Can Sudan, one of Africa's most diverse countries, function as
an Islamic state? Mahmud Muhammad Taha posed an original answer to
this question. Taha was the charismatic leader of the "Republican
Brothers and Sisters," a small group of Sudanese nationalists who
called for a mystical, inclusive reinterpretation of Islam that
ended traditional legal discriminations against women and
non-Muslims. Taha's followers pitched his sometimes controversial
mix of law and mysticism on Sudanese street corners in the 1970s.
Sudanese Islamist politicians, who used a more divisive
interpretation of Islam, opposed him vigorously. When they gained
control of the state in the chaotic 1980s, Taha was executed. In
Taha's first biography, Edward Thomas explores the life and ideas
of an important Sudanese reformer who has become a symbol for
resistance, tolerance and human rights.
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