{"id":12933,"date":"2015-02-23T10:00:39","date_gmt":"2015-02-23T14:00:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/?p=12933"},"modified":"2015-02-23T10:00:39","modified_gmt":"2015-02-23T14:00:39","slug":"abdelwahab-meddeb-the-malady-of-islam-5","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/abdelwahab-meddeb-the-malady-of-islam-5\/","title":{"rendered":"Abdelwahab Meddeb: The Malady of Islam (5)"},"content":{"rendered":"<h1 class=\"p1\"><span class=\"s1\"><b><a href=\"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/02\/maladie.jpeg\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-12835 lazyload\" data-src=\"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/02\/maladie.jpeg\" alt=\"maladie\" width=\"228\" height=\"332\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/02\/maladie.jpeg 237w, https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/02\/maladie-205x300.jpeg 205w\" data-sizes=\"(max-width: 228px) 100vw, 228px\" src=\"data:image\/svg+xml;base64,PHN2ZyB3aWR0aD0iMSIgaGVpZ2h0PSIxIiB4bWxucz0iaHR0cDovL3d3dy53My5vcmcvMjAwMC9zdmciPjwvc3ZnPg==\" style=\"--smush-placeholder-width: 228px; --smush-placeholder-aspect-ratio: 228\/332;\" \/><\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/02\/malady.jpg\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-12832 lazyload\" data-src=\"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/02\/malady.jpg\" alt=\"malady\" width=\"225\" height=\"336\" src=\"data:image\/svg+xml;base64,PHN2ZyB3aWR0aD0iMSIgaGVpZ2h0PSIxIiB4bWxucz0iaHR0cDovL3d3dy53My5vcmcvMjAwMC9zdmciPjwvc3ZnPg==\" style=\"--smush-placeholder-width: 225px; --smush-placeholder-aspect-ratio: 225\/336;\" \/><\/a><\/b><\/span><\/h1>\n<h2 class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: center;\"><span class=\"s1\"><b>The Malady of Islam<\/b><\/span><\/h2>\n<h4 class=\"p4\" style=\"text-align: center;\"><span class=\"s1\"><b>by Abdelwahab Meddeb<br \/>\n<\/b><\/span><b><br \/>\ntranslated from the French by<br \/>\n<\/b><b>Pierre Joris and\u00a0Charlotte Mandell<\/b><\/h4>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><em><strong>(5th installment)<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong>P A R T II<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong>A Genealogy of Fundamentalism<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong>9<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> To throw light on the genesis of Saudi Arabia and the formation of its ideology, it is necessary to go far back in the course of history. Before returning to the eighteenth century, one has to go as far back as the ninth. When I evoked above such a sequence of events from the Middle Ages, I suggested that I might try to illuminate further the figure of Ibn Hanbal, one of the protagonists who took part in the events in Baghdad during the first quarter of the ninth century. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\">As discussed earlier,\u00a0Ibn Hanbal created one of the four law schools of Sunni Islam. His doctrine insists more than any other on a return to the purity of the letter and on the imitation of the <i>salaf<\/i>, the \u201cAncients of Medina\u201d, which amounts to trying to apply to every person and to each century the idealized model of the Prophet\u2019s city. What is omitted\u00a0<\/span><span style=\"line-height: 19.2000007629395px;\">is that from its very beginning \u2014 only a few years after the Prophet\u2019s death \u2014 <\/span><span style=\"line-height: 1.5;\">Medina, which\u00a0in the seventh century experienced the birth of the Prophet\u2019s politics, was historically scarred by a bloody civil war. Three of the first four Caliphs (whom myth called the \u201cwell-guided Caliphs\u201d) were assassinated. A great part of the history of Islam took place in the violence of civil war, and at regular intervals it has been rocked by factional disputes concerning legitimacy. Ibn Hanbal covered over the issues and enmities that had divided the early community by promoting the adversaries and enemies of those first days of discord to the hierarchy of the Ancients; he tried to reconcile the greatest number in order to win a large consensus favorable to rallying the community to the one and incontestable truth of the Qur\u2019an and the tradition (the <\/span><i style=\"line-height: 1.5;\">sunna<\/i><span style=\"line-height: 1.5;\">). So as not to trouble the horizon of such a truth, he advised against recourse to personal opinion (<\/span><i style=\"line-height: 1.5;\">al-ra\u2019y<\/i><span style=\"line-height: 1.5;\">) as recommended by other schools of law. He therefore recommended that the reading of the Qur\u2019an be literal, and should avoid any allegorical exegesis.