Robert Spencer

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Pamela Geller

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Bat Ye'or

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Brigitte Gabriel

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Daniel Pipes

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Debbie Schlussel

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Walid Shoebat

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Joe Kaufman

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Wafa Sultan

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Geert Wilders

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The Nuclear Card

Glen Bowersock: In the Shadow of the Sword by Tom Holland–Review

Posted on 13 May 2012 by Garibaldi

Books and articles on Islam are pretty good business these days, just ask Robert Spencer.

Tom Holland’s most recent book takes aim at the Meccan origins of Islam, but as Glen Bowersock writes it is one of the most “irresponsible” books on Arabia in recent memory.

Books that take minority revisionist positions appeal to an anti-Muslim culture that is contemptuous of Islam. As one commenter on Bowersock’s review noted,

Commercially-driven bandwagon jumping of the most risible kind is not restricted to popular writings, clearly. Interesting that, today, I struggled to buy a copy of Alexander Kynsh’s readable and erudite Islam in Historical Perspective, a book widely respected and admired within academic Islamic Studies, whilst the literary classes of Britain celebrate having this title on their bookshelves because it is written with such literary panache, willfully oblivious to the ugly cultural current that flows beneath this kind of intellectual partisanism.

*Update: I want to add that Tom Holland is not an Islamophobe or anti-Muslim as far as I can tell. Bowersock’s review of Holland’s book highlighted some crucial issues and questions and was generally spot-on in my opinion. I want to emphasize that writing, investigating, and critiquing the “origins of Islam” and the “literal truth” of orthodoxy does not make one a hate-monger, in fact it is necessary. I would recommend everyone read Holland’s book for themselves and decide.

In the Shadow of the Sword by Tom Holland – review

by Glen Browerback (The Guardian)

In his sprawling new book Tom Holland undertakes to explain nothing less than the origin of Islam. This is a subject as relevant to today’s world as it is controversial within it. How Islam began was obscure right from the start, above all to the surprised Christians who first succumbed to the Arab armies that surged out of the Arabian peninsula in the seventh century. They had seen themselves as confronting a different threat. After all, the Persians had captured Jerusalem in 614 and soon moved into Egypt. At that moment they appeared to be the principal antagonist of the Byzantine empire based in Constantinople. No one could have imagined that a little over two decades later the Persian empire would be in its death throes and that the Patriarch of Jerusalem would be turning over the city to an Arab caliph.

The beginnings of Islam have always been anchored in Mecca in the northwestern part of the Arabian peninsula. Here Muhammad was believed to have received from the angel Gabriel the earliest revelations that became incorporated in the Muslim scripture, the Qur’an. Scholarly debate about the revelations and about Meccan society has gone on for centuries, but no one before has seriously doubted the conjunction of Muhammad and Mecca. Holland wants us to believe that Muhammad did not come from Mecca at all but from southern Transjordan, and that his revelation was a compound of languages and ideas floating around in the Near East.

Holland came to his work on Islam unencumbered by any prior acquaintance with its fundamental texts or the scholarly literature. He modestly compares himself to Edward Gibbon, whom he can call without the slightest fear of contradiction “an infinitely greater historian than myself”. In the Decline and Fall, at the opening of his magisterial chapter 50 on Muhammad, Gibbon had candidly acknowledged his ignorance of “Oriental tongues”, but he also expressed his gratitude “to the learned interpreters who have transfused their science in the Latin, French, and English languages”. Holland seems to have confined himself largely to interpreters, learned or otherwise, writing in English, but his efforts to inform himself, arduous as they may have been, were manifestly insufficient.

He has written his book in a swashbuckling style that aims more to unsettle his readers than to instruct them. I have not seen a book about Arabia that is so irresponsible and unreliable since Kamal Salibi’s The Bible Came from Arabia (1985). Although that work was depressingly misguided in replacing biblical places with their homonyms in the Arabian peninsula, it at least revealed an accomplished scholar who had gone badly astray. Holland has read widely, but carelessly. He starts out with an irrelevant, though arresting, account of a defeated Jewish king in Arabian Himyar (Yemen) killing himself by riding his horse into the Red Sea. It is typical of Holland’s style to lead off with this fanciful story when an inscription from the time of the king’s death records that the Ethiopians killed him.

