CONTENTS: |
1. THE RISE OF ISLAM |
Pre-Islamic Arabia
The Life of Muhammad
Qur'an |
2. ISLAMIC CIVILIZATION |
The Rise of the Caliphate and Imamate
Umayyids and Abbasids
The Rise of the Ottomans.
Creation of an Islamic Civilization
Islamic Law
Islamic Theology and Philosophy
Sufism (Islamic Mysticism)
Modern Developments
Twentieth Century Islam |
3. THE TEACHINGS OF ISLAM |
Five Pillars
God
Revelation
Spiritual Worlds
Humanity
Physical Creation
Judgment And Resurrection |
4. SHÍ'ISM |
Islam in Iran
Nineteenth-Century Iran |
5. ISLAM AND THE BAHÁ'Í FAITH | |
1. THE RISE OF ISLAM
Islam is the religion founded on the revelation brought to humanity by Muhammad
(c. 570 C.E.-632 C.E.). Muslims see it as the latest chapter in the ongoing
religion of God, a religion that can be traced back through Jesus to Moses and
Abraham. Muslims consider all three to have been prophets of God and refer to
them as Muslims. Thus Islam accepts Christianity and Judaism as true
religions, but claims to supersede their truths with a new divine
revelation.
This religion has been called "Muhammadanism" in the past, and its adherents
have been termed "Muhammadans." Neither term is acceptable to Muslims,
however, because they do not view themselves as followers of Muhammad, or
Muhammad as the founder of their religion; the founder is God, and the Qur'an,
their scripture, is seen as the words of God, not the words of Muhammad. The
word
islám comes from the Semitic root
slm, which means
submission to a higher power or the peace that comes from that submission.
Islám means "submission" in Arabic and refers specifically to
submission of one's will to the will of God. "Muslim" means "one who submits"
in Arabic. Thus, indeed, Jesus and Abraham were Muslims, for they submitted
their wills to the will of God. Springing from the same
slm root is the
Arabic word
salám, which means "peace." (
Salám is
a cognate to the Hebrew word
shalom, which also means peace; Hebrew and
Arabic are both Semitic languages, and are closely related to each other.)
Thus Islam is often referred to as the "religion of peace" as well.
From the noun "Islam," in English, is coined the English adjective "Islamic."
It is important to learn how to use the words Islam, Islamic, and Muslim
correctly; one cannot refer to the followers as "islams" or the religion as
"Muslim."
Islam is the most recent of the world's large religions, and consequently far
more is known about the circumstances of its birth and the life of its Founder.
With Abraham, Moses, Buddha, and Jesus, scholars are not sure of their years of
birth or death, and in the case of Abraham and Buddha are not even certain
about the century. The lives of these four figures are probably destined
forever to remain mysterious because historical records about them are so
unreliable. With Muhammad, however, we know his date of birth within a year or
two, and we know the very day of his death. Numerous descriptions of his life
and of his own words have come down to us, and most accounts seem fairly
accurate. Thus biographies of Muhammad can and have been written.
Pre-Islamic Arabia
While historical knowledge of seventh-century Arabia is not as good as that of
first century Palestine, historians know the basic outline of events in Arabia
immediately before the coming of Muhammad. To the north and west were Iran,
Iraq, Syria, and Palestine, all urbanized, advanced societies. Iran and the
Byzantine Empire were constantly fighting for control over Iraq and Syria, and
the border between these two huge empires fluctuated back and forth, with
terrible economic consequences for both. Arabia was invaded by a Roman army
once, in 24 B.C.E., but the desert proved impenetrable and the expedition was a
disaster.
In the far south of the Arabian peninsula was Yemen, a hilly area with more
rainfall where frankincense and myrrh--important spices, especially for
embalming--were raised. Coffee later became a major source of income for Yemen
as well. The spice trade brought wealth to Yemen and it gradually became
organized as a country. Yemen established close ties with Abyssinia, the
kingdom occupying modern Ethiopia. Abyssinia even conquered Yemen from about
521 to 575, when it briefly fell under Persian influence. From Abyssinia,
Yemen learned of Christianity; from Iran, Zoroastrianism; and at least one king
became a convert to Judaism, so that religion obviously had some impact as
well.
Central Arabia consisted of semiarid hills and arid plains occupied by
migrating Arab tribes, who tended camels and sometimes goats and sheep. The
population was divided into clans and tribes that fought each other fiercely at
times and protected their own according to an ancient, and often cruel, tribal
law. Many tribes believed in killing girl babies, so that the first-born would
be a son. The desert had occasional oases and at them villages, and eventually
towns, sprang up. Because of its isolation, civilization spread to the area
only slowly, primarily via the caravan trade; because of the war between
Byzantium and Persia, much of Yemen's spices and many goods from India moved to
the Mediterranean overland. Jews moved into the area and settled at the oases,
where they became numerous. Christian missionaries visited and some Arabs
converted. A primitive monotheism also sprang up. The Arabs who had rejected
polytheism in favor of one God but did not convert to Christianity or Judaism
were (at a later date, at least) called
anfs. While the Arabs knew
about Christianity and Judaism, detailed knowledge of the religions' teachings
seems to have been slight, and may have been influenced by heretical Christian
sects.
Gradually one town in central Arabia emerged as the principal center of Arab
culture: Mecca. Mecca's merchants came to control much of the caravan trade.
Mecca had a stone cube-shaped building about thirty feet square called the
ka'bah (which is Arabic for cube) which was filled with 365 idols,
representing the same number of gods and goddesses. The ka'bah came to be seen
as the center of Arab religion; every year one month, the month of
ajj,
became a month when Arabs went on pilgrimage to Mecca. There they traded,
arranged marriages, had a good time, and worshipped at the ka'bah. During the
month of ajj, warfare was forbidden. Arab poets composed poetry to be read at
the ajj celebration; pre-Islamic poetry has been preserved and gives us a
sample of the language the people spoke. An alphabet for the Arabic language
was developed from the Aramaic alphabet, and received limited use by merchants
and poets. Children born on the holy land around the ka'bah were automatically
considered members of the Quray
sh tribe, the tribe that controlled the
ka'bah. Mecca gradually emerged as central Arabia's primary trading center.
In the ajj, the ka'bah, and the Quray
sh tribe we see the establishment
of social institutions that one day could have led to a united Arab nation,
probably under a Quray
sh king.
The Life of Muhammad
In the year 570 Yemen attempted to invade and conquer Mecca and the area, but
the invasion failed. Because the Yemenese army was equipped with
elephants--the tanks of their day--the year of the invasion was remembered as
"the year of the elephant." This was the year in which Muhammad was born.
Muhammad was born into a small, weak clan of the Quray
sh tribe. His
father was named Abdu'lláh, which means "servant of God." The
"ulláh" part of the name comes from "Alláh," the modern Arabic
word for "god." It is not known where the word "Alláh" came from;
possibly it is a contraction of al-iláh, "the god" (al means "the" in
Arabic). At any rate, the name of Muhammad's father may be a clue for us,
because it sounds like the name a anf--a monotheist--would have. It suggests
that polytheism had been rejected by Muhammad's father or grandfather. Whether
this had any influence on Muhammad is not known, because Abdu'lláh died
before his son was born.
Unfortunately for Muhammad, his mother died when he was about six, leaving him
an orphan. The boy was raised by his uncle (the father of 'Al), a caravan
operator and merchant. Muhammad was raised a merchant himself, and as a young
man was hired by a wealthy widow named Khadjah to run her caravans. At age 25
he married her; they had about six children. Their life together was happy;
Muhammad married no other women until after Khadjah died.
All accounts indicate that Muhammad did not want to become a prophet. He did
not seek out mystical experiences, nor did he meditate or withdraw from life.
He was, to put it in modern terms, a successful businessman and family man.
However, he did seek solitude from the troubles he found in Mecca, often in a
cave on a nearby hillside. In 610 he began to have visions. In one of them
the angel Gabriel came to him and said "You that are wrapped up in your
vestment, arise, and give warning. Magnify your Lord, cleanse your garments,
and keep away from all pollution."
Muhammad fled from these experiences and hid himself in his cloak. Once he
ran to Khadjah and hid himself in her robes. But Khadjah encouraged him to
listen to his revelations, which often came to him again and again. Khadjah's
cousin, Waraqah, who was a Christian, also encouraged him. Finally Muhammad
realized that he was receiving messages from God. He began to take them to the
people of Mecca, first privately, then more publicly. His message emphasized
acceptance of the one, transcendent God; that Muhammad is His messenger; that
idol worship and killing of girl babies was forbidden; and that one must
prepare oneself for the Day of Judgment.
A few, listening to Muhammad, accepted him as a prophet and became Muslims.
Most Meccans, however, looked at him as a crazy poet and made fun of Muhammad.
Their taunts are preserved in the Qur'an itself. And when Muhammad began to
preach against worship of the idols in the ka'bah many Meccans became outwardly
hostile, since such preaching undermined the ajj, and therefore their
livelihood. Muhammad also condemned the town's economic inequalities. After
ten years the Muslim community grew slowly but tension increased to the point
where the Muslims no longer could be protected by their clans against violence.
Without clan protection one was in grave danger, because in the absence of
police and courts it was the fear of starting a blood feud that prevented
people from killing each other. In one famous case a non-Muslim tried to force
his Muslim slave, Bilál, a black man, to recant. Bilál was tied
to the ground and heavy stones were piled on his chest in order to torture him.
The torture ended when a Muslim purchased Bilál, then emancipated him.
In 615 Muhammad had to send some of his followers to Abyssinia, where the
Christian king offered them refuge, an act of generosity that Muslims remember
to this day.
In 619 Khadjah died, as did Muhammad's uncle, who also protected him from
murder. This put Muhammad in grave danger. In 620 he was invited to move to
the city of Ya
thrib, two hundred miles to the north, and become the
chief arbitrator of the city's feuding tribes. The situation in Mecca finally
became impossible and Muhammad and two hundred of his followers had to flee the
city in the year 622. This event is called the
hijra or hegira (the
Latin pronunciation of the Arabic word) and marks the beginning of Islam as a
religion. Dates in the Islamic calendar are reckoned from the hijra.
In Medina Muhammad began as leader of one of the town's eight groups, but He
gradually emerged as the town's leader, and therefore he was able to implement
the social changes that the revelations had demanded that Mecca make. This
sets Muhammad off from Jesus in a sharp way: while Jesus was a prophetic
figure, he never ruled a state; Muhammad was both prophet and statesman. This
makes his career radically different from that of Jesus.
Medina was a large agricultural town containing pagan and Jewish tribes. The
pagans embraced Islam but the Jews did not, which prompted Qur'anic revelations
criticizing Jews and Christians for their obstinacy. Considerable friction
arose between the Jews and Muslims and eventually led to the expulsion of the
Jews from the town. Medina was a trading rival with Mecca, and the Meccans
decided to go to war against Medina and their cousin. Muhammad then became a
general as well.
Warfare continued sporadically for seven years, with Muslim victories and
defeats. In 627 Meccans besieged Medina for two weeks and almost took the
city. Muhammad acquired more allies, however, as tribes became Muslim. In 630
Mecca surrendered to a Muslim army, converted to Islam, and became the center
of an Islamic Arabia. Muhammad and 'Al cleansed the ka'bah of its idols,
restoring it to the worship of the one true God. Pilgrimage to Mecca became
Muslim pilgrimage. In the next two years, most of Arabia accepted Muhammad as
their leader and nominally became Muslim. On 8 June 632, at age 65, Muhammad
died.
How is Muhammad perceived by Muslims? There is a strong tension in Islam
between efforts to view him as an ordinary man and efforts to exalt him as a
miracle-working prophet. But for all Muslims, Muhammad is seen as the epitome
of Muslim life, and Muslims have long sought to emulate him. His actions are
seen as a model; for example, Muslim pilgrimage is patterned after Muhammad's
pilgrimage in 629. Stories about his actions and words, called
hadth, long have circulated in the Muslim community;
within a century or two of Muhammad's death they were written down and closely
scrutinized by Muslim scholars for their historical accuracy. The had
th
became a major pillar of the Muslim tradition, supplementing the Qur'an itself
when the Qur'an was silent about a crucial matter.
