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 El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West?

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PostSubject: El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West?   El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West? EmptyWed May 14, 2008 8:55 pm

"Moorish Spain is perhaps more relevant to us today than it has ever been. It was a twisted, distorted dream - a nightmare - of Andalus that drove crazed bombers to destroy hundreds of lives on the Madrid trains in March 2004: their aim was to kick-start a reconquest of the Iberian peninsula for their perverted version of Islam. Such events might make us fear a 'romanticised' idea of the period, and rely instead on the historian's dry account.

Yet the dream can work both ways: it is precisely within Moorish Spain itself that the lessons we need to learn for a better future between Islam and the West can be found. Culturally and religiously tolerant societies were created and lost several times back then. What worked and what didn't? How can harmony be achieved and then sustained."


Jason Webster's introduction to a small book of poetry called "Andalus - Moorish Songs of Love and Wine" was written in Valencia in 2007, when the horror of the Madrid bombs was still fresh. The book is a potent reminder that against that moment there were 800 years of Moorish Spain that achieved

"an openness and spirit of invention which allowed for exploration beyond the standard forms, the same spirit which made Andalus the intellectual and artistic powerhouse of the western Mediterranean: its worth remembering that at the time all manner of Christians from the future Pope Sylvester II to the great translator Gerard of Cremona were making their way to Spain "in search of knowledge". But for their efforts, and the work of many thinkers and writers of the three religions here in the Middle Ages (Islam, Christianity and Judaism), the European Renaissance might never have got off the ground.”

Jason Webster finishes by saying " There are things that need to be stressed about Moorish Spain at a time of growing pessimism about future relations between East and West. There always have been clashes between the two, and probably will be more, but alongside this existed a mutual understanding, trust and respect. We must hope that something of that can be recaptured today. In Andalus huge advances were made in everything from medicine to philosophy, astronomy and higher mathematics, and it gave us chess, oranges, paper, cotton and a fine tradition of love poetry that may, or may not, depending on the latest academic fashions - have influenced Europe's love-struck troubadours. What will future generations say that today's intense contact between the two communities has produced?"

This is a very different outlook to the hostile perspective of Declan Ganley's blog piece " The Cure at Troy" (on the Libertas website), in which he demonises Islam, comparing the prospective US withdrawal from Iraq "as a victory akin to the rout of the 2nd Crusade. Here the Francs were forced to lift their siege of Damascus and abandon vast territories, setting the stage for the fall of Egypt, the rise of Saladin and the annihilation of one of the greatest civilisations in history. Thus fell the apogee of Greek and Roman learning, the Byzantine Empire, whose death throes were commented on by Benedict XVI, perhaps giving room to consider that smarter, richer, better does not always beat faith, sacrifice and commitment. The storm is gathering apace, it will present itself with spectacular effect in the cities of the West soon enough."
Is the future of relations between Islamic people and the rest of the world predicted by this apocalyptic vision of a gathering Islamic storm, or is there any way we can achieve a culture of mutual tolerance and shared learning, as existed in Al Andalus for hundreds of years ?

Just to give a flavour, here is an extract from one of the poems in Webster’s book:

"The pennants of morning are unfurled,
Night’s bell has tolled, its time to travel on.
Go early to the garden and drink a morning draught
Among the flowers glistening with the dew-
The doves have stirred from their lofty perches, and
Warble their sermons from acacia-branch pulpits;
In every sort of language they coo in prose and verse,
Each telling in his own way of his own burning love.
The branch bends down, after the shower,
To drink from cups brimming with the dew,
While the clouds tears spill out into the land,
And find their path through every garden.
The air, spreading joy on all sides,
Toys with the shining scimitar;
Rise! And share in soulful ecstasy,
Caught between flowers and pure light!..

Ibn Zamrak (trans. Ted Gorton)
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PostSubject: Re: El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West?   El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West? EmptyWed May 14, 2008 9:07 pm

I've seen this before. How exactly does Ganley link the rise of Salahud Din to the decline of the Byzantine empire? And why does he spell Franks with a c?

If he really wishes to understand the reason for the collapse of the byzantine Empire, perhaps he should consider a certain event which happened during the fourth crusade from which Byzantium never recovered. That is if he wishes to do so, and not just engage in an anti-Islamic tirade.


Last edited by riadach on Wed May 14, 2008 9:11 pm; edited 1 time in total
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PostSubject: Re: El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West?   El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West? EmptyWed May 14, 2008 9:09 pm

riadach wrote:
I've seen this before. How exactly does Ganley link the rise of Salahud Din to the decline of the Byzantine empire? And why does he spell Franks with a c?

All the better to spend them ?
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PostSubject: Re: El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West?   El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West? EmptyWed May 14, 2008 9:12 pm

cactus flower wrote:
riadach wrote:
I've seen this before. How exactly does Ganley link the rise of Salahud Din to the decline of the Byzantine empire? And why does he spell Franks with a c?

All the better to spend them ?

I would love it if that was the reasoning behind it :-)

I should make a deal with him. I'll stay away from economics and finance, if he stays away from history (and possibly Irish).
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PostSubject: Re: El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West?   El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West? EmptyWed May 14, 2008 9:21 pm

So do you have a view on the history of Islam?
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PostSubject: Re: El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West?   El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West? EmptyWed May 14, 2008 9:30 pm

cactus flower wrote:
So do you have a view on the history of Islam?

In an assessment of Islam's contribution to the history of the world, I would lean more towards the Al-Andalus view, than Mr Ganley's version of events. I'm not going to argue that the history of islam has been an entirely positive thing, but I would wonder where would western science and learning be today without the mu'atzlis, and the early muslim polymaths, not to mention the amount of greek learning adopted by the arabs, when western europe was overrun by Germanic peoples with little or no respect for the written word.


He might want to ask as well, why Nur ad-Din eventually invaded Egypt, putting all of Syria and Egypt under his control thus posing an even greater threat to the crusader states. It was because of constant Crusader intervention in the Nile and disruption of the fatimid caliphate in a bid to bring it under its control. Perhaps a better analogy to the current Iraq situation, or west v islam situation at present, given it was they who provoked the response.
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PostSubject: Re: El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West?   El Andalus - a lesson for a better future between Islam and the West? EmptyFri May 16, 2008 2:14 am

I couldn't agree more. Very Happy
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