Why Partition? by Perry Anderson

Posted by F. Sheikh

Was partition of Indian Subcontinent inevitable? In this an intellectually provocative and critical analysis of historical events, the author argues that the partition could have been avoided if Gandhi did not have injected a massive dose of religion into the national movement,  and if Gandhi and Nehru were not arrogant and short sighted to dismiss out of hand Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s initial idea of a confederation of independent states. Muhammad Ali Jinnah was looking for autonomous states with central confederation but was rejected because it would have meant a weak central Government, less dominance of Hindus and diluted power for Congress Party and its top political leaders. Muhammad Ali Jinnah was dismissed both by Congress Party leaders and British as a crackpot just bluffing. Congress Party and its leaders arrogantly thought that the demand of independent confederation of states and later demand for a separate state (Pakistan) was a temporary non-viable demand that will die down itself. It was serious a miscalculation. In my opinion, Muhammad Ali Jinnah embraced the  idea of Pakistan to pressure Congress Party to accept confederation of states, but Pakistan slogan turned out to be a populous slogan embraced by Muslim masses and it took a life of its own with no turning back. Even Allama Iqbal in his famous  1930 speech had both options on the table and said “Self-government within the British Empire, or without the British Empire,”

Perry Anderson , a historian, recently wrote a book “ The Indian Ideology “ and this Article is from the book.

Before reading some excerpts or full 26 page long article,  it is worth reading some comments by Mr. Namat Arora, a historian himself, about nationalistic Indian and Pakistani historian’s jaundiced view of the history( Dr. Mubarak Ali also expressed similar views at TFUSA meeting) and why accounts by Mr. Perry Anderson carry more weight.   

“Nations without a past are contradictions in terms,’ wrote Eric Hobsbawm. A precursor to every modern nation are stories about its past and the present — stories full of invention, exclusion, and exaggeration — which help forge a ‘national consciousness’. Historians, wrote Hobsbawm, have ‘always been mixed up in politics’ and are ‘an essential component of nationalism’. They participate in shaping a nation’s mythos and self-perception. In his vivid analogy, ‘Historians are to nationalism what poppy-growers in Pakistan are to heroin addicts: we supply the essential raw material for the market.’ The more nationalist a historian, he held, the weaker her bid to be taken seriously as a historian’

“But not all historians are equally complicit. Some are deeply skeptical of the dominant national histories and claims of nationhood. ‘Getting its history wrong is part of being a nation,’ wrote Ernst Renan. The skeptical historian may see value in nationalism, but she always sees a pressing need to inspect and critique its claims, assumptions, omissions, myths, and heroes. Scrutiny may reveal that a ‘cherished tradition’ is neither cherished, nor a tradition; likewise for supposedly ancient origins and customs, traits and virtues, arts and culture, and other qualities of life and mind said to define the essence of a nation and its people. This approach is especially common among Marxist historians, who seek to write history from below and attempt to expose the actual conditions of social life, including the divisions, conflicts, and oppressions that plague a nation (their analytical orientation defines the genre, not their views on communism). This, then, is the vantage point of British Marxist historian Perry Anderson’s magnificent and lucid new work, The Indian Ideology. “

The Author writes in concluding paragraphs of the essay;

“But if the independence of the subcontinent was inevitable, was its division too? A century later, the struggle against the Raj ( British) has generated a vast literature, within India and beyond it. But it is striking how rarely this issue is ever centrally or candidly confronted. The major question posed by the modern history of the region has yet to receive analytic treatment commensurate with it.”

“Popular conceptions in India blaming the creation of Pakistan on a British plot are legends.”

The author argues in previous paragraphs of the essay that the Raj ( British), contrary to its previous policy of divide and conquer, it had economic and political interests to keep independent India as one country aligned to Commonwealth and Britain, and then writes on other reasons for partition;

“ If the Raj can be eliminated as an efficient cause of partition, we are returned to the famous remark of a veteran of Non-Cooperation at the Round Table Conference of 1931: ‘We divide and you rule.’ The ultimate drivers of the split were indigenous, not imperial. How were they distributed? The official view in Delhi, shared across the political spectrum, has always been that it was Jinnah’s personal ambition that fired Muslim separatism, destroying the unity of the national liberation struggle and wrecking what would otherwise have been its natural culmination in a single ecumenical state coinciding with the borders of the Raj and bearing the proud name of India. Like most politicians, Jinnah was certainly ambitious. But he was also an early architect of Hindu-Muslim unity; had little mass following down to the end of the 1930s; and even when he acquired one, probably aimed at a confederation rather than complete separation. The division in the struggle for independence, when it came, was confessional, but it was not Jinnah who injected religion into the vocabulary and imagery of the national movement, it was Gandhi. That he did not do so in any sectarian spirit, calling on Muslims to defend the caliph in the same breath as Hindus to restore the golden age of Rama, was of little consequence once he jettisoned mobilisation against the British without regard for his allies in the common struggle. Non-Cooperation died as a campaign to evict the Raj. It lived on as an all but permanent description of political relations between the two communities it had once brought together. What remained was Gandhi’s transformation of Congress from an elite into a mass organisation by saturating its appeal with a Hindu imaginary. Here, unambiguously, was the origin of the political process that would eventually lead to partition.”

