Islam Essay
j
I
/
The Idea of · ·
the Muslim World
A Global Intellectual History
CEMIL AYDIN
MCTC LIBRARY 1501 Hennepin Ave. i Mpls, MN 5540'.·1
Ill Ill
Harvard University Press
i- ,,.,..
'
Ca'mbridge, Massachusetts, {j) London, England 2017
.i
i
,/
Introduction
What ls the
Muslim World?
Roughly a fifth of people now living are Muslims. Their societies, located in every corner of the globe, vary in language, ethnicity, political ideology, nationality, culture, and wealth. Yet throughout modern history, Muslims and non-Muslims have appealed to an imagined global Muslim unity. One need only look at the headlines to see that this unity does not exist: today, the very people who claim to speak on behalf of all Muslims target other Muslims as their enemies; Muslim societies are more divided than ever, riven by civil wars and protracted conflicts across borders. Even so, the illusion of Muslim unity persists. This illusion is captured most succinctly in the universally
popular notion of a "Muslim world," with its own collective his- tory and future, often contrasted with a putative "West." But we rarely question the historical roots and conceptual shortcuts
2 INTRODUCTION
inherent in such terms. Since when do political leaders, intellec- tuals, and everyday people talk about a Muslim world? How has it encompassed a civilization, religious tradition, and geopo- litical unit? Why are the same people who take for granted the existence of a Muslim world reluctant to talk about a Christian world, an African world, or a Buddhist world in the same way? Why has the idea of the Muslim world become so entrenched, despite the obvious naivete of categorizing one and a half billion people, in all their diversity, as an imagined unity? When President Barack Obama made his 2009 address "to the
Muslim world" in Cairo, he was confirming the modern assump- tion that there is a global Muslim community to be engaged.1 Obama was trying to undo the damage President George W. Bush's war on terror had done to America's image among Muslims. To that end, Obama praised the historical contribu- tions of Muslims in areas such as algebra, medicine, navigation, and printing. He also criticized Americans' negative stereotypes about Muslim faith traditions. He mentioned the positive moral values of these traditions and lauded American Muslims. This was a kind of sweetener before he put forward his government's views about the political tensions between the United States and diverse Muslim societies. It was an odd gesture. Would it be acceptable, or even sensible, to appeal to the contributions of East Asian civilization, Buddhism, and Confucianism before addressing America's political disputes with China? Alongside Obama and so many others in the so-called West,
Muslim leaders and intellectuals rely on the notion of the Muslim world to describe, simultaneously, the geopolitics, civ- ilization, and religious tradition of diverse millions. About two decades before President Obama's speech, in January 1988, Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini wrote a letter to Mikhail Gorbachev on behalf of the Muslim world, urging the Soviet leader not to be misled by the capitalist West and to study the
f
)
I t e
INTRODUCTION 3
spiritual and political values oflslam. Khomeini ended his letter by declaring, "The Islamic Republic oflran, as the greatest and most powerful base of the Islamic world, can easily fill the vacuum of religious faith in your society."2 How did we arrive at this point, where a fantastical entity could be so present, so prevalent in political thinking? Why do so many Muslim and non- Muslim political leaders, intellectuals, and religious figures comfortably base many of their arguments and decisions on the idea of the Muslim World without reflecting on the accuracy of the generalization that this term signifies?