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> Between the time of Ibn Hanbal (the early ninth century) and the eighteenth century, which saw the birth of Saudi ideology through the intermediary of Mohamed Ibn &#8216;Abd al-Wahhab (1703-1792), there was\u00a0the intermediary link constituted by Ibn Taymiyya (1263- 1328). This Syrian theologian was a radical disciple of Ibn Hanbal who lived through an uneasy period for Islam (this kind of radicalism, by the way, comes to the fore only when the entity to which one belongs is under major threat). Ibn Taymiyya lived during the time of\u00a0the Mongol invasions, the sacking of Baghdad and the end of the Caliphate, with the perils posed by the Crusades barely overcome. This was an extremely dangerous, even apocalyptic situation for Islam, which felt threatened in its very being. Ibn Taymiyya, gifted with exceptional intelligence and energy, spent his life lying in wait for any protrusion that might mar the smooth surface of the letter, and he set himself the task of polishing that letter, by ridding it of the variety of meanings that decorated its profile. He indiscriminately hunted down the effects of philosophy on theological discourse and its contaminations by Greek thought; he fustigated any number of esoteric sects, decreeing them to be heretic by virtue of the privilege they accorded to hermeneutics; he denounced the theory and the experience of the uniqueness of Being as preached and lived by the Sufis, whom he considered far more dangerous than the Christians for a belief based on absolute monotheism. While, among the Christians, God became man on one single occasion (through the Incarnation), with the Sufis, the human disposition towards the reception of the divine is open and universal. In every day life this constitutes an attack on the idea of the One God. Ibn Taymiyya also denounced pilgrimages and visits to the tombs of saints by condemning every manner of intercession, identified with the detestable survivals of paganism and idolatry that deserved nothing but eradication [1].<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\">Ibn Taymiyya also wrote a short book, a sort of manifesto, which, since its composition at the beginning of the fourteenth century, constitutes the breviary that delights the eyes and the hearts of each and every suitor of the pure letter. This book is called <i>Politics in the Name of Divine Law for Establishing Good Order among the Affairs of the Shepherd and the Flock <\/i>[2]. Its many small, popular one-hundred page editions, bear witness to this text\u2019s wide diffusion. The book sets out the charter which links the prince and his subjects in their submission to the <i>Sharia<\/i>, Islamic law. The radicalism emanating from such a book totally fulfills the expectations of the fundamentalists. This text alone is worth an exhaustive analysis to help us delineate the symptoms of what I call the malady\u00a0of Islam. I will, however, cite only a few characteristic passages, sufficient for the purposes of the book at hand.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> To begin with, the author makes corporal punishment<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>as set out by the Qur\u2019an the very criterion of the law. These punishments, very few in number, involve stoning for adultery, flagellation for false accusation of adultery, flagellation of the wine drinker, the chopping off of the hand of the thief, chopping off of the hands and feet or crucifixion for highway banditry (depending on whether or not homicide is involved). These rudiments of a penal code are called <i>hudud<\/i>, the plural of <i>hadd<\/i>, a word which in the common vocabulary means \u201cinterval, obstacle, extremity, end, point or edge, limit, border.\u201d They constitute God\u2019s claim, the inalienable share of justice that belongs to God and that cannot be called into question or paid for in any other way. Ibn Taymiyya adduces an anecdote concerning the Prophet asked by a plaintiff who wanted to withdraw his accusation against a thief in order to spare the latter the amputation of his hand; the Prophet grows angry, arguing that nobody, not even he, can intervene in what he has called \u201cGod\u2019s share\u201d: the latter separates God and humans by an unbridgeable border, made tangible through the prescriptions which distribute bodily punishments according to the offence. The Prophet then told the plaintiff to think twice before accusing someone, because once the machinery of law has been put into motion, it is impossible to go back. It is that share of the law which is not negotiable, and with which neither rank nor fortune can interfere.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> This vision, which locates the share of the law in the untouchable region of transcendence, seems to echo Kant\u2019s perception of penal law. In the section devoted to \u201cthe right to punish and pardon\u201d contained in the \u201cDoctrine of law,\u201d the first part of the <i>Metaphysics of Morals<\/i>,\u201d he writes:\u00a0<\/span><span style=\"line-height: 1.5;\">\u201cPenal law is a categorical imperative, and woe onto him who would slip into the serpentine rings of eudemonism in order to discover something which, by the advantage it promises him, would deliver him from punishment or diminish the latter.[3]\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"line-height: 1.5;\">In Kant\u2019s mind law is thus outside the world, beyond any empirical consideration or human feeling; here too one is inside a logic of purity that rids the law of any utilitarianism, that relieves it of any compromise:\u00a0<\/span><span style=\"line-height: 1.5;\">\u201cFor justice ceases to be justice as soon as it puts a price on itself.