Thursday, August 7, 2014

Islamic civilization has never quite recovered from World War I - By Father Raymond J. de Souza - August 7, 2014

At this website by various means we seek to defend life, to encourage Christian faith, to promote Catholic tradition, to edify Marriage in its link to the Creator, to encourage families and individuals, and to support missionary disciples of Jesus.  G.S.

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https://nationalpost.com/opinion/father-raymond-j-de-souza-islamic-civilization-has-never-quite-recovered-from-world-war-i

National Library of Israel

After The Great War, Jerusalem was lost to Christian Europe. To this day, Muslims ask: When will it be reclaimed? Father Raymond J. de Souza - August 07, 2014  

On Monday, at the Commonwealth ceremony of remembrance in Glasgow Cathedral, the Reverend Laurence Whitley began: “We meet because on a summer’s day like this one, one hundred years ago, the world changed. Our nations and peoples found themselves in a war the like of which had never before been experienced, and the memory of which still haunts us all.”

The centenary of the outbreak of World War I is most often remarked as just that — the event that changed the world. Its effects haunt Europe’s bloodiest century.

The Austro-Hungarian Empire foundered upon nationalisms that tore apart the dual monarchy, nationalisms that would tear apart Europe again and again. The Russian monarchy fell, giving way to communist tyranny. The German monarchy fell, giving way to the unstable Weimar Republic, which in turn gave way to Nazi tyranny.

In the West, we understandably focus on the European consequences of how the world changed. Yet the effects haunt what is unfolding in the Middle East even today. The Ottoman Empire was the fourth great dynasty to fall. It is not possible to understand fully the Middle East today, with its unravelling post-WWI settlement, without attempting to understand how many Islamic eyes see that war.

With the end of the Ottoman Empire, Islam lost its geopolitical expression on the world stage. The great territories of Arabia were carved up by the British and the French, a dramatic consequence of Islam’s defeat at the hands of (what many Muslims consider) Christian Europe. More vivid still was, as an immediate consequence of that defeat, the British mandate over Palestine and the loss of Jerusalem.

The conquest of Jerusalem by Islamic armies in 636 was of utmost symbolic importance — the holy city of Judaism and Christianity had been taken. The Islamic geopolitical presence expanded and contracted over a millennium but, with the exception of the crusader interludes, Jerusalem remained a Muslim city. Jerusalem’s most distinctive features — the 7th-century Dome of the Rock and the 16th-century walls of the old city — were Muslim constructions. After WWI, it was lost to Christian Europe. When would Muslims reclaim it?

The creation of the state of Israel by the United Nations after World War II was a consequence in part of Zionism and in part the Holocaust — a safe national homeland for the Jewish people at a time when independence was coming to colonies the world over. In a contrasting view, historic Muslim lands had been lost when Islam was geopolitically weak, first to Christian Europe and then to world Jewry. The defeat of the Arab armies in 1948 only confirmed that Jerusalem had been lost only because Islam was militarily feeble. In a common Islamic reading, it is WWI, not WWII, that determined the (unjust) settlement of the Middle East.

The first sustained attempt to recapture what had been lost in WWI was the project of Arab nationalism. The Arab nation as a whole would reconstitute Islam’s geopolitical force, but largely on lines of secular nationalism. After that project catastrophically failed in the comprehensive defeat of the Six Day War of 1967, the project became less Arab and more Islamic.

The war in Gaza and the lethal expulsion of Christians from the “Islamic State” in territories of Syria and Iraq are but the latest manifestation of the internal war that dominates the Islamic Middle East. Can what was lost after WWI be reclaimed — a caliphate that will unite Muslims and restore Islamic sovereignty over Jerusalem?

The secular Arab states have made their peace, by treaty or de facto, with Israel, so the remaining option seems to be a non-state movement of jihad. To the extent that it gains political control over territory — whether in Gaza or the Sinai or the “Islamic State” or in Egypt or Libya — things go very badly for both Jews and Christians.

To present this Islamic reading of post-WWI history is neither to be sympathetic to it, much less endorse it. But it behooves us to understand it. The summer of 1914 gave rise to 77 years of European bloodshed and tyranny before the last of the evil empires was dismantled. Due in part to this global preoccupation with Europe’s pathologies, a brake was put on history in the Middle East. History is now accelerating there again. The guns of August echo still.

