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ETHICS OF W AR IN MUSLIM CULTURES A CRITICAL AND COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE DOCTORAL THESIS PREPARED BY: MOHAMMAD JAFAR MAHALLATI REQUIRED FOR DOCTORAL DEGREE FROM: THE INSTITUTE OF ISLAMIC STUDIES MCGILL UNIVERSITY Final Copy July 19,2006 Volume No: 1+1 Library and Bibliothèque et Archives Canada Archives Canada Published Heritage Direction du Branch Patrimoine de l'édition 395 Wellington Street 395, rue Wellington Ottawa ON K1A ON4 Ottawa ON K1A ON4 Canada Canada Your file Votre référence ISBN: 978-0-494-27816-1 Our file Notre référence ISBN: 978-0-494-27816-1 NOTICE: AVIS: The author has granted a non L'auteur a accordé une licence non exclusive exclusive license allowing Library permettant à la Bibliothèque et Archives and Archives Canada to reproduce, Canada de reproduire, publier, archiver, publish, archive, preserve, conserve, sauvegarder, conserver, transmettre au public communicate to the public by par télécommunication ou par l'Internet, prêter, telecommunication or on the Internet, distribuer et vendre des thèses partout dans loan, distribute and sell theses le monde, à des fins commerciales ou autres, worldwide, for commercial or non sur support microforme, papier, électronique commercial purposes, in microform, et/ou autres formats. paper, electronic and/or any other formats. The author retains copyright L'auteur conserve la propriété du droit d'auteur ownership and moral rights in et des droits moraux qui protège cette thèse. this thesis. Neither the thesis Ni la thèse ni des extraits substantiels de nor substantial extracts from it celle-ci ne doivent être imprimés ou autrement may be printed or otherwise reproduits sans son autorisation. reproduced without the author's permission. ln compliance with the Canadian Conformément à la loi canadienne Privacy Act some supporting sur la protection de la vie privée, forms may have been removed quelques formulaires secondaires from this thesis. ont été enlevés de cette thèse. While these forms may be included Bien que ces formulaires in the document page cou nt, aient inclus dans la pagination, their removal does not represent il n'y aura aucun contenu manquant. any loss of content from the thesis. •• • Canada ABSTRACT Rules of engagement, ethics of war, and codes of chivalry are all phrases which remind one of human attempts to rein in and regulate what is perhaps the most anarchic and illogical of aH human activities: organized war. The role of the great religions of the world both in propagating war through crusades and jihads as well as their attempts at transcending its savagery through images of miles Christianus or the pious ghiïzl has also been much discussed. The aim of this thesis is to study the ethics of war in the context of Islamic societies in the Early Middle Ages from several complementary perspectives. Our sources for the period vary greatly from decade to decade and from region to region. This has often led historians of ideas and mentalities to concentrate on one aspect to the exclusion of others. This is particularly so in the case of ethics of war where most of the argument seems to concentrate on a few passages from the Qur'an, supplemented by sorne quotations from manuals of l].adith and commentaries on them in the legal textbooks of the different religious schools. That all these are crucial for an understanding of Muslim attitudes and reactions to war throughout centuries is beyond dispute. But it remains, nevertheless, a lop-sided view: neglecting large areas of debate and speculation in literature, philosophy, and mystical meditations, presented as fully fledged arguments or as occasional remarks and observations embedded in the extant texts from the period. By evaluating these scattered sources and listening to the different voices heard through them, l hope to show sorne of the different attitudes and responses to the ethics of war and avoid the monolithic and doggedly timeless approach which, at its worst and most