Holland explodes with indignation over the traditional term, jahiliyya (age of ignorance), for the time before Muhammad. After a tabloid view of Arab culture in that period, he declares: “The effect of this presumption was to prove incalculable. To this day, even in the west, it continues to inform the way in which the history of the Middle East is interpreted and understood.” This was partially true in Gibbon’s time, but it is quite false today. Research and publication on pre-Islamic history, archaeology, art and languages may be found in many western universities, such as Oxford, as well as in many Arab countries, including Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt, and Syria.

The past 30 years have seen lively controversies in the scholarship on early Islam, much of it emanating from the revisionist work of John Wansbrough in analysing the text of the Qur’an and its possible links with both Christian and Jewish language and thought. This is catnip for Holland, as is the revisionist work by Wansbrough’s disciple, Andrew Rippin, and, much more idiosyncratically, by the pseudonymous Christoph Luxenberg, who dares not speak his name. Although these debates are all solidly grounded in close textual study, they can do little more than titillate uninitiated readers because the dust has not yet settled.

Holland’s failure to follow Gibbon in examining French scholarship means that he has missed many of the most important recent discoveries, above all the large number of inscriptions from late antique south Arabia that Christian Julien Robin and his associates in Paris have been publishing in a steady stream. We now know much more about the Judaism of Himyar, the conflict with Christian Ethiopia and the Persian occupation of western Arabia. In discussing early Qur’an manuscripts Holland has missed the collaborative manuscript, in five different hands, which François Déroche has dated to the third quarter of the seventh century. It appears to antedate the Qur’anic inscriptions in the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem.

The scattershot nature of Holland’s investigations is particularly apparent in his breezy reference to the Qur’an manuscripts that were found in Sana’a, Yemen, in 1973. He hints darkly at censorship to explain publication delays caused by textual variants in a palimpsest but is unaware that the palimpsest itself and two other manuscripts are actually now with the publisher. He is also unaware that a second cache of Qur’an manuscripts was discovered five years ago in renovations of the Great Mosque in Sana’a and that in February 2010 the Yemeni authorities granted permission for them to be studied.

But Holland is at his most irresponsible when he turns to the Meccan origins of Islam. After reasonably supporting Patricia Crone’s argument against the tradition of Mecca as a mercantile centre, he goes on to ask whether the place itself might not be an invention in the story of Muhammad. He raises the possibility that the Qur’anic pagans, calledmushrikun, might be confederate tribes simply because the word is constructed from the Arabic root for “sharing”. He looks for these tribes in southern Jordan and not only thinks of placing Muhammad among them but proposes that his own Meccan tribe, the Quraysh, took its name from the Syriac word qarisha, which, according to Holland, would have been “duly Arabised”. This jaw-dropping idea depends on Holland’s mistaken view that the Syriac word could allude to a confederation. What it means is to clot or congeal.

For some reason Holland’s book was released in the Netherlands in Dutch before it appeared in English. It had a different title then, The Fourth Beast. A marketing strategy of this kind looks like a conscious effort to profit from recent Dutch anxiety over Muslim immigrants. But Holland’s cavalier treatment of his sources, ignorance of current research and lack of linguistic and historical acumen serve to undermine his provocative narrative. In the Shadow of the Sword seems like an attempt by author, agent and publisher to create a very different account of early Islam, but fortunately the quality of the book stands in the way.

• Glen Bowersock’s From Gibbon to Auden: Essays on the Classical Tradition is published by Oxford.

  • Hakeem

    Some quotes from Imam Shafi’:

    “All humans are dead except those who have knowledge. And all those who have knowledge are asleep, except those who do good deeds. And those who do good deeds are deceived, except those who are sincere. And those who are sincere are always in a state of worry.”

    “I never once argued with anyone hoping to win the debate; rather I always wished that the truth would come from his side.”

    “The foolish one addresses me with words of disgrace, but I hate to respond to him in a similar manner. The more ignorant he proves, the more patient I become. Just like the incense; the more it’s burnt, the more it releases its fragrance.”

