DEVELOPMENT OF AWQĀF IN TUNISIA (1784-1957)
DEVELOPMENT OF AWQĀF IN TUNISIA (1784-1957)
BY
Muhammad Amin A. Samad
Dr. R.N. Verdery
Social Institutions of Islam: Awqāf
April 10, 1975
(397-706D)
Institute of Islamic Studies
McGILL UNIVERSITY
INTRODUCTION
This
paper attempts to give illustration on the condition of the waqf in
Tunisia since it became a French protectorate until its independence. I shall
divide this paper into three parts: waqf before French protectorate,
during protectorate and after independence.
Before the establishment of the French Protectorate
there were two kinds of courts in Tunisia: a. religious court (chara, shar‘)
which administered Islamic law and decided cases of personal status,
succession, private ownership, and habous (h.ubs);
b. secular court (ouzara, wizārah), which dealt with criminal and other
civil cases.[1] Those
who were not Muslims attached themselves to their own rules of personal statute[2]
that created confusion. It was hoped that time would come where all Europeans
in Tunisia would follow French laws, except the Muslims and the Jews who were
to keep their personal statutes.[3]
There were three types of land in Tunisia:
a.
Private property (melk, milk). It included public domain that
was distributed among farmers by Minister Khayr al-Dīn, especially in Zaghwan
territory, where each of them received 20 hectares.[4]
Wasteland which was considered “dead” and belonged to no one could be possessed
through cultivation. Melk land were subject to tithe (achour, cushur),
which resembled freehold property, while arch lands which resemble
leasehold property were subject to tribute (kharaj).[5]
b. Tribal or Communal lands. These
lands belonged to tribes who lived in them, whose boundaries were known by
neighbouring people without any need for erecting markers,[6]
and located in Southern territory, occupied by nomads and semi-nomads. These
tribal lands could not be alienated.[7]
This Southern (High Steppes) territory was poor,[8]
and only esparto and coarse scrubby grass grow, most of which was used for sheep
in winter, but was burned by sirocco, the hot wind which blows from the
sahara in summer.[9]
c.
Habous lands. These lands at
one time were not less than 4 million ha. soil of Tunisia.[10]
Some of private lands were turned into habous (especially the private habous)
by their owners, either settlers or nomads, to avoid the risk of confiscation
by the ruler (the Bey) or a powerful neighbour, as habous is perpetual,
inalienable, and exempted from tax.[11]
Public habous, until 1874, was entrusted to the
management of oukils (wakīls) appointed by H.E. the Bey. They
managed reports on the estate, set the revenue apart for beneficiary works
instituted by the constituent. Due to
mismanagement Khayr al-Dīn abolished the oukils administration of the
public habous in March 19, 1874, and formed a jemaia (jamciyyah)
which controlled the revenue of the public habous.[12]
The private habous was administered by a moqaddem.
As he received very little for his serviced he did not care and manage tao
make the land productive. Therefore there was a great amount of unused lands.[13]
French private colonization in Tunisia started in
1878, when the Société Marseillaise brought the great estate of
Enfida from Khayr al-Dīn which had an area about 96 000 hectares.[14]
The French took over Tunisia in 1881 as their major step in building the Second
French Empire.[15]
As their method of control was a Protectorate, they kept the existence of
Tunisian government under their control. They issued laws as beycal decrees.[16]
To smooth native susceptibility the Resident issued all decrees in the name of
Allah and His Highness the Bey.[17]
It had been
customary to draw up a sort of affidavit (outika, wathīqah) when a piece
of land was bought or when the documents of the title were lost.[18]
This system of wathīqah and shar‘ were not satisfactory for the
French in their land case. Therefore,
Cambon[19]
set forth the Land Registration Act in July 1885, a degree introducing
registration of land founded on the Torrean system.[20]
All landowners were to register their property through a special tribunal
mixte (mah.kamah
mukhtalat.ah), consisting of three French
and three[21]
Tunisian judges, in addition to three French magistrates, i.e., a
president, a vice-president, and a reporter. The owner of private lands,
including habous were to apply to the protector of land property. The
application of the claim was
announced through publication in Arabic and French in the Journal officiel
tunisien, and a period of 45 days was allowed to elapse to know if there
was any challenge or any consideration. Then a survey on the claim was made. If
sixty days had passed without any challenge, and if the tribunal granted the
application, the protector (conservateur) issued a certificate known as
a titre bleu (blue title) to the landowner. All rights of property were
recorded on the certificate and abrogated all previous claims. The Tunisians
