya do Sheikh Nasiru Kabara.
O Nasiru jovem era extremamente entusiástico em sua busca para o conhecimento. Seu primeiro encontro com o sistema de aprendizagem Islamic avançado - longo depois que se tinha graduado do sistema educando normal de Allo (Qur'an lido dos slates de madeira), emergindo extremamente fluent na língua árabe, no jurisprudance Islamic e na lingüistica - era com Bad'ul Amli e Murshida, ambos os treatises em Tauhidi; a unidade do deus. Seguiu em seguida um apepite voracious para outros livros e tinha terminado logo seus estudos de Ahlari, de Iziyya e de Risala: tudo registra necessário para uma compreensão apropriada do Islam. Porque no Islam não há nenhum conceito do copyright, logo após o Nasir jovem ele mesmo typesetting o Risala e o Ishiriniya (livro da poesia no elogio do Prophet) e vendia-os.
Seu processo de aprendizagem era essencialmente self-motivated, com naturalmente incentivo apropriado de seu professor principal: Mallam Natsugune. Conseqüentemente, o Nasiru jovem era um searcher voracious do conhecimento Islamic, sendo distante antes de seus comtemporâneos - certamente preaching realmente a seus classmates his compreensão avançada do meaning do Quran; assim semeando as sementes adiantadas de sua entrada em Tafsir em tal idade macia.
Em Kano dessa era - 1920s - havia cinco escolas avançadas; essencialmente o que podem ser consideradas as escolas da pre-universidade agora - onde o Nasiru novo se usou ir, no seus próprios, a mais adicional seu conhecimento. Estas escolas eram:
1. A casa do deputado Imam do Mosque central da cidade, situado na divisão 2
de Daneji. A casa de Mallam Ibrahim, juiz principal de Kano na divisão 3
de Yakasai. A casa do juiz do circuito de Bichi, Alhaji Musdafa na divisão 4
de Kurawa. A casa do Sheik Abdulkarim (Mallam Sambo) na divisão 5
de Ciromawa. A casa de Imam principal de Zawiyya, Mallam Inuwa na divisão que de Mayanka
estas escolas tiveram bibliotecas extensivas da referência conter coleções obteve dos vários centros scholastic africanos nortes. Todos dão forma ao núcleo central do thirst de Nasiru para um conhecimento mais adicional.
Mesmo nessa idade, sua aquisição do conhecimento estava mais do que a aprendizagem rote; questionou o que não compreendeu de seu professor; assim sendo extremamente revolucionário em sua compreensão do conhecimento Islamic. A percepção tradicional do relacionamento entre a pupila e o mestre no sistema educando Islamic dá raramente o quarto para a aquisição interativa do conhecimento. Nasir não aceitou tal relacionamento didactic, e conseqüentemente, com diffidence e respeito, sempre pedidos para um elaboration mais adicional de o que não compreendeu de o que aprendeu de seus professores - de quem eles mesmos eram somente demasiado disposto obrigar o scholar novo. Isto não estava surpreendendo, mesmo nos 1930s “archaic” Kano, considerando o fato que alguns de seus outros professores eram graduados da universidade do al-Azhar no Cairo, na universidade a mais velha em África. Assim Nasiru Kabara combinou duas tradições intelectuais: seu ancestry de Timbuctu quando Timbuctu próprio era um citadel do learnig no Sudão; e his contato com scholars e os professores visitando do al-Azhar nos 1930s em Kano.
Entre os residentes locais em Kano que juntou o Qadiriyya neste tempo (1937) era um lad novo, Muhammad Nasir Kabara, que era destined trazer mudanças grandes no tariqa e introduzir não somente o celebration do aniversário do al-Jilani do al-Qadir de Shaykh Abd, um festival que não fosse praticado pelos africanos nortes, mas para carregar também o uso do bandiri a cada canto de Hausaland.
Na idade de dezessete, Muhammad Nasir era realmente demasiado novo ser aceitado como um membro do Qadiriyya mas, porque seu avô, Mallam Nakabara - um Mallam instruído extremamente bom - desejado o para incorporar a ordem, Shaykh Sa'ad teve uma escolha pequena mas para lhe dar o wazifa. Embora uma juventude, Nasir fosse não somente literatura e ciências árabes classical dentro lidas boas mas era também conversant com a aprendizagem de Sufism e os trabalhos dos scholars principais do sufi do tempo.
Quando o Amir de Kano Abdullahi Bayero foi no Haj Nasir emitido uma letra com Wali Sulaiman ao Khalifa do Qadiriyya, al-Hassan de Shaykh Abu como-Sammani, o neto do founder do Sammaniyya, pedindo que dê-lhe um ijaza para transformar-se muqaddam de seu próprio zawiya. O Shaykh astonished ouvir-se instruída tão altamente de uma juventude e emitiu um jubba e um tampão a Nasir junto com uma letra da nomeação como um muqaddam. Embora Nasir não se separasse imediatamente himself da comunidade em Alfindiki, porque Shaykh Sa'ad estava ainda vivo, suas ações foram consideradas como inovações pelos árabes. Em Nasir 1949 feito o Haj e encontrado com o Khalifa, o Shaykh Hashim e o Shaykh novos Muhammad de Mauritânia. Em sua viagem do retorno, visitou o Sudão, onde se encontrou com com al-Fatih B. de Shaykh Muhammad. Shaykh Qarib Allah, Khalifa do Samaniyya Sudanese. Visitou também outros países árabes onde aprendeu muitas coisas a respeito da organização do hadra e do bandiri. Por 1950 o Sheikh Nasir estava em muitas maneiras distante mais versáteis e eclectic do que seus professores; e com sucesso fazendo Sufism aceitável a umas audiências mais largas, podia assim fazer Qadiriyya penetrar em cada parte do país.
Assim desde que Nasiru aproximadamente 1958 Kabara foi considerado o líder de todas as filiais de Qadiriyya em Kano. As linhas de autoridade dentro da liderança a estrutura, entretanto, pode ser vista nos termos dos indivíduos cuja a autoridade estende sobre diversas filiais e os testes padrões do detalhe dentro de cada filial.
Nasiru Kabara recebeu sua autoridade original no al-Bayt de Kuntiyya e de Ahl de Ibrahim Nakabara, que era a figura dominante que liga o vigésimo-século Qadiriyya do nineteenthand em Kano. Ibrahim (ca. 1867-1941) era Fulani e seu avô era originalmente de Katsina. Aprendeu uma escala larga dos assuntos de seu pai: lei, theology, literatura, lógica, e gramática. Aprendeu o astrology de Mahmud Kabara; lei (o Mukhtasar) do mallami babban, al-Sayudi de Abdurrahman; e sufism (especialmente Qadiriyya) de seu pai e de Ibrahim de Zaria, que tinha vindo a Kano. Pela idade de trinta, tinha-se transformado um conselheiro legal a Emir Aliyu. Foi oferecido a posição do alcalóide (juiz) mas recusado na convicção que os mallams não devem ser envolvidos no governo. Não viajou fora de Kano e não continuou sua posição como o conselheiro legal sob emirs Abbas, Usman, e Abdullahi Bayero. Era também o mallarn pessoal de Emir Usman. Ibrahim não escreveu livros, embora possuísse seus próprios commentaries escritos no Mukhtasar. Seu repouso na divisão de Kabara era um centro mais altamente da aprendizagem em Hausaland. Uma seção de seu composto foi reservada para estudos do theology e do mysticism, e uma outra seção foi reservada estudando a lei. Não era um proponent ardent do solitude (khalwa). Embora houvesse outros líderes de Qadiriyya tradicional em Kano durante este período, a autoridade de Ibrahim foi reforçada por suas qualidades pessoais do piety e do conhecimento e por sua eficácia como um professor dos mallams. Não foi sucedido nesta autoridade por seu filho mas por seu estudante Nasiru Kabara, que exibiu estas mesmas qualidades.
Nasiru Kabara " “foi dado” a na Kabara de Ibrahim como uma criança e cresceu acima em sua casa. Como um Fulani, Nasiru teve o acesso aos mallams tradicionais de Qadiriyya em Kano. Com suas abilidades como um scholar e um professor, transformou-se o heir provável a na Kabara de Ibrahim. “
Durante o período de 1935 a 1955, Nasiru era bem sucedido em estabelecer o contato direto com as fontes preliminares da autoridade de Qadiriyya em Khartoum, em Timbuktu, e em Bagdade; e assim transformou-se cada vez mais independent de linhas de Qadiriyya de autoridade tradicionais. Seu desengate a Bagdade em 1953 era um ponto de giro em sua carreira. Estabeleceu sua autoridade diretamente dentro das matrizes internacionais de Qadiriyya; quando em Bagdade o estudou aspectos classical e modernos de Qadiriyya, e subseqüentemente introduziu ou interpretou muito deste material para uma audiência Nigerian; seu único companheiro viajando a Bagdade era o comerciante rico, Sanusi Dantata. Em conseqüência do desengate, Nasiru fixou a sustentação financeira para sua campanha à reforma Qadiriyya e estende-a a um nível maciço.
Em cima de seu retorno de Bagdade, Nasiru abriu seu próprio mosque de Qadiriyya e declinou atender ao mosque de Muhammad Sidi. Por 1956 mais da liderança e do laity tinha alinhado com o Nasiru e um rapprochement foi alcançado com Muhammad Sidi. Durante este período Nasiru viajou durante todo mosques do norte da abertura de Nigéria e muqaddams apontar. Nurtured também seus contatos no mundo árabe, retornando duas vezes a Bagdade e Khartoum visitando, Cairo, Beirute, Damasco, Tehran, e Amman. Em 1958 foi apontado headmaster da escola e da biblioteca judiciais de Shahuci em Kano. Em 1961 abriu sua própria escola preliminar sênior de Islamiyya na divisão de Gwale e continuou ensinando assuntos avançados em seu próprio repouso.
Em 1949 Nasiru foi apontado para o conselho dos emir dos conselheiros por Abdullahi Bayero. Quando Muhammad Sanusi se transformou emir em 1954, entretanto, Nasiru foi substituído no conselho por mallams reformados de Tijani. Durante o reino de Sanusi, Nasiru servido como um consultante legal à corte de apelação muçulmana do norte e continuado como um dos dois leitores do tafsir no palácio (q.v.). Com a nomeação do Ado Bayero como o emir em 1963, Nasiru assentou bem outra vez em um conselheiro ao emir. Desde 1963 foi um membro do conselho de Kaduna de Mallams e estêve nos comitês locais e regionais numerosos, variando do comitê nativo da autoridade de Kano na prostituição ao comitê especial Nigerian do norte na instrução na província de Kano.
Apesar de sua participação como um mallam do governo, Nasiru Kabara manteve uma base do independent da autoridade das estruturas administrativas em Kano e em Nigéria do norte. Foi pela maior parte responsável para fazer Qadiriyya aceitável ao homem comum, Fulani e Hausa, e foi um intermediary importante entre a classe governando de Fulani e o Hausa mais comuns. Traduziu o theology e o mysticism de Qadiriyya no idiom do Hausa.
Além às funções da iniciação, do treinamento, e do intermediation, a liderança de Qadiriyya em Kano tem a responsabilidade para o financiamento e organizar as várias atividades do brotherhood e para comunicar-se com todos os segmentos do brotherhood, do local e do nacional. Na transformação do brotherhood de um elite a uma organização maciça, uma função principal da liderança foi a inspiração e a administração do ritual.
A maioria dos membros reformados de Qadiriyya fazem o wuridi nos grupos conduzidos por um imam. A natureza exata do wuridi varia com o subgrupo dentro de Qadiriyya. O tempo total expended em cada grupo seria aproximadamente trinta minutos por o dia. Alguns imams de Qadiriyya (Salamiyya) conduzem também a sessões do bandiri aproximadamente duas vezes uma semana nas noites. Durante estes agrupe sessões que do prayer o nexo do líder-seguidor é reforçado fortemente, em parte pelo relacionamento tradicional de um imam àqueles que “pray atrás.”
Qadiriyya reformado colocou uma ênfase especial no celebration do grupo do aniversário do founder (Mauludin Abdulkadir). Este ceremony é identificado especificamente com Qadiriyya reformado e foi iniciado em Kano por Nasiru Kabara em aproximadamente 1959. Serve como uma reunião anual para líderes e membros do brotherhood durante todo de Nigéria do norte. Os Delegations de cada uma das cidades do norte principais congregate em Kano por um dia cheio dos prayers e das atividades. A característica central do dia é uma procissão do grupo, arranjada por delegations da área, do repouso de Nasiru Kabara na área de Jarkasa de divisão de Kabara ao enterro de Kano Qadiriyya moído ao oeste da cidade de Kano, onde os prayers são ditos sobre as sepulturas de saints de Kano Qadiriyya. A procissão serve também como the only time no ano em que os homens, as mulheres, e as crianças todos participam no mesmo serviço da adoração. A ordem da procissão indica aproximadamente a hierarquia da autoridade dentro do elite de Qadiriyya; há um núcleo interno dos muqaddams que acompanham Nasiru Kabara durante este período.
Dos testes padrões do withiin Qadiriyya da autoridade e da comunidade em Kano diversos pontos podem ser sumariados:
(1) A associação com o Qadiriyya no décimo nono século foi limitada aos mallams de Fulani e os administradores (quem derivaram sua autoridade dos líderes do Fulani Jihad) e aos árabes africanos nortes (quem não se integrou religiosa no Milieu de Kano).
(2) Com o estabelecimento da régua colonial, os elementos na comunidade árabe de Kano reaffirmed suas próprias ligações espirituais com fontes africanas nortes da autoridade espiritual.
(3) Os membros da classe do mallam do Hausa começaram a associar com este formulário renovado de Qadiriyya africano norte e foram rccruited em posições da liderança dentro de uma geração.
(4) A parte do sucesso de Qadiriyya no setor do Hausa era devido a uma ênfase na adoração do grupo e a focalizar das atividades dentro dos mosques locais.
(5) O sucessor “legitimate” à liderança de Fulani tradicional Qadiriyya em Kano (Nasiru Kabara) affiliated com linhas independentes da autoridade de Qadiriyya como um reforço de his “herdou” a autoridade e a procurou consolidar as seções do árabe, do Hausa, e do Fulani de Qadiriyya.
(6) Isto foi realizado em parte estendendo Qadiriyya de uma base do elite a uma base maciça. Neste processo, a sustentação de comerciantes ricos do Hausa era essencial. No nível maciço, Qadiriyya reformado era também um rdection do nationalism de Kano do emergizng que exijisse que a autoridade religiosa estivesse deslocada de Sokoto e de África norte a Kano próprio.
(7) Por causa da base maciça de Qadiriyya reformado, era já não possível para o elite de Qadiriyya identificar completamente com a classe governando de Kano. Assim, quando os líderes do brotherhood puderam agir porque os conselheiros à classe governando, eles guardaram geralmente seu status como mallarns nongovernment.
(8) Talvez em consequência do deslocamento de um elite a uma base maciça, a liderança do brotherhood tornou-se involvida em duas funções relativamente novas: a interpretação da doutrina para o uso local e a inspiração, com o ritual e o ceremony, do grupo e da adoração maciça.
