Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T20:48:28.197Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Mecca Pilgrimage By West African Pastoral Nomads

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

Each dry season many Um Borroro or nomadic Fulani set off eastwards to Mecca. They are some of the 5,000 or so West Africans who make the pilgrimage (the haj) each year by travelling along the savannas through Cameroun, Chad, and the Sudan.1 About four-fifths of them come from what is generally called Hausaland and Bornu in Nigeria and Niger, but some pilgrims from all the West African savanna countries travel overland.2 Although they comprise only about six per cent of the total arriving in Mecca from West Africa (the majority come by air and sea), they represent an important relict movement which earlier this century involved more than 15,000 migrants per annum.3

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1977

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Page 47 note 1 King, R., ‘The Pilgrimage to Mecca: some geographical and historical aspects’, in Erdkunde (Bonn), 26, I, 1972, pp. 6173Google Scholar; and Tweedy, O., ‘Central African Highway’, in Geographical Journal (London), 75, 1930, pp. 215.Google Scholar

Page 47 note 2 Birks, J. S., ‘Aspects of Overland Pilgrimage to Mecca, with Special Reference to Darfur Province, Republic of Sudan’, Ph.D. dissertation, University of Liverpool, 1975Google Scholar; and ‘Overland Pilgrimage in the Savanna Lands of Africa’, in Kosinski, L. A. and Prothero, R. M. (eds.), People on the Move (London, 1975), pp. 297308.Google Scholar

Page 47 note 3 al Nagar, O. A. R., ‘West Africa and the Muslim Pilgrimage: an historical study with special reference to the nineteenth century’, Ph.D. dissertation, London University, 1969Google Scholar; Latham, R. G. and Thompson, R. J. C., ‘Report on Westerners in the Sudan’, typescript, Ibadan Library Archives, 1927Google Scholar; and Willis, C. A., ‘Report on Slavery and the Pilgrimage’, typescript, Khartoum, 1926.Google Scholar

Page 47 note 4 Barbour, K. M., Khor al Atshan, A Geographical Account of a Scheme of Agricultural Development in the Central Sudan (Khartoum, 1951)Google Scholar; Davies, H. R. J., ‘The West African in the Economic Geography of the Sudan’, in Geography (London), 49, 1964Google Scholar; Graham, A., ‘Rural Water Supplies and Settlement in Gedaref District, Sudan’, Ph.D. dissertation, London University, 1963Google Scholar; and Mather, D. B., ‘Migration in the Sudan’, in Steel, R. W. and Fisher, C. A. (eds.), Geographical Essays on British Tropical Lands (London, 1956), pp. 115–43.Google Scholar

Page 48 note 1 Stenning, D. J., Savanna Nomads (London, 1959).Google Scholar

Page 48 note 2 Sudan Government, Darfur Province Diaries, Khartoum, 1921.

Page 49 note 1 Graham, op. cit.

Page 51 note 1 Stenning, D. J., ‘Transhumance, Migratory Drift and Migration Patterns of Pastoral Fulani Nomads’, in Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (London), 87, I, 0106 1957, pp. 5773.Google Scholar

Page 51 note 2 Barbour, K. M., The Republic of the Sudan – a Regional Geography (London, 1961).Google Scholar

Page 56 note 1 Davies, loc. cit.

Page 57 note 1 Prothero, R. M., ‘Migration in Tropical Africa’, in Caidwell, J. C. and Okonjo, C. (eds.), The Population of Tropical Africa (New York, 1968), pp. 250–63.Google Scholar

Page 57 note 2 Shamma, S. O. Abu, ‘International Aspects of Public Health’, in The Health of the Sudan (Khartoum, 1960), pp. 101–6Google Scholar; and Maurice, G. K., ‘The Entry of Relapsing Fever into the Sudan’, in Sudan Notes and Records (Khartoum), XV, I, 1932, pp. 97119.Google Scholar

Page 57 note 3 Sudan Government, Darfur Province Diaries, Khartoum, 1943.