Connect with us

History

Sheikh Abubakar Gumi led Funeral Prayers for Sir Ahmadu Bello

Published

on

 

By Abbas Yushau Yusuf

Today the 11th of September Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi, the famous Late Islamic cleric in Nigeria clock 28 years after his departure to the great beyond on the 11th of September 1992.

Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi was an Islamic Scholar who was famous internationally and has contributed to the course of Islam in Nigeria and the world.

 

The late Shiekh will be remembered for his doggedness in ensuring that Islam is practised according to the teachings of the Prophet of Islam, Muhammad Sallallahu Alayhi Wassalam.

 

 

Sheikh Gumi has to his credits several Books authored which Include the exegesis of the Glorious Quran titled Raddul Azhan Fi Maanil Quranul Kareem and Aqidatussahihah bimawafaqatishshariah.

 

He is the first African to Translate the meaning of the Glorious Quran into the popular Hausa language which was sponsored during the time of late King Fahd Ibn Abdul Aziz, The  King of Saudi Arabia.

FRIDAY SERMON: Islam Detest Dereliction of Duty

In 1987 Late Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi and another International Islamic Scholar Sheikh Ahmad Deedat was also given an award for their services to Islam tagged King Faisal Award for services to Islam.

 

As at then, Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi was given a cash prize of 97 thousand dollars and when he came back to Nigeria he gathered his relatives whom he has never helped and handed them over the money as a charity.

From Independence, in 1960 till he died on September 11the 1992, Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi has related well with Nigerian leaders both Muslims and Christians.

 

He agrees and disagreed with some of them on issues that have to do with the Federal Republic of Nigeria on their modus operandi on governance.

 

Among Nigerian leaders, late Sheikh Abubakar Gumi was very closed to was the Late Premier of Northern Nigeria Sir Ahmadu Bello.

 

 

As related in his famous autobiography Where I Stand written by Professor Ismaila Abubakar Tsiga of Bayero University  Kano, Professor Ismaila Abubakar Tsiga described how Late Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi was able to convince the Northern Nigerian colonial government of how a certain Imam in Maru was conducting Friday congregational prayers without performing ablution for the Imam to reverse his decision.

Advert

 

Malam Argued that religion of Islam stipulated few conditions in which a Muslim is allowed to perform dry ablution.

By then Malam Aminu Kano of blessed memory and Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi were tutors of the Northern regional government in Maru now Zamfara State.

 

Some of the Head of States Malam Abubakar Mahmud Gumi had a disagreement with were Major General Johnson Thomas Umanakwe Aguiyi Ironsi and Major General Muhammadu Buhari on some of their policies.

 

In the Book Where I stand, Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi narrated how he refused to go on a tour to Arabian countries as demanded by Late Aguiyi Ironsi to explain to them the motive behind the January fifteen 1966 coup that led to the killing of Sardaunan Sokoto Sir Ahmadu Bello and other prominent southwestern leaders of Nigeria by dissident soldiers.

 

 

Another scenario was when the Military government of President Muhammad Buhari was jailing second republic politicians for more than 100 years, Sheikh Gumi told him its wrong.

 

Malam narrated that the saddest moment in his life was the January 1966 coup in which Sir Ahmadu Bello, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Sir Chief Samuel Ladoke Akintola was killed by a gang of dominant Igbo military officers.

 

Malam Said the Northern Region Minister of Education Late Alhaji Isa Kaita phoned him that smoke was billowing from the Premiers House, Sheikh Gumi came out from his residence and went straight to Sardauna’s residence and learnt that the House was bombarded with shells and military bullets.

By the time he was walking on the streets of Kaduna all the roads were deserted, when he entered Sardauna’s residence he found that the Premier of Northern Region is no more, he was killed by Nzeogwu and co.

 

Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi met the bereaved families and many people were crying and the arrangement was being made to take the premiers corpse to Hubbare in Sokoto where late Sheikh Danfodio was buried.

 

Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi said no, a martyr is supposed to be buried where he was killed, Sheikh Gumi arranged the Funeral prayer for Sir Ahmadu Bello and asked people to arrange rows behind him, and he led the Prayers for late Sir Ahmadu Bello.

Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi died on Friday the 11th of September 1992 in a London Hospital, He was flown back to Nigeria t same day in a Presidential Jet on the Instruction of President Ibrahim Babangida.

