Brief Islamic History
The Rightly guided
Caliphs
Upon
the death of the Prophet, Abu Bakr, the friend of the Prophet and the first
adult male to embrace Islam, became caliph. Abu Bakr ruled for two years to be
succeeded by 'Umar who was caliph for a decade and during whose rule Islam
spread extensively east and west conquering the Persian empire, Syria and
Egypt. It was 'Umar who marched on foot at the end of the Muslim army into Jerusalem and ordered the
protection of Christian sites. 'Umar also established the first public treasury
and a sophisticated financial administration. He established many of the basic
practices of Islamic government.
'Umar was succeeded by 'Uthman who ruled for some twelve years during which
time the Islamic expansion continued. He is also known as the caliph who had
the definitive text of the Noble Quran copied and sent to the four corners of
the Islamic world. He was in turn succeeded by 'Ali who is known to this day
for his eloquent sermons and letters, and also for his bravery. With his death
the rule of the "rightly guided" caliphs, who hold a special place of
respect in the hearts of Muslims, came to an end
Umayyad
The
Umayyad caliphate established in 661 was to last for about a century. During
this time Damascus became the capital of an
Islamic world which stretched from the western borders of China to southern France.
Not only did the Islamic conquests continue during this period through North
Africa to Spain and France in the West and to Sind, Central Asia and Transoxiana in the East, but the basic
social and legal institutions of the newly founded Islamic world were
established.
Abbasids
The Abbasids, who succeeded the Umayyads,
shifted the capital to Baghdad
which soon developed into an incomparable centre of learning and culture as
well as the administrative and political heart of a vast world.
They ruled for over 500 years but gradually their power waned and they remained
only symbolic rulers bestowing legitimacy upon various sultans and princes who
wielded actual military power. The Abbasid caliphate was finally abolished when
Hulagu, the Mongol ruler, captured Baghdad
in 1258, destroying much of the city including its incomparable libraries.
While the Abbasids ruled in Baghdad, a number of
powerful dynasties such as the Fatimids, Ayyubids and Mamluks held power in Egypt, Syria
and Palestine.
The most important event in this area as far as the relation between Islam and
the Western world was concerned was the series of Crusades declared by the Pope
and espoused by various European kings. The purpose, although political, was
outwardly to recapture the Holy Land and especially Jerusalem for Christianity.
Although there was at the beginning some success and local European rule was
set up in parts of Syria and
Palestine, Muslims finally prevailed and in 1187
Saladin, the great Muslim leader, recaptured Jerusalem and defeated the Crusaders.
North Africa And Spain
When the Abbasids captured Damascus,
one of the Umayyad princes escaped and made the long journey from there to Spain to found Umayyad rule there, thus
beginning the golden age of Islam in Spain. Cordoba
was established as the capital and soon became Europe's
greatest city not only in population but from the point of view of its cultural
and intellectual life.
The Umayyads ruled over two centuries until they weakened and were replaced by
local rulers.
Meanwhile in North Africa, various local dynasties held sway until two powerful
Berber dynasties succeeded in uniting much of North Africa and also Spain in the
12th and 13th centuries. After them this area was ruled once again by local
dynasties such as the Sharifids of Morocco who still rule in that country.
As for Spain itself, Muslim
power continued to wane until the last Muslim dynasty was defeated in Granada in 1492 thus bringing nearly eight hundred years
of Muslim rule in Spain
to an end.
After the Mangol
Invasion
The
Mongols devastated the eastern lands of Islam and ruled from the Sinai Desert
to India
for a century. But they soon converted to Islam and became known as the Il-Khanids.
They were in turn succeeded by Timur and his descendents who made Samarqand
their capital and ruled from 1369 to 1500. The sudden rise of Timur delayed the
formation and expansion of the Ottoman empire
but soon the Ottomans became the dominant power in the Islamic world.
Ottoman
Empire
From
humble origins the Turks rose to dominate over the whole of Anatolia and even
parts of Europe. In 1453 Mehmet the Conqueror
captured Constantinople and put an end to the Byzantine
empire.
The Ottomans conquered much of Eastern Europe and nearly the whole of the Arab
world, only Morocco and Mauritania in the West and Yemen, Hadramaut and parts of the Arabian peninsula remaining beyond their control.