    …and lastly

    “I am convinced about the veracity of my opinions, but I do consider it likely that they may turn out to be incorrect. Likewise, I am convinced about the incorrectness of the views different from mine, but I do concede the possibility that they may turn out to be correct.”

  • Ahmed

    @Martin and @JT,

    Just because someone is sceptical on the origins of Islam does not mean they’re an Islamophobe. However, many Islamophobes do LOVE the idea that the Islamic version of events are wrong, because then it means that Islam, which they hate, is all wrong.
    Robert Spencer is the perfect example of this. He made a living by criticising Mohammed … but now that he knows he has been refuted (great job, Danios!), he has decided to take the line that Mohammed did not even exist!

    I don’t think Muslims have a problem with people questioning the accuracy of their view on the origins of Islam. Hey, we often don’t know what exactly happened a decade ago, so it is natural if people question what exactly happened 1400 years ago. What I think Muslims do object to is when people are questioning the origins because they just want to bash Islam and Muslims.

  • Ahmed

    A few points:

    1) I don’t think Tom Holland is an Islamophobe.
    2) As long as Holland is able to stand corrected (if shown that something he suggested is actually unlikely/false), then I have no problem with it (sometimes academics can be so egotistical, that even when it has been shown they were “wrong”, they do not accept it).
    3) Just because someone is not an “expert” in some field, it does not mean things they say cannot be right. I personally don’t agree with Holland’s book, but people shouldn’t just dismiss things he writes by saying “oh, he doesn’t speak Arabic” or something similar. Instead, each and every point Tom makes should be debated, not his lack of knowledge compared to other experts.

  • JT

    There is no problem with someone questioning the origins of Islam. It is unreasonable to expect a non-Muslim to agree with the idea of the Qur’an being the revealed word of God. As Muslims, we do believe in the divine origin of Islam but non-Muslims will have to find other reasons. I can’t say anything about the content of the book without reading it, but it’s not Islamophobia if you just take a skeptical view of the traditional Muslim narrative. Also, we are under no obligation to agree with their conclusions.

    But if this book was to be more neutral, the title would have to be changed.

  • Averroe’s Ghost

    First alarm bell, “In the Shadow of the Sword,”…that’s silly name to me. Orientalisms, I hope the cover not a man ridinng a camel and sword in one hand, Qur’an in the other?

  • Martin

    I agree with Jai that the Dutch title was ill-judged, though I’ll take Tom’s word for it that the alleged intentions are incorrect at least as far as he is concerned. However, I find it a little hard to follow the rest of Jai’s sentiment. I’m not sure how a book might be used by anti-Muslim types to stir up and reinforce their own hatred of Muslims just because it might seem to them to discredit the truth claims of the religion.

    Even if the book had been intended to “debunk” the beliefs of Muslims, it may well make hate-mongers happy (as they don’t want people to believe in Islam), but unless it reinforces negative stereotypes of Muslims as people or of the moral teachings of Islam I don’t see how it could make the haters and their target audience hate Muslims or Islam more. Presumably they and their target audience disbelieve in Islam already.

    From what I’ve seen, what those people really use to spread hate are negative stories about Muslims and certain verses and hadith that they like to claim are interpreted and acted upon by Muslims in an certain way. In other words their message is that Islam (and sometimes the Muslim) is evil. They may also enjoy arguing that Islam is false, but that’s a different matter, as Muslims (even in an anti-Muslim environment) don’t need protecting from arguments against the truth-claims of their religion.

  • InPeace

    Hey David, what qualification did Gibbons have to write about the Roman empire and Christianity?

    Any Davie boy?

  • Sir David : Man on a phone with a french spell check

    Tom
    Fair enough I apologise for comparing you to other persons such as Robert Spencer.( which on this site is a prétty Bad insult :-) )
    I might even have a look out for the book.
    David

  • Garibaldi

    I don’t consider Tom an Islamophobe or anti-Muslim. Writing on the early origins of Islam and disputing “literal truth” is totally necessary and of course doesn’t make one a hater.

    I do think Bowersock’s review was spot-on for the most part however, and that’s why I reproduced it here.

  • Steve

    Jai, are you saying nobody should enquire and write about the history of islam in case some right wing elements sieze on it?