 

Those that attend his funeral on that fateful Friday were the then Sitting President General Ibrahim Babangida, Governor of Kano Architect Kabiru Ibrahim Gaya, Yahaya Abdulkareem of Sokoto and Late Governor Muhammad Dabo Lere of Kaduna State among Important dignitaries.

Some southern Magazines did not take it well with Late Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi, TELL magazine described Late Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi as the Ayatollah of Nigeria.

 

In its cover story after the demise of Sheikh Gumi, TELL magazine tagged sheikh Gumi “THE EXIT OF AYATOLLAH” referring him, to Ayatollah of Iran.

 

They also described former Military President, General Ibrahim Babangida as Late Sheikh Abubakar Gumi’s closest friends.

The books authored by Late Sheikh Gumi are still being taught in many institutions across the world.

Dr Ahmad Abubakar Gumi the Kaduna based Islamic Scholar and a medical Doctor is also one of the children of Late Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi.

 

May Almighty Allah continue to rest his soul

 

 

 

 

 

 

History

Late Prof. Haruna Wakili: A Legacy of Scholarship, Service, and Integrity

Published

on

 

By Dr. Yau Muhammad

Professor Haruna Wakili (1960–2020) was a distinguished Nigerian academic, historian, and public servant whose contributions to education and governance left an indelible mark on both Bayero University, Kano (BUK), and Jigawa State.

Early Life and Academic Pursuits

Born in June 1960 in Rumfa word, Hadejia, Jigawa State, Prof. Wakili began his educational journey at Government Teachers College, Dutse, obtaining his Grade II Certificate in 1980. He proceeded to Bayero University, Kano, where he earned a B.A. in History in 1985, graduating as the best student in his department and receiving the Prof. M.A. Al-Hajj Memorial Prize and the Prof. Michael Crowder Prize for excellence in modern African history. He further obtained an M.A. in History in 1989 and a Ph.D. in 1998 from the same institution. In 2004, he expanded his academic horizons by earning a certificate in American History from New York University, USA .

Academic and Administrative Roles at Bayero University

Prof. Wakili commenced his academic career at BUK in 1990 as an Assistant Lecturer in the Department of History. Over the years, he rose through the ranks, becoming a Professor and Head of the Department. He was notably the only individual to serve twice as Director of the Aminu Kano Centre for Democratic Research and Training (Mambayya House), where he spearheaded significant research initiatives and promoted democratic studies . In 2018, he was appointed Deputy Vice Chancellor (Administration), a role he held until his passing in 2020 .

Advert

Commissioner for Education in Jigawa State

Between 2010 and 2015, Prof. Wakili served as the Commissioner for Education, Science, and Technology in Jigawa State under Governor Sule Lamido’s administration. During his tenure, he was instrumental in transforming the state’s educational landscape. His notable achievements include the establishment of Sule Lamido University in Kafin-Hausa, aimed at expanding higher education access for the state’s residents . He also oversaw the construction and renovation of schools, enhancement of teacher welfare, and implementation of training programs to improve educational standards .

Scholarly Contributions and Mentorship

An accomplished historian, Prof. Wakili specialized in the study of riots, revolts, conflicts, and peace studies in Nigeria. His doctoral thesis focused on the phenomenon of riots and revolts in Kano. He authored several publications, including “Turawa A Kasar Hadejia: Karon Hadejiyawa da Turawan Mulkin Mallaka” and “Religious Pluralism and Conflict in North Western Nigeria, 1970–2000” . Known for his intellectual rigor and integrity, he emphasized original research and was a staunch advocate against plagiarism. His mentorship inspired many students to pursue academic excellence and critical thinking .

Legacy and Tributes

Prof. Wakili passed away on June 20, 2020, at the National Hospital in Abuja after a prolonged illness. His death was deeply mourned across academic and political communities. BUK’s Vice Chancellor, Prof. Muhammad Yahuza Bello, lauded him as a dedicated scholar and administrator . Former Governor Sule Lamido described him as an epitome of humility and selfless service . The Emir of Hadejia, Alhaji Adamu Abubakar Maje, remembered him as a close confidant and a man devoted to humanity .

