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How did the infidels win?
National Post ^ | June 01 2002 | Bernard Lewis

Posted on 06/01/2002 11:01:44 AM PDT by knighthawk

From the time of Muhammad till the second siege of Vienna in 1683, Islamic civilization regarded the Christian West as a benighted backwater. Then things changed. Historian Bernard Lewis asks:

In the enormously rich historical literature developed during 14 centuries of Islamic history, until very recent times, there were no histories of countries or nations. Rather, there are histories of Islam and histories of particular dynasties or states within Islam. We think, for example, of the long wars involving the Muslims and the Europeans, the Moors in Spain, the Tartars in Russia or the Turks in Europe. But in the Muslim world, they do not describe encounters in these terms. They never use the words "Arab" or "Moors" or "Tartars" or "Turks" in this context. The division is always the wars between the Muslims and the unbelievers.

In the West, the nation is seen as the natural unit of identify and allegiance. But until recently, this was not so in the Muslim world. In modern times, the Arab world has been chopped up into what would apparently seem to be nation-states. But if you look at them closely, you can see their artificiality. Look at the borders. Most of North America's borders are straight lines. That's understandable because they were drawn with pencils and rulers on maps. The borders of Europe are different. They are not straight lines. They are the result of a thousand years of struggle. You would expect the same to be the case in the Middle East, where the entities are even more ancient than those of Europe. But no, their borders are straight lines drawn by Europeans. Perhaps even more remarkably, there is no word in Arabic for Arabia. This is not because Arabic is a poor language. On the contrary, Arabic is an incredibly rich language. It is because the Muslims simply did not think in terms of territorial ethnic identity.

I mention this point because I think it's important in understanding Muslim perceptions of what is going on.

In the Muslim perception, the world took a new turn in the 7th century when Islam was born and spread rapidly in all directions with enormous success. This was seen at the time, with some justification, as a challenge to other faiths. Anyone who has been to Jerusalem will surely have visited the Dome of the Rock. That magnificent structure is the oldest surviving Muslim religious building outside Arabia. If you go inside, you will see inscriptions written on the dome. One says "He is God. He is one. He does not beget. He is not begotten." This is an explicit rejection of certain basic Christian dogmas. By building this structure in Jerusalem of all places, which at that time was not yet regarded as a Muslim Holy City, by putting up this building with these inscriptions in Jerusalem, the Muslims were in effect saying to the Christian world -- and, in particular to the Christian emperor in Constantinople, "Your time has passed. Now we are here. Move over."

There has been a lot of talk of late about the clash of civilizations. Most of the civilizations known to history -- such as those of China, India, Greece, Rome, Egypt and Babylon -- have been regional. Christianity and Islam are different. These are the only two civilizations whose underlying religions claim not only that their truths are universal -- all religions claim that -- but also that their truths are exclusive. Both believe that they are the fortunate recipients of God's final revelation to mankind, and it is therefore their duty to bring it to the rest of the world. It is inevitable that you will have a clash between two religions that are geographically adjacent, historical consecutive, theologically akin.

For a long time, Islam got the better of this clash. For a period of centuries, the civilization of Islam was by far the most advanced and the most creative in the world. It was enormously successful in every material sense. Its armies coming out of Arabia conquered everything across the Middle East and North Africa. They invaded Europe, conquering Spain, Portugal, Southern Italy and even advancing into France. Eastwards, they advanced across to Central Asia and India. Muslims also developed a highly sophisticated economic system of production and exchange with a remarkably advanced system of banking and credit. As far back as the 10th century, a Muslim merchant or a non-Muslim merchant living under Muslim rule could draw a cheque in Southern Iraq and cash it in Morocco.

From the perspective of Muslims, Western Europe was a kind of outer darkness of barbarism and unbelief, a primitive tribe beyond the border to which they gave understandably little attention. There was nothing to fear and nothing to learn. On the contrary, it was the Europeans who went to the great Muslim universities in Spain, in Sicily and in the East. In those centuries, Europe -- meaning Christendom as Muslims saw it -- was a poor benighted backwater.

Then things changed. The change was gradual, and took place over a vast area and a long period. But what brought the change home were rather dramatic single events. One of those events was the second Turkish siege of Vienna in 1683.