    Does that go for all ideologies or just islam?

  • Gooner

    I am again disappointed at some of the comments to Tom, which I find very unfair, who has more than likely a far greater grasp of history than many of us. Again I am a fan of this site and an athiest who actually stands against those who wish to demonise Muslims which I do daily on forums. Yet I find some people here being as bad as the Islamophobes by attacking Tom with the same level of distain that Islamophobes use to attack Muslims.

    Does this provide ammunition to Islamophobes because of the way some are acting here in regards to Tom because has written a History of early islam?
    Yes it does, it works both ways, if you wish to have the support of Non-Muslims, you should not bash them for their opinion and Tom is not even attacking Islam or Muslims.

    Have a think about that people and don’t be like the islamophobes!

    P.S. Love your books Tom, they are excellent!

  • Jai

    Tom Holland,

    “I understand your concern – and, perhaps, if I belonged to a minority in Europe at the moment, I might well share it.”

    It’s a concern you should share irrespective of whether or not you belong to a minority in Europe. You may not regard yourself as being in the direct firing line, but taking some steps back and objectively considering the bigger picture in terms of the millions who would be adversely impacted would be a very good idea.

    “most Europeans today regard religon, let alone Islam, as something alien and unfathomable.”

    I would have to politely disagree with you. Most white British people these days have that view when it comes to religion, including Christianity. This is not the case in mainland Europe, although generally people there are obviously less fanatical or conservative in their Christian beliefs as many of their counterparts in the United States.

    “putting to one side Anders Breivik – who is no more representative of mainstream European opinion”

    Correct, but Breivik – like his ideological fellow-travellers, which include various anti-Muslim propagandists in the US and the English Defence League/British Freedom Party here in the UK – is drawing on existing prejudice and ignorance amongst the wider population, both of which are being deliberately exploited and exacerbated by vested interests determined to poison the well. Again, there is a direct historical precedent for this.

    As mentioned in my previous comment, I very strongly encourage you to read through the articles I supplied above.

    “As a believing Muslim, you will, of course, declare your conviction that God did indeed reveal Himself to Muhammad in Mecca and Medina, and that to attempt to find human explanations for the Qur’an is a waste of effort. Equally, since I am not a Muslim, I am sure you will accept that I find such an explanation inadequate.”

    It’s not clear if these statements were directed at me personally, although the post as a whole seems to be in response to my own earlier comment, but not once have I ever stated that I am a Muslim (let alone a “believing Muslim”). Similarly, I have never written anything at all indicating this to be the case.

    If the paragraph quoted above was indeed addressed to me, it’s a complete strawman argument: For the record, I’m a Sikh, and am therefore not a Muslim either. In fact, a number of Loonwatch’s main article writers and below-the-line commenters are also not Muslims.

    With all due respect (again), it does, however, have some worrying implications if you automatically assume that anyone taking an opposing stance to you in this matter is a “believing Muslim”, apparently coupled with a number of extrapolated assumptions as quoted in the paragraph above.

    “That being so, should I shrink from applying to the Arab empire the same spotlight that I have sought to shine on the Roman or the Persian empires?”

    I’m afraid that’s another strawman argument. Romans no longer exist as a cultural or theological group in the historical sense. Modern-day Persians are obviously inheritors of their own ancient civilisation, but again most of them are not Zoroastrians. Most pertinently, neither “Romans” nor “Persian Zoroastrians” are currently minority groups in the West who are subjected to escalating bigotry in the general population & some sections of the media along with calculated political & propaganda campaigns by well-funded international networks pushing an agenda to discredit and demonise their religious beliefs.

    As I said previously, the timing could not be worse. If you’re looking for an analogy, let me state the closest example yet again: It’s like a historian in 1930s Europe writing a book which, as one of its key premises, denies Judaism’s divine origins, God’s influence on its prophets, and the divine influence on its sacred texts. Consider the wider societal context, including the impact on a minority group which was already the target of escalating anti-Semitism.

