Sidi
Mohammed al-Jazouli
(d. 869/1454)
At the
beginning of the fifteenth century, the Shadhiliya brotherhood was
closely associated with political and intellectual elites of North
Africa. This was to be expected, since Sidi Abul Hassan Shadhili
(d.
656/1241), Sidi Abul
Abbas al-Mursi (d. 686/1271), Sidi Abd an-Nur al-Amrani
(b. 685/1286), Sidi Madi ibn Sultan (d. 718/1318) and Sidi Ibn Abbad ar-Rundi (d. 792/1377), all made a point of recruiting followers
from the upper classes of urban society. Almost without exception, the
Shadhili Sufis who appear in the biographies of the later Marinid
period are ulama, courtiers, or sharifs. In the rare cases where one
finds an exception to this rule, the person in question is mostly
likely to be a skilled craftsperson or a vendor of luxury goods. This
absence of a lower-class following indicates that the leaders of
Shadhiliya in Tunis, Tlemcen, and Fez were primarily concerned with
presenting their order as an alternative to the other elite Sufi orders
of North Africa, such as the Sahrawardiya. To become fully integrated
into the social life of the region, the Shadhiliya needed a doctrinal
orientation that would appeal to people from all levels of society and
enable it to transcend its patrician origins. This would be provided by
a sharif and scholar from the Moroccan Sus named Sidi Abu Abdellah
Mohammed ibn Abderrahman b. Abi Bakr b. Slimane al-Jazouli.
Like
Abu Abdellah ibn
Yassin (d. 451/1059), Mohammed ibn
Tumart (d. 524/1130) and other reformers who proceeded him
Imam al-Jazouli is better remembered as a character of legend that as a
real human being. Having spent the majority of his life in rural
Morocco, and sojourning only briefly in the urban centres where his
biographers where to live, al-Jazouli was known to the generations
following his death for his charismatic reputation than for his Sufi
teachings. Even more, because so many of the traditions that detailed
his life were transcribed at a much later date from secondary sources
or hearsay, none of his biographies can be considered definitive. The
same can also be said of Moulay Abdessalam ibn
Mashish (d. 622/1207), the teacher of Abul Hassan Shadhili, who despite the
absence of any written legacy expect a short prayer called As-Salat
al-Mashishiya, has risen to the status of patron saint for all
Moroccan Sufism.
Imam
al-Jazouli's present-day reputation is based primarily on a work that
was written more than two hundred years after his death: Mumti'u‘
al-asma'a fi dhikr al-Jazouli wa at-Tabba'a wa ma lahuma mina al atba‘ (The
Delight of the Hearing in the Recollection of al-Jazouli, at-Tabba'a,
and Their Followers), by the Shadhili master Sidi Mohammed al-Mahdi
al-Fasi (d. 1109/1694). Although the date of Imam
al-Jazouli's birth is not known, enough information exists to provide a
rough outline of his origins and background. His
nisba (attributional name) tells us the he came from the
Simlala tribe, one of the most important Sanhaja Berber groups in
Jazula. The
turbulent political environment of Simlala in the fifteenth century
forced the Shaykh to leave his homeland because its culture of violence
made serious scholarship impossible. As it turned out, the young sharif
had to travel all the way to Fez to get an education, since the
insufficient intellectual resources of Marrakech, the usual destination
for students from central and southern-Saharan Morocco, made study in
that city impossible as well.
While
in Fez, al-Jazouli lived at Madrasat al-Halfawiyyin (the
present Madrasat
as-Saffarin), the oldest of the Marinid madaris, whose rooms
were reserved for students from the Sus. While there, he studied the Mukhtasar
of Ibn al-Hajib, the standard introductory work on usul
al-fiqh. He also studied Al-Mudawwana al-kubra, Sahnoun's
("Abdessalam ibn
Said Tanukhi Qayrawani," d. 240/854) ninth-century
compendium of Maliki law. al-Jazouli's room in this madrasa is
till known, and can be shown to the visitor by the madrasa's caretaker.