Above all else, the reign of Muhammad over the Muslim community is viewed as
the golden age of Islam. The philosophy of Plato, of all people, gives us a
model for how Muhammad is viewed: as a just king. In
The Republic,
Plato discusses the ideal form of government, which he says is rule by a
perfect king, one who insures that justice is established, that economic
disparities are reduced, and who makes just laws. Muslim scholars, when they
translated
The Republic into Arabic, understood this idea as fitting
Muhammad perfectly. Muslims look back with nostalgia to the early days of
their community, and seek to reform modern Islamic society to fit the seventh
century pattern. This is an extremely important difference between Islam and
Christianity. Christians view the perfect kingdom as something Christ will
establish in the latter days; therefore their golden age is still ahead of
them. Some see this golden age in very secular terms, as the product of steady
social progress. Muslims, however, have their ideal society in the past, and
they constantly seek to emulate that example. Whether the world, or even any
segment of it, can reproduce that golden age, before God's Judgment Day comes,
is an open question.
The Qur'an.
Muhammad revealed the verses of the Qur'an over a thirty-two year period.
Some verses were revealed more than once; the context of the revelation of each
verse has been recorded and scrutinized carefully, to understand its impact on
the verse's meaning. Sometimes later verses were revealed to supersede earlier
ones. All of them were memorized by Muhammad's followers; some were written
down in the lifetime of the Prophet, on leather, palm bark, the shoulderblades
of sheep, papyrus, parchment, and whatever material was available. When
Muhammad settled in Medina He employed secretaries to write down revelation as
it occurred; this was important because some of the revelations concerned
matters of legislation. It is also possible that Muhammad organized some of
the revelation into surihs (chapters) and determined the order of some of the
surihs. Probably between the years 650 and 656 the Caliph 'U
thman
commissioned Zayd ibn-
Thabit to gather the various texts together and
assemble an official Qur'an. One reason for this was the death of many of the
companions of the Prophet, some in battle. Short passages probably were
sometimes added to existing surihs, so that the entire revelation could be
included. Points that distinguish the different consonants from each other in
the Arabic alphabet were added and standardized, to create an official text.
The 114 surihs were arranged usually by length, longest to shortest, with no
effort to rearrange material topically. As a result, chapters often suddenly
jump from one subject to another. Finally, previous collections were
destroyed, so that they would not weaken the authority of the official text and
cause disunity in the community. In spite of the effort considerable
information on variant readings, and even variant arrangements of the surihs,
have survived; but the information reveals that no great variation in the
content of the Qur'an existed. Another fifty years passed before vowel points
were added to the Qur'anic text, and its content attained final, modern
form.
It is the consensus of the vast majority of modern western Islamic scholars
that the text of the Qur'an is an accurate compilation of the revelation that
Muhammad claimed to receive. Thus the Qur'an does not suffer from the problems
that textual criticism has detected in the Bible. While we cannot be certain
of words uttered by Jesus and recorded in the New Testament, we can be certain
of words uttered by Muhammad and recorded in the Qur'an.
Muslims understand the Qur'an to be the literal word of God, revealed to
humanity through Muhammad, but not composed by Muhammad; rather, most Muslims
believe the Qur'an was eternal and uncreated, existing in the mind of God since
before the world began. One consequence is that Muslims reject translation of
the Qur'an, arguing that the word of God cannot be translated without
interpretation, and no human can do the translation justice; thus the Qur'an
should only be read in the original. For a thousand years Muslims have
produced interlinear translations of the Qur'an into Persian, Turkish, and
other languages, "translations" where the Arabic verse is given first, then a
word-by-word translation into the vernacular, sometimes accompanied by a
second, smooth translation into the vernacular as well. The purpose of such
translations, however, was to assist the student to learn the Arabic. Today a
few Muslims have translated the Qur'an into English, but Muslims do not
consider the result to be the Qur'an, merely an interpretation of it. Titles
of such works make this clear, such as Muhammad M. Pickthall's
The Meaning
of the Glorious Qur'an and A. J. Arberry's
The Koran Interpreted.
Because of the desire to avoid interpretation, Qur'an translations tend to be
wooden and literal, making the Qur'an a difficult work to read in English. To
give a few examples: in a common translation one Qur'anic passage has the
refrain "which of your Lord's bounties will you and you deny?" The "you and
you" seems strange and off-putting in English; but the "you" is in the dual
form in Arabic, and refers to two distinct groups: humans, and jinn (spirits).
A more literary, stylistic translation might read "which of your Lord's
bounties will ye deny?", and this is how Shoghi Effendi translated the verse
(see
Bahá'í Prayers, 106). This reads better and sounds
more biblical, and therefore more familiar to a western audience; but it
reduces the meaning of the Qur'an slightly, something Muslims reject. Some
Muslim translators go so far as to leave many untranslated words like Allah
(God), injl (gospel), Musa (Moses), Ibrahm (Abraham), 'Isa (Jesus), and Dawad
(David); such an approach makes the Qur'an very hard to read for the
layperson!
Study of the Qur'an is supposed to be a central activity in the life of each
Muslim. Muslims gather to chant the Qur'an or hear it chanted; chanters have a
status and prestige in the Muslim world that is similar to the status of opera
singers in the west. To some extent, Christian devotion to and use of the
Bible is similar; but the Bible is not held in equal veneration by all
Christians, some of whom see it as a partially or largely human product.
Furthermore, the Bible is not from one author, and contains a variety of
theological viewpoints. In a sense, dialogue and pluralism are built into the
Bible. They are not built into the Qur'an, which had a single, historical
source.
In addition, Christians turn much of their devotion to Jesus, while Muslims
generally do not venerate Muhammad, not in the official religion, at least
(Muhammad veneration is popular in folk Islam, however). For Christians, Jesus
is the
logos, the Word of God; for Muslims the
logos is the
Qur'an. Thus, in a sense, the closest analogy in Christianity to Muslim
devotion to the Qur'an is Jesus, not the Bible!
Muslims not only are devoted to the Qur'an, they seek almost literal adherence
to it. Muslims turn to the Qur'an and the life of the Prophet as guidance
about how to live every detail of their life. Muslim society, over fifteen
hundred years, has created an elaborate law code based on these two sources,
which is enforced in the civil court system. A traditional life style also has
evolved, based on the Qur'an and the Prophet. Particularly troubling to
westerners is the fact that this way of life evolved in a pre-scientific world,
and does not seem amenable to change in response to modern conditions or ways
of thinking. Thus, for example, the veiling of women is not specified in the
Qur'an, but is seen by some Muslims as a Muslim essential, which they feel
should not be compromised.
2. ISLAMIC CIVILIZATION
The Rise of the Caliphate and Imamate.
The death of Muhammad was a major crisis for the fledgling Muslim community.
Many Arabs, who had become only nominal Muslims, renounced their belief and
broke away from the Muslim league. The Arab unity that Muhammad had forged was
threatened with complete collapse. The believers were leaderless and did not
know who to turn to.
The crisis was resolved in traditional Arab fashion. Clan elders came
together and discussed who should succeed Muhammad as the leader of the
community. Two positions emerged: those who sought a leader from among the
Medinans, and those who preferred a Meccan successor, usually 'Umar. To avoid
intense clan rivalries, a compromise candidate was put forward: Abá
Bakr, an old man who was highly respected, a devoted Muslim, a close companion
of the Prophet, the father of the Prophet's wife 'Ai
shah, and a member
of a small, weak Meccan clan. Abá Bakr was declared the first
caliph (Arabic
khalíf), which means "deputy"
or "successor."
'Alí was not present at the discussion, but after it was hastily
concluded the leaders marched on his house, demanding that he accept their
choice. 'Alí chose not to oppose the choice or to advance his own
claim, thereby maintaining the unity of Islam in the face of the crisis of the
Prophet's death. But 'Alí, nevertheless, maintained that the Prophet
had meant that he be His successor. Muhammad had made many statements
suggesting 'Alí should be his successor. Furthermore, 'Alí was
His cousin, was the Prophet's blood brother, and had married his daughter,
Fátimah. Their two sons, Husayn and Hasan, were the Prophet's
grandsons. 'Alí's character, his bravery, his principled behavior, were
unquestioned. But many Muslims were suspicious of the dynastic principle, and
did not want Muhammad's successor to be someone who was a close relative or
even of the same clan as the Prophet. They were even more concerned that
'Alí's claim wa not merely to be the temporal ruler of Islam--the
caliph--but also to be its spiritual leader, or
imám, one who
could interpret the meaning of the Qur'án and hadí
th.
Abá Bakr's rule lasted only two years; in 634 he died of old age. But
in those two years Abá Bakr was able to rally Islam, bring the
rebellious tribes back into the fold and into the League, and unify Arabia.
When Abá Bakr died the succession question arose again. Abá-Bakr
nominated 'Umar, so he was declared caliph and 'Alí was again passed by.
'Alí remained in seclusion, did not oppose 'Umar, but did not support
him either. However, he gradually accumulated a following of Muslims who
accepted his claim to be Muhammad's rightful successor.
The ten years of 'Umar's rule saw the rapid, unexpected, almost explosive
expansion of Islam out of Arabia. Muslim armies headed north and west every
year, with astonishing results. They faced two large, well-established,
wealthy, powerful empires; and they defeated both of them. The entire Persian
Empire was overrun, and the Byzantine Empire was overrun as far north as
Turkey. Damascus, capital of the Byzantine province of Syria, fell in 635,
just three years after the death of the Prophet. Jerusalem, already a holy
city to the Muslims, fell in 638; it is interesting to note that the Patriarch
of Jerusalem surrendered the city to 'Umar, who gave the city very generous
terms. Umar asked to be given a tour of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher,
which the Patriarch personally gave him. In 641 Alexandria, the largest city
in Egypt and one of the largest in the world, surrendered to the Muslim armies,
and in the next few years northern Africa was overrun to the Atlantic, three
thousand miles from Egypt. In 641, also, the capital of the Persian Empire,
which was located a few dozen miles north of modern Baghdad, fell to Muslim
armies; Iran was overrun in the next decade. The expansion of the lands under
Islamic rule continued for two more generations, until the French turned back
the Muslim armies at Tours in 733, and the Chinese battled them in western
China in 751. Even after that date, northern India fell to Islamic rule
between 1000 and 1200, and Europe as far north as Vienna, Austria, was
conquered as late as the 1500s. The Muslims in Bosnia are only three hundred
miles from Rome.
'Umar led this expansion, which continued long after his death. 'Umar was
assassinated by a slave in 644, and according to his own commands a conclave of
six Muslim leaders was called to choose his successor. 'Alí was one of
the six, but the conclave did not choose him; rather, they selected
'U
thmán, who was on the council, as was two of his cousins.
'U
thmán's reputation was not spotless, like the previous two
leaders: he was accused of putting too many of his relatives into
governorships; and he was a member of the clan of the Quray
sh that had
opposed Muhammad to the last, and thus his faith was suspect.
'U
thmán also had to administer the vast territories conquered by
Islam, a much more difficult task than conquering them in the first place.
While one can pay one's army with booty of the conquest for the first few
years, afterwards one much pay it with tax revenues, and that meant
establishment of a tax system, something Arabs had never had before. They had
to rehire the old Byzantine and Persian tax collectors. But the Muslim
governors had never had experience ruling over provinces and often were
incompetent or corrupt. 'U
thmán was blamed for these troubles,
and as caliph he was responsible.
The Islamic world faced its first leadership crisis: what do you do when the
Caliph is bad? It was a theological crisis as well as a political one, for how
could God allow His community to be badly led? Revolt threatened. 'When
U
thmán was assassinated by three Egyptians in 656 C.E., many were
relieved. The citizenry of Medina acclaimed 'Alí the next caliph and he
accepted the position. Most Muslims were pleased by the choice, especially in
Arabia. But 'U
thmán's cousins, who were governors of many
provinces, plotted revenge for his murder. Muawíyyah, governor of
Syria, was particularly powerful, and was head of the clan. When 'Alí
pardoned the assassins of 'U
thmán many were furious. A bloody
civil war between 'Alí and Muawíyyah began, which was never
resolved. Even 'Ai
shah, the young wife of Muhammad, resisted
'Alí and was defeated. It was the first time Muslim killed Muslim, a
behavior regarded as scandalous to most. Thousands of the companions of the
prophet died in the fighting, which rent the unity of Islam.
The first a Muslim sect, the
Kharíjites, separated themselves
from the other Muslims, who they viewed as too worldly and willing to
compromise the revelation, as a result of the conflict against
Muawíyyah. The last straw, for them, was 'Alí's compromise with
Muawíyyah after the Battle of Siffin; they argued that 'Alí
should have defeated Muawíyyah and not stopped the battle to talk to
him, as Muawíyyah demanded once it became clear he was losing the fight.