and all other landowners and claimants took their cases before the Tunisian and
French judges respectively, except in case a Tunisian was involved in a
dispute, two Tunisian and two French judges handled the case.[22]
As the decision was
given by the tribunal was final, and the period for the challenge or any other
consideration was not enough for the Tunisians to present their supporting
evidence of their property, if they had any, many of them lost their lands.[23]
From 1886 to 1937
there were 22,897 applications for registration which were received, covering
the area of 6,071,112 acres with a value of 797,852,239 francs; 18,624
certificates of title were granted, covering the area of 3,722,486 acres with
the value of 577,498,207 francs.[24]
To promote
colonization the French used devices to overcome the prohibition of alienation
of the habous, i.e., substitution, leases, and enzel (inzāl).[25]
According to H.anafī school the habous is
substitutable. This law was adopted with issuing a decree in 1898, where the habous
and the enzel could be exchanged for money to purchase a new property,
which could be in turn put into habous. In this way productive land
could be exploited in exchange for non-productive one.[26]
There are two kinds
of substitution: substitution of the same nature, i.e., one in which the
habous land is exchanged with another at least of the same value; the jemaia
give their evaluation, and if it is profitable for the foundation it is
submitted to the approval of H.E. the Bey. Otherwise, the suggestion for
substitution is rejected.[27]
The
other kind of substitution is substitution in kind, i.e., with something
else of different kind, and this could happen only through public auction,
preceded by sufficient announcement (advertisement), and with fixed price set
by experts and accepted by the demander.[28]
If the habous land happened to be exchanged for a profitable building,
then it was rented to the administration of colonization (idārat al-isticmār)
with low price.[29]
Another device to overcome the prohibition of
alienation of the habous is the use of lease. There are two kinds of
lease: ordinary lease and long-term lease:
a. Ordinary lease: urban estates
were rented through public auction for a maximum period of three years.
Actually, they could be rented for three, six, and even nine years. [30]
b.
Long-term lease: the decree of January 31st, 1898 provided
this long-term lease. Habous land suitable for agriculture could be
rented, as the initial period, for ten years. Then it could be renewed twice
for a maximum of thirty years. At the end of the lease, the land returned to
the care of its mutawalli.[31]
According to the decree of 1898, a lease should be
preceded by a large publication and then public auction; at the expiration of
the first ten year period, the tenant can ask for renewal without auction for
another ten year lease ‘on condition
that he is to bear the addition of 20% of the rent.” [32]
this long term lease can give the tenant, at the end of the first ten year
period, a right to transfer the lease into enzel without auction “and
with the approval of technical people.”[33]
A long-term lease which led to perpetuity is called enzel.
The owner of a lease is held to pay a certain amount of money every year to the
owner of the habous. He is neither a tenant, for his title is not
perpetual, nor an owner, for the habous cannot be alienated.[34]
The decree of enzel rights issued by the Bey in 1888 was directed
against the unused habous. The holder of the enzel could build a
building in the area.[35]
This public auction of the habous touched the
natives’ religious feelings and interest since, unlike the colons who were
usually the highest bidders in the auction, they could not compete with the
higher prices bid by the colons.[36]
According to a decree issued in 1898 the jemaia
(the public habous administration) was to hand over 2,000 hectares of
lands annually to the State domains administration “for agricultural purpose”,
which were in turn to be sold to settlers on easy terms of credit.[37]
In 1903 the jemaia was directed to accept
applications for enzel rights on cultivated land;[38]
in July 17th, 1908, a decree was issued in which the activity of the
jemaia was under the supervision of the Supreme Council of the habous;[39]
by this year, 108,000 acres were handed over to Europeans, and 38,000 acres to
Tunisians by means of enzel.[40]
Theoretically, the habous (especially the public one) had been
controlled by the state since 1830.[41]
As for the private habous a decree was issued in June 22, 1938, to
reform its management in order to secdure good adjustment and effective control
of the mokaddem.[42]
The communal (tribal) lands in Tunisia were about four
million hectares, which were about one-third of the total lands of Tunisia.[43]
When the French came and bought lands including the habous at the High
Tell,[44]
summer grazing b3ecame less until there was not enough grass for the flocks.
