Jews in Muslim Societies

Hello all!

Below is the handout for tomorrow’s class; it’s a lot of material, so if you could look it over before then, it’d be great. This and the other short reading will be on Blackboard, under the discussion board, as well.  See you tomorrow!

Jews in Muslim Societies, October 8th

Our authors this week:

Maria Rosa Menocal (Ornament of the World: How Muslims, Jews, and Christians Created a Culture of Tolerance in Medieval Spain, 2002) was born in Cuba.  She received her PhD in Romance Philology in 1979 from the University of Pennsylvania, and taught there for a few years before moving to Yale.  For the past 23 years she has taught at Yale, where she is currently the R. Selden Rose Professor of Spanish and Portuguese and director of the Whitney Humanities Center.  Her research interests include comparative medieval lyric; the intellectual history of the study of the Arabic and Hebrew aspects of medieval Spanish identity; the formation of Castilian culture in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.  Besides Ornament of the World, her books include The Arabic Role in Medieval Literary History: A Forgotten Heritage (1987), Writing in Dante’s Cult of Truth: From Borges to Boccaccio (1991), and Shards of Love: Exile and the Origins of the Lyric (1994).

Amy Mills (“Narratives in City Landscapes: Cultural Identity in Istanbul”, The Geographical Review 95, 2005) received her PhD in Geography from the University of Texas at Austin in 2004.  She has been an assistant professor in the department of Geography at the University of South Carolina since 2005.  She describes her research (which focuses on Turkey, specifically Istanbul) as “studies of geographies of identity at various scales. These scales include: the individual body and its gendered and ethnic identities; the neighborhood as a social space of community and belonging and/or exclusion; the city and its urban landscapes; and the nation and nationalism within a global context” (Mills, Personal Website, “Research”).

Jews in Islam

Islam and non-Muslims

Dhimmi (“people of the dhimma”): this term refers to non-Muslim peoples under Muslim rule whose rights were explicitly protected by the state.  For the most part, this applied to the People of the Book (Ahl al-Kitab, i.e., Jews and Christians), though in some areas it was extended to Zoroastrians and Hindus.  In return for state protection, dhimmi were expected to pay the poll tax or jizya.

-Jizya: poll tax paid by non-Muslim subjects of Muslim rulers

Jews in Medina- large population of Jews in Medina when Muhammad arrived in 622

-Constitution: drafted by Muhammad shortly after his arrival in the city.  Laid down the social bases of Jewish-Muslim interaction: mutual toleration and self reliance.

-“(25) The Jews…are one community with the believers (the Jews have their religion and the Muslims have theirs), their freedmen and their persons except those who behave unjustly and sinfully, for they hurt but themselves and their families.”

-“ (37) The Jews must bear their expenses and the Muslims their expenses. Each must help the other against anyone who attacks the people of this document. They must seek mutual advice and consultation, and loyalty is a protection against treachery. A man is not liable for his ally’s misdeeds. The wronged must be helped. “

The Quran- what is said about Jews? Overall, the Quran shows a marked preference for Christianity over Judaism.  Furthermore, Jews in the Hadith are portrayed negatively, though Bernard Lewis says that this appears “less so in discussing his [Muhammad’s] beliefs and practices, more so in reference to Jewish relations with the Prophet and Muslims” (59).

-5:82- Strongest among men in enmity to the believers wilt thou find the Jews and Pagans; and nearest among them in love to the believers wilt thou find those who say, “We are Christians”: because amongst these are men devoted to learning and men who have renounced the world, and they are not arrogant.

-5:59- Say: “O people of the Book! Do ye disapprove of us for no other reason than that we believe in God, and the revelation that hath come to us and that which came before (us), and (perhaps) that most of you are rebellious and disobedient?”

-9: 29-32- 29. Fight those who believe not in Allah nor the Last Day, nor hold that forbidden which hath been forbidden by Allah and His Messenger, nor acknowledge the religion of Truth, (even if they are) of the People of the Book, until they pay the Jizya with willing submission, and feel themselves subdued.  30. The Jews call ‘Uzair a son of Allah, and the Christians call Christ the son of Allah. That is a saying from their mouth; (in this) they but imitate what the unbelievers of old used to say. Allah’s curse be on them: how they are deluded away from the Truth!  31. They take their priests and their anchorites to be their lords in derogation of Allah, and (they take as their Lord) Christ the son of Mary; yet they were commanded to worship but One Allah. There is no god but He. Praise and glory to Him: (Far is He) from having the partners they associate (with Him).  32. Fain would they extinguish Allah’s light with their mouths, but Allah will not allow but that His light should be perfected, even though the Unbelievers may detest (it).

