22 September 2008
Thank You Dr Dominy,
Your Excellency, Ambassador Coulibaly, Ambassador of
Mali
to the
Republic
of
South Africa
,
Professor Nkondo, Chairman of the South African Library Council,
Mr John Tsebe, CEO of the South African National Library,
Your Excellencies, Members of the Diplomatic Corps,
Distinguished Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It’s a great honour for me to be standing before you this evening where we are marking a
milestone and celebrating an important achievement: The Launch of the Timbuktu
Manuscripts Exhibition at our National Library tonight is a milestone; and we
are celebrating an African achievement.
The manuscripts we are putting on display are from the historic Ahmed Baba library in
Timbuktu
. They are but relatively small selection from among many
thousands of items in the
Timbuktu
archives. These manuscripts from the library and the surrounding settlements, were rescued from the termites and the elements thanks to the
intervention of President Thabo Mbeki. Because he immediately recognised their
significance both for Africa and for humanity at large, he committed
South Africa
to the preservation and
dissemination of these writings. It was to become one of the first NEPAD
projects. Our National Library, South African archivists and scholars have
played a major role in that effort and I take the opportunity to thank them all
on behalf of the nation and on behalf of the African continent.
We have here 40 items, of various sizes and content, that testify to both the
intellectual and artistic capacity of a west African civilization few, yes, very
few, South Africans have even heard of. Islamic scholarship in
Africa
is little known. I would even hazard that once the study of
these manuscripts has been completed, their contents will compel us to rethink a
great deal of what we have been taught about Africa, especially pre-colonial
Africa
, its peoples and our culture.
When President Mbeki was first introduced to these manuscripts, he was convinced
that something serious and effective should be done about them. Tonight’s event
is as much a tribute to medieval African scholarship as it is to President
Mbeki’s foresight and vision.
During the 7th century the prophet Muhammad and his followers were responsible for the emergence and rapid growth of the new
religion, Islam. This was probably one of the more important transformative
movements that shaped the modern world and left an indelible impression on the
“old world” of the Middle East, Central Asia, Europe and
Africa
.
The impact of Islam on these societies may be measured by extent of the empire the
Muslims created. Within fifty years of the prophet’s death it spanned from the
shores of the Atlantic in the west to the borderlands of
India
in the east.
Islam’s abiding historical influence owed more to its cultural impact than to the sword.
The speed with which the new faith spread betrays the moribund character of the
social orders it overwhelmed. But Islam replaced them with thriving urban -
centred communities peopled by merchants, guilds of craftsmen and artisans,
scholars, jurists, poets and writers. With Islam came the Quran that stimulated
mastery of the art of writing and reading.
Islam extolls industry, thrift, cleanliness, imposed a number of disciplines on its
adherents, and enjoined charity. In addition to what was produced within their
far flung empire, the Muslims were also avid traders who dominated both the
Indian Ocean and the land routes across Asia and
Africa
into western Europe. The Mediterranean, once dominated by the fleets of
Rome
and
Byzantium
,
became a Muslim lake for five hundred years. The opulence of the courts in
Andalusia
in the west, and those of the Sultanates of Indonesia in the east, were made
possible by both the hard work of indigenous artisans and by the prosperous
trans-continental trade routes controlled by Muslim merchants.
It was trade, the visiting of distant lands, becoming accustomed to the ways of
strangers through commerce with peoples of diverse races that broadened the
minds of the scholars of the Islamic world. In such a cosmopolitan universe the
prejudices and limitations associated with life that does not extend far beyond
the horizon, can be seen for what they are. Toleration, empathy and
understanding for the views and faiths of others are more readily accepted in a
cosmopolitan environment. The development of the critical faculties opened the
door to the search for knowledge and for scientific thought.
Africa was the site of one of the earliest Muslim communities even prior to prophet’s
emigration from
Mecca
to
Medina
. But
many more African lands, north and south of the
Sahara
,
came under the sway of Islam during its westward expansion. The Mahgreb became
the staging post for the Muslim invasion of the Iberian peninsula,
Sicily
, Corsica and parts of
Italy
. From 711 until late into the 1400s
Spain
and various parts of the Iberian peninsula were ruled
by the Muslim Moors from
Africa
. Moorish
Spain
, till this day, offers the visitor sites of
breathtaking splendour.
At the height of its power the community of the faithful embraced blonde Caucasians from
Europe, North Africa and parts of Asia; Africans of a multitude of hues from
pitch black to tan; Mongoloid Uighurs, Indonesians and Malays; Indians,
Persians, as well as the Arabs. For three centuries peace, prosperity and
progress reigned in these Muslim territories only to be disrupted by Christian
aggression, the Crusades, orchestrated from
Europe
during the 11th century. It was armies drawn from
this tapestry of humanity who faced the equally diverse Crusader armies at the
gates of
Jerusalem
.
As part of this multi-racial, multi-ethnic, cosmopolitan Muslim world, the intellectuals
of the kingdoms of Mali and Songhay, took part in and contributed to its
scholarship and research in astronomy; chemistry, zoology, botany ; they also
engaged in its philosophical debates and participated in its jurisprudential
disputes. The very materials they used tell us a great deal about the links
within that world. Some of the paper used for this manuscripts bears watermarks
from as far as
Samarkand
,
Baghdad
,
Damascus
and
Cairo
.
The leather bindings come from Morrocco. These manuscripts are but a small
sample of the wealth of human knowledge debated, studied and stored by the
intellectuals of this continent.
To ensure that the valuable scholarship contained in these manuscripts will now be more
effectively preserved for future generations, the South African National Library
and its archival specialists trained Malian archivists in some of the latest
techniques. Our National Library’s bookbinding section also assisted in the
preparation of special storage cases of low acidity which will ensure that the
papers used in these manuscripts survive longer.
This project and this exhibition are a re-affirmation of our African identity. I hope
that the exhibition will enhance academic and public awareness of
Africa
's literary heritage, and specifically
the literary heritage associated with Islam.
In conclusion, let me thank and congratulate Dr Shamil Jeppie, the South African
coordinator of research on the Timbuktu Manuscripts, the National Library and
its staff, our National Archives and its staff, as well as all the other
institutions who have made this exhibition possible.
I declare the exhibition open and invite all South Africans to come and view it. It is
highly educative.
Thank You.
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