They reached their zenith of power with Suleyman the Magnificent whose armies
reached Hungary and Austria.
From the 17th century onward with the rise of Westem European powers and later Russia, the
power of the Ottomans began to wane. But they nevertheless remained a force to
be reckoned with until the First World War when they were defeated by the
Western nations. Soon thereafter Kamal Ataturk gained power in Turkey and
abolished the six centuries of rule of the Ottomans in 1924.
Persia
While
the Ottomans were concerned mostly with the western front of their empire, to
the east in Persia
a new dynasty called the Safavids came to power in 1502.
The Safavids established a powerful state of their own which flourished for
over two centuries and became known for the flowering of the arts. Their
capital, Isfahan,
became one of the most beautiful cities with its blue tiled mosques and
exquisite houses.
The Afghan invasion of 1736 put an end to Safavid rule and prepared the
independence of Afghanistan
which occurred formally in the 19th century. Persia
itself fell into tummoil until Nader Shah, the last Oriental conqueror,
reunited the country and even conquered India.
But the rule of the dynasty established by him was short-lived. The Zand
dynasty soon took over to be overthrown by the Qajars in 1779 who made Tehran their capital and
ruled until 1921 when they were in turn replaced by the Pahlavis.
India
As
for India, Islam entered
into the land east of the Indus
River peacefully.
Gradually Muslims gained political power beginning in the early 13th century.
But this period which marked the expansion of both Islam and Islamic culture
came to an end with the conquest of much of India in 1526 by Babur, one of the
Timurid princes. He established the powerful Mogul empire which produced such
famous rulers as Akbar, Jahangir, and Shah Jahan and which lasted, despite the
gradual rise of British power in India, until 1857 when it was
officially abolished.
In India Muslims participated in the freedom movement against British rule
along with Hindus and when independence finally came in 1947, they were able to
create their own homeland, Pakistan, which came into being for the sake of
Islam and became the most populated Muslim state although many Muslims remained
in India. In 1971, however, the two parts of the state broke up, East Pakistan
becoming Bangladesh.
Malaysia And Indonesia
Farther
east in the Malay world, Islam began to spread in the 12th century in northern
Sumatra and soon Muslim kingdoms were established in Java, Sumatra and mainland
Malaysia.
Despite the colonization of the Malay world, Islam spread in that area covering
present day Indonesia, Malaysia, the southern Philippines and southern
Thailand, and is still continuing in islands farther east.
Africa
As
far as Africa is concerned, Islam entered into East Africa at the very
beginning of the Islamic period but remained confined to the coast for some
time, only the Sudan and Somaliland becoming gradually both Arabicized and
Islamized.
West Africa felt the presence of Islam through North African traders who
travelled with their camel caravans south of the Sahara.
By the 14th century there were already Muslim sultanates in such areas as Mali, and Timbuctu in West Africa and Harar in East Africa had become seats of Islamic learning.
Gradually Islam penetrated both inland and southward. There also appeared major
charismatic figures who inspired intense resistance against European domination.
The process of the Islamization of Africa did not cease during the colonial
period and continues even today with the result that most Africans are now
Muslims carrying on a tradition which has had practically as long a history in
certain areas of sub-Saharan Africa as Islam
itself.
In Africa also major countries with large or majority Muslim populations such
as Nigeria, Senegal and Tanzania began to gain their independence in the 1950's
and 1960's with the result that by the end of the decade of the 60's most parts
of the Islamic world were formed into independent national states. There were,
however, exceptions. The Muslim states in the Soviet Union
failed to gain their autonomy or independence. The same holds true for Sinkiang
(called Eastern Turkestan by Muslim geographers) while in Eritrea and the southern
Philippines Muslim independence movements still continue.
Islam in the Western
World
It
is almost impossible to generalize about American Muslims: converts,
immigrants, factory workers, doctors; all are making their own contribution to America's
future.
This complex community is unified by a common faith, underpinned by a countrywide
network of a thousand mosques.
Muslims were early arrivals in North America.
