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This book develops a number of points that highlight the introduction of Islam and its law in sub-Saharan Africa.It should be pointed out that Islamic law took root in sub-Saharan Africa without abrogating the ancestral law typical of Africa, with which it coexists in perfect harmony. So the aim of Islamic law was not to erase African legal customs for its own sake, but rather to integrate new principles that enhance the living, enriching part of African culture. In sub-Saharan Africa, there are several legal schools known in literary Arabic as "al-Madhahib al-Fiqhiyya". Among these legal schools, Seybou DJIBO cited Sunni schools such as Hanafism, Malikism, Shafi'ism, Hanbalism and Wahhabism, which is so feared, perhaps because of its ideology, which some describe as archaic, backward and hermetically sealed. He also cited Kharidjite schools such as Ibadism, and Shiite schools such as Imamisme, Ismailisme Khodja and Bohora, which are particularly widespread in East Africa.
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This book develops a number of points that highlight the introduction of Islam and its law in sub-Saharan Africa.It should be pointed out that Islamic law took root in sub-Saharan Africa without abrogating the ancestral law typical of Africa, with which it coexists in perfect harmony. So the aim of Islamic law was not to erase African legal customs for its own sake, but rather to integrate new principles that enhance the living, enriching part of African culture. In sub-Saharan Africa, there are several legal schools known in literary Arabic as "al-Madhahib al-Fiqhiyya". Among these legal schools, Seybou DJIBO cited Sunni schools such as Hanafism, Malikism, Shafi'ism, Hanbalism and Wahhabism, which is so feared, perhaps because of its ideology, which some describe as archaic, backward and hermetically sealed. He also cited Kharidjite schools such as Ibadism, and Shiite schools such as Imamisme, Ismailisme Khodja and Bohora, which are particularly widespread in East Africa.