    If you need another example closer to home, here it is: You’re just about old enough to remember the focus on Sikhs in the UK during the first half of the 1980s, due to various traumatic international events involving Sikhs underway at the time. British Sikhs had already experienced more than a decade of targeted discrimination, including being singled out for malevolent propaganda in Enoch Powell’s “Rivers of Blood” speech. Due to the aforementioned events, the situation deteriorated further during the early 1980s. Now imagine a British historian, in that kind of environment, writing a book aimed at discrediting the divine origin of Sikhism or any kind of divine influence on the Sikh Gurus, complete with a title reinforcing violent stereotypes of Sikhism and an even worse title for the version of the book published in mainland Europe, “The Fourth Beast”.

    “On the contrary – what I am doing, I hope, is showing to non-Muslims how Islam evolved as a civilisational solution to a period of devastating crisis – and that it achieved in the Middle East what Christianity achieved in Western Europe – the establishment of a moral and ethical framework that enabled rampant savagery to be tamed. Europe is never going to convert to Islam – but if Europeans can be brought to see in the evolution of Islam correspondences with their own history, and to recognise that Christendom and the House of Islam are both rooms in the same house, then I think that is no bad thing.”

    That’s an admirable intention, and one which any decent person should support. Unfortunately, this is not how your intentions have come across.

    There are, however, ways to rectify this. The paragraph quoted immediately above is definitely along the right lines. The best course of action would be for you to ensure that you repeat such statements as clearly, loudly, publicly and frequently as possible, ideally in writing. Otherwise you’ll find that you really are hijacked by some very nasty Far-Right elements indeed, and you’ll find yourself cited ad nauseam by those who already have a long track record of calculatingly exploiting the writings of various respected figures regarded as authorities in their fields.

  • Tom Holland

    Sir David – would the Runciman Award and the Hessell-Tiltman Prize serve as qualifications in your eyes? Or do you feel that anyone who does not hold an academic post at a university should be banned from writing about the past?

    Let me add, though, that the manuscript was read through in its entirety by Reza Aslan, Fred Donner, Gerald Hawting, Hugh Kennedy, Dan Madigan and Byran Ward-Perkins, and that relevant chapters were read by James Carleton-Paget, Patricia Crone, Vesta Curtis, Robert Irwin, Christopher Kelly and Ziauddin Sardar. That doesn’t mean, of course, that they all of them agree with my conclusions (see Zia’s review in the New Statesman for evidence of that!)- but it does suggest, I hope, that the book is something more than “bollocks”.

    But hey – why not read it for yourself?

  • Steve

    “Hi Tom
    You want to be taken seriously?
    Ok
    Some questions for you then
    What are your qualifications?
    Have you submitted this work for peer review?”

    Did the people who wrote the koran?

  • Tom Holland

    I understand your concern – and, perhaps, if I belonged to a minority in Europe at the moment, I might well share it. But that said, and putting to one side Anders Breivik – who is no more representative of mainstream European opinion than the London suicide bombers were of mainstream Muslim opinion – the challenge faced by Muslims in Europe is that most Europeans today regard religon, let alone Islam, as something alien and unfathomable. In that context, let me quote you the final paragraphs of my book:

    “The peoples of late antiquity, then, when they imagined themselves to be living through the End Days foretold by the prophet Daniel, had been mistaken. Not the empire of the pagan Romans, nor that of their Christian successors, nor that of the Ishmaelites had proved to be the Fourth Beast. Nevertheless, those who saw in the convulsions of the age a process of transformation unlike any other, by means of which a kingdom would end up established on earth ‘which shall be different from all the kingdoms’, were not so far wrong. Caesars, Shahanshahs and Caliphs, none of them remain – but the words of the rabbis who taught in Sura, the bishops who met in Nicaea and the ulama who studied in Kufa still shape the world as living things today. There could be no more conclusive testimony to the impact of the revolution witnessed by late antiquity than the existence, in the twenty-first century, of billions upon billions of people who profess belief in a single god and lead their lives in accordance with that belief.

    The pen, it seems, is indeed mightier than the sword.”

