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September 5, 2010 Dross in Yet Another Islamic 'Golden Age'By Andrew G. Bostom
The myth of a golden age of rational Islam plays a critical role in maintaining the somnolence of America's establishment in grasping the implacability of political jihad. Currently (see here, reviewed 9/2/10 at The National Review Online), the Mutazilites, typified by the Abbasid Muslim rulers al-Mamun (r. 813-833) and al-Mutasim (r. 833-842), are being lionized as avatars of the kind of "rationalist freethinking" which might have spared both Muslims and non-Muslims from the consequences of traditionalist Islamic irredentism.
These views are a contemporary repackaging of idealized portrayals initially put forth by Heinrich Steiner in 1865 and reiterated afterward by late 19th- and early 20th-century writers. All such romantic and apologetic portrayals -- past and present -- maintain that the Mutazilites were "liberal" rationalists and freethinkers. But these roseate characterizations are grossly oversimplified and ahistorical. The Mutazilites were pious Muslims motivated by Islamic religious concerns, first and foremost. The wistful projection of "Mutazilism" as a "squandered" modernizing force for Islam is an untenable hypothesis, debunked long ago by Ignaz Goldziher, one of the preeminent Western scholars of Islam. Goldziher acknowledges the "one salutary consequence" of the Mutazilites' ruthless endeavors was bringing "aql," reason, "... to bear upon questions of belief." But he also demonstrates that the Mutazilites exhibited no real manifestation of liberated thinking or any desire "... to throw off chafing shackles, to the detriment of the rigorously orthodox [Islamic] view of life." Moreover, the Mutazilites' own orthodoxy was accompanied by fanatical intolerance -- they orchestrated the "Mihna," or Muslim Inquisition, under their brutal 9th-century reign during the Abbasid-Baghdadian Caliphate.
And Goldziher has also shown how the Mutazilites advocated jihad in all realms where their doctrine was not ascendant while being fully prepared to assassinate those who refused to abide their formulations.
H.S. Nyberg summed up the Mutazilites' more general call for jihad in his Encyclopedia of Islam essay (p. 605): "[T]he faith (Islam) must be spread by the tongue, the hand, and the sword." Thus, the Mutazilites' jihadism was hardly confined to their internal Muslim antagonists. The Mutazilite Caliph Al-Mamun brutally subdued a Coptic Christian uprising in Lower Egypt, exterminating those who were not among the thousands enslaved and deported. (see Bat Yeor's The Decline of Eastern Christianity Under Islam, pp. 112, 131-2) And below is a prototypical example of a Mutazilite-led bloody jihad against the non-Muslim infidel in a neighboring area of the Dar al-Harb -- Byzantine Christian Anatolia -- written by the medieval chronicler Michael the Syrian. He is describing the 838 CE Muslim conquest of Amorium in Byzantine Anatolia (the current Turkish village of Hisarköy) by the Abbasid Mutazilite Caliph al-Mutasim, who succeeded Al-Mamun, and ruled from 833-42 (see, my The Legacy of Jihad, pp. 598-99):
Pace the latest Mutazilite revisionism, Nyberg's authoritative Encyclopedia of Islam entry (p. 601) states plainly,
However, Goldziher's even more sobering conclusions (pp. 98,102-3), gleaned from informed, serious, and thoughtful analyses of their doctrine and history, merit particularly careful review.
Ignaz Goldziher's sagacious words remind us that in our zealous desire for an Islamic Enlightenment, we must not rewrite past history as a prologue to perceived modern "solutions."
on "Dross in Yet Another Islamic 'Golden Age'"
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