A widely repeated account of al-Jazouli's student days conveys an image
of extreme introspection. During his sojourn at Madrasat al-Halfawiyyin he
would spend long periods alone in his room, leaving it only to attend
class. While in his room, he would lock the door and allow no one to
enter. Because of this antisocial behaviour word began to spread that
al-Jazouli was concealing money. When news of these suspicions reached
his father at Jazula , the latter hurried to Fez to see what was
happening. Upon arriving at the madrasa, Sidi Abderrahman al-Jazouli
demanded to enter his son's room. When he opened the door, he saw the
word "death" (al-mawt) written over and over again on the
walls. Understanding that his sons was in a deep state of spiritual
contraction (qabd), he remarked to the madrasa's caretaker, "Do
you see where this one is and where we are?"
Tracing
Imam al-Jazouli's career after the completion of his studies is
problematised by spares and conflicting information. Most sources claim
that he composed Dalail al-Khayrat (popular
with the name of 'ad-Dalil' in Moroccan Arabic), his books of
prayers on behalf of the Prophet Sidna Mohammed (peace and blessing
upon him), in Fez, replying on manuscripts that were available in the
library of the Al Qarawiyyine University. His biographers
disagree, however, about the exact stage of his life in which this
occurred. It is unlikely that al-Jazouli could have written his
world-famous collection of devotions as a marginally educated faqih.
Instead, this more probably occurred only after he gained a reputation
for piety and erudition. Assuming this hypothesis to be correct, and
given the dates of other, better known-periods of the Shaykh's life, it
is most likely that al-Jazouli wrote Dalail
al-Khayrat sometimes after his
participation in the defence of Tangier in 841/1437. This latter
conclusion is supported by a tradition recorded by the Jazulite Sufi
Sidi Ahmed ibn Abil Qacem as-Suma'i (d. 1013-1604-5), who claims that
al-Jazouli was told to return to Fez by a female saliha
whom he encountered in Tangier.
Sidi Mohammed al-Jazouli
spent the years between 843/1428 and 850/1435 between Fez and
Ribat Tit al-Firt while been a disciple of the venerated
master Sidi Abu Abdellah Mohammed as-Saghir (d. 850/1435), master of
Tariqa Sanhajiya Amghariya. al-Jazouli may have met his Shaykh and
spiritual guide while a student in Fez, for the latter—whose tomb is
still found in Fez—was making unstopped journeys between the cities of
Morocco. This peripatetic (sai'h) Sufi, who recruited also
warriors for the anti-Portuguese jihad, initiated Sidi al-Jazouli into
a rural variant of Shadhiliya order which he took from Sidi Abu Uthman
Said al-Hintati
al-Hartanani, who succeeded his master
Sidi Abderrahman ibn Ilyas Ragragi, as head of Ribat Shakir
after his death.
Although most sources agree with Mira't al-Mahasin
(The Mirror of exemplary qualities), a hagiographical monograph written
two generations after prior to Mumti'u al-asma'a by al-Fasi's
great uncle Sidi Mohammed ibn Yusuf al-Fasi (d.
1052/1637) who was master of the Shadhiliya in Fez, that al-Jazouli was
initiated into the Amghari-Shadhiliya only after he had completed ad-Dalil
, the spiritual
maturity of this latter work, as well as the well known doctrinal
orientation of Ribat Tit al-Firt
and Ribat Shakir, cast doubt
upon this assertion. The Sufis from these ribats practiced spiritual
methods that stressed, like al-Jazouli's, the veneration of Prophet
Sidna Mohammed (peace and blessing be upon him). Further evidence of a
"Mohammedian" perspective at Ribat Tit and
Shakir can be found in reports that in the later Marinid period the
leading families of these institutions recognised the doctrinal
supremacy of the Majiriya Sufi order at Ribat Asafi. The
Shaykhs of the Majiriya, who maintained links with the Qadiriya Sufi tradition in the Mashriq,
required aspiring disciples to pass extended periods of time at the
Prophet's mosques in Medina.
al-Jazouli himself held Ribat Asafi in such high esteem that he built
his own zawiya on its ruins and appropriated Sidi Abu Mohammed Salih
Majiri's (d. 631/1216) rules of Sufi
practice for his Sufi order.
