Saladin

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Saladin Page 2

by A R Azzam


  Barbarossa informing him of the calamity of Hattin but also relating to him

  how contemptuous Saladin was of the Christian religion. In one story

  Saladin, having captured the Holy Cross, flung it into an open fire, only for

  it to emerge unscathed. In all these accounts the aim was to garner support

  for another crusade. It was at this time that Henry II imposed the famous

  Saladin tithe on his subjects as a means to raise money. One of the things

  to be taxed was beer which, given the English fondness for the drink, must

  have made Saladin even more unpopular.

  Gradually, however, there began to emerge a different perception of

  Saladin. This was largely due to the oral accounts of those returning home.

  The dominating theme was Saladin's generous behaviour towards the

  enemy. It was largely due to his generosity that Dante placed him, barely

  one hundred years after his death, in the first Circle of Hell. In Boccaccio's

  Deca-mcron, Saladin is obliged to borrow money from the Jew Melchisedech

  because he has exhausted his treasury out of generosity. In another anec-

  dote, Jean le Long recounts how the Lord of Anglure was freed by Saladin

  in order to allow him to collect his ransom. When the lord however found

  out that his French estate was too poor to pay the ransom, he returned to

  Saladin with the intention of being his prisoner again. Saladin, moved by his

  honour, set him free on the condition that he build a mosque when he

  returned home. An apocryphal story? Almost certainly, but as late as 1927

  a visitor to Buzancy would have come across a building, then used as a

  school, known as 'le Mahomet'.''

  Saladin's religion needed to be rationalised by Christian writers and,

  within a century, stories began appearing hinting at Saladin's conversion to

  Christianity. Some even attempted to draw his ancestry to European origins.

  In one story, attributed to Jean Enikel who died in 1251, Saladin lay on his

  death-bed unable to choose between Islam, Christianity and Judaism. In the

  Recits d'un Menestrel de Reims, written in 1260, Saladin, once again on his

  death-bed, asks for a basin of water to be brought to him with which he

  baptises himself® So enraptured were writers by the figure of Saladin that

  • 3 •

  SALAD I N

  further embellishments were added which spoke of his fame as a lover rather

  than a warrior. Thus we read that during the Second Crusade, Eleanor of

  Aquitaine became smitten with Saladin and had to be sent home in disgrace

  by her husband the Idng. This is of course nonsense: Eleanor was in the

  Holy Lands when Saladin was ten years old and the story of the romance

  relates an alleged affair that she had with Raymond of Antioch, which

  caused a great scandal at the time.

  Military prowess, it seems, was equally incumbent on a Christian parent-

  age. Matthew Paris, in his Historm An^lorum, makes Saladin's mother

  English, while another common theme was that he was dubbed a Christian

  knight by Humphrey of Toron when the two men met in Alexandria. Other

  stories change the name to Hugh of Tiberius, but the story of Saladin's

  knighthood remained consistent up to the 1930s when, in his biography

  of Saladin, Rosebault devoted the entire opening chapter to the knighting

  incident, presenting it not as legend but as historical fact.® We even have

  stories of Saladin travelling to the West. Curious about the Christian way of

  life and accompanied by Hugh of Tiberius, Saladin finds himself in Paris,

  where he enters into a single combat with a knight to save a damsel in dis-

  tress. Later, in a tournament in Cambrai, he unhorses none other than

  Richard in a joust. The queen of France naturally falls in love with him

  and (once again) he is sent home in disgrace. In MMhilde by Sophie Cottin,

  published in 1805, it is not Saladin but his brother with whom the epony-

  mous heroine falls in love and whom he marries, though not without first

  converting to Christianity. And so we reach the famous visit in 1898 of

  Kaiser Wilhelm 11 to Saladin's tomb in Damascus. The little mausoleum,

  half hidden in a small garden, and covered by a red-ribbed dome was in such

  a neglected condition that the kaiser, moved by this sight, instructed that

  it be restored at his own expense and that his monogram be placed on a

  lamp hanging over the tomb. And it is perhaps in that moment, when the

  successor of Frederick Barbarossa paid homage to his ancestor's nemesis,

  that the separation between legend and the historical Saladin reached its

  widest point. However at this point an astute reader may ask an awlcward

  question: why, if Saladin was such a great hero, was his tomb in such a

  dilapidated state?