The Kharijites separated from the rest of Islam over issues of orthodoxy and
faithfulness to the revelation. They viewed other Muslims as having grown lax
in observance of the Prophet's teachings; as too willing to compromise with
Islam and its principles. They believed a Muslim must either conform fully to
the teachings of Islam or is an apostate (not simply a sinner); thus they were
extremist. In many ways they resemble modern "fundamentalists." They withdrew
from the Muslim community and waged war against it; as a result they were
largely wiped out. A more moderate form of Kharijite belief has survived to
this day in North Africa and Oman.
Thus the six-year period of 'Alí's rule over Islam was quite troubled.
It ended in 661 when Kharijites assassinated him. Muawíyyah emerged as
fifth caliph.
But not all partisans of 'Alí were willing to end their struggle
against Muawíyyah. Many had felt that 'Alí had been appointed by
Muhammad to be the
Imám, or spiritual as well as civil leader of
the Muslim community. They believed that 'Alí's oldest son, Hasan, had
inherited 'Alí's prerogatives and agitated for him to resist
Muawíyyah. Muawíyyah was not willing to take a chance that a
revolt would be raised up against him, so he had Hasan exiled, where he died
mysteriously. As a result the mantle of leadership of the party of 'Alí
fell on his younger son, Husayn.
Muawíyyah was too strong to oppose, but when he died of old age in 680
the party of 'Alí urged Husayn to lead a revolt. Husayn had been living
quietly in Mecca and refused; Muawíyyah's son, Yazíd, soon
succeeded his father as caliph.
Umayyids and Abbasids
Muawíyyah became the founder of the Umayyid dynasty (661-750). On his
death he was succeeded by his son Yazíd, and Yazíd in turn by his
son. Thus the dynastic principle that many Muslims feared in 'Alí's
leadership and Shi'ism became standarized for the Sunnis as well.
Muawíyyah moved the capital of the empire from Mecca--small and out of
the way--to Damascus, a Byzantine city, and adopted many Byzantine bureaucratic
practices. He also administered Islam in such a way as to favor Arab Muslims
over all others, and this engendered increased hostility and resentment over
time, for it became an Umayyad practice. Muawíyyah was succeeded by a
dozen Ummayad caliphs over the next century, and hostility to them never died
out. Finally in 747 C.E. a general named Abú Muslim led a revolt in the
name of a descendant of the Prophet, thereby acquiring Shi'ite support. It
grew in size and eventually resulted in the overthrow of the Umayyads and the
founding of the 'Abbasid dynasty (750-1258). It is so named because its first
ruler was Abú'l-Abbás, a descendant of Muhammad uncle,
'Abbás. Abú'l-Abbás crushed all opposition to him,
including his Shi'ite former allies, and assumed absolute rule. But to rally
support he granted non-Arab Muslims equal status with Muslim Arabs, a popular
move.
The first two centuries of the Abbasids (750-945) represented the peak of
Islamic culture and civilization. Iraq, northeastern Iran, Tunisia,
Afghanistan, and Morocco see mass conversion to Islam and become Islamic
societies. The Abbasids moved their capital to a new city called Baghdad, from
which they ruled an empire that stretched from the Pyrenees to western China;
the largest the world had yet seen. Peace allowed free trade and movement of
peoples, resulting in a prosperous and vibrant civilization. Trade was
extended to areas not previously benefiting from it; caravan routes were
established across the Sahara, allowing the Sahel to be drawn into world trade;
Indian Ocean shipping extended from Zanzabar to Indonesia; Central Asia traded
with Scandinavia. Greek philosophy, science, and medicine were translated into
Arabic, founding higher learning in that tongue. Since ninety percent of the
Jews lived in the Islamic world, their civilization and learning also
advanced.
Moving the capital to Baghdad--just a few miles from the old Sassanian
capital--meant that Persian civilization now became a major influence on
Islamic society as well. The Abbasids adopted all the trappings of Persian
emperors. 'Umar had lived simply; 'U
thmán was so easily
assasinated because he never had a body guard. The early caliphs were first
among equals. But the Abbasid rulers set themselves up as a class apart from
even the Islamic aristocracy, calling themselves "the shadow of God on
earth."
At first the Abbasid rulers appointed governors for each province in the
empire from among the trusted in Baghdad, and could recall governors at will.
But over time the governors grew independent of central authority--it was so
far away--and governors asked to have their sons succeed them as governors.
Thus by the end of the second Abbasid century political centralization began to
break down and provinces became increasingly independent of Baghdad. By the
1200s the Abbasid caliph had become a mere figurehead even in the ruling of
Iraq.
Reinforcing political decentralization was cultural decentralization; many
provinces developed schools, literature, and culture of their own. The Persian
language was revived, breaking the monopoly enjoyed by Arabic. In northwestern
Africa the Berbers became the dominant group; their language resisted
Arabization. The Turks migrated into the Islamic heartland from Central Asia,
bringing their culture and language. In 1071 a Turkish tribe, the Seljuqs,
defeated the Byzantines and entered Anatolia. This began the Turkification of
Anatolia and laid the foundation for modern Turkey. The Greek language spoken
there for a thousand years gradually went extinct as the population converted
to Islam.
The Seljuk empire waned and separate small empires and city-states arose, all
pledging loyalty to the powerless Caliph in Baghdad. In Egypt a dynasty called
the Fatimids established a powerful Shi'ite state. The majority of Egyptian
Muslims remained Sunnis, however, and when the Fatimids collapsed they were
replaced by a Sunni dynasty. Islamic weakness allowed the Crusades, launched
in 1095, to recapture Jerusalem for Christianity in 1099. The great general
Saladin (Saláhu'd-dín) ultimately drove the Crusaders out of
Jerusalem in 1187.
The Mongol invasion under Hulagu Khan in 1258 not only devastated much of the
Middle East, but destroyed Baghdad (killing 800,000 of it citizens!) and
extinguished the Abbasids. Islamic culture was dealt a severe blow by the
tremendous destruction. The Mongol invasion also demonstrated that the caliph
was an empty figurehead with no real authority. The caliph fled to Egypt,
where he and his descendants lived under house arrest as empty symbols of
Islamic unity, until 1517 when the cliphate was abolished. One significance of
the gradual abolition of the caliphate was destruction of the idea that the
monarch was God's infallible ruler. In pre-Islamic times the monarch was
actually seen as a god; Christianity and Islam abolished that notion, but left
intact the idea that the king was God's vicegerent. The gradual collapse of
the caliphate weakened the idea of the divine rule of kings in Islamic theology
and political philosophy.
In 1260 C.E. the Mamluks, the Turkish dynasty ruling Egypt, defeat the Mongols
and establish an empire over Egypt, Syria, Palestine that lasted until the
1500s. The history of the Middle East right up to the advent of the modern era
is a history of tribes, often Turkish, entering the area and conquering. The
last great conquer was Timur Lang (Tamurlane), who conquered the Middle East as
far as Egypt from 1381 to 1404.
The Rise of the Ottomans
The growing Turkish population in Anatolia soon formed the powerbase for the
last great Turkish empire, that of the Ottomans. The Ottomans started as a
small principality in central Anatolia, formed after the Mongol invasion
devasted much of the Middle East (but not Anatolia itself). The first powerful
leader was Osman (Turkish for 'U
thmán) and he established a
dynasty. In 1326 his son captured Bursa from the Byzantines and made it the
capital of their state. The family name was Osmanlis or Ottoman. By the mid
1300s the Ottomans controled all the way to the sea of Marmara; the outskirts
of Constantinople. In two centuries they overran Greece and the Balkans all
the way up to Vienna; it was the last great Muslim expansion through war. The
Ottomans also gradually conquered the Arab-speaking Muslim lands, ands thus
came to control Syria, Iraq, Palestine, Arabia, and eventually Egypt and Libya
as well. Algeria and Morocco offered token submission to Ottoman authority as
well.
In 1453 Ottoman Sultan Mehmet (Mahmud) II conquered Constantinople after a
very long sige, thereby ending that city's millennium of Christian importance.
Within a century the city had expanded from 100,000 to 700,000, Europe's
largest. The Ottomans lavished money on the city and rebuilt it magnificently.
The Ottomans also built up a very powerful navy and managed to control all the
eastern Mediterranean, thereby ending Venice's economic dominance of the
area.
The Ottomans were very flexible rulers, who did not attempt to impose cultural
or even administrative uniformity on their huge empire. They allowed local
customs to flourish as long as tax revenues continued to be remitted to the
Sultan.
But they experienced relative economic and military decline vis-a-vis Europe,
because of Europe's growing technological advances and European development of
oceanic shipping (which allowed conquest of the New World, and oceanic shipping
from India and China, thereby avoiding Central Eurasia). In 1699 and 1700 the
Turks were defeated by both the Austrians and the Russians; they lost Hungary
to the former and Crimea and northern shores of the Black Sea to the latter.
Economic capitulations also sapped the Empire's economy. By the late 1700s,
the Ottomans increasing turn to Europe for technological, cultural,
administrative, and military innovations.
Creation of an Islamic Civilization
When Islam suddenly expanded beyond the Arab peninsula, it was the religion of
simple desert people; Mecca, the largest town in the Islamic world, probably
had less than ten thousand people. Within a decade of the Prophet's death,
however, Muslims were masters of a million square miles or more of territory,
and controled cities of a half million people. They thus faced many challenges
they could not even have imagined decades earlier.
Arabs were tribesmen, herders, and soldiers; now they slowly learned how to be
governors and administrators. It was impossible to find Arabs to serve as
bureaucrats because almost no Arabs could read and write, hence Armenian,
Greek, and Persian administrators were retained from the previous regimes.
Government records were not kept in Arabic for almost a century. In that time
Arabic itself underwent revolutionary changes. The need to write down the
Qur'án exactly and clearly pushed the development of Arabic orthography
and grammar forward; grammar books and spelling were standardized based on the
Qur'án itself. Under U
thmán the text of the Qur'án
was standardized.
Other than the Qur'án and a few poems, Arabic was a language with no
written literature. But as Arabs settled in cities and as their affluent
children learned to read, and as the conquered peoples became Muslims and
Arabic speakers, new literature began to be created. The earliest works were
religious. Lives of the Prophet were written based on oral accounts. The
traditions (
hadíth) about the Prophet's words were
collected and analyzed. Commentaries on the Qur'án were written. Over
several generations a rich religious literature developed. The codification of
Muslim law also commenced, a task that took several hundred years to
complete.
As the conquered peoples adopted Arabic as their mother tongue, pre-Islamic
ideas began to enter the Muslim community. Many Syrians and Iraqis, as
Christians or Jews, had read Greek philosophy, and their Arabic-speaking
descendants also wanted access to philosophy. As a result books by Aristotle,
Plato, and Plotinus were translated into Arabic, often by Jews or Christians.
They were then read by Muslims. The result was the birth of Arabic philosophy.
Hundreds of words were borrowed from Persian and Syriac or coined in Arabic
from Persian and Syriac models to represent new ideas. Scientific,
mathematical, and medical texts were translated from Greek, Middle Persian, and
Sanskrit, thereby uniting much of the world's knowledge in Islamic science.
From India came a numbering system using a zero, which Arabs spread around the
world.
The development of Arabic culture extended in many directions. In the
Prophet's day the mosque in Medina was simply a large square wall, open to the
sky; the Medinans did not have the engineering knowledge to roof it over. But
in Damascus, Cairo, Basra, and Baghdad new mosques soon went up and their
architecture was radically improved. The rules of mosque architecture were not
immediately fixed; as a result some of the early mosques had beautiful
paintings of natural objects on their walls, something that later generations
would considered idolatrous.
As Islamic thought developed, several major areas immediately arose. The
first was political theory and law; who was to rule over Muslims, and what laws
could he establish? This issue, as we have seen, was of immediate concern
during the lives of the first four caliphs. It led to the collation of the
Qur'án, the compilation and assessment of the hadí
th, and
eventually the creation of legal schools. Almost as early, in terms of formal
organization, was philosopical and theological thought; though as formal
categories these took a century or more to emerge. Mysticism as an organized
movement also has very early roots, but took several centuries to coalesce.
