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"I'm
Right, You're Wrong, Go To Hell"
Religions
and the meeting of civilization
By Bernard Lewis
For a long time now
it has been our practice in the modern Western world to define ourselves
primarily by nationality, and to see other identities and
allegiances�religious, political, and the like�as subdivisions of the
larger and more important whole. The events of September 11 and after have
made us aware of another perception�of a religion subdivided into
nations rather than a nation subdivided into religions�and this has
induced some of us to think of ourselves and of our relations with others
in ways that had become unfamiliar. The confrontation with a force that
defines itself as Islam has given a new relevance�indeed, urgency�to
the theme of the "clash of civilizations."
At one time the general assumption of mankind was that
"civilization" meant us, and the rest were uncivilized. This, as
far as we know, was the view of the great civilizations of the past�in
China, India, Greece, Rome, Persia, and the ancient Middle East. Not until
a comparatively late stage did the idea emerge that there are different
civilizations, that these civilizations meet and interact, and�even more
interesting�that a civilization has a life-span: it is born, grows,
matures, declines, and dies. One can perhaps trace that latter idea to the
medieval Arab historian-philosopher Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406), who spoke in
precisely those terms, though what he discussed was not civilizations but
states�or, rather, regimes. The concept wasn't really adapted to
civilizations until the twentieth century.
The first writer to make the connection was the German historian Oswald
Spengler. Perhaps influenced by the horrors of World War I and the defeat
of imperial Germany, he looked around him and saw civilization in decline.
He built a philosophy on this perception, captured in the phrase "the
decline of the West"�Der Untergang des Abendlandes. His two volumes
under this title were published in 1918 and 1922. In these he discussed
how different civilizations meet, interact, rise and decline, and fall.
His approach was elaborated by Arnold Toynbee, who proceeded with a sort
of wish list of civilizations�and, of course, also a hit list. Most
recently Samuel Huntington, of Harvard University, has argued that the
clash of civilizations, more than of countries or governments, is now the
basic force of international relations. I think most of us would agree,
and some of us have indeed said, that the clash of civilizations is an
important aspect of modern international relations, though probably not
many of us would go so far as to imply, as some have done, that
civilizations have foreign policies and form alliances.
There have been a number of different civilizations in human history, and
several are extant, though not all in the same condition. Mustafa Kemal,
later known as Atat�rk, dealt with the relative condition of
civilizations in some of the speeches in which he urged the people of the
newly established Turkish Republic to modernize. He put the issue with
military directness and simplicity. People, he said, talked of this
civilization and that civilization, and of interaction and influence
between civilizations; but only one civilization was alive and well and
advancing, and that was what he called modernity, the civilization
"of our time." All the others were dying or dead, he said, and
Turkey's choice was to join this civilization or be part of a dying world.
The one civilization was, of course, the West.
Only two civilizations have been defined by religion. Others have had
religions but are identified primarily by region and ethnicity. Buddhism
has been a major religious force, and was the first to try to bring a
universal message to all mankind. There is some evidence of Buddhist
activities in the ancient Middle East, and the possibility has been
suggested of Buddhist influence on Judaism and, therefore, on the rise of
Christianity. But Buddhism has not expanded significantly for many
centuries, and the countries where it flourishes�in South, Southeast,
and East Asia�are defined, like their neighbors, by culture more than by
creed. These other civilizations, with the brief and problematic exception
of communism, have lacked the ideological capacity�and for the most part
even the desire�for indefinite expansion.
Christianity and Islam are the two religions that define civilizations,
and they have much in common, along with some differences. In English and
in most of the other languages of the Christian world we have two words,
"Christianity" and "Christendom." Christianity is a
religion, a system of belief and worship with certain ecclesiastical
institutions. Christendom is a civilization that incorporates elements
that are non-Christian or even anti-Christian. Hitler and the Nazis, it
may be recalled, are products of Christendom, but hardly of Christianity.
When we talk of Islam, we use the same word for both the religion and the
civilization, which can lead to misunderstanding. The late Marshall
Hodgson, a distinguished historian of Islam at the University of Chicago,
was, I think, the first to draw attention to this problem, and he invented
the word "Islamdom." Unfortunately, "Islamdom" is
awkward to pronounce and just didn't catch on, so the confusion remains.
(In Turkish there is no confusion, because "Islam" means the
civilization, and "Islamiyet" refers specifically to the
religion.)
