The Treasures of Timbuktu
Scholars in the fabled African city, once a great center of learning and trade, are racing to save a still emerging cache of ancient manuscripts
- By Joshua Hammer
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2006, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
Fida ag Mohammed, the collection's curator, fiddles with a set of prayer beads in the rear seat. A gaunt man in his late 40s or early 50s with wispy sideburns that blow outward in the breeze, Mohammed was initially reluctant to take me, a stranger, to Ber. But Haidara reassured him that I was a journalist, not a spy, and he finally consented. "There are evil people out there who want to steal from us our traditions, our history," he explains as Baba swerves to avoid a speeding pickup truck packed with blue-robed, white-scarved Tuaregs. "We have to be careful."
After two hours we reach Ber, a shadeless collection of mud-brick huts and tents scattered across a saddle between two low desert ridges. There is a veterinary clinic, a health center and a primary school, but few other signs of permanence. Mohammed leads us to his two-room house, where we sit on mats on the dirt floor. He disappears into his kitchen and returns with a pot filled with something dark and smelly: minced gazelle, Baba whispers. Nervously, I taste a few spoonfuls of the meat, finding it gamy and gristly, and decline the warm camel milk that Mohammed offers as a digestif.
Ber once had 15,000 manuscripts dating as far back as the 15th century, the men tell me. Most of these were in the possession of village marabouts, or "knowledge men," often the only individuals who know how to read and write. But in the early 1990s, after a period of droughts and neglect by the government, the Tuaregs launched a violent rebellion. Tuareg villages were attacked, looted and sometimes burned by government troops and mercenaries from other desert tribes. (Ber was spared.) Before the Tuaregs and the government concluded a peace deal in 1996, Ber's inhabitants dispersed all but a few hundred manuscripts to settlements deep in the Sahara, or buried them in the sand. It was a modern-day version of a story that has played out in Mali for centuries, a story of war, depredation and loss. "I'm starting to locate the manuscripts again," Mohammed tells me. "But it takes time."
We cross a sandy field and enter a tin-roofed shack, Mohammed's "Centre de Recherche." Mohammed opens a trunk at my feet and begins to take out dozens of volumes, the remains of Ber's original collection, along with a few he has recovered. He touches them reverently, delicately. "Dust is the enemy of these manuscripts," he murmurs, shaking his head. "Dust eats away at them and destroys them over time." I pick up a miniature Koran from the 15th century, thumb through it and stare in amazement at an illustration of the Great Mosque of Medina. It's the only drawing, besides geometrical patterns, that I've seen in four days of looking at manuscripts: a minutely rendered, pen-and-ink depiction by an anonymous artist of Saudi Arabia's stone-walled fortress, two pencil-thin minarets rising over the central golden dome, date palm trees at the fringes of the mosque and desert mountains in the distance. "You are one of the first outsiders to see this," he tells me.
After an hour inspecting the works, Mohammed brings out a guest register, a thin, grade-school composition book, and asks me to sign it. A total of six visitors have registered since 2002, including a former U.S. ambassador to Mali. "The next time you come to Ber, I'll take you into the desert for a week," Mohammed tells me before we part. "I'll show you where they buried the books, deep in the ground, so that nobody can find them." They are still out there, thousands of them, guarded by fearful villagers, disintegrating slowly in the heat and dust. But thanks to Mohammed, Haidara, al-Wangari and others like them, the desert has at last begun to surrender its secrets.
Writer Joshua Hammer lives in Cape Town, South Africa. Photographer Alyssa Banta is based in Fort Worth, Texas.
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Comments (5)
Dear respected sir,
I have an inherited ancient Qur'an manuscript. It is a very beautiful and decorative masterpiece from early 19th century in 1838. The date 1259 Hijri is written at the very end of QUR’AN. Almost 172 years old. It is a rare and priceless treasure. This magnificent Qur'an was written in the time of MOHAMMAD SHAH QAJAR.
Details: size 215x160x45 m.m. with brown leather binding, written in unique calligraphic style Naskh Arabic script in black ink illuminated, Liberal golden inlay work and decorative designs made from Ink of precious stones: Ruby, Cinnabar, Lapis Lazuli and floral ink. First two suras of the Qur'an al-Fatiha and the initial lines of al-Baqara decorated highly interacted design both are almost completely covered with gold illumination, the title of each sura is written in high-purity red blue ink decorated with gold, also gold roundels at the end of verses, each and some pages have gold frame, all pages in cream color with highly polished beige rag paper, between the every two text pages attached transparent golden butter paper. It is a complete Qur'an, without missing any page, generally in excellent condition due to its age. It is a living miracle of unique Islamic work of art. It might be worth that of a whole treasure. This responsibility takes upon Islamic Governments and Museums to preserve this type of valuable antiques because it's very important for Islamic history/culture.
As a Muslim it's our duty to role play for preservation of this highly artistic manuscript antique. Therefore, I would like to invite you to buy this superior antique manuscript Holy Qur'an .
Yours sincerely,
Ali
E-mail: ali2002b@gmail.com
Posted by ali on December 10,2010 | 10:19 AM
Thanks for sharing this article. There are different mosques in Mali. Djenne is located in close proximity to the flood plain of Bani River, southwest of Timbuktu. Djenneis very famous place in mali. It is most visited place by the muslims. You can see the beautiful architecture in the mosque. for more details refer http://www.journeyidea.com/the-great-mosque-of-djenne-timbuktu-mali/
Posted by Mack on June 25,2009 | 01:37 AM
What a great description of buildings, people, colours, landscape...a pleasure to read your article. C.M from Madrid.
Posted by C. Menéndez on October 15,2008 | 03:32 AM
role of geography in our period
Posted by victor on March 20,2008 | 03:53 PM
I needed a portrait account of Ancient Ghana. THANKS.
Posted by lilian on March 12,2008 | 09:33 AM