Jihad in Islamic History: Doctrines and Practice
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What is jihad? Does it mean violence, as many non-Muslims assume? Or does it mean peace, as some Muslims insist? Because jihad is closely associated with the early spread of Islam, today's debate about the origin and meaning of jihad is nothing less than a struggle over Islam itself. In Jihad in Islamic History, Michael Bonner provides the first study in English that focuses on the early history of jihad, shedding much-needed light on the most recent controversies over jihad.
To some, jihad is the essence of radical Islamist ideology, a synonym for terrorism, and even proof of Islam's innate violence. To others, jihad means a peaceful, individual, and internal spiritual striving. Bonner, however, shows that those who argue that jihad means only violence or only peace are both wrong. Jihad is a complex set of doctrines and practices that have changed over time and continue to evolve today. The Quran's messages about fighting and jihad are inseparable from its requirements of generosity and care for the poor. Jihad has often been a constructive and creative force, the key to building new Islamic societies and states. Jihad has regulated relations between Muslims and non-Muslims, in peace as well as in war. And while today's "jihadists" are in some ways following the "classical" jihad tradition, they have in other ways completely broken with it.
Written for general readers who want to understand jihad and its controversies, Jihad in Islamic History will also interest specialists because of its original arguments.
Michael Bonner
Michael Bonner practices in Somerset, Texas, a small community a few miles Southwest of San Antonio. He lectures to physicians and dentists in the United States and abroad and is the author of numerous health and wellness articles. Dr. Bonner's professional affiliations include memberships in The American Dental Association, The Texas Dental Association, The Academy of General Dentistry and The American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine, where he is a candidate for diplomat status.
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Jihad in Islamic History - Michael Bonner
Jihad in
Islamic History
Jihad in
Islamic History
Doctrines and Practice
MICHAEL BONNER
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS
PRINCETON AND OXFORD
First published in France by Téraèdre under the title
Le jihad, origines, interprétations, combats © Téraèdre
48 rue Sainte-Croix-de-la-Bretonnerie 75004 Paris
English edition copyright © 2006 by Princeton University Press
Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street,
Princeton, New Jersey 08540
In the United Kingdom: Princeton University Press, 3 Market Place,
Woodstock, Oxfordshire OX20 1SY
All Rights Reserved
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bonner, Michael David.
[Jihad. English]
Jihad in Islamic history : doctrines and practice / Michael Bonner.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical reference and index.
eISBN: 978-1-40082-738-1
1. Jihad—History. 2. War—Religious aspects—Islam. I. Title.
BP182.B6513 2006
297.7'209—dc22 2005034086
British Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available
This book has been composed in Janson
Printed on acid-free paper. ∞
pup.princeton.edu
Printed in the United States of America
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
To the memory of my sister
Alisa Bonner
Contents
List of Maps
Symbols and Accent Marks
Preface
CHAPTER ONE. Introduction
What Is Jihad?
Just War and Holy War
Warfare and Jihad?
Fields of Debate
Historiography and Origins
Readings
CHAPTER TWO. The Quran and Arabia
Combat in the Quran
Gift and Reciprocity
Fighting and Recompense
The Beggar and the Warrior
Readings
CHAPTER THREE. Muhammad and His Community
Sira and Maghazi: Sacred History
Hadith: The Norm
Themes of Jihad in the Hadith
Fighting with One’s Money
Readings
CHAPTER FOUR. The Great Conquests
The Course of Conquest
Explanations
Approaches to the Islamic Sources
Approaches to the Non-Islamic Sources
Readings
CHAPTER FIVE. Martyrdom
Martyrdom before Islam
Martyrdom in Quran and Tradition
Contexts of Martyrdom in Islam
Martyrs and Neomartyrs
Readings
CHAPTER SIX. Encounter with the Other
Conquest Society and Fiscal Regime
Treatment of Non-Muslims
Abode of Islam, Abode of War
Convivencia
Readings
CHAPTER SEVEN. Embattled Scholars
Syria and the Byzantine Frontier
Arabia
Iraq: The Synthesis of al-Shafii
North Africa
Spain
Central Asia
The Embattled Scholars: Conclusions
Readings
CHAPTER EIGHT. Empires, Armies, and Frontiers
The Umayyad Caliphate: Imperial Jihad
Revolution and Jihad
The 'Abbasid Caliphate and Its Military Crisis
Frontier Societies: Against Byzantium
Frontier Societies: Spain and North Africa
Ribat
The Crusades
Ottoman Origins
Corsairs in the Mediterranean
The Western Sudan
Empires, Armies, and Frontiers: Conclusions
Readings
CHAPTER NINE. Colonial Empire, Modern State, New Jihad
Resistance and Reform
Fundamentalism and Islamism
Readings
CHAPTER TEN. Conclusions
Bibliography
Maps
1. The Middle East ca. 600 CE 38
2. The Spread of Islam to 750 CE 57
Symbols and Accent Marks
This book uses a limited system of transliteration for non-Latin alphabets, namely Arabic, Greek, Hebrew, and Persian. For these alphabets it does not indicate long and short vowels, and it does not use special signs to indicate consonants that do not occur in the English alphabet. The only exceptions are the Arabic glottal stop hamza indicated as ' and the deep guttural stop ayn.
