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THE ERITREAN MUSLIM LEAGUE - Paths Toward the Nation: Islam, Community, and Early Nationalist Mobilization in Eritrea, 1941–1961. By Joseph L. Venosa. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 2014. Pp. xix + 283. $29.95, paperback (ISBN 978-0-89680-289-6).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 June 2016

JAMES DE LORENZI*
Affiliation:
CUNY John Jay College
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Abstract

Type
Reviews of Books
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016 

The present work is a major contribution to the history of Eritrean nationalism and Islamic movements in Northeast Africa. It is a political and social history of the Eritrean Muslim League; its evolving ‘righteous struggle’; its major personalities, and its various antecedents, successors, opponents, and antagonists. The author makes three principle arguments. First, the Muslim League was a critical public forum for the emergence and articulation of Eritrean national identity. Second, the Muslim League emerged from a confluence of local dynamics and developments in the wider Muslim world that shaped its distinctive organizational identity and, in turn, the larger nationalist movement of which it was a part. And finally, Joseph L. Venosa argues that it was a key precursor to the nationalist armed struggle. These arguments rest upon the author's adept survey of an impressive range of under-utilized sources: a considerable number of Arabic and Tigrinya newspapers published by the organizations in question; numerous interviews with former activists and their relations; and archival material from institutions in Eritrea, Great Britain, and the United States. As such, this work is a welcome addition to the specialist literature on Eritrean politics during the eras of the British Military Administration and the subsequent federation with Ethiopia, with which it systematically engages.

The book is a rigorously chronological study in nine parts. The Introduction surveys the main arguments, the local and international context for Islamic modernism, and the underlying source material. Seven narrative chapters follow. Chapter One sets the stage by examining the ferment of the early 1940s, focusing on rural unrest amongst Tigre-speakers, the emergence of Mahber Fikri Hager, and the Bet Giyorgis conference. Chapter Two examines the foundation of the Muslim League in 1946 and related formative developments, which include the expansion of its membership, the issues taken up in its newspaper Sawt al-rabita al-islamiyya, and the arrival of the Four Power Commission. Chapter Three considers the stormy events of 1948–9, which included heightened Ethiopian intervention, brigandage, the defection of league President Sayyid Abu Bakr al-Mirghani, the assassination of Abdul Kadire, and the emergence of the Independence Bloc. Chapter Four examines the fascinating schisms that developed in 1949–50 that produced the Massawa-based Independent Muslim League, the Muslim League of the Western Provinces, and occasional Salafist voices. Chapter Five takes up the strategic repositioning just prior to federation, while Chapter Six explores the fate of the Muslim League amid the broken promises and increasing anti-Muslim sectarianism of the federal era. Chapter Seven examines the proliferation of Muslim political organizations in the early years of the armed struggle, the emergence of diasporic nationalist activism, and the impact of these on the Eritrean Liberation Front. The Epilogue recapitulates the main arguments.

Rich in detail and drama, this nuanced analysis offers many provocative insights. One relates to the heterogeneity and cosmopolitanism of the Muslim League's base and leadership, themes illuminated by the author's heuristic model of a ‘nationalist contact zone’. Venosa ably documents how the programs and civil society institutions of the Muslim League accommodated a diverse range of actors, spanning the divides of town and country, activist and scholar, and language and sect. The author expertly outlines the shifting politics of this distinctive nationalist coalition, which were manifest in organizational and interpersonal conflicts as well as disputes over strategy. An equally fascinating finding relates to the impact of extra-regional and/or international developments on the course of local events: these linkages are manifest in the influence of political discourse from the wider Muslim world, such as pan-Arabism and the implications of the Pakistani model for Eritrea, as well as Atlanticism and human rights discourse.

This work has greatly enhanced our understanding of the political, intellectual, and social history of Eritrea's Muslim communities in a pivotal though comparatively understudied era. It is for this reason an important contribution to the specialist literature on the modern history of Ethiopia and Eritrea and their fraught political relationship. The book's later chapters on the student movement offer a welcome addition to the debate that is currently raging over the nature of student radicalism in these countries and the revolutionary movements they spawned. The book will attract the interest of specialists of Islamic Africa, British imperial history, early United Nations history, and of decolonization more generally.