Despite the
conclusions of al-Fasi and others, it is doubtful that al-Jazouli would
have found that it necessary to join the Amghariya after having written
an influential book pf Prophetic devotions. A Sufi who is spiritually
advanced enough to produce a work like the Dalil is more likely to
attract his own disciples that to search for a master. It is thus more
plausible to assume that al-Jazouli composed the
Dalail al-Khayrat after
becoming a disciple of Sidi Abdellah Amghar, and not the other way
around. If this is correct, then one might date his association with
the Amghariya to the period immediately prior to his participation at
the relief of Tangier in 841/1426. it is even possible that al-Jazouli
fought at Tangier in the company of Amghariya, for the Banu Amghar were
strong supporters of jihad and their base in northern Dukkala abutted
the territory of the Shawiya Arabs, who also participated in the
Tangier campaign.
The death of
Sidi Abu Abdellah Amghar in Fez in 850/1446 have freed al-Jazouli to
travel to the Mashriq, where he performed the pilgrimage to Mecca and
Medina and visit the Prophet's Sidna Mohammed (peace and blessing be
upon him) mosque and tomb in Medina. He next travelled to travelled to
Cairo and studied at the al-Azhar University under a mystic named Sidi
Abdellaziz al-Ajami. According to
Sidi
Abdellah Ghazwani (d. 935/1520), the third paramount Shaykh (Shaykh
al-jama'a) of the al-Jazouliya, al-Ajami had been initiated into
the Shadhiliya Sufi order without intermediary (bila wasita) by
Sidi Abul Hassan Shadhili himself. This practice can be explained by
the saying of Abul Hassan, “Al-Khadir said to me, 'O Ali I will be
there for your companions after you.' To which I replied, 'No, I will
be there for my companions, both the living and the dead.' He also
said, “I have companions born of men and women that have not yet been
created, their spirits (arwahuhum) have already made the pact with me (baya‘ni).”
According
to an authoritative manuscript of Dalail al-Khayrat
at the Bibliothéque Ben Youssef in Marrakech, al-Jazouli
presented the final version of this work to his disciple Sidi Mohammed
Sahli (d. 917/1511). This so-called Sahli copy (an-nuskha as-Sahliya)
is the standard upon which all the copies of Dalail al-Khayrat
are based. Since al-Jazouli presented the definitive version of his
most famous work to Sidi Sahli a mere seven years before his death, it
is hard to believe that he could have written it as early as the 840s
(1425) and then carried it around the Arab World in rough-draft form
for nearly two decades. A more plausible scenario is that al-Jazouli
began the collection of Dalail al-Khayrat upon his return to
Morocco and then revised it during the period in which he organised the
al-Jazouliya Sufi order. Besides being more in agreement with the
evidence at hand, this assumption also assumes, as one would normally
expect, that Dalail al-Khayrat was a miracle of doctrinal
talent than the product of a long-term Sufi training.
Upon
his return to Morocco in 857/1442, al-Jazouli's innovative doctrines
and charismatic personality caused a stir in Sufi circles. al-Jazouli's
doctrine of mahabba (mystic love) found in the fragments of his
treaties on Sufism, An-Nush at-tamm li-man qala rabbi Allah thumma
istaqam (Complete advise for one who says, "My Lord is God" and
follows the straight path), in particular was so powerful that it was
believed that he occupied a unique station at the feet of Sidna
Mohammed (peace and blessing be upon him). What sets al-Jazouli's Risala
fi'l mahabba apart from others of its type in the Maghrib is that
its version of the story of Joseph (Yusuf) and Potiphar's wife Zulaykha
is highly atypical. Rather than adhering closely to the Quranic text of
Surat Yusuf, as is usually done in the Maghrib, al-Jazouli
presents this romance in a way that recalls the Persian classic Yusuf
u Zulaykha by the Naqshabandi Sidi Abderrahman al-Jami of Heart
(d. 898/1483). In al-Jazouli's version Zulaykha embraces the religion
of Islam out of love for the handsome prophet. After realizing,
however, that she can attain the full consummations of her desires only
by loving God alone, she abandons her desire for Yusuf and says: "O
Yusuf, I used to love you before knowing God the Exalted. But once I
had come to know the One-and-Only Conqueror (al-Wahid al-Qahhar),
love for anything apart for Him could not remain with [my] love
for Him. Now I desire nothing but Him!"
