Islamic Society and State Power in Senegal By Leonardo A. Villalon. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995, pp. 338.

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Ahmed Sheikh Bangura

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Abstract

Senegal is one of the most stable sub-Saharan African countries. Leonardo
Villal6n's book, Islamic Society and State Power in Senegal, attributes that stability
to the forms of religious organization provided by Senegal's unique brands
of Sufism. Most Senegalese are affiliated to a marabout (Sufi leader) and are
members of a Senegalese Sufi order. These orders remain the most pervasive
forms of social organization. Leonardo Villal6n's work, devoted to an examination
of the shape of Senegalese society, therefore focuses on its most salient feature:
the forms and patterns of its religious organization.
The author argues that the Senegalese Sufi orders, developed in the wake of
French colonialism, provide an effective mode of social organization vis-a-vis
the state. They check the hegemonic ambitions of the state and give a measure
of leverage to the disciple-citizens in their dealings with it. This maraboutic system
explains much of Senegal's relative success in maintaining a dynamic balance
between state and society. In other words, the Sufi pattern has become the
basis for the establishment of a religiously based "civil society." While this balance
remains precarious, as there are conceivable factors that can disrupt it, it
has thus far shielded Senegal from the instability and strife that continue to
bedevil many African societies ...

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