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On Early Islam
The Pride of Haroon
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The first four
Caliphs of Islam, the Rashidun, or 'the rightly guided ones', lived
in Mecca. They were chosen by a closed-door deliberation of elders, not by
hereditary right. Three were assassinated. The issue at heart was the basis
of succession itself—Muhammad, who was not only the political
leader of his community but also led the conquest of Arabia, didn't lay down
any guiding principles or appoint a successor. 'While consultation was
recommended [by the Qur'an ♣] and
arbitrary rule deplored, the one was not enjoined, nor the other forbidden.'♣ Quite predictably, all hell broke loose. Over the centuries, any line of
descent from Muhammad, no matter how tenuous, would be used to buttress
claims of leadership of an Islamic community in some faraway land; it would
become a basis of dynasties, and a cause of bitter strife. It was an
inauspicious start for political Islam. |
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When Ali, the fourth Caliph,
was murdered, the then powerful governor of Syria, Mu'awiya, threw his
hat in the ring. He was a Quraysh of the house of Umayyad in Mecca, and
was related to the second prophet.♣
He had disliked Muhammad when he was alive but here was the opportunity
of a lifetime. His lust for power prevailed, and the locus of Arab rule
shifted north —Damascus became the capital of the new
Islamic empire. Despite the anti-monarchical bent of the Qur'an, which
also placed ties of blood beneath those of belief, hereditary succession
became normative in the Umayyad Caliphate. A ninth-century author
relates Mu'awiya's appointment of his son Yazid as heir apparent —a precedent-setting event in Islam, |
The people
gathered in the presence of Mu'awiya, and the orators arose to proclaim
Yazid as heir to the Caliphate. Some of the people showed disapproval,
whereupon a man of the tribe of Udhra ... rose to his feet. Drawing his
sword a hand span from the scabbard, he said, 'The Commander of the
Faithful is that one!' and he pointed to Mu'awiya. 'And if he dies, then
that one!' and he pointed to Yazid. 'And if anyone objects, then this
one!' and he pointed to his sword. Mu'awiya said to him, 'You are the
prince of orators'.
The Umayyad
Caliphate lasted over a century. Institutionally, they made few drastic
changes in the lands they ruled: the basis was conquest for tribute, not
assimilation. 'The Umayyad Caliphs ... were concerned primarily with the
consolidation of their political power and the solution of the numerous
economic and administrative problems.'♣
Islam often spread in spite of them. Later Sunni purists declared them
worldly and irreligious usurpers. At the end of the 7th century, the Caliph
Abdul al-Malik made Arabic the official state language—until then public records in Damascus
were kept in Greek—and issued
coins with only words on
them, proclaiming la ilaha illa-'llah, Muhammadun rasulu-'llah (No
god but Allah, Muhammad is the messenger of Allah). |
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The Umayyads also commissioned
the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, the first monumental religious
complex in Islam.♣ It loudly
proclaimed the arrival of the new faith and its Abrahamic lineage;
inscriptions on its walls recognized Jesus as an apostle of God while
casting a doubt upon his status as His Son and incarnation.♣ Next came the great Umayyad mosque in
Damascus, replacing a Christian basilica, which had replaced a temple of
Jupiter. Its novelty was a design from the Prophet's house in Medina—the
mihrab,
which indicated the direction of Mecca. Large
mosques were built in Aleppo,
Cordoba, and Qayrawan—they
dazzled the man in the street and drove home the greatness of Allah and
His messenger, backed by a powerful political establishment. |
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Many Arabs in positions of power in
the frontiers cities of Islam amassed enormous fortunes and, like a newly
rich untutored class, squandered it with abandon. They spent lavishly on
fine textiles, royal palaces and opulent private homes, mosques and public
buildings. The machinery of empire was in top gear but not everyone was
happy. The pecking order seems to have placed the Arabs on top, followed by
half-Arabs, the native converts and the non-Muslim, in that order. 'The
state', says Albert Hourani in his History of the Arab Peoples, '...