Imam
al-Jazouli most likely spent the first year after his return to Morocco
in Fez, where he composed the initial draft of Dalail al-Khayrat
and reassessed the social and political situation of his country. Then
he travelled via Ribat Tit al-Fitr to his natal village of Tankarat in
Jazula. After recruiting his first disciples among the Awlad Amr and
Banu Ma'aqil Arab tribes in the Sus, he moved to the city of Asafi
(which had by then grown in importance to become the port of Marrakech)
and established a zawiya on the sight of the ribat of Sidi Abu Mohammed
al-Majiri. al-Jazouli clearly thought of this master as the inspiration
for his own model of institutional Sufism. In another fragment from an-Nush
at-tamm he encourages his readers to use al-Majiri's treaties Ma'adin
al-jawahir (The Mine of Jewels) as a manual of Sufi
practice.
Imam
al-Jazouli borrowed heavily from the institutional repertoire of
Majiriya Sufi Order and required his disciples to adopt the
patched cloak (muraqqa'a),
staff ('asa), pouch (rakwa) and soft felt cup (shashiya)
of
Majiri fuqara. An important difference between the al-Jazouliya and the
Majiriya, however, was the nomadic mystics (salihun) of the
al-Jazouliya were encouraged to visit other saints in Morocco instead
of performing the Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina. This emphasis on
visits to living Shaykhs and the shrines of local saints was in part
due to the fact that the pilgrimage centres of the Mashriq were often
inaccessible to fifteenth-century Moroccans. The Falls of Sabta to the
Portuguese, the dissolution of governmental authority in the central
and western Morocco, and increased corsair activity in the western
Mediterranean all conspired to cut off most of the sea and land routes
used by North African pilgrims on their journeys to the East. One can
assume, however, al-Jazouli also had a more instrumental purpose in
ordering his followers to stay at home. His emphasis on visiting local
religious leaders prepared an already-established Sufi network for
political mobilisation and promoted a distinct, regional identity for
the al-Jazouliya that set it apart from other Sufi orders in the
Maghrib.
Imam
al-Jazouli also appropriated Abu
Mohammed Salih's three doctrinal pillars of repentance (tawba),
invocation (dikhr), and virtue (sala'h). the male
aspirant who wished to join the al-Jazouliya first had to demonstrate
his repentance by shaving off his "hair of unbelief" (sha'ar al-kufr)—in
the manner of a Meccan pilgrim—as a symbol of his desire to break with
the past. This custom, which was based on the Prophet's practice of
cutting off the coiled locks of Arabs who converted to Islam from
polytheism, was used by al-Jazouli as both a rite of passage and a
symbol of initiation into Tariqa al-Jazouliya as an institution. Once
tonsured, and after a forty-day regime of fasting and seclusion, the faqir
became a full member of the order and swore an oath of allegiance (bay'a)
to Shaykh al-Jazouli as his personal imam.
Simply becoming a member of
the al-Jazouliya, however, was not enough for one to become a
full-fledged Sufi. It was still necessary for the faqir to
acquire personal discipline, eliminate discord (both within the
individual and between the individual and others), and establish
brotherhood (ukhuwwa). To help in the accomplishment of these
goals, Imam
al-Jazouli required the faqir to
follow a fourteenth-step programme, which he called his "Rules of
Repentance" (shurut as-tawba). After following these rules for a
sufficient amount of time, the Jazulite initiate, who has now advanced
to the stage of the "sincere discipline" (murid sadiq), must
complete his training by acquiring ten attributes that summarise the
essence of the Jazulite way. To eliminate any feeling of
self-importance that might remain to the faqir, these attributes are
specifically related to the example of a dog:
In the dog are ten praiseworthy attributes that are
found in the sincere disciple: (1) he sleeps only a little at night;
this is the signs of the lovers of God (muhibbin); (2) he
complains of neither heat nor cold; this is a sign of the patient (sabirin);
(3) when he dies, he leaves nothing behind which can be inherited from
him; this is a sign of the ascetics (zahidin); (4) he is neither
angry nor hateful; this is a sign of the faithful (muminin); (5)
he is not sorrowful at the loss of a close relative, nor does he accept
assistance; this is a sign of the secure (muqinin); (6) if he is
given something, he consumes it and is content; this is a sign of the
contented (qani'in); (7) he has no known place of refuge, this
is a sign of the wanderers (sai'hin); (8) he sleeps in any place
that he finds; this is a sign of the satisfied (radiyin); (9)
once he knows his master, he never hates him, even if he beats him or
starves him; this is a sign of the knowers ('arifin); (10) he is
always hungry; this is a sign of the virtuous (salihin).
