In the scorched sands of 19th-century
Somaliland, where nomadic clans roamed under the relentless sun, Sayyid Muhammad Abdullah
Hassan was born in 1856. He was to
become a staunch enemy of foreign influence in Somalia.
Hassan pursued religious studies, and after a transformative Hajj to Mecca in the
1890s, embraced the strict
fundamentalist message of the Salihiyya order.
Returning to Somalia in 1895, he
preached against foreign encroachments and missionary influences, uniting
disparate Somali tribes under a banner of Islamic purity and independence.
In 1899, he declared jihad, founding
the Dervish movement—a guerrilla force that waged relentless campaigns against
British, Italian, and Ethiopian forces.
His fighters effectively employed
hit-and-run tactics. The British mounted
four major expeditions against the Dervishes between 1900 and 1904 but failed
to subdue the movement. Dubbed the
"Mad Mullah" by the British, Hassan was suspected of conspiring with
Germany in World War one to raise a widespread Muslim uprising in British
controlled areas.
No such uprising arose, but the
British continued to pursue Hassan’s forces after World War one, finally
smashing the Dervish strongholds by the use of aerial bombardment in 1920.
A fugitive, Hassan died of influenza
in Ethiopia on December 21, 1920.

































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