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Periodical article |
Title: | Religion and communal conflict in the Sudan: The war against paganism |
Author: | Johnson, D.H. |
Year: | 2000 |
Periodical: | Bulletin of the Royal Institute for Inter-faith Studies |
Volume: | 2 |
Issue: | 2 |
Pages: | 63-84 |
Language: | English |
Geographic term: | Sudan |
Subjects: | interreligious relations violence |
Abstract: | The Sudan's current religious confrontation began in the nineteenth century: first, with the establishment of Egyptian colonial rule, which made a political distinction between Egypt's Sudanese Muslim and non-Muslim subjects; and then, with the introduction of the organizing principles of the jihadic state under the Mahdiyya. Post-WWII Sudanese nationalism has attempted to build a national identity around the spread of Islam and Arabism, and this has made the Sudan's large pagan population the particular focus of religious conversion and oppression. This paper describes the different ways in which some Sudanese pagan societies have confronted, accommodated, or evaded Islam in the twentieth century. It also briefly discusses the different relations which exist between the Sudanese Christian churches and paganism, since the use of vernacular languages in the propagation of Christianity means that pagans and Christians have entered into a dialogue, based on a shared language of spirituality. [Abstract from journal]. |