The
cornerstone of Jazulite praxis was the daily recitation of prayers on
behalf of the Prophet Sidna Mohammed (peace and blessing be upon him)
from Dalail al-Khayrat and the morning and noon recitation of
al-Jazouli's Hizb al-Falah (Litany of good fortune). To these
were added Sidi Abul Hassan Shadhili's Hizb al-Barr (Litany of
the land) and Al-Musabba'at al-'Ashr (The Ten sevens), a
collection of Quranic invocations complied by Sidi Abu Talib al-Makki
(d. 386/996) but attributed to Sidna
al-Khadir. Imam al-Jazouli
also composed another litany, Hizb al-Jazouli (The Litany of
al-Jazouli) or Hizb Subhana ad-Daim (The "Glory Be the to the
Eternal), which was reserved for
the use of his family. In the generation after his death, this litany
was appropriated by his indirect disciple Sidi
Mohammed al-Hadi Ben Aissa
(Patron Saint of Meknes; d. 933/1518).
The authority of the
spiritual master in the al-Jazouliya was absolute. al-Jazouli and his
successors expected unquestioning obedience from their followers, and
they were looked upon as inerrant sources of divine knowledge. "One
must cleave to spiritual masters", said Imam al-Jazouli, Even if they
are in Baghdad, for going to them brings illumination, mercy, and the
Secrets to hearts." The fully actualised Jazulite Shaykh (Shaykh
al-Wasil) "has arrived at the station of direct perception (maqam
al-mushahada) and has disappeared into the lights of perfections,
such that he is concerned with nothing but the King of Truth. When he
returns among humankind, he returns with illumination (anwar),
knowledge ('ulum), and laws (ahkam). He who
follows him is educated and inspired, and understands what those who
are cut off from him will never understand."
Bu this was not all. Shaykh
al-Wasil was essential to the disciple because he drew his wisdom from
the divine source of prophecy itself: "Write down what you hear from
me, for I am an intermediary between yourselves and the Truth. The
Truth illuminates and the slave understands. He who is inspired toward
the right (as-sawab) has an obligation to speak, and [his
guidance] is a benefit to others." The fact that Shaykh al-Wasil
possessed such as quasi-prophetic knowledge made obeying him a
near-canonical obligation: "He who follows the example of his Shaykh
follows the example of his Lord. For the sacredness of ('hurma)
of the Shaykh before his disciples is like the sacredness of the
Prophet before the Companions."
Because of his charismatic
personality and penchant for uttering ecstatic statements (shatahat),
few of those who came into contact with Imam
al-Jazouli were able to remain neutral. The Imam justified his
ecstatic statements by
asserting that he was the Mujaddid, the Renewer of his age, whose
prerogatives included a sort of poetic licence in regard to divinely
inspired utterances. The tradition of the Renewer in Islam is based on
a hadith from the Sunan of Abu Dawud which states: "God will
send to this community at the turn of every century someone who will
restore religion." This person is most is most often described in
Muslim sources as a scholar who will restore the original purity of
Islam by returning Muslims to the Prophetic Sunna. It was not
difficult for the juridically trained al-Jazouli to portray himself as
a Mujaddid. By composing Dalail al-Khayrat and thus focusing
attention on the specifically "Mohammadian" aspects of divine
inspiration, he was in a favourable position to cast himself as a
reviver of the Sunna.