  The state of the tomb reflected a deeper truth; the fact was, for the

  Muslims, Saladin was neglected for many centuries. Hillenbrand writes of

  the 'ironically roundabout route for Muslims to take in search of their own

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  P R O L O G U E ; S E P A R A T I N G T H E MAN F R O M T H E MYTH

  past'/ and she chooses her words carefully. The Saladin whom the Muslims

  would raise to an almost messianic status in the twentieth century bore a far

  closer resemblance to nineteenth-century European popular imagination

  than to any historical character, and this was largely a reflection of the

  obsession which the West had with the Crusades; one of the few subjects,

  as Tyerman points out, that is the obvious exception to the rule that history

  is written by the victors.^ This obsession with the Crusades was largely not

  shared by the Muslims, for example the Arabic term al-Hurub al-Salibiyya

  (the war of the crosses) was not used until the middle of the nineteenth

  centuiy and was largely borrowed from Europe. Gradually, however, in the

  nineteenth and twentieth centuries the idea of parallels between European

  policies past and present 'crystallised in the Muslim consciousness'' and

  as the stories of his glowing reputation percolated into the Middle East,

  Saladin's fame grew greater among the Arabs. And so in this way, within

  two months of the kaiser's visit, the famous Egyptian poet Ahmad Shawqi

  responded with an ode eulogising Saladin's achievements.

  It is certainly not a coincidence that the 'reintroduction' of Saladin to

  the Arab world was accompanied by European intervention in the region,

  which reopened psychological wounds that had been left dormant for many

  centuries. Akbar Ahmad puts his finger on this when he comments that the

  memory of the Crusades lingers in the Middle East and colours perceptions

  of Europe,^" and Hillenbrand goes fiirther in pointing out that the Crusades

  are seen through an anti-imperialist prism and the Islamic response in the

  twelfth and thirteenth centuries is viewed as the blueprint for modern Arab

  and Islamic struggles for independence.^^ And so the Saladin legend grew

  and endures powerfully to this day. But what this legend actually says is less

  clear. Is it a truly potent messianic banner, acting as a balm and a ray of hope

  for the disillusioned and disfranchised in the Muslim world, or is it a hollow

  clarion call, an excuse for inaction reducing the individual, in the words of


  Edward Said, 'to an idle spectator waiting for another Saladin or for orders

  to come down from above?'^^ In his 1997 book on Paldstan, Akbar Ahmad

  could use the title Jinnah, Pakistan and Islamic Identity - The Search for

  Saladin, and assume that his readers would automatically understand what

  the title implied. The assumption is a simple one, but the reality is more

  diverse and complex. Like the Godot character in Beckett's play, Saladin has

  come to represent in the Muslim consciousness a sort of political messiah, a

  longed-for liberator.

  • 5 •

  SALADIN

  The scars run deep. Muslims will not forget the Crusades as long as their

  lands are subject to Western intervention and as long as Palestinians aix

  obliged to react to the state of Israel. Wliether Israel is the Latin Kingdom

  and the US intervention in the region a new crusade is of litde relevance

  for the purpose of this book, and no amount of emotive rhetoric will make

  it so. The reflisal to draw any comparisons does not in any way diminish

  the present-day struggle; however, it remains a historian's duty to insist that

  Saladin was a man of his age and was influenced by, and to an extent was

  influencing, events of his age. The Crusades were a particular phenomenon

  at a particular time in history which required a particular response from the

  Muslims. However, the raw emotions felt at the presence of Israel fan the

  flame of the Saladin legend and it is not a coincidence that the centuries

  when Jerusalem was in Muslim hands was the period when Saladin was most

  neglected. In the Middle East the events of the distant past have a sharp

  contemporary relevance.

