The last Ottoman Caliph,
Abdülmecid
II
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When Mohammed died in 632,
however, he had made no provisions for who would succeed him as the leader of
the Islamic faithful. There was considerable disagreement among the closest
circle of his advisors. In the end, his
father-in-law, Abu Bakr, was named “caliph” or Leader of the Faithful. This was both a religious and political title
as Islam, unlike the modern West which believes that Religion and the State
should be in separate and distinct spheres, sees society as in integrated whole
with the political power at the service of sharia
or religious law.
Mohammed had several sons but
none survived him into adulthood. There
were those among his followers who believed that the succession should have
gone to his son-in-law, Ali and they refused to recognize the legitimacy of Abu
Bakr’s reign. Those who accepted the
election of Abu Bakr as caliph evolved into the Sunnis. Those who believe that Mohammed had
designated his son-in-law, Ali, as his successor evolved into the Shiites. This split was not immediate but grew slowly
wider during Islam’s first century.
Abu Bakr died only two years
after Mohammed. He was the last caliph
for almost three decades to die peacefully. Abu Bakr was succeeded by Umar ibn al-Khattab
who reigned for ten years. It was Umar
who captured Jerusalem from the Byzantines in 636. Umar was assassinated by agents of the
Persians in 644 after a ten year reign.
He was succeeded in turn by Uthman ibn al-Affan. Umar had appointed a body of six men to elect
a successor upon his death and left the instructions that any of the six who dissented
from the choice should be killed so that there would be opposition. The final choice came down to Uthman or Ali
and while Uthman was chosen, the Ali faction would not accept the election. But neither was Ali or any of his followers
killed. A very deep wound within the
community of Islam began to fester.
During Uthman’s caliphate,
variant versions of the Qur’an were collected,
a single text established by the caliph, and all other versions
destroyed so that there would be a single Arabic text which even today is the
definitive text of the Qur’an. Uthman’s
reign was a violent one, marked by rebellions in both Syria and Egypt that
threatened the unity of the caliphate.
In fact, the rebels offered the caliphate to Ali but he supposedly
refused. In 656 a group of rebels broke
into Uthman’s home and murdered him. Ali
was urged both by the rebels and by the citizens of Medina to accept the
caliphate and finally did, but many who had been followers of Uthman refused to
recognize the legitimacy of his reign. In
661 at prayers during the annual fast of Ramadan, Ali was murdered. He was succeeded by Muawiyah I who
established the Umayyad dynasty. These
first five caliphs are considered to be the “rightly guided” caliphs. Ali had a son, Hussein (or Husayn) who
refused to pledge to the Umayyads as he considered their claim to the caliphate
illegitimate. Yazīd ibn Mu’āwiya ibn Abī Sufyān, the son of Muawiyah and
second Umayyad caliph, had Hussein ambushed and killed at Karbala in modern
Iraq. He is considered a martyr by the
Shiites and his memory is still a source of Shiite anger towards the Sunnis.
The Umayyads ruled the
caliphate from their capital at Damascus until overthrown by the Abbasids in
750. The Abbasids moved the seat of the
caliphate to Baghdad. Survivors of the
Umayyads fled to Muslim Spain where they eventually established a rival
caliphate at Cordoba. The Abbasids fell
to the Mongols in 1258 and the caliphate eventually ended up being claimed by
the Ottoman Sultans until their deposition following World War I.
Over the centuries there have
been a number of counter-caliphates claiming leadership in the Islamic
world. The Umayyads of Cordoba retained
their caliphate until 1031 when it fractured into a number of warring Islamic
kingdoms. The Fatimid caliphate
(909-1171) controlled most of North Africa from the Red Sea in the east to the
Atlantic in the West. They also reached
up into Sicily for a period. They were
Shiite and their caliphs claimed descent from Mohammed through his daughter,
Fatima, the wife of Ali. The Sokoto
Caliphate was a nineteenth century Islamic movement among Nigerian Muslims that
eventually lost out politically to the power of European colonialism. The Ahmadiyya Caliphate which claims over 20
million followers is a Messianic movement in Islam that claims its caliph,
currently Mirza Masroor Ahmad, is the successor to the five righteous caliphs
and a prophet. It is considered
heretical by mainstream Muslims who believe there is no prophet after
Mohammed.
When the Ottoman caliphate
was deposed by Kemal Ataturk in 1924, there was a movement, especially among
Muslims in the British Empire, to come together to chose a successor in a
restored caliphate In the end, however,
the movement came to nothing.
It would seem that this new
caliphate proclaimed by Abu Bakr al Baghdadi is no more than another attempt to
revive a long lost and impractical claim to empire, but this could be very
different. Islam is undergoing a real
worldwide revival and many young Muslims are anxious to see their religion take
its ancient place as a world-spanning empire.
The sort of religious fundamentalism represented by this movement is
just the sort of thing that can energize people who feel that they have been
discriminated against and marginalized for too long and are ready to break the
political and religious hegemony that has kept them back. Abu Bakr’s choice of a name (after the first
caliph) and his talk of a caliphate, as well as his claim that while a Sunni he
is in fact a descendent from Mohammed, could bring together both Sunni and
Shiite factions in an attempt to restore Islam to the sort of power it had in
the days of the “rightly-guided caliphs.”
Hitler’s dream of a restored Reich and the way it captured the imagination
of the German people two generations ago show that a mystical psychopath can be
as dangerous as any other cruel dictator.
Do not be surprised if this movement builds momentum in the Muslim world
and becomes a major political and security threat to the West.
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