As doutrinas da autoridade e da comunidade em Qadiriyya reformado
visto que Qadiriyya tradicional em Kano confiou pesadamente nas décimas nonas escritas de Jihad do século como as fontes principais da doutrina de Qadiriyya os líderes de Qadiriyya reformado elas mesmas foram escritores prolific. Like the Fulani Jihad writers, the contemporary Qadiriyya writers are concerned to relate classical Islamic thought to local circumstances. In the interim period between the Jihad writings and the contemporary writings, there was "a dearth of Qadiriyya literature in Kano. None of the major leaders during this period, Ibrahim na Kabara, Ali Musa, Saad b. Ahmad, Sharif Garba, Sidi Muhammad, and Muhammad Sidi-wrote on Qadiriyya. The Reformed Qadiriyya movement, associated with Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali, has not only produced its own literature but has revived an interest in the Jihad classics," has introduced works on Qadiriyya from the Arab world," and has inspired local Hausa "praise poets" " to express themselves on brotherhood matters. Nasiru Kabara hase written about 150 works in all.
The amount of systematic theology in the writings of Nasiru Kabara has been minimal; his primary purpose seems to be to relate the history and elements of the brotherhood in terms understandable to contemporary Kano society and to stimulate an identification with the saints of the brotherhood. The writings of Ahmad b. Ali cover many of these same topics. There is no specific praise of the Shaziliyya way, as distinct from Qadiriyya, and much of the literature contains poems that are sung at worship gatherings. Another Reformed Qadiriyya leader in Kano, Adamu na Ma'aji (q.v.), seems mainly concerned with chains of authority and conditions of initiation."
The writings of brotherhood leaders such as Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali espouse the community and authority of Qadiriyya on two major grounds: affiliational (primarily on the basis of direct personal experience) and communal (primarily on the basis of loyalty to the nineteenth-century Jihad tradition). Within the category of affiliational appeal, there have been five areas of doctrinal exposition: the origins and spread of Qadiriyya, the elements and requirements of Qadiriyya, the benefits and blessings for those who follow Qadiriyya, personal praise of the Qadiriyya saints, and general preaching.
With regard to the spread of Qadiriyy, Nasiru Kabara describes in Alnafahat the Qadiriyya shaykhs in history and the distribution of Qadiriyya among the continents of the world." In Naf' al-'ibad, he discusses the Qadiriyya caliphate throughout history. In Ithaf al-khald'iq he presents the genealogy of the founder, 'Abd al-Qadir, and a considerable amount of biographical data. He also mentions some of the successors of 'Abd al-Qadir in the contemporary world.
With regard 4o the requirements of Qadiriyya, Nasiru Kabara elabarates in Al-nafabdt the details and the nature of the brotherhood ceremonies." In the Naf' aVibad he describes the Qadiriyya daily voluntary prayers." In the Ithaf al-khald'iq he discusses the necessities and voluntary aspects of ablution, washing, taimama (symbolic washing with dust), prayer, prostration, giving of alms, fasting, pilgrimage, and other Islamic rituals for those who follow Qadiriyya. In Da'wat al-ghawth he elaborates on the conditions for following Qadiriyya.
With regard to the benefits of Qadiriyya, all of the above-mentioned writings refer to the personal satisfactions and blessings that accrue to those who follow Qadiriyya. Nasiru describes the "glorious benefits" for the followers of Qadiriyya and assures them of the best reward.
With regard to the praise of Qadiriyya saints, it is clear that instead of being a perfunctory gesture it is a culmination of the past that is directed into the brotherhood experience. In Naf al-'ibad, Nasiru inscribes the prayer he offered while at the tomb of 'Abd al-Qadir in Baghdad.
The praise of a primary saint, 'Abd al-Qadir, should not obscure the central fact of all the reformed brotherhoods: an individual is encouraged to do addu'a (al-du'a), that is, to pray directly to God. Nasiru exemplifies the passion and symbolism of such a prayer in the Subhdt al-anwar.
Finally, general preaching has always been a function of the religious authorities who try to induce conversions through individual volition. Such preaching is invariably in the vernacular language (in this case Hausa); and if it can be fashioned into poetry, it will be sung by minstrels near and far. Nasiru Kabara has been particularly successful in his general preaching.
Nasiru Kabara identified in the Subhat al-anwar, five branches of Qadiriyya in Hausaland, one of which is Usmaniyya. In various other works, he refers to Usmaniyya al-Fudawiyya and identifies himself with this branch. In the Naf al-'ibad he includes the prayer he read when he visited the tomb of Usman dan Fodio, and it is clear that he regards Muhammad Bello, son of Usman, as among the founders of Usmaniyya. Nasiru writes that he hopes to visit Bello at Wurno (the assumption being that Bello is not dead). While Nasiru does not include any reference to special ritual associated with Usmaniyya, it is clear that the Jihad leaders are considered to be of special importance. The continual identification of them with Qadiriyya is clearly intended to remind their descendants not to desert the "faith of their fathers." The Hausa poem by Ibrahim Makwarari (Begen Shehu Abdulkadir) is illustrative of the way in which Nasiru is regarded as the successor to the Jihad leaders.
With regard to the alleged doctrinal prohibition against change of brotherhood, there has been an attack on mallams who encourage such conversion, primarily those associated with Reformed Tijaniyya. The doctrinal basis of this attack is stated by Nasiru Kabara in Al-nalabat, where he suggests that the Tijani mallams are "fabricating" if they assert that one tariqa is better than another. He argues for a strict prohibition against leaving the Qadiriyya brotherhood, supporting his argument with verses from the Qur'an and traditions of the Prophet. He asserts that when a person has promised to do something religious, such as follow a brotherhood, he must keep that promise. He criticizes the Tijaniyya specifically for assuming it can convert persons from other brotherhoods, suggesting that this was not the policy of the original Tijani leaders and that the practice is a false modern innovation .
Publications
He has published well over 150 treatises and books explaining various aspects of Islamic philosophy, Arabic and Hausa linguistics. His writing career started quite early in his life in his youth. Perhaps not surprisingly, his first treatise was on Abdulkadir Jilani, the founder of the Qadiriyya Islamic Philosophical movement. His method of writing usually follows the medieval scholastic tradition widespread in the middle-east. Thus he combines commentary with critical appraisal. A classical example of his approach is provided in the intellectual conjectures-and-refutations arguments of Al-Ghazali in his Tahaful Falasafa, and Ibn Rushd's counter-commenterary, Tahaful Tahafut.
His writings follow a specified and characteristic pattern; beginning with the praise of God, then the rationale of the writing under consideration and the proposed title of the work., followed by an abstract and then the main exposition. An example is his exposition on arm positioning during prayers which he explained in Kan Ul Fasab. He started by priasing Shehu Abdulmahal-al-Shawani a leading exponent of Shafi'iyya movement which supports Saddlu (dropping the arms by the side during the standing portion of the prayer). He then brings a Prophetic tradition (Hadith) which shows the Prophet's support for such arm positioning. Subsequently, the then brings more Prophetic traditions which explained the stands of both Sadlu and Kablu (crossing the arms on the chest during the standing portion of the prayer).
In his various writings, Sheikh Nasiru Kabara has clearly brought out the concept of Kanawiyya, a connation of Kano as an intellectual entrepot in medieval Africa. Some of the books and treatises he has published are included below.
BIOGRAFI AV SCHEJKEN NASIR KABARA KANO NIGERIA
Automatically translated into Swedish thanks to WorldLingo
Al-Nasir Kabara (RA) för Maulana Sheikh Muhammad
Liv och tider
vid. SANI BALA SHEHU
sanibalashehukano@yahoo.com sanibalashehu2004@yahoo.co.uk
+2348065872052. 08080626852 08073400690 08045208685 07029467896
Amirulen Jaysh, Sheikh Nasir Muhammad Kabara (RA), liv- och tid
Sheikh Nasir Muhammad Umar Kabara, en noterad islamisk forskare och philsopher var bördig 1912 i den Guringuwa byn utvändiga Kano, Nigeria. Hans morföräldrar kom från Kabara, en town under det Timbucktu kungariket. Hans farfar för tredje utveckling - också från Kabara i Timbucktu - Mallam Umaru, också som är bekant, som Mallam Kabara var den enda från härstamningen som ska sättas i Adakawa i den Kano staden, för flyttning på till vad är nu bekant, som Kabara avvärjer, namngett efter honom. Han var en fulländade Sufi i Timbucktu, innan han avgick för Kano.
Det första tinget Mallam Kabara gjorde på att sätta i Kabara avvärjer var att upprätta en skola i 1787, av en sortera som sågs gemensamt, som Zaure skolar var den yttre farstun av hans hus konverterades in i ett islamiskt skolar. Detta skolar bland antecknade det äldst skolar eventuellt i Kano är nu delen av det Darul Qadiriyya hushållet av Sheikh Nasiru Kabara.
Den ungdomliga Nasiruen var extremt entusiastisk i hans sökande för kunskap. Hans första möte med det långa avancerade islamiska lärande systemet -, efter han hade avlagt examen från systemet för det normalaAllo (Qur'an som läs från trä, kritiserar), skolgång och att dyka upp extremt flytande i arabiskaspråk, islamisk jurisprudance och språkvetenskap - var med Bad'ul Amli och Murshida, båda avhandlingar på Tauhidi; enheten av guden. Följde därefter en voracious apepite för annan bokar, och snart hade han avslutat hans studier av Ahlari, Iziyya och Risala: allt bokar nödvändigt för en riktig överenskommelse av islam. Ta copyrightt på, därför att i islam det inte finns något begrepp av, snart efter den ungdomliga Nasiren var självt sätta Risalaen och Ishiriniyaen (boka av poesi i beröm av profeten) och sälja dem.
His att lära som var processaa, var i grunden self-motivated, med anslår naturligtvis uppmuntran från hans huvudsakliga lärare: Mallam Natsugune. Därför var den ungdomliga Nasiruen en voracious searcher av islamisk kunskap och att vara avlägsen framåt av hans samtidor - sannerligen predikade han faktiskt till hans klasskompisar hans avancerade överenskommelse av det menande av Quranen; således så tidig sortfröt av hans tillträde in i Tafsir på den sådan mjuka åldern.
I Kano av den era - 20-tal - det fanns avancerade fem skolar; i grunden vad kan vara den ansedda pre-universitetar skolar nu - var barn van vid Nasiru går, på hans eget, att främja hans kunskap. Dessa skolar var:
1. Huset av ställföreträdande Imam av stadscentralmoskén som lokaliseras i Danejien, avvärjer
2. Huset av Mallam Ibrahim, lagman av Kano på Yakasai avvärjer
3. Huset av Bichi går runt domaren, Alhaji Musdafa på Kurawa avvärjer
4. Huset av schejken Abdulkarim (Mallam Sambo) på Ciromawa avvärjer
5. Huset av högsta Imam av Zawiyya, Mallam Inuwa på Mayanka avvärjer
dessa skolar hade omfattande att hänvisa till arkiv som innehåller samlingar erhållande från olikt norr afrikanskt skolastiskt, centrerar. Alla bildar centralen kärnar ur av Nasirus törstar för mer ytterligare kunskap.
Även på den ålder, var hans förvärv av kunskap mer än rote lära; han ifrågasatte vad han inte förstod från hans lärare; således vara extremt revolutionärt i hans överenskommelse av islamisk kunskap. Den traditionella föreställningen av förhållandet mellan eleven och det ledar- i det islamiska skolgångsystemet ger sällan rum för det växelverkande förvärvet av kunskapen. Nasir accepterade inte sådan didaktiskt förhållande, och därför, med diffidence och respekt, alltid förfrågan för mer ytterligare elaboration av vad han inte förstod av vad han läde från hans lärare - vem sig själv var endast för villigt att oblige den unga forskare. Detta förvånade inte, även i ”den arkaiska” 30-tal Kano, considering faktumet, att några av hans andra lärare var kandidater av al-Azharuniversitetar i Cairo, den äldsta universitetar i Afrika. Således kombinerade Nasiru Kabara två intellektuella traditioner: hans Timbuctu anor, när Timbuctu sig själv var en citadel av learnig i Sudan; och his kontakt med att besöka forskare och professorer från al-Azhar i 30-tal i Kano.
Bland lokalinvånarna i Kano, som sammanfogade, var Qadiriyyaen på denna tid (1937) en ung knatte, Muhammad Nasir Kabara, som var destinerad att komma med storeändringar i tariqaen och inte endast att introducera berömmen av födelsedagen av Shaykh Abd al-Qadiral-Jilani, en festival, som inte övades av de norr afrikanerna, men också att bära bruket av bandirien till varje tränga någon av Hausaland.
På åldern av sjutton var Muhammad Nasir egentligen för barn som ska accepteras som en medlem av Qadiriyyaen, men, som hans farfar, hade Mallam Nakabara - en extremt väl lärda Mallam - som önskades honom som skriver in beställa, Shaykh Sa'ad, ett lite primat men som ger honom wazifaen. Även om en ungdom, Nasir var inte endast väl läst in klassisk arabiskalitteratur och vetenskaper men, han var också förtrogen med lära av Sufism och arbetena av de ledande sufiforskarna av tiden.
När Amiren av Kano Abdullahi Bayero gick på hajjen Nasir som överfördes en märka till och med Wali Sulaiman till Khalifaen av Qadiriyyaen, Shaykh Abu al-Hassan som-Sammani, sonsonen av grundaren av Sammaniyyaen som frågar honom att ge honom en ijaza för att bli muqaddam av hans egna zawiya. Shaykhen görades häpen för att höra av en sådan högt lärd ungdom, och han överförde en jubba och ett lock till Nasir samman med en märka av tidsbeställningen som en muqaddam. Även om Nasir inte avskilde omgående självt från gemenskapen i Alfindiki, som Shaykh Sa'ad var stilla vid liv, betraktades hans handlingar som innovationer av arabsna. I Nasir som 1949 göras hajjen och möts den nya Khalifaen, Shaykhen Hashim och Shaykhen Muhammad av Mauretanien. På hans återresa besökte han Sudan, var han mötte med Shaykh Muhammad al-Fatih B. Shaykh Qarib Allah, Khalifa av den sudanesiska Samaniyyaen. Han besökte också andra arabiska länder var han läde många saker som angår hadra- och bandiriorganisationen. Vid 1950 var sheikhen Nasir i många väg som långt var mer mångsidig och som var eklektisk än hans lärare; och lyckat efter att ha gjort Sufism godtagbar till mer bred åhörare, var han thus kompetent att göra Qadiriyya att tränga igenom in i varje del av landet.
, sedan således Nasiru omkring 1958 Kabara har varit ansedd, förgrena sig ledare allra av Qadiriyya i Kano. Fodrar av myndighet inom ledarskap strukturera, emellertid kan beskådas in benämner av både individerna vars myndighet fördjupa över flera förgrena sig, och detaljen mönstrar inom varje förgrena sig.
Nasiru Kabara mottog hans original- myndighet i Kuntiyya, och Ahl al-Bayt från Ibrahim Nakabara, som var det framträdande, figurerar att anknyta nineteenthandtjugonde-århundradet Qadiriyya i Kano. Ibrahim (ca. 1867-1941) var Fulani, och hans farfar var ursprungligen från Katsina. Han som är lärd en lång räcka av, betvingar från hans fader: lag, teologi, litteratur, logik och grammatik. Honom lärd astrologi från Mahmud Kabara; lag (Mukhtasaren) från den babban mallamien, Abdurrahman al-Sayudi; och sufism (speciellt Qadiriyya) från hans fader och från Ibrahim av Zaria, som hade kommit till Kano. Vid åldern av trettio hade han blivit en laglig konsulent till Emir Aliyu. Han erbjöds placera av alkalien (domare) men vägrades på övertygelsen att mallams inte bör vara involverade i regering. Han reste inte utanför Kano och fortsatte his placerar som laglig konsulent under emirs Abbas, Usman och Abdullahi Bayero. Han var också den personliga mallarnen av Emir Usman. Ibrahim skrev inte bokar, även om han ägde hans egna skriftliga kommentarer på Mukhtasaren. Hans hem i Kabara avvärjer var en centrera av higher att lära i Hausaland. Man delar upp av hans sammansättning var den fastställda asiden för studier av teologin och mysticism, och another delar upp var den fastställda asiden för att studera lag. Han var inte en ivrig förespråkare av ensamhet (khalwa). Även om det fanns andra ledare av traditionella Qadiriyya i Kano under denna period, Ibrahims förstärktes myndighet av hans personliga kvaliteter av piety och kunskap och av hans effektivitet som en lärare av mallams. Han lyckades inte i denna myndighet av hans son utan av hans deltagare Nasiru Kabara, som ställde ut dessa samma kvaliteter.