served the interests of small groups of rich and powerful men, who operated
—in government and in other fields—by methods that to an increasing and
disquieting extent resembled those of the ancient empires that Islam had
overthrown and superseded.'♣ |
Resistance to
Umayyad rule began brewing in the ranks and it came from multiple fronts: a)
the formerly-privileged elites of Persia who resented their subordination to
uncouth Arab bigwigs, b) those who opposed hereditary succession, and c)
those who wanted hereditary succession but derived from the Prophet's family—the Shi'a. In 680, Husayn, a son of Ali
and a grandson of the Prophet, led an insurrection in southern Iraq on the
tenth day of Muharram at Karbala; they were defeated by Umayyad forces,
marking the beginning of a schism within Islam.♣ |
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'... some seventy were killed
... the sole survivor being a sick child, Ali the son of Husayn, who was
left lying in a tent ... The massacre of Karbala became central to the
Shiite perception of Islamic history ... The doctrinal differences
between Sunni and Shi'a Muslims are of minor importance, far less than
those that divide the rival churches of Christendom. But the Shiite
sense of martyrdom and persecution, reinforced by their long experience
through the centuries as a minority group under rulers whom they regard
as usurpers, raised a psychological barrier between them and the Sunni
state and majority, a difference of experience and outlook, and
therefore also of religious and political attitudes and behavior.
Kerbala [in southern Iraq] was to become a major Shi'a shrine.'
♣ |
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The Umayyad Caliphs of course had
their own party of religious supporters, the Sunnis, who believed that
doctrinal authority changed with the Caliphate, which itself was elective
and any Quraysh—a member of the Prophet's tribe—was eligible. A few decades later, a
full-fledged armed revolt, held together by a coalition of interests, arose
in the former Persian heartland. It was led by Abu Muslim, a manumitted
slave,♣ from the very towns founded
a century earlier by the Arabs. They defeated the Umayyad army in 750 CE;
the Caliph and his family were assassinated, except one of
his grandsons who escaped,
... disguised and
accompanied by one servant, wandered across Palestine, Egypt, Barqa and
into Atlas mountains. After five years as penniless vagabonds, they
reached Ceuta, on the Straits of Gibralter. Andalus had been conquered at
the time of the Umayyads and many Syrians had settled there. They welcomed
the fugitive prince who, in May 756, occupied Cordova, the capital.♣
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Power now shifted
east to Baghdad for two centuries (nominally for four, until 1256, when the
Mongols finished it off), reflecting the growing prominence of Persians in
Islam. The historian al-Tabari (839-923 CE) recorded the announcement
hailing the new Caliph by his brother in the mosque at Kufa (his sobriquet
was al-Saffah, 'the blood-shedder'):
Praise be to God,
with gratitude, and yet more gratitude! Praise to him who has caused our
enemies to perish and brought to us inheritance from Muhammad our Prophet,
God's blessings and peace be upon him! O ye people, now as the dark nights
of the world put to flight, its covering lifted, now light breaks in the
earth and the heavens, and the sun rises from the springs of day while the
moon ascends from its appointed place ... Right has come back to where it
originated, among the people of the house of the Prophet, people of
compassion and mercy for you ... God has let you behold what you were
awaiting and looking forward to. He has made manifest among you a caliph
of the clan of Hashim, brightening thereby your faces and making you to
prevail over the army of Syria, and transferring the sovereignty and the
glory of Islam to you ... Has any successor to God's messenger ascended
this your minbar save the Commander of the Faithful 'Ali ibn Abi
Talib and the Commander of the Faithful 'Abd Allah ibn Muhammad—and he gestured
with his hand toward Abu'l-'Abbas.♣
The new Caliph lived up to his
nickname, ruthlessly eradicating ex-allies, including Abu Muslim;
henceforth, loyalty to the dynasty, rather than the brotherhood of Islam,
would be the basis of empire. Religion would serve to legitimize the new
Caliphate. Yet, the Abbasids patronized a more liberal school of theology—the Mu'tazilah—much to the resentment of the Shiites
and the orthodox Sunnis; it led to more crushed Shiite rebellions.♣
The Abbasid propaganda which had
caused the fall of the Umayyads had made great play with their addiction
to wine and women in Damascus. Now, however, that they were themselves in
power, the dream of a return to true religion under the Prophet's own
family seemed to have evaporated, while luxury continued to increase. The
Umayyads had retained much of ancient Arab tradition and, when in need of
relaxation, [the Abbasids] camped in the desert to hunt gazelle.♣
The Caliph presided
over a loose collection of provinces, each with a governor and a bureaucracy
similar to older Persian arrangements —power devolved increasingly to the local 'satraps'. Administration was
divided into departments—divans—headed by the vizier. The Arab monopoly
on power had passed—Islamized Persians began entering the
higher echelons of leadership. In this time of peace, flourishing
agriculture and trade led to unprecedented prosperity and a huge burst of
intellectual and cultural activity, peaking in the reign of Haroon al-Rashid
and al-Mamun. This was the golden age of Islam, Baghdad was the richest city
in the world
—only Constantinople came somewhat
close. |
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'Their ships were by far the
largest and the best appointed in Chinese waters or in the Indian ocean.
