Maryam Jamilah |
Maryam Jamilah Response to Orientalism
Prolog
The
term Orientalism generally refers to the study of the Eastern Civilization.
Even though the term covers all aspect of the ‘East of Europe’ societies,
including Near East and Far East, Orientalism was and always very much
associated with the European interest in studying the immediate East of Europe
and that refers to the Middle East, the Arab World and Islam.
Even
though the tradition of Orientalism was to certain extend derived from the
curiosity of the European to the fascinating life of their neighbor, the study
could not escape from its association with the Western domination over their
‘Others’, beginning with the authoritative language of Middle Age Churches,
continued by the Imperialists idea of ‘White’s Man Burden’. The domination was
demonstrated through the Colonialism which gave different dimension to the
connotation of Orientalism from a solid academic orientation as it general be
in Germany and some other European countries, to the political dimension of
Western Imperialism.
This
viewpoint was most notably popularized by Edward Said in his controversial 1978
book Orientalism, which was addressed to criticize the current trend of
Orientalists and Orientalism, with the Princeton University professor Bernard
Lewis, as the main subject.
MUSLIM
RESPONSE
When
the colonialization type of Orientalism dominated the field, this is not to
suggest that every Orientalist was a conscious agent of imperialism or that all
researches done in this field served to justify the legitimate colonialism.
There was never an entirely monolithic European stance toward Islam, Muslims,
the Orient or colonialism. But Muslims are the direct
‘victims’ of many of the Western countries’ foreign policies which took it
shape from the expertise of the Orientalists.
For
this reason, it is not easy to find among the Muslims who response to the
Orientalism in an objective and academic manner. Orientalism became a taboo to
them which led to the extensive approach of generalizing all those whom their
views are against Islamic values to be considered as Orientalists. In general,
the common response from Muslims is in the language of victim and defensive
manner.
In
order for us to do justice to the discussion, we would like to suggest the
Muslim response to Orientalism to be divided into two major categories:
1. Response
given by Muslim scholars and preachers and other prominent figures from the
background of Islamic Studies.
2. Response
given by Muslim scholars and other influential figures from the background of
Human Sciences and other disciplines outside the field of Islamic Studies.
This
categorization is not intended to generalize the many type of Muslim responses but
more or less, to offer a better treatment to the subject within the limit.
Muslim
scholars from the background of the Islamic Studies were very much bothered by
the fact that many of the Orientalists gave the wrong presentation of Islam
from their study. This was due to the fact that the Orientalists were trying to
express Islam within their own understanding which might not be compatible with
the dualism of Islam world view. Either the shortcoming emerged from their lack
of appropriate methodology to study Islam, or simply because of the devilish
idea against Islam.
Due
to this reason, we found that Muslim scholars were in general gave a strong
rejection against Orientalism. This idea is very much accepted by the preachers
and laymen because they were observing the social and intellectual illness
occurred among the Muslim society members, which Orientalism fits the criteria
to take the blame.
The
pattern was significantly different from the approach taken by the Muslims who
came from the background of Human Sciences’ discipline. Many viewed Orientalism
in a more objective way and carefully distinguish the Orientalists who served
the colonial authorities and those who study the East simply because of their
admiration to the neighboring civilizations. This is also due to the fact that
many of the contemporary Human Sciences disciplines like psychology, sociology,
anthropology and history emerged from the tradition of the West. Orientalism as
an academic discourse which claimed by Bernard Lewis to be emerged from the
humanism tradition of the Enlightenment, is more familiar to the Muslim social
scientists compared to those who solely came from the background of Islamic
Revealed Knowledge.
Maryam
Jamilah as a figure for us to study within the subject, would be suggested to
be among the first category of Muslim responses towards Orientalism as due to
her association with the Muslims in Pakistan after her acceptance of Islam.
Even though she recognized some of the positive sides of Orientalism, but many
or the majority of her works would fall within the first category. She gave the
most unsympathetic treatment against the Orientalism which can be viewed from
many of her writing such as Islam and Orientalism, Islam Versus the
West and others.
MARYAM
JAMILAH: A QUICK LOOK ON HER BIOGRAPHY
Maryam
Jamilah (formerly known as Margaret Marcus) was born in 1934 into a pleasant
and prosperous suburb near New York City. Her ancestry was Germany and her
great grandparents had migrated from Germany between 1841 until 1861 seeking
brighter economic opportunity. Although of Jewish origin, she claimed that
neither of her both parents were observant and their Jewishness being purely
nominal.