Tribes which did not migrate to the north (the Tell) in summer remained in the
Steppes faced disaster, as they had not enough grass for their sheep. Many of them lost their sheep, and tried to
find work in the cities.[45]
In January 1901 the ruler issued a decree that all the
collective lands of the tribes belonged to the state.[46]
In February 22, 1904, this decree was supported by a tribunal mixte,
which declared that the tribes had no rights on these lands, as they had no
legal status, and as they were not organized groups. So, these lands were
registered as state lands and subject to sale.[47]
The decree of 1926 abolished the inalienability of tribal lands, and this led
to encouragement of private ownership.[48]
In 1956 Tunisia became an independent state, and its
first president was Bourguiba,[49]
who tried to be a great Muslim reformer like Muh.ammad
cAbduh.[50]
It was through his request that the article 1 in the constitution read “The
Tunisian state is free, independent, and sovereign. Islam is its religion and
Arabic is its language.”[51]
In May 31st, 1956, Bourguiba issued a
decree to abolish the public habous. The jemaia was abrogated,
and 150,000 of its lands, which finance the mosque and other charitable
institutions, were transferred into the state property.[52]
The habous had been attacked a long time ago because of its economic ill
management and being a very easy means to turn away the law of succession.[53]
In July 18, 1957 Bourguiba issued a decree to abolish
the private habous. There were 1,500,000 hectares of private habous
land at that time. This land was divided among the heirs with fair share to women.
As for the tenants who had long occupied the land, the government respected
their de facto rights.[54]
ENDNOTES
[1]Naval Intelligence Division, Tunisia
(Geographical Handbook Series, for official use only, February, 1945), p. 159.
[2]The Jews with Talmud, the Italian with Civil Code of
Italy, the French with continental law, and the Maltese with Maltese Code of
the knight of Rohan (le code maltais de chevalier de Rohan) which was
modified by English ordonnance, see Paul Leroy-Beaulieu, L’Algérie et la Tunisie (Paris: Guillaumin
et Cie, 1897), p. 471.
[4]1 hectare is equal to 2.471 acres. See al-H.abīb Thāmir, Hādhihī Tūnis
(Cairo, 19438), p. 43. Jean Despois, L’Afrique du Nord (Paris: Presses
Universitaires de France, 1964), 3rd ed., p. 151. Before French
protectorate there was no “state domain”, as “dead lands” were considered in
the possession of the Muslim community, see R. Jambu-Merlin, Le Droit Privé en Tunisie (Paris: Institut de
Droit Comparé de l’Université de Paris, 1960), p. 315
[5]Naval Intelligence Division, Tunisia, p. 160;
Despois said that this “dead” land belonged to tribal lands, see Jean Despois, L’Afrique
du Nord, pp. 151 and 171.
[6]Charles C. Harber, “Tunisian Land Tenure in the Early
French Protectorate”, The Muslim World, vol. lxiii (July, 1973), p. 312;
al-H.abīb Thāmir, Hādhihī Tūnis, p.
45.
[7]P. Gillin, “Histoire de la Colonisation Française”
Encyclopédie de l’Empire Français, l’
Encyclopédie Coloniale et Maritime:
Tunisia (Paris: 1944), 4th ed. , p. 126.
[8]The annual rainfall is about 16 inches, and sometimes
there is no rain at all, see Thomas Hammerton, Tunisia Unveiled (London,
1959), p. 161.
[9] Another harmful wind, tramontana, blows from
the north, is cold and brings no moisture with it, see ibid., pp. 73-4
and 161.
