The fabled city of Timbuktu has attracted frequent media attention
over the last few years. During the occupation of northern Mali by Al
Qaida linked extremists in 2012 the destruction of mausoleums to local
Islamic saints in Timbuktu caused an international outcry and resulted
in a UNESCO funded rebuilding project after the recapture of the city in
2013. The extremists also burned around 4500 manuscripts from the Ahmed
Baba Institute as their last act of defiance before the French and
Malian forces re-conquered Timbuktu. Already during the Jihadist
occupation many thousands of manuscripts had been transported in secret
to Bamako in the now famous rescue operation organised by the Timbuktu
librarian Abdel Kader Haidara. This swashbuckling tale has been the
subject of two international best-selling novels, The Bad Ass Librarians of Timbuktu (2016) by Joshua Hammer and The Book Smugglers of Timbuktu (2017) by Charlie English, as well as countless articles and documentary films. Timbuktu, ante bellum,
was a thriving city of tourism and the centre of over fifty private
family libraries which have now been moved to Bamako where the
manuscripts are receiving conservation treatment and are being digitised
by SAVAMA, an association of Timbuktu libraries led by Abdel Kader Haidara,
which has received international funding from the German, Dutch,
Luxemburg, Swiss and Norwegian governments as well as the Ford
Foundation and many other sources.
Certain important libraries in Timbuktu declined taking part in the
rescue mission to relocate to Bamako. Instead they chose to hide their
precious manuscripts in secret desert hiding places in and around
Timbuktu: these include the Imam Essayouti, Al Aquib and Al Wangara
manuscript libraries, attached in turn to the three ancient mosques of
Timbuktu: the Djinguereber (built 1327), the Sankore (built soon after)
and Sidi Yahya (1440). ... [mehr] http://blogs.bl.uk/endangeredarchives/2018/03/manuscripts-of-mali.html
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