Yahya ibn Ibrahim, a chieftain of the…
1048 CE
Yahya ibn Ibrahim, a chieftain of the Gudala (and brother-in-law of the late Tarsina), had gone on pilgrimage to Mecca around 1040.
On his return, he had stopped by Kairouan in Ifriqiya, where he met Abu Imran al-Fasi, a native of Fes and a jurist and scholar of the Sunni Maliki school.
At this time, Ifriqiya was in ferment, the Zirid ruler al-Muizz ibn Badis was openly contemplating breaking with his Shi'ite Fatimid overlords in Cairo, and the jurists of Kairouan were agitating for him to do so.
Absorbing this heady atmosphere, Yahya and Abu Imran had fallen into conversation on the state of the faith in their western homelands, and Yahya had expressed his disappointment on the lack of religious education and negligence of Islamic law among his southern Sanhaja people, who were at this stage only superficially Islamicized and still clung to many heathen practices.
With Abu Imran's recommendation, Yahya ibn Ibrahim had made made his way to the ribat of Waggag ibn Zelu, near present Tiznit, in the Sous valley of southern Morocco, to seek out a Maliki teacher for his people.
Waggag had assigned him one of his residents, Abdallah ibn Yasin, a Gazzula Berber, and probably a convert rather than a born Muslim.
His name can be read as "son of Ya Sin" (the title of the 36th Sura of the Qur'an), suggesting he had obliterated his family past and was "re-born" of the Holy Book.
Ibn Yasin certainly has the ardor of a puritan zealot; his creed is mainly characterized by a rigid formalism and a strict adherence to the dictates of the Qur'an, and the Orthodox tradition.
(Chroniclers such as al-Bakri allege Ibn Yasin's learning was superficial.)
Ibn Yasin's initial meetings with the Gudala people had gone poorly.
As he had more ardor than depth, Ibn Yasin's arguments were disputed by his audience.
He responded to questioning with charges of apostasy and handed out harsh punishments for the slightest deviations.
The Gudala soon had enough and expelled him almost immediately after the death of his protector, Yahya ibn Ibrahim, sometime in the 1040s.