Matthew M. Heaton
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Colonial ideology and the Nigerian pilgrimage, 1907– 26
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Chapter 1 examines the development of colonial administrative ideology in Nigeria and its ultimate application to the pilgrimage by the early 1920s. Initially, British colonial officials showed little interest in controlling the movement of subjects at all, let alone for something as complex as the pilgrimage. The nascent inklings of ‘indirect rule’ under Lord Lugard in northern Nigeria suggested that the less intrusion into the ‘traditional’ practices of colonial subjects the better, and nowhere was this considered more sacrosanct than in religious matters. However, by the late 1910s, attitudes were beginning to change, as colonial officials in both Nigeria and Sudan began to view the pilgrimage as in some ways a threat to the premises of indirect rule by weakening the control that indigenous political authorities had over their subjects, injecting anti-colonial and fanatical discourses, and threatening the security of colonial subjects through deprivation, disease, and even enslavement on their long voyages. By the early 1920s, it had become clear to many colonial officials that some form of regulation of the pilgrimage would be necessary if for no other reason than to mitigate the problems that the traditional practices posed for the new colonial political order.

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Decolonising the Hajj

The pilgrimage from Nigeria to Mecca under empire and independence

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