Under their highly developed banking system, an Arab businessman could
cash a cheque in Canton on his bank account in Baghdad. [Wealthy women
wore] lavish jewels and pearls, silks and embroidered fabrics. Exquisite
carpets and cushions, the sparkling fountains, the soft music and the
exotic perfumes of private apartments ... musk, myrtle and jasmine ...
[it was also] an age in which conversation and culture were considered
an art. Intellectual, and even theological, discussions were among the
recreations of the educated classes. Poetry was still, as it had been
among the nomad tribes before Islam, the most typical Arab art form ...
improvisation of verse in conversation was considered an essential
accomplishment in polite society ... al-Mamun opened an institution
which he called the House of Wisdom [Bayt al-Hikmah] ... for the
translation of Greek works ... outstanding contributions ... in the
field of mathematics ... [they] invented algebra, plane and spherical
trigonometry ... logarithms ... astronomers measured the circumference
of the earth with remarkable accuracy, six hundred years before Europe
admitted that it was not flat ... Baghdad had its first paper mill ...
opened public hospitals, medical schools ...'
♣ |
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An anecdote relates
that at the peak of Abbasid power, a Byzantine aristocrat, Nicephorus I,
became emperor. He had just deposed Empress Irene in a coup on the grounds
that she was too meek vis-à-vis the Caliph—the Byzantines had paid tribute for many
years and it was time to stand up to the Abbasids. He promptly sent a letter
to Haroon demanding the instant refund of all the tribute paid over the
years, or else .... Haroon was furious and wrote on the back of the letter,
'From Haroon, the Prince of the Faithful, to Nicephorus, the Roman dog. I
have read your letter, you son of a heathen mother. You will see and not
hear my reply.' He mobilized a large army which swept across Asia Minor and
reached within 150 miles from Constantinople when Nicephorus sued for peace
and agreed to continue paying the tribute. Graciously consenting, Haroon
withdrew his troops. |
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The armies now
were highly professional and 'moved with perfect drill and discipline'
and it was the Turks who would dominate them. But the old
expansionary phase was over—Andalus and the Maghreb were lost and
Ifriqiya (greater Egypt) had 'dominion status'. The leading western
Christian king of the time was Charlemagne—both rulers cultivated cordial ties to
deter their main foes: Byzantium, hostile to Charlemagne,
and Umayyad Spain, a bitter rival of the Abbasids. According to
contemporaneous records of Christian writers, the envoys of Charlemagne
returned from the east with rich gifts from 'the king of Persia'—exquisite fabrics, aromatics, an
elephant, and more interestingly, an intricate water clock. The Muslims,
it appears, maintained utter silence about the gifts they received
from the Franks
—no records or references have come down
to us. |
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'Alcoholic
drinks were often indulged in both in company and in private. Judging by
the countless stories of revelry in such works as the Aghani♣
and the Arabian Nights, and by the numerous songs and poems in praise of
wine, prohibition, one of the distinctive features of the Moslem
religion, prohibited no more than did the eighteenth amendment to the
Constitution of the US. Even Caliphs, viziers, princes, and judges paid
no heed to the religious injunction. Khamr, made of dates, was
the favorite beverage.' ♣ The
Jews and the Christians were the bootleggers of the time. |
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§ |
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The Thousand and One Nights (Alf
Layla wa Layla in Arabic or The Arabian Nights), originally
transmitted orally with material added somewhat haphazardly at different
times and places, was now being formally recorded by scholars.♣ The tales of Aladdin, Ali Baba, and Sindbad the Sailor were to become
part of the global folklore. The dominant Abbasid legal system—there were four, all proceeding from the
Shari'ah but with significant variations nevertheless♣—was the Hanafi rite. It relied heavily
on consensus and judicial reasoning. Soon after the reign of al-Mamun,
Abbasid power began to wane. Local governors or amirs, responsible for
tax collection, became the effective rulers of the empire especially
when the governorships were held by army commanders—some of them were Turks. The ultimate
humiliation came in 946, when the Caliph became a puppet to the Shiite
Persian house of Buyeh which invaded and occupied the capital but didn't
remove him from his palace because his religious title was useful to
them. |
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Further
disintegration led to more independent dynasties, one of which, the
Samanids (819-999) of Bukhara, reverted to Persian as the state language—written in Arabic script—and ushered in a cultural revival. Firdausi of
Khurasan (b. c. 935--d. c. 1020-26), the 'Homer of
