Somalia RELIGIOUS LIFE
Modern mosque in Mogadishu
Courtesy R.W.S. Hudson
Italian-built Roman Catholic cathedral in Mogadishu,
subsequently gutted by bombs in the civil war
Courtesy R.W.S. Hudson
Most Somalis are Sunni Muslims. (Less than 1 percent of
ethnic Somalis are Christians.) Loyalty to Islam reinforces
distinctions that set Somalis apart from their immediate African
neighbors, most of whom are either Christians (particularly the
Amhara and others of Ethiopia) or adherents of indigenous African
faiths.
The Islamic ideal is a society organized to implement Muslim
precepts in which no distinction exists between the secular and
the religious spheres. Among Somalis this ideal had been
approximated less fully in the north than among some groups in
the settled regions of the south where religious leaders were at
one time an integral part of the social and political structure.
Among nomads, the exigencies of pastoral life gave greater weight
to the warrior's role, and religious leaders were expected to
remain aloof from political matters.
The role of religious functionaries began to shrink in the
1950s and 1960s as some of their legal and educational powers and
responsibilities were transferred to secular authorities. The
position of religious leaders changed substantially after the
1969 revolution and the introduction of scientific socialism.
Siad Barre insisted that his version of socialism was compatible
with Quranic principles, and he condemned atheism. Religious
leaders, however, were warned not to meddle in politics.
The new government instituted legal changes that some
religious figures saw as contrary to Islamic precepts. The regime
reacted sharply to criticism, executing some of the protesters
(see Islam in the Colonial Era and After
, this ch.).
Subsequently, religious leaders seemed to accommodate themselves
to the government.
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