Nasiru Kabara " ”gavs” till Ibrahim na Kabara som ett barn och växte upp i hans hushåll. Som en Fulani har Nasiru haft att ta fram till de traditionella Qadiriyya mallamsna i Kano. Till och med hans kapaciteter som en forskare och en lärare blev han den rimliga arvingen till Ibrahim na Kabara. ”
Under perioden från 1935 till 1955, Nasiru var lyckat, i upprättande av direktkontakten med de primära källorna av Qadiriyya myndighet i Khartoum, Timbuktu och Baghdad; och thus blev han mer och mer vilden av traditionella Qadiriyya fodrar av myndighet. His snubblar till Baghdad i 1953 var en vändpunkt i hans karriär. Det som är etablerat hans myndighet direkt inom landskamphögkvarteren av Qadiriyya; stunder i Baghdad introducerade tolkade han utstuderade klassiska och moderna aspekter av Qadiriyya och därpå honom eller mycket av denna som var materiell för nigerianska åhörare; his sular resandeföljet till Baghdad var den förmögna köpmannen, Sanusi Dantata. Som ett resultat av snubbla säkrade fördjupa Nasiru ekonomisk hjälp för hans aktion till reform Qadiriyya och den till en jämn samlas.
På hans retur från Baghdad öppnade gick ned Nasiru hans egna Qadiriyya moské och för att delta i moskén av Muhammad Sidi. Av 1956 mest av ledarskap och laityen hade arrangera i rak linje med Nasiru, och en förnyat närmande nåddes med Muhammad Sidi. Under denna period reste Nasiru alltigenom nordliga Nigeria som öppnar moskéer och bestämmer muqaddams. Han fostrade också hans kontakter i den arabiska världen som två gånger går tillbaka till Baghdad och besöker Khartoum, Cairo, Beirut, Damascus, Tehran och Amman. I 1958 var han den juridiska bestämda rektor av Shahuci skolar och arkivet i Kano. I 1961 öppnade han hans egna Islamiyya som den höga grundskola för barn mellan 5 och 11 år i Gwale avvärjer och har fortsatt avancerad undervisning betvingar i hans egna hem.
I 1949 var Nasiru bestämd till emir'snas råd av konsulenter av Abdullahi Bayero. Då Muhammad Sanusi blev emir i 1954, emellertid, byttes ut Nasiru på rådet av omdanade Tijani mallams. Under regeringstiden av Sanusi Nasiru som tjänas som som en laglig konsulent till den nordliga Muslim hovrätten och fortsättas som en av de två tafsiravläsarna i slotten (q.v.). Med tidsbeställningen av Ado Bayero som emir i 1963 blev Nasiru igen en konsulent till emiren. Efter 1963 har han varit en medlem av det Kaduna rådet av Mallams och har varit på talrik lokal och regionala kommittéer som spänner från Kano den infödda myndighetskommittén på prostitution till den nordliga nigerianska speciala kommittén på utbildning i det Kano landskapet.
Illviljan hans medverkan som en regerings- mallam, Nasiru Kabara har underhållit en basera av myndighetsvilden av det administrativt strukturerar i Kano och nordliga Nigeria. Han har varit i hög grad ansvariga för danande Qadiriyya som är godtagbar till allmänningmanen, både Fulani och Hausa och har varit en viktig mellanhand mellan det Fulani avgörandet klassificerar och den mer gemensamma hausaen. Han har översatt teologin och mysticismen av Qadiriyya in i Hausaidiomet.
Förutom fungerar av påbörjande, utbildning och intermediation, det Qadiriyya ledarskap i Kano har ansvar för finansiering, och alla uppläggningen de olika aktiviteterna av brödraskapet och för att meddela med segmenterar av brödraskapet, lokalen och medborgare. I omformningen av brödraskapet från en elit till en samlasorganisation fungerar har ett ha som huvudämneledarskap varit inspirationen och administrationen av ritualen.
Mest av de omdanade Qadiriyya medlemmarna gör wuridi i grupper ledde vid en imam. Avkrävanaturen av wuridien varierar med undergruppen inom Qadiriyya. Den sammanlagda tiden som förbrukas i varje skulle grupp, är omkring trettio noterar per dag. Några Qadiriyya (Salamiyya) imams leder också bandiriperioder omkring två gånger en vecka i aftnarna. Under dessa gruppbönperioder förstärks ledare-anhängaren nexusen starkt, delvis av det traditionella förhållandet av en imam till de som ”be bak.”,
Omdanade Qadiriyya har förlagt en special betoning på gruppberöm av grundare födelsedag (Mauludin Abdulkadir). Denna ceremoni identifieras med omdanade Qadiriyya och var specifikt initierad i Kano av Nasiru Kabara i omkring 1959. Det servar som ett årligt möte för brödraskapledare och medlemmar från alltigenom nordliga Nigeria. Delegationer från varje av de nordliga städerna för ha som huvudämne samlas i Kano för en heldag av böner och aktiviteter. Centralsärdrag av dagen är en gruppprocession som är ordnad vid områdesdelegationer, från hemmet av Nasiru Kabara i det Jarkasa området av Kabara, avvärjer till Kano Qadiriyya gravplatsen som är västra av den Kano staden, var böner är said över gravarna av Kano Qadiriyya saints. För procession servarna också som den enda tiden i året, då manar, kvinnor och alla barn deltar i den samma tjänste- dyrkanen. Beställa av processionen indikerar ungefärligt hierarkin av myndighet inom den Qadiriyya eliten; det finns ett inre kärnar ur av muqaddams som medföljer Nasiru Kabara under denna period.
Från mönstrar av myndighet, och gemenskapwithiin Qadiriyya i Kano som flera pekar, kan resumeras:
(1) Anslutningen med Qadiriyya i det nittonde århundradet begränsades till Fulani mallams och administratörer (vem härledde deras myndighet från ledarna av Fulanien Jihad) och till norr afrikanska Arabs (vem inte integrerade sig religiously in i den Kano milieuen).
(2) Med etableringen av koloniinvånaren härska, beståndsdelar i Kanoen som den arabiska gemenskapen intygade på nytt deras egna negro spiritual anknyter med norr afrikanska källor av andlig myndighet.
(3) Medlemmar av hausana som mallam klassificerar, började till bundsförvanten med förnyad denna bildar av norr afrikanska Qadiriyya och var rccruited in i ledarskap placerar inom en utveckling.
(4) Delen av framgången av Qadiriyya i Hausasektoren var tack vare en betoning på gruppdyrkan och fokuseringen av aktiviteter inom lokalmoskéer.
(5) ”Den legitima” efterträdaren till ledarskap av traditionella Fulani Qadiriyya i Kano (Nasiru Kabara) som anslutas med vilde, fodrar av Qadiriyya myndighet, som en förstärkning av his ”övertog” myndighet och sökte att konsolidera det arabiskt, Hausa, och Fulani delar upp av Qadiriyya.
(6) Detta var fulländat, genom att fördjupa Qadiriyya från en elit, baserar delvis till en samlas baserar. I detta processaa var servicen av förmögna Hausaköpmän nödvändig. På den jämna samlas, var omdanade Qadiriyya också en rdection av emergizngKano nationalism som begärde att religiös myndighet skiftas från Sokoto och norr Afrika till Kano sig själv.
(7) På grund av samlas basera av omdanade Qadiriyya, det var ej längre möjligheten för att den Qadiriyya eliten fullständigt ska identifiera med det Kano avgörandet klassificerar. Således har stundbrödraskapledare som styrkan agerar, som konsulenter till avgörandet klassificerar, dem, vanligt bevakat deras status som nongovernment mallarns.
(8), som kanske en följd av förskjutningen från en elit till en samlas baserar, fungerar brödraskapet som ledarskap blev involverat itu förhållandevis nytt: tolkningen av doktrinen för lokalbruk och inspirationen, till och med ritual och ceremoni, av gruppen och samlas dyrkan.
Doktriner av myndighet och gemenskapen i omdanade Qadiriyya
, eftersom traditionella Qadiriyya i Kano relied tungt på de nittonde århundradeJihad handstilarna som ha som huvudämnekällorna av den Qadiriyya doktrinen ledarna av omdanade Qadiriyya, sig själv har varit fruktsamma författare. Like the Fulani Jihad writers, the contemporary Qadiriyya writers are concerned to relate classical Islamic thought to local circumstances. In the interim period between the Jihad writings and the contemporary writings, there was "a dearth of Qadiriyya literature in Kano. None of the major leaders during this period, Ibrahim na Kabara, Ali Musa, Saad b. Ahmad, Sharif Garba, Sidi Muhammad, and Muhammad Sidi-wrote on Qadiriyya. The Reformed Qadiriyya movement, associated with Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali, has not only produced its own literature but has revived an interest in the Jihad classics," has introduced works on Qadiriyya from the Arab world," and has inspired local Hausa "praise poets" " to express themselves on brotherhood matters. Nasiru Kabara hase written about 150 works in all.
The amount of systematic theology in the writings of Nasiru Kabara has been minimal; his primary purpose seems to be to relate the history and elements of the brotherhood in terms understandable to contemporary Kano society and to stimulate an identification with the saints of the brotherhood. The writings of Ahmad b. Ali cover many of these same topics. There is no specific praise of the Shaziliyya way, as distinct from Qadiriyya, and much of the literature contains poems that are sung at worship gatherings. Another Reformed Qadiriyya leader in Kano, Adamu na Ma'aji (q.v.), seems mainly concerned with chains of authority and conditions of initiation."
The writings of brotherhood leaders such as Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali espouse the community and authority of Qadiriyya on two major grounds: affiliational (primarily on the basis of direct personal experience) and communal (primarily on the basis of loyalty to the nineteenth-century Jihad tradition). Within the category of affiliational appeal, there have been five areas of doctrinal exposition: the origins and spread of Qadiriyya, the elements and requirements of Qadiriyya, the benefits and blessings for those who follow Qadiriyya, personal praise of the Qadiriyya saints, and general preaching.
With regard to the spread of Qadiriyy, Nasiru Kabara describes in Alnafahat the Qadiriyya shaykhs in history and the distribution of Qadiriyya among the continents of the world." In Naf' al-'ibad, he discusses the Qadiriyya caliphate throughout history. In Ithaf al-khald'iq he presents the genealogy of the founder, 'Abd al-Qadir, and a considerable amount of biographical data. He also mentions some of the successors of 'Abd al-Qadir in the contemporary world.
With regard 4o the requirements of Qadiriyya, Nasiru Kabara elabarates in Al-nafabdt the details and the nature of the brotherhood ceremonies." In the Naf' aVibad he describes the Qadiriyya daily voluntary prayers." In the Ithaf al-khald'iq he discusses the necessities and voluntary aspects of ablution, washing, taimama (symbolic washing with dust), prayer, prostration, giving of alms, fasting, pilgrimage, and other Islamic rituals for those who follow Qadiriyya. In Da'wat al-ghawth he elaborates on the conditions for following Qadiriyya.
With regard to the benefits of Qadiriyya, all of the above-mentioned writings refer to the personal satisfactions and blessings that accrue to those who follow Qadiriyya. Nasiru describes the "glorious benefits" for the followers of Qadiriyya and assures them of the best reward.
With regard to the praise of Qadiriyya saints, it is clear that instead of being a perfunctory gesture it is a culmination of the past that is directed into the brotherhood experience. In Naf al-'ibad, Nasiru inscribes the prayer he offered while at the tomb of 'Abd al-Qadir in Baghdad.
The praise of a primary saint, 'Abd al-Qadir, should not obscure the central fact of all the reformed brotherhoods: an individual is encouraged to do addu'a (al-du'a), that is, to pray directly to God. Nasiru exemplifies the passion and symbolism of such a prayer in the Subhdt al-anwar.
Finally, general preaching has always been a function of the religious authorities who try to induce conversions through individual volition. Such preaching is invariably in the vernacular language (in this case Hausa); and if it can be fashioned into poetry, it will be sung by minstrels near and far. Nasiru Kabara has been particularly successful in his general preaching.
Nasiru Kabara identified in the Subhat al-anwar, five branches of Qadiriyya in Hausaland, one of which is Usmaniyya. In various other works, he refers to Usmaniyya al-Fudawiyya and identifies himself with this branch. In the Naf al-'ibad he includes the prayer he read when he visited the tomb of Usman dan Fodio, and it is clear that he regards Muhammad Bello, son of Usman, as among the founders of Usmaniyya. Nasiru writes that he hopes to visit Bello at Wurno (the assumption being that Bello is not dead). While Nasiru does not include any reference to special ritual associated with Usmaniyya, it is clear that the Jihad leaders are considered to be of special importance. The continual identification of them with Qadiriyya is clearly intended to remind their descendants not to desert the "faith of their fathers." The Hausa poem by Ibrahim Makwarari (Begen Shehu Abdulkadir) is illustrative of the way in which Nasiru is regarded as the successor to the Jihad leaders.
With regard to the alleged doctrinal prohibition against change of brotherhood, there has been an attack on mallams who encourage such conversion, primarily those associated with Reformed Tijaniyya. The doctrinal basis of this attack is stated by Nasiru Kabara in Al-nalabat, where he suggests that the Tijani mallams are "fabricating" if they assert that one tariqa is better than another. He argues for a strict prohibition against leaving the Qadiriyya brotherhood, supporting his argument with verses from the Qur'an and traditions of the Prophet. He asserts that when a person has promised to do something religious, such as follow a brotherhood, he must keep that promise. He criticizes the Tijaniyya specifically for assuming it can convert persons from other brotherhoods, suggesting that this was not the policy of the original Tijani leaders and that the practice is a false modern innovation .
Publications
He has published well over 150 treatises and books explaining various aspects of Islamic philosophy, Arabic and Hausa linguistics. His writing career started quite early in his life in his youth. Perhaps not surprisingly, his first treatise was on Abdulkadir Jilani, the founder of the Qadiriyya Islamic Philosophical movement. His method of writing usually follows the medieval scholastic tradition widespread in the middle-east. Thus he combines commentary with critical appraisal. A classical example of his approach is provided in the intellectual conjectures-and-refutations arguments of Al-Ghazali in his Tahaful Falasafa, and Ibn Rushd's counter-commenterary, Tahaful Tahafut.
His writings follow a specified and characteristic pattern; beginning with the praise of God, then the rationale of the writing under consideration and the proposed title of the work., followed by an abstract and then the main exposition. An example is his exposition on arm positioning during prayers which he explained in Kan Ul Fasab. He started by priasing Shehu Abdulmahal-al-Shawani a leading exponent of Shafi'iyya movement which supports Saddlu (dropping the arms by the side during the standing portion of the prayer). He then brings a Prophetic tradition (Hadith) which shows the Prophet's support for such arm positioning. Subsequently, the then brings more Prophetic traditions which explained the stands of both Sadlu and Kablu (crossing the arms on the chest during the standing portion of the prayer).
