Hi, Iām John Green, this is Crash Course World History and today weāre going to talk about the Islamic state. A story ripped from the headlines! Mr. Green? Wait. No, no, no, no this is not history this is news and also for me itās not even news - itās the future. Yeah, Me from the Past, it turns out that history is a continuous process, and that even current events have a history. [Theme Music] All right, letās begin with the headlines. In 2014 ISIS ā the Islamic State In Iraq and Syria, also known as ISIL and Islamic State, and many other things. Anyway, they declared a caliphate in the territory that the group controls, prompting many Americans to wonder what a Caliphate is. Well, if youāve seen our episode on the emergence of Islam, the caliphate is an Islamic state, modeled on the original Islamic community that was founded by the prophet Muhammad in the 7th century. Now Muhammad was not a caliph, because the word means successor and they were the successors to Muhammad. But the first four political leaders who led the community and turned it into an empire have come to be known as the Four Rightly Guided caliphs. And when groups like ISIS that are trying to reestablish this kind of government look back on it they see it as being kind of the golden age. That this was a time of not just of growth for the Islamic empire but also of political stability and unity. Which as it happens it really wasnāt. Like even under the Four Rightly Guided caliphs the Islamic world was tremendously diverse and had huge disagreements. I mean of the Four Rightly Guided caliphs, three were assassinated. But anyway, the ideal version of that type of state is what ISIS and some other Islamists mean when they talk about reconstructing a caliphate although what the boundaries of a modern-day Caliphate might be are far from clear. I mean are you going to try to include Indonesia, but anyway, according to historian Michael Cook, āthe restoration of the caliphate is a political ideal for many Islamists ā and for some a political project,ā But I want to be clear, that is not the case for the vast majority of Muslims. So when I use the term Islamism I mean something very specific. For me, Islamism is the idea that Islam can be the basis of government; itās not the same as fundamentalism, although itās often related to it. And itās certainly not the same thing as Islam - which is a diverse and complicated and world wide religious tradition. Now, Islamism is a potent political force, but itās a relatively recent one, and in many ways it developed as a response to our old friend, Western-style nationalism. That said, the idea that Islam can guide nation states or new kinds of states is much older than, you know, 2001. But it became much more relevant to Americans then with the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington. Since then there has been more and more attention paid to the argument that Islam and Western civilization were at-best incompatible and at-worst locked in a mortal clash of civilizations. That clash of civilizations idea has become so ingrained that even though I donāt really agree with it I think we need to at least acknowledge what weāre talking about when we talk about us and them. Us, usually refers to European style nation states such as those which became dominant in the 19th century. These states tend to value democracy or at least pluralism, and, to varying degrees, they espouse political values such as egalitarianism and individualism. National identity in these states has at least traditionally been in a sense ethnic ā based on some sense of shared language and culture if not exactly kinship ā and itās secular rather than religious. And then the arguments goes that the Islamic world is the opposite of this, but I am not convinced that thatās accurate. For instance, there are lots of religious connections in European style nation states and there are lots of conversations about strengthening those religious connections or even making laws according to religious dictates. And in the Islamic world there are lots and
lots of nation states. But letās start with the idea that the Islamists are out of step with the modern political reality of the nation state. Letās go to the Thought Bubble. So Islam is a universal religion that is supposed to transcend ethnic identity. According to the Quran, āThe believers indeed are brothers.ā
(Q49:10) The universal nature of Islam didnāt mean
