o:id 5233 url https://islam.zmo.de/s/westafrica/item/5233 o:resource_template Report o:resource_class bibo:Report dcterms:title Genealogies of a Non-Political Islam in the Sahel: The Burkina Case dcterms:publisher Working Papers of the Priority Programme 1448 of the German Research Foundation - Adaptation and Creativity in Africa: technologies and significations in the making of order and disorder dcterms:date 2017 dcterms:type https://islam.zmo.de/s/westafrica/item/8694 dcterms:identifier https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q113867008 Q113867008 iwac-reference-0000762 dcterms:language https://islam.zmo.de/s/westafrica/item/8322 dcterms:abstract Burkina Faso is an exception in the Sahel in that no politicisation and ideological radicalisation of Islam has taken shape in the public space. This paper – the first version of a chapter in an upcoming book – analyses both the causes and the implications of this fact. The historical analysis of the formative process of the Burkinabe nation reveals that Islamisation is a recent development in the country as compared to other parts of the Sahel. It came about as a result of the colonial transformation of societies in the area of future Burkina Faso, in the first half of the twentieth century and progressed in competition with Catholicism. While Islam later became the country's majority religion, the singular aspects of Burkina Faso's history – again, relative to its neighbours – have created a society marked by religious pluralism, and a very specific form of ‘consensual secularism.' In this context, an Islamic public space has emerged where various doctrinal currents – modernist reformists, Wahhabis, Sufis – struggle to assert themselves, but which leads to an enduring combination of subordination to and partnership with Burkina's successive regimes, especially as influential Muslim merchants largely control the all-important trade economy of the country. This result does not imply that Muslims in Burkina are politically quiescent, but that they tend to mobilise politically not as Muslims, but as citizens of Burkina, as is testified by the country's stormy political history. The case therefore teaches us to avoid essentialising Muslims' existence in the political arena. dcterms:spatial https://islam.zmo.de/s/westafrica/item/546 dcterms:provenance Leipzig Halle bibo:authorList https://islam.zmo.de/s/westafrica/item/1236 bibo:issue 23 --