In all of these movements several issues became central to thought. One was
reliance on the Qur'án and hadí
th, versus use of
analogical reasoning, logic, and extra-Islamic ideas. Another was the
relationship of free will to divine will; those stressing the latter tended to
insist on predestination and downplayed or totally discounted free will. As
one might imagine, those who stressed predestination were often those who
stressed complete reliance on revelation through the Qur'án. As these
issues interacted in various fields of thought a huge array of movements arose
that overlapped, fused, split, went extinct, and influenced each other.
Islamic Law
Islamic legal theory developed because judges--qadis--were rendering
inconsistent and unjust decisions, often based more on their personal opinions
than on the Qur'án. Thus under tha Abbasids attempts to codify Islamic
law became more and more systematic and thorough. The result of the field of
fiqh, legal theory, and the creation of
ulamá, learned men
in this field.
Eventually, after much disputation, a conensus emerged about the basis of
legal decisions. There were four sources of law:
- Qur'án. It has 6000 verses, but only 600 concern law; and
only 80 give specific laws. Thus the Qur'án provides a skeleton only.
Its statues promarily concern slavery, comsumption of alcohol, gambling,
polygamy, the status of women, and the killing of girl children.
- The Sunna of the Prophet (hadíth) (and
those of the Imams, for the Shi'ites): Following the hadíth is
itself based on a hadíth, "obey God and obey the Messenger,"
which provides the basis for accepting the sunna as an infallible source of
legal guidance.
- Reasoning (ijtihád, interpretation; or qiyas,
analogical reasoning): The role of this faculty was suspect in Islam and has
been progressively restricted, except in Twelver Shi'ism (which still accepts
reasoning). In much of Sunni Islam, the "gates of ijtihád" are
considered closed.
- Consensus of the community. This is based on the
hadíth "my community will never agree on an error." The
community here, usually, is understood to be the community of legal scholars,
who over time sift through the various interpretations and come to favor
certain ones.
Only the first two are material sources of the law; in other words, analogy
and consensus cannot create laws from a vacuum, only from Qur'án and
sunna.
The application of these four resulted in four major Sunní legal
schools (Hanafí, Hanbalí, Malikí, Shafí'í).
While each school tends to be dominant in a patricular area, Muslims accept all
four as legitimate variants. Sometimes Twelver Shi'ism or Ismailism are
accepted as other variant but legitimate legal schools.
The result of this effort was codification of the
Sharí'ah or
code of laws in Islam. But in most places local laws continue to exist, either
parallel to or in place of the
Sharí'ah.
Acts are classified into five possible categories in Islamic law: (1)
required; (2) recommended; (3) indifferent or permissible; (4) reprehensible,
but not forbidden; (5) forbidden.
Islamic Theology and Philosophy
Theology (
kalám, "words," in Arabic) developed sooner than
philosophy, and from very different roots, for theology developed in Islam
before the impact of Greek philosophy and Islamic philosophy developed directly
from the Greek. As one might imagine, the two diferent foundations produced
massively different results, and it took centuries for theology and philosophy
to merge in any sense.
The earliest theological thought developed among the Qur'án memorizers
and early Islamic intellectuals. Their concerns tended to be highly practical:
the legitimacy of political succession in Islam, the nature of God and the
Qur'án, the relationship between faith and works (for people who said
they were Muslims--including Caliphs--were sinning), and the relationship of
free will to predestination. The Kharijites, as already noted, maintained that
a true Muslim could not sin; his deeds had to meet the high expectations of his
faith. Thus sinners were unbelievers who had to be converted. The Kharijites
also championed free will, for they could not accept the notion that human
sinfulness was somehow caused by God. Others, reading their Qur'áns
carefully, noted many verses in the Holy Book supporting the notion of
predestination.
The arrival of Greek philosophy in the Arabic language gave both sides, but
especially those advocating free will, many new ideas for making their case.
The Mutazilites. The Mutazilites were one of the earliest advocates of
positions that show Greek influence. In particular, they championed
intellectual and reasoning as a complement to revelation and the Qur'án.
They also stresses the oneness of God--tawhíd--and viewed it as
rejecting stress on the idea of God having attributes. Many Muslims had come
to view the Qur'án as eternal and uncreated and they viewed that
position with scepticism as well, as compromising the unity of God by creating
a second eternal divine principle. The Mutazilites also viewed many
Qur'án passages as metaphorical, especially those referring to God
having a face, talking, walking, etc. The utterly transcendent God obviously
(to them) could not be so represented. The Mutazilites also championed free
will, for otherwise, they maintained, God's justice would collapse. One cannot
punish someone for a sinful act if that person was not a free moral agent.
The Mutazilites eventually attempted to force all Muslims to accept their
views; under the Caliph al-Ma'múm, a Mutazilite himself, an inquisition
was initiated. But the Mutazites had powerful opposition, and eventually a
synthesis emerged that replaced them. Only in Shi'ite Islam did Mutazilism
continue to be important.
The synthesis accepted by most of Sunni Islam was A
sharism, founded by
al-A
shari (d. 935), a prominent Mutazilite. He reasserted the doctrines
of predestination, the uncreatedness of the Qur'án, the omnipotence of
God and the existence of divine attributes, but tempered them some and utilized
the Mutazilite language drawn from Greek philosophy to explain them. His
synthesis was successful and became the basis of most Sunni theology today.
In contrast Mutazilism and Asharism, philosophy based primarily on Greek texts
and thought started with human reason rather than revelation. As one can
imagine, it was highly suspect to most Muslims, even most intellectuals, and
thus remained marginalized. The Arabic word for philosophy,
falsafah,
is borrowed directly from the Greek philosophy.
The earliest philosophers, such as al-Kindí (d. ca. 870 C.E.) and
al-Razí (died ca. 925-34), were often on the fringe of Islamic
adherence. They championed reason over revelation. Subsequent philosophers
took reconcilition of philosophy and theology as a major task of their careers.
Al-Fárábí (died 950) used Plato's concept of the
philosopher-king in
The Republic as a way of understanding the role of
Muhammad, thereby united philosophy and religion. He was also very interested
in "prophetic psychology," the nature of the soul of a prophet and how prophets
knew what they knew. Ibn-Síná (980-1037) developed prophetic
psychology even further. Ibn-Ru
shd stressed the importance of
philosophers in understanding divine law, especially in enforcing it properly;
his thinking influenced medieval Judaism in particular.
Al-Ghazzálí (1058-1111) ultimately rejected most of philosophy as
a waste of time in favor of direct, mystic knowledge of God. The works of
these men, translated into Latin, had a major impact on Catholic theology
during the late Middle Ages. Their names were often latinized
(Ibn-Ru
shd as Averroes, Ibn-Síná as Avicenna) and they
were accepted as philosophical fathers of the church.
But after about 1400 Islamic philosophy and science declined. The last great
thinker was Ibn-
Khaldún, who contributed to political theory,
linguistics, and has been called the father of modern sociology. But even in
Ibn-
Khaldún's day few Islamic thinkers were doing original work,
and after him copists and encylopedists dominated. No one has a good theory to
explain the decline of Islamic science and philosophy.
Sufism (Islamic Mysticism)
Sufism, or Islamic mysticism, arose early in Islam; certainly it existed by
the second Muslim century. Its roots are to be found in the piety of the
Qur'án reciters who kept the text alive before it was committed to
writing, and to the early Muslim story tellers who told stories of the Prophet
and of His companions filled with morals and good deeds. The story tellers
stressed the miraculous aspects of Muhammad's life and often imported
Christian, Zoroastian, and Buddhist mystical stories into Islam. As a
movement, Sufism partially arose as a reaction against the legalism that
developed in Islam when Islamic law began to be codified. It also as Muslims
can in contact with Christian ascetics and with the rich mystical and
metaphysical literature of Hellenistic culture, especially Neo-Platonism.
No one is sure where the word
súfí comes from. One
theory--the most popular--traces it to
súf or "wool," the
scratchy material that ascetics loved to make their clothes out of. Other
scholars have attempted to link the word with the Greek
sophia, wisdom,
or Arabic
safá, "purity," or
suffah, "bench" (referring to
the companions of the Prophet who gathered often in the first mosque in
Medina), or
saff, "rank" (an allusion to the spiritual superiority of
the Sufis). None of these etymologies is very likely, but they have provided
the Sufis with many opportunities for puns and clever aphorisms about their
group.
The first Sufis were ascetics. They were concentrated in three places:
Basrah, Kufah, and Baghdad, all in Iraq. The first Sufi of importance was
Hasan al-Basrí (c. 643-728 C.E.), who, as his name suggests, was from
Basrah. Hasan preached eloquently about the Day of Judgment and the fear of
hell-fire. He was devoted to the Prophet and the Qur'án and feared the
growing materialism and laxity of Muslim life. He was not a speculative
thinker, but an ascetic renouncer of the world; he even implied that God's
creation of the world was a mistake. He did not hesitate to condemn injustice
and thus functioned, like an Old Testament prophet, as a conscience of the
nation.
Because of saying of the Prophet, "If ye knew what I know ye would laugh
little and weep much," there was a group of ascetics in Basrah that spent much
of their time weeping about their shortcomings and the lot of humanity. Many
of these ascetics were Hasan's disciples. Among the Basrah group was the most
prominent female Sufi, ar-Rábi'ah al-'Adawiyyah (died c. 801). She is
credited with introducing an emphasis on selfless love of the divine into
Sufism, thus making Sufism more than ascetic renunciation (though she was quite
an ascetic too; she never married, and refused to look on spring-time verdure,
preferring to contemplate the Maker of such verdure instead). Sold into
slavery while still young, ar-Rábi'ah was set free by her master because
of her exemplary piety. She was one of the earliest Sufis to write poetry,
though her woks were only a few lines long.
Not all early Sufis were Arabs; Ibráhím ibn-A
dham (died
c. 770) was from Balkh, an ancient Buddhist city in Central Asia, north of
Iran. Ibráhím was supposedly born a prince who renounced the
life of ease in favor of asceticism, though it is possible the legends of his
life have been tainted by the story of the Buddha. He is credited with the
first classification of the stages of asceticism. His asceticism was of a
particularly harsh type.
Egypt also contributed to early Sufism in the form of
Thaubán
ibn-Ibráhím, surnamed
Dhú'n-Nún (d. 859).
His parents were Nubians, probably of Christian background. He acquired
considerable learning in alchemy and philosophy (probably Neo-Platonism) as
well as the religious sciences, and thus was one of the first learned Sufis.
He is credited with defining the distinction between
'ilm, discursive
learning, and
ma'rifa or mystical knowledge (also called
irfán). He developed a concept of the different mystical states
a Sufi passes through, ultimately reaching annihilation or extinction in God
(
faná) and subsistence in God (
baqá). His poetry
was the first Sufi poetry of quality.
The eigth and nineth centuries had relatively few Sufis, but in the tenth
century their number increased considerably, as did their literary output
(especially poetry). The greatest was Husayn ibn-Mansúr
al-Halláj, born in southern Iran in 858. As a young man he went to
Baghdad where he studied Sufism under several great Sufi masters. Then he
traveled across much of Iran, Central Asia, western China (Singkiang province)
and India, where he may have picked up some understanding of Hindu mysticism.
He acquired quite a following; when he went on pilgrimage to Mecca for the
second time, he is said to have been accompanied by 400 disciples. He wrote
poetry, Qur'án commentary, prayers, and works of theology, some of which
has been preserved.
Halláj finally settled in Baghdad, where he taught. His religious
views were generally seen as extreme. He stressed 'i
shq, "mystical
love," but when Halláj used the word it still primarily meant erotic
love, not a trait one normally associated with the divinity. He also utilized
the Christian terms
láhút, "divine nature," and
násút, "human nature" in his writings, terms Christians
had usually used to refer to Christ's two natures; this appeared heretical to
many Muslims. He ws also an outspoken man. The result was imprisonment and
finally execution on charges of blasphemy. Halláj's last words
reportedly were
aná'l-Haqq, "I am the Divine Truth" (or "I am
God"), which have been misunderstood as claiming self-divinization through full
union with the divine. Halláj and many other Sufis experienced a
profound feeling of transformation as a result of their intense mystical
experiences.
Over the next two centuries Sufism developed a considerable body of
literature, which included many spiritual manuals. The apex of Sufi writing
was the result of the great theologian al-
Ghazzálí
(1058-1111), who became a Sufi after years as a professor and attempted to
unite philosophical, theological, and mystical thinking under the umbrella of
the latter. His extensive writings integrated Sufism into Islamic beliefs and
made mysticism much more acceptable to the moderate Islamic mainstream.