that ethnicity didnāt matter at all of course; it did. Early on and for a long time Arab ethnicity was privileged in the Islamic world and this was especially true during the period of conquest. This was despite Muhammad saying āTruly the Arab has no superiority over the non-Arab, nor the non-Arab over the Arab, nor the black over the white, nor the white over the black, except in piety.ā But their amazingly rapid and far reaching conquest granted the Arabs huge prestige that lasted until the 18th century. Now, from the beginning being a Muslim meant being part of a political community, because unlike Jesus or the Buddha, Muhammad was also a political leader in addition being a religious one. But at least to an extent the tight connection between political and religious identity really ended with the assassination of the Fourth Rightly Guided Caliph Ali. According to the writer Tamim Ansary, āAfter Aliās death, the khalifate was just an empire.ā But as the empire grew and became more diverse, it became impossible to hold it together as a political unit. So, even though the idea of a caliphate doesnāt square so well with western notions of ethnically homogenous nation states, ethnicity has always mattered in the Islamic world, as we can see if we go to Turkey, or Egypt, or Pakistan. In each of those places, the experience of being a Muslim is affected by the experience of oneās ethnicity. Thanks, Thought Bubble. So this idea that the Islamic empire wasnāt always a caliphate for much of its history, was just an empire is really important. Because it gets to how not-different ways
of organizing people are when it comes to like us and them. Now Iām not trying to make a false equivalence or say that all people are the same or whatever. But like letās look at a defining western political value - egalitarianism. In its earliest incarnations, Islam was unusually egalitarian, especially for its time. The religion structurally avoids hierarchy except perhaps based on piety. The Quran (49:13) states: āthe noblest among you in the sight of God is the most godfearing of you,ā and thereās a quote from Muhammad that āpeople are equals like the teeth of a comb.ā To which I say. Whatās a comb? Also, Islamic law, unlike, say Hammurabiās code, doesnāt make class distinctions among Muslims, only between Muslims and non-Muslims, and Muhammad is quoted as saying that the blood of believers is always of equal value. In fact, that Islam lacks caste and formal aristocracy was noted by many Europeans, who thought it was weird. Now this canonical idea egalitarianism is
not the same thing as equality - at least the equality that weāve come to think about in the present day. Like in the Quran, and in the sayings of Muhammad called Hadiths, women and men are alike in the performance of prayer and their obligation to pay the alms tax and their expectations of eternal life in paradise. And women did have some inheritance rights in the early Islamic community that they did not enjoy in pre-Islamic Arabic communities. And that they also wouldnāt have had in Byzantium or, god forbid, Rome. And then thereās the inequality between Muslims and āunbelieversā which is pretty well known; like other āpeoples of the bookā Christians and Jews, could live and work in Muslim empires provided they paid a special tax called the jizya. Which was far better than the life of a Muslim under Ferdinand and Isabella in Spain. And then thereās the issue of slavery, which the Quran accepts. In general Muslims have avoided enslaving other Muslims, showing that there is a sense of brotherhood and solidarity among believers, but overall to quote a historian āIslamic egalitarianism was ā¦ limited to free Muslim males.ā Of course, if youāve watched our US History series you may remember that early American egalitarianism was limited to like land-owning Christian males. My point here, is that if you look for historical precedents, you can generally find them. Thatās true in the Islamic world, itās also true in the rest of the world. Now today, in Europe and the United States, most citizens expect their states to be, in at least some degree, democratic, and republican, and constitutional. So when people in the west look at the early Islamic empire we have a way of imaging Caliphs as kings because, like, you know, we had kings. But Caliphs were important in different ways, for starters, they were the successor to the prophet. Now, maybe thatās similar to what the Roman Catholic papacy became over time but itās not like a king - except for the king of England. King Henry VIII, founder of my church, who was like āI need to be the head of the church so that I can get divorced.ā But this combination of religious and political authority is important as is, at least initially, there was no hereditary succession of caliphs. And then thereās the concept of bayāa which is a kind of political allegiance, like according to Michael Cook, āan agreement is made between the future caliph and the future subject whereby each party is to have specified rights and duties.ā A closely related theme is shura, āthe duty of the caliph to consult with others before making his decision.ā Like, according to tradition, when Abu Bakr accepted the role of the first Caliph he claimed that Muslims had no duty to obey him if he disobeyed God and the Prophet. Now thatās not democracy, but it is limited rule and it gives people some participation in the government. And then thereās another Western value that is often bandied about as something that isnāt part of the Islamic world - freedom. Islam, as you may know, means āsubmission.ā And a Muslim is a person who submits to God. And to some Westerns that seems like the opposite of freedom. But the tradition within Islam, is that by