Preface
My intention in this short book is to offer an introduction to the jihad and, more specifically, to the origins of the jihad within the broader history of Islam. I have not provided a systematic overview of the doctrine of jihad, which would have required a longer book of an entirely different character. Nor have I given a comprehensive summary of the history of Islam, or even of its early history, as seen from the perspective of the jihad. Instead I have worked with two goals in mind.
My first goal is to provide the reader with an introduction to some of the most important debates, both premodern and modern, over the jihad. I think of this reader as someone who may or may not have basic knowledge of the political and religious history of the Islamic world, but who wishes to find a way through this particular terrain. I have tried to give this reader a sense of what happened—the structure and the most important particulars of historical events—without, however, simply rehashing the history of Islam, which is available now in a number of good books in English. I have tried to keep my analytic focus on the jihad, even as I touched on other broad historical topics, and even as I outlined some of the debates regarding methods and approaches that have gone on among modern specialists in the study of Islamic society, religion, and culture. In this way, I have sought to acquaint the reader with the most important ways in which the jihad has been identified and approached, both in the past and in the present. I have tried to identify the most important and challenging problematics regarding this theme which, as everyone now knows, has far more than academic importance.
My second goal is to present a connected series of theses of my own regarding the jihad and its origins. Some of these have been presented in earlier work of mine, some not; they boil down to the following.
One thesis has to do with the Quranic message and its lasting heritage in Islamic societies. In chapter 2, I identify two different thematic areas within the Quran. One of these has to do with the notions of gift and reciprocity, and with generosity, charity, and the care of the poor and unfortunate. The other has to do with recompense, requital, and reward, relating especially to jihad and the conduct of war. These two thematic areas do not conflict with each other; in fact, it is impossible to have either of them without the other. It is precisely the combination of the two that provided much of the transforming power of the Quran and the early message of Islam. This has implications for our contemporary world, which I allude to at the end of the book.
Another thesis has to do with the extended origins of the jihad. The basic elements of the jihad as we know it came into existence during the first rise of Islam and the lifetime of Muhammad (around 570–632 CE). Other elements of the jihad came into the world soon afterward. However, I argue that the doctrine of jihad, as we recognize it today, and the distinctive set of social practices that are associated with it, did not come into existence until considerably later, toward the end of the eighth century of the Common Era, when the This view of extended origins Abbasid Caliphate was consolidating its power. It is only then that the jihad becomes fully recognizable as a doctrine, as a source of inspiration and guidance in the building of a series of new Islamic states, and as what we may call, in Linda Darling’s phrase, a piece of contested territory
among a variety of groups within Islamic society.¹This view of extended origins has a number of consequences for our view of the jihad in history, which I will spell out as I go along.
Another thesis grows directly from the one just mentioned. This has to do with the long series of dynastic states that arose and succeeded one another in the various parts of the Islamic world, over the centuries. I propose to view many of these as frontier societies and thus, to a large extent, as an outcome of the doctrine and practice of the jihad. A key to this thesis—and what made me notice the phenomenon in the first place—is the participation in warfare along the frontiers of many religious scholars who were specialists in the holy law, mystics, preachers, and sometimes simply fighters (chapter 7).
These three themes—reciprocity/gift and recompense/reward in the original Quranic message, the prolonged gestation period of the jihad, and the rise and growth of many Islamic states as frontier societies—correspond broadly to three stages in the development of the jihad within Islamic societies and states.
An earlier version of this book has appeared in France, in a new series called Islam in Debates.² In the spirit of that series, it provides nonspecialist readers with a concise introduction to a complex and controversial area of study. It points out what the main areas of contention are within this field and where its main arguments seem to be headed. It also provides suggestions for further reading. This English-language version is somewhat longer than the French one, in large part because I have taken into account the highly useful suggestions made by three anonymous readers for Princeton University Press.
Any study of the jihad runs the risk of including an unmanageably large amount of Islamic history and doctrine. I have sought to avoid this by limiting myself to a fairly precise set of questions, set out in the introduction. I concentrate mainly on the early period of Islam, and it is there that my own contributions and ideas stand the best chance of being considered original, and perhaps even right. However, I also sketch out certain aspects of the jihad over the many centuries of Islamic history. At the end I include a quick look at aspects of the jihad in the modern and contemporary periods, not to provide a survey but to consider the question of whether and, if so, to what extent there is continuity of the jihad, from the beginnings of Islam until the present.
