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Emir of Zazzau Alu Dansidi, a learned Poet

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Emir Alu Dansidi

 

By Abubakar Muhammad Musa(Saraki)

linguistmam@gmail.com

 

Malam Sidi Abdulkadiri, the Sixth Emir of Zazzau, was the eldest son of Malam Musa Bamalli and was born before the jihad which ushered in the Fulani rule in Zazzau emirate. His mother, Aminatu was a Fulani of ‘Yandoto.

 

Malam Sidi Abdulkadiri who took over the mantle of leadership of Zazzau Emirate from Emir of Zazzau Muhammad Sani was succeded by Malam Abdussalami Basullube in the year 1853.

Emir Alu Dansidi

Emir Alu Dansidi with a European

Like other children of Malam Musa, Sidi Abdulkadiri was privileged as the first son of Musa to be trained both in the art of administration and scholarship.

Sidi waited for 40 years before he finally succeeded his father, Malam Musa. He held the office of Dangaladima, before his coronation. Sidi’s children; Muhammadu, Nuhu, and Aliyu (Alu) had each held the office of Wambai separately. Alu later succeeded his father and became the Emir of Zazzau in the year 1903.

Read also:Peacock royalist on the throne of Zazzau Emirate

Alu Dansidi (1903 to 1922)belongs to Mallawa Ruling House of Zazzau Emirate. He was the grandson of the flag bearer of Usman Danfodio, the first Fulani Emir of Zazzau, Malam Musa Bamalle. Alu didn’t grow up in the palace with his parents as he was raised by his teacher and mentor, Malam Abubakar is popularly known as Liman Durum.

 

Alu was the first person that became Emir after the British colonial conquest of Zazzau emirate and its incorporation into the protectorate of Northern Nigeria. He became the Emir at the ripe age of 62 years.

 

As a poet, he contributed his quota in poetry and literary work. He wrote a lot of poetries among other ones are:

 

> – Tabarkoko

> – Saudul Kulubi

> – Wakar Diga

> – Wakar Kano etc

 

Emir of Zazzau Alu Dansidi was privileged to have a very formidable team of brave and influential people as his Council members and District Heads of the Emirate.

These include:

 

  1. Magajin Gari Dalhatu Dan Yero (who later became an Emir)
  2. Danmadami Ibrahim Kwasau (Later became an Emir)
  3. Katukan Zazzau Ja’afaru Dan Isiyaku (Later became an Emir)
  4. Madaki Sa’idu
  5. Madaki Yero (Then he was Galadiman Zazzau)
  6. Dangaladima Abbas
  7. Wali Halliru
  8. Iya Abdullahi

 

All of the listed councilors of the emirate were eminently qualified to ascend the throne of the emirship. Apart from being learned and experienced in administration, they all have a royal pedigree.

 

It’s in Alu Dansidi’s cabinet that three members ascended the throne of Zazzau Emirate. These are:

 

1 – Emir of Zazzau Dalhatu Dan Yero

2 – Emir of Zazzau Ibrahim Kwasau and

3 – Emir of Zazzau Malam Ja’afaru Dan Isiyaku.

 

MALLAWA’S LEGACIES IN ZAZZAU

 

The legacies of Emir of Zazzau, Malam Alu Dansidi are numerous but notably are:

 

  1. Provision of Mallawa Eid Praying Ground along Zaria – Jos road axis, precisely near “Gonar Waziri”, opposite the present-day “Jushin Gari”, where he (Malam Musa) led the first Eid Prayer during his time and became Permanent during the reign of Alu Dansidi for Mallawa Dynasty.

 

  1. Establishment of the first Zaria prison. Alu Dansidi’s uncle and predecessor, Emir Abubakar, who ruled for 3 years, from 1873 to 1876, during his reign he didn’t reside at the palace, instead decided to rule from his personal house which was much bigger than the palace at the time.

When Alu’s uncle, Emir Abubakar died he was buried inside the house which was personal property. However, on the ascension to the throne, Emir Alu donated his uncle’s house, ( Emir Abubakar’s house) located at Kofar Doka, Zaria to the colonial masters which were converted to Zaria Prison.

