Historically, Manouba is noted as the birthplace of the
sufi saint Sayyida ʿĀʾisha al-Mannūbiyya (1199–1267 CE), and until 2012 the city contained a shrine to her, supposedly her father's house. It was customary in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, for the Beys of Tunis to make a ritual circuit of city's the great shrines on the 27th day of Ramaḍān (
laylat al-Qadr) and visit this shrine. More recently, 'up until the
Tunisian revolution of January 2011, once a week, on Sundays or Mondays, rituals were held ... During the day, the shrines were women's space, devoted to music and trance rituals. At night, they became men's space, dedicated to Ṣūfī ceremonies (
dhikr ...)'. However, on 6 October 2012, the shrine was burned down by religious extremists, thought to be young
Salafis; ʿĀʾisha's
catafalque was entirely destroyed. ==Gallery==