His Royal Eminence Amirul Mu’minin Sheikh As-Sultan Muhammadu Sa’adu Abubakar III
Sultan of Sokoto
16
His Royal Eminence Amirul Mu’minin Sheikh As-Sultan Muhammadu Sa’adu Abubakar III
Sultan of Sokoto

Amirul Mu’minin Sheikh As-Sultan Muhammadu Sa’adu Abubakar III is the 20th Sultan of Sokoto. As Sultan of Sokoto, he is the head of the Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs in Nigeria (SCIAN), which is the umbrella body for all Muslim organizations in the country, and is considered the spiritual leader of Nigeria’s 108 million Muslims, who account for roughly 50% of the nation’s population. Al­though the position of Sultan of Sokoto has become largely ceremonial, the holder is still a central figure for Nigerian Muslims.

Birth: 24 August 1956 (Age: 68)

Source of Influence: Administration of Religious Affairs, Philanthropy, Charity & Development, Lineage: Lineage

Influence: Central figure for 107 million Nigerian Muslims

School of Thought: Sunni, Traditional Sunni, Maliki, Qadiriyyah Sufi Order

Status: Featured in current year

Influence

Amirul Mu’minin Sheikh As-Sultan Muhammadu Sa’adu Abubakar III is the 20th Sultan of Sokoto. As Sultan of Sokoto, he is the head of the Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs in Nigeria (SCIAN), which is the umbrella body for all Muslim organizations in the country, and is considered the spiritual leader of Nigeria’s 108 million Muslims, who account for roughly 50% of the nation’s population. Al­though the position of Sultan of Sokoto has become largely ceremonial, the holder is still a central figure for Nigerian Muslims.

Military Man: Sa’adu Abubakar succeeded his brother, Muhammadu Maccido, who died in a plane crash in 2006. Prior to this he served in the mili­tary, including commanding African peacekeepers in Chad. He retired as Brigadier General and was serv­ing as Defense Attache to Pakistan when he became Sultan.

Lineage Back to Sheikh Usman Dan Fodio: The Sultan of Sokoto is the spiritual leader of Nigeria’s enormous Muslim community. He gains this position by lineage. Abubakar is the 20th heir to the two-cen­tury-old throne founded by his ancestor, Sheikh Us­man Dan Fodio. Dan Fodio (1754-1817 CE) was a scholar, leader of the Maliki school of Islam and the Qadiri branch of Sufism, and Islamic reformer of the 19th century. Dan Fodio believed that Is­lam should have a more central role in the life of the people of West Africa and led an uprising to institute the changes he sought. His figure and his writings are a very important chapter in the history of Islam in West Africa, and Abubakar, by lineage, holds a key place in West-African Islam, and particularly for the Fulani and Hausa people who followed Dan Fodio.

An Illustrious Family: The position currently does carry with it some weight—though largely ceremoni­al since British colonial rule diminished its political significance. Much of this clout is derived from the respect that was earned by Siddiq Abu Bakar Dan Usman—17th Sultan and father of Abubakar— who held the Sultanate for over 50 years. The rule of Abubakar’s father from 1938 to 1988 earned the position significant social capital and popularity with ordinary Muslims.

Administrative Power: Abubakar holds important administrative influence in Nigerian religious life. Abubakar is the titular ruler of Sokoto in northern Nigeria and is also the head of the Nigerian National Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs. Leadership of this council means that the Sultan of Sokoto remains the only figure that can legitimately claim to speak on behalf of all Nigerian Muslims. This role has be­come increasingly influential over the years with a rise in interreligious tensions between Nigeria’s Mus­lim-majority north and Christian-majority south. The Sultan of Sokoto is also the Chancellor of Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto, one of the largest universities in Nigeria, with over 40,000 students.

Interfaith Initiative: The Sultan has started many initi­atives to counter and reduce the influence of Boko Haram. He has also worked to strengthen Mus­lim-Christian ties by inviting an international joint Muslim Christian Delegation to visit Nigeria. In 2019, he was appointed Co-Moderator of the Council of Religion for Peace (CRP).

 

Quotes

“Nigerians should abhor violence and live in peace and tranquility”

Statistics

3 years served as Defence Attaché to Pakistan

54% Nigerians are Muslim