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With contributions from Malawian, Zambian, Zimbabwean, British and
American historians this book takes a scholarly as well as
eyewitness look at the 1959/60 State of Emergency in Nyasaland. A
key turning point in the growth and triumph of Malawian nationalism
the contributors examine the Emergency and its significance in the
modern political history of Malawi and its central African
neighbours.
There is a long history of Islam in Malawi, which precedes
Christianity; and Muslims constitute about fifteen percent of the
country's population. However Muslims and Islam in Malawi have
until relatively recently remained low profile, and there has been
little research or documentation of their history. This collection
of essays traces the history of Muslim culture in Malawi, looking
at for example: how Islam spread to Malawi within the context of
the expansion of Islan in East Africa; how Islam developed; and how
the Christian churches responded. Further contributions address
Islam in Nyasaland in 1910; Kanyenda and the Swahili challenge;
Mohammedanism and the Yaos in 1991; the Yao Tariqa and the Sukuti
movements; the problems of Islamic education; and the growth of a
political and commercial Muslim elite.
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