It is important to remember that, in the 17th century, Islam was still threatening Europe, not the other way around. Turkish pashas were still ruling in Budapest and in Belgrade. Corsairs from North Africa were still raiding the European coasts, including the coasts of England and Ireland and, on one occasion, even Iceland -- collecting human booty for sale in the slave markets of Algiers.

The first Turkish siege of Vienna ended in a sort of draw. But the second siege, in 1683, was a disaster. A Turkish historian of the time, describing the episode, said: "This is the most calamitous defeat that we have suffered since the foundation of our state." One must admire his candour and regret that similar candour is rarely to be found among present day historians of the region.

The defeat outside Vienna was followed by a headlong retreat through the Balkans and a peace treaty, the Treaty of Karlowitz in 1699, the first ever imposed on a defeated Ottoman empire by victorious Christian European enemies.

The lessons of history are often taught on the battlefield. In this case, the lesson was clear.

Among Muslims, the debate began at the beginning of the 18th century, and has been going on ever since. The main question: What went wrong?

There was a growing awareness that Muslims, who had always been victorious, were now losing on the battlefield, in the marketplace and, in fact, in every significant field of human endeavor. The debate became increasingly agonized, and continues to the present day.

When you become aware that things are going wrong, there are two ways you can approach the problem. First, you can ask "What are they doing right?" There were many Muslims who followed this line of inquiry, and experimented with Western forms of warfare and weaponry, Western-style factories, parliaments and the like.

The second approach is to say "Who did this to us?" This of course leads into a twilight world of anti-Western conspiracy theories and neurotic fantasies. Unfortunately, this approach has prevailed in many parts of the Muslim world to the present day.

In answering the question, "Who did this to us?" Muslims have often blamed "Imperialists." (Of course, when Muslims were invading Europe, imperialist expansionism was seen as natural and good because the invaders were bringing the word of God to the heathens. When the Europeans, after centuries of Muslim domination, counterattacked on the other hand, this was wicked.) In this regard, the United States has now inherited the role of its Christian predecessors. As many Muslims see it, the world continues to be divided between the Islamic world and its age-old imperialist rival, the Christian world. This division is at the heart of the writings of Osama Bin Laden and his complaints about the "crusader" presence in Saudi Arabia and so forth.

- - -

Even after the second siege of Vienna, the Arab world was largely shielded from reality by Ottoman power, even in the era of Ottoman decline and retreat. But eventually, that came to an end.

The modern history of the Arab world is generally held to begin at the end of the 18th century, when the French Republic sent a small expeditionary force commanded by a young general called Napoleon Bonaparte to Egypt. To the utter shock and horror of the Egyptians and everyone else in the region, this small army from France was able to invade, conquer, occupy and govern Egypt without the slightest difficulty. The fact that an army from the West managed to penetrate one of the heartlands of the Islamic world -- not just Vienna or the Balkans -- was a terrible shock.

But if the arrival of the French was a shock, their departure was a second and perhaps more salutary shock. The eviction of the French was accomplished not by the Egyptians, nor by the Turks, but by a small squadron of the Royal Navy commanded by a young Admiral called Horatio Nelson.

The lesson was clear: A European power could come to the region and do what it pleased, and only another European power could get them out. Thus began the game, so to speak, of playing European powers off against one another.

For two centuries or more, the scenario remained the same -- though the players were sometimes different. In the final phase, the players were the two superpowers, the Soviet Union and the United States; and Middle Eastern leaders used the skills they had perfected over two centuries in playing them off against each other.

Then, suddenly, it came to an end. The phase in history that had been initiated by Bonaparte and Nelson was terminated by Bush and Gorbachev. Suddenly, there was no rivalry; there were no rival powers. First one and then the other seemed disinclined to play the Imperial role -- the Russians because they couldn't and the Americans because they wouldn't.

Some Muslim leaders are trying to keep playing the old game, and so are seeking another power to play off against the West, as it is embodied by the United States. The prime candidate is the European Union, or at least some parts of the European Union where there is a negative sentiment regarding America. Unfortunately, for those who pursue this policy, even if the Europeans have the will to play this role, they lack the ability.

