In Senegal, Iran and Saudi Arabia vie for
religious influence
Send a link to a friend
[May 12, 2017]
By Tim Cocks and Bozorgmehr Sharafedin
DAKAR (Reuters) - In an upmarket suburb of
Senegal's seaside capital, a branch of Iran's Al-Mustafa University
teaches Senegalese students Shi'ite Muslim theology, among other
subjects. The branch director is Iranian and a portrait of Iranian
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei hangs on his office wall.
The teaching includes Iranian culture and history, Islamic science and
Iran's mother tongue, Farsi; students receive free food and financial
help. The university is a Shi'ite outpost in a country where Sufism, a
more relaxed, mystical and apolitical form of Sunni Islam, is the norm.
Two miles away, the Islamic Preaching Association for Youth (APIJ)
teaches the strand of Islam that predominates in Iran's great religious,
political and military rival, Saudi Arabia.
The APIJ funnels cash from donors in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Dubai and
Kuwait to mosques run by Salafists - conservative Sunni Muslims who are
sworn enemies of Iran. The APIJ's shelves are stacked with Salafist
theology texts adorned with gold-leaf Arabic inscriptions - texts its
imams use to preach in some 200 mosques across Senegal.
The two institutions embody a contest for influence in Senegal, and more
widely in Africa, between Iran-backed Shi'ites and Saudi-funded Sunnis.
It's one strand of a broad power struggle in which each side is spending
millions of dollars to win converts. At stake is huge political
influence, on a resource-rich continent that has often served as the
theater for rivalries between world powers.
Interviews with teachers and converts on both sides shed light on the
depth of the divide and the ways both sides try to gain an edge.
The Iranian director of Dakar's branch of Al-Mustafa makes no secret of
his concerns over his Saudi rivals. "The Salafists came to Africa to
destroy ... Islam," said Chiekh Abbas Motaghedi in February.
Up the road, in the APIJ building, the Salafists show equal passion.
"We cannot accept the Iranian influence in Senegal, and we'll do
everything to fight it," said Chiekh Ibrahima Niang, the imam, sitting
legs crossed in a silky white robe. "We need to show the world that
Shi'ism is wrong."
But for Senegal, either influence would be a disruption. It's a society
that has always leaned towards political moderation, thanks largely to a
tradition of tolerance espoused by its Sufi orders or "brotherhoods."
"Where the brotherhoods are weak, as in eastern Senegal, is where the
threat of radicalisation is highest," said Bakary Sambe, director of the
Dakar-based Timbuktu Institute and a coordinator for the Observatory on
Religious Radicalism and Conflicts in Africa.
Iran has often been a destabilizing influence: In 2010, an Iranian arms
shipment was intercepted in the Nigerian port of Lagos which Senegal
suspected were destined for rebels in its southern Casamance region.
Dakar briefly cut ties with Tehran over it.
Salafism is the more troubling strand, Sufis say: It is largely free of
political interference, but has shared cause with violence that Senegal
has so far escaped.
"Salafists in Senegal are cousins of those making jihad in Mali," Ahmed
Khalifa Niasse, son of a deceased powerful Sufi Imam and vocal critic of
Gulf Arab religious influence, told Reuters at his palace in Dakar.
"They see themselves as soldiers of God purifying Islam."
Salafists vehemently deny that link. "Salafism has nothing to do with
terrorism," says Niang. "Yes, there are people who want to use force to
impose the Salafist way, but we are very much against them. We are
against violence."
TRAINING LOYALISTS
Iran's supreme leader Khamenei supervises the activities of Al-Mustafa,
which is based in the Iranian city of Qom and has branches in 50
countries. Thousands of students from across Africa receive enough
Iranian money to enable them and their families to visit Qom while
finishing their studies, said the son of a cleric based there who
declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue.
Al-Mustafa in Dakar receives 150 students a year and gives them free
tuition, a stipend and breakfast, its director of studies Chiekh Adrame
Wane told Reuters. Graduates repay the generosity by promoting Iran
online or in books, said a professor based in Qom. In countries like
Somalia, Iran pays for weddings and home furniture, including a TV and a
fridge, if both couples are Shi'ite or newly converted to Shi'ism.
Al-Mustafa is now Iran's main tool for promoting Shi'ism, said the
professor, who also declined to be named. Its aim is "to train people to
be loyal to the Islamic Republic and the Supreme Leader."
A top official at Al-Mustafa in Qom, also declining to be named, gave a
different view. "Our goal is purely cultural and educational. We want to
promote higher education in Africa," he said.
"Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Turkey and many other countries have built their
religious schools in Africa. Alongside them, there are many American and
British Christian schools, and even Hindu schools. So there is a rivalry
in Africa and if we do not establish our presence there, we would fall
behind."
[to top of second column] |
Students sit outside the Grand Mosque de lÕVead, a Salafist mosque
of the Anta Diop University in Dakar, Senegal, May 4, 2017.
REUTERS/Mikal McAllister
Two senior Al-Mustafa officials said students and teachers at Al-Mustafa
are routinely vetted by the Ministry of Intelligence or the powerful
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Reuters was unable to independently
verify this.
Motaghedi, the Al-Mustafa director in Dakar, said the university had
no involvement with the intelligence services or Iranian politics.
"We're a private university ... Our only mission is to teach,
nothing else," he said, adding that Khameni was merely a patron and
adopting Shi'ism was not a requirement for study.
In the 2016 Iranian budget, Al-Mustafa received 2,390 billion rials
($74 million). But the university receives more funding from the
office of the Supreme Leader and other conglomerates under his
command, one official said. Neither Motaghedi nor Wane would comment
on financial flows to the Dakar branch.
"SIMPLE MESSAGE"
At the APIJ in Dakar, Imam Niang extolled the virtues of Sunni
Islam. "Salafism ... has a simple message," he said as he scanned an
ornate Koran through reading glasses. "To be a good Muslim, you must
follow the practices of the Prophet Mohammed."
Niang went to Koranic schools from age 6 until 27 and later studied
in Saudi Arabia. Immediately after he returned in 1989, he and
fellow conservatives set up the APIJ in Senegal. Since then,
hundreds of modest mint-green and sky-blue mosques financed by the
APIJ have sprung up in suburbs of Dakar and fishing villages across
the country.
A success for the Salafists was when they gradually took over
worship at the main mosque at Dakar's Anta Diop University in the
1990s.
Imam Ismaila Ndiaye, coodinator of Senegal's Salafist movements and
preacher at the university, said his strand of Sunni Islam offered
an alternative to Sufism, asserting that Senegal's secular state and
liberal values were imposed on it by French colonizers. But he said
Salafist mosques were not turning Senegalese youth towards jihad.
"If the Catholics can finance projects in Senegal aimed at
evangelizing at people, then why shouldn't Saudi Arabia do the same
thing?" he said.
He said Gulf businessmen had committed only small sums to Sunni
movements in Senegal – $20 million in total over several decades –
but a steady stream of funds continues to what he identified as
three main pillars of Salafism: the APIJ, al Falah, which was
founded in 1975, and a movement on outskirts of Dakar led by
firebrand cleric Ahmed Lo, who spent 17 years in Saudi Arabia.
"THE RIGHT PATH"
Judging who is winning the contest for influence is tricky. Imam
Sherif Mballo, secretary general of the League of AhlulBayt, a
pan-African Shi'ite movement founded last August, says there are
between 30,000 and 50,000 Shi'ites in Senegal, where the population
is 15 million.
Mballo converted to Shi'ism after watching the Iranian revolution on
TV, then worked with the Iranian embassy for 25 years, making
several visits to Iran. But when it came to establishing his own
pro-Iran Shi'ite group, after an initial injection from an Iranian
businessman - he declined to say how much - he said he received
nothing more.
There are no reliable figures on the numbers of Salafists in
Senegal, said the Timbuktu Institute's Sambe. However, he said
Salafists control several hugely popular mosques.
Peter Pham, Africa director of the Atlantic Council in Washington,
said traditional Senegalese Sufi brotherhoods have more in common
with the conservative Sunni strand prevalent in Saudi Arabia than
they do with Shi'ites, because Sufism is already part of the Sunni
religion.
Some Senegalese find the Sufi traditions of their ancestors old hat
and stifling. The opportunity to adopt other versions of Islam is
liberating.
Maths teacher Souleymane Sall, 38, converted to Salafism while at
school. He liked the pure focus on the prophet's acts, and he was
weary with what he saw as the lack of intellectual rigour in the
Sufi faith he grew up with.
But after university, a friend lent him a book on Shi'ism and, after
doing more research, he started to suspect a lot of bad things the
Salafists were saying about it were false.
"Eventually, I concluded that Shi'ism was the right path for me," he
told Reuters. "At least for the moment."
(Cocks reported from Dakar, Sharafedin from Dubai; Edited by Sara
Ledwith and Richard Woods)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |