Thursday, January 31, 2013

On book-burning in Timbuktu

The images are a shock: empty manuscript cases scattered about, their contents apparently reduced to ashes; centuries of learning left to blow away in the wind. Hearing that only a small portion of the collection was destroyed, and even that scans had been made, is cold comfort. The act invites incomprehension. What sort of person burns books? And what sort of Islamist attacks a library full of painstakingly calligraphed copies of the Qur'an?

I can claim only the most tenuous of connections to Timbuktu: its patron saint, Sidi Yahya al-Tadallisi, was a native of my hometown, Dellys, and its main language, Koyra Chiini Songhay, is a close relative of the endangered language I've worked on most, Korandjé - both in Algeria. I don't understand what happened, but the background suggests some possibilities.

Timbuktu's hundreds of thousands of manuscripts are part of a local tradition of Islamic learning continued since the 1300s or so, involving scholars from all ethnic groups - Arab, Tuareg, Fulani, Songhay, Manding... (Most of them are in Arabic, that community's language of scholarship; a few are in other languages, and have barely been studied.) But the value of their content to this small though admirable community is overshadowed by their symbolic value and its power to attract foreign money, on a scale marginal to the world but overwhelming in a small, isolated Malian town. The library that was attacked was a state-of-the-art archive recently built in partnership with South Africa; the Mellon Foundation had already built one earlier; UNESCO, Norway, Saudi Arabia had all contributed to giving these manuscripts a good home. This brought Timbuktu, as a whole, jobs and prestige. But those who didn't benefit from it must have had sour thoughts sometimes: they build palaces for books, while we live in huts? This would apply all the more to outsiders in the midst of a hostile population, as most of the rebels seem to have been.

Money attracts not just jealousy, but crime. Until the past year, AQIM's leadership were best known for two highly profitable and religiously questionable practices: smuggling cigarettes, and kidnapping tourists. The monetary value of Timbuktu manuscripts has soared even within the past couple of decades, and the fairly small amount of ashes seen in the pictures hardly seems proportionate to the number of empty manuscript boxes. Let's just say it would not be surprising to find some of the missing manuscripts turning up on the black market...

Finally, there are undoubtedly some books in these libraries that a committed Salafi would see as heretical. The local Islamic tradition reflected by these manuscripts continues practices that were normal in pre-modern North Africa, but suspect or anathema to most modern North Africans following the religious reforms of the early 20th century: most conspicuously, joining Sufi organisations (some themselves holding controversial beliefs, ranging up to Ibn Arabi's near-pantheism) and visiting saints' tombs. But while this may have played a part in shaping attitudes, this is unlikely to have been decisive; otherwise they would have burned them earlier.

The order of motivations I'm postulating is kind of sad in its own right. The books of Timbuktu aren't just a symbol for proving that Africa has a written heritage, or an image to look at in museums or coffee table books. They were intended to be read and taught from, to form part of a living tradition. Yet their content is the one thing that not only their attackers but even most of their defenders seem oblivious to; oh, you'll find glittering generalities about the astronomical and mathematical manuscripts all over the place, but quotes or translations are much scarcer. You can read a few dozen of them (in Arabic, but with English summaries) at the World Digital Library; the Tombouctou Manuscript Project is working on translating them. But as you read, spare a thought (or a donation) for the people caught up in this, not just the books...

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I agree with what you say about the incongruity of this very rich affair in the middle of a poor country. From what I read (in the comfort of my far away and safe home) this awful book burning happened only as the AQIM were being chased out, unlike the destruction of the saints' shrines which occurred early on and was clearly done with religious purpose. This makes me think that this was done as a final act of revenge on the town, by people who realized they had lost, and that the town was siding with their enemies. There is no telling yet if this was ordered by AQIM commanders, or if it was an act of a few individuals.

Tunisian said...

Well, the trending Wahhabi-Islam virus easily explains the burnings. Wahabbism is invading North Africa through Arab TV. No need for implausible theories like revenge. Revenge would then have been carried by local poor people not by visiting Al-Qaeda fighters financed with Arabian money. The burning of books and shrines in Tuareg land didn't occur in previous centuries because Wahhabism didn't exist or didn't reach these reaches. Those Islamic and Berber manuscripts should have been all scanned and put online a long long time ago. This the best way to protect them. I thought Timbuktu / Tinbuktu was founded by the Berbers. Don't they still speak Tamaceq-Berber there today?

Lameen Souag الأمين سواق said...

According to Jeffrey Heath, who studied all three languages there, the population of Timbuktu was about 80% Songhay-speaking, 10% Tamasheq-speaking, and 10% Arabic-speaking before the last Tuareg rebellion (1990-1994). During the rebellion, the Songhay kicked out most of the Arabs and Tuaregs - they seem to be targeting them again now, judging from the reports of looting. The "racial" tensions in question go a long way back - the local histories say that the Berber Maghsharan tribe founded Timbuktu by settling black slaves there.