“By the mid-1930s, Congress as a party was close to monolithically Hindu – just 3 per cent of its membership were Muslim. Privately, its more clear-sighted leaders knew this. Publicly, the party claimed to represent the entire nation, regardless of religious affiliation. The reality was that by the end of the 1930s, it commanded the loyalty of an overwhelming majority of the Hindu electorate, but had minimal Muslim support. Since Hindus comprised two thirds of the population, it was already clear that free elections on either an unaltered or a universal franchise would deliver Congress absolute control of any future all-India legislature. Common sense indicated that from a position of such strength, it would be necessary to make every feasible concession to ensure that the quarter of the population that was Muslim would not feel itself a permanently impotent – and potentially vulnerable – minority. Ignoring every dictate of prudence and realism, Congress did the opposite. At each critical juncture, it refused any arrangement that might dilute the power to which it could look forward. In 1928, after Congress had initially been persuaded to accept allocation to Muslims of a third of the seats in a national legislature, Motilal Nehru’s Report reduced it to a quarter, and Jinnah was shouted down for attempting to revert to the original agreement. In 1937, coalition government in Uttar Pradesh was rejected, and the Muslim League told to dissolve itself into Congress. In 1942, the Cripps Mission scheme for a postwar India was rebuffed by Congress for allowing constituent units the freedom to choose whether or not to join a future Indian union. In 1947, Nehru killed off the cabinet mission plan as a confederation for giving too much leeway to areas where the Muslim League was likely to dominate. The display of blindness was unvarying.”

“Finally, and most fundamentally, the ideology and self-conception of Congress rested on a set of historical myths that disabled it from taking sober stock of the political problems confronting the struggle for emancipation from the Raj. Central to these myths was the claim that India had existed as a nation time out of mind, with a continuous identity and overarching harmony prior to the arrival of the British. Congress, in this outlook, was simply the contemporary vehicle of that national unity, in which differences of religious faith had never prevented ordinary people living peacefully side by side, under the aegis of enlightened rulers. Imperialism had sought to set community against community, and a handful of self-seeking Muslim politicians had colluded with it, but independence would show the world an India stretching from the North-West to the North-East Frontier Agencies, at one with itself, a democracy governed by a party in the tolerant traditions of the greatest emperors of its past, the modern expression of a six-thousand-year-old civilization.”

Was the division inevitable because of the deep religious antagonism and differences? The author writes;

“Yet it can of course be argued that no political force could have averted that division, so deep and so long-standing were the differences, and latent antagonisms, between the two major religious communities of South Asia.

Such a conclusion, however, is not more palatable to polite opinion in India than the alternative. Confronted with the outcome of the struggle for independence, Indian intellectuals find themselves in an impasse. If partition could have been avoided, the party that led the national movement to such a disastrous upshot stands condemned. If partition was inevitable, the culture whose dynamics made confessional conflict politically insuperable becomes a damnosa hereditas, occasion for collective shame. The party still rules, and the state continues to call itself secular. It is no surprise the question it poses should be so widely repressed in India.

Historically, the larger issue could be held undecidable. What is not beyond accounting, however, is something else. Whether or not partition was bound to come, the plain truth is that the high command of Congress took scarcely any intelligent steps to avert it, and many crass ones likely to hasten it; and when it came, acted in a way that ensured it would take the cruellest form, with the worst human consequences. For even were a scission of the subcontinent foreordained by its deep culture, its manner was not. At the hour of division, the political cupidity of Congress, in collusion with the dregs of the viceregal line, not only inflicted enormous popular suffering, which certainly could have been avoided, but compounded it with a territorial greed that has poisoned India’s relations with its neighbour down to the nuclear stand-off today.

 

Mr. Namat Arora,  a historian, writes about Gandhi and religion in his review of the book ” The Indian Ideology”

Gandhi’s success however came at a huge cost, writes Anderson, mostly due to his religiosity. To him ‘religion mattered more than politics’ as it did not even to Ayatollah Khomeini. Anderson presents, in a fresh way, a portrait of Gandhi, including the peculiar grab bag of Hindu beliefs, inflected with Christian ones, that he embraced, which would also inspire his odd ideas about sexuality and abstinence that have caused much head-scratching ever since. Would it were that his faith had played out only in the bedroom. Instead, it was part of a worldview that despised the social changes wrought by modernity — machines, railways, hospitals, and modern education — and defended all manner of atavisms. To ‘real intellectual exchange he was a stranger’ and ‘rarely disavowed directly anything significant he had once said or written’. He had ‘limited knowledge of, or interest in, the outside world’, as evident in his extreme misreading of Hitler. Allergic to socialism, his political ideal was a nebulous Ram Rajya. Floods and earthquakes were punishments for human failings. While he despised untouchability and even campaigned against it, he naively held that ‘the caste system is not based on inequality’, that discrimination could be removed by transforming minds while preserving castes, that the ‘hereditary principle is an eternal principle. To change it is to create disorder.’ Hinduism had a built-in mechanism for social justice since misbehaving Brahmins would be demoted in the next life and vice versa. “Over time, faced by Ambedkar’s attacks, he would tone down his views. Anderson observes that he knew little about Islam and warned his son to never marry a Muslim for it was against dharma. He claimed to revere the cow, reflexively imagined India as a Hindu nation, and was really a ‘Hindu revivalist’. The basic facts here are not new; what’s striking is Anderson’s choice of material and the narrative he weaves out of it.”