Sufism was also one of the chief vehicles for the development of modern
Persian as a literary language. The list of great Persian Sufi poets is too
long for this summary, but several poets deserve special mention.
Farídu'd-dín 'Attár (died 1220, probably during the Mongol
invasion) was from northeastern Iran and, as his surname suggests, he was a
druggist. His greatest work was
Mantiq ut-tayr, "Conversation of the
Birds," which describes the mystical journey of a group of birds through a
series of seven valleys, each symbolic of a stage in the mystical journey of
the soul. Their goal was to seek out the
Símurgh
(Phoenix), the king of all birds. At each valley many birds perished or turned
back until only thirty birds reached the Símur
gh's palace. They
entered the palace and approached the throne, which was empty. They climbed on
the throne and gazed at the mirror behind it, thereby beholding the
Símur
gh; for
símurgh not only means
"phoenix" but "thirty birds." In this way 'Attár teaches the mystic
truth that the individual soul is identical with God (in this case, the
Phoenix, symbol of the divine).
No doubt the greatest Persian mystical poet--if not the greatest Sufi poet of
all time--was Mauláná Jalálu'd-dín
Rúmí (1207-73). From northeastern Iran, as a boy
Rúmí was taken by his father to Rúm (Anatolia) to escape
the Mongol destruction. There both men served as religious teachers. But
Rúmí had the ability to pour out mystical poetry of incredible
beauty with unbelievable speed, often while in a state of rapture. His primary
work is often called the Qur'án of the Persians, a title that captures
the work's impact on the language and its enduring popularity. By
Rúmí's day the Sufi custom of
dhikr--remembering God--had
evolved from chanting the ninety-nine beautiful names of God to dancing to the
rhyth of the chanting. His followers became the Meveli Order of Sufis, often
called "whirling dervishes" because of their mystic dances.
At the same time the Persian poets are developing their ideas, Arab Sufis are
going beyond the theological system of
Ghazzálí and
formulating new mystical conceptions.
Shihábu'd-dín
Suhrawardí (1153-91) was a Syrian mystic who wrote extensively about the
mystical nature of light. He developed an extensive angelology to describe the
bearers of light to the world, borrowing terms from Zoroastrian angelology for
his works. Unfortunatele he was misunderstood by many divines, who had him
imprisoned for his beliefs; and he died in prison at only 37 years of age.
Even greater a gnostic Sufi was Muhyíu'd-dín ibn-'Arabí
(1165-1240), from Spain, was a prolific and comprehensive writer who developed
the concept of
wahdatu'l-wujúd or "unity of being." Some argue
that by this term ibn-'Arabí meant to imply that nothing truly exists
except the One. Others say that ibn-'Arabí recognized the existence of
levels of existence, and that above the level of unity of all being was the
level of the unknowable and transcendent divine essence. Ibn-'Arabí
stressed the cosmos contained a marked spiritual hierarchy of emanation from
the divine, with many spiritual levels. He believed there was always on the
earth an
insánu'l-kámil or "perfect human" who serves as
the spiritual guide of humanity. Such an idea resembles the Shi'ite notion of
the imam. The ideas of Ibn-'Arabí and Suhrawardí had widespread
influence on Shi'ite thinkers. In seventeenth century Iran, Mullá
Sadrá was an important transmitter of their ideas to mainstream Twelver
Shi'ism.
The Mongol invasion disrupted Sufism seriously. Yet while it ended much of
the development of Sufi thought, it also fostered the establishment of Sufi
orders. By the end of the thirteenth century there were dozens of such Order,
and each had lodges all over the Islamic world. Orders played a key role in
taking Islam beyond the land conquered by Muslim armies, to Indonesia, central
Africa, and central China. In the last two centuries, however, with Islam's
growing interaction with the west has comeincreased criticism that Sufism is
the cause of Islam's weakness. Consequently Sufism has been systematically
dismantled by some twentieth-century governments.
Modern Developments
Islam has always possessed reforming tendencies. Often at the beginning of
each new Islamic century there has been an unsually strong tendency to seek
reform. Traditional reform tends to follow a certain pattern: (1) it stresses
return to the seventh-century pattern of Islam, while the Prophet was alive,
for it represents the ideal for Islam; (2) it views foreign influence as
largely bad and as something that has corrupted Islam, and thus must be done
away with; (3) it critiques all existing Islamic institutions, including the
ulamá.
One of the first examples of Islamic revivalism in the modern time was the
Wahhabí movement, which started in Saudi Arabia in the late eighteenth
century. The Wahhabís stressed that the seventh century community of
the Prophet did not include any veneration of saints or praying at shrines, so
they destroyed all lavish tombs--even the tomb of the Prophet. They outlawed
Sufism. They viewed deviation from pure Islam as the cause of Islamic weakness
and hence they stressed complete adherence to all the laws of Islam. Their
approach proved quite successful in the Arabian peninsula; Wahhabi theology,
combined with the military skill of Muhammad ibn-Saud, subdued much of the
Arabian peninsula and laid the foundation for modern Saudi Arabia.
Though European influence on the Middle East had already been growing for at
least two centuries, Napoleon's invasion of Egypt in 1798 dramatically
symbolized the new situation. Nearly a millennium earlier Europe had invaded
the Middle East in the Crusades and had ultimately been repulsed. Other
peoples--nteably Turks and Mongols--had invaded the Middle East and conquered
it, but ultimately they had converted to Islam. Napoleon's invasion
dramatically reminded Muslims of twonew facts: Europe as now much stronger and
more dangerous than it had been before; and it was not about to convert to
Islam. Imperialism thus triggered a religious crisis: how could God allow
Christians, whose religion had been superceded by the coming of Muhammad, to
become superior over Muslims?
Islamic modernism arose as a response to European culture. It was one of
three possible responses to the crisis brought on by European dominance:
1. Separate private Islam from public secular life and establish
western-style nation states;
OR
2. Retain Islam and purify it; emphasize noncooperation and withdrawal from
west and jihad against it;
OR:
3. Open the gates of ijtihád; reject blind imitation of the past;
create a modernized Islam.
The first of the three was Islamic secularism and is best demonstrated by the
Turkish reforms promulgated by Atatürk. The second was the basic approach
of the Iranian revolution of 1978. The third approach was that of Islamic
modernism.
The principal spokesman for modernism was Jamálu'd-dín
Af
ghání (1838-97). He was actually an Iranian, but called
himself an Afghan because they were Sunní, not Shi'ite. He traveled the
Islamic world, writing and lecturing. He was often kicked out of most
countries. He rejected secularized modernism; stressed reason; and rejected
passivity and fatalism. He argued that Islam was a religion of science and
rejected the idea of science as "European science." He denouced stagnation in
the Islamic world. He criticized Sufism as other-worldly.
Two of his principal students were Muhammad Abdúh (1849-1905) amd
R
ashíd Ridá (1865-1935): reformers and disciples of
Af
ghání. Abdúh stressed tauhíd in his
writings. He noted that reason and religion are complementary and that science
and religion are not contradictory. He also criticized Sufism as un-Islamic;
also taqlíd. He called for the reopenin of ijtihád., criticized
lack of educational institutions in Islam, and the continued practice of
polygamy. Ridá, a Syrian, was a disciple of Abdúh. He also
stressed monogamy.
The modernists were a minority. Most Muslims felt they compromised too much
of Islam. Most modernists sought to reform Sufism, reform law, and purge the
law of old ideas. They did manage several important accomplishments:
1. Pride in Islam.
2. Inspiring others to unite Islam and aspects of the west.
3. Their call for reinterpretation (
ijtihád) has partially been
heard. Thus some speak of Islamic democracy and Islamic views of human
rights.
4. They preserved Islam as the basis of a modern state.
Twentieth Century Islam
Islam has continued to grow as well in the twentieth century, especially in
the Third World. Sub-Saharan Africa and India are seeing large increases in
the numbers of Muslims, where Muslim missionaries are competing with Christian
and Hindu teachers respectively. Christian missionary efforts to Islamic
countries are generally barren--after a century of preaching and bible study
classes, the number of ex-Muslim Christians in most countries can still be
counted in the hundreds--but Muslim missionary efforts in the Christian west
have been yielding good results. In the United States several million Muslims
from the Middle East, Pakistan, and India have settled. Perhaps a half million
African Americans have converted. The number of converts from European
Christian background is not known, but is probably in the tens of thousands.
It is estimated that in twenty years the number of American Muslims may exceed
the number of American Jews.
3. THE TEACHINGS OF ISLAM
Like any religious tradition, Islam can be summarized simply or in complex
detail, depending on the level one wishes to reach. Just as Christianity has
creeds and Buddhism has the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path, Islam has
a basic summary of major teachings. This summary is oriented around what the
believer must do; it says little about what he or she should believe. Islam
does have a complex metaphysics, and we will explore it as well. The basic
summary of Islam is called the
FIVE PILLARS. They are:
- Repeating the shaháda, "there is no God but God, and
Muhammad is the prophet of God." This is the nearest thing to an official
creed that Islam has. If one can say it, one is considered a Muslim; there is
no baptism ritual, as in Christianity. The shaháda is very
simple, asserting the existence of the one God and of his prophet. More
elaborate creeds have been created by individual Muslims, but they have no
binding authority.
- Salát or obligatory prayer. This prayer, which consists of part of
a chapter of the Qur'án, begins with ablutions where one washes the
face, hands, and feet. Mosques contain fountains where one can wash. This
establishes a state of ritual purification. It is preferred to say the prayer
on a prayer mat, in order to avoid contamination by the world while in a state
of ritual purification; even a spread-out newspaper will be used by Muslims as
a prayer mat. A Muslim prays five times a day: between dawn and sunrise; at
noon; in late afternoon; immediately after sunset; and at night, before
midnight. Worshipers pray facing the qiblah or point of
adoration, which is the ka'bah in Mecca; when a Muslim is traveling it is
always an interesting problem trying to determine which way one should face in
order to pray! The prayer involves a series of ritual acts, as well as
repeating the chapter of the Qur'án a certain number of times. These
ritual positions include holding ones hands next to one's ears, palms facing
forward, and repeating Alláh-u-Akbar, "God is Most Great"; it
also includes lowering the head to the knees and prostration, when the hands,
feet, and head are all touching the ground. In this position one is
prostrating before God, admitting one's complete powerlessness and dependence
on God. This is a difficult admission for westerners to make, so proud they
are of their independence and self-reliance; but it is good for the soul.
Muslims prefer to pray the salát together, but may pray individually
instead. The Friday noon prayer is the big weekly prayer when everyone goes to
mosque; after the salát there is usually a sermon by the prayer
leader.
Shí'í Muslims perform the ablutions in slightly different ways
than Sunnís, and the call to prayer is slightly different. They allow
the noon and afternoon prayers to be joined together, as well as the evening
and nighttime prayers; thus they can perform their prayers only three times
daily, though they must repeat the prayers so as to have said them five
times.
- Zakát, or alms giving. This pillar embodies the principle of
social responsibility in it. A Muslim must give a portion of his wealth to
charity. It may involve giving alms to the poor, but more often it involved
contributing charity to the mosque, which then redistributed it to widows,
orphans, and other needy persons. The percentage one must give is not fixed;
various Muslim legal experts have fixed it at 2.5%, 5%, or 10% of one's total
income. The percentage also is considered to vary depending on whether
agricultural produce, property, or gold is the source of the wealth. Muslims
believe that the giving of zakát purifies one's wealth, and one is then
free to expend the rest on oneself if one desires. The institution of
zakát recognizes both the need for individuals to be free to earn as
much money as they are capable, and the need of society to support the poor and
those experiencing hardship.
- Fasting or sawm. Muslims fast an entire Muslim month, from new
moon to new moon. During that period they must abstain from eat, drink, and
sexual intercourse from the first light of day to the last light (the
Qur'án specifies [2:187] that fasting must begin when there is enough
light to distinguish a white thread from a black one). Since the month of
fasting rotates through the seasons, there are times when it falls during the
summer, and Muslims may not drink water for fourteen or more hours when it is
over a hundred degrees outside; under such circumstances the fast is quite a
rigorous exercise. Exemptions from fasting are granted to the sick, travelers,
pregnant women, and nursing mothers, though they are supposed to make up the
fast at a later date. Children and the aged are also exempt. At night Muslims
have large feasts and break the fast together. In spite of its rigor, the fast
is very widely observed, more so than the obligatory prayers. It constitutes a
mild form of asceticism, one which cannot do harm to the body--if one is
harmed, one should cease fasting--and thus serves as a symbol of one's
dependence on God, not on the material world. It reminds one of one's faith
and tests that faith in a powerful, but not harmful, way.