Much of this book, especially in its earlier chapters, consists of presentation and analysis of various kinds of historical narrative. Here I try to give the reader an idea of some of the most important debates that have gone on in regard to both the narratives and the doctrines of early Islam where these have related most directly to the jihad. Though I have not tried to hide my own preferences among the various arguments that have been made, I did try to treat them all fairly and dispassionately. At the same time, with so much territory to cover in so few pages, I had to leave out many arguments and ideas that some readers may no doubt consider to be the most important ones.
Translations from the Quran are my own wherever there is no indication otherwise. In some places, as indicated in the notes, I have used the translation of Arthur J. Arberry, The Koran Interpreted. The verses of the Quran are cited according to the modern Egyptian system.
I wish to thank my editor at Princeton University Press, Fred Appel, for his discerning judgment and encouragement. I also wish to thank the academic editors of the French series in which it first appeared, Jocelyne Dakhlia and Françoise Micheau, and Jean Ferreux, editor of Les Editions du Téraèdre, for having first proposed that I write on this theme and for all their expert advice. Over the years, I have learned about jihad from several teachers and friends. Here I can mention especially Michael Cook, David Eisenberg, Andras Hamori, Rudi Lindner, Roy Mottahedeh, and Houari Touati. Two scholars, recently deceased and much regretted, Albrecht Noth and John Wansbrough, are cited throughout the book. Three anonymous readers for Princeton University Press have offered advice that has proved uncommonly precise and useful. I have also profited from discussions on several of these topics with Michigan graduate students including (but not limited to) Rob Haug, David Hughes, Mohammad Khalil, Derek Mancini-Lander, and Kristina Richardson. Rob Haug has also provided expert help with maps, here and elsewhere. Layla Hourani has provided technical help in several areas. Finally, I wish especially to thank my wife Daniela for her intellectual precision and discerning literary judgment.
¹ Linda Darling, Contested Territory.
² L’Islam en débats, published by Éditions du Téraèdre, Paris, under the general editorship of Jocelyne Dakhlia and Françoise Micheau. The book’s title is Le Jihad: Origines, interprétations, combats.
Jihad in
Islamic History
CHAPTER ONE
Introduction
What Is Jihad?
In the debates over Islam taking place today, no principle is invoked more often than jihad. Jihad is often understood as the very heart of contemporary radical Islamist ideology.¹By a sort of metonymy, it can refer to the radical Islamist groups themselves.²Some observers associate jihad with attachment to local values and resistance against the homogenizing trends of globalization.³ For others, jihad represents a universalist, globalizing force of its own: among these there is a wide spectrum of views. At one end of this spectrum, anti-Islamic polemicists use jihad as proof of Islam’s innate violence and its incompatibility with civilized norms.⁴At the other end of the spectrum, some writers insist that jihad has little or nothing to do with externally directed violence. Instead, they declare jihad to be a defensive principle,⁵or else to be utterly pacific, inward-directed, and the basis of the true meaning of Islam which, they say, is peace.
Thus Islam, through jihad, equals violence and war; or else, through jihad, it equals peace. Now surely it is not desirable, or even possible, to reduce so many complex societies and polities, covering such broad extents of time and space, to any single governing principle. And in fact, not all contemporary writers view the matter in such stark terms. Many do share, however, an assumption of nearly total continuity, in Islam, between practice and norm and between history and doctrine. And it is still not uncommon to see Islam described as an unchanging essence or a historical cause. The jihad then conveniently provides a key to understanding that essence or cause, and so we are told that Islam is fundamentally about
war, that it accounts for
the otherwise inexplicable suicidal activity of certain individuals, that it explains
the occurrence of wars in history, and so on.
None of this so far has told us what jihad actually is, beyond its tremendous resonance in present and past. Is it an ideology that favors violence? A political means of mass mobilization? A spiritual principle of motivation for individuals?
While we do not wish for this to be an argument over words alone, we cannot understand the doctrines or the historical phenomena without understanding the words as precisely as possible. The Arabic word jihad does not mean holy war
or just war.
It literally means striving.
When followed by the modifying phrase fi sabil Allah, in the path of God,
or when—as often—this phrase is absent but assumed to be in force, jihad has the specific sense of fighting for the sake of God (whatever we understand that to mean). In addition, several other Arabic words are closely related to jihad in meaning and usage. These include ribat, which denotes pious activity, often related to warfare, and in many contexts seems to constitute a defensive counterpart to a more activist, offensive jihad. Ribat also refers to a type of building where this sort of defensive warfare can take place: a fortified place where garrisons of volunteers reside for extended periods of time while holding Islamic territory against the enemy. Ghazw, ghazwa, and ghaza' have to do with raiding (from which comes the French word razzia). Qital, or fighting,
at times conveys something similar to jihad/ ribat, at times not. Harb means war
or fighting,
usually in a more neutral sense, carrying less ideological weight than the other terms. All these words, however, have wide semantic ranges and frequently overlap with one other. They also change with distance and time.