Mr. Namat Arora wrote a review on the Book ” The Indian Ideology ” and following is an excerpt from the review;

“A tragic impact of Gandhi’s takeover of Congress, writes Anderson, was that he ‘injected a massive dose of religion — mythology, symbology, theology — into the national movement.’ Despite his sincere belief in the parity of all religions, it was inevitably a Hindu imaginarium. It increased the popular appeal of Congress to Hindus but also sowed the seeds of Muslim alienation in Congress — which, behind the rhetoric, had only 3 percent Muslims in the 1930s when a quarter of the population was Muslim — culminating in Partition. . It inspired his ‘thoroughly regressive’ Khilafat campaign, opposed by secular-minded Muslims like Jinnah. It also led him to sabotage the British grant of a separate electorate to the Untouchables, championed by Ambedkar, who was ‘intellectually head and shoulders above most of the Congress leaders’ and held that ‘No matter what the Hindus say, Hinduism is a menace to liberty, equality and fraternity’. To Gandhi, observes Anderson, tackling the ‘sin of untouchability’ didn’t merit a fast unto death but blocking a political approach to empower the Untouchables did. After all,”

‘If Untouchables were to be treated as external to the Hindu community, it would be confirmation that caste was indeed, as its critics had always maintained, a vile system of discrimination … and since Hinduism was founded on caste, it would stand condemned with caste. To reclaim the Untouchables for Hinduism was an ideological imperative for the reputation of the religion itself. But it was also politically vital, since if they were subtracted from the Hindu bloc in India, its predominance over the Muslim community would be weakened. There were ‘mathematical’ considerations to bear in mind, as Gandhi’s secretary delicately reported his leader’s thinking on the matter. Most menacing of all, Gandhi confided to a colleague, might not Untouchables, accorded separate identity, then gang up with ‘Muslim hooligans and kill caste Hindus’?’

“More contentiously, Anderson argues that ‘contrary to legend, his attitude to violence had always been — and would remain — contingent and ambivalent.’ Nor did he have much success withSatyagraha, or non-violent resistance, for ‘each time Gandhi had tried it, the British had seen it off.’ Anderson claims that success in the nationalist struggle came from his rebuilding of Congress, its rise as a popular political force, and the steady expansion of the electoral machinery from 1909 — not from the mass mobilization of Satyagraha. But even if true, surely the latter amplified the former by raising mass consciousness. Moreover, wasn’t non-violence still preferable in this struggle to violent resistance? Anderson seems unconvinced. He admires the secular-leftist leader Bose, his ‘fearless militancy and commanding intellectual gifts’, and criticizes Gandhi’s undemocratic eviction of him from Congress. In Anderson’s view, the violence that Satyagraha‘spared the British was decanted among compatriots’, as in communalism and Partition. For Gandhi’s infusion of Congress with Hindu religiousity — of which, Anderson argues, Satyagrahawas a part — ‘was the origin of the political process that would eventually lead to partition.’

One has to read full essay to get the full picture, including Kashmir,other territorial disputes, Gandhi and Raj’s complicity in violence that took thousands of lives and last minute changing of borderlines.   To read full article click on the link below:  It is 26 page long article, but once you start reading, time flies.

http://www.lrb.co.uk/v34/n14/perry-anderson/why-partition

The author has two more articles ” Gandhi Center Stage” and ” After Nehru”

References used by Mr. Perry Anderson

Lineages of the Present: Ideology and Politics in Contemporary South Asia by Aijaz Ahmad (Verso, 377 pp., £14, 2002, 978 1 85984 358 1)
The Punjab Bloodied, Partitioned and Cleansed: Unravelling the 1947 Tragedy through Secret British Reports and First-Person Accounts by Ishtiaq Ahmed (Oxford, 500 pp., £32.50, March, 978 0 19 906470 0)
The Duel: Pakistan on the Flight Path of American Power by Tariq Ali (Pocket Books, 336 pp., £8.99, 2009, 978 1 84739 374 6)
The Pathan Unarmed: Opposition & Memory in the North-West Frontier by Mukulika Banerjee (James Currey, 256 pp., £17.99, 2000, 978 0 85255 273 5)
Nehru: A Political Life by Judith Brown (Yale, 407 pp., £18, 2005, 978 0 300 11407 2)
The Partition of Bengal and Assam, 1932-47: Contour of Freedom by Bidyut Chakrabarty (Routledge, 288 pp., £100, 2004, 978 0 415 32889 0)
Bengal Divided: Hindu Communalism and Partition, 1932-47 by Joya Chatterji (Cambridge, 324 pp., £36, 2002, 978 0 521 89436 4)
The Princes of India in the Endgame of Empire, 1917-47 by Ian Copland (Cambridge, 320 pp., £40, 2002, 978 0 521 89436 4)
The Rediscovery of India by Meghnad Desa (Bloomsbury, 512 pp., £25, 2011, 978 1 84966 350 2)
The Life of Mahatma Gandhi by Louis Fischer (HarperCollins, 672 pp., £8.99, 1997, 978 0 00 638887 6)
Independence and Partition: The Erosion of Colonial Power in India by Sucheta Mahajan (Sage, 428 pp., £31.99, 2002, 978 0 7619 9368 1)
Britain Since 1918: The Strange Career of British Democracy by David Marquand (Phoenix, 512 pp., £14.99, 2009, 978 0 7538 2606 5)
An Autobiography by Jawaharlal Nehru (Penguin, 672 pp., £13.99, 2004, 978 0 14 303104 8)
The Discovery of India by Jawaharlal Nehru (Penguin, 656 pp., £29.99, 2004, 978 0 670 05801 3)
War and Peace in Modern India by Srinath Raghavan (Palgrave, 384 pp., £60, 2010, 978 0 230 24215 9)
The Garrison State: Military, Government and Society in Colonial Punjab, 1849-1947 by Tan Tai Yong (Sage, 333 pp., £39.50, 2005, 978 0 7619 3336 6)

[*] Aijaz Ahmad, radicalising Mushirul Hasan’s original sentiment.

