Awlad Sidi Shaykh
The Awlad Sidi Shaykh (Arabic: أولاد سيدي الشيخ, also spelled Ouled Sidi Cheikh) was a confederation of Arab tribes in the west and south of Algeria led by the descendants of the Sufi saint Sidi Shaykh. The Awlad had religious authority, and also owned agricultural settlements and engaged in trade. During the French occupation of Algeria they alternately cooperated with and opposed the colonialists.
Awlad Sidi Shaykh
أولاد سيدي الشيخ
History[edit]
Colonial era[edit]
After the French invasion of Algiers in 1830 it became clear that they might try to occupy the whole country and impose a rule much less acceptable than that of the Turkish Bey.
In 1831 the Duc de Rovigo caused a scandal in Algiers when he built a military highway through two functioning cemeteries with no respect for the human remains, and converted several mosques into Catholic churches.[8]
Algerians opposed to the French occupation came to accept 'Abd al-Qadir as leader of their movement.[8]
Some of the Awlad Sidi Shaykh recognized 'Abd al-Qadir as sultan, as did the powerful Banu Hashim and Banu 'Amir.[9]
These groups of the Oran Plateau and the Plain of Gharis accepted Muhyi al-Din, chief of the Qadiriyya Sufis, as the "Champion of Islam" against the French.[10]
In the 1840s the Awlad Sidi Shaykh assisted the Governor-General Thomas Robert Bugeaud in his struggle with the Emir 'Abd al-Qadir.[1]
However, in the southern desert regions they supported 'Abd al-Qadir.[11]
In the early 1850s the confederation was still divided.
Some, led by Si Hamza, cooperated with the French.
Others, led by Mohammed bin Abdallah, opposed them.[1]
Between 1864 and 1865 the Awlad Sidi Shaykh rose in rebellion against the French.[1]
The rebellion stopped southward French expansion near Oran.[12]
It was triggered by officers of the Arab Bureau (bureaux arabes) who were insensitive to the traditions of the Awlad.[13]
One of the main military leaders of the revolt was Si Sliman, head of one of the main families.
The French suppressed the revolt through greatly superior force.[14]
Awlad Sidi Ahmad Majdub of the Amir Bedouin tribe of Morocco participated in the revolt, but was pardoned and placed in the Sebdou circle.[12]
The Awlad were restive during the Kabyle Revolt (1871–72) but did not play a major role.[14]
In the 1870s and 1880s local politics in Algeria were dominated by Europeans, commercial farming by French immigrants expanded, and funding for Islamic courts was cut, as was funding for schools that trained interpreters and judges.
It was in this context that the Awlad Sidi Shaykh staged the last, desperate rural revolts along the frontier with Morocco.[15]
Plans to destroy the second Flatters expedition of 1880–81 were made by the Kel Ahaggar Tuaregs of the Hoggar Mountains, the Awlad Sidi Shaykh confederation and the Senussi before the expedition left Ouargla.
They knew the planned route and were kept informed by the expedition guides, who helped sabotage the expedition by leading it past wells.
Six hundred men of the three tribes gathered to ambush the expedition near the wells of Bir el-Garama.[16]
The result was a massacre of half the expedition members, while many of the others died during a long retreat.[17]
Until 1883 the Awlad continued to occasionally mount raids against the colonialists.[14]
The rebellion in the southwest led by Cheikh Bouamama (Shaykh Bu 'Amamah) from 1881 to 1883 fell apart due to disagreements among the tribes.[18]
When Cheikh Bouamama retreated to Morocco in 1882 the French conquest of the south of Algeria was complete.[19]
After this the Awlad Sidi Shaykh largely accepted French authority.[14]
As the rebellion died down, the itinerant marabouts of the Awlad Sidi Shaykh turned to rebuilding their business, demanding donations to their shrine from the peasants, who still thought they had strong influence with God.[20]
The colonial administrator Alfred Le Chatelier, a relatively enlightened secularist and republican, succeeded in convincing the Mekhedma tribe of the Sud-Oranais that they need not pay tribute.[21]
There were still disturbances until 1902, and one of Awlad's leaders, Bu 'Imama, continued to resist until 1904.[22]