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Contemporary debates about Muslim slavery occur in a context of fierce polemics
between Islam and other belief systems. While Islamic groups had an ambivalent
and generally muted impact on the legal repudiation of slavery, a growing
religious commitment to abolition was essential if legislation was to be
enforced in the twentieth century. Drawing on examples from the whole 'abode' of
Islam, from the Philippines to Senegal and from the Caucasus to South Africa,
Gervase Clarence-Smith ranges across the history of Islam, paying particular
attention to the period from the late 18th century to the present. He shows that
"sharia-minded" attempts to achieve closer adherence to the holy law restricted
slavery, even if they did not end it. However, the Sharia itself was not as
clear about the legality of servitude as is usually assumed, and progressive
scholars within the schools of law might even have achieved full emancipation
over the long term. The impact of mystical and millenarian Islam was
contradictory, in some cases providing a supportive agenda of freedom, but in
other cases causing great surges of enslavement. The revisionist Islam that
emerged from the 18th century was divided.
"Fundamentalists" stressed the literal truth of the founding texts of Islam, and
thus found it difficult to abandon slavery completely. "Modernists,' appealing
to the spirit rather than to the letter of scripture, spawned the most radical
opponents of slavery, notably Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan, the Islamic William
Wilberforce. Once slavery had disappeared, it was the Sufi mystics who did most
to integrate former slaves socially and religiously, avoiding the deep social
divisions that have plagued Western societies in the aftermath of abolition. In
this important new book, Clarence-Smith provides the first general survey of the
Islamic debate on slavery. Sweeping away entrenched myths, he hopes to stimulate
more research on this neglected topic, thereby contributing to healing the
religious rifts that threaten to tear our world apart in the 21st century.
Reviews
"As a
historian, Clarence-Smith has certainly made his case. Islam and the
Abolition of Slavery is a tour de force." --Times Literary Supplement
"Islam
and the Abolition of Slavery is a tour de force which ranges over the
entire Islamic world, from the Hijrah to the present, and for good measure
includes comparisons with the attitudes and practice of other major world
religions towards the "embarrassing institution"." --Journal of the Royal
Asiatic Society
About the Author
William Gervase Clarence-Smith is Professor of History in the School of Oriental
and African Studies at the University of London.
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* Hardcover: 320 pages
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* Publisher: Oxford
University Press, USA (March 23, 2006)
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* ISBN-10: 0195221516
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* Product Dimensions: 8.6 x
5.6 x 1 inches
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