[4]\u201d Let us remember that the passage in Kant leads to a defense of capital punishment and a refutation of the theses developed by one of his early critics, the Marquis di Beccaria, in his <\/span><i style=\"line-height: 1.5;\">Dei delitti e delle pene<\/i><span style=\"line-height: 1.5;\"> (1764) [5].<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> But is it necessary to insist that a world separates Kant and Ibn Taymiyya? For the German philosopher, the purity and absoluteness of law aim at considering man as an end and not as a means. In his company, and in the context of the Enlightenment that\u00a0is his, we remain inside the horizon of freedom. With the Syrian scholar, we do not leave the theocentrism that submits man to the order of the Divine. For the one the purity and absoluteness of law are attained by recourse to divine transcendence, for the other, law is its own foundation. This law will become, during the nineteen twenties, transcendence itself, if one follows the theories of the Kantian jurist Hans Kelsen[6].<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> Concerning the application of corporal punishment, many other schools of law show themselves much more adaptable. Out-of-court settlement is permitted by certain jurists for false accusations of adultery as well as for theft, for these are offenses that violate a human right. Active repentance is also taken into account in relation to theft and banditry. And recourse to <i>shubba<\/i>, the \u201cresemblance\u201d of the committed act to a licit act, can merit the accused a presumption of innocence. The jurist has set up many ruses to soften the approach of the <i>hudud<\/i>. Further, the establishment of proof is made very difficult. Finally, it is considered more praiseworthy to pass over in silence faults involving corporal punishment rather than adducing proofs[7].<\/span> <span class=\"s1\"> In fact, there is a wide range of \u201cliberal\u201d procedures which Ibn Taymiyya does not mention.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p2\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 30px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[1] These polemics can be found in his <i>Fatwas<\/i>, all of which have been published under the auspices of the Saudi State in an edition of more than twenty volumes, the whole of which their Embassies offer as presents!<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>See also his epistles and controversies, assembled in Ibn Taymiyya, <i>Majmu\u2019at al-Rasa\u2019il wa\u2019l-Masa\u2019il<\/i>, edited by M. Rashid Ridha in five parts distributed over 2 volumes, Cairo, nd. Rashid Righa (1865-1935) is Mohammed \u2018Abduh\u2019s Syrian student, who deviated from his master\u2019s horizon by given a more restrictive meaning to the <i>salaf<\/i>, which \u2018Abduh had extended from the first Muslims in Medina to include the great traditional thinkers up to Ghazali (d. in 1111). Add to this his suspicions against sufism and you will understand the belated interest he developed in Ibn Taymiyya. As a consequence of this adherence to the Hanbalite doctor from Damascus, he repudiated an early text in which he assimilated Wahhabism to a <i>bid\u2019a<\/i>, a \u201cblamable innovation;\u201d towards the end of his life he will shower praise on this same Wahhabism, just before the definitive triumph of Abd al-Aziz Ibn Saud, the founder of Saudi Arabia (in 1932).<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p2\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 30px;\"><span class=\"s1\"> [2] Ibn Taymiyya, <i>as-Siyasa ash-Shar\u2019iyya fi Islah ar-Ra\u2019i wa\u2019r-Ra\u2019iyna<\/i>, Cairo, n.d.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p2\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 30px;\"><span class=\"s1\"> [3] Immanuel Kant, <i>La Metaphysique des moeurs, Doctrine du Droit<\/i>, trad. A Philonenlo, (Vrin, Paris, 1993, p. 214).<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p2\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 30px;\"><span class=\"s1\"> [4] ibid. p. 215<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p2\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 30px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[5] ibid. p. 217. Hegel also showed how such a purity resulted in revolutionary terror: see the section entitled \u201cAbsolute Freedom and Terror\u201d in the <i>Phenomenology of Mind<\/i>, 599-610.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p2\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 30px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[6] Hans Kelsen, <i>La th\u00e9orie pure du droit<\/i>, translated from the German by Charles Eisenmann, LGDI Bruylant, Paris-Bruxelles, 1999.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p2\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 30px;\"><span class=\"s1\"> [7] Encyclop\u00e9die de l\u2019Islam, art. <i>Hadd<\/i>, ed. By B. Carra de Vaux and J. Schacht.