In looking at the history of civilization we talk, for example, of
"Islamic art," meaning art produced in Muslim countries, not
just religious art, whereas the term "Christian art" refers to
religious or votive art, churches and pious sculpture and painting. We
talk about "Islamic science," by which we mean physics,
chemistry, mathematics, biology, and the rest under the aegis of Muslim
civilization. If we say "Christian science," we mean something
totally different and unrelated.
Does one talk about "Jewish science"? I don't think so. One may
talk about Jewish scientists, but that's not the same thing. But then, of
course, Judaism is not a civilization�it's a religion and a culture.
Most of Jewish history since the Diaspora has taken place within either
Christendom or Islam. There were Jews in India, there were Jews in China,
but those communities didn't flourish. Their role was minimal, both in the
history of the Jews and in the history of India and China. The term
"Judeo-Christian" is a new name for an old reality, though in
earlier times it would have been equally resented on both sides of the
hyphen. One could use an equivalent term, "Judeo-Islamic," to
designate another cultural symbiosis that flourished in the more recent
past and ended with the dawn of modernity.
To what extent is a religiously defined civilization compatible with
pluralism�tolerance of others within the same civilization but of
different religions? This crucial question points to a major distinction
between two types of religion. For some religions, just as
"civilization" means us, and the rest are barbarians, so
"religion" means ours, and the rest are infidels. Other
religions, such as Judaism and most of the religions of Asia, concede that
human beings may use different religions to speak to God, as they use
different languages to speak to one another. God understands them all. I
know in my heart that the English language is the finest instrument the
human race has ever devised to express its thoughts and feelings, but I
recognize in my mind that others may feel exactly the same way about their
languages, and I have no problem with that. These two approaches to
religion may conveniently be denoted by the terms their critics use to
condemn them�"triumphalism" and "relativism."
In one of his sermons
the fifteenth-century Franciscan Saint John of Capistrano, immortalized on
the map of California, denounced the Jews for trying to spread a
"deceitful" notion among Christians: "The Jews say that
everyone can be saved in his own faith, which is impossible." For
once a charge of his against the Jews was justified. The Talmud does
indeed say that the righteous of all faiths have a place in paradise.
Polytheists and atheists are excluded, but monotheists of any persuasion
who observe the basic moral laws are eligible. The relativist view was
condemned and rejected by both Christians and Muslims, who shared the
conviction that there was only one true faith, theirs, which it was their
duty to bring to all humankind. The triumphalist view is increasingly
under attack in Christendom, and is disavowed by significant numbers of
Christian clerics. There is little sign as yet of a parallel development
in Islam.
Tolerance is, of course, an extremely intolerant idea, because it means
"I am the boss: I will allow you some, though not all, of the rights
I enjoy as long as you behave yourself according to standards that I shall
determine." That, I think, is a fair definition of religious
tolerance as it is normally understood and applied. In a letter to the
Jewish community of Newport, Rhode Island, that George Washington wrote in
1790, he remarked, perhaps in an allusion to the famous "Patent of
Tolerance" promulgated by the Austrian Emperor Joseph II a few years
previously, "It is now no more that toleration is spoken of, as if it
was by the indulgence of one class of people that another enjoyed the
exercise of their inherent natural rights." At a meeting of Jews,
Christians, and Muslims in Vienna some years ago the Cardinal Archbishop
Franz Koenig spoke of tolerance, and I couldn't resist quoting Washington
to him. He replied, "You are right. I shall no more speak of
tolerance; I shall speak of mutual respect." There are still too few
who share the attitude expressed in this truly magnificent response.
For those taking the relativist approach to religion (in effect, "I
have my god, you have your god, and others have theirs"), there may
be specific political or economic reasons for objecting to someone else's
beliefs, but in principle there is no theological problem. For those
taking the triumphalist approach (classically summed up in the formula
"I'm right, you're wrong, go to hell"), tolerance is a problem.
Because the triumphalist's is the only true and complete religion, all
other religions are at best incomplete and more probably false and evil;
and since he is the privileged recipient of God's final message to
humankind, it is surely his duty to bring it to others rather than keep it
selfishly for himself.
Now, if one believes that, what does one do about it? And how does one
relate to people of another religion? If we look at this question
historically, one thing emerges very clearly: whether the other religion
is previous or subsequent to one's own is extremely important. From a
Christian point of view, for example, Judaism is previous and Islam is
subsequent. From a Muslim point of view, both Judaism and Christianity are
previous. From a Jewish point of view, both Christianity and Islam are
subsequent�but since Judaism is not triumphalist, this is not a problem.