O’ HEART! DOES ANY ONE KNOW WHAT YOU ARE?

O’ HEART! DOES ANY ONE KNOW WHAT YOU ARE?

In peace, heart tunes the love’s reed;
In war, it mounts the warrior’s steed.
It rules the court, the week, the bold,

And sparks love into young and old,
All men below and saints above;
For love is heart, and heart is love. . . . Ashraf

(Inspired by Sir Walter Scott’s poem on Love)

WHY MUSLIMS ARE BACKWARD? Some ideas presented at the TF monthly session in March 2012

Since i joined the TF I’ve heard Mr. Salik ask this question “why are Muslims so backwards”. Before we answer the question let’s examine if we really are backwards.  Some may say it’s just the way “the media” and “the West” portrays us.Please go to this link and scroll down a little: http://www.123muslim.com/islamic-articles/10277-muslim-jewish-comparison.html. I’d also ask the readers to go to the UN & UNICEF sites and compare counties with same per capita income in western world and the muslim world and  see the big differences in education levels, especially girls, big differences in neonatal, infant and maternal mortality. After seeing these statistics most rational people will conclude we are backward.
One of the reasons frequently quoted for this sorry state of affairs of Muslims is “colonialism”. Of course it is easy to put the blame on someone else but if colonial suppression was a reason for a race/religion being backwards, then the Jews should be the most backward religion of all; they have been persecuted for centuries but they still excel. Singapore, Hong Kong, Iceland, Sweden all were under colonial rule at some time or another and these countries are nowhere near backwards. And there are many other explanations offered by Muslims to explain their backwardness, most of them blaming external sources.
But what really are the reasons? It is a very complex question to answer. I’ll offer mine; and i want to emphasize they are mine alone. I expect very few people to agree with my reasons; most will disagree. I will list the reasons under the following headings i) genetic/racial/ethnic reasons ii) reasons relating to our religion and its followers, the Muslims.
Genetic/Racial/Ethnic: This may be a controversial reason but i strongly suspect it plays a role. This may sound racist to some, self-loathing to others but the truth has to be faced, even if it is bitter. I am not saying that there are individual Muslims who are not much smarter than most Jews or Christians; my reason more relates to the races as a whole unit – comparing the races and ethnicities that comprise the majority of the Muslim population and the races that comprise the Jewish and Christian populations..
Reasons related to Islam and Muslims: I have lumped the two categories together because sometimes it is hard to distinguish whether the reason pertains to the religion itself or Muslims’ interpretation of the religious edicts and i am not scholarly enough myself to parse the differences. Even scholars disagree as to whether certain observances, beliefs and actions are derived from the Quran and reliable hadith or are cultural in origin or even misinterpretations of the Quran/hadith.
i) I think that the Muslim belief that this life is just a blip and is not as important as the afterlife results in fatalism about your station in this life; so if you are poor & uneducated, so what, as long as you get to heaven with all its promised goodies.  There is nothing wrong in the belief to keep this life in perspective as compared to the afterlife but both extremes are harmful.
ii) Our inability to separate usury from interest: We just mentioned the disparity in the # of inst. of higher learning. How are we to build institutions of higher learning or hospitals, costing millions of dollars, without borrowing? The richest people in Islam who could possibly donate the whole amount for such institutions are busy building fancy mosques and spreading their brand of islam. also how is a person of poor means to start a business if he cannot apply for a loan at the bank. Thus the poor remain poor, entrepreneurship is killed.
iii) Our greater focus on religious education versus secular education.
iv) Our belief that Islam is not just a religion but a way of life. I will not debate here if this is right or wrong but will touch on only one result of this belief – the political system. I think having religion as the final authority in running a modern country is the reason we have so many failed islamic states. there is a famous quote: politics is inherently a dirty game; religion does not make it cleaner, politics ends up defiling religion. there is a video by Zakir Naik. I admire his wealth of knowledge but don’t necessarily agree with all he says. At the end he says the West has advanced because they have moved away from religion but for Islam to advance we have to move closer to religion. How does that make sense? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-12lOG1r_V0&feature=related.
I’d like others to contribute to this discussion or offer counter arguments.
In order to keep this presentation short, i’ve not gotten into details about each individual reason at length but would elaborate if someone asked for it.

Today’s Lecture-The Golden Age of Islam

Today, December 2nd, 2012 , Mr. Azeem Farooki made a great presentation in the meeting on “The Golden Age of Islam”. It was followed by a lively and robust discussion. After the presentation, some of the question/topics raised and discussed were;

1- Causes of downfall  after Golden Age? 2- What contributed to the Golden Age? 3- Was Golden Age co-incidental 4- Al-Farabi, Averroes  and similar thought philosophers’ impact on Gleden Age 5- Alghazali , Al-Arabi , Rumi & Sufism and its impact on Golden Age..6- Islam and Philosophy.