Imam al-Jazouli
demonstrated his closeness to Allah and the Prophet Sidna Mohammed
(peace and blessing be upon him) through divine inspirations (ilhamat),
divine addresses (muhadathat), and divine conversations with God
(mukalamat). These attestations of divine favour also served as
proofs of his wilaya (sainthood) by confirming his exalted
ranks as the Khalifa (successor) of the Prophet, Mahdi,
and Qutb az-Zaman (Axis of the Age). Many of al-Jazouli's
statements consist of bold declarations of unparalleled spiritual
supremacy, both among his contemporaries and in comparison of old
generations of Sufis. Unlike the mahdist leaders of past generations,
however, al-Jazouli's doctrines were attractive to all classes of
society; poor and rich, illiterate and educated. Eventually, the
political potential of his followers was to provoke the Marinid Sultan
Abdellhaqq II (d. 869/1454) into opposition against the Shaykh and his
supporters.
Several of Imam
al-Jazouli's muhadathat call for the revival of Islam under a
divinely guided imam. These discourses are replete with double meaning
and make use of ambiguous and highly provocative vocabulary:
Reputation
is not gained through possessions or sons. Instead, reputation comes
from one's repute before the Lord of Lords. One is not great because of
the glory of wealth and children. Rather, one is great because of the
glory of God and His attributes. One is not great because of the
greatness of his tribe or his love of high rank. Instead, one is great
because of the greatness of nobility (sharaf) and lineage (nasab).
I am noble in lineage (ana sharifun fi-n nasab). My ancestor is
the Messenger of God (peace and blessing be upon him) and I am nearer
to him than all of God's creation. My reputation is eternal, dyed in
gold and silver. Oh you who desire gold and silver, follow us, for he
who follows us dwells in the heights of 'illiyyun in this world
and the Hereafter!
Past
nations (umam) have asked to be included in our polity (dawlatuna).
Yet no one can be included in it unless he has already attained
salvation (sa'ada). Our polity is the state (dawla) of
those who strive (mujtahidin) and struggle (mujahidin) in
the path of Allah—fighters against the enemy of Allah. The kings of the
Earth are in my hands and under my feet!
Oh assembly
of Muslims! Look at your Master, for He is with me! I have no
perception (nadhar) except through Him. His perfection (kamal)
has encompassed my chest and my life. Indeed, it has encompassed me for
all of my life! His perfection has annihilated me from everything other
than him. Oh you who would see me on earth! See me instead in Heaven,
on the Throne, and even above it! Do you not know that the axial saints
(aqtab) are needed by every created being? They are in the
station of prophethood (maqam an-nubuwa), revealing the divine
secret (yafshuna as-sirr)!
Oh assembly
of Muslims! Do you know that the Chosen One (peace and blessing be upon
him) is near to me (qaribun minni) and that his authority (hukmuhu)
is in my hands? He who follows me is his follower, but he who does not
follow me will never be his follower. I have heard [the Prophet] say
(peace and blessing be upon him): "You are the Mahdi! He who desires to
be saved (man arada an yus'ada) must come to you!"
Oh assembly
of Muslims! Cleave to the community of the Chosen One (peace and
blessing be upon him) and do not cleave to his enemies because of your
rejection of the faith, disputes, cheating, or treason! Oh assembly of
Muslims! God has created one to guide you at the end of time, so praise
him! Oh assembly of Muslims! No one hates us for our covenant with God
except the one who possesses neither this world nor the hereafter, and
no one is jealous of our obedience to God (the Glorious the Mighty)
except the one who has no fortune with God (the Glorious the Mighty)!
Oh my
Murid! Do not resent what I have given you of my speech (haditi)
and my words (kalami). For I have spoken to you in pre-eternity (azal)
before your existence. I have renewed your understanding after your
creation and illuminated your heart before your existence. I have
illuminated your essence after your creation, I have made known to you
the details of my knowledge, and I have honoured you among the best of
my creation. I have inspired you to hearken into me, I have given you
authority over the finest of my creatures, and I have bestowed on you
the greatest secret. Oh my Murid!, all of the ulama are in your grasp!
It is not difficult to
imagine the fear that such proclamations, coming from a man who
attracted more than 12,000 followers in less than thirteen years,
provoked in the ruler of a Marinid state that was disintegrating from
within. The doctrines of Imam al-Jazouli scandalised the ulama of Fez
and even some of his fellow Sufis. Since the Imam's openness were
particularly concerned about his use of institutional symbology, such
as shaving the head wearing the distinctive garments of the Majiriya
brotherhood, and reaffirming the ethos of Moroccan Sufism through the
practice of visiting spiritual masters, it is clear that what was most
threatening to vested interests was the idea of Jazulite corporateness.
al-Jazouli was little concerned with these fears, however, and even
condemned the ulama of Morocco for their hypocrisy and irrelevance,
especially with regard to their failure to arouse the Muslim masses in
defence of their religion. "Say to the ulama," he told his disciples,
"How happy you would be if only you were sincere!"