In his various writings, Sheikh Nasiru Kabara has clearly brought out the concept of Kanawiyya, a connation of Kano as an intellectual entrepot in medieval Africa. Some of the books and treatises he has published are included below.
ЖИЗНЕОПИСАНИЕ SHEIK NASIR KABARA KANO НИГЕРИИ
Automatically translated into Russian thanks to WorldLingo
Al-Nasir Kabara Sheikh Muhammad Maulana (RA)
Жизнь и времена
. SANI BALA SHEHU
sanibalashehukano@yahoo.com sanibalashehu2004@yahoo.co.uk
+2348065872052. 08080626852 08073400690 08045208685 07029467896
Amirul Jaysh, Sheikh Nasir Muhammad Kabara (RA), Sheikh Nasir Muhammad
Umar Kabara жизни и времен, замеченный исламский эрудит и philsopher были принесены в 1912 в селе вне Kano, Нигерии Guringuwa. Его grandparents пришли от Kabara, городка под королевством Timbucktu. Его grandfather третьего поколения - также от Kabara в Timbucktu - Mallam Umaru, также известного по мере того как Mallam Kabara было единственное одним от lineage, котор нужно установить в Adakawa в городе Kano, перед двигать дальше к теперь известно как палата Kabara, названо после его. Он был accomplished Sufi в Timbucktu перед уходить для Kano.
Первая вещь Mallam Kabara сделала на устанавливать в палате Kabara должна была установить школу в 1787, из вида общ ссылаемого как школа Zaure где наружная зала входа его дома была преобразована в исламскую школу. Эта школа по возможности среди самых старых записанных школ в Kano будет теперь частью домочадца Darul Qadiriyya Sheikh Nasiru Kabara.
Моложавое Nasiru было весьма восторженно в его поиске для знания. Его первая встреча с предварительной исламской учя системой - длиной после того как он градуировал от нормальный школьнаяой системы Allo (Qur'an прочитанного от деревянных шиферов), вытекающ весьма fluent в арабском языке, исламском jurisprudance и лингвистике - была с Bad'ul Amli и Murshida, обоими трактатами на Tauhidi; всеединство бога. Затем последовал за прожорливым apepite для других книг и скоро он завершил его изучения Ahlari, Iziyya и Risala: все записывает обязательно для правильного вникания мусульманства. Потому что в мусульманстве не будет принципиальной схемы авторского права, скоро после моложавого Nasir себя typesetting Risala и Ishiriniya (книга поэзии в хвалении пророка) и продал их.
Его учебный прочесс был необходимо self-motivated, с of course соотвествующим поощрением от его GLAVNого учителя: Mallam Natsugune. Следовательно, моложавое Nasiru было прожорливым искателем исламского знания, был далеко впереди его сверстниц - деиствительно он фактическ проповедовал к его одноклассникам его выдвинутое вникание смысли Quran; таким образом засующ предыдущие семена его входа в Tafsir на таком нежом времени.
В Kano той эры - 1920s - были 5 выдвинутых школ; необходимо можно рассматривать школами pre-университета теперь - где молодое Nasiru использовало пойти, на его, к дальнейшему его знание. Эти школы были:
1. Дом депутата Imam мечети города центральной, расположенного в палате 2
Daneji. Дом Mallam Ibrahim, главного судьи Kano на палате 3
Yakasai. Дом судьи цепи Bichi, Alhaji Musdafa на палате 4
Kurawa. Дом Sheik Abdulkarim (Mallam Sambo) на палате 5
Ciromawa. Дом главного Imam Zawiyya, Mallam Inuwa на палате Mayanka
эти, котор школы имели обширные архивы справки содержать собрания получила от различных северных африканских схоластичных центров. Все формируют центральный сердечник жажды Nasiru для более дальнеишего знания.
Даже на том времени, его прием знания был больше чем rote учить; он спросил он не понял от его учителя; таким образом был весьма революционно в его вникании исламского знания. Традиционное воспринятие отношения между зрачком и оригиналом в исламский школьнаяой системы редк дает комнату для взаимодействующего приема знания. Nasir не признавало такое дидактическое отношение, и последовательн, с diffidence и уважением, всегда запросами для более дальнеишей разработки он не понял он выучил от его учителей сами - был только слишком охотно готово обязать молодого эрудита. Это не удивляло, даже в «архаических» 1930s Kano, considering факт что некоторые из его других учителей были студент-выпускниками университета al-Azhar в Каире, самом старом университете в Африке. Thus Nasiru Kabara combined two intellectual traditions: его ancestry Timbuctu когда Timbuctu само было цитаделью learnig в Судане; и его контакт с посещая эрудитами и профессорами от al-Azhar в 1930s в Kano.
Среди местных жителей в Kano соединило Qadiriyya в это время (1937) было молодым хлопцем, Muhammad Nasir Kabara, которое было destined для того чтобы принести большие изменения в tariqa и not only ввести торжество дня рождения al-Jilani al-Qadir Shaykh Abd, празднество которое не было напрактиковано северными африканцами, но также снести пользу bandiri к каждому углу Hausaland.
На времени 17, Muhammad Nasir было реально слишком молодо быть принятым как член Qadiriyya но, по мере того как его grandfather, Mallam Nakabara - весьма хорошее learned Mallam - пожеланное его для того чтобы вписать заказ, Shaykh Sa'ad имел маленький выбор но дать ему wazifa. Хотя молодостью, Nasir были not only хорошими прочитанными внутри классическими арабскими словесностью и науками но он был также conversant с учить Sufism и работами leading эрудитов sufi времени.
Когда Amir Kano Abdullahi Bayero пошло на hajj Nasir посланное письмом до Wali Sulaiman к Khalifa Qadiriyya, al-Hassan Shaykh Abu как-Sammani, внук основателя Sammaniyya, спрашивая, что он дало ему ijaza для того чтобы стать muqaddam его собственного zawiya. Shaykh было удивляно hear of такая высоки learned молодость и он послал jubba и крышку к Nasir совместно с приказом о назначении как muqaddam. Хотя Nasir немедленно не отделило от общины в Alfindiki, по мере того как Shaykh Sa'ad было все еще живо, его действия были сосчитаны как рационализаторства арабами. В встрещенном Nasir 1949 сделанном Hajj и новым Khalifa, Shaykh Hashim и Shaykh Muhammad Мавритании. На его возвращенном путешествии, он посетил Судан, где он встречал с B. al-Fatih Shaykh Muhammad. Shaykh Qarib аллах, Khalifa Sudanese Samaniyya. Он также посетил другие арабские страны где он выучил много вещей относительно организации hadra и bandiri. К 1950 Sheikh Nasir находился в много дорог далеко более разносторонних и эклектичных чем его учителя; и успешно делающ Sufism приемлемо к широкая аудитория, он мог таким образом сделать Qadiriyya прорезать в каждую часть страны.
Таким образом в виду того что Nasiru около 1958 Kabara было учтено руководителем всех ветвей Qadiriyya в Kano. Линии авторитета в пределах водительства структура, однако, может быть осмотрена in terms of и индивидуалы авторитет которых удлиняет над несколькими ветвей и картинами частности внутри каждая ветвь.
Nasiru Kabara получило его первоначально авторитет в al-Bayt Kuntiyya и Ahl от Ibrahim Nakabara, которое было доминантным рисунком соединяя двадцат-столетие Qadiriyya nineteenthand в Kano. Ibrahim (ca. 1867-1941) было Fulani и его grandfather был первоначально от Katsina. Он выучил широкий ассортимент вопросов от его отца: закон, теология, словесность, логика, и грамматика. Он выучил астрологию от Mahmud Kabara; закон (Mukhtasar) от babban mallami, al-Sayudi Abdurrahman; и sufism (специально Qadiriyya) от его отца и от Ibrahim Zaria, которое пришло к Kano. временем 30, он стал юридическим советником к Emir Aliyu. Ему предложил положение алкалиа (судьи) но отказал на осуждении что mallams SLEDUET включить в правительство. Он не переместил вне Kano и не продолжил его положение как юридический советник под emirs Abbas, Usman, и Abdullahi Bayero. Он был также личным mallarn Emir Usman. Ibrahim не написало книги, хотя он обладал его собственными комментариями в писменном виде на Mukhtasar. Его домом в палате Kabara был центр более высоко учить в Hausaland. Один раздел его смеси был set aside для изучений теологии и mysticism, и другой раздел был set aside для изучать закон. Он не был пылким пропонентом уединения (khalwa). Хотя были другие руководители традиционного Qadiriyya в Kano в это время, авторитет Ibrahim был усилен его личными качествами piety и знания и его эффективностью как учитель mallams. Он не был преуспет в этом авторитете его сынком а его студентом Nasiru Kabara, который exhibited эти такие же качества.
Nasiru Kabara " «далось» к na Kabara Ibrahim как ребенок и выросло вверх в его домочадце. Как Fulani, Nasiru имело доступ к традиционным mallams Qadiriyya в Kano. Через его способности как эрудит и учитель, он стал правоподобным наследником к na Kabara Ibrahim. «
Во время от от 1935 до 1955, Nasiru были успешно в устанавливать непосредственный контакт с главным образом источниками авторитета Qadiriyya в Khartoum, Timbuktu, и Baghdad; и таким образом он стал все больше и больше независимо традиционных линий Qadiriyya авторитета. Его отключением к Baghdad в 1953 было поворотный пункт в его карьере. Оно установило его авторитет сразу внутри международные штабы Qadiriyya; пока в Baghdad он изучил классические и самомоднейшие аспекты Qadiriyya, и затем его ввел или интерпретировал много из этого материала для нигерийской аудитории; его единственный перемещая товарищ к Baghdad был состоятельным купечеством, Sanusi Dantata. В результате отключения, Nasiru обеспечило финансовую поддержку для его кампании к реформе Qadiriyya и удлиняет его к массовому уровню.
На его возвращении от Baghdad, Nasiru раскрыло его собственную мечеть Qadiriyya и просклоняло присутствовать на мечети Muhammad Sidi. 1956 больше всего из водительства и laity выровнял с Nasiru и rapprochement достиглось с Muhammad Sidi. В это время Nasiru переместило повсеместно в северные мечети отверстия Нигерии и muqaddams назначать. Он также воспитал его контакты в арабском мире, возвращающ дважды к Baghdad и посещая Khartoum, Каиру, Beirut, Damascus, Tehran, и Amman. В 1958 он был назначен headmaster школы и архива Shahuci судебных в Kano. В 1961 он раскрыл его собственную начальную школу Islamiyya старшую в палате Gwale и продолжался научить предварительным вопросам в его собственном доме.
В 1949 Nasiru было назначено к совету emir советников Abdullahi Bayero. Когда Muhammad Sanusi стало emir в 1954, однако, Nasiru было заменено на совете реформированными mallams Tijani. Во время царствования Sanusi, Nasiru, котор служят как законный консультант к северной мусульманской апелляционной инстанции и продолжаемые как один из 2 читателей tafsir в дворце (q.v.). С назначением Ado Bayero как emir в 1963, Nasiru снова шло советником к emir. С 1963 он был членом совета Kaduna Mallams и находился на многочисленнnNs местном и областных комитетах, колебаясь от комитета авторитета Kano родного на проституции к северному нигерийскому особому комитету на образовании в провинции Kano.
Несмотря на его запутанность как mallam правительства, Nasiru Kabara поддерживало основание авторитета независимо управленческих структур в Kano и северной Нигерии. Он больш ответствен для делать Qadiriyya приемлемо к общему человеку, и Fulani и Hausa, и был важным intermediary между господствующим классом Fulani и мещанином Hausa. Он переводил теологию и mysticism Qadiriyya в идиоматизм Hausa.
В дополнение к функциям начала, тренировки, и intermediation, водительство Qadiriyya в Kano имеет ответственность для финансирования и организовать различные RABOTы братства и для связывать с всеми этапами братства, местно и национально. В преобразовании братства от элиты к массоваяа организация, главной функцией водительства была воодушевленностью и администрацией ритуала.
Большой часть из реформированных членов Qadiriyya делает wuridi в группах водить imam. Точно природа wuridi меняет с подгруппой в пределах Qadiriyya. Полное время использовало в каждой группе было бы около 30 MINUT в день. Некоторые imams Qadiriyya (Salamiyya) также водят встречи bandiri около дважды неделя в вечерах. Во время этих соберите встречи молитве nexus руководител-следующего, котор сильно усилен, отчасти традиционным отношением imam к тем которые «помолите позади.»
Реформированное Qadiriyya устанавливало особый акцент на торжестве группы дня рождения основателя (Mauludin Abdulkadir). Эта церемония специфически определена с реформированным Qadiriyya и была начата в Kano Nasiru Kabara в около 1959. Оно служит как каждогодная встреча для руководителей и членов братства от повсеместно в северной Нигерии. Делегации от each of главных северных городов congregate в Kano на полный день молитв и деятельностей. Центральной характеристикой дня будет шествие группы, аранжированное делегациями зоны, от дома Nasiru Kabara в зоне Jarkasa палаты Kabara к захоронению Kano Qadiriyya смолотому west of город Kano, где молитвы сказанн над могилами saints Kano Qadiriyya. Шествие также служит как the only time в годе когда люди, женщины, и дети все участвуют в таком же обслуживании поклонению. Заказ шествия показывает грубо иерархию авторитета в пределах элиты Qadiriyya; будет внутренний сердечник muqaddams сопровождают Nasiru Kabara в это время.
От картин withiin Qadiriyya авторитета и общины в Kano несколько пунктов могут быть суммированы:
(1) ассоциация с Qadiriyya в девятнадцатом столетии была ограничена к mallams Fulani и администраторы (вывели их авторитет от руководителей Fulani Jihad) и к северным африканским арабам (не интегрировало вероисповедно в Milieu Kano).
(2) с установкой колониального правила, элементы в общине Kano арабской вновь подтвердили их собственные духовные соединения с северными африканскими источниками духовного авторитета.
(3) члены типа mallam Hausa начали связывать с этой возобновленной формой северного африканского Qadiriyya и были rccruited в положения водительства внутри одно поколение.
(4) часть успеха Qadiriyya в участке Hausa была из-за внимания на поклонении группы и фокусировать деятельностей внутри местные мечети.
(5) «правомерный» продолжатель к водительству традиционного Fulani Qadiriyya в Kano (Nasiru Kabara) affiliated с независимыми линия авторитета Qadiriyya по мере того как подкрепление его «унаследовало» авторитет и изыскало консолидировать разделы араба, Hausa, и Fulani Qadiriyya.
(6) это было выполнено отчасти путем расширять Qadiriyya от основания элиты к массовому основанию. В этом процессе, поддержка состоятельных купечеств Hausa была необходима. На массовом уровне, реформированное Qadiriyya было также rdection национализма Kano emergizng которое потребовало, чтобы вероисповедный авторитет был перенесен от Sokoto самого и северной Африки к Kano.
(7) из-за массового основания реформированного Qadiriyya, не было no longer по возможности для элиты Qadiriyya определить вполне с господствующим классом Kano. Таким образом, пока руководители братства могли подействовать как советники к господствующему классу, они обычно защищали их состояние как nongovernment mallarns.