releasing people from domination by other people, and making them servants of God - there is freedom. Freedom is a famously abstract concept, but if we think of it as the opposite of slavery, then being free from having to serve other people is freedom. That said, in contemporary Islamism, political freedom is not generally held in particularly high esteem. Which is one of the reasons why Islamists
were less relevant in the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011 than people tend to think. But in at least one way, the caliphate can be thought of as enshrining republican (with a little ārā) values; Islamism emphasizes the rule of law and that even the caliph is subject to it. Since ultimate sovereignty belongs only to God, men to quote Michael Cook, āare not entitled to exercise lordship over each other.ā And the much talked about Shariāa law, coming from a source outside the political process (whether thatās God or religious scholars) acts as a huge check on rulers becoming dictators. Right. like Iranās government has many problems, but its president is not a dictator. But that same complete sovereignty of God over the people makes it difficult for Islamists to embrace democracy, because itās based on the idea that the people themselves are sovereign. And the most radical Islamists, like Ayman al Zawahiri of Al-Qaeda really do hate democracy. He called democracy, āa new religion that
deifies the masses.ā And the completely extreme and absolutely horrifying Boko Haram in Nigeria have exclaimed that they, āwill never accept any system of government apart from one stipulated by Islam,ā and will, ākeep on fighting against democracy, capitalism, socialism and whatever.ā Yes, the āand whateverā is a quote. If you belong to a group that is fighting blank, blank, blank, and whatever - you need to leave that group. So itās easy and relatively common for people in the West to say that Islam is inimical to political values like freedom, equality and democracy. And when we talk about certain groups of radical Islamists, thatās true. But in the West we also really, really struggle to see the other complexly, and to understand the incredible diversity in response to the revelation of the Quran. In my opinion, the clash of civilizations model oversimplifies the world into this group and that group, and imagines that this group sees the world only that way and that group sees the world only this way. In fact, itās complicated. For one thing, modern Islamism itself, is a very recent phenomenon, and in large part itās a reaction to western imperialism and nationalism, and it doesnāt always reflect the ideas of Islam OR Islamic history. Humans have a storied tradition of calling upon certain facets of our history to inspire us toward what we already kind of want. And those seeking to recreate the caliphate want a more powerful and unified Arab world, if not, an Islamic world. And so they look toward history for inspiration, taking parts and leaving many others. What really happened, is that for the most part European style nationalism took hold in the Islamic world at the same time it rose in Europe, as the creation of Turkey shows quite clearly. But in trying to understand the allure of the caliphate itās important to understand that Islam is not just a religion. From the beginning, it was a civilization. As the historian Tamim Ansary wrote: āIslam might just as validly be considered as one item in a class whose other items include communism, parliamentary democracy, fascism, and the like, because Islam is a social project like those others, an idea for how politics and the economy ought to be managed, a complete system of civil and criminal law.ā But itās also a very diverse system shaped by everything around it and everything inside of it - like any civilization. So when we try to discuss a topic as complex and charged as contemporary Islamic thought and practice and political world views, we donāt just need to be sure that we have some sense of history. We also need to be sure that weāre all talking about the same thing. There is nothing bright about the lines between politics and religion and history and nation. Thank you for watching. Iāll see you next week. Crash Course is filmed in the Chad and Stacey Emigholz studio here in Indianapolis. Itās made possible thanks to the hard work of all of these people. And also your subscriptions on Subbable. Subbable is a voluntary subscription service that allows you to support Crash Course directly so we can keep it free for everyone forever. You can also support Crash Course by buying some of our awesome merch like t-shirts or posters. Thank you for watching. And as we say in my hometown, ādonāt forget to be awesome.ā
they're praying in the wrong direction
Edit: excellent video, as usual from John Green. I believe he talks about Islam and the Arab world better than most Arab "scholars" in social media and Twitter.
But can we not make the sub /r/crashcourse?
This is excellent! Don't think i've seen this explained as well ever. Can anyone think of criticisms or counter-arguments to this video?
I love John Green :)