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Could a revival of Islam's urban
legacy transform Muslim society?
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The current weakness of the Muslim world may well be best understood as a
failure of urbanism, the inability of a culture to adapt to an era that is
dominated more and more by cities. Joel Kotkin explores the strengths and
weaknesses of the cities of the Muslim world.
In overcoming a society that has become utterly hostile to modern
civilization, one major source of strength may be found in cultivating the
strong urban legacy of the Muslim world.
Riches to rags
In contemporary times, Muslim cities have, to a large extent, become utter
failures. That is true from the sprawling, impoverished expanses of Lagos and
Cairo to the war-shattered ruins of Beirut and Baghdad.
This is particularly odd because for almost a millenium, the religion of
Muhammad provided the rationale and order for the world's most impressive
urban centers. Reviving this model of urbanism could well be the key to creating
a template for Islamic success in the new century. From its origins in the 7th
century, Islam has always been a profoundly urban faith. The need to gather the
community of believers required a settlement of some size for the full
performance of one's duty as a Muslim.
Out of the desert
The Prophet Mohammed did not want his people to return to the desert and its
clan-oriented value system. Islam virtually demanded cities to serve as "the
places where men pray together."
This urban orientation came naturally for a religion that first sprang to
life in a city of successful merchants.
Bringing order
Mecca, a long established trading and religious center on the barren Arabian
peninsula, had long been influenced first by Hellenistic - and then by Roman
rulers. Its varied population included pagans, Jews and, after the 2nd century,
Christians as well.
Mohammed himself was a member of the Qurayshi family, one of the more
powerful clans established in Mecca. He saw the need to end the blood-drenched
feuds that prevented the establishment of a just and enduring society. By the
same token, any urban society, as well as the growth of trade or rational
governance - whether in Arabia, Italy or China - requires a sense of order and
security.
Paradise lost?
Over the ensuing centuries, Islam provided this framework for a remarkable
constellation of cities, from Cordoba in Spain to Delhi in India. Many of the
capital cities of modern times - Damascus, Cairo, Baghdad - all had their
greatest success in the first centuries of Islamic rule.
As the Arab poet Ibn Jubayr wrote:
If Paradise be on earth, Damascus must be it; if it is in heaven, Damascus
can parallel and match it.
Turn back to tolerance?
Few people would say such things today about these cities. But history does
provide some clues about how they can revive themselves. Perhaps most important
would be the restoration of tolerance.
Under Islam, Jews and Christians were both tolerated as "peoples of the book."
Allowed to practice their faiths, Jews and some Christians - particularly those
dissenting from the Orthodox faith of the Byzantines - actually favored, and
even abetted, Muslim conquests. This contrasts with the current situation in
Islamic cities. From Jakarta to Beirut and Teheran, Baghdad and Cairo, once
cosmopolitan populations have become less so, even as these cities have swollen
to unprecedented size.
Minority "brain drain"
Islamic regimes, and the presence of fanatically intolerant groups like al
Qaeda, have driven the diversity out of these cities.
Minorities once honored in administration and trade - Bahais, Jews, Coptic
Christians, Armenians, Assyrians - have fled for Los Angeles, Detroit, Paris or
London, often establishing successful colonies there.
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Cosmopolitan culture
Along with the cosmopolitan character of Islamic urban life, the cultivation
of the arts, science and commerce - have also suffered. In the first 500 years
of Islam, the Arab suq often improved on the Graeco-Roman agora or forum.
Rulers developed elaborate commercial districts, with large buildings shaded
from the hot desert sun, with storerooms and hostels for visiting merchants. The
new rulers also built large libraries, universities and hospitals at a pace not
seen since Roman times. Cordoba, wrote one German nun, was "the jewel of the
world, young and exquisite, proud in its might." So great was the cultural pull
in Cordoba, complained one 9th-century Christian scholar, that even few
Christians could write Latin adequately but could "express themselves in Arabic
with elegance and write better poems in this language than the Arabs themselves."
Crossroads of the world
Baghdad, the capital founded by the Abbasid Caliphate in the late 8th
Century, emerged as the greatest of these early Muslim cities. By 900, it was
likely the largest city in the world.
Its very location suggested its importance - between the Tigris and Euphrates
Rivers, close to the site of ancient Babylon, and nearby as well to Ctesphipon,
the former capital of the Sassanid Persian empire. Not surprisingly, a
contemporary observer, al Ya'qubu, described Baghdad as the "crossroads of the
world."
Getting bad grades
In sharp contrast, today's cities in the Muslim world offer little
culturally or economically to the rest of the world except for what can be
pulled out of the ground.
Arab society today, according to the recent United Nation's Arab Human
Development Report, lags not only behind Europe and America in the West, but
also Asia in the East. This is true for all indices of modernity - from degrees
of literacy, to child mortality, access to the Internet and development of
sophisticated industry.
Bigger - but not better
The result has been cities that have grown in size, but not in cultural
influence or economic importance. As key minorities have left, so have many of
the educated portions of the population, leaving a large portion of the
population poorly prepared for modern urban life.
"The cities have grown but have become less cosmopolitan," suggests
Iranian-born geographer Ali Modarres. "The growth of the cities has been
primarily made up of rural, provincial people. So you have had stagnation in
these cities - even as they have expanded."
Cause of decline
The causes of decline of this urban world have been hotly debated. Some
scholars like Bernard Lewis see an unwillingness to change - in contrast to
Europe, America or more recently East Asia - as the primary reason for the
precipitous decline of the past three to four hundred years.
Others, like Edward Said, tend to blame the racism and cruelty of the West
for Islamic setbacks. Ultimately, determining the causes of decline is secondary
to reversing the downward slide. The glories of the great cities of the Islamic
past can provide some guideposts, suggests Ali Modarres, who teaches at
California State University in Los Angeles.
Spirit of enterprise
Mr. Modarres and other scholars even suggest that there is much Islamic
societies could still teach westerners about cities. He points to a legacy of
graceful architecture, the brilliant use of shading to lower energy use in hot
climates, the creation of excellent systems of water, the gardens and sanitation
systems of earlier Islamic cities.
The key problems facing Islamic cities - and the West that must deal with the
consequences of their failures - do not lie in anything intrinsic in Muslim
history or culture. What has been missing is the will - and self-confidence - to
recover the spirit of enterprise, toleration and rule of law that, for once made
Islamism and urbanism a synergy capable of greatness.
Joel Kotkin, a senior fellow at the Davenport Institute for Public Policy
at Pepperdine University, is writing a history of cities for Modern Library.