(8) возможно как последствие переноса от элиты к массовому основанию, водительство братства стало involved в 2 относительно новых функциях: толкование доктрины для местной пользы и воодушевленности, через ритуал и церемонию, группы и массового поклонения.
Доктринами сами авторитета и общины в реформированном
Qadiriyya тогда как традиционное Qadiriyya в Kano положилось тяжело на девятнадцатых сочинительствах Jihad столетия как главные источники доктрины Qadiriyya руководители реформированного Qadiriyya были плодовитые писатели. Like the Fulani Jihad writers, the contemporary Qadiriyya writers are concerned to relate classical Islamic thought to local circumstances. In the interim period between the Jihad writings and the contemporary writings, there was "a dearth of Qadiriyya literature in Kano. None of the major leaders during this period, Ibrahim na Kabara, Ali Musa, Saad b. Ahmad, Sharif Garba, Sidi Muhammad, and Muhammad Sidi-wrote on Qadiriyya. The Reformed Qadiriyya movement, associated with Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali, has not only produced its own literature but has revived an interest in the Jihad classics," has introduced works on Qadiriyya from the Arab world," and has inspired local Hausa "praise poets" " to express themselves on brotherhood matters. Nasiru Kabara hase written about 150 works in all.
The amount of systematic theology in the writings of Nasiru Kabara has been minimal; his primary purpose seems to be to relate the history and elements of the brotherhood in terms understandable to contemporary Kano society and to stimulate an identification with the saints of the brotherhood. The writings of Ahmad b. Ali cover many of these same topics. There is no specific praise of the Shaziliyya way, as distinct from Qadiriyya, and much of the literature contains poems that are sung at worship gatherings. Another Reformed Qadiriyya leader in Kano, Adamu na Ma'aji (q.v.), seems mainly concerned with chains of authority and conditions of initiation."
The writings of brotherhood leaders such as Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali espouse the community and authority of Qadiriyya on two major grounds: affiliational (primarily on the basis of direct personal experience) and communal (primarily on the basis of loyalty to the nineteenth-century Jihad tradition). Within the category of affiliational appeal, there have been five areas of doctrinal exposition: the origins and spread of Qadiriyya, the elements and requirements of Qadiriyya, the benefits and blessings for those who follow Qadiriyya, personal praise of the Qadiriyya saints, and general preaching.
With regard to the spread of Qadiriyy, Nasiru Kabara describes in Alnafahat the Qadiriyya shaykhs in history and the distribution of Qadiriyya among the continents of the world." In Naf' al-'ibad, he discusses the Qadiriyya caliphate throughout history. In Ithaf al-khald'iq he presents the genealogy of the founder, 'Abd al-Qadir, and a considerable amount of biographical data. He also mentions some of the successors of 'Abd al-Qadir in the contemporary world.
With regard 4o the requirements of Qadiriyya, Nasiru Kabara elabarates in Al-nafabdt the details and the nature of the brotherhood ceremonies." In the Naf' aVibad he describes the Qadiriyya daily voluntary prayers." In the Ithaf al-khald'iq he discusses the necessities and voluntary aspects of ablution, washing, taimama (symbolic washing with dust), prayer, prostration, giving of alms, fasting, pilgrimage, and other Islamic rituals for those who follow Qadiriyya. In Da'wat al-ghawth he elaborates on the conditions for following Qadiriyya.
With regard to the benefits of Qadiriyya, all of the above-mentioned writings refer to the personal satisfactions and blessings that accrue to those who follow Qadiriyya. Nasiru describes the "glorious benefits" for the followers of Qadiriyya and assures them of the best reward.
With regard to the praise of Qadiriyya saints, it is clear that instead of being a perfunctory gesture it is a culmination of the past that is directed into the brotherhood experience. In Naf al-'ibad, Nasiru inscribes the prayer he offered while at the tomb of 'Abd al-Qadir in Baghdad.
The praise of a primary saint, 'Abd al-Qadir, should not obscure the central fact of all the reformed brotherhoods: an individual is encouraged to do addu'a (al-du'a), that is, to pray directly to God. Nasiru exemplifies the passion and symbolism of such a prayer in the Subhdt al-anwar.
Finally, general preaching has always been a function of the religious authorities who try to induce conversions through individual volition. Such preaching is invariably in the vernacular language (in this case Hausa); and if it can be fashioned into poetry, it will be sung by minstrels near and far. Nasiru Kabara has been particularly successful in his general preaching.
Nasiru Kabara identified in the Subhat al-anwar, five branches of Qadiriyya in Hausaland, one of which is Usmaniyya. In various other works, he refers to Usmaniyya al-Fudawiyya and identifies himself with this branch. In the Naf al-'ibad he includes the prayer he read when he visited the tomb of Usman dan Fodio, and it is clear that he regards Muhammad Bello, son of Usman, as among the founders of Usmaniyya. Nasiru writes that he hopes to visit Bello at Wurno (the assumption being that Bello is not dead). While Nasiru does not include any reference to special ritual associated with Usmaniyya, it is clear that the Jihad leaders are considered to be of special importance. The continual identification of them with Qadiriyya is clearly intended to remind their descendants not to desert the "faith of their fathers." The Hausa poem by Ibrahim Makwarari (Begen Shehu Abdulkadir) is illustrative of the way in which Nasiru is regarded as the successor to the Jihad leaders.
With regard to the alleged doctrinal prohibition against change of brotherhood, there has been an attack on mallams who encourage such conversion, primarily those associated with Reformed Tijaniyya. The doctrinal basis of this attack is stated by Nasiru Kabara in Al-nalabat, where he suggests that the Tijani mallams are "fabricating" if they assert that one tariqa is better than another. He argues for a strict prohibition against leaving the Qadiriyya brotherhood, supporting his argument with verses from the Qur'an and traditions of the Prophet. He asserts that when a person has promised to do something religious, such as follow a brotherhood, he must keep that promise. He criticizes the Tijaniyya specifically for assuming it can convert persons from other brotherhoods, suggesting that this was not the policy of the original Tijani leaders and that the practice is a false modern innovation .
Publications
He has published well over 150 treatises and books explaining various aspects of Islamic philosophy, Arabic and Hausa linguistics. His writing career started quite early in his life in his youth. Perhaps not surprisingly, his first treatise was on Abdulkadir Jilani, the founder of the Qadiriyya Islamic Philosophical movement. His method of writing usually follows the medieval scholastic tradition widespread in the middle-east. Thus he combines commentary with critical appraisal. A classical example of his approach is provided in the intellectual conjectures-and-refutations arguments of Al-Ghazali in his Tahaful Falasafa, and Ibn Rushd's counter-commenterary, Tahaful Tahafut.
His writings follow a specified and characteristic pattern; beginning with the praise of God, then the rationale of the writing under consideration and the proposed title of the work., followed by an abstract and then the main exposition. An example is his exposition on arm positioning during prayers which he explained in Kan Ul Fasab. He started by priasing Shehu Abdulmahal-al-Shawani a leading exponent of Shafi'iyya movement which supports Saddlu (dropping the arms by the side during the standing portion of the prayer). He then brings a Prophetic tradition (Hadith) which shows the Prophet's support for such arm positioning. Subsequently, the then brings more Prophetic traditions which explained the stands of both Sadlu and Kablu (crossing the arms on the chest during the standing portion of the prayer).
In his various writings, Sheikh Nasiru Kabara has clearly brought out the concept of Kanawiyya, a connation of Kano as an intellectual entrepot in medieval Africa. Some of the books and treatises he has published are included below.
BIOGRAFIE VAN SJEIK NASIR KABARA KANO NIGERIA
Automatically translated into Dutch thanks to WorldLingo
De Sjeik Muhammad al-Nasir Kabara van Maulana (Ra)
Het leven en Tijden
door. SANI BALA SHEHU
sanibalashehukano@yahoo.com sanibalashehu2004@yahoo.co.uk
+2348065872052. 08080626852 08073400690 08045208685 07029467896
Amirul Jaysh, Sjeik Nasir Muhammad Kabara (Ra), het Leven en de Sjeik
Nasir Muhammad Umar Kabara, een genoteerde Islamitische geleerde van Tijden en philsopher waren geboren in 1912 in dorp Guringuwa buiten Kano, Nigeria. Zijn grootouders kwamen uit Kabara, een stad onder koninkrijk Timbucktu. Zijn derde generatiegrootvader - ook van Kabara in Timbucktu - Mallam Umaru, die ook als Mallam Kabara wordt bekend was enige van lineage in Adakawa in stad te regelen Kano, alvorens op wat zich te bewegen nu genoemd geworden afdeling Kabara is, die na hem wordt genoemd. Hij was een verwezenlijkte Sufi in Timbucktu alvorens voor Kano te vertrekken.
Het eerste ding Mallam Kabara deed bij het regelen in afdeling Kabara was een school in 1787, van een soort op te richten die algemeen als School Zaure wordt verwezen waar de buiteningangszaal van zijn huis in een Islamitische school werd omgezet. Deze school misschien onder de oudste geregistreerde scholen in Kano is nu een deel van het huishouden van Darul Qadiriyya van Sjeik Nasiru Kabara.
Youthful Nasiru was uiterst enthousiast in zijn onderzoek naar kennis. Zijn eerste ontmoeting met geavanceerd Islamitisch het leren systeem - lang nadat hij van het normale Allo (Qur'an die van houten leien wordt gelezen) het scholen systeem een diploma had behaald, te voorschijn komen uiterst vloeiend in Arabische taal, Islamitische jurisprudance en Taalkunde - was met Bad'ul Amli en Murshida, beide verhandelingen op Tauhidi; de eenheid van God. Volgde daarna een voracious apepite voor andere boeken en spoedig had hij zijn studies van Ahlari, Iziyya en Risala afgerond: alle boeken noodzakelijk voor een juist inzicht in Islam. Omdat in Islam er geen concept auteursrecht is, spoedig nadat youthful Nasir zelf Risala en Ishiriniya (boek van poëzie in lof van Prophet) zette en hen verkocht.
Zijn leerproces was hoofdzakelijk zelf-gemotiveerd, met natuurlijk aangewezen aanmoediging van zijn hoofdleraar: Mallam Natsugune. Derhalve was youthful Nasiru een voracious onderzoeker van Islamitische kennis, ver zijnd voor zijn tijdgenoten - predikte hij aan zijn klasgenoten inderdaad eigenlijk zijn geavanceerd begrip van de betekenis van Quran; waarbij de vroege zaden van zijn ingang in Tafsir op dergelijke tedere tijd worden gezaaid.
In Kano van die era - jaren '20 - er waren vijf geavanceerde scholen; hoofdzakelijk wat als pre-universitaire scholen kan worden beschouwd nu - waar jonge Nasiru die wordt gebruikt om, op van hem gaan, zijn kennis bevorderen. Deze scholen waren:
1. Het huis van Imam van de Afgevaardigde van de Centrale Moskee van de Stad, die in de Daneji afdeling 2
wordt gevestigd. Het huis van Mallam Ibrahim, Belangrijkste Rechter van Kano bij Yakasai afdeling
3. Het huis van de Rechter van de Kring Bichi, Alhaji Musdafa bij Kurawa afdeling
4. Het huis van Sjeik Abdulkarim (Sambo Mallam) bij Ciromawa afdeling
5. Het huis van Belangrijkste Imam van Zawiyya, Mallam Inuwa bij afdeling Mayanka
Deze scholen had uitgebreide verwijzingsbibliotheken die inzamelingen bevatten die uit diverse Afrikaanse scholastische centra van het Noorden worden verkregen. Allen vormen de centrale kern van de dorst van Nasiru voor verdere kennis.
Zelfs op die tijd, was zijn aanwinst van kennis meer dan het rote leren; hij vroeg wat niet hij van zijn leraar begreep; aldus zijnd uiterst revolutionair in zijn begrip van Islamitische kennis. De traditionele waarneming van het verband tussen de leerling en de meester in het Islamitische het scholen systeem geeft zelden ruimte voor interactieve aanwinst van de kennis. Nasir keurde dergelijke didactische verhouding goed, en bijgevolg, met diffidence en eerbied, altijd verzoeken voor verdere uitwerking niet van geen wat hij begreep van wat hij van zijn leraren leerde - wie zelf slechts te bereid waren om de jonge geleerde te verplichten. Dit was verrassend niet, zelfs in de „archaïsch“ jaren '30 Kano, overwegend het feit dat sommige van zijn andere leraren gediplomeerden van de al-Azhar Universiteit in Kaïro, de oudste universiteit in Afrika waren. Aldus combineerde Nasiru Kabara twee intellectuele tradities: zijn voorgeslacht Timbuctu toen Timbuctu zelf een citadel van learnig in de Soedan was; en zijn contact met het bezoeken van geleerden en professoren van al-Azhar in de jaren '30 in Kano.
Onder de lokale ingezetenen in Kano die toetrad was Qadiriyya op dit ogenblik (1937) jonge lad, Muhammad Nasir Kabara, die bestemd was om grote veranderingen in tariqa te brengen en niet alleen om de viering van de verjaardag van Shaykh Abd al-Qadir al-Jilani, festival te introduceren die niet door het Noorden Afrikanen werd uitgeoefend, maar ook om het gebruik van bandiri aan elke hoek van Hausaland te dragen.
Op de leeftijd van zeventien, was Muhammad Nasir werkelijk te jong om als lid van Qadiriyya worden goedgekeurd maar aangezien zijn grootvader, Mallam Nakabara - een uiterst goed geleerde Mallam - hem wenste om de orde in te gaan, Shaykh Sa'ad een kleine keus maar had om hem wazifa te geven. Hoewel de jeugd, Nasir niet alleen goed in klassieke Arabische literatuur en wetenschappen maar werd gelezen hij was ook vertrouwd met het leren van Sufism en de werkzaamheden van de belangrijke sufigeleerden van de tijd.
Toen Amir van Kano Abdullahi Bayero op hajj Nasir verzond een brief door Wali Sulaiman naar Khalifa van Qadiriyya, Shaykh Abu al-Hassan zoals-Sammani, de kleinzoon van de stichter die van Sammaniyya ging, hem vraagt om hem een ijaza te geven om muqaddam van zijn eigen zawiya te worden. Shaykh was verbaasd om zulk een hoogst geleerde jeugd te vernemen en hij verzond een jubba en een GLB naar Nasir samen met een brief van benoeming als muqaddam. Hoewel Nasir zich niet onmiddellijk van de gemeenschap in Alfindiki scheidde, aangezien Shaykh Sa'ad nog in leven was, werden zijn acties beschouwd als innovaties door de Arabieren. In 1949 maakte Nasir Hajj en ontmoette nieuwe Khalifa, Shaykh Hashim en Shaykh Muhammad van Mauretanië. Voor zijn terugkeerreis, bezocht hij de Soedan, waar hij Shaykh Muhammad al-Fatih b. samenkwam. Shaykh Qarib Allah, Khalifa van Soedanese Samaniyya. Hij bezocht ook andere Arabische landen waar hij vele dingen betreffende de hadra en bandiriorganisatie leerde. Tegen de Sjeik van 1950 was Nasir in menig opzicht veel veelzijdiger en eclectisch dan zijn leraren; en met succes hebben gemaaktd Sufism voor breder publiek aanvaardbaar, kon hij zo Qadiriyya maken in elk deel van het land doordringen.
Aldus aangezien ongeveer 1958 Nasiru Kabara als de leider van alle takken van Qadiriyya in Kano is beschouwd. De lijnen van gezag binnen de leiding de structuur, echter, kan in termen van zowel de individuen worden bekeken het van wie gezag zich over verscheidene takken en bijzondere patronen binnen elke tak uitbreidt.