By the eighteenth century there were many thousands of them, working as slaves
on plantations. These early communities, cut off from their heritage and
families, inevitably lost their Islamic identity as time went by. Today many
Afro-American Muslims play an important role in the Islamic community.
The nineteenth century, however, saw the beginnings of an influx of Arab
Muslims, most of whom settled in the major industrial centre where they
worshipped in hired rooms. The early twentieth century witnessed the arrival of
several hundred thousand Muslims from Eastern Europe: the first Albanian mosque
was opened in Maine in 1915; others soon
followed, and a group of Polish Muslims opened a mosque in Brooklyn
in 1928.
In 1947 the Washington Islamic Centre was founded during the term of President
Truman, and several nationwide organizations were set up in the fifties. The
same period saw the establishment of other communities whose lives were in many
ways modelled after Islam. More recently, numerous members of these groups have
entered the fold of Muslim orthodoxy. Today there are about five million
Muslims in America.
Aftermath of the
Colonial Period
At
the height of European colonial expansion in the 19th century, most of the
Islamic world was under colonial rule with the exception of a few regions such
as the heart of the Ottoman empire, Persia,
Afghanistan, Yemen and certain parts of Arabia.
But even these areas were under foreign influence or, in the case of the
Ottomans, under constant threat. After the First World War with the breakup of
the Ottoman empire, a number of Arab states such as Iraq
became independent, others like Jordan
were created as a new entity and yet others like Palestine,
Syria and Lebanon were
either mandated or turned into French colonies. As for Arabia, it was at this
time that Saudi Arabia
became finally consolidated. As for other parts of the Islamic world, Egypt
which had been ruled by the descendents of Muhammad Ali since the l9th century
became more independent as a result of the fall of the Ottomans, Turkey was
turned into a secular republic by Ataturk, and the Pahlavi dynasty began a new
chapter in Persia where its name reverted to its eastern traditional form of
Iran. But most of the rest of the Islamic world remained under colonial rule
Arab
It
was only after the Second World War and the dismemberment of the British,
French, Dutch and Spanish empires that the rest of the Islamic world gained its
independence. In the Arab world, Syria
and Lebanon became
independent at the end of the war as did Libya
and the shaykdoms around the Gulf and the Arabian Sea
by the 1960's. The North African countries of Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria had
to fight a difficult and, in the case of Algeria, long and protracted war to
gain their freedom which did not come until a decade later for Tunisia and
Morocco and two decades later for Algeria. Only Palestine
did not become independent but was partitioned in 1948 with the establishment
of the state of Israel
Far East
Farther east still,
the Indonesians finally gained their independence from the Dutch and the Malays
theirs from Britain.
At first Singapore was part
of Malaysia
but it separated in 1963 to become an independent state. Small colonies still
persisted in the area and continued to seek their independence, the kingdom of Brunei becoming independent as recently
as 1984.
National States
While the world of
Islam has entered into the modern world in the form of national states,
continuous attempts are made to create closer cooperation within the Islamic
world as a whole and to bring about greater unity. This is seen not only in the
meetings of the Muslim heads of state and the establishment of the OIC
(Organization of Islamic Countries) with its own secretariat, but also in the
creation of institutions dealing with the whole of the Islamic world. Among the
most important of these is the Muslim World League (Rabitat al-alam al-Islami )
with its headquarters in Makkah. Saudi Arabia has in fact played a
pivotal role in the creation and maintenance of such organizations.
The
Islamic world remains today a vast land stretching from the
Atlantic to the Pacific, with an important presence in Europe and America,
animated by the teachings of Islam and seeking to assert its own identity.
Despite the presence of nationalism and various secular ideologies in their
midst, Muslims wish to live in the modern world but without simply imitating
blindly the ways followed by the West. The Islamic world wishes to live at
peace with the West as well as the East but at the same time not to be
dominated by them. It wishes to devote its resources and energies to building a
better life for its people on the basis of the teachings of Islam and not to
squander its resources in either internal or external conflicts. It seeks
finally to create better understanding with the West and to be better
understood by the West. The destinies of the Islamic world and the West cannot
be totally separated and therefore it is only in understanding each other
better that they can serve their own people more successfully and also
contribute to a better life for the whole of humanity.
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