Contrary to widespread assumption, the term "Muslim world" does not derive from ummah, a concept as old as Islam, which re- fers to the Muslim religious community. Instead the idea of the Muslim world began to develop in the nineteenth century and achieved full flower in the 1870s. Also mistaken is the belief that Muslims were united until nationalist ideology and European co- lonialism tore them apart. This is precisely backward; in fact, Muslims did not imagine belonging to a global political unity until the peak of European hegemony in the late nineteenth century, when poor colonial conditions, European discourses of Muslim racial inferiority, and Muslims' theories of their own ap- parent decline nurtured the first arguments for pan-Islamic soli- darity. In other words, the Muslim world arrived with imperial globalization and its concomitant ordering of humanity by race. The racialization oflslam was bound up with its transformation into a universal and uniform religious tradition, a force in inter- national politics, and a distinct object in a discourse of civiliza- tions. Political strategy and intellectual labor made this new reality, and both Muslims and European Christians took part. The eve ofWorld War I was the high point of perceived global
Muslim unity. In the fall of 1914, the sultan of the Ottoman Empire drew on the authority he had cultivated as caliph of the global Muslim community to declare jihad on behalf of the
4
ill33]33]]3]]]33]]]3]]]]3l3fl0~NNllllNNNlllllAl»Al]JJJJJ - INTRODUCTION
Muslim world. Yet even then there were strong expressions of Muslim loyalty to the Ottomans' enemies: the British, French, Dutch, and Russian empires. Competing Muslim and non- Muslim conceptions of the Muslim world wrought dramatic changes over the next decade. The abolition of the Ottoman caliphate in 1924 inspired self-reflection and debate on Muslim- world identity in an era when modernizing ideologies of na- tionalism and bolshevism threatened to obviate other political forms. During World War II, the notion of the Muslim world re-
mained a centerpiece of imperial propaganda, as both Axis and Allies sought Muslims' support. But afterward, at the peak of decolonization during the 1950s and the 1960s, the Muslim world receded. No successor rose to anchor the Muslim world, as the Ottomans had. Indian independence and the messy partition of Pakistan sapped the influence of Indian Muslims, who, for a century, had been able to sway global affairs by pres- suring and cajoling their British overlords. In this period, few journalists and scholars referred to Islam as an explanatory factor in world politics.
But it was not to last. Amid interrelated political events from Arab-Israeli conflicts to the Iranian Revolution, the 1970s and 1980s witnessed a resurgence of pan-Islamic patterns of thinking born in the imperial age. The Muslim world was again seen as a geopolitical unity, even though Muslim societies were by then ruled by more than fifty postcolonial nation-states. How to explain this resurfacing of century-old tropes during
the 1980s despite the radical transformation of the global system? Gone was European imperial hegemony in Muslim societies. Gone was the Ottoman caliphate. And there were all those nation-states. Yet the discourse of Muslim unity survived. It re- turned through the renewed racialization of Muslims and in the form of post-Cold War Islamist ideologies.
INTRODUCTION 5
The persistence of the geopolitical idea of the Muslim world from its peak in World War I to the present is not an outgrowth of shared history or immutable ideology within Muslim socie- ties. 3 It is, rather, a function of the civilizational and geopo- litical narratives concocted in encounters of Muslim societies with European empires, reconfigured according to the exigen- cies of the Cold War. The central aim of this book is to demonstrate the origins and
understand the appeal of these narratives in which the Muslim world lives alongside the Christian West. I therefore offer a critical genealogy of the idea of the Muslim world, showing how, starting in the late nineteenth century, pan-Islamists and Islam- ophobes have used the assumption, ideal, and threat of Muslim unity to advance political agendas. Together, and in tension, they created the Muslim world for their own strategic purposes and positioned it in everlasting conflict with the West. I hope that by recovering the imperial context in which essentialized ideas about Islam and the West developed, we will come to ap- preciate the historical contingency of the Muslim world, to understand more fully the role of religious identities in inter- national affairs, and to reflect on ways in which the overlap of race and geopolitics limits struggles for rights and justice .
• • • The idea of the Muslim world is inseparable from the claim that Muslims constitute a race. The distinction of the Muslim world and the Christian West began taking shape most forcefully in the 1880s, when the majority of Muslims and Christians resided in the same empires. The rendering of Muslims as racially distinct-a process that called on both "Semitic" ethnicity and religious difference-and inferior aimed to disable and deny their demands for rights within European empires. Muslim intellec- tuals could not reject the assumptions of irreducible difference
6 INTRODUCTION
but responded that they were equal to Christians, deserving of rights and fair treatment. The same conception of Muslim unity and difference justified appeals to Muslims as a global commu- nity during World War I and World War II. Racial assumptions also ensured that later subaltern and nationalist claims for rights would be framed in the idioms of Muslim solidarity and an en- during clash between Islam and the West, giving rise to the Is- lamism and Islamophobia of the 1980s and beyond.