It was Malam Musa Bamalle that initiated the idea of moving the Zaria Central Mosque from it’s initial position at Anguwan Juma to its present location at Zazzau Emir’s Palace. He laid the foundation of the mosque by himself but the construction work was actually done during the reign of Emir Abdulkareem.

 

  1. During Malam Musa’s reign, he established an intermarriage link between members of two royal families -the Mallawa ruling House and the Katsinawa ruling House by giving out the hands of his daughter in marriage, Iya Atu to his very close friend, Malam Abdulkarimu- the patriarch of Katsinawa ruling house.

Read also: Why EFCC’s chiefs are always booted out of office?

This culture of intermarriage between members of the two ruling houses has been sustained to date. For example, Ahmadu Nuhu Bamalli, a member of the royal family from the  Mallawa lineage is married to the daughter of the present Emir of Zazzau, Alhaji Shehu Idris, who hails from the Katsinawa ruling house. Many examples of this intermarital relationship abound between members of the two royal households.

 

  1. Malam Musa Bamalle was among the closest allies of the founder of the Sokoto Caliphate, Shehu Usman Danfodio, and one of the prominent field commanders of the1804 Jihad. He was the only person that participated in “Koto Jihad” from the Zazzau area.

 

  1. Malam Musa was among the Danfodio’s acquaintance that accompanied Malam Sulaiman, who established the Fulani dynasty in Kano, following the overthrow of Habe where he (Malam Musa) spent a period of six months with the newly crowned Kano Emir, Malam Sulaiman, assisting him to put the administrative machinery in place.

 

  1. It was during the reign of Emir Alu that railway line was constructed from Baro, in the present-day Niger State to Doguwa in the present day Kano State which passed through Zaria. In fact, it was Emir Alu himself that supervised the execution of the construction of the railway line project.

 

  1. Alu Dan Sidi was credited with the establishment of new settlements in Zaria and beyond. It was during his reign that Tudun Wada and Gyallesu were established as settlements for the Fulanis and some Mallawas while Sabon Gari was reserved for the laborers who were engaged in the construction of the railway line as well as believers of other faiths.

 

He also established Doka, a settlement in  Kaduna, that is now at the heart of Kaduna metropolis. Iya Abdullahi was sent to preside over the new settlement.

 

  1. Moreover, it was during Alu Dansidi’s reign that the road linking Zaria City to Samaru was constructed.

 

  1. The historical flag given to Malam Musa Bamalle by Shehu Danfodio which granted him the authority to wage a holy war against Habe rulers in Zazzau is one of the relics kept inside the Emir’s Palace. The Flag is one of the instruments of office given to newly installed emir in Zaria upon coronation.

 

  1. Other relics that had their origin traced to Malam Musa Bamalli which are considered instruments of office for the installation of new Emir in Zazzau are his walking stick (Kandiri); historical sword; a copy of the Holy Qur’an given to him by Shehu Danfodio in the year 1804.

 

  1. Missionaries used to base at “Durumin Maigarke” an area within the core-walled City of Zaria. However, Emir Alu became suspicious of them, fearing that of missionaries might want to institutionalize their religion in his domain and convert his people into Christianity. Consequently, in his speech on Sallah day in the year 1910, he issued a Royal Decree ordering their immediate relocation to an area outside the ancient city of Zaria. This led to his dethronement from the throne. He was sent to Lokoja on exile in the present-day Kogi State,  by the British Colonial Masters in the year 1922, 19 years after his coronation.