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p2\" style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong><span class=\"s1\"> 10<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> In his <i>siyasa<\/i>,Ibn Taymiyya\u00a0makes <i>jihad<\/i>, holy war, one of his privileged themes. He gives it the same importance as prayer, and seems to situate it above the other four canonical prescriptions (the confession of faith, fasting, charity to the poor and the pilgrimage). To indicate its high status, he associates it with the image that is meant to represent religion: a column with the base representing submission to God, the shaft representing prayer and the capital representing <i>jihad<\/i>. Thus he makes the fight against the infidel one of the two functions of the prince, who must devote his energies to the service of religion, by insuring on one hand the triumph of virtue inside the polis (through the rigor of corporeal punishments), and on the other hand by waging holy war beyond the borders. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> At the end of his manifesto, Ibn Taymiyya concludes that by putting all the means of the empire (the financial and military capacities) in the service of religion, Islam will complete its religious edifice: it works toward the conquest of the benefits of the world here below and confirms those of the hereafter. He thinks of this as Islam\u2019s achievement of the greatest possible political and religious victory; through this accomplishment such a community avoids a double peril: The first peril is\u00a0produced by the two forms of separation between the political and the religious \u2013 political power that does not take religion into account. The second danger is religion that\u00a0is only preoccupied with itself, divesting itself of power and grandeur to reduce itself to humility and compassion. This double peril is what happened to the two other religions, which grew impotent, unable to perfect the religious edifice.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>They took two erroneous paths: the one that asserts religion without being able to put political, financial and military power at its disposal, and the one that does possess the power, money and military might but without any plan to put these in the service of the establishment or the strengthening of religion. The first path is the one of those \u201cwho will incur divine anger\u201d; the second is the one of those who \u201cwent astray\u201d[2]. The Jews take the first, the Christians the second of these paths.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> We realize how much the consubstantiality of the political and the religious (which so many believe to belong to the essence of Islam) is just the elaboration of one theologian transformed into a warrior of his faith (I&#8217;ll return to this question later in the book). This consubstantiality is presented as an ideality (or utopia) and as a galvanizing slogan in the framework of an ideology that is now being reactivated by contemporary fundamentalists.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> And I cannot pass over in silence how wrong Ibn Taymiyya turns out to be when we compare his words with the facts of his era and the historical memory that formed it. Thus when it comes to the Jews denied political and military power, many of the poems written by the Spanish Jew Yehuda Halevi (circa 1075- circa 1141) bear witness to that privation stressing the pathos of the situation:<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p4\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">The son of the slave robes me with terror<br \/>\n<\/span>and throws his dart with a high hand&#8230;<br \/>\nI have been stripped of the light of love<br \/>\nAnd a proud foot presses on me like a yoke.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p4\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">I suffer from the cruelty of his customs<br \/>\n<\/span>In exile, in prison, in sadness, revolted<br \/>\nWithout leader or minister of state.<br \/>\nThe enemy approaches and the rock steps aside.[3]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> A like dispossession\u2013 sign of exile \u2013 was represented in Christianity. Witness the allegory of the Synagogue shown under the south porch of Strasbourg cathedral (middle of the thirteenth century). The synagogue is represented as a beautiful lady with bandaged eyes (to signify that her gaze remains darkened to the new light emitted by the New Testament\u2019s grace) and carrying a broken lance (to recall her exclusion from active statecraft and from the use of arms). But what about Christianity? On the same gothic porch, facing the synagogue, haughtily steps the allegory of the Church as a noble Lady proudly exhibiting the attributes of power (crown and intact lance) together with the ecclesiastical symbols. Ibn Taymiyya couldn\u2019t help remembering the Crusades, a chapter barely closed when he was born, and which were nothing but the adaptation of jihad in Christianity. Either\u00a0the Syrian theologian was\u00a0well appraised of the latest episodes in the conflict between the pope and the emperor concerning the sharing of power between the temporal and spiritual realms, or he simply dismissed the words of the Gospels that separate the realm of God from that of Caesar.