When Ramadan, the month of fasting, ends, Muslims celebrate with the Little
Festival or 'Id al-Fitr. Sweets and greeting cards are exchanged.
- Hajj or pilgrimage. As already noted, hajj is a pre-Islamic ritual that
Muhammad modified and continued. Pilgrimage is to Mecca and sites near it; an
additional pilgrimage to the sites connected to the life of the prophet in
Medina often is performed, but is not required. Pilgrimage is binding on all
Muslims who have the financial means, health, and freedom to go. In recent
years, with rapidly improving air transportation and health facilities, the
pilgrimage has swelled to over two million people, all of whom must be in the
same places at the same time. The result is massive costs for Saudi Arabia,
which fortunately has the oil wealth to pay for the facilities.
In addition, some Muslims consider
jihád a major principle of
the Faith; in fact, some consider it the fifth pillar. The translation "holy
war" is very misleading; as Muslims are quick to point out, Arabic has no word
for "holy war," the phrase having developed as a way to translate the word
crusade, which is a Latin word and a "Christian" idea!
Jihád means to struggle in the path of God, and only rarely is
such struggle violent. To struggle in the path of God can refer to one's
effort to control one's passions and avoid vices; it can be an internal effort.
It can mean telling others of the true Faith; this is how Islam has always been
spread. While Muslim armies have often conquered areas, they did not convert
the population at the point of the sword; rather, they established a Muslim
civil, educational, and legal system, and allowed the conversion to occur
gradually, over hundreds of years, through personal efforts by Muslims. In
this respect the record of Islam is at least as good as Christianity.
Charlemagne converted half of Germany to Christianity by the sword, and
massacred thousands who refused to surrender their pagan beliefs. Spain was
forcibly converted back to Christianity from Islam by the sword, and thousands
of Muslims and Jews were forced to flee. The Jews fled not to other Christian
countries, but to Muslim countries, where they were persecuted much less. Most
of Latin America was Christianized through a combination of force and
missionary work.
The word
jihád, however, has come to acquire the connotation of
holy war as well as its other meanings. Muslim fanatics often invoke it
against outsiders and against each other: the Iran-Iraq war was declared a
jihád by both sides.
In addition to the Five Pillars, Islam has a detailed metaphysics; in other
words, an understanding about the nature of everything that exists. The major
concerns of its metaphysics are: God; the Prophet, Revelation, and Religion;
the spiritual worlds (heaven and hell, Satan, angels, and jinn); the nature of
human beings, their purpose for existence, and the last judgment they will
face; and the nature of the physical world.
GOD: Islam is a religion that strongly emphasizes the oneness of God,
or
tawhíd. The shaháda begins with "there is no god but
God," making monotheism a basic part of a Muslim's faith. This emphasis is
obvious and inevitable when one considers that Muhammad came to a polytheistic
people. Not only did He have to smash their idols; He had to convince them the
idols were powerless, even as representatives of Alláh (which seems to
have been one interpretation of their role). Islam forbids making images of
God; mosques are not allowed even to have images of people or nature in them
(for this reason they are decorated with calligraphic passages from the
Qur'án, or geometrical patterns). Individuals who "associate partners
with God" are guilt of
shirk, "association"; they are
called a
mushrik, "polytheist."
God is described in the Qur'án as all-powerful and all-knowing. This
is generally understood by Muslims to mean that human beings are complete
subordinate to the divine will, although the Qur'án also strongly
asserts human responsibility and warns men of the consequences of violating
God's will. At the beginning of every surih God is referred to as "the
merciful, the compassionate," thereby balancing an emphasis on God as judge and
punisher. Muslims generally believe that the Qur'án contains the
ninety-nine "most beautiful names" of God; it is a common part of Muslim piety
to repeat them, using rosary beads to keep count. Another Muslim tradition
claims that there is a hundredth or "most great" name of God, which will be
revealed in the Judgment Day.
Muslim theologians, over the last fifteen hundred years, have developed a
theology about God based on the Qur'án, Jewish and Christian ideas, and
concepts from Greek philosophy. The self or essence (
dhát) of
God was understood to be al-'Azím, "the Inaccessible." In other words,
no matter how much we can know God, there is always something about God that is
beyond our knowing, because God is of a fundamentally different nature and
station than humanity. In addition to the essence, though, God also had
sifit, "attributes." These attributes were divided into several
categories:
- The attribute of existence or essence or self (dhát) is
itself an attribute.
- "Essential" attributes, or attributes that are eternal, unchanging, and
part of God's very nature. These fall in two groups:
- Negative attributes, or attributes that make God different from
creation; these include eternity, permanence or everlastingness, dissimilarity
with creation, and self-subsistence.
- Attributes that "add meaning" to the essence: these include sight,
hearing, power, will, life, knowledge, speech, perception.
- Attributes of action, which do not qualify the essence, but which
describe what the essence does in this world: among these are visibility,
creation, command, and predestination. In these attributes, God chooses
whether or not to express them.
Not all Muslims accept this categorization of the divine. Some Shi'is argue
that any attempt to describe God's mystery through discussion of attributes is
inadequate and improper. Other Shi'is, emphasizing the unknowability of God's
essence, separated the attributes from Him and described them as real things in
themselves, separate from God's essence.
REVELATION: Islam emphasizes that God communicates to humanity through
chosen individuals, through whom He vouchsafes a revelation. God has done this
in the past through a series of men: Noah, Sálih, Hád, Abraham,
Moses, David, Solomon, and Jesus, to list a few. Through individuals such as
these God has given humanity a revelation progressively. The revelation has
been compiled into a book of some sort--though not all the "books"
survived--and the resulting scripture has been the scripture of the Religion of
God. The followers of this scripture are the "People of the Book," usually
understood to refer to Christians and Jews.
The Qur'án uses two words to refer to these prophetic figures. One is
rasál, "messenger" or "apostle" of God. This is the term used in
the Shaháda regarding Muhammad (". . and Muhammad is the rasál of
God"). The other term is
nabi, "prophet." This word is much rarer than
rasál and seems to have referred to figures with less authority than a
rasál; they warn the people, but do not bring a new Book and shari'ah.
The word nabi also appears to be absent from the earliest revelations; some
scholars think it was not used Qur'ánically until the late Mecca or
Medina period. Nabi is not applied in the Qur'án to Arabic figures,
such as Hád or Sálih; only to Old and New Testament figures.
Muhammad is referred to as a nabi in the Qur'án only in the phrase
khátam an-nabiyyin, "seal of the prophets." Now
understood by Muslims to mean that Muhammad was the last prophet
and the
last messenger, this phrase may have meant that the cycle of biblical lesser
prophets has closed. One western scholar, Montgomery Watt, speculates that it
"perhaps originally meant 'one confirming previous prophets'" (Watt,
Bell's
Introduction to the Qur'án, 28), because one function of a seal is
to confirm the authenticity of the authorship of a document.
SPIRITUAL WORLDS: The Qur'án speaks of Paradise/heaven and hell.
One Qur'ánic description of Paradise is as a place where men get all the
food and women they want, and clearly is meant to be allegorical, not literal.
Hell-fire is mentioned as the penalty for unbelief. The Qur'án mentions
jinn or spirits and angels, and Muslims understand these verses literally, and
therefore believe in such creatures. The Qur'án mentions several angels
by name: Jibril (Gabriel), who brought revelation to Muhammad; 'Azráil;
Isráfil; and Michael. Satan is mentioned about fourteen times in the
Qur'án, and sometimes under the name of Iblis; he is understood in
Muslim tradition to have been a spirit who refused God's command to bow before
Adam, because he would not bow to any one but God. For his sin of excessive
attachment to
tawhid, God banished Iblis from heaven. Iblis is not so
much an anti-god and an embodiment of evil as much as he is a tempter of
humans.
HUMANITY: The Qur'án says God fashioned humanity from baked
clay by breathing His spirit into him. The Qur'án does not speak of the
individual being made up of two separate parts--a body and soul--this is a
Christian idea that entered Islam later, and is now widely accepted. Humans
were created good, Islam does not speak of a fall and original sin. But human
beings are constantly challenged in their lives to make moral choices; humans
have free will and are free moral agents. Humanity is the "cream of creation"
and exceeds even the angels in knowledge and virtue (Rahman,
Major Themes of
the Qur'án, 18-19).
God asked the heavens and the earth whether they would take on the task of
creating a moral order in creation, but they refused because the burden would
be too heavy. The Qur'án says humanity accepted the challenge instead,
and this is the mission of mankind: to build a moral and spiritual order on
earth. Not only does Iblis seek to prevent this, but a laziness in humanity
and a distortion of humanity's true nature because of unbelief complicates the
task. Hence Muhammad was called on to arise and warn, because the
responsibility to accept, submit to, and obey God's law lies with humanity
alone. Creation has no choice to be
muslim, to submit to God's will;
only humanity has a choice, and must choose voluntarily to be
muslim.
PHYSICAL CREATION: Islam has no Genesis story; the Qur'án says
that God created simply by saying "Be!" God was the Creator of the universe
and is also its sustainer; all of creation is dependent on God. There are
several important themes in the Qur'án about nature. One is that God
can be seen through His signs (ayát) in nature. The Qur'án
constantly asserts that the rhythms of the seasons, the growth of plant life,
and nature's greatness and bounty are reflections of qualities of its Maker.
Thus creation reveals God to us. Another theme is that creation exists to be
of use to humanity.
JUDGMENT AND RESURRECTION The Qur'án often speaks about a day
of judgment, when all of humanity will be judged by its deeds and either
rewarded with Paradise if belief was true, or punished with hellfire if it was
not. The Judgment is also the time when the bodies of the dead will rise from
their graves. On the Day of Judgment, the world as it is known will end, and
with it Islam and Islamic law. Most Muslims understand these doctrines
literally, though some view them metaphorically. A major part of popular
Islam--though it is not overtly Qur'ánic--is belief in the coming of a
Mahdi or "Guide." This belief grew steadily from the first Islamic
century, and is particularly important in Shi'ism. Many Muslims believe in two
returns: first the Mahdi, then the Return of Christ. Others see these as
referring to the same figure, and use the terms interchangeably.
4. SHÍ'ISM
Those who accepted 'Ali's claim to be the rightful successor of Muhammad sought
to place one of 'Ali's sons on the throne. This was the beginning of the
splitting of Muslims into two groups: the
Shi'ah (from the
Arabic
shi'), or "party of 'Ali," and the
Sunnis,
those who follow the
sunna or practice of the Prophet. The earliest
Shi'is, however, were primarily supporters of the political power of the
descendants of the prophet, not believers in their religious authority. Hasan,
the older grandson of the prophet, claimed the caliphate after his father's
death. But Muawiyya's army was very powerful and Hasan was forced to abdicate.
He retired to Medina, where he lived quietly. He died mysteriously in 669, at
age 46; Shi'i historians maintain he was poisoned. The claim to the leadership
of Muhammad's family then passed to his younger brother, Husayn.
When Muawiyya died in 680, the caliphate passed to his son, Yazid, a drunkard
and a tyrant. This marked the beginning of a dynasty, the Umayyids, who ruled
Islam for a century and a half; each caliph passed the leadership on to his son
or another relative. There was a lot of dissatisfaction with Yazid and with
the dynastic principle, so a major city in Iraq, Kufa, asked Husayn to lead
them in revolt. Husayn accepted, but by the time he had arrived Yazid's army
had already subdued his supporters, so Husayn found himself facing an army of
thousands with a company of about sixty men, women, and children. After
fruitless negotiations, a massacre resulted; on 10 October 680 Yazid's general
decapitated the entire party, including Husayn. This cruel act, which occurred
at the town of Karbila, is remembered to this day, reenacted through passion
plays. It stirred belief in the spiritual sovereignty of the descendants of
the Prophet, which took Shi'ism beyond a merely political movement.