HISTORY, 8th c.-19th c.

-Under the Caliphate, Jews were generally accorded fair treatment as dhimmi, though there were periods of repression (particularly associated with the era of Abu Mutawakkil in the mid 9th century)

Muslim Spain: Timeline

-711: Umayyad Invasion of al-Andalus (the Iberian peninsula)

-756: After Abassid overthrow of Umayyad dynasty in 750, last Umayyad, Abd ar-Rahman I, flees to Spain where he establishes himself as emir

-929: Abd ar-Rahman III (912-961) proclaims himself Caliph; Umayyad caliphate in Spain reaches greatest point

-1090: after years of civil war and disunity after the fall of the Umayyads (1030), the conservative African dynasty the Almoravids conquer al-Andalus

-1147: Almohads replace Almoravids, Muslim control of al-Andalus decreasing with every dynastic change

-1212: Almohads suffer crushing defeat at hands of the combined Christian kingdoms (Castille, Navarre, Aragon, and Portugal)

-1228: last Muslim state in Spain, Grenada (under the Nasrid dynasty), is established; survives as client of Castille until Catholic conquest in 1492

Ottomans Jews were most important community in Muslim world

-first, most numerous; Ottomans actively encouraged Jewish immigration from around the Mediterranean, transporting Jews from areas where they were persecuted and settling them in Ottoman territory

-the presence of so many minorities (many varieties of Christianity) made Jews a less obvious target

-Jews, unlike Christians, had no attachment to the Ottomans’ enemies (Christendom)

Persia was generally the worst place for Jews in Muslim world

-most visible minority and only one across Iran (others were regional, e.g.  Armenians)

-stricter standard of Shi’a Islam: Jews not just infidels, but “ritually unclean- people whose very touch brought pollution” (151)

Balfour Declaration, Mandate, and establishment of the State of Israel

-1917- Balfour Declaration by the British government, stating that “His Majesty’s Government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine”, formed the basis for the 1922 British Mandate over Palestine

-Jewish immigration to Palestine increased in the 1930s as a response to Nazi persecution, though the British tried to put a cap on immigrants to Palestine

-with the establishment of Israel and the ensuing war between Israel and her Arab neighbors in 1948, Jews in Arab countries faced both domestic (persecution or outright expulsion) and international (Israeli efforts to get Jews to move, and often logistic cooperation between Israel, Western nations, and Arab countries in order for the latter to get rid of their Jews) pressure to leave

-Aliya (Hebrew for ‘ascent’): the immigration of Jews to the State of Israel, or Eretz Israel

-over 800,000 Jews from Arab countries came to Israel in the decades after 1948; today almost none remain

Islamic Anti-Semitism: A Historiographical Debate

-One view: “There is little sign [in the Muslim world] of deep-rooted emotional hostility directed against Jews- or for that matter any other group- such as the anti-Semitism of the Christian world” (32); that anti-Semitism in the Muslim world is essentially a product of European anti-Semitism, transferred to the Middle East via imperialism and European media (Protocols of the Elders of Zion, Nazi propaganda, etc.)

-Opposing view: “During the last fifteen years, certain Western scholars have tried to argue that, first, Islamic anti-Semitism- that is, hatred of Jews- is only a recent phenomenon learned from the Nazis during and after the 1940s, and, second, that Jews lived safely under Muslim rule for centuries, especially during the Golden Age of Muslim Spain.  Both assertions are unsupported by the evidence.  Islam 1, that is, the Islam of the texts, as found in the Qur’an and hadith and in the sira, and Islam 2- that is, the Islam developed or elaborated from those texts early on by the Qur’anic commentators and jurisconsulists, and then set in stone more than a millennium ago- and even Islam 3, in the sense of Islamic civilization- that is, what Muslims actually did historically- have all been deeply anti-Semitic.  That is, all have been anti-infidel, so that Christians too are regarded with disdain and contempt and hatred, but the Jews have been served, or been seen to have merited, a special animus.” (22) 

Country

1948

2008

Afghanistan

6000

0

Algeria

140000

0

Azerbaijan 30000?

6,800

Egypt

75000

100

Iran

50000

10800

Iraq

105000

120

Lebanon

25000

0

Libya

40000

0

Morocco

250000

3000

Syria

20000

100

Tunisia

66000

1000

Turkey

80000

17800

Yemen

55000

200

912000