It is thanks to this elaboration of both Muslim difference and Muslim unity that contemporary writing, scholarly and other- wise, tends to emphasize Muslim exceptionalism. The assump- tion is that Muslims, due to their piety and the nature of their faith, naturally resist the liberal international order of inde- pendent, pluralistic nation-states. Muslims' attitudes toward politics are presumed different from those of Buddhists, Hindus, Jews, and Christians, whose societies need not be explained by reference to faith tradition or civilizational identity. How- ever, this theory of Muslim exceptionalism is unsupported and unsubstantiated. The Ottoman Empire, Republican Turkey, British-ruled Indian Muslims, Afghanistan, the Saudi Kingdom, Pakistan, postcolonial Egypt, and Iran under the shah ardently supported the imperial and later nationalist world orders. The seeming importance of Islam in the contemporary politics of Muslim-majority societies derives not from theological require- ments or a uniquely high level of Muslim piety but from the legacy of imperial racialization of Muslim-ness and from the particular intellectual and political strategies of Muslim re- sistance to this racialized identity. The geography and technology of empire were essential to
these processes of racialization and resistance in the second half of the nineteenth century. New transportation and com- munication technologies such as steamships and the telegraph fostered unprecedented levels of connection among Muslims,
INTRODUCTION 7
naturalizing the geopolitical concept of the Muslim world in Europe and its colonies. The networks enabled by these tech- nologies were the medium of pan- Islamic thought born of con- frontation with imperial racism. Imperial racism, but not empire itself. Muslim leaders and
thinkers of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were not, for the most part, anti-imperialists. Instead they sought fair treatment from the four major European empires: British, Dutch, French, and Russian. These were cosmopolitan arrangements, home to wide-ranging ethnic and religious groups. But racialized legal categorizations shared across European empires, the em- powerment strategies of colonized Muslim subjects, and tactics employed in imperial rivalries confirmed rather than challenged Muslim difference, ensuring that Muslims would be a separate class within the imperial whole. The British ruled almost half of the world's Muslims and therefore played an especially impor- tant role in guiding the development of pan-Islamic thought. British fears of rebellion and policies of oppression engendered specifically Muslim responses. At the same time, Muslims understood that their vast numbers and the reality of their overwhelming loyalty to the empire allowed them real clout. Thus Muslim solidarity was of strategic importance. The Ot-
toman sultans, as the most powerful modern Muslim rulers and overseers of the Muslim holy cities, enjoyed a special position as leaders of the global Muslim community. They used this to their advantage, claiming spiritual sovereignty over Muslims globally and leveraging this influence in political wrangling with the British and other European empires. Seeking a competitive edge by any means available, empires variously used the idea of global Muslim solidarity to weaken their rivals, justify alliances with them, and bolster propaganda campaigns. The advances of the imperial age led to increased wealth and
an intellectual renaissance, including for Muslim subjects of
8 INTRODUCTION
Christian rule. Printing and steamship technologies enabled mobility and productivity in Muslim thought and publishing. Women's rights, education, and economic activity improved.4 Yet by the early twentieth century, the categorization of Mus- lims as an inferior, colored race prone to rebellion against global white hegemony had provoked paranoia in colonial metropoles, leading to oppression and Muslim perceptions of their own victimization. Late nineteenth-century Muslim intellectuals responded to
the inequalities of racialization with a number of strategies. By articulating a concept of Islamic civilization, these reformers sought to elevate the esteem in which Muslims were held and thereby contest the assertion of racial inferiority-if not racial difference itself. Pioneers of the idea oflslamic civilization dis- tinguished the values, ideals, and accomplishments of Muslim societies from Islam as a faith tradition itself but assumed that the civilization was inspired by the values of the faith. This in- volved a new focus on a "golden age" oflay Muslim philosophy, art, and cultural production. The reformers' goal was to make Islam compatible with mo-
dernity. Rebutting the likes of French historian and philosopher Ernest Renan, who claimed that Islam was incompatible with modern science, reformist writers argued that Islam was in harmony with modern standards of reason and progress. The civilization wrought by Muslims was the evidence. Modernist reformers emphasized Andalusian Muslim history as a sign of Islam's contribution to Europe, carving out a place for Averroes and Avicenna in the global history of science and medicine. Dis- cussion of Islamic civilization in relation to world and Euro- pean history became a hallmark of intellectual life in every Muslim society.