After
a long journey of discovering the relation between Arab and Jews, Maryam
Jamilah proclaimed his faith in Islam in Brooklyn, New York in the hand of
Sheikh Dawud Ahmed Faisal who suggested her to change her name from Margaret
Marcus to Maryam Jamilah.
Maryam
Jamilah was a prolific author who wrote about her view in almost every prominent
American magazine during the 1950’s. She was also actively corresponded with
many Muslim scholars all around the world and the most famous dialogue was
between her and Abu al-A’la al-Maududi which took place between 1960 until
1962. During the spring season of 1962, Abu al-A’la al-Maududi invited Mayram
Jamilah to migrate to Pakistan and al-Maududi accepted her like a member of his
own family. Maryam Jamilah accepted the invitation. She migrated to Pakistan
and married Muhammad Yusof Khan, one of the prominent Jamaat Islami figures.
They were granted 4 children. Not like the particular practice among the
Pakistani women of that time, Maryam Jamilah did not limit herself to
concentrate on her private life but she actively continues her writing.
MARYAM
JAMILAH AND ORIENTALISM
In
1980, Maryam Jamilah wrote a book, titled as Islam and Orientalism. She
made clear in her introduction of the book, that the reason she wrote the book
was to help rescue the modern educated Muslims from the fallacy of accepting
these unscrupulous scholars as the supreme authorities on Islam. She also
admitted that her book was intended to show the Muslim reader how the West sees
us (Muslims).
Firstly,
Maryam Jamilah did not reject the tradition of Orientalism as a whole. She
acknowledged some positive contributions produced by some Orientalists. She
said:
Is Orientalism then totally evil? The
answer is a qualified no. A few outstanding Western scholars have devoted their
lives to Islamic studies because of their sincere interests in them. Were it
not for their industry, much valuable knowledge found in ancient Islamic
manuscripts would have been lost or lying forgotten in obscurity. English
Orientalists like the late Reynold Nicholson and the late Arthur Arberry
accomplished notable work in field of translating classics of Islamic
literature and making them available to the general reader for the first time
in a European language.
In
this case, Maryam Jamilah appreciated the work of European Orientalists like
Nicholson and Arberry who were far from the colonialization interest.
Maryam
Jamilah suggested that Orientalists do their best work in the field of
translation. She might suggest that because the field of translation does not
interfere with the content of the text or perhaps try to impose their
(Orientalists) authority in presenting Islam. Maryam Jamilah was very sensitive
with the superior attitude of the West over Muslims.
But
in the entire book of Islam and Orientalism, Maryam Jamilah did not
highlight any study case which supported her recognition of the positive side
of Orientalism. In order to give justice to her, we would suggest that Maryam
Jamilah did not draw attention to this exception because the negative impact of
Orientalism against Islam was much more significant to be present compared to
the benefits, from her point of view. The works of Maryam Jamilah were mainly
produced during the time when the Americanization process took its most active
shape to be imposed over Muslims all around the world. This led to the defensive
approach of her.
MARYAM
JAMILAH’S SUGGESTIONS
Maryam
Jamilah emphasized in her Introduction that the only way to crush a false idea
is with a better idea based in logical and persuasive reasoning.
This
is a very important suggestion given by Maryam Jamilah to the attention of
those who want to defend Islam from Orientalism. The tradition of Orientalism
emerged in the West particularly during and after the Renaissance as a
systematic field of study and had its own way in dealing with the subjects.
Muslims cannot face Orientalism with slogans and rhetoric but they need to
offer a better idea based on good and well structured form of intellectual
qualification.
For
this reason, Muslims need to develop a kind of discipline to counter the idea
of Orientalism. If Orientalism is a Western way of presenting Islam, from the
Western perspective, Muslims should lead the intellectual movement to build the
field of Occidentalism, and that is to present the West from Eastern and
perhaps Islamic point of view.
Maryam
Jamilah also urged all Islam-loving scholars to assert the absolute eternity,
universality, self sufficiency and total independence of Islam from man made
philosophies.
This
led to a very complicated issue regarding the need of Islamic methodology in
Social Sciences. In order for Islam to stand independently from the Western
framework, Muslims need to dig out their legacy in historiography, and many
other field in Human Sciences and presenting them in the contemporary well
documented format. The challenge is huge and perhaps Muslims should move
forward from simply reactively refuting the Orientalists, from one issue to
another, to produce a genuine interpretation of the issue dealt. Muslims should
work on building the methodology which can be applied to study the West and
global issue from Islamic values and points of view.