Below is the lecture by Azeem Farooki. Please comment on any aspect, especially causes of downfall.    

The Golden Age of Islam 

The Golden Age of Islam is the most productive period in history from 8th to 13th centuries of an Islamic society that valued learning, acquiring knowledge, and seeking education.  The word Qur’an means reading, it refers to the text which is read as Kitab, meaning the written book. The very first words revealed to the Prophet (peace be upon him) were “Read in the name of your Lord”, followed by concepts of “reading”, “learning”, “knowing” and “pen” in the first two lines of the scripture.  The Prophet (pbuh) emphasized and advised pursuit of knowledge.  The Islamic civilization evolved into a diverse society, and drew its strength from the interaction of many cultures, ethnicities, and faiths.  Muslim scholars compiled, decoded, and improved upon the ancient knowledge of Babylon, Greece, Rome, Persia, Egypt, and India.

 

After the death of the Prophet (pbuh), the Islamic Community was led by a series of Caliphs.  The first four are known as “rightly guided” and they were elected by the community.  Thereafter, the caliphate became hereditary starting with the Ummayad clan who ruled 661-750, from Damascus, Syria.  The next dynastic Caliphs were known as Abbasid and they ruled 750-1258, from Baghdad, Iraq.  After the fall of Damascus, one Ummayad prince Abdul Rehman who survived the genocide, fled to Spain and founded the Western Ummayad dynasty.  During the next 500 years, competition between Abbasid and Western Umayyad promoted Muslim innovations.  In 15th century, the Turkish Ottomans took over the caliphate, and it lasted for 400 years. Mustafa Kamal Ataturk, the founder of Turkey, abolished it in 1924 and exiled the last Caliph Sultan Abdul Majid II (1868-1944) to Europe from Istanbul.

 

There were two major centers of excellence during The Golden Age of Islam:

 

1. Abbasid Caliphate in Baghdad, Iraq      

 

In ancient times the land area between the two rivers Tigris and Euphrates plain known as Mesopotamia was called the Cradle of Civilization, now known as Iraq.  Various nations came to the Babylon land, Cyrus the Great came in 539 BC and Alexander the Great arrived in 331 BC. Khalid ibn al Waleed conquered the Euphrates delta in 634 and Arabic replaced Persian as the official language. Abbasid Caliph Abu Jafar al-Mansur founded the City of Baghdad in 758 on the west bank of the river Tigris.

 

Baghdad became a major commercial and cultural city. Intellectual activity in the field of Islamic law, which started in Madinah during the Umayyad period, now moved to the new metropolitan city of Baghdad. Caliph Harun al-Rashid (763-809) became the fifth Caliph of the Abbasid dynasty in 786, and established cultural, intellectual, and scientific disciplines. His opulent court is romanticized in the renowned story book: The Thousand and One Nights, includes popular tales like Aladdin’s Lamp, Ali Baba and Forty Thieves, and Sindbad the Sailor Man. Al-Mamun (813-833) became the sixth Abbasid Caliph and established the famous House of Wisdom (Bayt al-Hikma) in Baghdad in 830.

House of Wisdom contained an extensive library, an academy, a translation bureau, and several astronomical observatories. Where no Arabic terms existed, the Greek terms were transliterated and brought new words into language, for example:

Falsafah = Philosophy, Jumatriya = Geometry, Jughrafiyah = Geography.

 

Byzantine Emperor provided manuscripts of Euclid (300 BC) known as The Elements and it was translated.  All manuscripts from the House of Wisdom were translated from Arabic into Latin and in Hebrew, thus providing the fundamental knowledge in philosophy and science to European scholars. In 10th century, Baghdad was considered the intellectual and cultural center of the world. In recognition to the Caliph al-Mamun’s contributions to astronomy, one of the craters on the Moon is named al-Mamun.

 

A famous scholar of the House of Wisdom was Mohammed ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi (780-850). His book Hisab al-Jabr wa’l-Muqabalah translated as Mathematics of Transposition and Cancellation laid the foundation of algebra. He introduced Indian numerals 0-9 for calculation. It was the Latin transliteration of the title word al-Jabr, that originated the term “algebra” in Europe, and the book remained a textbook for a long time. Al-Khwarizmi was transliterated as Al-goritimi from which the European word “algorithm” was derived. In recognition of his contributions to mathematics and astronomy, the Soviet Union issued a special stamp in 1987 bearing his resemblance. Also, another crater on the Moon is named al-Khwarizmi.

 

2. Ummayad Caliphate in Cordoba, Spain

 

Spain was ruled by the Byzantine King Roderick during the Umayyad Caliphate of Al-Walid (705-715) in Damascus, Syria. Musa ibn Nusair and Tariq ibn Ziyad defeated King Rodriguez in 710, captured the cities of Cordoba, Toledo, and Seville, and established Muslim rule in Spain and Portugal that lasted for the next 900 years. It was known as al-Andalus. Today the southern province of Spain is known as Andalusia.

