Adam Alao AbdulBaqi Abeebullah Abdullah Al-Ilory | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1917 (1917) Waza, present-day Benin |
| Died | 3 May 1992(1992-05-03) (aged 74–75) London, United Kingdom |
| Occupation | Islamic scholar |
| Alma mater | Al-Azhar University[1] |
Adam Abdullah Al-Ilory (1917 – 3 May 1992) was a Beninese-Nigerian Islamic scholar, author, and education reformer. He played a leading role in the modernization of Islamic education in Nigeria and was the founder of the Arabic and Islamic Training Centre (commonly known as Markaz) in Agege, Lagos.
Al-Ilory was born in Waza, in present-day Benin Republic, into the family of Abdul Baqi Al-Ilory. He was of Yoruba ancestry and later moved to Ilorin, Nigeria, where he began his Islamic education under his father and other scholars.
He pursued higher Islamic studies at Al-Azhar University in Cairo, Egypt. In 1952, he founded the Arabic and Islamic Training Centre (Markaz) in Abeokuta, Ogun State, before relocating it to Agege, Lagos in 1955.[2]
At Markaz, Al-Ilory introduced a structured, modern system of Islamic learning—using classrooms, blackboards, written exams, student uniforms, and a subject-based curriculum. This marked a departure from traditional Qur’anic methods of education in Nigeria.
Al-Ilory authored several works in Arabic, including:
He was a follower of the Maliki school of Islamic jurisprudence and a member of the Qadiriyya Sufi order. He served as Secretary-General of the League of Imams and Alfas of Yorubaland, Edo, and Delta regions.
The Markaz institution introduced innovations such as blackboard teaching, exams, school uniforms, and certificates in the Southwest region of Nigeria.[3] In 1957, the center held its first graduation, attracting a new wave of Islamic students and reformers who would go on to replicate the model.
Sheikh Al-Ilory married six wives and had 23 children. Their names include:
Al-Ilory died in London on 3 May 1992. His death was widely mourned across West Africa. In 2017, his centenary was celebrated in Nigeria, attracting national and religious leaders.[4]