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> It is in\u00a0the long run\u00a0that Ibn Taymiyya\u2019s words turn out faulty. Taking into account historical evolution, every reasonable person will conclude that our theologian\u2019s judgment is only contingent, even if it did take the long <i>periplos<\/i> of the centuries to prove him wrong. As far as I know, humanity\u2019s greatest political achievement took place in Europe, originating from a Christian genealogy, even if it was formed precisely on the separation from religion, through the effects of an intellectual negation that neutralized the inherited belief. With the return of Israel to statehood (Yehuda Halevi\u2019s desire come true more than eight centuries after its poetic expression), the Jews\u2019 re-appropriation of the military has known its times of glory as well as its hours of decay. Today, it is the condition of Muslims that seems politically and militarily unhappy and marked by loss and defeat.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> But history has more than one trick up its sleeve. It gives the lie yet again to Ibn Taymiyya while simultaneously derailing a stereotype dear to common sense. If I have to weigh the contributions of the one and the other on the scales of history, I would say without fear of error that the most precious legacy that may be ascribed to Islam consists in the profusion and intensity of its body of spiritual texts. This legacy owes as much to the ardor and intensity of its poetic and lyrical sayings as to the exalted tenor of its speculations. The success of Islam took place was achieved in the Sufi corpus \u2013 denounced by Ibn Taymiyya, whereas\u00a0the defeat of Islam occurred in the political sphere \u2013 exactly where our theologian had situated the privileged space of his faith. In contrast,\u00a0according to a current credo,\u00a0only in Christianity\u00a0(since it is far from the political) can\u00a0the mystical experience come to its full realization, as Christianity is supposed to be the religion of love and not of law. And yet spiritual success recognizes itself as Islamic while political success recognizes itself as Christian. In truth the lesson of these observations is that the matter of history cannot be satisfied with an essentialist vision, either of the men or the ideas that create such a vision.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> To come back to Ibn Taymiyya, in his day he represented only one opinion among many. Though his radicalism pleased the crowd, it worried his colleagues in theology and in law, and he was a source of dissension within the <i>polis<\/i>. Accordingly he endured trials and long years of imprisonment (which he devoted to writing). His literalism, his anthropomorphic, \u201ccorporist\u201d dogmatism is derided by the traveler from Tangiers, Ibn Battuta (1304 \u2013 c. 1369) who claims to have met him:<\/span><\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p class=\"p5\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\">In Damascus there lived among the great Hanbalite jurists one Taqi as-Din Ibn Taymiyya, a man held in great esteem and who could discourse on the various religious sciences, though he was slightly deranged [4]. The people of Damascus highly venerated this man who exhorted them from his pulpit. On one occasion he proffered words that the jurists contested, and the latter referred his case to al-Malik an-Nasir who ordered him to be taken to Cairo. (\u2026) Al-Malik an-Nasir commanded that he be thrown in jail. Our man remained imprisoned for several years and in jail he wrote an exegesis of the Qur\u2019an he entitled <i>al-Bahr al-muhit <\/i>(\u201cThe Ocean\u201d) which ran to forty volumes\u2026. Ibn Taymiyya\u2019s mother went to complain to the sovereign and that is when al-Malik an-Nasir ordered him released from prison. But Ibn Taymiyya continued to behave the same way. I was in Damascus at that time and one Friday I witnessed one of his exhortations from the mosque\u2019s high chair. Among other things he said: \u201cGod descends toward the sky from the world here below as I now descend,\u201d and he took one step down from the high chair. A malekite jurist called Ibn as-Zahra confronted him and contested what he had said. The crowd rose up and beat the jurist with fists and sandals so hard that his turban fell off, revealing a silken skullcap [5]. The people criticized that piece of hairdress\u2026 (Ibn Taymiyya was then taken to the Hanbalites\u2019 judge, or kadi)\u2026 who had him imprisoned and flogged\u2026 The condemned man died in jail [6].<\/span><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> Such testimony shows the theologian as excited agitator, rousing the crowds, scandalizing his Sunni peers, even those who belonged to his \u2013 the Hanbalite \u2013 legal school. His attitude and provocation exasperated the good will of the political authority. He represents an ideological voice that embarrasses the state power without being unanimously backed by the scholars. On the other hand it would seem that he had the <i>vox populi<\/i> behind him, the voice of the people who seem to put up with simplifications and prefer the effortless adhesion to the apparent sense of the letter. It is that voice \u2013 bellicose, theatrical \u2013 that will be the voice listened to centuries on by the firebrands of fundamentalism. And above all, by the founder of Wahhabism.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[1] \u201cSubmission\u201d is the primary meaning of the word <i>islam<\/i>, in conformity with the instinct of natural religion; it is the return to this first principle of adoration that characterizes Islam as a religion.