Formulation of the claim
The shaykhs of the zawiyas frame rural populations that are far from central authority.
Explanation
Arkoun presents the marabouts as local scholars who combine literacy with immersion in rural environments dominated by orality. They were therefore not outside those environments, but part of their social and religious fabric.
From this position, they participated in the beliefs and rituals of the population, and then also assumed the role of mediator and arbiter in family and tribal disputes. In this sense, their role is not limited to religious instruction; it extends to organizing and framing relations within rural society.
Its place in the book’s argument
This atom falls within Arkoun’s description of forms of religious and social mediation that emerged outside the center of political power. It illuminates one aspect of his presence in the peripheries, where zawiyas and Sufi orders become local structures that perform functions of framing, regulation, and conciliation.
This idea is consistent with the book’s interest in tracing the intermediaries that make religion present in everyday social life, not merely as an abstract text, but as a practice embodied in institutions, figures, and social relations.
Limits of the claim
The atom does not mean that the zawiyas were a complete substitute for central authority or that they governed the countryside on their own. Nor is it sufficient by itself to explain all forms of rural religiosity or all the functions of shaykhs across different periods and countries.