    My argument is twofold: that we are all of us, even the most determinedly atheistic and secular, the legatees of monotheism; and that Islam, far from coming like lightning from a clear blue sky, is a bloom sprung from the same seedbed as Judaism and Christianity. As a believing Muslim, you will, of course, declare your conviction that God did indeed reveal Himself to Muhammad in Mecca and Medina, and that to attempt to find human explanations for the Qur’an is a waste of effort. Equally, since I am not a Muslim, I am sure you will accept that I find such an explanation inadequate. That being so, should I shrink from applying to the Arab empire the same spotlight that I have sought to shine on the Roman or the Persian empires? That I do not believe the literal truth of Livy’s account of the origins of Rome does not in any way diminish my admiration for Roman civilisation – just as my questioning of the literal truth of Muslim tradition should not be interpreted as ‘loonacy’. On the contray – what I am doing, I hope, is showing to non-Muslims how Islam evolved as a civilisational solution to a period of devastating crisis – and that it achieved in the Middle East what Christianity achieved in Western Europe – the establishment of a moral and ethical framework that enabled rampant savagery to be tamed. Europe is never going to convert to Islam – but if Europeans can be brought to see in the evolution of Islam correspondences with their own history, and to recognise that Christendom and the House of Islam are both rooms in the same house, then I think that is no bad thing.

    Thank you for giving me the chance to express myself here, and for reprinting my reply to Professor Bowersock – I appreciate it.

  • Sir David : Man on a phone with a french spell check

    Hi Tom
    You want to be taken seriously?
    Ok
    Some questions for you then
    What are your qualifications?
    Have you submitted this work for peer review?

    Unfortunetly the world is full of people who just write bollocks in subjects they have nô experiance in or qualifications in. Robert Spencer being a classic example.
    The reason money or ego but usually both

  • Jai

    Tom Holland,

    Normally I’m a huge fan of your work, and I particularly enjoyed Rubicon and Persian Fire.

    However, with all due respect: In the current climate, publishing a book essentially attempting to debunk the origins of Islam is like a European historian in the 1930s publishing a book designed to discredit the origins of Judaism.

    In both cases, the intentions of the author concerned may or may not be well-meaning, but the timing is absolutely appalling and the contents extremely irresponsible. The subliminal message of titling the Dutch version of your book “The Fourth Beast” is even more astonishing. I find it very difficult to believe that someone at your end did not consider any of this; it suggests a complete lack of intelligent judgement at best and grossly cynical opportunism at worst.

    You are no doubt aware of the prevalence of anti-Muslim bigotry in some sections of the general population and the media; everyday discourse along these lines is now acceptable when targeting Islam & Muslims in a manner and scale that would be completely unacceptable when it comes to any other religion and its followers. Again, there is a direct historical precedent for this.

    There is also a well-funded and increasingly closely co-ordinated international anti-Muslim propaganda network. This includes individuals and organisations that were repeatedly cited in Anders Breivik’s manifesto, most of whom are amongst the core sources systematically pushing the toxic anti-Muslim “message” in recent years. As another article on this website a few days ago confirmed, this “message” has been infiltrating some of the highest levels. Since you’re obviously aware of Loonwatch, you may also wish to browse through this website’s archives, as the matter has been heavily documented here. However, in the first instance, I strongly recommend you read the following: http://middleclassdub.blogspot.co.uk/2011/10/islamophobia-and-antisemitism-same.html, http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2011/08/26/304306/islamophobia-network/, http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/aug/26/islamophobia-defamation-muslim-american, http://www.newstatesman.com/uk-politics/2012/04/who-are-breivik%E2%80%99s-fellow-travellers.

    Unfortunately, there is now a distinct possibility that your work will be hijacked by these obsessive activists as yet more ammunition against Islam & Muslims, not least because they will attempt to exploit the fact that your status as a respected historian supposedly increases the credibility of their own claims. You may well find that the Far-Right and the disingenuously named “Counter-Jihad” network in general hijack you as an unwilling poster-boy — especially when it comes to their agenda to publicly “debunk” and discredit Islam, with the associated destructive impact on wider perceptions (and treatment) of Muslims.

    As I said earlier, the timing of your book is like a historian in 1930s Europe deciding to write a book discrediting the origins of Judaism. It may be worthwhile for you to consider the implications of that.