 

Some  title holders in the present-day Zazzau Emirate who are from Malam Musa Bamalli’s lineage are:

 

  1. Amb. Ahmadu Nuhu Bamalli – Magajin Garin Zazzau.
  2. Alhaji Sa’idu Mailafiya – Ciroman Zazzau
  3. Alhaji Aliyu Sani Yero (Ali Wakili) -Ubandoman Zazzau
  4. Alhaji Balarabe Sidi Yero (Balarabe Muhammad Tijjani) – Bunun Zazzau
  5. Alhaji Abdulkadir Iya Pate – Talban Zazzau
  6. Durbin Zazzau – Alhaji Aliyu Umar Bamalli
  7. Barden Kudun Zazzau
  8. Alhaji Umar Abdullahi – Barden Gabas Zazzau
  9. Alhaji Mansur Nuhu Bamalli – Barde Kerarriya
  10. Alhaji Abdullahi Sidi Bamalli – Sarkin Kasuwa
  11. Alhaji Aminu Usman – Sarkin Nassarawan Tudun Wada.
  12. Sarkin Kasuwan Kaduna
  13. Alhaji Muhammad Rabi’u Ja’afaru – Wakilin Kudun Kaduna (Dagacin Kabala Kostin)
  14. Sarkin Makera
  15. Alhaji Aminu Pate – Wamban Dawakin Zazzau

 

Malam Alu Dansidi became an Emir of Zazzau at the age of 62. He ruled for 19 years and was dethroned at the age of 83.

 

He died in the year 1924 at the age of 85 years.

 

Allah shi kyauta makwanci, Allah shi jikan magabatanmu, Allah shi kyauta tamu bayan ta su. Amin.

 

History will forever remember Emir of Zazzau Malam Alu Dansidi, because of the legacies he left behind will continue to benefit this generation and the generation yet unborn.

 

Acknowledgment: A special Royal Salute to His Excellency, Ambassador Ahmadu Nuhu Bamalli, Magajin Garin Zazzau, and the Nigerian Ambassador to The Kingdom of Thailand.

 

Abubakar Muhammad Musa is a public affairs commentator and analyst wrote this from Zaria.

 

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History

Margaret Walker: Trailblazing Poet, Scholar, and Activist

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Margaret Walker was born on July 7, 1915, in Birmingham, Alabama was a college student at the age of 15 when she begin writing poetry. She received a BA from Northwestern University in 1935 and an MA from the University of Iowa in 1940. In 1936 she joined the Federal Writers’ Project in Chicago, where she became friends with Richard Wright and joined his South Side Writers Group.

In 1941 Walker became the first African American poet to receive the Yale Younger Poets Prize, for her debut collection For My People (Yale University Press, 1942). She was also the author of the poetry collections This Is My Century: New and Collected Poems (University of Georgia Press, 1989), October Journey (Broadside Press, 1973), and Prophets for a New Day (Broadside Press, 1970).

Walker married Firnist Alexander in 1943, and together they had four children. In 1949 they moved to Mississippi, where she joined the faculty at Jackson State College. She returned to the University of Iowa for her doctoral studies and received a PhD in 1965. The following year, she published her dissertation as a novel, Jubilee (Houghton Mifflin, 1966).

In 1968 Walker founded the Institute for the Study of the History, Life, and Culture of Black People at Jackson State College. As director of the institute, which was later renamed the Margaret Walker Center, she organized the 1971 National Evaluative Conference on Black Studies and the 1973 Phillis Wheatley Poetry Festival.

After Walker retired from teaching in 1979, she published On Being Female, Black, and Free (University of Tennessee Press, 1997), a collection of personal essays, and Richard Wright: Daemonic Genius (Warner Books, 1988), a work of nonfiction informed by her friendship with Wright. Margaret Walker died of cancer on November 30, 1998, in Jackson, Mississippi.

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History

Today In History: 40 Years After Shagari’s Government Was Overthrown

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Abbas Yushau Yusuf

On the 31st of December 1983, forty years ago today, the military, led by Major General Muhammad Buhari, Nigeria’s former civilian President, overthrew the first presidential system of government.

The Second Republic, led by Late President Shehu Aliyu Usman Shagari, was just three months into its second term.

President Shagari prepared for the day after attending Jumuat prayers at the Obalende Jumuat Mosque, Lagos. He then proceeded to the council chambers of the former State House, Dodan Barracks, to record a New Year’s speech expected to be relayed to Nigerians on January 1, 1984, which was never broadcasted till today.

Former President Shehu Shagari was overthrown while taking a rest at Aguda House, now the official office of the Vice President in Abuja.