 

Emphasis on learning and education was the centerpiece of Muslim Spain resulting in advances in science, medicine, and philosophy. Translation work, including Sanskrit books from India, was carried out and continued into the 12th century. Italian translator Gerard of Cremona (1114-1187) translated 71 books from Arabic into Latin. In Cordoba, there were seventy libraries with 60,000 books. There was no city like Cordoba in Europe and students from France and England came to learn in Cordoba. Irrigation systems were developed that turned the dry plains of Spain into an agricultural paradise and new fruits, grains and vegetables were introduced to Europe.

 

Muslims brought the tropical fruit crops from India and introduced lemons, bananas, almonds, pomegranates, dates, figs, peaches, apricots, oranges, watermelons, sugarcane, cotton, saffron, rice, cumin, cucumbers, coriander, and artichoke in the dry climate of Spain, Central Asia and the Mediterranean.

 

The intellectual society of Cordoba known for its equality and justice for all residents, produced Muslim and Jewish scholars like Ibn Rushd / Averroes (1126-1198) and

ibn Maymun / Maimonides (1135-1204).  Many scholars, scientists, and philosophers such as: al Kindi (801-873), Ibn Sina (980-1037), al Razi (865-925), az-Zahrawi (936-1013), Ibn Haytham (965-1040), Omar Khayyam (1048-1131), al-Ghazali (1058-1111), al-Idrisi (1099-1166), Attar (1145-1146), ibn Arabi (1165-1240), Rumi (1207-1273), ibn Khaldun (1332-1406), and Ulug Beg (1394-1449) emerged from Baghdad and Cordoba.  So far, 24 craters on the moon are named after Muslim scholars, the last name is Ulug Beg for his contributions to astronomy at the Ulug Beg Observatory in Samarqand.

Accomplishments

According to Michael Hamilton Morgan in his book The Lost History, Khwarizmi showed the way of not only building of 100 story towers and mile long bridges but the very essence of designing the modern computers; calculating the point at which a space ship will intersect with the orbit of Jupiter’s moon; the reactions of nuclear physics; the cellular processes of biotechnology; pharmaceutical and marketing research; the calculus of global economy; the language and intelligence of computer software and the confidentiality of modern phone conversations.

In the book The Genius of Islam – How Muslims Made the Modern World, the author Bryn Barnard wrote that Islam’s best known contribution to humanity is the translation of ancient knowledge into Arabic, and when this knowledge became known to medieval Europe, it started the Renaissance, which is the starting point of the modern world.

He highlights the Islamic achievements as follows:

 

1. Mathematics was upgraded to calculate charity, inheritance, and taxes; astronomy was retooled to accurately establish the direction and precise times of prayer and fasting and used to create maps and navigational tools to the pilgrimage to Makkah; architecture evolved to build mosques, palaces and homes: irrigation and horticulture were developed to keep a growing population fed; medicine and pharmacology were expanded to keep people healthy; efficient communications methods were invented to keep them informed.  Muslim merchants in India liked the Hindu Indian numeral systems of nine numerals and zero the decimal and positional system. In the 13th century, Muslim numerical system was adopted in Spain and Italy allowing later on to understand Newton’s calculus and Einstein’s theory of relativity in time and space.

 

2.  Muslim learned to make paper when they spread into Central Asia in 8th century.

Before Islam, Arabia’s main art was oral poetry. The Qur’an itself was initially only recited. When the Qur’an was finally written down – the art of Calligraphy flourished, resulting in the demand for paper. The Islamic world evolved from a memory based oral culture to a scribal and printing society which now uses 300 million tons of paper in one year worldwide.

 

3.  In architecture, Islam’s most influential element is the pointed arch allowing building walls to be thinner and buildings higher. The pointed arch was first used in 705 in building the Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem.

 

4.  Islam gave the idea of a hospital. In Persia, sick people went to a center called Beemaristan “place of the ill” – where they were treated by a specialist. The first Muslim Beemaristan was built in Damascus in 706. By 1106, there were sixty in Baghdad and fifty in Cordoba, Spain. The first European medical school was founded in Palermo, followed by Montpellier, Bologna, Padua in Italy and then in Paris, France. Designed on Muslim templates, they were called – hospitals – from the Latin word for “guest”.

 

5.  Few things are more fundamental to modern civilization than crank-and-connecting-rod mechanism like wheel, a crank, and rod of an automobile. The wheel is a prehistoric idea. The crank is a Chinese invention of a rod or knob attached to the side of a wheel, allowing it to be pushed and pulled. When a hinged rod is attached at a right angle to the end of a crank, the turning wheel moving the crank around pushes and pulls the rod back and forth. This simple invention was first outlined in 1206 by the Arab engineer Isma’il ibn al Razzaz al-Jazari (1136-1206) in his “Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices” in Arabic Kitab fi ma’rifat al-hiyal al handaiyya, along with descriptions of several mechanical devices.

 

6.  Considered as the most important document in the history of medieval engineering, the crank and rod mechanism allowed Muslim engineers to use waterwheels that drove many kinds of machines. This resulted in: Steam powered automobile with back and forth pistons in 1769; Steam powered ship with cranked rotating paddles in 1803; Gasoline powered airplane with cranked spinning propellers in 1903.

According to Bryn Barnard, it is hardly an exaggeration to say that this medieval Islamic invention makes the modern world go around; he further cites the following examples.

