April 21, 2003 |
||
|
WHAT WENT WRONG? Western Impact and Middle East Response Bernard Lewis Oxford University Press, 2002, 180 pp. |
|
Lewis, Professor of Near Eastern
Studies Emeritus at Princeton, is one of the foremost authorities on Islamic
history and culture. The book,
written largely from three public lectures given in 1999, documents the
historical eclipse of the Middle East over the past three centuries. A somewhat academic volume, it is
generally positive and optimistic about Islam. It offers some clues to but does not seem to anticipate the
high level tension of today’s political situation. For many centuries Islam was in the forefront of human
civilization. (3) Europe was seen much as Africa, “an outer darkness of
barbarism and unbelief from which there was nothing to learn…” (4) “…the Renaissance, the Reformation, the
technological revolution passed virtually unnoticed in the lands of Islam.”
(7) Ch 1. Battlefield LessonsFor centuries Islam was victorious. The first peace signed by a defeated
Ottoman Empire with victorious Christian adversaries was the Treaty of
Carlowitz in 1699. (18) In 1630 an Ottoman civil servant drew attention to
civilian and military weaknesses, attributing them to a falling away from the
good old ways. The remedy was a
return to them. “This diagnosis and
prescription still command wide acceptance in the Middle East.” (23) Ch 2. The Quest for Wealth and Power“In a society accustomed to despise the infidel
barbarians…even traveling abroad was suspect; the idea of studying under
infidel teachers was inconceivable.”
However, religious authorities gave permission to imitate infidels in
order to fight them more effectively.
For a long time, they didn’t ask why the infidels were the ones
inventing the new devices. (43) In the early 1800s, the Ottoman leaders began to ask the
source of European wealth and strength.
Since Christianity was known to be an inferior and corrupt form of
religion, the source had to be elsewhere.
(45) “For the whole of the
nineteenth and most of the twentieth century the search for the hidden
talisman concentrated on two aspects of the West—economics and politics, or
to put it differently, wealth and power.” (46) Modernization in the Ottoman Empire was accelerated by
printing, translation, newspapers, telegraph, war correspondents, and
Christian missions. Proselytizing
Muslims was a capital offense but Catholics and Protestants competed to win the
Eastern Christians. They printed
newspapers and other literature that gained a wide readership. Newspapers
transformed peoples’ perception of themselves and the world. (51-2) “The cumulative effect of reform and modernization was,
paradoxically, not to increase freedom but to reinforce autocracy: 1. by
strengthening the central power through …central communication…, and 2. by
enfeebling or abrogating the limiting traditional intermediate powers….” (53) Liberty or freedom meant one who was not a slave. “The converse of tyranny was not liberty
but justice. Justice in this context
meant essentially two things, that the ruler was there by right and not by
usurpation, and that he governed according to God’s law….” (54) “By 1920, it seemed that the triumph of Europe over Islam
was complete.” “The once great
Ottoman Empire was defeated and occupied, its Muslim provinces parceled out
among the victorious powers.” “But
the victory was illusory and of brief duration. The West European empires, by the very nature of the culture,
the institutions, even the languages that they brought with them and imposed
on their colonial subjects, demonstrated the ultimate incompatibility of
democracy and empire, and sealed the doom of their own domination.” “…these ideas had encouraged the Christian
subject peoples of the Ottoman Empire to rebel and demand their
independence. In the twentieth
century, the same ideas had the same effect on the Muslim subject peoples of
the European empires….” (60-1) “The difference
between Middle Eastern and Western economic approaches can be seen even in
their distinctive forms of corruption, from which neither society is
exempt. In the West, one makes money
in the market, and uses it to buy or influence power. In the East, one seizes power, and uses it
to make money. Morally there is no
difference between the two, but their impact on the economy and on the polity
is very different.” (63) Ch. 3. Social and Cultural BarriersWomen, science, and music, mark three crucial differences
in approach, in attitude, and in perception between two neighboring
civilizations. (66) “According to Islamic law and tradition, there were three
groups of people who did not benefit from the general Muslim principle of
legal and religious quality—unbelievers, slaves, and women. The woman was obviously in one significant
respect the worst-placed of the three.”
(67) “The emancipation of women by modernizing rulers was one
of the main grievances of the radical fundamentalists, and the reversal of
this trend is in the forefront of their agenda.” “The emancipation of women is Westernization; both for
traditional conservatives and radical fundamentalists it is neither necessary
nor useful but noxious, a betrayal of true Islamic values.” (73) Islamic civilization (in the Middle Ages) made immense
contributions to the rise of modern science in Europe but it was very
reluctant to investigate and accept it.
“In Europe, the scientific movement advanced enormously in the era of
the Renaissance, the Discoveries, the technological revolution, and the vast
changes, both intellectual and material, that preceded, accompanied, and
followed them. In the Muslim world
independent inquiry virtually came to an end….” (78-9) Ch. 4. Modernization and Social Equality“The slave, the woman, and the unbeliever were subject to
strictly enforced legal, as well as social, disabilities, affecting them in
almost every aspect of their daily lives.