The coup recorded only one casualty, Brigadier Ibrahim Bako, who came all the way from Kaduna to arrest former President Shehu Shagari at the State House in Abuja.

As the battle ensued between the coupists and the soldiers still loyal to President Shagari, Brigadier Ibrahim Bako was killed.

During his detention in Lagos, Ex-President only read in the pages of newspapers that he ordered the shooting of Brigadier Bako, which he debunked in his autobiography “Beckoned To Serve.”

The short-lived Second Republic was seen as just a four-year break by the military when they handed over on October 1, 1979.

Despite corruption allegations leveled against Shagari by Buhari’s military administration, Shagari turned out to be one of the few Nigerian leaders who never enriched themselves with public funds.

He and his vice, Late Alex Ekwueme, were cleared by the Justice Uwaifo commission.

Now, it’s forty years since the coup that plunged Nigeria into another fifteen years of military rule.

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History

Sarkin Kano Alu Babba(1894-1903)

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Aliyu Babba popularly known as Alu was believed to have been born in 1853. He was named after his maternal grandfather Sarkin Musulmi Aliyu Babba. He started his early education under the guidance of his mother Saudatu who taught him the Holy Qur’an. His other teachers were Mallam Babba Na Kofar Kwaru and Malam Mustapha Naibi of Yolawa. He studied fiqh (jurisprudence) and tafsir (commentary of the Holy Qur’an) under the guidance of these scholars. He advanced his studies at Madabo School where he studied Muktasar of Sidi Khalil the most advanced book on jurisprudence. The Madabo School specialized in this subject. He studied nahwu (Arabic grammar) and al-‘Irab (syntax) with Mallam Usman Dan Shamaki.
He was the Waziri and the closest associate of the leader of the Yusufawa, Yusuf Dan Abdullahi. When the later died the Cucanawa skillfully stage-managed the ascension of Aliyu to the leadership of the group. He was the most knowledgeable and charismatic of the surviving sons of Abdullahi Majekarofi. It was also believed that Yusuf recommended him as his successor, because he was a grandson of Sarkin Musulmi Aliyu Babba Dan Muhammad Bello thus making it difficult for Sokoto to attack the Yusufawa. The two contenders to the leadership of the Yusufawa, Sarkin Dawakin Tsakar Gida Abbas and Dan Makwayo Shehu had no option other than to pledge allegience to their younger brother.
Alu triumphantly entered Kano on Wednesday 16th Safar 1312 AH (19th August 1894) after the defeat of Sarkin Kano Tukur, who was forced into exile. Sarkin Musulmi Abdulrahman’s effort to reinstate Tukur failed while Alu consolidated his position as the new Sarkin Kano. There were reprisals and violent suppression of dissidents and criminals as a result of the militarization of the society by the civil war. This necessitated new appointments. The most prominent was Ahmadu, the elder brother of Alu who was appointed Waziri, which was the highest title. He also appointed Mahmud, Kwairanga, Sulaiman, Hamza, Abdussalam as Galadima, Madaki, Alkali, Makama and Sarkin Bai respectively. Ismaila al-Khatib the father of Walin Kano Sulaiman was appointed the Imam. He made innovations in the sarauta by instituting new slave titles the most prominent of which was that of the shatima Shekarau who was placed in charge of the famous weapon known as sango.
Alu was a brave and industrious warrior he invented the sango (explosive), which he used in his military engagements, he was nicknamed maisango. But other historians have suggested that he got this sango from Yoruba areas derived from the Yoruba god of thunder (sango) and that it was imported through Bida therefore it was not Alu’s invention. Nevertheless he used it on his assault against the Tukurawa forces in Kano and on his subsequent enemies whom he fought as the Emir of Kano. Sango terrified horses and horsemen because it was new weapon with explosive sound.
The Damagarawa seriously threatened his authority. They invaded Kano twice in the first instance in 1313 AH (1896) they were heavily defeated but later in 1313 AH (1898) they retaliated and inflicted heavy casualty and defeat on Kano. Eventually Kano was relieved of their nuisance in 1316 (1899) when the French imperialist subjugated them. Alu was also able to withstand Ningi’s aggressiveness, the Ningawa were defeated several times during his reign. The other external threats to his reign were Maradi and Hadejia when they took the advantage of the uneasiness caused by the Kano civil war. While Alu was consolidating his rule, the British were gradually conquering the Emirates of the Sokoto Caliphate. The first Emirates to be conquered were Ilorin and Bida in 1897. He was aware of these developments and British intentions and activities in various parts that later became Northern Nigeria. He wrote a series of letters to the Sarkin Musulmi and the Waziri on the activities of the Nasara (Christians) as the British were known to Muslims. He canvassed for hijra (emigration) that they should leave the country all of them.
In 1312 AH (29th January 1903), the British imperial expeditionary force left Zaria for Kano. They crushed the brave oppositions mounted by various towns and villages along their way to Kano with all brutality and barbarism. For example, they burnt the bodies of Sarkin Bebeji Jibril and seven others after murdering them to show example to the resistant ‘natives’. When they reached Kano on 3rd February 1903, an unorganized but courageous resistance confronted them. Alu had gone to Sokoto but he was aware of the impending British imperialist invasion. The news of the conquest of Kano was brought to him by one Inuwa son of Ma’aji Yahaya and brother of Rahmatu who attempted to resist the invasion by setting the armory on fire. He was angry with the messenger and he ordered him to be imprisoned but was persuaded by the Waziri to release him. The sallama arrived later the next day.
