History is synonymous with turbulence, but even by its troubled standards, the churn in a single century between 1857 and the 1960s was unprecedented. Every single empire, ancient, middling or modern, collapsed: Mughal, Chinese, Japanese, Ottoman, Safawid, Tsarist, Spanish, Hapsburg, German, Dutch, Belgian, Portuguese, Italian, French and British.
Strategic stability, always a tenuous reality, went into a spin as post-empire and post-colonial states had to find new equations, not only with old masters but also between themselves and within themselves.
Great empires linger on their deathbed, and it is difficult to pinpoint the precise moment of decline. There are few disputes, however, about a death rattle.
Fall of the Ottoman Empire
The Mughals spent over 125 years in hospital, unwilling to die and unable to live after Nadir Shah smashed what was left of their pretensions in 1739. Ottoman fragility was evident when Russia advanced to the Black Sea, France took Algeria in 1830 and Greece became independent in 1832.
The slow death, however, turned into hurry when World War I
ended the Tsars, Ottomans and Hapsburgs. The British Empire enjoyed a false
resurrection, when it gained some 800,000 square miles of territory in 1919,
but by 1947 it had lost India, instigating the downward spiral that finished
Europeans as world powers. The age of empire gave way to an era of uncertainty.
The most startling impact, however, was in the Muslim world. With the collapse
of the last two great Muslim empires, Mughal and Ottoman, within a space of six
decades, every single Muslim from Morocco to Indonesia became a subject of
Europe. The Soviet Union, in theory, was a coalition of independent states.
Lenin quickly disabused such illusions when he sent troops to reconquer Muslim
Central Asia.
Ridicule is the fate of the weak. Queen Victoria, the story goes, asked
the Sultan of Turkey why he called himself Caliph when Victoria ruled over more
Muslims than him. In 1918 that joke turned into a nightmare. Nothing
shocked and psychologically destabilised Muslims more than one fact: for the
first time since the advent of Islam, even Mecca and Medina were under
Christian control.
A cry that had been building for some time in the subconscious
acquired momentum: Islam was in danger.
Search for ‘Islamic Space’
This triggered a significant political reaction. Muslims began
to seek an ideological mooring in Islam both as an inspiration that would
revive their ability to defend their faith and to restore the power and glory
that was once theirs. This was not instant revelation, but a gradual
awakening that often had to lurk within the shadows of debate before it
acquired relevance with the birth of new Muslim states. Even when Muslims did
fashion a democracy, as in Pakistan, they attached a new notion to their constitution:
an Islamic republic, in which one faith was supreme.
A parallel idea began to flourish: the search for “Islamic space”
that would function as a supranational alliance to ensure common security and
project Islamic interests. A cursory examination of these concepts would reveal
innumerable contradictions, but emotional idealism was not easily deflected by
intellectual or practical obstacles.
The most powerful support for Islamism, logically, came where pride in the past
was most prevalent; in the successor communities, and then successor states, of
the Mughal and Ottoman empires.
The Medina Question: A Bargain with Allah
At the heart of the present Muslim angst lies what once Henry Kissinger described, in a conversation, as the Medina question: how did small bands of 7th century Bedouin from a minor oasis in the Arabian deserts conquer, within a lifetime, the known world between the walls of China and the south of France?
The historian and sociologist Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406) argued
that the answer lay in sharia, which protected religion and broadened
intellect in this life and preserved the soul in the next one. It also created
group solidarity, from which emerged battlefield success and empire. Glory,
therefore, was the boon of a compact, a bargain between Allah and the people
who believed in Him.
If the history of others, wrote Ibn Khaldun, followed the familiar trajectory of rise, decline and fall, then that of Muslims added a fourth dimension: rise, decline, fall and renewal. Renewal was possible through a return to first principles that had turned an oasis into a world power.
Belief in renewal becomes acute, understandably, in any age of loss. It also raises questions: where had Muslims gone wrong? Had Allah abandoned Muslims? The debate was sharpest where humiliation was most keenly felt, within Mughal and Ottoman space.
On the Indian subcontinent, Muslims joined Mahatma Gandhi after he accepted leadership of the first movement for the restoration of the Caliphate. Uniquely, Gandhi thus became the first non-Muslim to lead a jihad, albeit a non-violent one, which was a condition he imposed.
But there should be no confusion about what Muslims wanted from
this struggle: a post-British India in which Muslims would offer allegiance to
an Imam-e-Hind, a sort of Caliphate-light, and the community live by the sharia irrespective of what system
non-Muslim Indians chose for themselves. This position was repeatedly
articulated by the Jamat-e-Ulema. The first nominated Imam-e-Hind was, in fact,
Maulana Azad.
At exactly the same time, Arabs rose against the British in an intifada, with its epicentre in Iraq. The British used air force and gas, and lost 453 dead (mostly Indian troops) and 600-odd missing before calm was restored. London realised that direct rule was impossible, and soon instituted forms of neo-colonisation through feudatories on the lines of the princely states of India.
Neo-colonisation is the grant of independence on condition that
you do not exercise it. Implicit in its strategies is partition; the weaker the
neo-colony the more amenable it will be. A serious attempt was made to Balkanise
India as well just before 1947; ‘Ulsterisation’ was a familiar trope
of our independence discourse. The plan for Turkey after 1918 was a brutal
carve-up. But the Arabs did not have either a Kemal Ataturk or a Sardar Patel.
It only remains to note the level of tension that one unresolved problem of a
princely state has caused in South Asia, and wonder, perhaps with a shudder,
what might have happened if more such states had taken shape.
In the succeeding decades, Arab frustration over various forms of “foreign
influence” and lack of Arab unity has grown slowly but surely. Nasser,
famously, tried to unite Egypt and Syria; it was a non-starter. Today, the
self-styled ‘Caliph’ of the ‘Islamic State’ has made destruction of the Sykes-Picot
pact of 1916 between Britain, France (and later Russia) which planted the seeds
of western domination, a rallying point.
The British considered every option: fully
supplicant Sultans, annexation, “spheres of influence”, semi-autonomous
regions, reconstitution of Ottoman vilayets
into Anatolia, Armenia, Jazirah-Iraq, Syria and Palestine, a railway route to
India and handing the Caliphate to Arabs of the Hijaz. When the Americans
finally learnt of this plan, revealed prematurely in December 1917 by Leon
Trotsky to a British journalist, an aide of President Woodrow Wilson, Colonel
House, remarked, presciently, “They are making it a breeding ground for future
war.”
In March 1921, Winston Churchill created straight-line maps for Arab
“countries” at a conference in Cairo, where naturally not a single
Arab was invited. Sherif Hussein was allotted Mecca, but the Sauds never
accepted his claims, and drove them out of the Hejaz in 1924. The Saudis could
not declare themselves the new Caliphs, but they did command one of the
essential prerequisites of the title: they became the new custodians of the Two
Holy Mosques, in Mecca and Medina.
(Excerpts from the 10th RN Kao Memorial Lecture. MJ Akbar is a BJP Rajya Sabha MP)
This is part one of the speech delivered on January 23, 2016.
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