The
ancient Malian city of Timbuktu has housed for centuries thousands of manuscripts
which are invaluable to the history of Africa and Islam.
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A cultural treasure of sub-Saharan Islam, hundreds
of thousands of priceless parchments sit on metal shelves in Mali's capital as
archivists painstakingly classify and digitize them. They have endured the ravages of time and jihadist
fury, but the Timbuktu manuscripts may yet perish, far from their fabled home
in the shifting sands of the northern Mali desert. Their clandestine passage to Bamako will remain one
of the most remarkable episodes of the silent resistance to jihadism in
northern Mali, documented to widespread acclaim in the Oscar-nominated movie
"Timbuktu".
The vast majority were spirited away as Islamists
torched part of Timbuktu's Ahmed Baba Islamic Research Institute in January
2013 as they fled a French-led offensive on their northern bastion.
The insurgent fighters had already destroyed many
of the city's centuries-old shrines, the iconic legacy of Timbuktu's golden age
of intellectual and spiritual development.
The fighters took the city in April 2012, swiftly
implementing a version of Islamic law which forced women to wear veils and set
whipping and stoning as punishment for transgressions.
Islamist fighters had considered the texts and the
shrines -- which helped earn the city UNESCO world heritage status -- to be
idolatrous.
"It was me who brought the manuscripts
here," says Mohammed al-Kadi Maiga, of the Ahmed Baba Institute, which is
ensuring their preservation in Bamako.
The librarian organized the clandestine smuggling
in three stages of thousands of tracts on astronomy, physics, chemistry and
literature, hidden in trunks, backpacks and bags of rice.
"We saw how in Iraq manuscripts and cultural
artifacts were ransacked," he said, explaining how the 2003 US invasion
led staff and families housing private collections to conclude that their own
heritage must be rescued.
"If they had stopped us, maybe they would have
cut off our hands," Maiga shuddered, proud to converse with colleagues in
classical Arabic, a language imposed by Timbuktu's brutal new masters to
enforce their authority.
- Perilous return -
Lazarus Eloundou, the head of UNESCO in Mali,
estimates that at least 370,000 manuscripts were smuggled out of Timbuktu and
the surrounding area.
But he laments the "incalculable loss" of
around 4,200 which went missing - burned or otherwise destroyed.
"Those who destroy, they do so to impose on
communities in the territories they occupy their own conception of life,
culture, religion, the better to dominate these populations," Eloundou
said.
"When they want to erase your history, they
want to show that you have never existed before."
The collection's wealth of knowledge, still largely
unexplored, contains manuscripts dating back 800 years.
The tomes, mostly in Arabic and Fula -- a language
widely spoken across West Africa -- covered a variety of subjects: astronomy,
botany, music, law, history and politics.
In the Ahmed Baba Institute's makeshift building in
Bamako, a 12th-century biography of the Prophet Mohammed shares shelf space
with a Hausa-language Koran from the 18th century.
A copy of the 1880 Treaty of Madrid, guaranteeing
consular protections in Morocco to Western nations, is preserved nearby.
If these artifacts are to survive, they must make
their way back to Timbuktu, a return as potentially perilous as the outward
journey, experts warn.
"It is essential to preserve these ancient
manuscripts, currently in Bamako, against the risk of rapid deterioration to
which they are exposed," concluded participants in an international
conference on this subject in the Malian capital late January, calling for an "emergency
plan".
"Returning the manuscripts to Timbuktu is an
obligation, a duty. We have no choice but to send them back one day to
Timbuktu. But when? That is the question," Abdul Kadri Idrissa Maiga, the
director of the Ahmed Baba Institute.
"First, we must first
restore the premises so that they are suitable to receive these manuscripts.
You also need maximum security," he said, pointing to the unstable
situation in the north.
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The head or the files department, Drissa Traore,
checks a manuscript at the Ahmed Baba Institute in Bamako on January 28, 2015
©Sebastien Rieussec (AFP)
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An employee makes boxes to protect manuscripts at the Ahmed Baba Institute in Bamako on January 28, 2015 ©Sebastien Rieussec (AFP) |
With AFP reports
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