Ahmed Mahdi Gindhish (1818–1905) was a Somali poet and religious figure.[1]

He was born in Geladi in the Somali Region region of Ethiopia. He belonged to the Murusade Abakar tribe of Galgaduud.

Gindhish gained a reputation as a wise and religious peace maker, who exhorts his listeners and his relatives across the warring Somali clans to follow Muslim virtues - his awareness surrounding threats from Menelik and the Europeans, of the time of uncertainty, chaos and the later Colonial influence - to avoid the divine punishments of wrongdoers. His biographers wrote the book "Baaris ka fog siyaasad", translated to "Research removed from politics", discussing his life and poetry.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Andrzejewski, B.W (1988). Developments in the Study of Somali Poetry, 1981-1986. Northeast African Studies.
  2. ^ Daamey, Cabdalla Qaasim (2024). Sooyaalkii iyo suugaantii Axmed Mahdi Aadan (Axmed Gindhish). Sooyaalkii iyo suugaantii Axmed Mahdi Aadan (Axmed Gindhish).