The other, and at first sightly more promising response to the end of the Cold War, was that of Osama bin Laden. He and his followers make it perfectly clear in their writings that they regard the defeat of the Soviet Union as their achievement -- through their long struggle in Afghanistan. I think you must agree it is not by any means an implausible explanation of what happened.

- - -

Where are we now? Within the Islamic world, more particularly the Middle Eastern world, I think one must divide countries in terms of their attitude to the West into three zones. One zone comprises those countries that have governments that we are pleased to regard as pro-Western and pro-American. These governments are therefore, and I stress the word "therefore," cordially detested by their people. They are detested not because they are pro-West but because they are regarded as Western puppets and therefore the West is held responsible for the corruption and tyranny of these regimes. It is no accident that most of the hijackers and terrorists on Sept. 11 came from countries with Western-friendly governments.

A second group are countries with hostile governments. I am thinking in particular of Iraq and Iran, perhaps also Syria. These are bitterly anti-American and anti-Western; and therefore their peoples are very pro-Western and pro-American. Let me relate an Iranian joke that I heard only last week from an Iranian, which I think captures the mood. (Jokes are often the only uncensored form of comment in these countries.) When American planes began to fly over Afghanistan, many Iranians put out notices over their houses saying, "This way, please."

In these countries whose governments detest the West, all the indications are that there is general goodwill toward the West among the people. In Iran, for example, after 9/11, great numbers of people went out into the streets and lit candles in sympathy vigils. This did not happen in nominally U.S.-friendly countries like Saudi Arabia; quite the reverse.

The third group comprises the Middle Eastern countries where both the government and the people are friendly. There are just two countries in this categories: Turkey and Israel, which happen to be the only two countries with functioning democracies.

- - -

Let me end with a discussion about Western influence in the Middle East. We tend to think of modernization and Westernization as good things. And, in many ways, they have been good things. But they have also done tremendous damage to Muslim societies. They have, for example, strengthened dictatorship to a degree that was never possible previously.

Modernization has strengthened the central power, and given the government new means of surveillance and repression. This has made possible that ultimate example of Westernization -- the one-party dictatorship. It flourishes in Syria and in Iraq at the present time in a way that combines the Nazi and Soviet models.

Westernization also has the effect of enfeebling or eliminating the limiting powers within a society. In traditional societies, there were many limiting powers that acted as constraints on government power. There were the urban patricians, the country nobility, the religious establishment, the military establishment and others. All these were enfeebled or abolished and made subject to the central authority.

There was a time when socialism and nationalism were the two most widely accepted creeds in the Middle East -- particularly after the end of the Second World War, when the Soviets had won great victories in Eastern Europe. The British Labour Party had won a great electoral victory, throwing out the mighty Winston Churchill. Socialism was seen as the wave of the future. So they brought in a whole series of socialist governments all over the Arab world. There was some debate. Some said that we must have Arab socialism; that is to say socialism, but adjusted to the different Arab cultural context. Others said, "No, that's nonsense. We must have scientific socialism," meaning the Moscow Marxists' variety. By now, I think they would all agree that socialism is neither Arab nor scientific.

The other great slogan of the time was nationalism, which was supposed to bring freedom, throwing off the foreign yoke. Unfortunately, there was some confusion between freedom and independence. Indeed, in most of the places that had previously been under Imperial rule, they had less freedom under independence than they had under foreign rule. So you had the two ideas discredited -- socialism discredited by its failure; nationalism discredited by its success. These were the two great movements that dominated public discourse and public life in these countries for half a century. Both are dead. Both are gone. So, where do they turn now?

Basically there are two alternative approaches. One is the approach of those who ask, "What did we do wrong?" and who feel that the way forward is to modernize their societies but to do it properly and, most important of all, with a measure of democratization of their political institutions and liberalization of their economies.

On the other hand you have those who say: "The source of all our troubles was the West" -- either what Westerners themselves did or, more frequently and more importantly, what Westernizing local "puppets" or imitators did. And the remedy, therefore, is to go back to back in time to the true, authentic, original Islam. This is the remedy proposed by the Islamic Republic in Iran and also by the various terrorist movements.

The choice between the two approaches is an awe-inspiring one; and, at this point, I would not like to predict which way it will go. It is, of course, going both ways at the present time.