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[2] Two expressions taken from the last verse of the Qur\u2019an\u2019s opening Sura, called al-Fatiha. The interpretation proposed here by Ibn Taymiyya, which identifies the Jews with \u201cthose who (reap) divine anger\u201d and the Christians with those who have \u201clost the way,\u201d is traditional, though not shared by all.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[3] Yehuda Halevi, <i>Le Diwan<\/i>, trans. Into French by Y. Arroche and J.G. Valensi (Montpellier, Editions de l\u2019Eclat, 1988. p. 91-93)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[4] The Arab text says: \u201cilla anna fi \u2018aqlihi shay\u2019un,\u201d literally \u201cbut something was perturbing his mind.\u201d [Translator\u2019s addendum: Meddeb suggests that this Arabic expression, translated \u201cinto good French, means precisely \u2018mais il avait un grain\u2019\u201d \u2013<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>which could be Englished as \u201cbut there was a grain of folly in him.\u201d]<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[5] According to tradition, men are not supposed to wear silk.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[6] Ibn Battuta, <i>Voyages et p\u00e9riples<\/i>, in <i>Voyages Arabes <\/i>(Paris: Biblioth\u00e8que de la Pl\u00e9iade, Gallimard, 1995), p. 454-455.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p6\" style=\"text-align: center;\"><span class=\"s1\"><b>11<\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> Mohamed Ibn Abd al-Wahhab (1703-1792) is at the origin of the ideological strain that will be named Wahhabism for him. In the very interior of the Arabian Peninsula he preached a cross between the theory of Ibn Hanbal and that of Ibn Taymiyya. In his native Nejd, he established ties with the tribe of the Saud which strove to take over power by conquering the deserts of Arabia. Thus was launched \u2013 at the very heart of the eighteenth century and contemporaneous with the European Enlightenment \u2013 the puritanical movement that brought forth today\u2019s Saudi Arabia two centuries later.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> Through the contemporaneity of these two phenomena belonging to very separate mental spaces, a new era for the world opens. Since that time, the differential between co-existing human cultural modes has increased rapidly: we will find peoples living in the same century who illustrate the multiple states that humanity has known, from the immemorial pre-Neolithic to the child engendered by the latest technological revolution. The Marquis de Sade\u2019s reaction to the events in Arabia can be situated in the framework of this phenomenon which thereafter will be ever more exacerbated, until at the beginning of the twenty-first century, it manifests itself in the cohabitation on this single planet of that immemorial being and of the cosmonaut setting off to conquer space. Here is how a post-religious man at the end of the eighteenth century judges, in his new wisdom, his fellow man who is regressing towards the all-religious:<\/span><\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p class=\"p5\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\">And once again wars of religions are ready to devastate Europe. Boheman, leader and agent of a new sect of \u201cpurified\u201d Christianity, has just been arrested in Sweden, and the most disastrous plans were found among his papers. The sect to which he belonged is said to want nothing less than to render itself master of all the potentates of Europe and their subjects[1]. In Arabia new sectarians are emerging and want to purify the religion of Mahomet. In China even worse troubles, still and always motivated by religion, are tearing apart the inside of that vast empire. As always it is gods that are the cause of all ills[2].<\/span><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> The words are by the divine marquis, who had understood the danger of that sect at the very moment of its emergence. Note Sade\u2019s discernment in associating this peril of purification not just with Islam: he makes it into a universal problem that poses its threat as soon as a zealot tries to create a revolutionary and insurrectional movement in the name of the letter, whatever the specific religion may be.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>To demand that human affairs be conducted in the name of God can only engender fanatics and their attendant disasters.