Husayn's son, 'Ali (658-712 or 713) titled Zainu'l-ábadin, was spared
because he had been too ill to fight and was taken to Damascus; eventually he
was allowed to retire to Medina. But making a claim to the caliphate was
pointless; Yazid and his successors were too powerful. The fourth imám
continued the pattern of political quietism, since the converse had always
proved disastrous. He spent much of his time in prayer and mourning over the
martyrs of Karbila. He lent little support to the growing Shi'ah movements,
which were now acquiring thousands of followers.
The death of the fourth imam saw a split in the ranks of the Shi'ites. One
group, the
Zaydís, came to accept Zayd ibn-'Alí, a
grandson of Husayn, as the fifth Imam. They also recognized descendants of the
Prophet other than those through 'Alí and Fatima as possible imams.
They were politically active and religiously conservative, like the Kharijites.
They are very numerous in modern Yemen and are otherwise found in many places
in the Muslim world.
But for most Shi'ites, Zaynu'l-ábadin was succeeded by his son,
Abá Ja'far Muhammad ibn 'Ali, known as Muhammad al-Báqir. He was
the first to organize some Shi'i doctrines, such as the doctrine of designation
of each imám by his predecessor. During his imamate, Shi'is began to
organize their own understandings of Muslim law. His son, Ja'far
as-Sádiq, became the sixth imám upon al-Báqir's death,
which occurred between 732 and 743. Ja'far as-Sádiq is known as one of
the greatest imáms in terms of learning and scholarship; even two of the
greatest Sunni jurisprudents were among his students. It is likely that under
Ja'far, the claim that the imáms were the religious center of Islam was
put forward more strongly. Ja'far also lived to see the destruction of the
Umayyad dynasty; in 750 it was overthrown and a new Sunni dynasty, the
Abbasids, was established.
On his death there was a split among supporters about his successor. Ja'far's
oldest son, Ismá'il, died before his father, so when Ja'far died the
question arose whether Ja'far's younger son, Másá, or
Ismá'il's oldest son, Muhammad, was the rightful imám. Those who
followed the latter line are called Ismá'ilis; this Shi'i sect continues
to exist to this day, and its head, the Aqa Khan, is its imám. But
others followed Másá.
Másá al-Kázim was poisoned in 799 and was succeeded by
his son, 'Ali ar-Rida, the eighth imám. Ar-Ridá died suddenly in
818 and was succeeded by the ninth imám, Muhammad at-Taqi, and in 835 he
died and was succeeded by 'Ali al-Hádi, who was only about six when he
became the tenth imám. His son, Hasan al 'Askari, became the eleventh
imám in 868; he died in December 873 or January 874--the Islamic year
260. Because of the hostility of the Abbasid caliphs, neither the tenth nor
the eleventh imáms appeared in public, nor did they meet their
followers. Instead they communicated to their followers through an
intermediary named 'U
thmán al-Amri.
'U
thmán al-Amri claimed that the eleventh imám had had a
son, and that he now represented that son, who was the twelfth imám.
This claim was denied by the eleventh imám's brother, either because it
was not true, or because he wanted to be the twelfth imám himself.
Shi'i historians differ in their interpretations of the situation. Some say
Hasan al-'Askari never had a son. Others say his son was of mature years;
others say he was born eight months after his father's death. Modern Iranian
Twelver Shi'is say the boy was four years old when his father died. The boy's
name is reported by some to have been 'Ali, by others Muhammad. Twelvers
accept the latter name and add the title al-Mahdi (the guided). Modern
Twelvers believe that, for his own protection, Muhammad al-Mahdi went into
"occultation" (hiding). He is reported to have communicated to the faithful
via intermediaries called
bábs (gates), the first of whom was
'U
thmán al-Amri. When the last of the four gates died in 941
(329 A.H.), the lesser occultation ended and the greater occultation began. The
line of Twelver imáms came to an end.
About the time the lesser Occultation came to an end the Twelvers came to
believe that the Twelfth Imám would return to earth in the last days as
the Mahdi, and would establish a reign of justice and peace on earth. After
his coming, they believe, Christ will return. Shi'is claim to see him in
dreams and visions, and try to communicate to him by leaving messages at the
tombs of the imáms.
The Twelvers are the largest Shiite group today, but they are not the only
one, and historically they were often a very small, weak group. They emerged
as a distinct Shi'i group mostly in the third Muslim century (the eighth
century C.E.) after the death of the twelfth imám. Twelver Shi'ism
appears to have grown in size partly because it did not have a living
imám; many other descendants or alleged descendants of the Prophet
called themselves the imám, formented militarty revolt, and were killed.
By not having a living imám, Twelver Shiism was able to survive and
grow, and other Shi'is often were absorbed into it when their revolts were
crushed and their imáms executed. There have been dozens of Shiite
groups, and some of their lines of imáms have continued to this day.
Some of these lines spring off the line of twelve imáms, such as the
Ismá'ilis; others spring from other descendants of 'Ali or other
relatives of Muhammad. Today, Shi'is are about ten percent of all Muslims, the
rest being Sunnis; perhaps eighty percent of the Shi'is are Twelvers. Twelvers
constitute ninety percent of the modern population of Iran and fifty-five to
sixty percent of the population of Iraq.
The imamate, which evolved into a clearly articulated doctrine in the second
Muslim century, is perhaps the most distinct and universal Shi'i belief.
Shi'is believe that there has always been an imám to provide guidance to
the believers; even between the earthly ministries of Moses, Jesus, and
Muhammad, there was always an imám on earth. Some Shi'i traditions even
list all the imáms in human history. The imáms are understood to
be sinless and infallible, to be guided by the Holy Spirit, and to be blessed
with a special type of guidance that, while less powerful than the revelation
afforded a Messenger of God, is a type of infallible and unfailing inspiration.
Obedience of the imám is obligatory to all on earth.
An integral part of the Shi'i doctrine of the imám is that he is the
legitimate political leader of Islam; just as the caliphs usurped 'Ali's
authority, modern governments, in the absence of the authority of the
imám, are not legitimate. In practice, however, this doctrine has been
manifested many different ways. Many imáms outside the Twelver line
claimed political authority and led revolts against the government; such
revolts became a common expression of social discontent against Islamic rulers.
As noted, most imáms of the Twelver line, after Husayn's martydom, did
not make a claim to political leadership; rather, they acknowledged the
authority of the caliphs, and urged their followers to do the same. Thus
political quietism was a common option pursued by Twelver Shi'is. Not until
the twentieth century did the Twelver Shi'i clergy claim the authority to rule
collectively in the place of the imám Shi'i theologians often had freer
speculative rein than Sunni writers. Iraq was the center of Shi'ism and was
also the home of deep pre-Islamic religious ideas: various orthodox and
heretical forms of Christianity, various Zoroastrian and Jewish sects,
gnosticism, Manichaeism, and some Greek philosophy. These ideas entered
Shi'ism to a greater extent than Sunnism because the claim that the
imáms were divinely empowered to interpret the Qur'án allowed
considerable innovation. Among the ideas that
Shi'is were exposed to
were transmigration of souls; occultation; divine leadership; delegation of
God's powers to a human vicegerent; anthropomorphism with respect to God; and
alteration in God's will. These ideas together came to be designated
ghuluww, "extremist" by many Muslims; while some of them
came to be accepted as Shi'i beliefs, others became popular heresy. Ghuluww
ideas were especially popular among Shi'is in the first century or two, then
declined in prominence, partly because the imáms discouraged them.
A major difference between the two traditions is in their view of the
authority of the ulama (the "learned" in the religion). The imám had
been seen as one with considerable authority in the community, and the lapse of
the imamate caused many of its powers, gradually, to devolve onto the Shi'i
ulamá. Thus the learned are much more important to Shi'ism than they
are to Sunni Islam.
There are other differences of belief between Shi'is and Sunnis. Shi'ism
recognizes the institution of temporary marriage, where a man and woman can
agree to marry for a particular length of time that can be as short as a few
hours. Sunnis view such an institution as legalized prostitution and do not
accept it. Shi'i divorce law is a bit stricter than the Sunnis', and Shi'i
inheritance law allows women to inherit more than Sunni law does.
Islam in Iran
Islam entered Iran during the caliphate of 'Umar and soon began to make
considerable headway in converting the Zoroastrian population. Most of Iran's
earliest Muslims were not followers of 'Ali, but there were some. In the 700s
northern Iran and Iraq came to be centers of Shi'ism; several imáms died
and were buried in Mashhad and Qum in northern Iran (the rest are buried in
Iraq). Qum, Rayy, Mashhad, and Kashan emerged as important Shi'i theological
centers. When in the ninth century a dynasty in Iran--the Buyids--accepted
Shi'ism, and then Twelver Shiism, and came to dominate the Caliphate at
Baghdad, Shi'ism acquired considerable political influence in Iran and Iraq.
But the majority of the population, except in a few cities, remained Sunni.
Shi'ism remained a minority religion in Iran until the 1500s, but it underwent
considerable internal consolidation. Shi'i scholars wrote many important
religious and philosophical works that remain definitive of Shi'ism to this
day. When Sufism--an Islamic mystical movement--arose, Shi'ism was initially
hostile to it, but gradually found ways to incorporate its practices and some
of its ideas.
It was the rise of the Safavid dynasty in Iran that took Shi'ism to the
masses. The first Safavid shah, Shah Ismá'il, was the leader of the
Safavid Sufi order, which was a Twelver Shi'ite order; when he assumed
political power in Tabriz in 1501 he declared Twelver Shi'ism to be the state
religion of his kingdom. Shah Ismá'il made a concerted effort to fund
missionary projects to educate the population in his realm in Shi'ism. In
particular, he encouraged the Safavid order to continue its propaganda in Iran
and suppressed all rival Sufi groups, especially those that were Sunni. His
successors imported prominent Arab Shi'i ulamá who appointed Shi'i
prayer leaders in most Iranian towns and established Shi'i theological
colleges. The ulama who were trained in these colleges became the Muslim
religious leaders of most of Iran's villages and towns. The Safavids also
restored or rebuilt the tombs of the imáms and their descendants.
Because they controlled parts of Iraq briefly, they were able to rebuild the
tombs located there and strengthen Iraqi Shi'ism. They introduced passion
plays, which reenact the martyrdom of Husayn, into the popular culture. The
result was a gradual conversion of the entire Persian-speaking population to
Shi'ism over the next century. When, in the 1730s, a group of Sunni Afghans
took over much of Iran and ended Safavid rule, they were not able to convert
the population back to Sunni Islam. When the Qájár dynasty
assumed control of the area in the 1790s, it was Shi'i.
The spread of
Shi'ism in Iran was not unaccompanied by controversy.
The authority of the ulamá soon became an important issue because they
had to speak on behalf of the Hidden Imám. Many ulamá claimed
that
ijtihád, analytical reasoning, was a legitimate means for
determining the will of the Hidden Imám and that it was necessitated
because the ancient sources did not provide guidance on all matters; this group
came to be called the Usulis. Others said the ulamá had to stick to the
Qur'án and the traditions (a
khbár) of the Prophet and the
imáms and not add other principles to the derivation of Muslim law; they
came to be called the A
khbáris. The battle between the groups
was also a battle over the extent of clerical power, the former group wishing
to extend it as far as possible, the latter seeking a lesser role of the
ulamá in society. Supporting the A
khbáris position were
Sufi orders and others who sought to retain more heterodox views of Islam.
After two centuries of bitter dispute the Usulis finally defeated the
A
khbári position in the late eighteenth century. This opened the
way for establishment of the ulamá as the arbiter of doctrine, law,
morals, and social customs, a task they took on increasingly throughout the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Part of the usuli position involved
taqlid, "imitation," the importance of the ordinary
Shi'i chosing
a leading
Shi'i cleric as his or her
marj'ih or "center of
imitation," and following that cleric's theological and legal rulings
completely.
Iranian
Shi'ism also developed an esoteric philosophical tradition
based on various Sufi philosophers, especially Ibn-'Arabi and
Suhravárdi. The most important exponent of this tradition was
Sadru'd-din Muhammad ibn-Ibráhim-i-
Shirázi, known as
Mullá Sadrá (1572-1641). Sadrá advocated a doctrine about
the nature of physical reality, involving the unity of all things and the
denial that each thing had an essence beyond the fact of its existence. He
argued that there was an evolutionary movement of all things upward toward God
(Bayat, 30). He told his followers to renounce material wealth and worldly
ambition and not to imitate anyone in their search for truth. For the latter,
anti-Usuli position Sadrá was severely persecuted. His ideas became the
foundation for many of the esoteric doctrines put forward by the
Shay
khis.
