March 2, 2002, Saturday
THE
ARTS/CULTURAL DESK
Scholars Are Quietly Offering New
Theories of the Koran
By ALEXANDER STILLE (NYT) 2066
words
To Muslims the Koran is the very word of God, who spoke through the
Angel Gabriel to Muhammad: ''This book is not to be doubted,'' the Koran
declares unequivocally at its beginning. Scholars and writers in Islamic
countries who have ignored that warning have sometimes found themselves the
target of death threats and violence, sending a chill through universities
around the world.
Yet despite the fear, a handful of experts have been
quietly investigating the origins of the Koran, offering radically new theories
about the text's meaning and the rise of Islam.
Christoph Luxenberg,
a scholar of ancient Semitic languages in Germany, argues that the Koran has
been misread and mistranslated for centuries. His work, based on the earliest
copies of the Koran, maintains that parts of Islam's holy book are derived from
pre-existing Christian Aramaic texts that were misinterpreted by later Islamic
scholars who prepared the editions of the Koran commonly read today.
So,
for example, the virgins who are supposedly awaiting good Islamic martyrs as
their reward in paradise are in reality ''white raisins'' of crystal clarity
rather than fair maidens.
Christoph Luxenberg, however, is a pseudonym,
and his scholarly tome ''''The Syro-Aramaic Reading of the Koran'' had trouble
finding a publisher, although it is considered a major new work by several
leading scholars in the field. Verlag Das Arabische Buch in Berlin ultimately
published the book.
The caution is not surprising. Salman Rushdie's
''Satanic Verses'' received a fatwa because it appeared to mock Muhammad. The
Egyptian novelist Naguib Mahfouz was stabbed because one of his books was
thought to be irreligious. And when the Arab scholar Suliman Bashear argued that
Islam developed as a religion gradually rather than emerging fully formed from
the mouth of the Prophet, he was injured after being thrown from a second-story
window by his students at the University of Nablus in the West Bank. Even many
broad-minded liberal Muslims become upset when the historical veracity and
authenticity of the Koran is questioned.
The reverberations have
affected non-Muslim scholars in Western countries. ''Between fear and political
correctness, it's not possible to say anything other than sugary nonsense about
Islam,'' said one scholar at an American university who asked not to be named,
referring to the threatened violence as well as the widespread reluctance on
United States college campuses to criticize other cultures.
While
scriptural interpretation may seem like a remote and innocuous activity, close
textual study of Jewish and Christian scripture played no small role in
loosening the Church's domination on the intellectual and cultural life of
Europe, and paving the way for unfettered secular thought. ''The Muslims have
the benefit of hindsight of the European experience, and they know very well
that once you start questioning the holy scriptures, you don't know where it
will stop,'' the scholar explained.
The touchiness about questioning the
Koran predates the latest rise of Islamic militancy. As long ago as 1977, John
Wansbrough of the School of Oriental and African Studies in London wrote that
subjecting the Koran to ''analysis by the instruments and techniques of biblical
criticism is virtually unknown.''
Mr. Wansbrough insisted that the text
of the Koran appeared to be a composite of different voices or texts compiled
over dozens if not hundreds of years. After all, scholars agree that there is no
evidence of the Koran until 691 -- 59 years after Muhammad's death -- when the
Dome of the Rock mosque in Jerusalem was built, carrying several Koranic
inscriptions.
These inscriptions differ to some degree from the version
of the Koran that has been handed down through the centuries, suggesting,
scholars say, that the Koran may have still been evolving in the last decade of
the seventh century. Moreover, much of what we know as Islam -- the lives and
sayings of the Prophet -- is based on texts from between 130 and 300 years after
Muhammad's death.
In 1977 two other scholars from the School for
Oriental and African Studies at London University -- Patricia Crone (a professor
of history at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton) and Michael Cook (a
professor of Near Eastern history at Princeton University) -- suggested a
radically new approach in their book ''Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic
World.''
Since there are no Arabic chronicles from the first century of
Islam, the two looked at several non-Muslim, seventh-century accounts that
suggested Muhammad was perceived not as the founder of a new religion but as a
preacher in the Old Testament tradition, hailing the coming of a Messiah. Many
of the early documents refer to the followers of Muhammad as ''hagarenes,'' and
the ''tribe of Ishmael,'' in other words as descendants of Hagar, the servant
girl that the Jewish patriarch Abraham used to father his son Ishmael.
In its earliest form, Ms. Crone and Mr. Cook argued, the followers of
Muhammad may have seen themselves as retaking their place in the Holy Land
alongside their Jewish cousins. (And many Jews appear to have welcomed the Arabs
as liberators when they entered Jerusalem in 638.)
The idea that Jewish
messianism animated the early followers of the Prophet is not widely accepted in
the field, but ''Hagarism'' is credited with opening up the field. ''Crone and
Cook came up with some very interesting revisionist ideas,'' says Fred M. Donner
of the University of Chicago and author of the recent book ''Narratives of
Islamic Origins: The Beginnings of Islamic Historical Writing.'' ''I think in
trying to reconstruct what happened, they went off the deep end, but they were
asking the right questions.''
The revisionist school of early Islam has
quietly picked up momentum in the last few years as historians began to apply
rational standards of proof to this material.
Mr. Cook and Ms. Crone
have revised some of their early hypotheses while sticking to others. ''We were
certainly wrong about quite a lot of things,'' Ms. Crone said. ''But I stick to
the basic point we made: that Islamic history did not arise as the classic
tradition says it does.''
