Author: L. Carl Brown
Publishers: New York: Columbia University Press, 2000
Pages: 256
Price: US $ 27.50
This is both an important and a useful
book. It is important for the light it sheds on the politics and also on
the societies of the Islamic world by daring to make an unfashionable but
highly productive comparison between Islam and Christendom. It is useful
because it addresses very precisely the questions in the minds of many
upper-level undergraduates taking courses in Islamic politics thought.
It should, however, be read by everyone interested in politics in the Islamic
world or in international relations, whether as commentator or practitioner,
and not just by the undergraduates.
One of the avowed aims of the book
is to challenge the general Western view of the relationship between Islam
and politics. It addresses a general as well as a specialist audience,
and goes to some lengths (especially in the earlier chapters) to be accessible
to the non-specialist, explaining for example the distinction between the
Sunni and the Shi‘ah. One may hope that the book reaches
the audience it addresses and which needs to read it, both in the West
and in the Islamic World.
The book is divided into two sections
first, a survey of classical Islamic political thought and political systems,
and second, a survey of the political thought and systems that emerged
in the Islamic world in the aftermath of the confrontation with modern
European powers. Both sections of the book cover all the essential aspects
of these topics with admirable clarity, though one might have hoped for
more references to identified representative figures in the first section,
a minor deficiency which is absent from the second section of the book.
The most interesting argument in the
first section of Professor Brown’s book proceeds from the familiar observation
that there is no Church in Islam. Brown takes this observation in new directions,
and in so doing raises interesting questions about the unrecognized Christian
origins of much contemporary political theory. The absence of a Church
from Islam – or more precisely, the absence of a hierarchically organized
structure to unite the ‘religious specialists’ of Islam – meant that there
could be no confrontation between Church and State of the sort that was
a constant theme in European history until the twentieth century. In the
absence of confrontation between Church and State, there would hardly be
a consequent separation between them. The separation of Church and State
which is characteristic of contemporary Western societies, and which is
so often taken as a ‘natural’ characteristic of ‘developed’ political systems,
seems to be a consequence of a specifically Christian pattern of development,
of aspects of Christianity which have no real equivalent in Islam or in
Judaism, and which derive ultimately from the circumstances under which
Christianity evolved – as a minority religion subject to non-Christian
(Roman) structures of state power. That the hierarchy developed by later
Shi‘i Islam is in some years closer to the Catholic than the Sunni
model may help to explain why the most significant recent confrontation
between the ‘ulama’ and state occurred in Iran.
Though a formal separation of Church
and State could never occur in Islam since it was never needed, Brown argues
that a variety of de facto divisions did come about, not between
State and Church but between State and Society. After the realities of
politics in a vast empire terminated the practice of the ‘golden age’ during
which religious and political questions were handled seamlessly by the
Prophet (sws) and then by the Rashidun Caliphs, a historical accommodation
was reached whereby the society would accept the authority of the state
so long as it did not seek to impose its own views as orthodoxy, and the
state would not interfere in religious matters (save for occasional efforts
to obtain a fatwa it needed on one point or another) so long as its authority
was not threatened. Importantly for later periods, this accommodation was
unspoken, and is never reflected in most works of political theory, which
maintained unsullied the ideal of the early ummah.
One important consequence of this
accommodation, Brown argues, was the development of low expectations of
the state, which Brown calls ‘political pessimism’, a condition that is
found in most of the Islamic world even today. In the pre-modern period,
however, the state of affairs that gave rise to political pessimism was
far from negative, since one aspect of it were the relative freedom of
most parts of Islamic society from the attentions of the state: ‘The weakness
of political ties between the rulers and the ruled fades before the clear
strength of society’. Even under states such as the Mamluk Egypt,
when ‘narrowly political history... offers a dismal series of coups and
countercoups’ the achievements of society, in religion and learning and
culture, might still be ‘impressive’. (p. 67).
In the second part of the book, Brown
shows how the encounter with an alien civilization that combined the military
superiority of the Mongols with a civilization that was not clearly inferior
to that of Islam – Europe in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries –
destroyed this historic accommodation. In the new Islamic world which emerged
in the twentieth century, the state had invaded the society, and the society
had developed an interest in the political questions that for centuries
it had left to a small elite that was regarded as a necessary evil with
which it was best not to involve oneself. In the process, the state – or
rather a variety of nation states of one kind or another – had both challenged
Islam in the name of modernization, and raises a variety of expectations
that were entirely unrealistic. The challenges were resented and the expectations
inevitably disappointed, producing a ‘generalized religio-political malaise’
that led to the expansion of ‘religio-political radiation’ amongst those
who had few interests in the continuation of the existing order.
As Brown freely admits, ‘religio-political
radicalism’ is in no way the exclusive property of Islamic societies. The
difference between Muslim ‘scripturalists’ who want ‘to bring into existence
the divinely ordained society here and now’ and their Christian equivalents
is that the golden age of the Muslim radical cannot but be the ummah at
the time of the Prophet (sws), whereas for the Christian it is more likely
to be some form of ‘New Jerusalem’. The other difference between the Muslim
and Christian religio-political radical is four centuries: Brown maintains
that the proper comparison to make with contemporary Islam is not contemporary
Christianity, but the Europe of the Reformation. This is an argument which
Brown makes cogently in a few pages (pp. 136-8), and is a most convincing
one. It also has far-reaching consequences for the Western understanding
of Islam. Westerners recently horrified and uncomprehending at the prospect
of the destruction, on religious grounds, of artistic and cultural heritage
in Afghanistan, for example, might usefully be reminded of their own culture’s
treatment of images perceived as idols in the Europe of the Reformation.
The book ends with a brief survey
of the lives, work and significance of the figures Brown identifies as
the Luthers and Calvins of Islam – Al-Banna, Mawdudi, Qutb and Khomeini.
Brown refuses to pronounce on the likely future of ‘relgio-political radicalism’
in the Islamic world, though he notes that the record of states claiming
to be Islamic (Iran, Pakistan, Sudan) is such that questions must inevitably
be raised about whether they can really claim to represent ‘the solution’.
Brown finally observes ‘that there are many alternatives to current approaches
in ‘that historical storehouse of Islamic thought concerning politics’
(p. 177), alternatives which one feels Brown and many others would much
prefer to those currently on offer, alternatives to which adjectives like
‘liberal’ and ‘tolerant’ might reasonably be applied. Brown’s observation
is no more than an afterthought to his book, but is nonetheless of importance,
and so this review will end with a response to that afterthought. As Brown
so clearly shows, the parts of the ‘historical storehouse’ which are at
present most accessible are those which contain the classical political
theory that looks back to the golden age and does not reflect the historic
accommodation which, for so many centuries, replaced that theory in practice
– and did so with remarkable success. The contents of the storehouse that
might lead to other alternatives are at present accessible only to those
with an understanding of the history of the Islam world after the Rashidun
Caliphs and before that modern period, and it is precisely this period
that is of least interest of most Muslim undergraduate students (a group
which cannot anyhow be said to be greatly devoted to the study of history),
at least in Egypt but probably also elsewhere.
(Courtesy: Islamic Studies, Summer 2001)
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