National Post

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/father-raymond-j-de-souza-islamic-civilization-has-never-quite-recovered-from-world-war-i

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https://nationalpost.com/opinion/scott-van-wynsberghe-the-great-wars-jihad

Wikimedia CommonsEnver Pasha, a central figure in the Young Turks movement, on a 1900s Ottoman postcard.

Scott Van Wynsberghe: The Great War’s jihad       
Special to National Post - November 9, 2012 

During a 1915-1916 standoff between British and Ottoman forces at the Suez Canal, Muslim soldiers from two Indian battalions tried to defect.

As the eleventh day of the eleventh month once again approaches, inspiring remembrance of past sacrifices, the First World War — which led to the very concept of Remembrance Day — continues to confound. Typically portrayed as a conflict that tore apart Western civilization, it is not often recognized as something else altogether, namely, an official Islamic holy war.

The Great War’s jihad has received uneven treatment from historians. Fritz Fischer, in a 1961 book on Germany’s grand strategy in the war, made clear that Berlin aimed to inflict Islamic uprisings on the colonial empires of the Allies. However, Fischer’s message had trouble getting through.

A 1973 account of the war, by David Sherman, did not mention jihad at all. As late as 1989, David Fromkin presented a survey of the Ottoman Empire for the period 1914-1918 that minimized the issue of holy war. General overviews of the First World War by Martin Gilbert (1994), David Stevenson (2004) and G.J. Meyer (2006) followed the leads of Sherman and Fromkin, saying little or nothing on the subject. If not for the efforts of such writers as Peter Hopkirk (1994), Donald M. McKale (1998) and Sean McMeekin (2010), the whole line of enquiry may have languished.

Possibly encouraging disregard for the Great War’s jihad is the fact that it partly originated in the mind of not a Muslim but an erratic infidel, Germany’s Kaiser Wilhelm II. Quirky and impulsive, Wilhelm had a weakness for odd ideas. (Among other things, he helped invent the paranoid racial notion of the “Yellow Peril.”) Even by his standards, however, what he did in the Middle East was unusual.

In the fall of 1898, reportedly as a means of strengthening ties with the Ottoman Empire, Wilhelm toured parts of that realm. His destinations included Jerusalem (where he dedicated a church), but it was a side-trip to Damascus that got all the attention. During a banquet in his honour on Nov. 8, he became enthusiastic and declared, “May the [Ottoman] Sultan, and his 300 million Muslim subjects scattered across the Earth, be assured that the German Kaiser will be their friend for all time.” Germany thus found itself in an alliance with the Islamic world. According to Sean McMeekin, the news was so surprising that wild stories about Wilhelm converting to Islam spread across the Middle East.

German-Ottoman relations ballooned. The years leading up to the First World War witnessed a huge engineering project, the famous “Berlin-to-Baghdad Railway,” and the number of German military personnel posted to the Ottoman Empire reached about 2,000. As well, the Ottoman Empire itself changed in ways that favoured Germany. As of 1914, there was still a sultan, but he was a figurehead, power having shifted to a revolutionary movement formally called the Committee of Union and Progress but better known as the Young Turks. Central among the Young Turks was Enver Pasha, who had received military training in Germany and had served as the Ottoman military attaché in Berlin.

On the surface, much of the above looked secular, not theological, yet a religious component lurked underneath, as shown by the career of German diplomat Max von Oppenheim. A fervent orientalist, Oppenheim had traveled across the Middle East and had been trained in Arabic and Islam at Cairo, where he served for many years in the German consulate until his retirement in 1910. Oppenheim was a strong believer in the power of Islam, and Wilhelm’s Damascus shocker created a huge opportunity for him, opening doors at the highest levels in Berlin.

Thus, when the First World War erupted in August 1914, it was a safe bet that the Ottoman Empire would join the fight on Germany’s side, and that Germany would use the Ottomans to cause Islamic trouble for the Allies. (Just as predictable was Oppenheim’s return to service: He was put in charge of a unit devoted to Middle Eastern subversion.) Sure enough, the Ottomans declared war in the following November — and then came the jihad.

