Barakat, Sudan

Barakat
Barakat
Coordinates: 14°18′51″N 33°32′04″E / 14.314122°N 33.534372°E / 14.314122; 33.534372Coordinates: 14°18′51″N 33°32′04″E / 14.314122°N 33.534372°E / 14.314122; 33.534372
Country Sudan
State Al Jazirah
Elevation 386 m (1,266 ft)

Barakat is a community in Al Jazirah state, Sudan. It lies on the west shore of the Blue Nile to the south of Wad Madani.

The extra long staple cotton named Sudan Barakat is planted in the irrigated fields of this region.[1] Sudan Barakat, which is entirely handpicked, is considered to be one of the world's highest quality cottons.[2] A 6,000 feddan pump irrigation scheme was started at Barakat in 1914.[3] The plan was launched by a group of English weaving companies called the Sudan Plantation Syndicate, which had already started a successful pump scheme at Taiba (Ţayyibat Ḩamad an Nīl) in 1910.[4] The town is home to the headquarters of the Sudan Gezira Board, which runs the Gezira-Managil Irrigation System.[5] A light railway runs through Barakat, used for carrying the cotton harvest.[6]

The village of Shakaba is nearby. After the Battle of Karari (2 September 1898), in which the Mahdist forces of the Khalifa were defeated by an Anglo-Egyptian army under General Herbert Kitchener, the Mahdi's family was sent to Shakaba under government escort. After hearing a rumor that the group was conducting Mahdist propaganda, a force of government troops fired on the group at random, killing Khalifa Muhammad Sharif and two of the Mahdi's sons, al-Fadil and al-Bushra. A third son, Abd al-Rahman al-Mahdi, was badly wounded.[7]

References

  1. "Sudan Barakat". Paul Reinhart AG. Retrieved 2011-08-28.
  2. "Sudanese Barakat Cotton". Light Years IP. Retrieved 2011-08-28.
  3. Tim Niblock (1987). "Class and power in Sudan: the dynamics of Sudanese politics, 1898-1985". SUNY Press. ISBN 0-88706-481-7.
  4. Paul Philip Howell, John Anthony Allan (1994). The Nile: sharing a scarce resource : a historical and technical review of water management and of economic and legal issues. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-45040-3.
  5. Andrew D. Roberts, John Donnelly Fage, Roland Anthony Oliver (1984). The Cambridge history of Africa, Volume 8. Cambridge University Press. p. 875. ISBN 0-521-22505-1.
  6. William R. Jobin (1999). "Dams and disease: ecological design and health impacts of large dams, canals and irrigation systems". Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0-419-22360-6.
  7. Gabriel Warburg (2003). Islam, sectarianism, and politics in Sudan since the Mahdiyya. Univ of Wisconsin Press. p. 81. ISBN 0-299-18294-0.
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