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1990s–Present — Timbuktu and the World
The Manuscripts: 700,000 Surviving Documents, a Race to Digitize, and a 2012 Jihadi Assault on the Archive
The most tangible physical evidence of Songhai's intellectual civilization survived in the private manuscript collections of Timbuktu's old families — stored in wooden chests, buried in desert caches, and passed down across generations despite colonial disruption, drought, and poverty. By the late twentieth century, scholars and the Malian government estimated that somewhere between 300,000 and 700,000 manuscripts had survived in and around Timbuktu — one of the largest concentrations of pre-modern manuscript material in the world.
The Ahmed Baba Institute of Higher Learning and Islamic Research (IHERI-AB), established in Timbuktu in 1970, began the systematic work of collecting, cataloguing, and preserving these manuscripts. International partnerships with South African, European, and American institutions produced large-scale digitization programs beginning in the 1990s and accelerating after 2000. By 2012, tens of thousands of manuscripts had been digitized and catalogued.
In January 2013, Islamist militant groups associated with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) — who had occupied Timbuktu for most of 2012 as part of the broader conflict in northern Mali — began destroying manuscripts as they retreated before the French military intervention. In the hours before French forces arrived, militants burned thousands of manuscripts stored at the Ahmed Baba Institute.
What the militants did not know — or could not stop — was that Timbuktu's librarians and archivists had been quietly moving manuscripts out of the city for months. Working through a network of trusted families and smugglers, they transported the bulk of the Institute's collection — an estimated 377,000 manuscripts — to Bamako, the Malian capital, in footlockers, suitcases, and wooden crates. The manuscripts were saved. The story of that rescue operation, organized by Abdel Kader Haidara and documented in journalist Joshua Hammer's book The Bad-Ass Librarians of Timbuktu (2016), is one of the most remarkable acts of cultural preservation in the twenty-first century.
"Books are more precious to us than our own lives. It is through books that we know our history, our science, our medicine, our poetry, our identity."
— Abdel Kader Haidara, director of the Mamma Haidara Library, Timbuktu
The manuscripts — now being digitized, translated, and published by scholars across multiple continents — are the primary rebuttal to everything that was claimed about Africa's absence from history. They were written in Timbuktu, by West African scholars, during the Songhai Empire. They document a civilization that governed itself, debated ideas, healed its sick, mapped the stars, and recorded its own story — for centuries, before European contact, and in spite of everything that came after.