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p7\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\">If we examine Ibn Abd al-Wahhab as a doctrinaire writer (by reading, for example, his most famous book, <i>Kitab at-Tawhid<\/i>, \u201cThe Book of the Unicity of God\u201d) we will discover a scribe without an ounce of originality. We don\u2019t even dare give him the status of thinker. The book I have just mentioned is stuffed with citations, revealing its author as a copyist more than a creator. His numerous other briefer works confirm that his short breath doesn\u2019t bestow the dignity of a genre on the short form. The pages he has covered with writing confirm his obedience to strict Hanbalite thinking. He seems to be even more rigid than the founding master. Ibn Hanbal, as it turns out, revealed himself to as rather tolerant on the question of excommunication; Ibn Taymiyya himself acknowledged that the Baghdadi scholar was extremely exigent in relation to cultural obligations (the <i>\u2018ibadat<\/i>) but rather liberal when it comes to matters of custom (the <i>\u2018adat<\/i>). <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p7\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\">In the wake of this remark one can see how the cult of the saints could be tolerated by Ibn Hanbal, even if in his day the brotherhoods had not yet been constituted. On that question, as on many others, we witness an increase in the scale of intensity between the three links: we go from the relative tolerance of the master from Baghdad (ninth century) via the radical critique (though it remains theoretical) by the theologian from Damascus (ninth century) to the violent actions and the destructions of century-old mausoleums by the Arabian disciple (eighteenth century). In fact, there isn\u2019t a single saint\u2019s tomb left in all of Arabia today, except for the Prophet\u2019s in Medina[3]. To safeguard his faith, the Wahhabite does not hesitate to destroy the vestiges of civilization with the sole aim of preventing the redoubtable confrontation of the myth he propagates with actual historical documents.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> An entire world separates the two early masters from Ibn \u2018Abd al-Wahhab, though he claims to follow their teachings. It is important to recall that Ibn Hanbal also had a Sufi lineage that included some great masters. Certain concepts he introduced are not incompatible with inner experience \u2013 for example, the concepts of <i>tafwidh<\/i> (to trust to God in what concerns the ultimate mystery) and of <i>taslim<\/i> (conscious surrender to the word of God and his prophet in one\u2019s acts as well as in one\u2019s words). Such dispositions can favor the fideism of an Ansari (1006-1089), the great spiritual master from Herat, whom I remember with deep emotion at this very moment when bombs are raining on what remains of his beautiful city[4]. This master combined Hanbalite rigor with the incandescence of inner experience as manifested in the fireworks of his Qur\u2019anic meditations[5]. Here is the fragment of Qur\u2019anic verse that captured his gaze and converted him to Sufism: &#8220;<\/span>Those who believe are the most ardent in their love for God&#8221;[6].<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\">Here is the result of his meditations, one of his \u201cCries from the Heart\u201d: &#8220;<\/span>My God! I have water in the head and fire in the heart; inside I feel pleasure, outside I feel desire. I have foundered in an ocean without shores; there is a pain in my soul for which there is no remedy. My gaze fell on something that no language can describe.[7]&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\">Ibn Taymiyya shows exceptional constructive abilities when he turns away from invectives and anathema. His <i>Refutation of the Logicians<\/i>, a work full of subtleties, offers\u00a0perspectives that allow its thought to throw light on certain zones defined by modern logic[8]. We need to point out some of the nuances that make for the complexity of both Ibn Hanbal and Ibn Taymiyya\u2019s work, if only to distinguish it from that of their rough disciple from the Nejd, Ibn \u2018Abd al-Wahhab, whose work, given its poverty, could well have been consigned to oblivion.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\"> The mediocrity and doctrinal illegitimacy of \u2018Abd al-Wahhab have often been denounced, at times by unknown or very ordinary sheikhs who thought themselves more competent than he in matters of traditional sciences and gave themselves permission to condemn him.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>This is the case of Dawud al-Baghdadi, who demolishes the doctrine of Ibn \u2018Abd al-Wahhab in a booklet containing two refutations of Wahhabism (these treatises were completed in 1293 AH \/ 1875 CE and they were published in Istanbul in 1305 AH \/ 1887 CE)[9]. Al-Baghdadi recalls a fatwa that had been argued in 1195 AH. \/1780 CE by a contemporary of Ibn \u2018Abd al-Wahhab, the Shafiite sheikh Mohamed Ibn Sulayman al-Madani. The latter had received a query submitted to him accusing Ibn \u2018Abd al-Wahhab of having opened the road to ignorance and of having authorized uncultivated men to extinguish divine light. How could such a personage pretend to the interpretation of the dogma (<i>al-Ijtihad<\/i>) when he did not fulfill the conditions that scholarly tradition demanded of anyone exercising this art? Doesn\u2019t he need to submit himself to the scholars instead of continuing to attribute the imamate (Prophethood) to himself and to exhort the community to follow in the path he is laying out? Why does he call anyone who contradicts him impious and demand his death?