But this strategy of contesting inferiority by upholding a nar- rative of Islamic civilization only reinforced the European ra-
INTRODUCTION 9
cial discourse in which Muslims were united-and divided from others-by their religion and heritage. Muslim thinking and writing about Islamic civilization created an abstraction linking Mecca to Java and Senegal, Istanbul to Samarkand and Delhi. This narrative of a singular Muslim civilization led to amnesia about cosmopolitan Muslim empires, which could not be re- duced to a simplistic civilizational model. Centuries of shared experience with Hindus, Jews, and Buddhists; shamans; Chris- tian Arabs, Greeks, and Armenians; and others were ignored. While reformers aimed to elevate the nonreligious character-
istics of Islamic history to which non-Muslims could relate as equals, they sought to use their faith tradition for new pur- poses, recasting Islam by collapsing its diverse traditions into a singular world religion comparable to Christianity. Its true spirit recovered, Muslim modernists claimed, Islam would be an instrument in the revival of the victimized, declining Muslim world. As followers of a universal religion compatible with science, Muslims would also appropriate and respond to secular European ideologies such as the Enlightenment, social Darwinism, and progress. In order to bring uniform and systematic meaning to this new
world religion, modernist scholars focused strictly on texts from which they claimed to deduce the essence oflslam beyond dif- ferences of culture, time, and place. Of course, there has long been a rich Muslim tradition of textual interpretation. Innumer- able debates, such as Ghazali's critique of philosophy and Aver- roes's responses insisting on harmony between revelation and reason, illustrate an enduring struggle to understand God's will by deciphering and arguing about religious texts. But reformers took a novel approach. They discounted vernacular Muslim practices that, historically, were as integral to the meaning of Islam as was textual scholarship. Late nineteenth-century Muslim intellectuals wrote books with essentializing titles such
10 INTRODUCTION
as The Spirit of Islam, Islam and Progress, The Rise and Decline of Islam, Christianity and Islam, and Women's Rights in Islam. Whereas earlier Muslim scholarship refrained from such gen- eralizations and preserved a polyvocal tradition, these works lumped together diverse Muslim practices and criticized their supposed impurities or simply overlooked them. 5 Muslim socie- ties of the nineteenth century were not actually less diverse than previously, but reformist elites hoped to refashion them as such, fixing the content and principles oflslam in order to create a unity that would empower Muslims. This process of reformation unfolds in the work of two gen-
erations of modern Muslim intellectuals, from Syed Ahmad Khan, Syed Ameer Ali, and Muhammad Abduh to Rashid Rida, Shakib Arslan, and Muhammad Asad. Their ideas inspired unity not only across faith differences but also what had been wide- ranging political and moral agendas. Approaches to slavery pro- vide a case in point. When Ahmet Bey, Tunisia's ruler, banned slavery in the mid-nineteenth century, Muslim scholars justified the ban on the basis of sharia. But their reasoning did not reflect a monolithic principle of Islam. It was understood that sharia scholars in Egypt and Zanzibar might rule differently. After the Ottomans banned the slave trade, it eventually disappeared in Muslim-ruled states without any universal claims about Islamic rules concerning slavery. Within less than a century, however, Ahmadiyya Muslim missionaries in Europe and America spoke oflslam's categorical ban on racism and slavery, in contrast with Christianity's condoning of racial discrimination. Thus, in time, the nineteenth-century goal of positioning
Islam as enlightened and tolerant-and therefore Muslims as ra- cially equal to their Western overlords-produced the notion oflslam in the abstract, providing the core substance of Muslim reformism and pan-Islamic thought in the early twentieth century. This Muslim modernist strategy to defeat the notion
INTRODUCTION 11
of racial inferiority and articulate Muslim belonging in a uni- versal humanity counterintuitively contributed to a rigid Ori- entalist conception of Muslims as essentially different from the rest of humanity. Ironically, in both the colonial and postcolonial contexts, this assumption further racialized Muslim societies. Although the historian may distinguish the geopolitical, civ-
ilizational, and religious modes of knowledge and discourse inherent in the racialization and reformation of an imagined Muslim world, all were tightly interwoven. Both Christian missionaries and secular theorists such as Renan argued that de- fects in the Muslim faith itself produced the civilizational de- cline that legitimized empire. Thus secular Muslim reformers responded by rewriting the history of science and philosophy- typically irrelevant to geopolitics-and theological reformers responded with new religious exegeses. They tried to refute missionary claims and social Darwinism but also, in some re- spects, embraced them by accepting the narrative of Muslim decline and reinterpreting the Quran and other religious texts to urge believers toward salvation by moral improvement. 6 This nineteenth- and twentieth-century history helps to re-
veal falsehoods in today's dominant narratives about politics in the Muslim world-both the politics imagined by Muslims and the politics of Islam imagined by non-Muslims. The literature of Muslim exceptionalism relies on an essentialized notion of Western Europe as nationalist, democratic, and progressive, in contrast with a conservative, antinationalist caliphate born from selective reading oflslamist critiques of Western moder- nity and redefinitions of Muslim traditions. Both Muslims and non-Muslims often assume that modern Europe created the no- tion of national sovereignty at the Treaty of Westphalia and that this norm then spread to the rest of the world thanks to the expansion of Eurocentric values projected as universal. Some of today's transnational Islamist political projects and identities
12 INTRODUCTION
claim to challenge Westphalian national borders in the name of the borderless Muslim world.