Bernard Lewis is the Cleveland E. Dodge Professor of Near Eastern Studies, Emeritus, at Princeton University. He has written numerous books about Islam, including, most recently, What Went Wrong: Western Impact and Middle Eastern Response. This essay is adapted from a May 30 speech delivered by Prof. Lewis in Toronto as part of the Donner Canadian Foundation Lecture Series.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: christianity; clashofcivilizatio; history; historylist; infidels; islam
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Comment #21 Removed by Moderator

To: knighthawk
In the Muslim perception, the world took a new turn in the 7th century when Islam was born and spread rapidly in all directions with enormous success. This was seen at the time, with some justification, as a challenge to other faiths. Anyone who has been to Jerusalem will surely have visited the Dome of the Rock.

The Nazi could have had a similar "perception." Nazism "spread rapidly" to Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, France, Holland, ...

For all of Lewis's supposed brilliance, I find the statement, "Anyone who has been to Jerusalem will surely have visited the Dome of the Rock," to be absurd. I have visited Jerusalem. I have been several hundred feet away from the Dome of the Rock. But I have never visited it, and it's not because I wasn't interested.

ML/NJ

22 posted on 06/01/2002 12:22:33 PM PDT by ml/nj
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To: knighthawk
Christianity and Islam are different. These are the only two civilizations whose underlying religions claim not only that their truths are universal -- all religions claim that -- but also that their truths are exclusive.

I truly believe Islam is a Satanic manifestation. Further, evil always attempts to copy what God does, and twist it. The Book of Revelation speaks of an un-holy "trinity": Satan, the Anti-chirst, and the false prophet.

But you know what? God is soverign, and in control. And nobody is ever going to kick Him off the throne.

Dear Satan: you lose.

23 posted on 06/01/2002 1:10:25 PM PDT by SkyPilot
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To: RLK
I doubt this. Islam is a history of dictatorship.

In their glory days Islam was more Feudalistic.

24 posted on 06/01/2002 1:12:29 PM PDT by Mike Darancette
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To: knighthawk

As many Muslims see it, the world continues to be divided between the Islamic world and its age-old imperialist rival, the Christian world.

Not quite. The muslims see the world divided between the islamic world and everyone else. They hate India, too, and that can hardly be regarded as a Christian nation. They hate anyone who is not muslim - the infidel.

The analysis here is very interesting - the debate seems to be simply

  1. Do what the winners are doing
  2. Do what worked a thousand years ago.

#1 seems to the majority like giving in and giving up. #2 is a sure-fired ticket back to the stoneage.

 

I'm encouraged.

25 posted on 06/01/2002 1:17:42 PM PDT by watchin
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To: knighthawk
Simple the western world invented rational science and free market capitalism.
26 posted on 06/01/2002 1:19:03 PM PDT by weikel
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To: Ohioan
The Professor shows a more balanced approach than one usually finds among modern day American Academics.

Bernard Lewis, although he is a professor emeritus of Princeton University and the Institute for Advanced Study, is an octogenarian English Jew who originally trained as a barrister and spent WWII in British intelligence. He is thus very far from being typical of American academics.

27 posted on 06/01/2002 1:22:00 PM PDT by aristeides
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To: Buckhead

the triumph of the literalists was the tipping point into the Islamic Dark Ages

But of course. The koran is a violent, racist, hate-filled book, full of commands to hunt and kill the infidel. The more literally it is taken, the more savage the adherents become. 

On the other hand, as the Bible was pried from the exclusive grasp of the medieval Church, and placed in the hands of the people - in their own languages - Christian Europe emerged from the Dark Ages.

28 posted on 06/01/2002 1:27:59 PM PDT by watchin
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To: abwehr
The other side of your comment is that iconoclastic Islam never had an ecclesiastical aedifice complex.
29 posted on 06/01/2002 2:09:50 PM PDT by a history buff
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Comment #30 Removed by Moderator

To: aristeides
Thank you. You have reassured me in my opinion of the typical Ivy League Professor.

For a brief moment, I thought that the level of scholarship might be improving.

William Flax Return Of The Gods Web Site

31 posted on 06/01/2002 2:26:45 PM PDT by Ohioan
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To: dix
I think we are going to have to bring them to their knees before we have peace.