Nasiru Kabara ontving zijn origineel gezag in Kuntiyya en Ahl al-Bayt van Ibrahim Nakabara, die de dominante twintigste-eeuw Qadiriyya van de cijferaaneenschakeling nineteenthand in Kano was. Ibrahim (ca. 1867-1941) was Fulani en zijn grootvader was oorspronkelijk van Katsina. Hij leerde een brede waaier van onderwerpen van zijn vader: wet, theologie, literatuur, logica, en grammatica. Hij leerde astrologie van Mahmud Kabara; wet (Mukhtasar) van babban mallami, Abdurrahman al-Sayudi; en sufism (vooral Qadiriyya) van zijn vader en van Ibrahim van Zaria, die aan Kano was gekomen. Door de leeftijd van dertig, was hij een rechtskundige adviseur aan Emir Aliyu geworden. Hij werd aangeboden werd de positie van alkali (rechter) maar geweigerd op de overtuiging geen die mallams in overheid zou moeten worden geïmpliceerda. Hij reiste niet buiten Kano en zette zijn positie als rechtskundige adviseur voort onder emirs Abbas, Usman, en Abdullahi Bayero. Hij was ook persoonlijke mallarn van Emir Usman. Ibrahim schreef geen boeken, hoewel hij zijn eigen geschreven commentaren op Mukhtasar bezat. Zijn huis in afdeling Kabara was een centrum van het hogere leren in Hausaland. Één sectie van zijn samenstelling werd terzijde gelegd voor studies van theologie en mysticism, en een andere sectie werd terzijde gelegd voor het bestuderen van wet. Hij was geen vurige verdediger van solitude (khalwa). Hoewel er andere leiders van traditionele Qadiriyya in Kano tijdens deze periode waren, werd het gezag van Ibrahim versterkt door zijn persoonlijke kwaliteiten van piety en kennis en door zijn doeltreffendheid als leraar van mallams. Hij werd niet opgevolgd in dit gezag door zijn zoon maar door zijn student Nasiru Kabara, die deze zelfde kwaliteiten tentoonstelde.
Nasiru Kabara werd " „gegeven“ aan Na Kabara van Ibrahim als kind en groeide in zijn huishouden. Als Fulani, heeft Nasiru toegang tot Traditionele Qadiriyya mallams in Kano gehad. Door zijn capaciteiten als geleerde en leraar, werd hij de waarschijnlijke erfgenaam aan Na Kabara van Ibrahim. „
Tijdens de periode vanaf 1935 tot 1955, was Nasiru succesvol in het vestigen van direct contact met de primaire bronnen van gezag Qadiriyya in Khartoum, Timbuktu, en Bagdad; en zo werd hij meer en meer onafhankelijk van Traditionele lijnen Qadiriyya van gezag. Zijn reis aan Bagdad in 1953 was een draaiend punt in zijn carrière. Het vestigde direct zijn gezag binnen het internationale hoofdkwartier van Qadiriyya; terwijl in Bagdad hij klassieke en moderne aspecten van Qadiriyya, en later bestudeerde introduceerde hij of interpreteerde veel van dit materiaal voor een Nigeriaans publiek; zijn enige reizende metgezel aan Bagdad was de rijke handelaar, Sanusi Dantata. Als resultaat van de reis, beveiligde Nasiru de financiële steun voor zijn campagne aan hervorming Qadiriyya en breidt het op een massaniveau uit.
Op zijn terugkeer van Bagdad, opende Nasiru zijn eigen moskee Qadiriyya en daalde om de moskee van Muhammad Sidi bij te wonen. Tegen 1956 zich het meest van de leiding en de leken had gericht op Nasiru en een verzoening werd bereikt met Muhammad Sidi. Tijdens deze periode reiste Nasiru door noordelijke het openen van Nigeria moskees en het benoemen muqaddams. Hij voedde ook zijn contacten in de Arabische tweemaal aan Bagdad terugkeert en wereld die, die Khartoum, Kaïro, Beiroet, Damascus, Teheran, en Amman bezoekt. In 1958 werd hij benoemd directeur van gerechtelijke School Shahuci en Bibliotheek in Kano. In 1961 opende hij zijn eigen Hogere Primaire School Islamiyya in afdeling Gwale en is blijven onderwijzend geavanceerde onderwerpen in zijn eigen huis.
In 1949 werd Nasiru benoemd aan de emir Raad van Adviseurs door Abdullahi Bayero. Toen Muhammad Sanusi emir in 1954 werd, echter, werd Nasiru vervangen op de raad door Opnieuw gevormde Tijani mallams. Tijdens regeer van Sanusi, Nasiru die als advocaat aan het Noordelijke MoslimHof van Beroep wordt gediend en voortdurend als één van de twee tafsirlezers in palace (q.v.). Met de benoeming van Ado Bayero als emir in 1963, werd Nasiru opnieuw een adviseur aan emir. Sinds 1963 is hij een lid van de Raad Kaduna van Mallams geweest en op talrijke lokale en regionale commissies geweest, die zich van het Inheemse Comité van de Instantie Kano voor Prostitutie aan het Noordelijke Nigeriaanse Speciale Comité voor Onderwijs in Provincie Kano uitstrekken.
Ondanks zijn betrokkenheid als overheid mallam, heeft Nasiru Kabara een basis van gezagsonafhankelijke van de administratieve structuren in Kano en noordelijk Nigeria gehandhaafd. Hij is grotendeels verantwoordelijk voor het maken van Qadiriyya voor de gemeenschappelijke man aanvaardbaar, zowel Fulani als Hausa geweest, en een belangrijke tussenpersoon tussen de Fulani gemeenschappelijkere uitspraakklasse en Hausa geweest. Hij heeft de theologie en mysticism van Qadiriyya in de idiomatische uitdrukking Hausa vertaald.
Naast de functies van initiatie, opleiding, en bemiddeling, heeft de leiding Qadiriyya in Kano verantwoordelijkheid om de diverse activiteiten van het broederschap en te financieren en te organiseren voor het communiceren met alle segmenten van het broederschap, lokaal en nationaal. In de transformatie van het broederschap van een elite aan een massaorganisatie, is een belangrijke leidingsfunctie de inspiratie en het beleid van ritueel geweest.
Het grootste deel van Opnieuw gevormde Qadiriyya members do wuridi in groepen die door imam worden geleid. De nauwkeurige aard van wuridi vari�ërt met de subgroep binnen Qadiriyya. De totale tijd besteed in elke groep zou ongeveer dertig minuten per dag zijn. Sommige imams Qadiriyya (van Salamiyya) leiden twee keer per week ook bandirizittingen ongeveer in de avonden. Tijdens deze zittingen van het groepsgebed wordt de leider-aanhanger samenhang sterk versterkt, gedeeltelijk door de traditionele verhouding van imam aan hen die „.“ erachter bid
Opnieuw gevormde Qadiriyya heeft een speciale nadruk op groepsviering van de verjaardag van de stichter (Mauludin Abdulkadir) gelegd. Deze ceremonie wordt specifiek geïdentificeerde met Opnieuw gevormde Qadiriyya en in Kano door Nasiru Kabara in ongeveer 1959 in werking gesteld. Het dient als jaarlijkse vergadering voor broederschapleiders en leden van in heel noordelijk Nigeria. De delegaties van elk van de belangrijkste noordelijke steden komen in Kano voor een volledige dag van gebeden en activiteiten samen. De centrale eigenschap van de dag is groepsprocession, die door gebiedsdelegaties, van het huis van Nasiru Kabara op het gebied Jarkasa van afdeling Kabara aan de begraafplaats van Kano Qadiriyya ten westen van Stad Kano wordt geschikt, waar de gebeden over de graven van de heiligen van Kano Qadiriyya worden gezegd. Procession dient ook als enige tijd in het jaar wanneer de mannen, de vrouwen, en de kinderen allen aan de zelfde vereringsdienst deelnemen. De orde van procession wijst ruwweg op de hiërarchie van gezag binnen de elite Qadiriyya; er is een binnenkern van muqaddams die Nasiru Kabara tijdens deze periode begeleiden.
Van de patronen van gezag en communautaire withiin Qadiriyya in Kano kunnen verscheidene punten worden samengevat:
(1) de vereniging met Qadiriyya in de negentiende eeuw was beperkt tot Fulani mallams en beheerders (die hun gezag uit de leiders van Fulani Jihad) afleidden en tot de Afrikaanse Arabieren van het Noorden (die zich niet godsdienstig in het Milieu Kano integreerden).
(2) met het vastleggen van koloniale regel, bevestigden de elementen in de Arabische gemeenschap Kano hun eigen geestelijke verbindingen met de Afrikaanse bronnen van het Noorden van geestelijk gezag opnieuw.
(3) de leden van de mallam klasse Hausa begonnen met deze vernieuwde vorm van het Noorden Afrikaanse Qadiriyya te associëren en waren rccruited in leidingsposities binnen één generatie.
(4) een deel van het succes van Qadiriyya in de sector Hausa was toe te schrijven aan zich een nadruk op groepsverering en het concentreren van activiteiten binnen lokale moskees.
(5) de „wettige“ opvolger aan de leiding van traditionele Fulani Qadiriyya in Kano (Nasiru Kabara) die met onafhankelijke lijnen van gezag Qadiriyya als versterking van zijn „geërft“ gezag wordt en die wordt gestreefd aangesloten naar om de secties Arabier, Hausa, en Fulani van Qadiriyya te consolideren.
(6) dit werd verwezenlijkt gedeeltelijk door Qadiriyya van een elitebasis tot een massabasis uit te breiden. In dit proces, was de steun van rijke handelaars Hausa essentieel. Voor het massaniveau, was Opnieuw gevormde Qadiriyya ook een rdection van het nationalisme van emergizngKano die eiste dat het godsdienstige gezag van Sokoto en Noord-Afrika aan Kano zelf wordt verplaatst.
(7) wegens de massabasis van Opnieuw gevormde Qadiriyya, was het niet meer mogelijk voor de elite Qadiriyya om zich volledig met de Kano uitspraakklasse te identificeren. Aldus, terwijl de broederschapleiders als adviseurs aan de uitspraakklasse zouden kunnen handelen, hebben zij gewoonlijk hun status als niet-gouvernementele mallarns bewaakt.
(8) misschien ten gevolge van de verschuiving van een elite naar een massabasis, werd de broederschapleiding betrokken bij twee vrij nieuwe functies: de interpretatie van doctrine voor lokaal gebruik en de inspiratie, door ritueel en ceremonie, van groep en massaverering.
De doctrines van Instantie en Gemeenschap in Opnieuw gevormde Qadiriyya
terwijl Traditionele Qadiriyya in Kano zich zwaar op het geschrift van de negentiende eeuwJihad als belangrijkste bronnen van doctrine Qadiriyya de leiders van Opnieuw gevormde Qadiriyya baseerde zijn zelf vruchtbare schrijvers geweest. Like the Fulani Jihad writers, the contemporary Qadiriyya writers are concerned to relate classical Islamic thought to local circumstances. In the interim period between the Jihad writings and the contemporary writings, there was "a dearth of Qadiriyya literature in Kano. None of the major leaders during this period, Ibrahim na Kabara, Ali Musa, Saad b. Ahmad, Sharif Garba, Sidi Muhammad, and Muhammad Sidi-wrote on Qadiriyya. The Reformed Qadiriyya movement, associated with Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali, has not only produced its own literature but has revived an interest in the Jihad classics," has introduced works on Qadiriyya from the Arab world," and has inspired local Hausa "praise poets" " to express themselves on brotherhood matters. Nasiru Kabara hase written about 150 works in all.
The amount of systematic theology in the writings of Nasiru Kabara has been minimal; his primary purpose seems to be to relate the history and elements of the brotherhood in terms understandable to contemporary Kano society and to stimulate an identification with the saints of the brotherhood. The writings of Ahmad b. Ali cover many of these same topics. There is no specific praise of the Shaziliyya way, as distinct from Qadiriyya, and much of the literature contains poems that are sung at worship gatherings. Another Reformed Qadiriyya leader in Kano, Adamu na Ma'aji (q.v.), seems mainly concerned with chains of authority and conditions of initiation."
The writings of brotherhood leaders such as Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali espouse the community and authority of Qadiriyya on two major grounds: affiliational (primarily on the basis of direct personal experience) and communal (primarily on the basis of loyalty to the nineteenth-century Jihad tradition). Within the category of affiliational appeal, there have been five areas of doctrinal exposition: the origins and spread of Qadiriyya, the elements and requirements of Qadiriyya, the benefits and blessings for those who follow Qadiriyya, personal praise of the Qadiriyya saints, and general preaching.
With regard to the spread of Qadiriyy, Nasiru Kabara describes in Alnafahat the Qadiriyya shaykhs in history and the distribution of Qadiriyya among the continents of the world." In Naf' al-'ibad, he discusses the Qadiriyya caliphate throughout history. In Ithaf al-khald'iq he presents the genealogy of the founder, 'Abd al-Qadir, and a considerable amount of biographical data. He also mentions some of the successors of 'Abd al-Qadir in the contemporary world.
With regard 4o the requirements of Qadiriyya, Nasiru Kabara elabarates in Al-nafabdt the details and the nature of the brotherhood ceremonies." In the Naf' aVibad he describes the Qadiriyya daily voluntary prayers." In the Ithaf al-khald'iq he discusses the necessities and voluntary aspects of ablution, washing, taimama (symbolic washing with dust), prayer, prostration, giving of alms, fasting, pilgrimage, and other Islamic rituals for those who follow Qadiriyya. In Da'wat al-ghawth he elaborates on the conditions for following Qadiriyya.
With regard to the benefits of Qadiriyya, all of the above-mentioned writings refer to the personal satisfactions and blessings that accrue to those who follow Qadiriyya. Nasiru describes the "glorious benefits" for the followers of Qadiriyya and assures them of the best reward.
With regard to the praise of Qadiriyya saints, it is clear that instead of being a perfunctory gesture it is a culmination of the past that is directed into the brotherhood experience. In Naf al-'ibad, Nasiru inscribes the prayer he offered while at the tomb of 'Abd al-Qadir in Baghdad.
The praise of a primary saint, 'Abd al-Qadir, should not obscure the central fact of all the reformed brotherhoods: an individual is encouraged to do addu'a (al-du'a), that is, to pray directly to God. Nasiru exemplifies the passion and symbolism of such a prayer in the Subhdt al-anwar.
Finally, general preaching has always been a function of the religious authorities who try to induce conversions through individual volition. Such preaching is invariably in the vernacular language (in this case Hausa); and if it can be fashioned into poetry, it will be sung by minstrels near and far. Nasiru Kabara has been particularly successful in his general preaching.
Nasiru Kabara identified in the Subhat al-anwar, five branches of Qadiriyya in Hausaland, one of which is Usmaniyya. In various other works, he refers to Usmaniyya al-Fudawiyya and identifies himself with this branch. In the Naf al-'ibad he includes the prayer he read when he visited the tomb of Usman dan Fodio, and it is clear that he regards Muhammad Bello, son of Usman, as among the founders of Usmaniyya. Nasiru writes that he hopes to visit Bello at Wurno (the assumption being that Bello is not dead). While Nasiru does not include any reference to special ritual associated with Usmaniyya, it is clear that the Jihad leaders are considered to be of special importance. The continual identification of them with Qadiriyya is clearly intended to remind their descendants not to desert the "faith of their fathers." The Hausa poem by Ibrahim Makwarari (Begen Shehu Abdulkadir) is illustrative of the way in which Nasiru is regarded as the successor to the Jihad leaders.
