Matthew M. Heaton
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Introduction
Colonising and decolonising the pilgrimage to Mecca from Nigeria
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The introduction lays out the historical and historiographical context for the content chapters that follow. It begins with a brief history of the Hajj from West Africa generally, and the Nigeria region specifically, prior to the twentieth century. It then transitions to an examination of the existing historiography of the Hajj, which focuses heavily on developments in the Middle East, South Asia, and Southeast Asia. From here, the introduction places the Nigerian pilgrimage in the historical and historiographical context of colonial Nigeria, arguing that the British colonial government took a minimalist approach to Hajj management, even as colonial efforts to direct pilgrim flows contributed to significant increases in the total pilgrim population passing through and settling in Sudan. The most significant transformations to the pilgrimage came from the exercise of nationalist priorities to establish a more interventionist, developmentalist, and social welfare-oriented state in the years before and after Nigerian independence in 1960. The introduction thus concludes by placing the Nigerian pilgrimage in the historiographical context of decolonisation studies, arguing both for the importance of decolonisation as a transformational force in the history of the Hajj and for the Hajj as a valuable case study for examining transnational implications of global decolonisation.

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Decolonising the Hajj

The pilgrimage from Nigeria to Mecca under empire and independence

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