These disabilities were seen as an inherent part of the structure of
Islam, buttressed by revelation, by the precept and practice of the Prophet,
and by the classical and scriptural history of the Islamic community.” (84) “Islam, in contrast to both ancient Rome and the modern
colonial systems, accords the slave a certain legal status and assigns
obligations as well as rights to the slave owner.” “The institution of slavery is not only recognized but is
elaborately regulated by Islamic law.”
(85) “Form a traditional Muslim point of view, to abolish
slavery would hardly have been possible.
To forbid what God permits is almost as great an offense as to permit
what God forbids.” (86) Ch. 5. Secularism and the Civil Society“Secularism in the modern political meaning—the idea that
religion and political authority, church and state are different, and can or should
be separated—is, in a profound sense, Christian.” “The authoritative Christian text on these matters is the
famous passage in Matthew 22:21, in which Christ is quoted as saying, ‘render
therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s; and unto God the things
that are God’s.’” (96-7) “For three centuries, Christianity was a persecuted
religion—different from, sometimes opposed to, and often oppressed by the
state authority. In the course of
their long struggle, Christians developed a distinctive institution—the
church, with its own laws and courts, its own hierarchy and chain of
authority.” “Their relationships
(Christianity and the state) may be one of cooperation, of confrontation, or
of conflict.” (97-8) “Muhammad was, so to speak, his own Constantine.” “There is, for example, no distinction
between canon law and civil law, between the law of the church and the law of
the state, crucial in Christian history.
There is only a single law, the shari’a, accepted by Muslims as of
divine origin and regulating all aspects of human life….” (100) “Muhammad achieved victory and triumph in his own
lifetime. He conquered his promised
land, and created his own state, of which he himself was supreme
sovereign. As such, he promulgated
laws, dispensed justice, levied taxes, raised armies, made war, and made
peace. In a word, he ruled, and the
story of his decisions and actions as ruler is sanctified in Muslim scripture
and amplified in Muslim tradition.”
“The state was the church and the church was the state, and God was
head of both…” (101) “It is only in comparatively recent times that Muslim
religious thinkers of stature have looked at secularism, understood its
threat to what they regard as the highest values of religion, and responded
with a decisive rejection.” (104) “In the secularization of the West, God was twice
dethroned and replaced—as the source of sovereignty by the people, as the
object of worship by the nation.”
(106) “A whole series of Islamic radical and militant
movements…share the objective of undoing the secularizing reforms of the last
century… In Three countries, Iran,
Afghanistan, and Sudan, these forces have gained power. In several others they exercise growing
influence, and a number of governments have begun to reintroduce shari’a
law….” (106) “But their primary enemies, and the most immediate object
of their campaigns and attacks, are the native secularizers—those who have
tried to weaken or modify the Islamic basis of the state…. The arch-enemy for most of them is Kemal
Ataturk, the founder of the Turkish Republic and the first great secularizing
reformer in the Muslim world.” (107) “In modern times, Islamic tolerance has been somewhat
diminished.” Since 1683 Islam has
been a retreating force in the world and Muslims have been threatened by the
rise and expansion of the great Christian empires of Europe. The threat was no longer merely military
and political; “it was beginning to shake the very structure of Muslim
society.” “Muslim majorities, feeling
morally threatened, became unwilling to accord even the traditional measure
of tolerance.” (114-15) Ch. 6. Time, Space, and ModernityMiddle-Eastern technology and science ceased to develop
when Western Europe was most rapidly advancing. (125) Ch. 7. Aspects of Cultural Change“Cultural change is Westernization; part of modernization,
no doubt, but not, according to a widely held view, an essential part of it.” (135) In the medieval movement, what was useful was translated,
that is to say primarily medicine, astronomy, chemistry, etc. No literature. No philosophy. That was
not regarded as useful. Everything
worth having was had. (139) ConclusionIn the 19th and 20th century, the
West was dominant, invading the Muslim in every aspect of public and private
life. (151) As the Arab world asked what went wrong, the new scapegoat
was Western imperialism. (153) Anti-Semitism from Nazi Germany had taken root in the Arab
world. Hostile stereotypes of the Jew
made the events of 1948, the failure of 5 Arab states and armies to prevent
half a million Jews from establishing a state, a tremendous shock and
intolerable humiliation. Some were
led to “blame all evil in the Middle East and indeed in the world on secret
Jewish plots. This interpretation has
pervaded much of the public discourse in the region, including education, the
media, and even entertainment.” (154) For the Islamists, the failures of modern Islamic lands
“afflicted them because they adopted alien notions and practices. They fell away from authentic Islam, and
thus lost their former greatness.
Those known as modernists or reformers take the opposite view, and see
the cause of this loss not in the abandonment but in the retention of old
ways, and especially in the inflexibility and ubiquity of the Islamic
clergy.” (157) “For the governments, at once oppressive and ineffectual,
that rule much of the Middle East this (blame) game serves a useful, indeed
an essential purpose—to explain the poverty that they have failed to
alleviate and to justify the tyranny that they have intensified.” (159) |
||