Prof. Haruna Wakili’s life was characterized by unwavering commitment to education, scholarly excellence, and public service. His contributions continue to inspire and shape the academic and educational landscapes in Nigeria.
Allah ya jikan Mallam da rahama. Ameen thumma Ameen.
Wassalam

 

Continue Reading

History

History, Identity, and the Unexpected Echoes of Ancestry”-Dokaji

Published

on

Huzaifa Dokaji

 

 

By Huzaifa Dokaji

About 2 years ago, a good friend of mine who works and lives in the UK engaged me in a conversation about the history of Northern Nigeria. The discussion moved from topic to topic until we ventured to the Sokoto Jihad. After several exchanges, we agreed to create a Clubhouse room to discuss texts written by the Sokoto Jihadists. One of the most fascinating conversations we had focused on the intellectual exchange between Sokoto and Borno, or more precisely, between Sultan Bello and al-Kanemi. Like my friend, I found much of al-Kanemi’s reasoning compelling, except his argument that people should only preach against social and political corruption. To me, that view felt overly idealistic and did not align with the broader Islamic impetus.

My friend grew increasingly critical and more interested in the subject. The engineer in him wanted to understand how, to borrow from Prof. Samaila Suleiman Yandaki, the Sokoto history machine produced and disseminated its narratives of rebellion and legitimacy. We agreed and disagreed, but always in pursuit of the truth, elusive and debatable as it was. That was possible perhaps because neither of us was blinded by ethnic fetishism.

I must add that when all those conversations were going on, my friend felt his connection to that history was merely a result of geography and faith. He often tried to discuss it as a detached observer, carefully framing his questions to me as someone he considered a legacy of the very history we were scrutinizing.

Not long ago, my friend reached out with what was definitely an exciting and shocking news to him. He had taken one of those ancestry DNA tests, and the result showed he was Fulani. Through the company’s database, he identified and reconnected with a relative. Since they were both in the UK, they met and had a fruitful discussion, and to my friend’s astonishment his paternal descent goes back directly to Abdullahi b. Fodio.

This discovery, while exhilarating for him, also unsettled the very framework through which he had previously engaged with history. It blurred the line between the observer and the subject, raising questions about belonging, identity, and the burden of historical legacy. A realization hit him that in this part of the world, ethnicity is never just about bloodlines or surnames; it is a contested space shaped by memory, politics, and perception. My friend’s new discovery did not simply anchor him to a lineage; it dragged him into a narrative that is still very much alive, one that shapes contemporary anxieties, resentments, and aspirations.

His realization took us back into a discussion we had on Club House on the dangers of simplistic historical, or more correctly, political narratives. As we debated at the time, I argued that the past was never the neat category some would have us believe. The story of Ali Aisami makes this clear. Permit me to digress a little.

Ali Aisama was a Kanuri man who was forced to flee his town after it fell to the Jihadists. After his parents died, and he married his surviving sister off to his father’s friend, he sought refuge with another family friend in a Shuwa Arab town. One night, while returning from a nearby town, he was kidnapped by Fulani slavers. The following day, they sold him to Hausa slavers in Ngololo market, about 55 miles from the town of Shagou.

Advert

The Hausa slavers fettered him and marched him for 22 days to Tsangaya, a village southeast of Kano and known at the time for its dates. From there, he was moved to Katsina and later to Yawuri, where he was sold to the Borgawa. His new Borgu master took him home, and put iron fetters on him day and night until he finally sold him to a Katunga (Yoruba) king/prince in old Oyo.

The king/prince mistook Ali Aisami’s tribal marks for royal ones (since they look like Yoruba royal marks), and treated him honorably. However, after the jihad broke out in Ilorin, out of fear that Ali Aisami might join his Muslim brethren, he was taken to Dahomey and sold to European slave dealers. Eventually, he was freed by British anti-slavers and resettled in Sierra Leone, where he converted to Christianity and adopted the name William Harding.

Ali Aisami’s journey across ethnic, political, and religious boundaries show that 19th-century Northern Nigeria was more complicated than comtemporary narratives suggest. His story, like many others, disrupts the simplistic binaries that often dominate discussions of the 19th century—binaries that cast certain groups primarily as victims and others as aggressors or perpetrators. In reality, such roles were fluid, reversible, and deeply embedded in broader social institutions, particularly slavery. Although Ali Aisami was Kanuri, a group that were said to enslave Hausa and other less powerful groups, Aisami himself was enslaved by Fulani captors, sold to Hausa slave traders, and passed through a complex chain of transactions that involved the Borgawa, Yoruba royalty, and eventually European slave dealers.

More surpringsly, the Borgawa and the Hausa (recently framed as “helpless” victims in the midst of Kanuri and especially Fulani imperialists) were at different moments and in different contexts, complicit in the same systems of exploitation. Narratives like Ali Aisami’s compel us to rethink ethnic identity not as a fixed or moral category but as one embedded in larger structures of power, commerce, and survival.