It has been suggested that Alu opted for Hijra (emigration) to avoid bloodshed. His exodus was to east where he intended to perform the Hajj (Holy pilgrimage to Makkah). Sallama Jatau who was one of the leaders of the Kano forces that fought against the British invaders met him at Birnin Goga and informed him of the conquest of Kano. He also brought Kubura Alu’s senior wife, the sallama later alleged that it was Kubura who made Alu to flee and he regretted that he had he known he would have killed her. Alu ordered his younger brother Galadima Mahmud to return his younger wife the daughter of the Sarkin Musulmi to her father. The Galadima was accompanied by Alkalin Kano Sulaiman and the Magaji Gari Keffi. In another version, it was reported that shamaki Harisu led the contingent to Sokoto. Probably Harisu knew the route better than the Sarki’s brother. They were perhaps the only people who knew that the Sarki was going to emigrate. It has also been reported that the Sarki consulted two other individuals Maikano Buzu and Alhaji Baba who according to the story “offered to guide the Emir to Istanbul [Turkey]”.
Alu left his forces at night. According to one of his slaves, Shehu Dan Jakadan Durmin Shura, three of them informed the sallama that the Sarki had fled. The sallama directed his horse holder to:
Go now and seek Dan Rimi, and at dawn tomorrow, just after first light, bid him to cause the gong to be sounded as if the Emir were still with us, and you, Usman Mabude [the man in charge of the supplies of gunpowder], see to it that the signal gun for saddling-up is fired off also’. Then Salama went off to the Emir’s lodgings and called upon the Majidadi to say where the Emir was. He said the Emir had fled in the night.
In the morning the sallama addressed the warriors at Birnin Goga and informed them that the Emir had fled and that whoever wanted to rejoin his family in Kano should follow him and he told the Waziri, who was the next in hierarchy of the sarauta system after the Sarki, to take command but the later and insisted that the sallama should lead and that he would follow with the other Hakimai. The Sallama and the Dan Rimi were the greatest of the Sarki’s slaves, according to Maitama Dan Makaman Dan Rimi who was an eyewitness “whenever the Emir rode with his army he was in front and then Dan Rimi and Sallama came behind. After them came the District Chiefs”. The army moved and the Sallama “ordered the drums to beat with the Emir’s drum roll so that it seemed still as if the Emir was there”. When the people came forth thinking that the Sarki was present, the Sallama informed them again that: “The Emir has fled. What will you do? Whoever wishes to do so can go to Sokoto or anywhere else that he may desire.’ And the people answered and said. ‘We are going to Kano. Wherever you go, we will follow’”.
Waziri Ahmadu and other prominent chiefs were martyred by the British invaders at Kotorkorshi and he became known as Mai Shahada (the Martyr). At that encounter when they met the British invaders Sallama told the Waziri after the first scouts have been killed “what should we do?” The Waziri replied: “What should we do? Why?” He had earlier made a similar observation and the Waziri had replied him: “Haba Salama! There is nothing for us to do but fight them. If we do not win today then we go under. Shall we postpone what we have begun?” And the Dan Rimi also agreed with the Waziri. Shehu Dan Jakadan Durmin Shura reported the encounter in which prominent Kano leaders were martyred:
Thereupon the whole force charged towards the soldiers on other side of the streambed but before we got there the soldiers started shooting, and Allah denied us good fortune. Most of our leaders, amongst them the Waziri, Salama, Mabudi and Yamu, the son of the Waziri all died during this charge.
Alu who was on his way to the East with letters of introduction from the Sokoto authorities addressed to Sarkin Gobir at Tchibiri asking him to grant Alu “safe passage”. Ironically the Sarkin Gobir had never made peace with the Caliphate therefore it was not surprising that he detained Alu and informed the French who notified the British in Sokoto and then handed him over to them “a week after the fall of Sokoto”. Nagwamatse reported Alu’s capture that he saw him “in a small procession in the market through the Kware gate”. According to the story he “was led by a British officer, and in the middle, unbound but riding on a mare with no bridle, and haltered to a trooper’s horse was the Emir Aliyu of Kano”. One of the British officers depicted Sarkin Kano after his capture and when he was paraded in Sokoto as “a silent, dejected tragic figure no doubt wandering what was going to happen next”.
The British invaders decided to banish Alu to a distant location after his capture but it took them a year and two months before they decided to settle him at Yola, Adamawa Emirate and there is no available information on where he was kept for over year but it has been suggested that he “was perhaps kept at some British camps and forts including Wushishi where” Sarkin Zazzau Kwasau was also detained. Both Alu and Kwasau were exiled to Yola, which was under the Emirship of unpopular Bobbo Ahmadu. Sarkin Kano Alu and about 300 of his followers gained the sympathy of the populace who regarded him as hero for resisting the British. He lived like a second Emir. According to one narration when the Mosque was a state of disrepair he spoke to the Emir who was unable to organize volunteers and Alu quickly ordered his followers many of whom were big men and they repaired the Mosque.

