'All women are guides': Sufi leadership and womanhood among Taalibe Baay in Senegal
Author's Department
Arab & Islamic Civilizations Department
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https://doi.org/10.1163/157006610X540735
Document Type
Research Article
Publication Title
Journal of Religion in Africa
Publication Date
12-1-2010
doi
10.1163/157006610X540735
Abstract
In Sufi Islamic groups in West Africa, the position of muqaddam, one appointed as a spiritual guide, is usually held by men. Although Senegalese Shaykh Ibrahim Niasse (1900-1975) appointed many Senegalese women as muqaddams throughout his life, few of his disciples were aware of these appointments. Since the 1990s a growing number of 'Taalibe Baay' (disciples of Niasse) women have more openly led active communities of disciples. Several factors have made it possible for these women to act uncontroversially as recognized leaders, including (1) Baye Niasse's popularization of mystical knowledge and authority, making them available to the general body of disciples, (2) the urbanization of the Taalibe Baay movement and (3) global and local processes raising Muslim women's visibility as objects of discourse and as active religious and economic actors. While these women sometimes draw on global discourses of gender equality, to a much larger extent they base their religious authority on embodying and performing the interiority and submissiveness conventionally associated with pious women. © 2010 Brill.
First Page
375
Last Page
412
Recommended Citation
APA Citation
Hill, J.
(2010). 'All women are guides': Sufi leadership and womanhood among Taalibe Baay in Senegal. Journal of Religion in Africa, 40(4), 375–412.
10.1163/157006610X540735
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/faculty_journal_articles/699
MLA Citation
Hill, Joseph
"'All women are guides': Sufi leadership and womanhood among Taalibe Baay in Senegal." Journal of Religion in Africa, vol. 40,no. 4, 2010, pp. 375–412.
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/faculty_journal_articles/699