With regard to the alleged doctrinal prohibition against change of brotherhood, there has been an attack on mallams who encourage such conversion, primarily those associated with Reformed Tijaniyya. The doctrinal basis of this attack is stated by Nasiru Kabara in Al-nalabat, where he suggests that the Tijani mallams are "fabricating" if they assert that one tariqa is better than another. He argues for a strict prohibition against leaving the Qadiriyya brotherhood, supporting his argument with verses from the Qur'an and traditions of the Prophet. He asserts that when a person has promised to do something religious, such as follow a brotherhood, he must keep that promise. He criticizes the Tijaniyya specifically for assuming it can convert persons from other brotherhoods, suggesting that this was not the policy of the original Tijani leaders and that the practice is a false modern innovation .
Publications
He has published well over 150 treatises and books explaining various aspects of Islamic philosophy, Arabic and Hausa linguistics. His writing career started quite early in his life in his youth. Perhaps not surprisingly, his first treatise was on Abdulkadir Jilani, the founder of the Qadiriyya Islamic Philosophical movement. His method of writing usually follows the medieval scholastic tradition widespread in the middle-east. Thus he combines commentary with critical appraisal. A classical example of his approach is provided in the intellectual conjectures-and-refutations arguments of Al-Ghazali in his Tahaful Falasafa, and Ibn Rushd's counter-commenterary, Tahaful Tahafut.
His writings follow a specified and characteristic pattern; beginning with the praise of God, then the rationale of the writing under consideration and the proposed title of the work., followed by an abstract and then the main exposition. An example is his exposition on arm positioning during prayers which he explained in Kan Ul Fasab. He started by priasing Shehu Abdulmahal-al-Shawani a leading exponent of Shafi'iyya movement which supports Saddlu (dropping the arms by the side during the standing portion of the prayer). He then brings a Prophetic tradition (Hadith) which shows the Prophet's support for such arm positioning. Subsequently, the then brings more Prophetic traditions which explained the stands of both Sadlu and Kablu (crossing the arms on the chest during the standing portion of the prayer).
In his various writings, Sheikh Nasiru Kabara has clearly brought out the concept of Kanawiyya, a connation of Kano as an intellectual entrepot in medieval Africa. Some of the books and treatises he has published are included below.
سيرة الالشّيخ [نسر] [كبرا] [كنو] نيجيريا
Automatically translated into Arabic thanks to WorldLingo
[مولنا] شيخة [موهمّد] [أل-نسر] [كبرا] ([را])
حياة وأوقات
ب. [سني] [بلا] [شهو]
[سنيبلشهوكنوهوو.كم] [سنيبلشهو2004هوو.ك.وك]
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[أميرول] [جش], شيخة [نسر] [موهمّد] [كبرا] ([را]), حياة وأوقات
شيخة [نسر] [موهمّد] [أومر] [كبرا], يلاحظ طالبة [إيسلميك] و [فيلسفر] كان في 1912 في [غرينغوا] قرية خارج [كنو], نيجيريا. أتى جده من [كبرا], مدينة تحت [تيمبوكتث] مملكة. ه [ثيرد جنرأيشن] جد - أيضا من [كبرا] في [تيمبوكتث] - [ملّم] [أومرو], أيضا يعرف بما أنّ [ملّم] [كبرا] كان الوحيدة واحدة من النسب أن يقرّر في [أدكوا] في [كنو] مدينة, قبل يتحرّك فوق إلى ماذا يكون الآن عرفت ك [كبرا] حراسة, يعيّن بعد ه. هو كان [سوفي] بارعة في [تيمبوكتث] قبل يغادر ل [كنو].
أتمّ الشيء أولى [ملّم] [كبرا] على يقرّر في [كبرا] حراسة كان أن يؤسّس مدرسة في 1787, من نوع عادة يرجع ك [زور] مدرسة حيث ال [إنترنس هلّ] خارجيّة من منزله كان حوّلت داخل مدرسة [إيسلميك]. هذا مدرسة من المحتمل بين القديمة يسجّل مدارس في [كنو] الآن جزء من [درول] [قديريا] منزل الشيخة [نسرو] [كبرا].
كان [نسرو] فتريّة جدّا متحمّسة في بحثه لمعرفة. مجابهه أولى مع متقدّمة [إيسلميك] يعلم نظامة - طويلة عقب كان هو قد تخرّج من العاديّة [ألّو] ([قور'ن] يقرأ من خشبيّة أردوازات) [سكهوول سستم], [إمرجنغ] جدّا فصيحة في لغة [أربيك], [جوريسبرودنس] [إيسلميك] ولسانيّات - كان مع [بد'ول] [أملي] و [مورشيدا], كلا مقال على [توهيدي]; الوحدة الإلهة. بعد ذلك تبع [أببيت] نهمة لأخرى كتب وقريبا كان هو قد أتمّ دراساته من [أهلري], [إيزيا] و [ريسلا]: كلّ يحجز ضروريّة لتفهم مناسبة إسلام. نضّد لأنّ في إسلام هناك يكون ما من مفهوم الحقّ نشر, قريبا بعد [نسر] فتيّة كان بنفسي [ريسلا] و [إيشيرينيا] (كتاب الشعر في تمجيد من النبي) وباعهم.
كان [لرن بروسسّ] ه أساسا [سلف-موتيفتد], مع [أف كورس] تشجيع مناسبة من معلمته رئيسيّة: [ملّم] [نتسوغن]. بالتّالي, كان [نسرو] فتريّة باحثة نهمة من معرفة [إيسلميك], يكون بعيد أمام متعاصره - حقّا هو كان واقعيّا وعظ إلى رفيق دراسته خاصّتي يتقدّم تفهم من المعنى من [قورن]; لذلك يزرع البذرات مبكّرة من مدخله داخل [تفسر] في هذا عمر ليّنة.
في [كنو] من أنّ عصر - عشرينات - كان هناك خمسة يتقدّم مدارس; أساسا ماذا يستطيع كنت اعتبرت [بر-ونيفرستي] مدارس الآن - حيث [نسرو] شابّة استعمل أن يذهب, على ه خاصّة, إلى بعيد معرفته. كان هذا مدارس:
1. المنزل النائبة [إيمم] من المدينة مسجد مركزية, يحدّ في [دنجي] حراسة
2. المنزل [ملّم] إبراهيم, قاضية رئيسيّة [كنو] في [يكسي] حراسة
3. المنزل من [بيش] دارة قاضية, [ألهجي] [موسدفا] في [كوروا] حراسة
4. المنزل الالشّيخ [أبدولكريم] ([ملّم] [سمبو]) في [سروموا] حراسة
5. نال المنزل من [إيمم] رئيسيّة من [زويا], [ملّم] [إينووا] في [منكا] حراسة
هذا مدارس تلقّوا واسعة مرجع مكتبات يحتوي تجميع من مراكز مختلفة شماليّة [أفريكن] مدرسيّة. كلّ يشكّل اللبن مركزية من [نسرو] حالة عطش لمعرفة بعيدة.
حتّى في أنّ عمر, كان اكتسابه المعرفة أكثر من [روت] يعلم; هو استنطق ماذا هو لم يفهم من معلمته; لذلك يكون جدّا ثوريّة في تفهمه من معرفة [إيسلميك]. يعطي الإدراك تقليديّة من العلاقة بين التلميذة والسيد في ال [سكهوول سستم] [إيسلميك] نادرا غرفة لاكتساب تحاوريّ من المعرفة. لم يقبل [نسر] هذا علاقة تعليميّة, وبالتّالي, مع [ديفّيدنس] وإحترام, دائما طلبات لتفصيل بعيدة من ماذا هو لم يفهم من ماذا هو علم من معلماته - الذي بنفسي كان فقط أيضا مستعدّة أن يجبر الطالبة شابّة. لم يفاجئ هذا كان, حتّى في ال "قديمة" ثلاثينات [كنو], [كنسدرينغ] الحقيقة أنّ بعض من ه أخرى معلمات كان متخرجات من ال [أل-زهر] جامعة في قاهرة, الجامعة قديمة في إفريقيا. لذلك ضمّ [نسرو] [كبرا] اثنان تقاليد عقليّة: ه [تيمبوكتث] سلسلة عندما كان [تيمبوكتث] بنفسي قلعة ال [لرنيغ] في سودان; وخاصّتي اتّصال مع يزور طالبات وأستاذات من [أل-زهر] في الثلاثينات في [كنو].
بين المواطن محلّيّ في [كنو] الذي تلاقى كان [قديريا] في هذا وقت (1937) ذكر شابّة, [موهمّد] [نسر] [كبرا], الذي كان معدّ ل أن يحضر تغيرات عظيمة في ال [تريقا] وليس فحسب أن يقدّم الإحتفال من العيد ميلاد من [شكه] [أبد] [أل-قدير] [أل-جيلني], مهرجان أيّ كان لم يمارس بالإفريقيات شماليّة, غير أنّ أيضا أن يحمل الإستعمال ال [بنديري] إلى كلّ ركن [هوسلند].
في العمر من [سفنتين], كان [موهمّد] [نسر] حقّا أيضا شابّة أن يكون قبلت كعضوة من [قديريا] غير أنّ, بما أنّ جده, [ملّم] [نكبرا] - [ملّم] جيّدة مثقّفة جدّا - يتمنّىه أن يدخل الأمر, [شكه] [س'د] تلقّى إختبار صغيرة غير أنّ أن يعطيه ال [وزيفا]. رغم أنّ شباب, [نسر] كان ليس فحسب جيّدة يقرأ داخل كلاسيكيّة [أربيك] أدب وأعلام غير أنّ كان هو أيضا يلمّ مع ال يعلم من [سوفيسم] والأعمال من الرئيسيّة [سوفي] طالبات من الوقت.
عندما ذهب [أمير] من [كنو] [أبدولّهي] [برو] على الحج [نسر] يرسل حرف من خلال [ولي] [سوليمن] إلى خليفة من [قديريا], [شكه] أبو [أل-هسّن] [أس-سمّني], الحفيدة من المؤسسة من [سمّنيا], يسأله أن يعطيه [إيجزا] أن يصبح [موقدّم] من ه خاصّة [زويا]. أدهشت [شكه] كان أن يعلم هذا شباب مثقّفة جدّا وهو أرسل [جوبّا] وغطاء إلى [نسر] مع حرف التعيين ك [موقدّم]. رغم أنّ [نسر] لم فورا فصلبنفسي من الجماعة في [ألفينديكي], بما أنّ [شكه] [س'د] كان بعد حيّة, اعتبرت أعماله كان كإبتداعات ب ال [أرب]. في 1949 [نسر] يجعل الحج ويلتقى الجديدة خليفة, [شكه] هاشم و [شكه] [موهمّد] من موريتانيا. على سفره عائدة, زار هو سودان, حيث هو التقى مع [شكه] [موهمّد] [أل-فتيه] [ب.]. [شكه] [قريب] الله, خليفة من [سمنيا] سودانيّة. هو أيضا زار أخرى بلاد عربيّة حيث هو علم كثير أشياء في ما يتعلّق ب ال [هدرا] و [بنديري] تنظيم. ب 1950 كان شيخة [نسر] في كثير طرق بعيدا أكثر متعدّد استعمال وانتقائيّة من معلماته; ويتلقّى بنجاح يجعل [سوفيسم] مقبولة إلى يوسع استماع, كان هو لذلك يمكن أن يجعل [قديريا] اخترقت داخل كلّ جزء من البلد.
لذلك بما أنّ حوالي 1958 [نسرو] [كبرا] يتلقّى يكون اعتبرت الزعيمة من كلّ فروع [قديريا] في [كنو]. ال [لين وف وثوريتي] ضمن القيادة بنية, مهما, يمكن كنت شاهدت بخصوص على حدّ سواء الفردات الذي سلطة يمدّد على عدّة فروع والتفصيل أساليب ضمن كلّ فرع.
استلم [نسرو] [كبرا] سلطته أصليّة في [كونتيا] و [أهل] [أل-بت] من إبراهيم [نكبرا], الذي كان الرقم مسيطرة يقترن [نينتينثند] [تونتيث-سنتثري] [قديريا] في [كنو]. إبراهيم ([ك.]. 1867-1941) كان [فولني] وكان جده أصلا من [كتسنا]. هو علم [ويد رنج] المواضيع من أبه: قانون, لاهوت, أدب, منطق, والنحو. هو علم علم تنجيم من محمود [كبرا]; قانون ([موكهتسر]) من ال [ملّمي] [ببّن], [أبدورّهمن] [أل-سودي]; و [سوفيسم] (خصوصا [قديريا]) من أبه ومن إبراهيم من [زريا], الذي كان قد أتى إلى [كنو]. بالعمر من ثلاثون, كان هو قد أصبح [لغل دفيسر] إلى [إمير] [أليو]. هو كان قدّمت الموقعة القلي (قاضية) غير أنّ رفضت على القناعة أنّ [ملّمس] سوفت لا يكون تضمّنت في حكومة. هو لم يسافر خارج [كنو] واستمرّ موقعته ك [لغل دفيسر] تحت أمراء [أبّس], [أوسمن], و [أبدولّهي] [برو]. هو كان أيضا ال [ملّرن] شخصيّة [إمير] [أوسمن]. لم يكتب إبراهيم كتب, رغم أنّ هو ملك ه خاصّة يكتب تعليقات على [موكهتسر]. كان منزله في [كبرا] حراسة مركز من [هيغر] يعلم في [هوسلند]. رصدت واحدة قسم من مركبته كان لدراسات من لاهوت وتصوف, وآخر قسم كان رصدت ل يدرس قانون. هو [ب] لم مقترح متّقدة عزلة ([كهلوا]). رغم أنّ هناك كان أخرى زعيمات من [قديريا] تقليديّة في [كنو] أثناء هذا فترة, إبراهيم عزّزت سلطة كان بنوعياته شخصيّة من تقوى ومعرفة وبفعاليته كمعلمة ال [ملّمس]. لم ينجح هو كان في هذا سلطة بإبنته غير أنّ بطالبته [نسرو] [كبرا], الذي عرض هذا نفسه نوعيات.
أعطيت [نسرو] [كبرا] " كان "" إلى إبراهيم [نا] [كبرا] كطفلة ونما فوق في منزله. ك [فولني], قد تلقّى [نسرو] منفذة إلى التقليديّة [قديريا] [ملّمس] في [كنو]. من خلال قدراته كطالبة ومعلمة, أصبح هو الوريثة مرجّحة إلى إبراهيم [نا] [كبرا]. كان "
أثناء الفترة من 1935 إلى 1955, [نسرو] ناجحة في يؤسّس اتّصال مباشرة مع المصادر أوّليّة من [قديريا] سلطة في خرطوم, تمبوكتو, وبغداد; ولذلك أصبح هو بدرجة متزايدة عضو مستقلّ من تقليديّة [قديريا] [لين وف وثوريتي]. كان رحلته إلى بغداد في 1953 [تثرن بوينت] في مهنته. هو أسّس سلطته مباشرة ضمن المقرّ رئيسيّ دوليّة [قديريا]; قدّم بينما في بغداد هو درس كلاسيكيّة ومظاهر حديثة [قديريا], وفيما بعد هو أو فسّر كثير من هذا مادة لاستماع نيجيريّة; كان ه وحيد يسافر رفيقة إلى بغداد التاجر غنيّة, [سنوس] [دنتتا]. نتيجة الرحلة, أمّن [نسرو] الدعم ماليّة لحملته إلى إصلاح [قديريا] ويمدّد هو إلى مستوى شاملة.
