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Panel 120: Ritual, Authority and Innovation in African Muslim Communities

Panel organisers: Roman Loimeier (Univ. of Göttingen, Germany) and Tea Virtanen (The Nordic Africa Institute, Sweden)

Contact: tea.virtanen@nai.uu.se

Muslim societies in Africa have been characterized by a long tradition of discussion and dispute over issues of ritual and innovation, as informed by multiple historical settings and a large variety of local contexts. In these discussions and debates over the "proper Islamic" character of rituals and the permissibility of innovation, questions of authority were paramount. Debates and discussion over ritual practices and questions of innovation allow us to analyse the dynamics of negotiation of authority in a specific community/society in a given period of time. The panel will inquire into this theme by looking at a select number of Muslim communities and societies in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Accepted Abstracts

SESSION 1

The Ratib al-Haddad: Tradition and Transition of a Text-based Ritual in East and South Africa

Zar Hadra and Pilgrimage Innovation and Claim for Religious Purity at the Sufi Shrines in Ethiopia

Prayer, Piety, and Pleasure: Contested Models of Islamic Worship in Niger

Innovation upon Innovation: Transforming Ungodly Dance into Sufi Dhikr in Cameroon

SESSION 2

The Izala Movement in Nigeria: From Guiding the Muslim Umma to Losing Authority

Intention and Conflict: Orders of the in Between

“Islam of the Spirits”, “Islam of the Mosque”: Spirit Possession and competing claims on being Muslim in northern Mozambique

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