But this narrative of the encounter between the modern West and the Islamic world is ahistorical and relies on myths of what constitutes the West and the Muslim world. In reality, before and during the colonial period Muslims' political views could be as imperial as Queen Victoria's, as nationalistic as Gandhi's, and as socialistic as Lenin's. In the age when imperi- alists and reformers were inventing unitary Islam, individual Muslims were anarchists, feminists, and pacifists. They were as modern as their European counterparts. Muslim political visions from the mid-nineteenth century onward, including pan-Islamism, reflect not enduring tradition but rather the particular entanglement of Muslim intellectual history and the shifting international order from the age of empires to that of the contemporary nation-state .
••• I started researching this topic in 2008, while ruminating on post-September 11 debates about Islam in international affairs. Yet even as late as 2012, I could not have imagined that today there would be a self-proclaimed caliphate in areas controlled by ISIS in Iraq and Syria. ISIS's call attracts and repulses poten- tial followers across the world. Meanwhile Islamophobia in Eu- rope and America insists on categorizing ISIS leaders and their Muslim victims as members of the same racial and civiliza- tional unity. ISIS's caliphate is a caricature, yet it demands acknowl-
edgment ofits supposed authenticity. Is today's self-proclaimed caliph, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, even aware of the cultural prac- tices of the last Ottoman caliphs, such as Abdulhamid II or Abdulmecid, who enjoyed operas by European composers and, in the fashion of imperial courts, painted portraits of their
INTRODUCTION 13
daughters? Does that so-called caliph know that Muslim rulers once wore proudly the medals bestowed on them by Christian leaders and offered such honors in return? Similarly, the politics of Sunni-Shia division are today presented falsely as funda- mental to Muslim life. Do rivals in Syria and Iraq, marshaling ideas of Muslim solidarity against each other, realize that the Shia-Sunni distinction had no political valence in the Eurocen- tric imperial world of the early twentieth century, when Shi'a and Sunni Muslims both looked to the Ottoman caliph as their spiritual ruler and representative on the world stage? These dangerous mistakes raise questions that must be ap-
proached through nuanced and thorough readings of history. How is it that terms such as ummah" and "caliphate" can signify such different practices now than they did a hundred years ago? What are the narrative and historical links between World War I and the present, today's Muslim question and its imperial past? In paying close attention to the evolution of Muslim-world
narratives over a 150-year period, one sees concepts and episte- mologies of the Muslim world transferred from the age of empires to the postcolonial period. Each generation gave new political meanings to these concepts and ways of thinking. Ot- toman Sultan Abdulhamid II, Haj Amin al-Husseini of Mandate Palestine, King Faisal of Saudi Arabia, and Ayatollah Khomeini oflran had different political goals, but they all relied on a sim- ilar framework of the imagined Muslim world in relation to the Christian West. Likewise, even though Renan and later scholars such as Arnold Toynbee and Samuel Huntington represent dif- ferent political sensibilities, they shared the same template of a racial, civilizational, and geopolitical Muslim world distinct from the West. It is in this theater, not of timeless doctrine but of contingent politics and ideas, built by many hands in the late nineteenth century and since renovated repeatedly, that con- temporary conflicts play out.