  • IbnAbuTalib

    I was reading Walid Saleh’s review of another revisionist work-Muhammad is the not the father of any of your men-by David Powers and thought that the unlearned skeptics like Tom Holland and others would do well to heed the following remarks made by Saleh who, mind you, is an eminent scholar of Islamic studies:

    “Revisionism in Islamic Studies is a rhetorical artice rather than a coherent analysis of evidence; it functions as an intellectual exercise that has little to do with the history it purports to explain. One starts with the axiomatic assumption that things are not what the tradition has been telling us (and by tradition here I mean mainstream Western scholarship); then one moves forward by means of presuppositions, plausible or implausible, that are sustainable only because they presuppose a different reality than the one attested by our sources,
    not because they are cogent in themselves. These presuppositions turn
    out to be conceivable only because of their value as counterclaims. Theentire exercise is sustained rhetorically by a tone of condescension.”

  • Sir David Illuminati membership number 16.69

    Can some one direct me to the well funded Islamaphobia industry please.

  • Gooner

    Only fair to post the reply by Tom, who I find an excellent writer and considering I am a fan of loonwatch am disappointed at this article. I find this article nothing more than a strange attack, when we know the early history of islam is mainly unknown:

    Is it justifiable to question what Muslim tradition has to say about the origins of Islam? Readers of Glen Bowersock’s review of my book might very well conclude not. That Qur’anic studies are currently in a state of the utmost disarray is a fact he simply shrugs aside. Instead, my book is cast by him as something worse than irresponsible. In a dyspeptic final paragraph, he strongly implies that it was cooked up by “author, agent and publisher” as something truly reprehensible: an attempt to exploit Islamophobia for commercial gain.

    In The Shadow Of The Sword: The Battle for Global Empire and the End of the Ancient World
    by Tom Holland
    Buy it from the Guardian bookshopSearch the Guardian bookshop
    Tell us what you think: Star-rate and review this book
    This is a serious charge – and since it is founded on Bowersock’s claim that my scholarship is shoddy and out on a limb, I hope that he will forgive me defending myself. I am accused of twisting my sources. I could, however, level much the same charge against Bowersock’s criticisms of me. In a passage on the early Qur’anic manuscripts found in Sana’a, for instance, he condemns my failure to mention that various palimpsests are currently “with the publisher”. But he has missed the two points that I am clearly using my brief mention of the Sana’a manuscripts to make. First – since “with the publisher” effectively equals “not yet published” – it has been impossible for any scholarly consensus as to their precise significance to emerge. Second, what research on them has so far been published points to the fact that the Qur’anic text, far from evolving over the seventh and eighth centuries, as some venturesome scholars have suggested in the past, seems to have been broadly stable throughout that period. My conclusion, in other words, could hardly be more sober. “There is not a hint of deliberate fabrication in any of the Sana’a fragments.”

    This, it seems to me, is as much certainty as the ferociously contested fields of Qur’anic palaeography and orthography will permit. If I did not cite a manuscript in the Bibliothèque Nationale dated by the French scholar François Déroche to the third quarter of the seventh century, it was not – as Bowersock charges – because I had “missed” it, but because the dating of early Qur’an manuscripts is notoriously a work in progress. Déroche himself, for instance, originally placed the origins of the Bibliothèque Nationale manuscript in the early eighth century – and there are other scholars who still do. Nor, unfortunately, does carbon dating offer any greater certainty. At a conference in 2010, the same Christian Robin cited by Bowersock in his review revealed that a preliminary carbon dating of some pages from one of the Sana’a palimpsests had given dates in the late 500s – a most awkward misfire. I hope, then, that it will be understandable why, in a book aimed at a general readership, I opted not to venture into such a quagmire.

    Instead, in my attempt to explore where and how the Qur’an might have emerged, if not from God, I adopted what is currently a fashion in Qur’anic studies, by looking at it in its historical context. The challenge with adopting this approach – which in any other field of history would be wholly uncontroversial – is that Muslim accounts of its composition, all of them written long after the lifetime of Muhammad, and often in direct contradiction of the Qur’an itself, are the only accounts we possess. No wonder, then, that Fred Donner, the éminence grise of early Islamic studies, should openly have acknowledged that “we simply do not know some very basic things about the Qur’an – things so basic that the knowledge of them is usually taken for granted by scholars dealing with other texts.” Attempts to explain its origins, then, cannot help but be provisional. I could hardly have been any clearer in emphasising that point. It is precisely why my chapter on Muhammad is titled “More Questions than Answers”.