Persia', wrote the Shahnameh—a
history of the kings of Persia from ancient times to the coming of the
Arabs in nearly 60,000 couplets. Seven times the length of the Iliad, it
took him 35 years to complete. It was his attempt to keep alive in the
hearts of his people their ancestral faith and the glories of their
past, in a time when the Arabs had made deep inroads into Persian life. |
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| Two Turkish Sunni dynasties, the
Ghaznavids of Ghazna (977-1186) and the Seljuks (1038-1157) of Khurasan,
arose at this time, existing in effect apart from the Caliphate but
nominally attached to it. They were founded on the military ethos of the
ghazis—a dedicated warrior class raised to
guard the northeastern boundaries against non-Muslim Turks. While the
rulers were of Turkish origin, they presided over a still creative Persian
culture. The first significant intrusion of Islam into India was led by
Mahmud of Ghazna who, quite justifiably, lives in Indian history as a cruel
and bloodthirsty fanatic, a destroyer of temples, and plunderer of their
wealth, but in his own dominion he was known as a patron of art, literature,
and science. He 'brought' to his court and the university he established at
Ghazna the greatest scholars and writers of the age.
One of these scholars was al-Beruni
(973-1048), whose 'patronage' by Mahmud of Ghazna yielded his monumental
commentary on Indian philosophy and culture—Kitab fi tahqiq ma li'l-hind.
'In his search for pure knowledge he is undoubtedly one of the greatest
minds in Islamic history.'♣ Born
near modern Khiva in Central Asia, 'he was an outstanding intellectual
figure ... possessing a profound and original mind of encyclopedic scope ...
conversant with Turkish, Persian, Sanskrit, Hebrew, and Syriac (Armenian) in
addition to the Arabic in which he wrote. He applied his talents in many
fields of knowledge, excelling particularly in astronomy, mathematics,
chronology, physics, medicine, mineralogy and history.'♣
Al-Beruni's objective in writing
his work on India was to provide, in his own words, 'the essential facts for
any Muslim who wanted to converse with Hindus and to discuss with them
questions of religion, science, or literature'. He read the major Indian
religious and astronomical texts; in his account he highlights choice parts
of the Gita, the Upanishads, Patanjali, Puranas,
the four Vedas, scientific texts (by Nagarjuna, Aryabhata, etc.),
relating stories from Indian mythology to make his point. He also compares
Indian thought to the Greek thought of Socrates, Pythagoras, Plato,
Aristotle, Galen and others, and at times with Sufi teaching.♣
He traveled in India for 13 years, observing, questioning, studying. The
result is a comprehensive exposition of Indian thought and society. 'Not for
nearly eight hundred years would any other writer match al-Beruni's profound
understanding of almost all aspects of Indian life.'♣ |
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'In his works on astronomy, he
discussed with approval the theory of the Earth's rotation on its axis
and made accurate calculations of latitude and longitude. In those on
physics, he explained natural springs by the laws of hydrostatics and
determined with remarkable accuracy the specific weight of 18 precious
stones and metals. In his works on geography, he advanced the daring
view that the valley of the Indus had once been a sea basin. In religion
he was a Shi'ite Muslim, but with agnostic tendencies. His poetical
works in the main seek to combine Greek wisdom and Islamic thought.'♣ He also corresponded with the famous philosopher Ibn Sina (Avicenna). |
'By the end of the first millennium, Arab mathematician and physicist
Alhazen had produced works on optical theory and planetary motion. His
theories, translated into Latin in 1270, strongly influenced European
thinkers. His publications deal with refraction, reflection, binocular
vision, focusing with lenses, the rainbow, parabolic and spherical mirrors,
spherical aberration, atmospheric refraction, and the apparent increase in
size of planetary bodies near the Earth's horizon. He was first to give an
accurate account of vision, correctly stating that light comes from the
object seen to the eye.'♣ |
Of considerable stature too is
another famous man, Omar Khayyam (1048-1131), who continued the mathematical
work of al-Beruni—the Seljuq empire owed the reform of its
calendar to him. The result was the Jalali era (named after Jalal-ud-din,
one of the king's names)—'a computation of time,' says Gibbon,
'which surpasses the Julian, and approaches the accuracy of the Gregorian
style.' He measured the length of the year as 365.24219858156 days, a number
that was improved to 365.242196 days only in the 19th century and the
current number is 365.242190 days. |
He not only discovered a general
method of extracting roots of arbitrary high degree, but his Algebra contains the first complete treatment of the solution of cubic equations
which he did by means of conic sections. He was also part of
the Islamic tradition of investigating Euclid and his parallel postulate.
