|
did their opposition begin to weaken. And then it as rather political Islam that had
weakened. When the Fatimids conquered Egypt in 356 and moved the seat of their empire from
al-Mahdiya to the newly founded Cairo, Islam assumed a new meaning for North Africa. The
Fatimid empire there quickly melted away, and in its place arose several independent
states, Berber in blood though claiming Arab descent and bearing Arab names. Islam no
longer meant foreign oppression, and it began at last to make its way. Again, in the
preceding period of insurrection the Berber leaders had frequently appeared in the guise
and with the claim of prophets, men miraculously gifted and with a message from God. These
wild tribesmen, with all their fanaticism for their own tribal liberties, have always been
peculiarly accessible to the genius which claims its mission from heaven. So they had
taken up the Fatimid cause and worshipped Ubayd Allah the Mahdi. And so they continued
thereafter, and still continue to be swayed by saints, darwishes, and prophets of all
degrees of insanity and cunning, The latest case in point is that of the Shaykh as-Sanusi,
with whom we have already dealt. As time went on, there came a change in these prophet-led
risings and saint-founded states. They gradually slipped over from being frankly anti-Muhammadan,
if also close imitations of Muhammad's life and methods, to being equally frankly Muslim.
The theology of Islam easily afforded them the necessary point of connection. All that the
prophet of the day need do was to claim the position of the Mahdi, that
|
|
|
Guided One, who according to the traditions of Muhammad was to come before the last
day, when the earth shall be filled with violence, and to fill it again with
righteousness. It was easy for each new Mahdi to select from the vast and contradictory
mass of traditions in Muslim eschatology those which best fitted his person and his time.
To the story and the doctrine of one of these we now come.
At the beginning of the sixth century a certain Berber student of theology, Ibn Tumart
by name, travelled in the East in search of knowledge. An early and persistent western
tradition asserts that he was a favorite pupil of al-Ghazzali's, and was marked out by him
as showing the signs of a future founder of empire. This may be taken for what it is
worth. What is certain is that Ibn Tumart went back to the Maghrib and there brought about
the triumph of a doctrine which was derived, if modified, from that of the Ash'arites.
Previously all kalam had been under a cloud in the West. Theological studies had been
closely limited to fiqh, or canon law, and that of the narrowed school of Malik ibn
Anas. Even the Qur'an and the collections of traditions had come to be neglected in favor
of systematized law-books. The revolt of Ibn Hazm against this had apparently accomplished
little. It had been too one-sided and negative, and had lacked the weight of personality
behind it. Ibn Hazm had assailed the views of others with a wealth of vituperative
language. But he had been a controversialist only. There is a story, tolerably well
authenticated, that the books of al-Ghazzali were solemnly condemned by the Qadis
|
|