extreme, envisages a non-existing consensus among the Muslims from the rise of Islam to the beginning of this new century and neglects the evidence of regional traditions and innovative thinkers by relying solely on a handful of quotes. ABSTRACT(FRENCH) Les règles du combat, l'éthique de la guerre, les codes chevaleresques - autant d'expressions révélatrices des efforts de l'Homme pour maîtriser et réglementer celle qui, de toutes ses actions, est sans doute la plus anarchique et la plus illogique: la guerre organisée. On a ainsi pu démontrer le rôle des grandes religions du monde dans la propagation de la guerre par le biais des croisades ou jihiids s'efforçant de sublimer la sauvagerie de la guerre par la création d'images telle que celle du miles Christianus ou encore celle du ghiizl pieux. Le but de notre propos est d'examiner l'éthique de la guerre replacée dans le contexte des sociétés islamiques du début du Moyen Age, en adoptant diverses approches qui se complètent les unes les autres. Les sources dont nous disposons pour cette période varient considérablement d'une décennie et d'une région à l'autre. Ces variations ont souvent amené les historiens des idées et des mentalités à se concentrer sur un seul aspect, à l'exclusion de tous les autres. C'est tout particulièrement le cas en ce qui concerne l'éthique de la guerre, où l'essentiel de l'argumentation employée paraît se fonder uniquement sur quelques passages choisis du Coran, complétés par des citations des manuels de lJadith et les commentaires sur ces derniers que l'on trouve dans les manuels légaux des diverses écoles religieuses. Il est certes essentiel de prendre en compte ces dernières sources pour comprendre les attitudes des Musulmans et leurs réactions face à la guerre à travers les siècles . Mais cela n'en est pas moins une optique partiale qui ne montre qu'un seul aspect des faits. Elle choisit en effet d'ignorer de vastes domaines qui laisse la place au débat et à la conjecture, tant dans la littérature et la philosophie que dans les méditations de mystiques, qui se présentent sous la forme soit d'arguments pleinement développés, soit d'observations passagères, insérées dans des textes de l'époque qui nous sont parvenus dans leur entièreté. C'est en évaluant ces sources éparpillées et en écoutant les diverses voix que l'on peut y percevoir que ce travail se propose d'examiner ces attitudes et réponses diverses et variées à la question de l'éthique de la guerre, afin d'éviter l'optique monolithique qui s'est obstinément perpétuée à travers les temps et qui, à son pire et dans les cas les plus extrêmes, envisage ii l'existence d'un soi-disant consensus - en réalité entièrement fictif - parmi les Musulmans, depuis la naissance de l'Islam jusqu'au début de notre siècle, et choisit d'ignorer totalement la présence bien attestée de traditions régionales et de penseurs fort innovateurs. iii CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ...........................................................................x TRANSLITERATION TABLE .................................................................. xi INTRODUCTION ................................................................................... .1 The Nature of the Problem Organization Methodology 1. PROPHETIC W ARS, PURPOSES AND CHARACTERS ................................. 8 The Cause or Causes of Early Muslim Wars War and Prejudice Rules of Engagement A Mirror of the Moral Shift: Revenge and Pardon Ethics and Laws: Models ofRight Conduct Khïïlid Ibn al-Walid or 'God's Sword' War and the Epical Tragedy 'Umar and Abu Bakr: Different Personalities, Different Rulings Strict Precedence or Tactical Ruling Honey and Stone at War Conclusions II. W AR ETHICS IN THE QUR' AN ............................................................. 