 

7.  Abu Ali al-Hasan ibn al-Haytham (965-1040), 11th century Muslim mathematician, philosopher, and astronomer introduced the idea of the bending of the light i.e. the Law of Refraction which was used by the Renaissance Europeans to create all manner of glass lenses. This discovery resulted in the design of camera, microscope, telescope, binoculars, projector, and glasses

 

8.  Islam’s impact on Western music world is significant, to say the least. Nearly every instrument in classical orchestra and pop music ensemble started out as a musical instrument from Arabia, Persia, Turkey, North Africa, or another part of the Islamic world. The marching band and the Western orchestra’s percussion section started as Muslim military music. Western composers Hayden, Mozart, and Beethoven composed Turkish music that used drums, a triangle, and cymbals. Muslim warrior music of Ottoman Empire is now regularly played at the Super Bowl.

 

This libraries and translation centers in Iraq and Spain attracted the best scholars from all over the world and laid the foundation for centuries of Muslim innovation. The books would become the West’s link to a Greek past, seen from then on through Muslim eyes.

 

Scholars & Philosophers

 

As the Islamic empire grew larger an elaborate system of religious law was developed called Sharia, preserving fundamental Islamic beliefs, and its application called Fiqah. There are four sources to look for answers and come to conclusion:  The first is Qur’an. The second source is Traditions – Hadees to see what the Prophet (pbuh) said and acted in a similar situation. If the two primary sources prove insufficient or inapplicable, then two additional sources Ijma and Qiyas are utilized to come to a decision. Ijma is the consensus of the Muslim community, meaning the view held by majority. Qiyas is to try to find similarity on an issue so that a comparison may be made based on Qur’an, Hadees, and then coming to one’s own conclusion. The Shia scholars added Opinion of the Shia Imams as the fifth source for Sharia and follow the Jafari school of thought, developed by the sixth Shia Imam Jafar al Sadiq (702-748).  The Sunni scholars developed four schools of thoughts on Islamic Jurisprudence and its legal system applied to all aspects of Muslim life:  Hanafi by Abu Hanifa (699-787); Maliki by Malik ibn Anas (715-795); Shafi by Mohammad Al-Shafi (768 – 820); and Hanbali by Ahmad Ibn-Hanbal (780- 855) who founded the most strict Hanbali school of thought.

 

In addition to the religious scholars or Ulema, another group of thinkers was interpreting all previous knowledge into a single system, a group known as the philosophers. The religious scholars divided the world between Muslims and non-Muslims. However, the philosophers placed the believers who were committing sins into a third category as Mutazilites or secessionists, and believed that every human act was not pre-ordained, man was a free agent, and reason is the main tool to discover truth independently of revelation. A rift now developed between religious scholars and philosophers when Abu Bakr al-Razi (841-925) said the miracles are just legends and heaven and hell are imaginary concepts and not physical entities. Nevertheless, the scholar-theologian Abu al-Hasan al-Ashari (874-936) had a theory that cause and effect were determined by God and he formed the Asharite group.

 

Abu Hamid Muhammed al-Ghazali (1058-1111) wrote The Aims of the Philosophers to explain Aristotle. He wrote a second book Incoherence of Philosophers and argued that faith can never be based on reason as reason’s function was to support revelation and all the truth we need we can find from the revelation. Ghazali came to the rescue of Asharites who were constantly competing with the Mutazilites doctrine. Ghazali also wrote Alchemy of Happiness and The Revival of the Religious Sciences explaining how the Sharia law is compatible with the Tariqa of Sufism. People loved his writings and the Mutazilites doctrine was discarded. Ghazali had a mental breakdown for several years and eventually became a Sufi – a movement which believed that reason does not lead you to ultimate truth but mystical ecstasy and obliteration of the self surely will. Regardless, the impact of not studying the sciences and inadvertently discarding reason and research was devastating to Muslim minds.

 

Unexpected Tragedies & Impact

 

After the reign of al-Mamun, the Abbasid caliphate was weakened by internal strife, and eventually fell under the control of Persians and Turks.  The Mongols, Genghis Khan (1162-1227) and later on his grandson Hulagu Khan (1217-1265) indiscriminately destroyed many cities. All books were burned, canals ruined and Caliph al-Mustasim was killed in Baghdad along with thousands. As a final touch, Tamerlane (1336-1405), the Mongol prince of Samarqand, decided to destroy Baghdad one more time in 1401, along with hundreds of other Islamic towns.

 

In Muslim Spain, internal fighting among the rulings kings resulted in disintegration into small kingdoms known as the Party of Kings. They built mini-alliances, sided with the Christian armies to defeat their own brothers, and eventually lost and destroyed their infrastructure. Result was a complete humiliation, annihilation, and defeat of an empire that took hundreds of years to build. The last ruler Abu Abd Allah was forced to leave his beloved Granada in 1492, in shame and misery, and died in Morocco in 1527.

 

The impact of the external forces along with internal strife decimated Baghdad, its Islamic culture and society. Religious scholars discouraged study of science and mathematics. West started learning new things from the vast translation efforts of Baghdad and Cordoba and making discoveries in 16th century.

