In the final days of Ramadan in 1835, hundreds of Muslim slaves in Brazil, known as the Malês, marched through the streets of Bahia, armed with blades and dressed in their traditional Islamic attire. Their goal: to free their imprisoned leaders and ignite a revolution against the oppression and injustice inflicted by the white ruling class.
But what was meant to be a historic uprising was fatally undermined. A domestic dispute, sparked by the anger of a former slave woman, led to the arrest of the revolt’s key leaders. The betrayal not only exposed the plot but resulted in a massacre of dozens of Muslim fighters, with others tortured — including those who hadn’t participated.
The Planning of the Malês Uprising
In 1835, the city of Salvador, capital of Bahia, had a population of 65,000. Around 40% were either enslaved or formerly enslaved Africans, many of them Muslims. The rest were primarily Portuguese and other European settlers.
The Malês were known not just for their devout Islamic faith, but also for their Arabic literacy, education, and skilled trades — such as blacksmithing, carpentry, and shoemaking. Some even earned wages and were able to purchase their freedom. But freedom was not liberation.
Even the free Muslims lived under the shadow of racism, marginalisation, and religious persecution. Their Qur’ans were confiscated. Religious gatherings were monitored. Many were barred from openly practising Islam.
In secret, meetings were held across the city. Muslim leaders drafted revolutionary plans in Arabic, raised funds to buy weapons, and even gained support from non-Muslims — including enslaved and formerly enslaved locals, and some indigenous Brazilians, all of whom were victims of colonial marginalisation.
Many of these groups were deeply moved by the compassion and justice found in Islamic teachings, and respected the Muslims’ sense of purpose and resistance.
The Revolt Betrayed by a Wife’s Fury
The uprising was planned for 25 January, during the last ten nights of Ramadan — specifically on Laylat al-Qadr, the Night of Power. But fate would intervene.
Sabina da Cruz, a freedwoman, had a falling out with her husband, Vitorio Sully, one of the revolt’s leaders. The day before the uprising, she went looking for him and found him in a house with other conspirators.
Out of anger, Sabina told a friend — also a freedwoman — who then told a white woman. That woman passed it to her husband, who promptly informed the colonial authorities.
In a single night, the leadership was arrested and the revolution exposed. Realising the plan had been compromised, the remaining Malês rushed to act.
Wearing Islamic dress and carrying bladed weapons, around 600 Muslim fighters stormed the streets of Bahia toward the prison.
But their weapons were inferior. The local infantry and police — now forewarned — were waiting. A brutal clash followed.
Nine soldiers were killed, but the Muslims paid a far heavier price. Roughly 70 Malês were martyred, and others captured, tortured, or executed — many of them without evidence of participation.
The Malês Failed, But Their Legacy Endured
Following the failed revolt, hundreds of Muslim slaves were arrested, tried, and punished. Some were sentenced to forced labour, public flogging, or death. Others were exiled, despite no proof of their involvement.
Yet the Malês Revolt became the largest anti-slavery Muslim uprising in the Americas, and its shockwaves reverberated for decades.
Public fear of similar revolts grew. By 1850, the Brazilian government banned the importation of slaves from Africa, and by 1888, slavery was officially abolished in Brazil.
According to Middle East Eye, in a report published on 16 October 2022, Muslim communities in Salvador, Bahia, are now urging Harvard University to return the skull of a Muslim man believed to have fought in the revolt — a haunting symbol of resistance.
Final Reflection
The Malês did not win the battle — but they did win something greater: a place in the eternal story of Islam’s resistance against injustice.
These African Muslims in Brazil — literate, disciplined, organised, and God-conscious — stood with the oppressed, united in faith and purpose. Their story is not just one of loss, but of courage, legacy, and the enduring power of Islamic resistance to tyranny.