Perhaps
this is the reason why Maryam Jamilah encouraged Muslim scholars to produce an
entire library on history, sociology, anthropology, psychology and biology from
the Islamic viewpoint and expose the fallacies and defective scholarship of the
Orientalists.
Maryam
Jamilah also disagreed with the approach taken by Muslim authorities to ban
materials of the Orientalists from Muslims hand. She viewed that banning books
will only make forbidden fruit more alluring. Such purely negative measures are
not only futile and ineffective but by making these inaccessible to mature
intellectuals, writers and leaders, they defeat their own purpose by keeping
them ignorant of what is being thought and done in the West. Thus, encourages
an attitude of isolationism, complacency and apathy.
Even
though Maryam Jamilah gave many good suggestions to the readers regarding the
proactive approach in dealing with Orientalism, she only focused on attacking
the Orientalists of whom she described at deviating, without giving any example
on how the good side of Orientalism could be appreciated.
For
instance, she questioned the reader, “what progress has been achieved since
the European Renaissance and the so-called “Enlightenment”? Philosophers for
the last three centuries have promised us through the replacement of religious
superstition with scientific rationalism, to transform this world into an
earthy paradise”.
The
statement is a kind of generalization in rejecting the Renaissance and the
achievement of the Enlightenment. To certain extend, the political, social and
economic status of Europe are very much improved since the emergence of the
Enlightenment but Muslims are far behind their ability to create an equal condition
among themselves. There are indeed many positive achievements contributed by
the Renaissance and rejecting the entire idea of the Enlightenment will not
help Muslim to achieve anything.
In
our opinion, Maryam Jamilah was quite unsympathetic to anything that comes from
the West because of her strong rejection of the Western superior attitude. She
emphasized a lot in many part of her writing, matters related to Western
obsession towards the authority and imposing it to ‘the Others’.
She
urged Muslim to produce a better work compared to the book of Phillip K. Hitti,
History of the Arabs. Otherwise, no matter how prejudice the book was,
it cannot be dislodged as the standard works preference on the subject by mere
Government decree. In her point of view, the standard of Hitti’s work will
continue to be regarded as the final authorities.
On
the other hand, she believed that Muslims are those who have the authority to
stand against the Western values. She urged in her book that all those ‘self
appointed’ ‘reformers’ to undermine the validity of any of these concepts,
should be straight forwardly condemned by the Ulama in an official Fatwa as
heretical, if not tantamount to apostasy.
The
authoritative approach taken by Maryam Jamilah can be related to her experience
lived as the forth generation of Jewish immigrants in New York who was trapped
between her high acknowledgement to the Judo tradition, but the image was badly
damaged by the arrogant attitude of the Rabbis and the Jewish community leaders
who believed that they are supreme.
Epilog
In
our opinion, even though Maryam Jamilah offered a genuine analysis of
Orientalists’ work in her book, Islam and Orientalism, but she failed to
significantly imposed her analysis among the academician because of her
intolerant approach towards Orientalism. Her complete rejection of everything
that originated from the Western Values, made her contribution to the field of
comparative study between Islam and Orientalism becoming less and less
significant to the current world that need a more objective study.
We
believe that Muslims should carefully examine the historical background of
Orientalism in order to understand the source of its influence and significance
to the world affair. How did Orientalism gain such kind of reputation? This
need to be carefully studied as an early step to suggest Occidentalism as an
independent and respected field of academic study to offer a genuine Islamic
interpretation of World civilization today.
REFERENCE
1. Maryam Jamilah, Islam Versus the West, Lahore:
Muhammad Yusuf Khan and Sons Publication, 1984.
2. Maryam Jamilah, Islam and Orientalism, New Delhi: Adam
Publishers and Distributors, 2007.
3. Maryam Jamilah, Al-Rasa’il al-Mutabadilah Bayna Abu
Al-Ali Al-Maududi wa Maryam Jamilah, Cairo: Al-Mukhtar Al-Islami li
al-Nashr wa al-Tauzi’ wa al-Tasdir, 1992.
4. Muhammad Bahauddin Hussein Ahmad, Haqiqah
al-Istishraq wa Mauqifuhu min al-Islam mundzu Dhuhurihi ila Nihayah al-Alfiyyah
al-Tsaniyyah, Kuala Lumpur: International Islamic University Malaysia
Publication, 2003.
5. Zachary Lockman, Contending Visions of the Middle
East: The History and Politis of Orientalism. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2005.