Ms. Crone insists that the Koran and the
Islamic tradition present a fundamental paradox. The Koran is a text soaked in
monotheistic thinking, filled with stories and references to Abraham, Isaac,
Joseph and Jesus, and yet the official history insists that Muhammad, an
illiterate camel merchant, received the revelation in Mecca, a remote, sparsely
populated part of Arabia, far from the centers of monotheistic thought, in an
environment of idol-worshiping Arab Bedouins. Unless one accepts the idea of the
angel Gabriel, Ms. Crone says, historians must somehow explain how all these
monotheistic stories and ideas found their way into the Koran.
''There
are only two possibilities,'' Ms. Crone said. ''Either there had to be
substantial numbers of Jews and Christians in Mecca or the Koran had to have
been composed somewhere else.''
Indeed, many scholars who are not
revisionists agree that Islam must be placed back into the wider historical
context of the religions of the Middle East rather than seeing it as the
spontaneous product of the pristine Arabian desert. ''I think there is
increasing acceptance, even on the part of many Muslims, that Islam emerged out
of the wider monotheistic soup of the Middle East,'' says Roy Mottahedeh, a
professor of Islamic history at Harvard University.
Scholars like Mr.
Luxenberg and Gerd-R. Puin, who teaches at Saarland University in Germany, have
returned to the earliest known copies of the Koran in order to grasp what it
says about the document's origins and composition. Mr. Luxenberg explains these
copies are written without vowels and diacritical dots that modern Arabic uses
to make it clear what letter is intended. In the eighth and ninth centuries,
more than a century after the death of Muhammad, Islamic commentators added
diacritical marks to clear up the ambiguities of the text, giving precise
meanings to passages based on what they considered to be their proper context.
Mr. Luxenberg's radical theory is that many of the text's difficulties can be
clarified when it is seen as closely related to Aramaic, the language group of
most Middle Eastern Jews and Christians at the time.
For example, the
famous passage about the virgins is based on the word hur, which is an adjective
in the feminine plural meaning simply ''white.'' Islamic tradition insists the
term hur stands for ''houri,'' which means virgin, but Mr. Luxenberg insists
that this is a forced misreading of the text. In both ancient Aramaic and in at
least one respected dictionary of early Arabic, hur means ''white raisin.''
Mr. Luxenberg has traced the passages dealing with paradise to a
Christian text called Hymns of Paradise by a fourth-century author. Mr.
Luxenberg said the word paradise was derived from the Aramaic word for garden
and all the descriptions of paradise described it as a garden of flowing waters,
abundant fruits and white raisins, a prized delicacy in the ancient Near East.
In this context, white raisins, mentioned often as hur, Mr. Luxenberg said,
makes more sense than a reward of sexual favors.
In many cases, the
differences can be quite significant. Mr. Puin points out that in the early
archaic copies of the Koran, it is impossible to distinguish between the words
''to fight'' and ''to kill.'' In many cases, he said, Islamic exegetes added
diacritical marks that yielded the harsher meaning, perhaps reflecting a period
in which the Islamic Empire was often at war.
A return to the earliest
Koran, Mr. Puin and others suggest, might lead to a more tolerant brand of
Islam, as well as one that is more conscious of its close ties to both Judaism
and Christianity.
''It is serious and exciting work,'' Ms. Crone said of
Mr. Luxenberg's work. Jane McAuliffe, a professor of Islamic studies at
Georgetown University, has asked Mr. Luxenberg to contribute an essay to the
Encyclopedia of the Koran, which she is editing.
Mr. Puin would love to
see a ''critical edition'' of the Koran produced, one based on recent
philological work, but, he says, ''the word critical is misunderstood in the
Islamic world -- it is seen as criticizing or attacking the text.''
Some
Muslim authors have begun to publish skeptical, revisionist work on the Koran as
well. Several new volumes of revisionist scholarship, ''The Origins of the
Koran,'' and ''The Quest for the Historical Muhammad,'' have been edited by a
former Muslim who writes under the pen name Ibn Warraq. Mr. Warraq, who heads a
group called the Institute for the Secularization of Islamic Society, makes no
bones about having a political agenda. ''Biblical scholarship has made people
less dogmatic, more open,'' he said, ''and I hope that happens to Muslim society
as well.''
But many Muslims find the tone and claims of revisionism
offensive. ''I think the broader implications of some of the revisionist
scholarship is to say that the Koran is not an authentic book, that it was
fabricated 150 years later,'' says Ebrahim Moosa, a professor of religious
studies at Duke University, as well as a Muslim cleric whose liberal theological
leanings earned him the animosity of fundamentalists in South Africa, which he
left after his house was firebombed.
Andrew Rippin, an Islamicist at the
University of Victoria in British Columbia, Canada, says that freedom of speech
in the Islamic world is more likely to evolve from within the Islamic
interpretative tradition than from outside attacks on it. Approaches to the
Koran that are now branded as heretical -- interpreting the text metaphorically
rather than literally -- were widely practiced in mainstream Islam a thousand
years ago.
''When I teach the history of the interpretation it is
eye-opening to students the amount of independent thought and diversity of
interpretation that existed in the early centuries of Islam,'' Mr. Rippin says.
''It was only in more recent centuries that there was a need for limiting
interpretation.''
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