[11]Jean Despois, L’Afrique du Nord, pp. 151 and
172; Charles C. Harber, “Tunisian Land Tenure”, p. 308; R. Jambu-Merlin, Le
Droit Privé, pp. 293 and 300; Wilfrid Knapp, Tunisia (London: Thames and
Hudson, 1970), pp. 113-4.
[12] Charles C. Harber, “Tunisian Land Tenure”, p. 308; R.
Jambu-Merlin, Le Droit Privé, p. 296; Mohamed Saadallah, “L’Œuvre des
Habous”, ” Encyclopédie de l’Empire Français, l’ Encyclopédie Coloniale
et Maritime: Tunisia (Paris: 1944), 4th ed. , p. 162.
[14] Nicola A. Ziadeh, Origins of Nationalism in
Tunisia (Beirut: American
University of Beirut, 1962), p. 39; another piece of land bought by the Société Marseillaise was Sidi Tabet, see
Charles C. Harber, “Tunisian Land
Tenure”, p. 309.
[16] Dwight L. Ling, Tunisia, from Protectorate to
Republic (Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press, 1967), p. 51.
[17]Herbert Vivitan, Tunisia and the Modern Barbary
Pirates (London: C. Arthur Pearson Ltd., 1899), p. 32.
[19] Paul Cambon was Resident General of France in Tunisia
from March 1882 till November 1886, see” Encyclopédie de l’Empire Français, l’ Encyclopédie Coloniale et Maritime: Tunisia, p. ix.
[20] Sir Robert Torrens, a governor of Southern Australia
created the Torrens Land Act in Australia and had been applied since 1885. This
system was adopted partially in Tunisia and without compulsion, see Naval
Intelligence Division, Tunisia, p. 185; Dwight L. Ling, Tunisia,
p. 65;
Wilfrid Knapp, Tunisia, p. 114.
[21] According to Thāmir, there were two Tunisian judges,
see al-H.abīb Thāmir, Hādhihī Tūnis, p.
42 (footnote).
[22]Naval Intelligence Division, Tunisia, p. 185;
Charles C. Harber, “Tunisian Land Tenure”, p. 310; al-H.abīb
Thāmir, Hādhihī Tūnis, p. 42.
[26] Dwight L. Ling, Tunisia,p. 64; P. Gillin,
“Histoire de la Colonisation,” p. 126; R. Jambu-Merlin, Le Droit Privé, p. 327; and Nicola A.. Ziadeh, Origins of Nationalism, p.
42.
[32]“à
condition de supporter une majoration de 20% sur le loyer”, see Mohamed Saadallah,
“L’Œuvre des Habous”, p. 163.
[36]Ibid., pp.
311 and 315; Naval Intelligence Division, Tunisia, p. 186; P. Gillin,
“Histoire de la Colonisation,” p. 128.
[37]Clement Henry Moore, Tunisia since Independence (Berkeley
and Los Angeles, University of California Press, 1965), p. 50; R. Jambu-Merlin,
Le Droit Privé, pp. 327-8; al-H.abīb Thāmir, Hādhihī Tūnis, pp.
46-7.
[44] Tunisia is cut into two districts by the Atlas
Mountains: the High Tell in the north and the High Steppes in the south. The High Tell is fertile area (“Tell” means
“rich” in the Berber dialect) as there is enough rain for crops and grass, and
is protected by the mountains from the burning sirocco wind in summer.
Nomads used to drive their flocks into this area for grazing. The High Steppes
is only suitable for grazing in winter; see Thomas Hammerton, Tunisia
Unveiled, pp. 161-2.
[46] Al- H.abīb Thāmir, Hādhihī
Tūnis, p. 45; Charles C. Harber, “Tunisian Land Tenure”, p. 312; Ih.sān H.aqqī, Tūnis
al-cArabiyyah (Beirut: n.d.), p. 221.
[49] Connaissance du Monde Arabe, “La Tunisie”
(Ottawa: Documentaire Publié par le Centre d’Information Arabe, n.d.), p. 69.
[52] Ibid; Jambu-Merlin, Le Droit Privé, pp. 335, see also
the footnote; Jean Despois, L’Afrique
du Nord, p. 174.
[54] Ibid; Clement Henry Moore, Tunisia since
Independence, p. 53.
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