    It is in this light that most of Bowersock’s criticisms should be seen. When I suggest that “Quraysh”, the name given by Muslim tradition to Muhammad’s tribe, might have derived from a Syriac word, “qarisha”, I am casting it as precisely that: a suggestion. Bowersock is wrong that the Syriac root verb – “QRSh” – means only to congeal or clot. Look up page 1,418 of the most recent Syriac lexicon, by Michael Sokoloff, and a definition can be found corresponding to an Arabic cognate: “to gather people”. Hardly the stuff of gripping popular history, of course; and yet readers need to be reassured that my narrative, however “swashbuckling,” draws on years of careful research.

    Of course, even Homer nods – and Bowersock himself can sometimes nap. How he can approvingly cite the seminal study on Meccan trade by his erstwhile Princeton colleague, Patricia Crone, and simultaneously claim that “no one before has seriously doubted the conjunction of Muhammad and Mecca,” I am at a loss to explain. It is precisely such a doubt that lies at the heart of Crone’s book. Nor is she alone: many leading Qur’anic scholars would now admit that it remains deeply obscure where the Qur’an might originally have taken shape.

    Most egregiously of all, Bowersock says that the Dutch title of the book – The Fourth Beast – “looks like” it was chosen “to profit from recent Dutch anxiety over Muslim immigrants”. Au contraire – as with my previous book, so with this, Dutch and British publishers chose different titles, from a whole number suggested by me. The Fourth Beast was a phrase derived from the Biblical Book of Daniel, applied successively to the pagan Roman empire, its Christian heir, and the Arab Caliphate – making it the perfect title for a survey of all three. I invite anyone who doubts that simply to read the penultimate paragraph of my book.

    Bowersock is a formidable scholar for whom I have great admiration – and his most recent work on ancient Ethiopia shows him to be as on the ball as ever. But this review, which is targetted not just at me but at an entire efflorescence in contemporary scholarship, is unworthy of him. Far from it being inappropriate to place the rise of Islam in the context of “languages and ideas floating around in the Near East”, the truly inappropriate thing, I would suggest, is to veil an important trend in scholarship from the gaze of the general public, and to scold those who would seek to lift it.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/may/07/tom-holland-responds-glen-bowersock?newsfeed=true

  • Christian-friend

    the man is an ignorant, not an islamophobe, don’t go too far here people!

  • Tom Holland

    JD – follow the links I have given above.

  • JD

    I am sure if I wrote a article on how quantum mechanics is bs writen by people trying to get a place in Physics books when my degree is in oh say IT . I have no idea of any quantum mechanic formula basic quantum mechanic 101 but go by what i have read in a book ~~ context , history land or scholar expert input~~~ . When I am called out on it pull the “doesn’t cast entirely positive light will attract crys of mathophobia”

    and as the article says

    For some reason Holland’s book was released in the Netherlands in Dutch before it appeared in English. It had a different title then, The Fourth Beast. A marketing strategy of this kind looks like a conscious effort to profit from recent Dutch anxiety over Muslim immigrants

    Also the timing of this books release with the books premises
    Tells us all we need to know

  • Steve

    Tom, you have fallen foul of the well funded Islmaophobia(tm) industry. Anything which doesn’t cast islam and its arabic folk tales in an entirely positive light will attract crys of islamophobia(tm)

  • Tom Holland

    Let me, in the interests of balance, post my response to Glen Bowersock:

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/may/07/tom-holland-responds-glen-bowersock

    Let me also direct you to an interview I did with a Muslim journalist:

    http://www.newstatesman.com/religion/2012/04/birth-religion

    I categorically refute any allegation that my book is anti-Muslim. It is a non-Muslim’s attempt to explore the origins of a religion that, by definition, I think derives from a human rather than a divine source. But that does not mean that I scorn or dismiss Islam. On the contrary – I present it, and monotheism generally, as a supreme civilisational achievement.

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