Another was the definition of ratios which he argued should be regarded as
'ideal numbers,' and so he conceived of a much broader system of numbers
than that used since Greek antiquity, that of the positive real numbers. He
was also commissioned to build an observatory in the city of Esfahan for
which he led a team of astronomers. In his lifetime, he was recognized as a
master of philosophy, jurisprudence, history, mathematics, medicine, and
astronomy. Khayyam was attached to the court of the Seljuks—of Khorasan, later Baghdad, Samarkand
and Esfahan as well—and lived amidst political turbulence
interspersed with quiet periods. He also attracted flak from the growing
religious conservatism of Sunni Turks. |
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Omar
Khayyam ('Tentmaker', possibly his father's profession) was not only a
top-notch mathematician but also a major poet. The world today knows
Omar Khayyam for his quatrains—the Rubaiyat. Besides the social
attitudes of the times, they reveal a sensitive, intelligent, humble,
gently-mocking yet good-humored man, skeptical of divine providence and
certainty of truth, wistful of an ever-present evanescence, mystical in
one, lamenting man's ignorance in another. '... he chooses to put his
faith in a joyful appreciation of the fleeting and sensuous beauties of
the material world. The idyllic nature of the modest pleasures he
celebrates, however, cannot dispel his honest and straightforward
brooding over fundamental metaphysical questions.'♣
Many of his 500 or so quatrains celebrate wine, exhorting all those who
take themselves too seriously to partake of it while time permits. Here
are ten sample quatrains (from the translation of E. H. Whinfield).♣ |
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O unenlightened race of humankind,
Ye are a nothing, built on empty wind!
Yea, a mere nothing, hovering in the abyss,
A void before you, and a void behind!
Some are thoughtful on their way
Some are doubtful, so they pray.
I hear the hidden voice that may
Shout, "Both paths lead astray."
The secrets eternal neither you know nor I
And answers to the riddle neither you know nor I
Behind the veil there is much talk about us, why
When the veil falls, neither you remain nor I.
All my companions, one by one died
With Angel of Death they now reside
In the banquette of life same wine we tried
A few cups back, they fell to the side.
Drinking wine is my travail
Till my body is dead and stale
At my grave site all shall hail
Odor of wine shall prevail. |
Heed not the Sunna, nor the law divine;
If to the poor his portion you assign,
And never injure one, nor yet abuse,
I guarantee you heaven, and now some wine!
Slaves of vain wisdom and philosophy,
Who toil at Being and Nonentity,
Parching your brains till they are like dry grapes,
Be wise in time, and drink grapejuice like me!
You, who in carnal lusts your time employ,
Wearing your precious spirit with annoy,
Know that these things you set your heart upon
Sooner or later must the soul destroy!
Never in this false world on friends rely,
(I give this counsel confidentially);
Put up with pain, and seek no antidote;
Endure your grief, and ask no sympathy!
You know all secrets of this earthly
sphere,
Why then remain a prey to empty fear?