Jihad refers, first of all, to a body of legal doctrine. The comprehensive manuals of classical Islamic law usually include a section called Book of Jihad. Sometimes these sections have different names, such as Book of Siyar (law of war) or Book of Jizya (poll tax), but their contents are broadly similar. Likewise, most of the great compendia of Tradition (hadith; see chapter 3) contain a Book of Jihad, or something like it. Some Islamic jurists also wrote monographic works on jihad and the law of war. Not surprisingly, these jurists sometimes disagreed with each other. Some, but not all, of these disagreements correlated to the division of the Sunni Muslim legal universe into four classical schools (madhhabis, Kharijis, and others. Like Islamic law in general, this doctrine of jihad was neither the product nor the expression of the Islamic State: it developed apart from that State, or else in uneasy coexistence with it. (This point will receive nuance in chapter 8.)
These treatments of jihad in manuals and other works of Islamic law usually combine various elements. A typical Book of Jihad includes the law governing the conduct of war, which covers treatment of nonbelligerents, division of spoils among the victors, and such matters. Declaration and cessation of hostilities are discussed, raising the question of what constitutes proper authority. A Book of Jihad will also include discussion of how the jihad derives from Scripture (the Quran) and the Example of the Prophet (the Sunna), or in other words, how the jihad has been commanded by God. There are often—especially in the hadith collections—rhetorical passages urging the believers to participate in the wars against the enemies of God. There is usually an exposition of the doctrine of martyrdom (see chapter 5), which is thus part of jihad. The list of topics is much longer, but this much can begin to give an idea of what the jihad of the jurists includes.
Jihad is also more than a set of legal doctrines. Historians of Islam often encounter it and try to understand its meaning and especially when they think about such things as motivation, mobilization, and political authority. For instance, regarding the earliest period of Islam, why did the Muslims of the first generations fight so effectively? What was the basis of their solidarity? How did they form their armies? Why did they assume the attitudes that they did toward their own commanders and rulers? For historians interested in such questions, it is impossible to study the historical manifestations of jihad apart from the legal doctrine, for several reasons. First, some—though far from all—of the historical narratives that are available to us regarding early Islam seem to have been formed by juridical perspectives, no doubt in part because many of the early Muslim historians were jurists themselves.⁶Second, the doctrine of jihad had a role of its own in events, a role that increased over time (see chapter 8). And not only the doctrine, but also its exponents and champions: the jurists and scholars known collectively as the learned,
the ‘ulama’: many of these were protagonists in the ongoing drama of the jihad in several ways including, at critical junctures, their participation (both symbolic and physical) in the conduct of warfare (see chapter 7). Jihad, for the historian, is thus not only about clashes between religions, civilizations, and states but also about clashes among groups within Islamic societies. Equally important, jihad has never ceased changing, right down to our own day. If it ever had an original core, this has been experienced anew many times over.
Just War and Holy War
The concept of just war, bellum iustum, has a long history in the West.⁷The medieval part of this history is particularly Christian, in part because of the emphasis on love (agap , caritas) in Christian doctrine and the difficulties this created for Christian thinkers and political authorities in their conduct of war. Then, with the introduction of natural law theory into the law of war in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and with Europe’s increasing domination of the seas,Western doctrines of just war came to prevail over both Christian and non-Christian states—whether they liked it or not—and their interactions in war and peace.
Now, it is possible to draw meaningful parallels between these Western doctrines of just war and the classical doctrine of jihad expressed by the Muslim jurists. However, there are also differences. For the most part, the Muslim jurists do not make the justice
of any instance of jihad the term of their discussion. Likewise, the concept of holy war, at least as we use it now, derives from Christian doctrine and experience, especially relating to the Crusades. Scholars of the ancient Near East and the Hebrew scriptures have broadened the concept, and so too have anthropologists. This anthropological literature on holy war may help us to ask about the links between the jihad, as it first emerged, with warfare in Arabia before Islam. It may also help us to see the role of jihad in the conversion to Islam of other nomadic and tribal peoples, such as the Berbers in North Africa and the Turks in Central Asia. At the same time, we must remember that the Muslim jurists did not usually discuss these matters in these terms; for them any authentic instance of jihad was necessarily both holy and just.
In the medieval Islamic world, there were philosophers who, unlike the jurists, were willing to foreground questions of justice and injustice in their discussions of warfare. They did this by adapting Islamic concepts into a Greek, mainly Platonic field of reference.⁸The most important of these philosophers was the great al-Farabi (d. 950). Al-Farabi considers a range of situations in which wars may be considerered just or unjust. They are unjust if they serve a ruler’s narrow,