My friend, the historian G. Rex Smith, has co-edited a translation of the travel narrative of Pierre Loti, who visited the Middle East in 1900.
Googling Ibn Majid
One of the most famous Arab navigators is the Omani Ahmad b. Majid, who flourished in the latter half of the 15th century. If you google his name on Youtube you will find a variety of videos, cartoons and films. Above is a brief sample.
Oldest Beer Site
Check out this report in The Guardian on what may be the oldest site for producing beer in the world. Of course it was discovered by archaeologists…
More Lithographic Animals
As a fan of 19th century lithographs and steel engravings of images about the Middle East, I have enjoyed the images in Story of the Bible Animals by the Rev. J. G. Wood, published in 1888 and available on archive.org. In a previous post I posted images of camels. Here are a few of the other animals in the same volume.
The Daughters of Kobani
I recently finished reading a fascinating and well-informed account of the role of female Kurdish fighters during the last decade in the fight against the Islamic State (ISIS) in northeastern Syria. This is The Daughters of Kobani by Gayle Tzemach Lemmon. Based on interviews with many individuals involved in the fighting, especially several of the major fighters, a powerful story is woven in a narrative that I find riveting at times. The fighters she describes are genuine heroines, young girls who rose to the occasion. Many of them gave their lives, others were tortured and abused when captured. There is a sub-story here as well, the realization of the horror unleashed by ISIS, including the many Western recruits for whom rape and murder were seen as a right. For Kurds, Yezidis and anyone who did not succumb to the terror-laden evil of ISIS, this was hell on earth.
The history of the region now known as the Middle East and previously styled the Biblical World or the Orient has seen the destruction of many people from the earliest recorded history. Those who believe in the stories of Adam and Eve will remember that Cain, one of the first couple’s two first-born sons killed Abel, his brother. As the story goes, the dispute was over religion because Cain was jealous that God preferred the animal sacrifice of Abel the herder rather than his own vegetable sacrifice as a farmer. But reading behind even these poetic lines the real issue here is about the shedding of blood. The rest of the Bible, Old and New Testaments, is a bloody book with God killing off the whole earth and even its animals with a flood, with the Children of Israel ordered by God to kill Canaanites without mercy, with Assyrians, Babylonians and Romans adding to the overall death toll.
When Islam superceded Judaism and Christianity in much of the region, the killing did not stop because human nature did not change. In truth the many reasons why humans kill each other are only superficially about religion, which is simply used as a justification. On a group level we call the desire to exterminate another group of people “ethnic cleansing” or “genocide.” Beyond this is the attempt to destroy a people’s culture and language. As White Americans flooded into the American West, the natives were either killed, put in reservations or forced to “assimilate” by conversion to Christianity and the White Man’s (and White Women’s as well) ways. The colonial expansion worldwide was almost always one resulting in cultural genocide. When Ataturk rebuilt the idea of Turkey as a modern state out of the ruined Ottoman hopes of World War I, the variety of ethnic groups in this state were redefined as “ethnic Turks.”
One of the longest lasting ethnic groups, saved from extinction in large part because of the highland enclave most have lived in, is the Kurds. Spread out geographically between modern Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran, all of these states have marginalized, persecuted and at times indiscriminately killed members of their Kurdish population. But the Kurds have survived, most recently establishing a quasi-homeland in northern Iraq following the fall of Saddam Hussein. To the extent that Kurdish issues make the world news, most recent discussion has been about the Kurdish fighters, who with outside support were able to wrest control of parts of northeastern Syria that had been overrun by the Islamic State (ISIS) less than a decade ago.
Among the Kurdish fighters were a number of women who took up arms and learned the manly art of war firsthand. This has been widely covered in the media, in part because of the common stereotype that women in the region are stay-at-home pawns of a region-wide patriarchal system that denies them rights. Admittedly, the number of women who are in the military or a local militia throughout the region are few, but when push comes to shove the Kurdish case shows that women are, and indeed have been (as can be seen below), fully capable of fighting for a just cause.
The unanswerable question after reading this book is what the future holds not only for Kurdish women, but for young girls and women throughout the region. The burden of sexism is a worldwide phenomenon that has gained more attention as the world becomes more globalized. Attention, however, demands action beyond the passing of laws that are not followed and ideals that are not approved. Due to this burden it is often forgotten that talking about women’s rights should also involve taking about human rights. Women are not a separate species, nor can achievement of equality ever be achieved without men realizing and advocating for that equality. Nor is the idea of equality the sterile notion of “sameness” any more than cultures having to all be the same. For Kurdish women the future is not just about their rights as women, but what it means to freely live as Kurds. The daughters of Kobani have opened a door; it is up to the sons of Kobani not to close it but keep it open for all.
Amish Camels
The image above, a drawing from the 1850s, epitomizes how the camel has been imagined for everyone in America, the West and just about everywhere outside the area where camels were important domestic animals. A turbaned man astride a galloping camel: Orientalism has ruled the day. And when Westerners visited the Middle East, riding a camel became a touristic must-do, as in the image below:
Camels (the one-humped kind) do exist outside the Middle East, including the Old West of the United States and Australia. But take a look at the next picture of two warning signs. One is from Qatar, where camels sometimes cross a rural road, and the other is from the Amish country in Ohio. The Amish are a group who came to America to escape persecution in Europe and maintain an old lifestyle without electricity or automobiles. I used to visit the Amish parts of central Ohio when I was a child and it was always a game to see who could spot the first Amish buggy. So, I would have been quite shocked to see a camel warning in Ohio.
But today it may be necessary, since the Amish are now raising camels for milk, an idea sparked by a Saudi that led to a company, Desert Farms, being formed in 2015. The prices are a bit out of reach at $18 for 16 ounces of fresh camel milk or $72 for 200 grams of powdered camel milk. But as the site exclaims, camel milk is halal and even if not really kosher, it can be at times.
So if you can afford it or find it (and good luck at that), drink up.
Pythagorus in Egypt
The Greek mathematician Pythagorus, considered the founder of mathematics, left his home in Samos for Egypt in 535 BCE. A decade later he was captured and taken prisoner to Babylon. In 520 he was able to return to Samos and started a school there and later in southern Italy. While looking over some texts in the megasite archive.org, I came across an oddly titled 1839 book of essays on past “worthies” from the biblical patriarchs to Lord Nelson. A poem on Pythagorus caught my eye…
Muslim Women Hadith Scholars
The image of an Islamic scholar engaged in memorization, collection or engagement with the many traditions (hadith, singular) of the Prophet Muhammad is invariably that of a male. After all, one of the most important collections is that of the Persian Muhammad b. Ismail al-Bukhari (d. 870 CE). But over the centuries there have been thousands of Muslim women who studied these traditions. For example, one of these scholars, Zaynab bint al-Kamal, is reported to have taught some 400 hadith works in 13th century Damascus. Many of these women are known, but most have not been recognized outside biographical sources.
Earlier this year Dr. Mohammed Akram Nadwi from the Cambridge Islamic College published a 43-volume work, al-Wafa’ bi-asma’ al-nisa’ (Biographical Dictionary of Women Narrators of Hadith) on over 10,000 female hadith transmitters and scholars. The text is currently in Arabic, but there is an English translation of the first volume available on Amazon.
For a talk in Arabic on Youtube about his book, click here.