[10] <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"s1\">Suppose, Baghdadi said,\u00a0that the conditions of <i>Ijtihad<\/i> were gathered in one person\u00a0who\u00a0would by, his own wits, elaborate a doctrine. Does that mean that he has to impose it on all and everyone, when the doctrinal domain is vast and the roads through it multiple, as established by the hermeneutic tradition, and corroborated by the scholars?[11] The critic asked for elucidations concerning Ibn \u2018Abd al-Wahhab\u2019s prohibitions of visits to the tombs of the saints, of vows, intercessions, offerings, sacrifice, the invocation of the prophet or of one of his companions in moments of distress, petitions addressed to someone else than God. The unknown querent who formulated this juridical consultation is also asking himself by what right the man from Nejd accuses the believer who makes use of such practices of being a renegade.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>The Shafiite scholar applies himself to the task of deconstructing one after the other all the prohibitions invented by Ibn \u2018Abd al-Wahhab. His very technical answers rely on some of the greatest names in Islamic theology, chosen among the most orthodox and exoteric Sunnites[12]. He ends up by revealing the author of those prohibitions as an illegitimate pretender to science, an ignorant sectarian, whose prescriptions wreck the complex edifice of law built up over the centuries[13].<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\"> [1] This Boheman is sort of a European equivalent of today\u2019s bin Laden.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\"> [2] D.A.F. Sade, <i>Cahiers<\/i> <i>personnels<\/i>, (Oeuvres Completes, XIII, JJ Pauvert, Paris, 1966) p. 9-10.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[3]<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>My friend, the poet Salah St\u00e9ti\u00e9, has told me that when visiting Arabia he learned that whenever the smallest archeological item relating to the history of early Islam and even to later Islamic periods is discovered, it is immediately covered in concrete. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[4] Concerning the Hanbalism the master from Herat was an adept of, see the preface by his translator, Serge de Laugier de Beaurecueil, in: Ansari, <i>Chemin de Dieu<\/i>, p. 24-30 (Paris Sindbad, 1985. [translator\u2019s note: Also see A. G. Ravan Farhadi, <i>Abdullah Ansari of Herat: An Early Sufi Master<\/i> (London, New York: RoutledgeCurzon Sufi Series, 1996).]<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[5] He was a redoubtable polemicist against intellectualist theologians.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[6] Qur\u2019an, II, 165<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[7] Ansari, <i>Cris du Coeur<\/i>, translated by Serge de Laugier de Beaurecueil (Sindbad, Paris, 1988) p. 82.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[8] Ibn Taymiyya, <i>Ar-Radd \u2018al\u00e2 al-Mantiqiyy\u00een<\/i> (Bombay, 1949).<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[9]<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>Dawud al-Baghdadi, <i>al-Mihna al-Wahbiyya fi Radd al-Wahhabiyya<\/i>, followed by <i>Ashaddal-Jihad fi Ibt\u2019al Da\u2019wa al-Ijtihad,<\/i> [1305 A.H. \/1887 C.E.), (reprint Istanbul: Ikhlas Vkfi Yayinidir, 1986.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[10] The Arab expression <i>Haddara dammahu<\/i> means exactly: \u201cto suffer, to permit that the blood of a man be spilled without the author of that act being susceptible to being pursued\u201d (used for a prince or a judge). Fundamentalists use this expression a lot, which constitutes a call for murder exonerating in advance the one who executes it.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[11] al-Baghdadi, <i>al-Mihna al-Wahbiyya fi Radd al-Wahhabiyya<\/i>, p. 40-41.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[12] Such as the Cordoban zhahirite Ibn Hazm (994-1063) and Ibn Qudama (1147-1223), the Hanbalite from Jerusalem.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: justify; padding-left: 60px;\"><span class=\"s1\">[13] al-Baghdadi, <i>al-Mihna al-Wahbiyya fi Radd al-Wahhabiyya<\/i>, p. 41-44.<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Malady of Islam by Abdelwahab Meddeb translated from the French by Pierre Joris and\u00a0Charlotte Mandell (5th installment) P A R T II A Genealogy of Fundamentalism 9 To throw light on the genesis&#46;&#46;&#46;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[11,37,933,55,1395,845,103],"tags":[124],"class_list":["post-12933","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-arab-culture","category-cultural-studies","category-history","category-intellectuals","category-islam","category-politics","category-translation","tag-abdelwahab-meddeb"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12933","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=12933"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12933\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":12936,"href":"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12933\/revisions\/12936"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=12933"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=12933"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pierrejoris.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=12933"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}