Aristotle is considered the founder of Western thought, forgetting that Ghazali, Ibn Sina, and Ibn Rushd, wrote extensive commentaries and made Aristotle’s difficult ideas understandable to Europeans. Europe set out to deliberately forget its Islamic heritage. In 1345, the Tucson poet and scholar Petrarch demanded the expulsion of all Arab learning from European education and claimed Muslim inventions as their own. They replaced Arab star names with Latin ones. John Freely describes this in his book Aladdin’s Lamp – How Greek science came to Europe through the Islamic World. He says eventually the Muslim contributions to the West were barely a memory to all.

Michael Hamilton Jordan in his book Lost History describes the commonly held beliefs that the greatness of the West is based on the knowledge acquired from the Greek and Roman societies. He says history is simplified by assigning a period of Dark Ages when the West was hibernating and then suddenly the great scholars, scientists and mathematician wake up to create an industrial revolution. Religion plays an important part and the Judeo-Christian faith provides the catalyst to the awakening. This gives scant attention to anything that the Golden Age of Islam produced and preserved. The author says several theories exist to explain the past 1400 years. Oriental group theory says the Muslim world during the 8th thru 13th centuries developed a society which showed brilliance of thought; their curiosity led them to study books beyond their times and shores; the intense effort of translation from Greek, Roman and Sanskrit literature allowed discoveries in every field of human thought. A second group believes that Islam is inherently incapable of intellectual freedom, democratic values and hence social and scientific progress. A third group gives credit to Muslims in scientific superiority over West until the 15th century as they could not keep up due to internal turmoil. The fourth liberal group emphasizes the higher values of Islam: quest of knowledge, equality of all before God, and thus is still hopeful of contributing. The fifth group takes credit for everything ever discovered.

The wounded civilization of Baghdad continued to flourish for a while in Egypt under the rule of Fatimid Caliphs but simply could not continue after the Mongol attack on Baghdad. There were glimpses of grandeur and splendor during the Ottoman, Safavid, and Moghul Empires up to the 18th century. Suleiman the Magnificent (1520-1566) is known as The Lawgiver – in Arabic al-Qanuni, for creating hundreds of laws that remain in effect to this day. He introduced the uniforms and band in his army. His chief architect Mimar Sinan (1490 – 1588) built the most majestic mosques in Istanbul and Ankara.

 

The Safavid (1502-1736) Empire excelled in fine arts, paintings and building cities like Isfahan (called Nisf-Jahan – half the world). Its Naqsh-e-Jahan square with beautiful boulevards, gardens, and mosques is considered by UNESCO as World Heritage Site.

 

The Moghul Empire (1526-1857) in India left its mark of kings and monarchs that ruled in religious freedom, justice, peace, and harmony, and gave the world architectural monuments like Taj Mahal. However, the spirit of creation and innovation never really regained the original passion, despite attempts to rekindle the flame by the likes of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan, Allama Sir Muhammad Iqbal, and Muhammad Ali Jinnah.

I believe the problem with a majority of Muslim population worldwide today is not the socio-religious groups and their ideology and practice, or lack of religious schools and mosques, but an apathy and disinterest of learning and acquiring modern education, especially computer science. Some Muslim professionals prefer to have their children become Hafiz instead of becoming professionals like themself.  I was asked to fund tuition of a college bound girl of a poor Muslim family in Madras, India, her parents preferred that she get a degree in arts, than computer science.  In Hyderabad India, a Muslim family rents their apartment not to Muslims but to Hindu boys who pay rent on time because they are computer engineers. Compare this to the majority of Auto Riksha drivers in the city who are illiterate young Muslims, barely speaking English, seldom making ends meet, and their main goal in life is to acquire Steve Jobs gadgets.

 

In the United States, ask ourselves the question how a non-Muslim Indian Professor was selected to become the Dean of Business School of Harvard University? What qualities are we lacking to achieve such a prestigious honor? Is it not a tragedy that after diligently studying, getting degrees in medicine, engineering and business sciences from prestigious colleges, the brightest Muslim minds protesting in the name of religion, waste their lives either by killing themselves or attempting to kill innocent people, destroying public property, and as a result languishing in prison for life.

 

One way to interpret the modern predicament is the current mentality by some that any thought originating outside the revelation is evil and haram and other cultures are bad influences on Muslims. This could be due to colonialism and domination, its memory is still fresh on our minds. Some have visceral hatred for the West and some hate for its political policies. I think abandoning the very first command of “Iqra” – its emphasis on reading, learning, knowing, searching for reason – and instead looking for answers unwittingly from a single source, was akin to committing intellectual suicide.

 

I know that it is equally important to develop, besides scientists and computer engineers, Muslim politicians, journalists, writers, and artists in the civil society to keep the backward thinkers on the fringe.  I am still hopeful that the Best Days of Islam are yet to come, as I certainly have faith in the grit and resilience of our young generation, but until the majority of us break the cycle of accepting that ignorance is bliss, continue to blame our faults and actions on the Western countries, we will not only maintain our status quo but will slide downward.

 

I like to remind us what Allama Iqbal expressed poetically by quoting directly from the Qur’an Chapter 13, Verse 11:  “God never brings a positive change to a nation (Umma), unless the nation is determined to change itself”.

Compiled by: Azeem Farooki

Acknowledgement: Information in this article is extracted from Internet and history books listed below.  Errors in dates, names, and description of events are unintentional.

1. Lost History – Michael Hamilton Jordan              2. Aladdin’s Lamp – John Freely                                              3. Destiny Disrupted – Tamim Ansari                     4. The Genius of Islam –  Bryn Barnard