The Crisis of Muslim History
eBook - ePub

The Crisis of Muslim History

Religion and Politics in Early Islam

  1. 192 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Crisis of Muslim History

Religion and Politics in Early Islam

About this book

This is a detailed yet accessible guide to the way in which religion and politics interacted during the earliest years of Islam. It focuses on the period of the first four caliphs, untangling the crisis of sucession and the subsequent schism between the Sunni and Shi'i movements in Islam, and drawing on a combination of primary documents and scholarship in the field. It includes two appendices featuring original English translations of key source material.

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Yes, you can access The Crisis of Muslim History by Mahmoud M. Ayoub in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & World History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

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Introduction

No, by God, be of good cheer, for God would never disgrace you! You surely treat your next-of-kin with kindness. You always speak the truth and endure weariness patiently. You receive the guest hospitably and lend assistance in times of adversity.1
Islam came into a society governed by moral principles based, not on faith in a sovereign God to whom all beings must answer on a day of judgment, but on time-honored customs which embodied certain values capable of holding society together and preserving its moral fabric. The words quoted above with which Khadījah, the Prophet’s wife, sought to reassure him in his moment of deep spiritual and psychological crisis do not invoke religious piety or right belief, but moral values of kindness, patience, hospitality, and reliability. Islam affirmed these values, gave them a broader moral framework of social responsibility, and deepened their religious meaning. It enjoined kindness not only to one’s next-of-kin but to the orphan, the needy, and the wayfarer. It called for patience and steadfastness not only in times of misfortune, but also in resisting oppression and wrongdoing whenever it might be found. Through obligatory alms (zakāt) Islam made social responsibility a religious duty and an act of worship and purification.
Muammad ruled the first Muslim commonwealth – which he founded in 622, twelve years after his prophetic call – primarily as a prophet. His role as a statesman was only a means of realizing a sociopolitical order based on a revealed law (sharī‘ah). To this end, he struggled for a base of operation until he secured a safehaven in Madīnah. From that secure base the Prophet, his fellow Immigrants (muhājirūn), and Supporters (anār) waged a continuous battle against his own recalcitrant people for the spread of the new faith with its community and power. That being the ultimate objective, all hostilities were forgotten as soon as the goal was achieved. The Prophet’s aim was to establish a faith-community rather than an empire. He died, therefore, without leaving a clear and concrete political model or apparatus that could sustain the vast empire which arose with amazing rapidity following his death.
The two primary frameworks within which the Islamic social order was constructed were the life-example (sunnah) of the Prophet Muammad, and the Qur’ān. Apart from actions relating to daily prayers and other ritualistic matters, the Prophetic sunnah consists largely of moral directives with occasional illustrative or supportive anecdotes. There is little in the sunnah that can serve as the basis for a political system as we understand it today. There are, to be sure, numerous adīth traditions with clear political purport. Such traditions, however, reflect not what the Prophet may have said or done, but the political crises, views, and ideals of later generations.2 As for the Qur’ān, like any sacred scripture it is open to endless interpretation as demanded by changing circumstances. This infinite possibility of meaning and interpretation is attested in the Qur’ān itself, which declares: “No one knows its interpretation [ta’wīl] except God” (Q.3:7).3 Moreover, before the legal principles of the Qur’ān and sunnah could be fully implemented they had to be codified into a complex system of law. This process lagged far behind the social and political exigencies the law was meant to cover. In fact, neither the Qur’ān nor the Prophetic tradition provides a clear political direction for the community.
The Shī‘ī doctrine of the imamate is an example of an early attempt to formulate a political structure within a juridical framework and does, indeed, present a coherent political theory. However, the basic principle of succession which this doctrine propounds was never universally accepted and has remained an unrealized eschatological hope. Some of the difficulties of interpreting and translating the Prophetic sunnah into political theory are demonstrated in the history of the tradition that underlies the doctrine.
The doctrine was, according to Shī‘ī tradition, enunciated in principle by the Prophet after his Farewell Pilgrimage at Ghadīr Khumm, a spot between Makkah and Madīnah. The adīth of al-Ghadīr, which proclaims ‘Alī to be the rightful successor (khalīfah) of Muammad, exists in many and widely divergent recensions and has been the subject of much debate and controversy in Muslim theology, historiography, jurisprudence, and political theory.4 Significantly, although this Prophetic adīth is regarded by Shī‘ī tradition as the decisive proof-text (na)of ‘Alī’s designation as the imām of the Muslims after Muammad, ‘Alīis nowhere reported to have invoked it in support of his right to the caliphate in his debate with Abū Bakr and ‘Umar. But this does not obviate the fact that Shī‘ī adīth and theological sources present this tradition as an incontrovertible argument in support of ‘Alī’s right to succeed Muammad as leader of the Muslim ummah. I shall return to this important tradition when we consider ‘Alī’s struggle to assert his right to the caliphate, his turbulent rule, and its tragic end.
