o:id 5004 url https://islam.zmo.de/s/westafrica/item/5004 o:resource_template Journal article o:resource_class bibo:AcademicArticle dcterms:title Islamic reform in colonial space: the jihad of Shaykh Boubacar Sawadogo and French Islamic policies in Burkina Faso, 1920-1946 dcterms:publisher https://islam.zmo.de/s/westafrica/item/25083 dcterms:date 2012 dcterms:type https://islam.zmo.de/s/westafrica/item/8475 dcterms:identifier https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q113524323 Q113524323 iwac-reference-0000024 dcterms:language https://islam.zmo.de/s/westafrica/item/8322 dcterms:abstract This paper examines the spread of Islam in Upper Volta (now Burkina Faso) during French colonialism. Focusing on the Tijaniyya Shaykh, Boubacar Sawadogo, and the strategies he pursued to avoid confrontations with the French, the paper interrogates the ways French colonialism inadvertently created a new public religious space that facilitated the unprecedented spread of Islam. Pursuing peaceful strategies of conversion and religious reform, Sawadogo converted an unprecedented number of Mossi, the colony's largest ethnic group, to Islam and laid the foundation for the subsequent growth of Islam in that territory. The Mossi had resisted Islam for several centuries prior to French conquests and the French had reinforced this resistance as part of a broader policy of preventing the spread of Islam in the French federation. An examination of the strategies pursued by Sawadogo to implement his religious visions in spite of the restrictions on Islamic proselytism allows us to re-interrogate the nature of colonial hegemony. dcterms:spatial https://islam.zmo.de/s/westafrica/item/546 bibo:authorList https://islam.zmo.de/s/westafrica/item/1245 bibo:doi https://hdl.handle.net/10520/EJC137662 10520/EJC137662 bibo:issue 1 bibo:pageEnd 69 bibo:pageStart 47 bibo:volume 32 --