Shaykhism.
Shay
khism arose in the context of eighteenth- and nineteenth-
century Shi'ism. Its founder,
Shay
kh Ahmad-i-Ahsá'i
(1753-1826), was an Arab from Ahsá, as his name indicates (this is an
area in modern Saudi Arabia).
Shay
kh Ahmad developed a
distinctive version of Shi'ism that differed from many Muslims on several
theological points. Moojan Momen lists these differences as follows (Momen,
An Introduction to Shi'i Islam, 226-28):
1. God:
Shay
kh Ahmad insisted on the ultimate unknowability of
God's essence and its utter difference from creation. This contradicted the
Sufi notion that one could attain existential unity with God.
2. Prophet: The Prophets (such as Muhammad and Jesus) occupied a radically
different station from both humanity and God. This again differed from Sufism
and many Muslims, who believed anyone could attain to the station of the
Prophet through mystical striving.
3. Imáms:
Shay
kh Ahmad had an exalted notion of the
nature of the imáms; that the first emanation from God's will was the
light of Muhammad, and from it came the light of the imáms, and from it
came the light of the believers. Thus the imáms were exalted to a
superhuman, even supernatural station.
4. The Worlds of God: In addition to the physical world and the spiritual
world, there was an intermediate world, called
'álam
al-mithál or
hárqalyá. It
is the "world of archetypal images," where every thing in the physical world
has an idealized, perfect reflection. Ideas like hárqalyá are
ancient; for example, Manichaean philosophy taught that every person had a twin
in a spiritual world. The word itself seems to be Syriac, not Arabic, and thus
is pre-Islamic. The
Shay
khis believed every person had a body in
this intermediate world as well as in the physical world. When one dreams,
one's dreams may provide access to this world. The occulted Twelfth
Imám is not waiting in this world to return, as the Twelvers taught, but
in Hárqalyá. This world is identical to Islamic purgatory.
5. Eschatology: The resurrection expected by Muslims will involve one's
spiritual body in Hárqalyá, not one's the physical body in this
world. Heaven and hell are personal states in Hárqalyá as well.
Muhammad's night journey occurred in Hárqalyá and did not involve
his physical body.
Shay
kh Ahmad's idea of hárqalyá
was an attempt to rationalize traditional miracles and extraordinary claims of
Islam with reason and logic; it got him in considerable trouble with the Shi'i
ulama.
6. The Perfect Shi'i: This idea was developed not by
Shay
kh
Ahmad as much as by his successors. It is the idea that there must exist on
earth, at all times, a perfect Shi'i, who serves as an intermediary between the
imám and the believers.
Shay
khis came to see
Shay
kh Ahmad and his successors as the perfect Shi'i.
7. Sources of jurisprudence: Most Shi'is maintained that Islamic law was built
on several pillars: the Qur'án and hadi
th, of course; and for
most Shi'is ijtihád or rational argumentation was important.
Shay
kh Ahmad deemphasized rational processes, emphasized
hadi
th more, and especially emphasized intuitive knowledge of the law's
meaning. For many critics, this appeared to be a claim of revelation in
disguise.
On
Shay
kh Ahmad's death, his appointed successor, Siyyid
Kázim-i-Ra
shti, assumed leadership of the movement. Opposition
from the Shi'i ulama in Iran intensified. Siyyid Kázim did not appoint
a successor when he died in 1843. As a result his movement broke up into three
groups; many others became Bábís. All three have survived to
this day, though they have drifted apart from each other and have usually
drifted toward orthodox Shi'ism. Together, they have about a half million
members.
Nineteenth-Century Iran
A. Iranian Society and Culture; Imperialism.
The incipient modernization of Iran was another very important factor shaping
the development of Babism. In the early nineteenth century Iran began to enter
the commercial and political orbit of Europe. The British were converting
India from a series of independent and semi-independent states, under partial
control by a British trading company into a crown colony. As a result they
were increasingly entering the Persian Gulf and trading at the ports there.
The Russians were expanding into Central Asia, gradually conquering what today
are the republics of Kazakhstan, Tajikestan, Kyrgyzestan, Uzbekestan, and
Turkmenestan. The British feared that the Russians would try to expand until
their frontiers reached India; if that happened, the Russians would be in the
position to threaten India militarily, and India was Britain's prized colony.
Hence Britain attempted to create buffer states between India and the Russian
territories. The British actually invaded Afghanistan in the mid 19th century
and overthrew a pro-Russian king, setting up a pro-British king instead.
Iran also bordered on the Russian Empire and India, but it was too large and
powerful overtly to invade. Instead, the British and Russians competed for
economic and diplomatic influence and control of Iran. Northern Iran, which
was on the Caspian and in direct contact with the Russian Empire, became part
of the Russian economic orbit. Southern Iran, and its Persian Gulf ports, came
under British economic dominance. The British established powerful friendships
with the governors of the Persian cities in the south, and competed as equals
with the Russians in the Court of the Shah. The British and Russians both
opposed economic integration of the country, because then one side or the other
would lose its control of half the country. Thus whenever the Shah proposed a
railroad from Tehran to the Caspian, the British prevented it; whenever he
proposed a railroad from Tehran to the Gulf, the Russians prevented it; and
whenever he proposed to turn to French, German, or American business interests
for assistance in developing the country, both British and Russian diplomats
prevented it. As a result, modernization of Iran was greatly slowed and the
country's existing resources often were unfairly exploited by the two powers.
In the late 19th century the Russians and British even signed a secret treaty,
which split the country between them into economic and political spheres, and
which prevented other European powers from gaining a toehold. No wonder, then,
that Iranians have long distrusted foreigners, and have seen foreign
conspiracies behind their own politics.
In 1805-13 and 1826-28 Iran fought two wars with Russia and lost both of them
disastrously. As a result, Iran lost control of the Caucasus and some of
Central Asia to Russia. The two military disasters made Iran realize that its
military was hopelessly out of date and that it had to modernize; consequently
it imported German and French military officers to reform its army, established
a military training college, and began to establish modern armaments factories.
It also sent young Iranians to Europe to study science, engineering, and
tactics. Many of them returned to Iran with ideas about Constitutions,
elections, human rights, and Parliaments as well.
Many have argued that Babism arose partly because of the severe ideological
and cultural strain Iran experienced when it entered the modern, secular,
scientific world. While Bahá'ís may disagree that this was the
primary reason for the movement's origin, they can appreciate the sociological
insights behind the theory, because God never works in a vacuum of temporal
causality. Rather, God seems to use the forces at work in history, and the
resulting events, to bring about His will. Thus one can study history to
understand the material means that God used to shape a religion's origin and
the development of its community and teachings.
B. Marxist interpretations. Under the Communists, Russian Oriental Studies
focused their scholarship on a Marxist analysis of history. One extensive
study of Babism was made by Mikhail Ivanov. It concluded that the Báb
led a struggle against feudalism and Western imperialism. It claimed His
popularity partly resulted from His advocacy of an egalitarian society and
freedom from foreign economic influence; two ideas the Báb did not
advocate. It also claimed many of His followers joined because they had been
dislocated by social and economic changes (Bayat, 104, 125).
C. The role of the clergy in Iranian society was strong and in many ways it
was growing. For example, the entire educational system was in clerical hands
in 1800.
D. Secularization and the rise of secular thought.
E. The year 1260. A messianic movement was nearly inevitable in A.H. 1260,
because of the many hadí
th or traditions attributed to Muhammad
or the imáms saying that Muhammad's religion would endure only a
thousand years after the disappearance of the Twelfth Imám (in the year
260 A.H.), and that the Twelfth Imám would return a thousand years after
his occultation. The year 1844 was thus a year of expectation for many
Muslims. For
Shay
khís the expectation of the coming of
the imám was quite straightforward, and when Sayyid Kázim died a
month before the beginning of the year 1260, several prominent
Shay
khís, among them Mullá Husayn, set out to find
the Qá'im or Promised One.
5. ISLAM AND THE BAHÁ'Í FAITH
The connections between the Bahá'í Faith and Islam are
closer than between the Bahá'í Faith and any other religion
because the Bahá'í Faith grew out of Islam. Consequently many
basic Bahá'í beliefs closely resemble or are identical to
Islam's. In many ways it can be said that Bahá'í metaphysics
(nature of God, Prophet, humanity, the world) are basically the same as
Islam's; the five pillars are also preserved in a very similar form. The
social teachings show the most change. This is the classic demonstration of
'Abdu'l-Bahá's statement that the spiritual teachings of religion are
eternal and unchanging, but the social dimension must be tailored to the needs
of each age.
The Bahá'í and Islamic doctrines of God are very similar. The
Bahá'í view is essentially the same as the
Shay
khi
view (described above), which was not unorthodox by Muslim standards.
Bahá'í and Muslim doctrines of revelation are slightly different:
the Bahá'í concept of the Manifestation is not quite the same as
the traditional Sunni Muslim concept of the Messenger of God, for a Messenger
is closer to an ordinary human being, with human foibles, than a Manifestation
is. The Shi'i concept of the Messenger of God, however, is closer to the
Bahá'í view. Bahá'ís reject the Muslim
understanding of the phrase "seal of prophets" as implying that Muhammad was
the last prophet. They also reject the common Muslim interpretation of a
Qur'ánic passages as stating that Jesus was never crucified; Muslims
often argue that a look-alike was crucified in His place.
From a historical point of view, the Bahá'í understanding of
Bahá'u'lláh's life and significance can be built on more solid
foundations than the Muslim view of the role of Muhammad or the Christian
understanding of Jesus. In the case of Jesus, it is difficult to know whether
any actual words of Jesus have survived, and which words attributed to Him in
the New Testament actually were said by him. On the other hand, we know the
times of Jesus extraordinarily well, and understand first century Palestine,
its language, culture, and history extremely well. To some extent this makes
up for our lack of knowledge about Jesus, and sheds a bright light on the few
biographical facts we are certain of.
In the case of Muhammad, historians are in the opposite situation: there is a
considerable amount of information on Muhammad's life preserved, and voluminous
records of His words (the text of the Qur'á is accurate), but there is
relatively little information about pre-Islamic Arabia. Hence scholars cannot
put Muhammad's life in a detailed context, and can not understand His
significance as well.
With Bahá'u'lláh, of course, both the life and the social
context of the Manifestation of God are preserved in rich detail. This is the
first time both have survived. Once Bahá'ís study the details of
Bahá'u'lláh's life in His historical context--a task that has
barely begun--it will make understanding of Bahá'u'lláh's
significance much greater, much more precise, and much more detailed than the
understanding of any previous Manifestation.
The Bahá'í Faith can even be seen as possessing five pillars. A
Muslim must be able to say the shaháda or statement of faith to be
considered a believer; when Bahá'ís declare their faith they sign
a short, simple statement of faith on the declaration card. Muslims possess
obligatory prayer; Sunnis say it on five separate times during the day, while
Shi'ism enjoins the obligatory prayer must be repeated on at least three
occasions daily. The Bahá'í Faith also has obligatory prayer,
which is repeated either once a day or three times daily, depending on the
prayer. However, Bahá'í obligatory prayer is not performed by
all Bahá'ís
en masse, as Muslim prayer is, nor is the text
the same as the Muslim salát. The Bahá'í Faith has a
fast, just like Islam; it is shorter, less rigorous, and occurs at a different
time than Ramadán, but otherwise is fairly similar. The
Bahá'í Faith requires the giving of huqúqu'lláh,
like Islamic zakát; the amount is different, but the principle that
giving it purifies one's remaining wealth is the same. Like Islam, the
Bahá'í Faith has a pilgrimage, though to a different place.
Bahá'ís even struggle in the path of God, though the struggle is
not allowed to become violent, and never can become holy war; rather, teaching
the Faith is emphasized.
The changed needs of the modern world are mainly reflected by the differences
between Bahá'í and Muslim social laws. The role of women in the
Faith have been radically expanded and equalized. Shi'i imitation of the
clergy has been abolished, along with the clergy itself; it has been replaced
by an emphasis on individual independent investigation of truth and universal
compulsory education. Whereas Islam lacked instructions from Muhammad about
organization of the community, the Bahá'í Faith has detailed
instructions from Bahá'u'lláh Himself about organization and
organizational principles. The principle of consultation, mentioned briefly in
the Qur'án, is greatly elaborated in the Bahá'í
scriptures.