Most Important Ramifications of Imam al-Jazouli
The Shaykh reserved his
most bitter invectives for those scholars who, while criticising rural
Sufis for their lack of religious knowledge, allowed the masses of
Morocco to slip into ever deeper levels of ignorance and corruption. By
living off the wealth of their sinecures and doing little to spread
their knowledge to others, these ulama shared responsibility for the
rise of Christian-inspired customs and social deviance in the Moroccan
countryside. In his 'Aqida (creedal manifesto), Imam
al-Jazouli lays such problems as hooliganism, the indiscriminate mixing
of the sexes, and full body tattooing squarely at the feet of the
scholarly establishment. Rather than wasting their time making
pronouncements about the permissibility of minor variations in Islamic
practice, the ulama should instead teach the fundamental values of
Islam to everyone: "Teach… the women and children, the Sufis and the
masses, whether free or slave, especially if they are closely tied [to
you] by contract or personal relationship, such as family or others.
The Prophet (peace and blessing be upon him) said: 'God has not charged
anyone with a sin greater than the ignorance of his people.'"
By the end of 863/1459,
Imam al-Jazouli and his followers had begun to wear out their welcome
in the city of Asafi. The year had already been one of the worst in
recent memory. It began with the Portuguese conquest of the
Mediterranean stronghold of al-Qasr as-Saghir, which removed the last
hope of reinforcing the kingdom of Granada in al-Andalus, and marked
the resumption of the Christian Reconquista that had temporary been
blocked at Tangier in 852/1437. If this disaster were not enough, the
same year witnessed an orgy of political conspiracy and bloodshed in
the Marinid capital of Fez. The regent Abu Zakariyya al-Wattasi, the
commander of the relief expedition to Tangier and symbolic leader of
the Moroccan jihad, was long absent from the scene, having being
captured and executed by Banu Ma'aqil' Arabs.
News of the unrest in Fez
must certainly have reached Asafi, where Imam al-Jazouli had been
calling for jihad since his arrival. The merchants of the city, who at
the time numbered as many as six hundred individuals, were loath to
abandon the profits they were earning from the Portuguese, who used
Asafi as a source of the trade items that they exchanged for gold on
the West African coast. These dealing were severally criticised by
al-Jazouli and his disciples, who resided in a great circle of tents
around Sidi Abu Mohammed Salih's ribat. This restless mass of Sufis and
Arab tribesmen, who at the time numbered half of the population of
Asafi itself, posed an unacceptable threat to the city's elites.
Cognizant of the fact that they could not assert their independence
with impunity, the merchants forced the Marinid governor of Asafi to
summon al-Jazouli to an audience. "fearing him because of the number of
people around him (muhibbin) and fearing that the Shaykh's
followers (muridin) might push them out of their world." The
governor challenged Imam al-Jazouli with an ultimatum. "If you do not
get away from me, I will red myself of you!" To which the Shaykh's
replied: "I am the one who will get away from you, but you will follow
me as well!" This prediction came true only two years later, when the
merchants of Asafi, now in league of the Portuguese, proclaimed their
city independence from Fez and forced the hapless governor to flee from
his life.
After being expelled from
the city, Imam al-Jazouli and his entourage moved south to Haha, a
foothill region of the High Atlas mountains midway between the
economically important Dukkala and the Sus and a strategic location to
the defence of central Morocco. The Imam established his new ribat at
Afughal, in the Aït Dawud tribal region east of the present town of
Tamanar. In fact, he maintained two ribats in the region: one for use
in the summer and one for use in the winter. The Imam's summer ribat
have been near the pass of Sidi Ali Mashu in Jabal Igran, where the
High Atlas mountains rise to an altitude of over 6,000 feet. His winter
ribat, by contrast, have been located nearer the coast—below Jabal
Amsitten near the present town of Smimou—where the Atlas foothills
reached no more than 3,00 feet in elevation. The military force of the
Imam based in these ribats have served as a buffer against Christian
incursions by threatening the Portuguese at both Asafi to the north and
Massa to the south.