You can not bend things to your will, but yet
Cheer up for the few moments you are here! |
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(More
Quatrains?) |
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Then came the
long haired Mongol hordes on horseback screaming war cries. 'For
centuries these hardy nomads had lived on the windswept plateau north of
the Gobi desert, occasionally swooping down on China or on the caravans
that plied the Great Silk Route. Most Mongols had kept aloof from the
civilizations and religions surrounding them, worshipping their own
deity, Tengri ('eternal blue sky'). But in the late 12th century,
a warrior chieftain called Genghis Khan united the eastern Mongol tribes
into a great confederation.'♣
They were soon drawn into conflict with frontier Muslim states and left
a trail of debauchery and mayhem wherever they went. In 1256, Hulegu, a
grandson of Genghis, approached Baghdad. Although a pagan, his wife was
a Nestorian Christian who is said to have influenced his hatred of
Islam. Here is an account of the encounter, ♣ |
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The Caliph's
army resisted bravely until the Mongols flooded its camp, drowning
thousands. Hulegu's forces proceeded to bombard Baghdad with heavy rocks
flung from catapults until the caliph surrendered. Then the Mongols
pillaged the city, burned its schools and libraries, destroyed its mosques
and palaces, murdered possibly a million Muslims, and finally executed all
the Abbasids by wrapping them in carpets and trampling them beneath their
horses' hooves. Until the stench of the dead forced Hulegu and his men out
of Baghdad, they loaded their horses, packed the scabbards of their
discarded swords, and even stuffed some gutted corpses with gold, pearls,
and precious stones, to be hauled back to the Mongol capital [Shang-tu or
the Xanadu of Samuel Taylor Coleridge]. It was a melancholy end to the
independent Abbasid caliphate, to the prosperity and intellectual glory of
Baghdad, and, according to some historians, to Arabic civilization itself. ♣
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A few years
later, Marco Polo would visit the court of the next Mongol ruler
—Kublai Khan, Hulegu's brother. In the
coming centuries, it would be the Mongols who would fight the Turks for
territorial control in western and central Asia and Egypt (the Mamluks
were of Turkish origin). Eventually, they would all absorb Islam and
contribute to its expansion into new lands including the Indian
subcontinent. |
§ |
The Islamic state was conceived as a theocracy with no
separation of 'church' and state—the Caliphs though had substantial
leeway in interpreting the law. Thereafter, in most cases, a ruler was head
of the community only, not of faith—the Khans, Sultans, and Shahs. His job
was to fulfill the many administrative functions of the state not covered by
the Qur'an, to ensure the authority of the law and by extension, preserve
the fabric of civilized life. He issued secular laws, or qanuns, and
a strong ruler could dodge the Shar'ia. The guardians of the faith were the
ulema but with no enforcing power.♣
There were periods with both liberal rulers and jurists, as in Abbasid
Baghdad and in some later Persian dynasties. Their dynamism, tolerance and
vitality of culture were well in excess of contemporaneous civilizations. Here are two modern historians on
the Islamic golden age in Baghdad,
Islamic civilization in the Arab
lands reached its peak under the Abbasids. Paradoxically, one reason was
the movement of its center of gravity away from Arabia and the Levant.
Islam provided a political organization which, by holding together a huge
area, cradled a culture which was essentially synthetic, mingling ...
Hellenistic, Christian, Jewish, Zoroastrian and Hindu ideas. Arabic
culture under the Abbasids had a closer access to the Persian tradition
and closer contact with India which brought to it renewed vigor and new
creative elements.♣
What we now call 'Arab
civilization' was Arabian neither in its origin and fundamental structure
nor in its principal ethnic aspects. The purely Arabian contribution was
linguistic and to a certain extent in the religious fields. Throughout the
whole period of the Caliphate the Syrians, the Persians, the Egyptians and
others, as Moslem converts or as Christians and Jews, were the foremost
bearers of the torch of enlightenment and learning ... In art and
architecture, in philosophy, in medicine, in science and literature, in
government the original Arabians had nothing to teach and everything to
learn. ♣
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The turning
point indeed was the coming of illiberal and destructive forces with the
new converts on the fringes of Islam—the Turks and the Mongols, who extracted
from the Qur'an what their cultural deficiencies had prepared them for.
Monotheistic scriptures, besides explicit injunctions, have also lent
themselves to a spectrum of interpretation—one only need remember the Crusades and
the Spanish Inquisition, sanctioned by the Catholic Church itself (more
on this later). Islam too has its fair share. Below is a flagrant and
oft-cited passage from the Qur'an♣
followed by a modern opinion by the American Orientalist Bernard Lewis.♣ |
And fight for the cause of Allah those who fight you, but
do not be aggressive. Surely Allah does not like the aggressors. / Kill
them wherever you find them and drive them out from wherever they drove
you out. Sedition is worse than slaughter. Do not fight them at the Sacred
Mosque until they fight you at it. If they fight you there, kill them.