على عودته من بغداد, فتح [نسرو] ه خاصّة [قديريا] مسجد وانخفض أن يحضر المسجد [موهمّد] [سدي]. كان ب 1956 أكثر من القيادة و [ليتي] قد حاذى مع [نسرو] و[ربّروشمنت] كان بلغت مع [موهمّد] [سدي]. أثناء هذا فترة سافر [نسرو] طوال شماليّة نيجيريا فتحة مساجد ويعيّن [موقدّمس]. هو أيضا رعى اتّصالاته في العالم عربيّة, يرجع مرّتين إلى بغداد ويزور خرطوم, قاهرة, بيروت, دمشق, [تهرن], وعمّان. في 1958 عيّنت هو كان مديرة من [شهوس] قضائيّة مدرسة ومكتبة في [كنو]. في 1961 فتح هو ه خاصّة [إيسلميا] [بريمري سكهوول] كبريات في [غول] حراسة ويستمرّ يعلم مواضيع متقدّمة في ه خاصّة منزل.
في 1949 عيّنت [نسرو] كان إلى الأمراء مجلس المستشارات ب [أبدولّهي] [برو]. عندما أصبح [موهمّد] [سنوس] أمير في 1954, مهما, [نسرو] كان استبدلت على المجلس ب يصلح [تيجني] [ملّمس]. أثناء العهد [سنوس], [نسرو] يخدم ك جائز مستشارة إلى ال [كورت وف بّل] شماليّة مسلمة ويستمرّ كواحدة من الاثنان [تفسر] قارئات في القصر ([ق.ف.]). مع التعيين الضجة [برو] كأمير في 1963, أصبح [نسرو] ثانية مستشارة إلى الأمير. منذ 1963 قد كان هو عضوة من [كدونا] مجلس [ملّمس] ويكون على يتعدّد محلّية ولجن إقليميّة, يتراوح من [كنو] أهليّ طبيعيّ سلطة لجنة على بغاء إلى اللجنة شماليّة نيجيريّة خاصّة على تربية في [كنو] محافظة.
على الرغم من تورطه كحكومة [ملّم], قد أبقى [نسرو] [كبرا] قاعدة من سلطة عضو مستقلّ من البنى إداريّة في [كنو] ونيجيريا شماليّة. هو قد كان كثيرا مسؤولة ل يجعل [قديريا] مقبولة إلى الرجل عاديّة, على حدّ سواء [فولني] و [هوسا], ويكون وسيطة مهمّة بين [فولني] يحكم صنف وال [هوسا] [كمّونر]. هو قد ترجم اللاهوت وتصوف [قديريا] داخل ال [هوسا] تعبير.
[إين دّيأيشن تو] الأعمال من إستهلال, تدريب, وتوسط, [قديريا] يتلقّى قيادة في [كنو] مسؤولية لتمويل وينظّم الأنشطة مختلفة من الأخوة ول يتّصل مع كلّ قطعات من الأخوة, فرع محلّيّ ومواطنة. في التحويل من الأخوة من نخبة إلى تنظيم شاملة, كبريات قيادة قد كان عمل الشهيق وإدارة الطقس.
يتمّ أكثر من ال يصلح [قديريا] أعضاء [ووريدي] في مجموعة يقاد بإمام. يتغيّر الطبيعة دقيقة من ال [ووريدي] مع ال [سوبغرووب] ضمن [قديريا]. كان الوقت إجماليّة ينفق في كلّ مجموعة حوالي ثلاثون دقائق لكلّ يوم. بعض [قديريا] ([سلميا]) يقود [إيممس] أيضا [بنديري] جلسات حوالي مرّتين أسبوع في الأمسيات. صنّفت أثناء هذا صلاة جلسات ال [لدر-فولّوور] [نإكسوس] يكون بقوّة عزّزت, جزئيّا بالعلاقة تقليديّة من إمام إلى أنّ الذي "صلحت وراء."
قد وضع يصلح [قديريا] [سبسل مفسس] على مجموعة إحتفال من المؤسسة عيد ميلاد ([مولودين] [أبدولكدير]). عيّنت هذا مرسم خصوصا مع يصلح [قديريا] وكان بدأت في [كنو] ب [نسرو] [كبرا] في حوالي 1959. هو يخدم كاجتماع سنويّة لأخوة زعيمات وأعضاء من طوال نيجيريا شماليّة. يجتمع وفد من كلّ من المدائن كبريات شماليّة في [كنو] ل يشبع يوم من صلوات وأنشطة. السمة مركزية من اليوم مجموعة موكب, يرتّب بمنطقة وفود, من المنزل [نسرو] [كبرا] في [جركسا] منطقة من [كبرا] حراسة إلى [كنو] [قديريا] قبر يعتمد غرب [كنو] مدينة, حيث صلوات يكونون يقول على القبور من [كنو] [قديريا] قديسات. يخدم الموكب أيضا بما أنّ [ث ونلي تيم] في السنة عندما رجال, نساء, وأطفال كلّ يساهمون في ال نفسه عبادة خدمة. يشير الأمر الموكب تقريبا التدرج السلطة ضمن [قديريا] نخبة; هناك لب داخليّة [موقدّمس] الذي يرافق [نسرو] [كبرا] أثناء هذا فترة.
من الأساليب من سلطة وجماعة [ويثيين] [قديريا] في [كنو] عدّة نقطات يمكن كنت لخّصت:
(1) حدّدت جمعية مع [قديريا] في القرن تاسع عشر كان إلى [فولني] [ملّمس] ومديرات (الذي استنتج سلطتهم من الزعيمات من [فولني] [جيهد]) وإلى [أرب] شماليّة [أفريكن] (الذي لم يضمنبنفسي بطريقة متديّنة داخل [كنو] وسط).
(2) مع الإقامة من قاعدة مستعمرة, أعاد تأكيد عناصر في [كنو] جماعة عربيّة هم خاصّة خطوات روحانيّة مع مصادر شماليّة [أفريكن] من سلطة روحانيّة.
(3) بدأ أعضاء من ال [هوسا] [ملّم] صنف أن يصحب مع هذا يجدّد شكل من [قديريا] شماليّة [أفريكن] وكان [ركّرويتد] داخل قيادة موقعات ضمن واحدة جيل.
(4) كان جزء من النجاح [قديريا] في ال [هوسا] قطاعة واجبة إلى توكيد على مجموعة عبادة وال [فوكسنغ] من أنشطة ضمن مساجد محلّية.
(5) ال "شرعيّة" خلف إلى القيادة من [فولني] تقليديّة [قديريا] في [كنو] ([نسرو] [كبرا]) منتسبة مع خطوط مستقلّة من [قديريا] سلطة بما أنّ تقوية من خاصّتي "ورث" سلطة وبحث أن يعزّز ال [أرب], [هوسا], و [فولني] أقسام [قديريا].
(6) أنجزت هذا كان جزئيّا ب يمدّد [قديريا] من نخبة قاعدة إلى قاعدة شاملة. في هذا عملية, كان الدعم من غنيّة [هوسا] تجار أساسيّة. على المستوى شاملة, كان يصلح [قديريا] أيضا [ردكأيشن] من [إمرجزنغ] [كنو] قومية أيّ طلب أنّ سلطة دينيّة يغيّر من [سكوتو] و [نورث فريك] إلى [كنو] بنفسي.
(7) بسبب القاعدة شاملة من يصلح [قديريا], كان هو [نو لونجر] يمكن ل [قديريا] نخبة أن يعيّن تماما مع [كنو] يحكم صنف. لذلك, بينما أخوة زعيمات أمكن تصرّفت بما أنّ مستشارات إلى ال يحكم صنف, هم يتلقّى عادة يحرسون وضعهم ك [ملّرنس] [نونغفرنمنت].
(8) ربّما كنتيجة التغير من نخبة إلى قاعدة شاملة, الأخوة أصبح قيادة متورّطة في اثنان أعمال جديدة نسبيّا: التفسير المذهب لإستعمال محلّية والشهيق, من خلال طقس ومرسم, من مجموعة وعبادة شاملة.
يكون مذاهب من سلطة وجماعة في يصلح [قديريا]
حيث أنّ [قديريا] تقليديّة في [كنو] اعتمد بثقل على التاسع عشر قرن [جيهد] كتابات كالمصادر كبريات من [قديريا] مذهب الزعيمات من يصلح [قديريا] يتلقّى بنفسي كاتبات وافرة. Like the Fulani Jihad writers, the contemporary Qadiriyya writers are concerned to relate classical Islamic thought to local circumstances. In the interim period between the Jihad writings and the contemporary writings, there was "a dearth of Qadiriyya literature in Kano. None of the major leaders during this period, Ibrahim na Kabara, Ali Musa, Saad b. Ahmad, Sharif Garba, Sidi Muhammad, and Muhammad Sidi-wrote on Qadiriyya. The Reformed Qadiriyya movement, associated with Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali, has not only produced its own literature but has revived an interest in the Jihad classics," has introduced works on Qadiriyya from the Arab world," and has inspired local Hausa "praise poets" " to express themselves on brotherhood matters. Nasiru Kabara hase written about 150 works in all.
The amount of systematic theology in the writings of Nasiru Kabara has been minimal; his primary purpose seems to be to relate the history and elements of the brotherhood in terms understandable to contemporary Kano society and to stimulate an identification with the saints of the brotherhood. The writings of Ahmad b. Ali cover many of these same topics. There is no specific praise of the Shaziliyya way, as distinct from Qadiriyya, and much of the literature contains poems that are sung at worship gatherings. Another Reformed Qadiriyya leader in Kano, Adamu na Ma'aji (q.v.), seems mainly concerned with chains of authority and conditions of initiation."
The writings of brotherhood leaders such as Nasiru Kabara and Ahmad b. Ali espouse the community and authority of Qadiriyya on two major grounds: affiliational (primarily on the basis of direct personal experience) and communal (primarily on the basis of loyalty to the nineteenth-century Jihad tradition). Within the category of affiliational appeal, there have been five areas of doctrinal exposition: the origins and spread of Qadiriyya, the elements and requirements of Qadiriyya, the benefits and blessings for those who follow Qadiriyya, personal praise of the Qadiriyya saints, and general preaching.
With regard to the spread of Qadiriyy, Nasiru Kabara describes in Alnafahat the Qadiriyya shaykhs in history and the distribution of Qadiriyya among the continents of the world." In Naf' al-'ibad, he discusses the Qadiriyya caliphate throughout history. In Ithaf al-khald'iq he presents the genealogy of the founder, 'Abd al-Qadir, and a considerable amount of biographical data. He also mentions some of the successors of 'Abd al-Qadir in the contemporary world.
With regard 4o the requirements of Qadiriyya, Nasiru Kabara elabarates in Al-nafabdt the details and the nature of the brotherhood ceremonies." In the Naf' aVibad he describes the Qadiriyya daily voluntary prayers." In the Ithaf al-khald'iq he discusses the necessities and voluntary aspects of ablution, washing, taimama (symbolic washing with dust), prayer, prostration, giving of alms, fasting, pilgrimage, and other Islamic rituals for those who follow Qadiriyya. In Da'wat al-ghawth he elaborates on the conditions for following Qadiriyya.
With regard to the benefits of Qadiriyya, all of the above-mentioned writings refer to the personal satisfactions and blessings that accrue to those who follow Qadiriyya. Nasiru describes the "glorious benefits" for the followers of Qadiriyya and assures them of the best reward.
With regard to the praise of Qadiriyya saints, it is clear that instead of being a perfunctory gesture it is a culmination of the past that is directed into the brotherhood experience. In Naf al-'ibad, Nasiru inscribes the prayer he offered while at the tomb of 'Abd al-Qadir in Baghdad.
The praise of a primary saint, 'Abd al-Qadir, should not obscure the central fact of all the reformed brotherhoods: an individual is encouraged to do addu'a (al-du'a), that is, to pray directly to God. Nasiru exemplifies the passion and symbolism of such a prayer in the Subhdt al-anwar.
Finally, general preaching has always been a function of the religious authorities who try to induce conversions through individual volition. Such preaching is invariably in the vernacular language (in this case Hausa); and if it can be fashioned into poetry, it will be sung by minstrels near and far. Nasiru Kabara has been particularly successful in his general preaching.
Nasiru Kabara identified in the Subhat al-anwar, five branches of Qadiriyya in Hausaland, one of which is Usmaniyya. In various other works, he refers to Usmaniyya al-Fudawiyya and identifies himself with this branch. In the Naf al-'ibad he includes the prayer he read when he visited the tomb of Usman dan Fodio, and it is clear that he regards Muhammad Bello, son of Usman, as among the founders of Usmaniyya. Nasiru writes that he hopes to visit Bello at Wurno (the assumption being that Bello is not dead). While Nasiru does not include any reference to special ritual associated with Usmaniyya, it is clear that the Jihad leaders are considered to be of special importance. The continual identification of them with Qadiriyya is clearly intended to remind their descendants not to desert the "faith of their fathers." The Hausa poem by Ibrahim Makwarari (Begen Shehu Abdulkadir) is illustrative of the way in which Nasiru is regarded as the successor to the Jihad leaders.
With regard to the alleged doctrinal prohibition against change of brotherhood, there has been an attack on mallams who encourage such conversion, primarily those associated with Reformed Tijaniyya. The doctrinal basis of this attack is stated by Nasiru Kabara in Al-nalabat, where he suggests that the Tijani mallams are "fabricating" if they assert that one tariqa is better than another. He argues for a strict prohibition against leaving the Qadiriyya brotherhood, supporting his argument with verses from the Qur'an and traditions of the Prophet. He asserts that when a person has promised to do something religious, such as follow a brotherhood, he must keep that promise. He criticizes the Tijaniyya specifically for assuming it can convert persons from other brotherhoods, suggesting that this was not the policy of the original Tijani leaders and that the practice is a false modern innovation .
Publications
He has published well over 150 treatises and books explaining various aspects of Islamic philosophy, Arabic and Hausa linguistics. His writing career started quite early in his life in his youth. Perhaps not surprisingly, his first treatise was on Abdulkadir Jilani, the founder of the Qadiriyya Islamic Philosophical movement. His method of writing usually follows the medieval scholastic tradition widespread in the middle-east. Thus he combines commentary with critical appraisal. A classical example of his approach is provided in the intellectual conjectures-and-refutations arguments of Al-Ghazali in his Tahaful Falasafa, and Ibn Rushd's counter-commenterary, Tahaful Tahafut.
His writings follow a specified and characteristic pattern; beginning with the praise of God, then the rationale of the writing under consideration and the proposed title of the work., followed by an abstract and then the main exposition. An example is his exposition on arm positioning during prayers which he explained in Kan Ul Fasab. He started by priasing Shehu Abdulmahal-al-Shawani a leading exponent of Shafi'iyya movement which supports Saddlu (dropping the arms by the side during the standing portion of the prayer). He then brings a Prophetic tradition (Hadith) which shows the Prophet's support for such arm positioning. Subsequently, the then brings more Prophetic traditions which explained the stands of both Sadlu and Kablu (crossing the arms on the chest during the standing portion of the prayer).
In his various writings, Sheikh Nasiru Kabara has clearly brought out the concept of Kanawiyya, a connation of Kano as an intellectual entrepot in medieval Africa. Some of the books and treatises he has published are included below.