Furthermore, they also reveal how the legacy of the Sokoto Caliphate cannot be read solely through the lens of ideological or religious transformation, but must also be situated within the material realities of slavery, warfare, and shifting political alliances. In this sense, Aisami’s life not only humanizes the abstract forces of the 19th century. It reminds us that historical agency often operated within morally ambiguous frameworks, where perpetrators and victims could inhabit the same position at different moments.

My point here is it is not intellectually helpful to see the jihad starkly as a war between right and wrong (as its protagonists do) nor dryly as the victimization of a certain group (as its antagonists do). Rather, it is more productive to approach 19th-century Northern Nigeria as a site of competing visions, shifting alliances, and intersecting hierarchies, in which individuals and groups navigated complex moral, economic, and spiritual terrains. This requires moving beyond essentialist readings that reduces history into tidy moral tales or ethnic scorecards. It calls for a method attentive to contradiction, nuance, and context. Only such an approach allows us to hold multiple interpretations at once: that perhaps, the jihad did led to religious and intellectual reform, and at the same time brought about new systems of enslavement and exclusion.

It is this methodological caution, grounded in a critical reading of sources and a suspicion of inherited and currently promoted narratives, that enables a fuller, more honest reckoning with the past. Here, the past is treated not as gold or garbage, but as a tangled emblem of value and ruin.

Anyways, the end of the gist is that after a Fulani Professor here in the US told me his ancestry DNA revealed strong Yoruba ties, I decided to send mine in to know where I fit. Who knows what I will turn out to be. I mean, it might not be a coincidence that I was almost born in Lagos and somehow vibe effortlessly with Yoruba people. Maybe it’s in the blood, or maybe, it’s just being Professor Aderinto’s mentee, I developed a soft spot for amala and fuji music. We will know in few months.

 

 

Huzaifa Dokaji wrote from the United States of America

Continue Reading

History

Today in History: Former Senate President Chuba Okadigbo Was Gassed To Death

Published

on

Late Dr Chuba Okadigbo
Late Dr Chuba Okadigbo

By Abbas Yushau Yusuf

On September 23, 2003, the vice-presidential candidate of the All Nigeria Peoples Party, Chief William Wilberforce Chuba Okadigbo, was allegedly gassed at Kano Pillars Stadium by security agents during a rally of the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), led by the opposition candidate in the 2003 general elections, General Muhammadu Buhari (retired).

The ANPP and its candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, staged the opposition rally at Sani Abacha Stadium as a prelude to their court case at the Presidential Election Tribunal in Abuja, led by Justice Umaru Abdullahi.

The rally, which had thousands of Buhari’s supporters in attendance, was graced by the new Governor of Kano State, Malam Ibrahim Shekarau, his late Deputy, Engineer Magaji Abdullahi, Hajiya Najaatu Muhammad, and John Nwodo Junior.

The ANPP National Chairman, Chief Donald Etiebet, also attended the rally. However, apart from Malam Ibrahim Shekarau, the rest of the ANPP Governors were not in attendance, including Ahmad Sani Yerima of Zamfara, Adamu Aliero of Kebbi, the late Bukar Abba Ibrahim of Yobe, Senator Ali Modu Sheriff of Borno, and Attahiru Dalhatu Bafarawa of Sokoto.

Advert

Aware of Dr. Chuba Okadigbo’s health condition, the then Federal Government under Chief Olusegun Obasanjo did not want the rally to proceed. Security personnel mounted the entrance to Kano Pillars Stadium to prevent entry into the field until the Kano Governor, Malam Ibrahim Shekarau, ordered the youth to break the gate, allowing the opposition figures to enter.

Upon entering the stadium, Malam Ibrahim Shekarau chastised his predecessor and the then Minister of Defence, Engineer Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, for not visiting Kano since handing over power on May 29, 2003. He referred to Kwankwaso as “Ministan tsoro,” meaning “Minister of Fear.”

On returning to Abuja, the late William Wilberforce Chuba Okadigbo died on Friday, September 25, 2003, following the alleged gassing by security agents at Kano Pillars Stadium.

Dr. Chuba Okadigbo was the political adviser to former President Shehu Shagari during the Second Republic. He hailed from Oyi Local Government in Anambra State.

Continue Reading

Trending