Such is the reward of the unbelievers. / But if they desist Allah is truly
All-forgiving, Merciful. / Fight them until there is no sedition and the
religion becomes that of Allah. But if they desist, there will be no
aggression except against the evil-doers. (Qur'an 2:189-192.)
♣
[Jihad♣] is a
recurring and at times a dominant theme in Islamic history. It retained
its potency on the frontiers of the Islamic world, where the frontier
peoples, often themselves recent converts to Islam, tried to carry their
new faith, by war and by preaching, to their unconverted kinsfolk in the
lands beyond the frontier ... notably in central Asia and Africa. In the
central lands of Islam, among peoples of more advanced culture and greater
political sophistication, the notion of jihad underwent a number of
changes ... By the ninth century ... [they] were becoming reconciled to
the fact of a more or less permanent frontier subject to only minor
variations and a more or less permanent non-Muslim state beyond that
frontier, with which it was possible to have commercial, diplomatic, and
at times even cultural relations.
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Towards the
end of the first millennium CE, with the waning of Abbasid power, the
gates of ijtihad—independent reasoning or interpretation
of scripture—were declared closed for good in Sunni
Islam.♣ This significant event
is believed to have contributed much to the fossilization of a hitherto
creative society, the breaking out from which state perhaps made harder
by the absence of a 'mother church' as a focal point for later
reform. Power struggles at the top continued, the dynamics of which were
first explained by the asabiya construct of the 14th century
Islamic historian Ibn Khaldûn.♣ |
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Golden ages
coincided with the reign of enlightened monarchs in periods of economic
abundance. The relative failure of political Islam in modern times lies
ultimately in its inability to develop secular institutions built around
the individual. As we'll see, the triumph of mysticism in medieval
Islam, indirectly and unintentionally, contributed to this outcome. But
neither is any other major religion, including Christianity—Islam's historical rival—to be credited with a more articulate
political philosophy. That was the unique achievement of the Greeks. (More on this
later.) |
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The Turks and Mongols would rule southwest Asia long enough to permanently
impair older spiritual traditions.♣
In lending an aggressive and militant character to political Islam, they
would be akin to the original Arabs—the common poverty of their pre-Islamic thought and culture is notable. In the 18th century, a fresh wave of religious conservatism would
arrive from Arabia (Wahhabism) with more to come in the 20th—backed with petrodollars and the
ultra-orthodox Hanbali legal system.♣
The experience of Christian colonialism and the opposing cultural values of
individualism (modernism), when coupled with certain harsh constructs of the
Qur'an, would fuel reactionaries. However, those in the
modern West who cite jihad as evidence for Islam's innate, uniform
and perennial decadence—to contrast it with their own superior
civilization—must de rigueur be asked to judge
it in a wider perspective. In the name of what beliefs have the most brutal
wars of 20th century been fought? ♣
§
Against the
backdrop of early political Islam arose two significant currents in Islamic
thought, both opposed to orthodoxy. The first would elevate the self, the
second would seek its
annihilation. The first was a spirit of intellectual inquiry derived from the
Classical Greeks. In the words of a leading scholar of Islamic philosophy, Majid Fakhry, ♣
Interest in science and philosophy [and theology] grew during [the
Abbasid] period to such an extent that ... [it] was no longer a matter of
individual effort or initiative. Before long, the state took an active
part in its promotion ... theological divisions ... racked the whole of
the Muslim community. Caliphs upheld one theological view against another
and demanded adherence to it on political grounds, with the inevitable
result that theology soon became the handmaid of politics ... A
fundamental cause of this development is, of course, the close correlation
in Islam between principle and law, the realm of the temporal and the
realm of the spiritual ... Greek ideas and the Greek spirit of
intellectual curiosity generated a bipolar reaction of the utmost
importance for the understanding of Islam. The most radical division
caused ... was between the progressive element, which sought earnestly to
subject the data of revelation to the scrutiny of philosophical thought,
and the conservative element, which dissociated itself altogether from
philosophy on the ground that it was impious or suspiciously foreign. This
division continued to reappear throughout Islamic history as a kind of
geological fault, sundering the whole of Islam.
The second would later be described
as "Eastern mysticism". Both currents, in their highest philosophical
expression, invoked complex metaphysics. Their trajectories in the
formative centuries shed light on the path Islam was to take in the ensuing
ones. |
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