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<title>JÁLÀBÍ PRACTICE OF MUSLIM CLERICS AND THE HERMENEUTICS OF PRAYER COMMODIFICATION IN IBADAN, NIGERIA</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1813" rel="alternate"/>
<subtitle/>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1813</id>
<updated>2026-04-18T14:42:06Z</updated>
<dc:date>2026-04-18T14:42:06Z</dc:date>
<entry>
<title>JÁLÀBÍ PRACTICE OF MUSLIM CLERICS AND THE HERMENEUTICS OF PRAYER COMMODIFICATION IN IBADAN, NIGERIA</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1814" rel="alternate"/>
<author>
<name>MUDASIRU, MORUFF</name>
</author>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1814</id>
<updated>2024-04-18T16:04:00Z</updated>
<published>2022-12-01T00:00:00Z</published>
<summary type="text">JÁLÀBÍ PRACTICE OF MUSLIM CLERICS AND THE HERMENEUTICS OF PRAYER COMMODIFICATION IN IBADAN, NIGERIA
MUDASIRU, MORUFF
Jálàbí, the Islamic petitionary prayer is deployed by Muslim clerics to render spiritual&#13;
services to individuals and groups in a manner that forges a transactional relationship&#13;
between the parties. Existing anthropological studies of everyday religious experiences have&#13;
focused more on the dynamics of the “prayer economy” rather than the hermeneutics of such&#13;
engagements, including Jálàbí. This study was, therefore, designed to explore the practices&#13;
of Jálàbí, in Ibadan, a city with a considerably large Muslim population, with a view to&#13;
determining the cultural meanings embedded in commodified prayers.&#13;
Hans-Georg Gadamer’s Cultural Hermeneutics and Kitiarsa Pattana’s Religious&#13;
Commodification Theory were adopted as the framework, while the ethnographic design&#13;
was used. Qualitative data were obtained through participant observation, interview of 86&#13;
informants randomly selected at locations of Islamic events, and in-depth interview of 10&#13;
Oníjálàbí clerics who were purposively selected based on their long years of experience in&#13;
Jálàbí, practice, advanced age, and pedigree in the Ibadan Muslim community. Data were&#13;
analysed using the ethnographic description.&#13;
Jálàbí practice in Ibadan was borne out of historical and pragmatic considerations that&#13;
enabled the intervention of Islamic spirituality to contribute to the development of the city.&#13;
The practice manifests in different religious functions and events such as naming&#13;
ceremonies (‘aqīqah), Fidāu (funeral) prayers, Walīmatu-khatmil Qur’ān (Qur’ān&#13;
graduation ceremonies), Islamic chieftaincy honours, and individual’s everyday quest for&#13;
success and security. Meanings embedded in commodified petitionary prayers are&#13;
engendered by the material forms through which Oníjálàbí operationalise (istikhārah,&#13;
Khatim Waqf, Ilmul Falaky or akosejaye, and Qira’āti Subhah, among others) and the ethos&#13;
of reciprocity and gratification that underlies the practice. Jálàbí, practice accords to prayer&#13;
the same significance as food, which nourishes the human body and hence constitutes an&#13;
item to be purchased with money. In Jálàbí, prayer is an important path to accessing Allah’s&#13;
favour that requires monetary gratification for efficacy and prompt response. Moreover, the&#13;
money given as Sadaqah (free-will alms), is a catalyst that not only facilitates easy access to&#13;
connect with Allah but also acts as security and protection from evil attacks and other&#13;
misfortunes. In naming ceremonies, monetary donations made by the congregation in&#13;
exchange for petitionary prayers are meant to literally buy barakah (divine blessings) for the&#13;
newborn baby. Money collected during Qur’ān graduation ceremonies (Walīmatu-khatmil&#13;
Qur’ān) is interpreted in the context of fees paid for knowledge acquisition and a way of&#13;
giving back to the clerics. Jálàbí, prayer intercessions are equated with traditional native&#13;
medicines whose value and effectiveness are believed to be proportional to the amount&#13;
expended.&#13;
The commodification involved in the petitionary prayer of the Oníjálàbí and their clients&#13;
(religious consumers) goes beyond economic transactions in Ibadan, Nigeria. It also&#13;
illustrates the spiritual values which people placed on prayers as human security and a&#13;
weapon against earthly principalities in a precarious state.
</summary>
<dc:date>2022-12-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</entry>
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