The Ottoman Sultan, Abdulhamid II, was looking for an ally and found it in his own lands. There was a very brave order, fond of its independence, based in the south of Benghazi and in the middle of the green Kufra Oasis; its name was the Senusi Movement.
Journey in the Grand Sahara of Africa and Through Time takes you to October 1895 to accompany Azmzade Sadik el-Mueyyed on a mission for Sultan Abdulhamid II to go before Sayed Mohamed Al Mahdi Al Senusi, the leader of the most influential religious movement in North Africa at the time known as the Ikhwan or Brotherhood.
Fast forward more than a century and their descendants tie the past to the present against the background of an ongoing struggle for the future of Libya by regional and global powers. Giyasiddin Goekkent, Sadik Pasha's son, explains The Foreign Policy of Sultan Abdulhamid. Orhan Osmansoy looks at the centuries old affinity between Turkey and Libya in his article titled A Resurrected Alliance. Ala Fakhri Al Senusi provides his Vision for the Future of Libya. Giyas Mueyyed Goekkent traces the beginning of the Ottoman presence in North Africa as a counterbalance to West European powers and provides an overview of the prospects for Libya after a decade long civil conflict. Iklil Azmzade looks at the roots of Sadik Pasha in his piece on the Azmzade dynasty.
Describing one of three missions to Africa by Sadik Pasha to counter the scramble for Africa by West European states, this volume, originally published as a travel book, has been supplemented with Sadik Pasha's subsequent report to the sultan and is a companion to The Ethiopia Book of Travels.
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