For Sidi Mohammed ibn
Slimane al-Jazouli, social consciousness was part of the very essence
of Sufism. For this reason, he promoted social activism in his 'Aqida.
A genre of religious literature that is usually devoted to doctrinal
matters alone. In this short treaties, he calls on his followers to
everything possible to improve the moral standards of their
communities. Addressing the Arab pastoralists who resided near his
ribat at Afughal, he condemns their drunkenness, immorality, and body
tattooing, and he criticises those who engage in such behaviours as
"madmen (majanin), enemies of God, the Messenger, and religion,
and enemies of those God-fearing souls who call [people] to Him." As a
remedy for their sins, he suggested that they give up their nomadic
lifestyle and take up farming (hiratha). This perception
indicates that the Imam wanted his pastoralist followers to abandon
their predatory ways for a livelihood that fostered creation and
nurturance rather than destruction and theft. It may also indicate that
he sought to institute a policy of sedentarisation, since the stability
of fixed adobe made Sufi training and socialisation easier to
accomplish.
Imam al-Jazouli was to
spend no more than six years at Afughal. According to the testimony of
his closest disciples, on the fourth day of Dul-Qi'ada 869 (28 June
1465), he collapsed and died while making his Subh prayer.
Because of the suddenness of his death and the fact that he gave no
sign of illness beforehand, it was immediately assumed that the someone
had poisoned him. Almost as soon as the Shaykh's body was wrapped in
its burial shroud, a dispute arose between the Sufi adepts in the
Shaykh's entourage and his pastoralist followers of Banu Ma'aqil, who
revered him not as a teacher and mystic but as a divinely appointed
leader and man of power. This confrontation was lost by the Sufi
adepts, who were forced to leave Afughal and take up residence
elsewhere in Morocco. The departure of al-Jazouli's most learned
companions now meant that both his ribat and mortal remains were under
the control of unlettered Banu Ma'aqil bedouins. On the advise of the
marginally educated Amr ibn as-Sayyaf, al-Jazouli was placed in a
movable ark (tabut) rather than being buried in the ground.
The sudden death of the
Imam and the revolt of Ibn Sayyaf in the regions of Haha and Shyazma
are the most significant plot reversals in the narrative of
al-Jazouli's life. Rather than been buried, al-Jazouli's body was left
in an ark so that it could be taken on campaigns as a talisman of
victory. When not in the field, the ark that held the Shaykh's remains
was placed in an open-air ribat on the summit of a hill near Qal'at
al-Muridin, where it was guarded around the clock and illuminated at
night by large torches. al-Jazouli Sufi biographers, who wished to
avoid tainting his reputation while at the same time blackening that of
Ibn as-Sayyaf, are anonymous in asserting that this rebel never lost a
battle while the ark containing the Shaykh's body was with him. The
emplotment of the al-Jazouli's career as a saint comes to an end in
890/1485, with murder of Ibn Sayyaf at the hands of his wife after
finding him in bed with her daughter.
The biographers of Imam
al-Jazouli state that the fear of another uprising, in which
al-Jazouli's body would once again be dug up by restive tribespeople,
was the main reason why the Saadian sharif Ahmed al-Araj moved the
Shaykh's never-corrupted body to Marrakech in the year 940/1525,
including him hence in his
Sab'atu
Rijal project to the city.
Furthermore, it is an open secret that Imam al-Jazouli's shrine in the
district of Riyad Laarous that the Shaykh's body is not buried
under the catafalque where most visitors pay their respects. Instead it
is located deep beneath the wall behind the catafalque. Jazulite Sufis
thus pay their respects to the left of the catafalque, facing the wall
behind the muqaddam's seat. In the following century of Imam
al-Jazouli's death, under the influence of his disciples and allied
mystics, the violent paradigm of political authority would be replaced
by a sharifian doctrine that created a distinct identity for Morocco and laid the ideological foundations for the
country's Alawite present monarchy.
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