This monograph is a spin-off of a much larger work on the life and times of the sixth Shī‘ī Imām, Ja‘far al-ādiq, which was begun over a decade ago, and which still awaits completion. The purpose of the present study is to fill an important gap that is manifest in most general introductions to Islam – there is a need for a clear and somewhat comprehensive presentation of the formative period of Muslim history following the death of the Prophet Muammad. The present volume is meant to help redress this problem and thus provide the background necessary for a better understanding of subsequent developments in Islamic thought and history.
In this study I shall briefly examine the political and socio-religious crisis of early Muslim history, and reflect on the changing perceptions and applications of old Arab customs and values in their Islamic context. To achieve this goal, I shall let the primary sources of Muslim thought and history themselves tell the story of the crisis and its effects.
These important historical and literary narratives were written by men who were themselves deeply engaged in the centuries-long debates surrounding this crisis and its aftermath. Their narratives therefore provide us with the best context for our study of the early unfolding of Muslim history from the vantage of Muslim historiography. While the actual events surrounding this crisis were soon shrouded with thick layers of myth, legend, and ideological considerations, the diversity of sources here employed will itself, I hope, allow us to investigate them with a good measure of credibility. I have not, however, used the sources uncritically; they have been carefully chosen to represent the wide diversity of Muslim perspectives. This approach may be new to Western scholarship, but I feel it has its value. I trust that this methodology will help us see in clearer perspective the profound and far-reaching effect this crisis has left on the Muslim community.
Two primary considerations have led me to concentrate on the period of the first four caliphs. The first is that these men are regarded by the majority of Muslims as true heirs to the Prophet in their piety, courage, justice, and wisdom. They were ideal rulers, collectively called al-khulafā’ al-rāshidūn (the rightly guided caliphs). Hence, the rule of Abū Bakr, ‘Umar, ‘Uthmān, and ‘Alī is considered by all Sunni Muslims to be the normative period of Muslim history. In contrast, Shī‘ī Muslims have condemned the rule of the first three caliphs as one of usurpation of ‘Alī’s sole right to the caliphate.
Western scholars have, not without justification, considered this period an era of violent struggle for power, resulting in a long period of protracted civil strife.5 It must be observed in this connection that the rule of all four caliphs was characterized by dissension and conflict, and all except Abū Bakr died violent deaths. The history is so evocative that both Muslim and Western scholars have felt compelled to take strong political and moral positions on the side of this or that party to the conflict. Not until the publication of Wilfred Madelung’s important work on the period, do we have a conscious attempt to “let the sources speak for themselves.”6
The second consideration is the crucial role this brief but turbulent period has played in the development of Islamic religious and political thought, including the rise of theological and legal schools. Subsequent to the tragic caliphate of ‘Alī and his equally tragic death, the four major divisions in the Muslim ummah appeared. These were the shī‘ah, or party of ‘Alī; the khawārij, or seceders, who deserted ‘Alī and regarded any authority in the ummah other than their own to be illegitimate, and therefore to be destroyed; the mu‘tazilah, who isolated themselves from political life altogether;7 and the murji’ah, who withheld judgment regarding the ultimate fate of all parties to the conflict that led to ‘Alī’s assassination – and hence of grave sinners in general – leaving it to God Himself to judge on the day of the final reckoning. Although the ideological and theological movements that took on these designations developed later, their roots clearly go back to the issues and attitudes which had divided the Muslim community during this early period of its history.
For centuries these four movements represented the major trends in Muslim theological, philosophical, and political thought. Their influence, moreover, may be discerned to this day in the sectarian factions which continue to divide what was meant to be a single and unified ummah, as clearly envisioned by the Qur’ān: “This ummah of yours is one ummah and I am your Lord, so worship me”(Q.21:92).8
1. Abū al-Fidā’ Ismā‘īl Ibn Kathīr, Tafsīr al-Qur’ān al-‘aīm, 2nd edn., 7 vols. (Beirut: Dār al-Fikr, 1389/1970), vol. 7, pp. 325–326.
2. For a brief but illuminating discussion of this issue, see Fred M. Donner, Narratives of Islamic Origins. The Beginnings of Islamic Historical Writing (Princeton: Darwin Press, 1998), pp. 40–47.
3. For various interpretations of this controversial verse see M. Ayoub, The Qur’ān and its Interpreters, 2 vols. (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1992), vol. 2, pp. 20–46.
4. For a comprehensive discussion of the al-Ghadīr tradition from a Shī‘ī point of view, see ‘Abd al-usayn Amad al-Amīnī, al-Ghadīr fīal-kitāb wal-sunnah wal-adab, 4th edn., 11 vols. (Beirut: Dār al-Kitāb al-‘Arabī, 1397/1977), esp. vols. 1 and 2.
5. See, for a good representative of this view, Julius Wellhausen, The Arab Kingdom and its Fall, trans. Margaret Graham Weir (Calcutta: University of Calcutta, 1927).
6. Wilfred Madelung, The Succession to Muammad: A Study of the Early Caliphate (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997). The author claims to have inherited this virtue from his mother “who taught him to see history as it really is,” as he asserts in his dedication of the book to her.
7. A socio-political phenomenon in Muslim history, which appeared during the cal...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Preface
  6. 1. Introduction
  7. 2. The Crisis of Succession
  8. 3. Abū Bakr’s Regrets and ‘Umar’s Uncertainties
  9. 4. The Second Crisis: The Shūrā Council and its Failure
  10. 5. ‘Uthmān: Khalīfat Allāh
  11. 6. ‘Ali Waṣī Rasūl Allāh: The Clash of Religion and Politics
  12. 7. Conclusion
  13. Appendix I The Four “Rightly Guided” Caliphs in their Own Words
  14. Appendix II The Ṣiffīn Truce Document
  15. Bibliography
  16. Index