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The Bamana Empire by the Niger: Kingdom; Jihad and Colonization 1712-1920

audiobook The Bamana Empire by the Niger: Kingdom; Jihad and Colonization 1712-1920 by Sundiata A. K. Djata in History

Description

At a meeting of the LDS Quorum of the Twelve in 1860; one of the church’s senior apostles; Elder Heber C. Kimball; complained that “Brother Orson Pratt has withstood Joseph [Smith] and he has withstood Brother Brigham [Young] many times and he has done it tonight and it made my blood chill. It is not for you to lead [the prophet];” Kimball continued; “but to be led by him. You have not the power to dictate but [only] to be dictated [to].”Whenever the quorum discussed Elder Pratt’s controversial sermons and writings and his streak of independent thinking; the conversation could become heated. As documented by Gary James Bergera in this surprisingly suspenseful account; Pratt’s encounters with his brethren ultimately affected not only his seniority in the Quorum of the Twelve but also had a lasting impact on LDS doctrine; policy; and organizational structure.“There is not a man in the church that can preach better than Orson Pratt;” Brigham Young told the twelve apostles on another occasion. “It is music to hear him. But the trouble is; he will … preach false doctrine.”Pratt responded that he was “not a man to make a confession of what I do not believe. I am not going to crawl to Brigham Young and act the hypocrite. I will be a free man;” he insisted. “It may cost me my fellowship; but I will stick to it. If I die tonight; I would say; O Lord God Almighty; I believe what I say.”“You have been a mad stubborn mule;” Young replied. “[You] have taken a false position … It is [as] false as hell and you will not hear the last of it soon.”Not infrequently; these two strong-willed; deeply religious men argued. Part of their difficulty was that they saw the world from opposing perspectives—Pratt’s a rational; independent-minded stance and Young’s a more intuitive and authoritarian position. “We have hitherto acted too much as machines … as to following the Spirit;” Pratt explained in a quorum meeting in 1847. “I will confess to my own shame [that] I have decided contrary to my own [judgment] many times. … I mean hereafter not to demean myself as to let my feelings run contrary to my own judgment.” He issued a warning to the other apostles: “When [President Young] says that the Spirit of the Lord says thus and so; I don’t consider [that] … all we should do is to say let it be so.”For his part; Young quipped that Pratt exhibited the same “ignorance … as any philosopher;” telling him “it would be a great blessing to him to lay aside his books.” When Pratt appealed to logic; Young would say; “Oh dear; granny; what a long tail our puss has got.”Ironically; Orson Pratt would have the last word both because Young preceded him in death and because several of Young’s teachings and policies had proven unpopular among the other apostles. One of Young’s counselors said shortly after the president’s death that “some of my brethren … even feel that in the promulgation of doctrine he [Young] took liberties beyond those to which he was legitimately entitled.” Meanwhile; Pratt continued to hold sway with some of his colleagues. His thoughtful—if ultra-literalistic—interpretations of scripture would also influence such later church leaders as Joseph Fielding Smith and Bruce R. McConkie.Bergera’s nuanced approach avoids caricatures in favor of the many complexities of personalities and circumstances. It becomes clear that the conflict in which these men found themselves enmeshed had no easy; foreseeable resolution.


#4220686 in Books Markus Wiener Pub 1997-05Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.50 x 6.50 x 1.00l; 1.20 #File Name: 1558761314251 pages


Review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. History of a non-Islamic EmpireBy Araph KeitaMany historians have focused primarily on the Islamic states of West Africa pre-colonial empires. However; the Bamana states of Segu and Kaarta are examples of African states that developed without the structure of Islam as an ideological basis for unity; or for administrative purposes; yet maintaining stability over a long period. Out of the ashes of the fall of the Songhai Empire in 1591; the Bamana states of Segu and Kaarta rose to power in the Niger Valley; controlling the length of the Niger from Timbuktu to Jenné; the center of the nuclear Songhai state; which provided control over the trade from the forest to the desert. This history follows the state development; and how the Bamana faced two foreign aggressors; one African in the form of a jihad; and another French in the form of colonialism.1 of 3 people found the following review helpful. A former kingdom in MaliBy Bill RI haven't read this yet. But was well printed and the book wss in A1 condition. The Bamanas were in southern Mali on near the Niger. They were a great power is this part of of Mali in their time until the French eliminated them.

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