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LITERATURE The written word and the book are central to Muslim society. Shaykh Bay Al-Kunti's library in Timbuktu was a legal reference point for a large part of Sub-Saharan Africa in the 1930's. In the 9th century the library in Cordoba, in Islamic Spain, contained 500,000 volumes, while the largest Christian library in Europe, in St. Gallen, Switzerland, contained at that time just 36 volumes. MODERNISING By the 19th century Muslim scholarship had fallen behind modern European scholarship. The Egyptian pan-Islamicist, al Afghani, believed that Islam had become weighed down by its past and wanted to revitalise it academically, without westernising it. He was hugely influential in West Africa and East Africa. The British at first were happy to let Koranic schools take the burden of education, but later helped build a small number of schools for Muslims, which had a non-religious component as well as religious strand to their syllabuses. These include: the Gordon Memorial College in Khartoum (1902); the first school for Muslim girls in Kenya in 1938. In Nigeria, schools were built in Kano (1911), and Sokoto (1912), with a Teachers Training College built in Katsina, in 1923. |
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