Mansa Musa was a great artist who built religious buildings through the cities he trade with. The buildings where powerful places of knowledge from teachers who taught the religion of Islam. These buildings were known as Mosques which were the most important architectural samples that appealed diversity of the Islamic belief and African societies. (Haskins 2005) Mansa Musa influenced Islam in West Africa by isolating Muslim societies, mixing Islam with local customs as the people selectively adopted Islamic ways, and pushed for change in an exertion to free the people of their mixed beliefs. The Africans were the first to race who accepted Islam which changed The West African Kingdom greatly. West African Muslims created school, the teachers and students used the Arabic language for reading, writing, and possibly …show more content…
Which allowed other become Muslim and making Islam a great religion in the West Africa Kingdom. While it could have stood only planned as an appearance of religious observance, Musa’s hajj and the wealth he showed had influential effects. In addition, Africans are often shown as hungry, underweight, dirty, and ignorant; The Mali Empire and ruler Mansa Musa proved this bias opinion to be wrong. The black people of The West African Kingdom have been shown that they are capable of becoming wealth no matter the