But it is a problem for Christians and Muslims�or perhaps I should say
for traditional Christians and Muslims. From their perspective, a previous
religion may be regarded as incomplete, as superseded, but it is not
necessarily false if it comes in the proper sequence of revelation. So
from a Muslim point of view, Judaism and Christianity were both true
religions at the time of their revelation, but they were superseded by the
final and complete revelation of Islam; although they are
out-of-date�last year's model, so to speak�they are not inherently
false. Therefore Muslim law, sharia, not only permits but requires that a
certain degree of tolerance be accorded them.
It is, of course, a little more complicated: Jews and Christians are
accused of falsifying their originally authentic scriptures and religions.
Thus, from a Muslim point of view, the Christian doctrine of the Trinity
and of the divinity of Jesus Christ are distortions. The point is made in
several Koranic verses: "There is no God but God alone, He has no
companion," and "He is God, one, eternal. He does not beget, He
is not begotten, and He has no peer." These and similar verses appear
frequently on early Islamic coins and in inscriptions, and are clearly
polemical in intent. They are inscribed, notably, in the Dome of the Rock,
in Jerusalem�a challenge to Christianity in its birthplace. Jews are
accused of eliminating scriptural passages foretelling the advent of
Muhammad. Anything subsequent to Muhammad, "the Seal of the
Prophets," is, from the Muslim perspective, necessarily false. This
explains the harsh treatment of post-Islamic religions, such as the Bahai
faith and the Ahmadiya movement, in Islamic lands.
Muslims did not claim a special relationship to either of the predecessor
religions, and if Jews and Christians chose not to accept Muhammad, that
was their loss. Muslims were prepared to tolerate them in accordance with
sharia, which lays down both the extent and the limits of the latitude to
be granted those who follow a recognized religion: they must be
monotheists and they must have a revealed scripture, which in practice
often limited tolerance to Jews and Christians. The Koran names a third
qualified group, the Sabians; there is some uncertainty as to who they
were, and at times this uncertainty provided a convenient way of extending
the tolerance of the Muslim state to Zoroastrians or other groups when it
was thought expedient. On principle, no tolerance was extended to
polytheists or idolaters, and this sometimes raised acute problems in
Asian and African lands conquered by the Muslims.
Tolerance was a much more difficult question for Christians. For them,
Judaism is a precursor of their religion, and Christianity is the
fulfillment of the divine promises made to the Jews. The Jewish rejection
of that fulfillment is therefore seen as impugning some of the central
tenets of the Christian faith. Tolerance between different branches of
Christianity would eventually become an even bigger problem. Of course,
the outsider is more easily tolerated than the dissident insider. Heretics
are a much greater danger than unbelievers. The English philosopher John
Locke's famous A Letter Concerning Toleration, written toward the end of
the seventeenth century, is a plea for religious tolerance, still a fairly
new idea at that time. Locke wrote, "Neither pagan, nor Mahometan,
nor Jew, ought to be excluded from the civil rights of the commonwealth,
because of his religion." Someone is of course missing from that
list: the Catholic. The difference is clear. For Locke and his
contemporaries, the pagan, the Muslim, the Jew, were no threat to the
Church of England; the Catholic was. The Catholic was trying to subvert
Protestantism, to make England Catholic, and, as Protestant polemicists at
the time put it, to make England subject to a foreign potentate�namely,
the Pope in Rome.
Muslims were in general more tolerant of diversity within their own
community, and even cited an early tradition to the effect that such
diversity is a divine blessing. The concept of heresy�in the Christian
sense of incorrect belief recognized and condemned as such by properly
constituted religious authority�was unknown to classical Islam.
Deviation and diversity, with rare exceptions, were persecuted only when
they offered a serious threat to the existing order. The very notion of an
authority empowered to rule on questions of belief was alien to
traditional Islamic thought and practice. It has become less alien.
A consequence of the similarity between Christianity and Islam in
background and approach is the long conflict between the two civilizations
they defined. When two religions met in the Mediterranean area, each
claiming to be the recipient of God's final revelation, conflict was
inevitable. The conflict, in fact, was almost continuous: the first
Arab-Islamic invasions took Islam by conquest to the then Christian lands
of Syria, Palestine, Egypt, and North Africa, and, for a while, to
Southern Europe; the Tatars took it into Russia and Eastern Europe; and
the Turks took it into the Balkans. To each advance came a Christian
rejoinder: the Reconquista in Spain, the Crusades in the Levant, the
throwing off of what the Russians call the Tatar yoke in the history of
their country, and, finally, the great European counterattack into the
lands of Islam, which is usually called imperialism.