So do I.

I see no other option than capitulation, and I will not support that.

32 posted on 06/01/2002 2:30:06 PM PDT by backhoe
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To: knighthawk
Looks like a great read, bookmarked for later reading.
33 posted on 06/01/2002 2:41:20 PM PDT by sgaspar
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To: knighthawk
I really don't know if democracy is good for most of the Arab world. The Persians (Iran and Iraq) seem to me to be more able to handle it then the rest of the Islamic world. One of the first things they need to do is to teach their people personal responsibility. People can not rule themselves if they are not willing to take responsibility for their actions and decisions.

The other thing they need to teach is honesty. It really has nothing to do with democracy, I just detest liars so I thought I'd throw that in ;o)

34 posted on 06/01/2002 2:44:23 PM PDT by McGavin999
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To: watchin
"...On the other hand, as the Bible was pried from the exclusive grasp of the medieval Church, and placed in the hands of the people - in their own languages - Christian Europe emerged from the Dark Ages...."

And a beautiful butterfly the People's Europe turned out to be.

Chartres Cathedral is the architecture of the Europe's Dark Golden Age. Burned down many times and each time re-built by anonymous men, even more expressive than before.

Europe, liberated from its it's hairy, barbaric popery, does not build such questionable follies any more.

The civilization that engineered the sleek, antiseptic, bulky rectangles on the tip of Manhattan island will NOT be able to prevail, in the long run, against it's many enemies. It's too fragile--too rootless. But maybe, with some sort of miraculous intervention, the civilization that inspired the tiny church at the base of the Trade Towers--crushed in the collapse--will.

35 posted on 06/01/2002 2:44:35 PM PDT by LaBelleDameSansMerci
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To: rdb3
Speaking of Edom, there are people who say they have traced Arafat's lineage back to Herod - he's ugly enough.
36 posted on 06/01/2002 2:46:32 PM PDT by 185JHP
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To: Ohioan
"...The Professor shows a more balanced approach than one usually finds among modern day American Academics. ..."

Exquisitely balanced---like the set of one of the higher-class, old Hollywood period pieces. A place for everything and everything in it's place.

I would try a heavier guage sandpaper, if you don't mind scratching the shiny surface. It might be interesting to discover the source of so much of America's "consensus"--on so many things.

37 posted on 06/01/2002 2:56:37 PM PDT by LaBelleDameSansMerci
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To: aristeides
"...He is thus very far from being typical of American academics...."

How true, how true. And fairly far from typical American anything--except that his ideas are undergirding the War Against Evil and Terrorism--in which typical Americans will die.

38 posted on 06/01/2002 3:02:23 PM PDT by LaBelleDameSansMerci
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To: knighthawk
"...There has been a lot of talk of late about the clash of civilizations...."

There certainly has, Mr. Lewis. And you--you sly dog--got the tongues wagging, didn't you?

Who is Bernard Lewis? From what Zeusian head did he spring, fully-formed, with his "clash of civilizations" in mind? How did it spread, like wildfire, throughout the Land? How nice that he was able to fashion a theory so firm, so round, so fully-packed; so available; so terribly appropriate; so capable of being bumper-sticker-ized. How fortunate that his theories so closely conform to traditional Anglo/Saxon prejudices and yet pay careful homage to the proper multi-cultural pieties.

"...I mention this point because I think it's important in understanding Muslim perceptions of what is going on...."

And you're just the fellow to explain it all--so we can understand it the way it needs to be understood.

39 posted on 06/01/2002 3:12:17 PM PDT by LaBelleDameSansMerci
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To: knighthawk
"We are at the end of not only the century, but of the entire modern age. It began about 500 years ago with the discover of new continents . . . That age is not only passing, it is now over . . One of the superstitions of the modern age . . . is that this age was going to last forever. There's an awful lot of people who still think that. There was an excuse for that in Gibbon's time, there's no excuse for this today. You know, that progress . . also a very debatable and disgusting word . . But this age is now not only passing, it's over finished, termine kaput, you know. What were the main conditions, symptoms of the modern age?
Watch John Lukacs give his talk on At the End of an Age At the End of an Age

40 posted on 06/01/2002 3:15:08 PM PDT by cornelis
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