Khalwa as an Islamic educational institution in the Sudan
dc.contributor.author
Eid, Osman Mohammad
en
dc.date.accessioned
2013-06-26T13:51:28Z
dc.date.available
2013-06-26T13:51:28Z
dc.date.issued
1985
dc.description.abstract
The introduction presents the subject of the thesis - the
khalwa as an Islamic educational institution - and outlines the
approach to that subject in the thesis. It also gives a brief
general introduction to Islamic education so that the khalwa can
be seen in that context.
Part I of the thesis presents a history of Islam in the Sudan
and the institution of the khalwa until the end of the Funj period.
It demonstrates how the unique use of the term khalwa in the
Sudan for an Islamic educational institution arose out of Sufism.
It presents examples of khalwas during that period in an
examination of the khalwas of the Sons of Jabir, Sughayrun, Suwar
al-Dhahab and al-Ghubush.
In Part II the development of the khalwa is presented up to
the present time. This part examines the khalwas in the Turco-
Egyptian period, the period of the Mahdiyya, the Condominium and
the present period of National rule. During this time there were
certain changes, some temporary and others of a more permanent
nature. The Turco-Egyptian period saw the khalwa coming under
Government influence in matters of finance, though remaining
unchanged in other respects. In the period of the Mahdiyya there
were drastic changes in the content of education, but afterwards
the khalwa returned to its traditional form. It was in the
Condominium period that the Government tried to bring the khalwa
within the newly emerging state system of education. Differences
in objectives and methods led to the failure of this policy. The
National Government, after independence, has also used the khalwa
as an instrument of educational policy. There are then detailed
examples of individual khalwas during this period. Of great note
is the contribution of the khalwas of 'Ali Bitäi at Hamishkorayb
as an Islamicising and civilizing agent of social change.
Part III deals with an analysis of the different aspects of
the khalwa as an educational institution - its teachers, students,
methods of teaching, subjects, programmes of study, discipline,
administration and financing.
The conclusion shows that khalwa education has changed very
little but that there is scope within the khalwa system for it to
continue to make a valuable contribution to Islamic education in
the Sudan.
en
dc.identifier.other
370219
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/7251
dc.language.iso
eng
dc.publisher
University of Edinburgh
en
dc.subject
Education
en
dc.title
Khalwa as an Islamic educational institution in the Sudan
en
dc.title.alternative
The khalwa as an Islamic educational institution in the Sudan
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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