The exact procedure for the Ottoman declaration of holy war has caused confusion. Some historians (Caroline Finkel, Andrew Mango and André Gerolymatos) pinpont the declaration at the Topkapi palace in Constantinople (now Istanbul) on Nov. 13. Against that, Sean McMeekin has opted for the 14th and the Fatih Sultan Mehmed mosque in the same city, with Peter Balakian agreeing on the date and Peter Hopkirk the site. There is a consensus that Sultan Mehmed Reshad V — who, technically, held the additional title of caliph, or head of the Sunni branch of Islam — was present, as was the top Ottoman cleric, Ugurplu Hayri Bey (reportedly a Young Turks appointee, says Balakian). The issuance of at least one “fetva” (that is, a fatwa or spiritual decree), and possibly up to five of them, was linked to the event.

So the holy war was on, sort of. From the beginning, results were mixed. There was no mass uprising of Muslims against the Allies — some Arabs, for example, were not so fussy on the Turks — but there were some startling moments. According to Peter Hopkirk, a regiment of Baluchi soldiers from present-day Pakistan suffered a 1915 mutiny that killed the unit’s British commander. During a 1915-1916 standoff between British and Ottoman forces at the Suez Canal, Muslim soldiers from two Indian battalions tried to defect. Historian Peter Mansfield says they were shot. In Egypt, Mansfield adds, there were two attempts to assassinate Britain’s puppet ruler there, Hussain Kemal.

London became so nervous that it asked the pro-British head of the Ismaili Muslims, the Aga Khan, to agitate in favour of the Allies. Biographer Anne Edwards claims he made enough progress that German agents tried to kill him. In Persia (now Iran) and Libya, however, he apparently had little influence.

By 1915, Persia was a mess. Such German operatives as Wilhelm Wassmuss had fanned out across the country and recruited locals for attacks on targets connected to Britain and Russia. (Although nominally independent, Persia had undergone a pre-war division into spheres of influence by those two powers.) Kidnappings, bank robberies and assassinations followed, and the British alone had to deploy 11,000 troops to quash this mischief. By the end of the war, Persia had been beaten up by all sides, giving it one more reason to hate the West.

In Libya, the Allies got another scare, this one at the hands of a religious movement, the Sanusi (or Sanussi, Senussi, Senoussi and so on). Espousing an austere form of Sufi mysticism in the early 1800s, this movement had won over tribes conducting trans-Saharan commerce and thereby became an economic force spanning much of the region. That ended in the late 1800s, as European empires advanced on all sides. Sporadic fighting with the French began in the early 1900s, followed by an Italian invasion of the whole of Libya (which was loosely held by the Ottomans) in 1911.

German and Ottoman agents were soon plying the Sanusi with guns and cash and urging them to join the jihad. Although already at war with Italy, the Sanusi attacked French positions in the Sahara during 1915-1916, wiping out the garrison at Djanet, in Algeria. Overstretching themselves, they also invaded Egypt during the same period, driving as far as the port of Mersa Matruh and grabbing a string of isolated oases near the Nile valley. The British needed some 35,000 troops to end the threat.

Ironically, as the disappointing German-Ottoman jihad fizzled out, it turned on itself. One of the Ottoman soldiers advising the Sanusi was an Arab, Jafar al-Askari (or Jafar Pasha), who would be captured by the British and would change sides. Working in concert with such British figures as Lawrence of Arabia, he aided Arab forces that had revolted against the Ottomans in 1916 and had liberated Mecca. Backfires do not get much worse than that.

National Post

 https://nationalpost.com/opinion/scott-van-wynsberghe-the-great-wars-jihad

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At this website by various means we seek to defend life, to encourage Christian faith, to promote Catholic tradition, to edify Marriage in its link to the Creator, to encourage families and individuals, and to support missionary disciples of Jesus.  G.S.

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© 2004-2021 All rights reserved Fr. Gilles Surprenant, Associate Priest of Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montreal  QC
© 2004-2021 Tous droits réservés Abbé Gilles Surprenant, Prêtre Associé de Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montréal QC
 

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