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Hausa Traders and Cattle Markets

  • Egodi Uchendu
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Dawn for Islam in Eastern Nigeria
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Dawn for Islam in Eastern Nigeria
© 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

© 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter 2
  2. DEDICATION 5
  3. CONTENTS 7
  4. Acknowledgements 9
  5. Maps and Illustrations 10
  6. Preface 11
  7. INTRODUCTION
  8. The Overview 15
  9. Sketching the Landscape 19
  10. Religious Diversification 27
  11. Igbo-Hausa Relations 28
  12. Pattern of Religious Expansion in Nigeria 30
  13. Conceptual Clarification 30
  14. The Question of Numbers: Are Igbo Muslims Worth Studying? 35
  15. 1. EASTERN NIGERIA BEFORE 1920
  16. The Journey of Islam towards the Southeast 39
  17. Earliest Inter-ethnic Contacts 43
  18. On the Trail of the Elephant Hunters 50
  19. The Organization of the Hunt 58
  20. Forms of Interaction with Migrants 66
  21. 2. THE BEGINNINGS OF ISLAM IN IGBOLAND, 1920–1950
  22. Introduction 73
  23. The Case of Enugu Ezike 82
  24. Islam in Ibagwa 93
  25. Women as Agents of Spread 95
  26. Expansion of Strangers’ Settlements and Barriers to Proselytization 97
  27. 3. THE EXPANSION OF ISLAM AFTER 1950
  28. Post-1950 Developments 103
  29. Extending Islam to Owerri 105
  30. The Enohia (Anohia) Awakening of 1958 106
  31. The Civil War Years 113
  32. Reconstruction and Rehabilitation: The Mbaise Affair 124
  33. Extending Islam to Nsukka Town 128
  34. Enohia after the War 131
  35. Other New Grounds 134
  36. 4. CONTACTS AND CONVERSIONS: THE PROPAGATION OF ISLAM IN IGBOLAND
  37. Introduction 135
  38. Hausa Traders and Cattle Markets 136
  39. The Igbo and Their Guests: Ambivalent Relations 144
  40. Migrants among Themselves 151
  41. Da‘wa and the Spread of Islam in Igboland 152
  42. The State and Islamic Proselytization 160
  43. Transnational Support for Da‘wa 165
  44. Igbo Muslims and Da‘wa 166
  45. 5. INTERROGATING CONVERSIONS TO ISLAM IN IGBOLAND
  46. Motives for Conversions to Islam in Igboland 169
  47. Women and Conversion 183
  48. Conversion of Children to Islam 188
  49. Other Factors Contributing to Conversions in Igboland 191
  50. 6. “IT IS MY FAITH, IT BELONGS TO ME:” RESPONSES TO CONVERSIONS TO ISLAM
  51. Induction into Islam 196
  52. The Benefits of Conversion 206
  53. Responses to Conversions to Islam 211
  54. Reactions to Conversions from Outside Igboland 222
  55. 7. MUSLIM–CHRISTIAN RELATIONS: THE CHALLENGES OF COEXISTENCE IN A MIXED RELIGIOUS SOCIETY
  56. Juggling for a Niche in the Community 225
  57. “Multiple people, multiple ignorance:” Shari‘a Implementation in Nigeria 238
  58. Issues at the Core of the Shari‘a Dispute 244
  59. Death of Igbo Muslims in the Riots 248
  60. Further Insurrection and the Progress of Islam in Igboland 254
  61. Suggestions for Lasting Peace in Nigeria 255
  62. CONCLUSION 260
  63. ANNEX 264
  64. INDEX 279
Heruntergeladen am 20.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783112208724-031/html
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