|
Shirazi Arabs
Shirazi Arab clans dominated Comorian life socially, culturally, and
politically from the fifteenth century until the French occupation
in 1886. Eleven clans lived on
Ngazidja, where their power was strongest. They divided
Ngazidja into eleven sultanates and Nzwani into two. Their leaders,
the sultans or sharifs, were in a continual state of war.
The descendants of clan nobles continue to form a major portion of
the educated and propertied classes of
Comoros. The rivalry of two political parties
pre-independence was seen by some as clan antagonisms. At the same
time, many descendants of nobles live in poverty and apparently have
less influence socially and politically on
Nzwani than on Ngazidja. The present-day elite is mainly
defined in terms of wealth rather than descent.
The Shirazi, who originated from the city of Shiraz in what is now
Iran, were Sunni Muslims adhering to the legal school of Muhammad
ibn Idris ash Shafii, an eighth-century Meccan scholar who followed
a middle path in combining tradition and independent judgment in
legal matters. The Shirazi Arabs traveled and traded up and down the
East African coast and as far east as India and Maldives. They
maintained wives at different trading posts, this being most likely
the origin of polygamy in Comoros.
The Shirazi built mosques and established Islam as the
religion of the islands. They also introduced stone architecture,
carpentry, cotton weaving, the cultivation of certain fruits, and
the Persian solar calendar. By the sixteenth century, Shirazis had
made Comoros a center of regional trade. |