The popularity of the exiled Sarkin Kano, his sympathy for those considered dissidents and his call for looking out for the promised Mahdi attracted the attention of the colonial authorities, including the High Commissioner Lugard who considered Alu’s correspondences as intrigues, and even warned that he will exile him to a non-Muslim territory.

Both the Resident and the Emir of Adamawa were not comfortable with his continued presence in Yola and in September 1904 he was moved from Yola to Lokoja on the Niger-Benue confluence. While he was leaving Yola and bidding farewell he was reported to have told Lamido Bobbo Ahmadu “until you come”. Five years later the Lamido was also exiled to Lokoja and then to Zaria and he lived for seven years in exile until his son Lamido Abba pleaded with the British and he was returned to Adamawa where he died in Yola in 1916.

At Lokoja the exiled Sarkin Kano Alu was virtually kept under house arrest and he was denied the freedom to see other exiled Emirs. Even his interaction was restricted for example Said bin Hayat the leader of the Mahdiyya was not allowed to visit him despite the fact that he was allowed to meet other exiled Emirs. Alu was thus considered a threat to the British colonial administration. But they did not prevent Sarkin Tijaniyya from interacting with him perhaps they did not consider the

brotherhood as dangerous to their domination as the Mahdiyya. This was despite the fact that Bashir had fought at Burmi along with Sarkin Musulmi Attahiru. Aminu, the son of Alu, married Zainabu the only daughter of Bashir. Both Alu and Bashir were maternal descendants of Sarkin Musulmi Mohammad Bello. Alu also gave his daughter in marriage to the Maigari of Lokoja (Chief of Lokoja). He died in Lokoja in 1926.

May his soul rest in peace…ameen

 

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