During this long period of conflict, of jihad and crusade, of conquest and
reconquest, Christianity and Islam nevertheless maintained a level of
communication, because the two are basically the same kind of religion.
They could argue. They could hold disputations and debates. Even their
screams of rage were mutually intelligible. When Christians and Muslims
said to each other, "You are an infidel and you will burn in
hell," each understood exactly what the other meant, because they
both meant the same thing. (Their heavens are differently appointed, but
their hells are much the same.) Such assertions and accusations would have
conveyed little or no meaning to a Hindu, a Buddhist, or a Confucian.
Christians and Muslims looked at each other and studied each other in
strikingly different ways. This is owing in part, at least, to their
different circumstances. Christian Europeans from the start had to learn
foreign languages in order to read their scriptures and their classics and
to communicate with one another. From the seventh century onward they had
a further motive to look outward�their holy places, in the land where
their faith was born, were under Muslim rule, and could be visited only
with Muslim permission. Muslims had no comparable problems. Their holy
places were in Arabia, under Arab rule; their scriptures were in Arabic,
which across their civilization was the language also of literature, of
science and scholarship, of government and commerce, and, increasingly, of
everyday communication, as the conquered countries in Southwest Asia and
North Africa were Arabized and forgot their ancient languages and scripts.
In later times other Islamic languages emerged, notably Persian and
Turkish; but in the early, formative centuries Arabic reigned alone.
This difference in the experiences and the needs of the two civilizations
is reflected in their attitudes toward each other. From the earliest
recorded times people in Europe tried to learn the languages of the
Islamic world, starting with Arabic, the language of the most advanced
civilization of the day. Later some, mostly for practical reasons, learned
Persian and more especially Turkish, which in Ottoman times supplanted
Arabic as the language of government and diplomacy. From the sixteenth
century on there were chairs of Arabic at French and Dutch universities.
Cambridge University had its first chair of Arabic in 1632, Oxford in
1636. Europeans no longer needed Arabic to gain access to the higher
sciences. Now they learned it out of intellectual curiosity�the desire
to know something about another civilization and its ways. By the
eighteenth century Europe boasted a considerable body of scholarly
literature regarding the Islamic world�editions of texts and
translations of historical and literary and theological works, as well as
histories of literature and religion and even general histories of Islamic
countries, with descriptions of their people and their ways. Grammars and
dictionaries of Arabic, Persian, and Turkish were available to European
scholars from the sixteenth century onward. It is surely significant that
far more attention was given to Arabic, the classical and scriptural
language of Islam, than to Persian and Turkish, the languages of the
current rulers of the world. In the course of the nineteenth century
European and later also American scholars set to work to disinter,
decipher, and interpret the buried and forgotten languages and writings of
antiquity, and thus to recover an ancient and glorious chapter in history.
These activities were greeted with incomprehension and then with suspicion
by those who did not share and there-fore could not understand this kind
of curiosity.
The Islamic world, with no comparable incentives, displayed a total lack
of interest in Christian civilization. An initially understandable, even
justifiable, contempt for the barbarians beyond the frontier continued
long after that characterization ceased to be accurate, and even into a
time when it became preposterously inaccurate.
It has sometimes been argued that the European interest in Arabic and
other Eastern languages was an adjunct�or, given the time lag, a
precursor�of imperialism. If that is so, we must acquit the Arabs and
the Turks of any such predatory intent. The Arabs spent 800 years in Spain
without showing much interest in Spanish or Latin. The Ottomans ruled much
of southeastern Europe for half a millennium, but for most of that time
they never bothered to learn Greek or any Balkan or European
language�which might have been useful. When they needed interpreters,
they used converts and others from these various countries. There was no
Occidentalism until the expanding West forced itself on the attention of
the rest of the world. We may find similar attitudes in present-day
America.
Today we in the West are engaged in what we see as a war against
terrorism, and what the terrorists present as a war against unbelief. Some
on both sides see this struggle as one between civilizations or, as others
would put it, between religions. If they are right, and there is much to
support their view, then the clash between these two religiously defined
civilizations results not only from their differences but also from their
resemblances�and in these there may even be some hope for better future
understanding.
(Bernard
Lewis/Atlantic Monthly) Bernard
Lewis is the Cleveland E. Dodge
Professor of Near Eastern Studies, Emeritus, at Princeton University. He
is the author of many books on Islam, including The
Crisis of Islam: Holy War and Unholy Terror (2003). His most recent
Atlantic article was "What
Went Wrong?" (January 2002).
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