31 Qur'ïïnic Exegeses: Moralist versus Legalist Approaches iv The Sufi Exegesis: The Prime War is Against the Self Breach of Contract: The Prime Cause for the inter-faith and Intra-faith Conflicts The Ethics of Debating does not Support war for Disbelief Worst than Killing: al-fitn a Against Inquisition Notions of Deterrence Sources ofGod's Hostility in the Qur'an Same Verse, Opposite Interpretations Contemporary Commentaries on the Classical Exegeses War within the Qur' anic Ethical Structure God' s Treatment of His Archenemy The Moral Mode of Mercy The Qur'anic Context of Jihad, I:Iarb and Qital Conclusions III. SHI '1 W AR ETHICS: A CRITICAL REVIEW ......................................... 60 The Mammoth Empire and Ethical Insensitivity The Balance of Human Life and Arabism 'Ali Ibn Abl Talib: The Lion and the Dust Jamal and Siffin: Two Benchmark Battles for ShI'! Ethics ofWar Moral Norms ofBattle: Siffin Banning Inhuman Retaliation and Taking Personal Risk The Impersonality ofWar The Sanctity ofContract and Treatment of the Non-Combatants v Karbala': AI-I:Iusayn's Call for Ethics of Liberality The Moral Impact of Karbala' Jihad in the Mirror of ShI'! I:Iadith Modem ShI'! Jurists on War: Between Apology and Critique Taba!aba'l: Against the Early Caliphal Conquest Mutahhar1: The Theorist of Liberating Jihad or Moral Interventionism Iskandar1: Retaliation (qi$a$), The Prime Cause ofWar in Islam M04aqqiq-Damad: The Immunity ofNoncombatant, Nonbeliever Kadivar: Against Discrimination in the Traditional Law Sali41-Najafiibadi: A Critique ofWhen Theology Rewrites History The Jurist's Tragic War Game: The Letter/Spirit Dichotomy Conclusions IV. THEOLOGY, PHILOSOPHY AND MYSTICISM ..................................... 111 The Relations between Ethics and Law Islamic Theology, Ethics, and War The Fallacy of Deterministic Moral Progress The Intellectual Legacy of the Mu'tazilites The Objective Justice and its Implications for War Theology and War in Broader Perspective Philosophical Ethics, War and al-FarabI Ibn Miskawayh, the Philosopher of Intimacy (uns) Al-Ghazali, a Dual Approach to 'Others' Na~lr al-Dln al-Tusl, and Political Ethics vi ~ufism: Against War for Belief Ibn al-'Arab1: The Primaey ofPeaee Rum1: The Essential Inner War Conclusions V. WARETHICS IN ADABAND EPIC LITERATURE .................................. 154 The Signifieanee of Adab for Ethies War Ethies and Heroism Shiihniimeh of Ferdowsl, The Paradigm ofPersian Epies Sources of Ethieal Norms in Persian Epie Literatures Dadestan-e Menog-l Xrad The Avesta Yadegar-e Zarlran Heroes and Anti-Heroes in the Shahnameh On the Primaey of Diplomaey: The Anti-War Leopards and Mountains Jus in Bello in Ferdowsl's Shahnameh Ferdowsi's Objective Ethies and Norms of Javiinmardi Justice and Jus ad Bellum in the Shahnameh Ferdowsl's Definition ofInfidelity (kufT) Heroes in Confliet: A Moral Dilemma A Medieval War Ethics Manual The Causes and Conduet ofWar in Manuals War Ethies in the Saljuq Literature Sa'di: On Enmity and Tolerance vii Conclusions VI. THEORIES OF W AR ETHICS: A COMP ARA TIVE PERSPECTIVE ......... 193 Western Theories of War Ethics Pacifist Theories Hebraic, Roman, and Christian Contributions to the Just War Theory The Realist Schools The Proliferation of Theories and Vague Conceptual Boundaries War Ethics in Islamic Traditions The Questions of 'Militant Ethos' and 'Total Community' Militants and Texts at War Jurists' Approach to the 'Self and to the 'Other' The Ethics of the Siyar Literature Jurists' Theoretical Clashes over War and Peace The Islamic Just War Theories Theory of Just-Defense Theory of Moral-Interventionism Theory of Total-Islamization Common Factors in Western and Islamic War Ethics Against Religious Ethics: A Critique Horizontal and Vertical Moral Structures Conclusions VII. W AR ETHICS AND PARA-ST AT AL MILITIA ...................................... .236 Faith, the Military, and Questions ofState Control viii

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the legal textbooks of the different religious schools Comparative War Ethics: A Medieval Perspective Arabie Persian Turkiah Urdu . c.- .. Chapter Seven surveys the ethics of war among irregular military professionals, such as.
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