  So where does this leave the historian attempting to set aside the legend

  and to write about the historical character!' The main challenge as far as

  Saladin is concerned is that he became a legend during his lifetime. His

  capture of Jerusalem and its restoration into the Islamic fold 88 years after

  its capture by the crusaders transformed him into the most famous and

  powerful figure in the Muslim world and a symbol for the aspirations and

  hopes of the Muslims who, with increasing fervour, sought the restoration

  of the third holiest city in Islam. At the same time his acts of chivalry became

  magnified and retold by Europeans returning home, so adding to the

  legend, and all this during his lifetime. And as the stories multiplied, the

  historical Saladin drifted fiirther and further into the shadows. For the his-

  torian one solution, and the one adopted in this book, in trying to draw

  Saladin from the shadows is to ignore the obvious. If Jerusalem and its

  capture gave birth to the legend then, it can be argued, by putting

  Jerusalem aside we can catch a glimpse of the real Saladin. Ehrenkreutz in

  his biography of Saladin hints at this when he asks the question of how

  history would have viewed Saladin had he died in 1185, two years before his

  capture of Jerusalem. ^^ It is an intelligent question, but the conclusion that

  Ehrenkreutz draws is wrong. He argues that Saladin would have been no

  more than an unknown warlord. Ehrenkreutz confiises fame with achieve-

  ment, and this book argues that in fact Saladin's greatest achievement took

  place before 1185, when he was still 'obscure', and that all that followed -

  • 6 •

  P R O L O G U E ; S E P A R A T I N G T H E MAN F R O M T H E MYTH

  Jerusalem, Richard, Acre, the Third Crusade - was built on this achieve-

  ment. It was Saladin's restoration of Sunni Islam into Fatimid Shiite Egypt

  that proved to be his greatest legacy, but to understand why this was of such

  fundamental importance we need to move away from the personality of

  Saladin and focus on the age in which he lived.

  This book starts in Baghdad and with the disintegration of the Abbasid

  caliphate. Although at first sight this may appear to have litde relevance in

  a biography of Saladin, a close reading of the first couple of chapters reveals

  the relevance. For it was in Baghdad, a century before Saladin's birth, that

  the spirit of the Sunni Revival was born and it was the ideals inherent in this

  revival, more than anything, that influenced and affected Saladin's beliefs

  and actions. Saladin was a child of the Sunni Revival and he was a loyal and

  obedient child. His subsequent fame, coupled with the West's obsession

  with the Crusades, has tended to obscure the fundamental point that for

  Saladin the restoration of Sunni orthodoxy within the Islamic fold was as

  important - indeed more important - than the restoration of Jerusalem. It

  is easy to make the i assumption that having captured Jerusalem he had

  achieved his goal, but, as Gibb has pointed out, this goal was reached pre-

  cisely because Saladin's eyes were fixed on the horizon and on a different

  goal.^® The aim of this book is to discover what this goal was.

  A secondary aim of this book is to throw some light on the characters

  who surrounded Saladin. One of the most remarkable aspects when writing

  about Saladin is to discover how his fame has tended to cast the achieve-

  ments of all those around him into the shadows. Saladin did not capture

  Jerusalem single-handedly and yet I was constantly struck when writing this

  book by how most people struggle to name even one of Saladin's advisers

  or generals, even though they were instrumental in his success. And yet

  Saladin was surrounded by giants whose personalities and abilities certainly

  matched his: the great Nur al-Din who was Saladin's 'spiritual father'; his

  memorable uncle Shirkuh, who paved his way to success; his wise brother

  al-Adil, and his courageous and headstrong nephew Taqi ul-Din. Other

  more minor characters are scattered throughout the book and each one

  helps throw a different light on Saladin: the enigmatic but profound

  al-Haldcari; Qaraqush, the 'Turk who knows nothing about books'; the

  wistflil Fatimid caliph al-Adid; and the brave and dashing Keukburi, the

  'blue w o l f . And then there are of course the three men without him Saladin

  would not have been Saladin. They were the jealous guardians of his legacy

  • 7 •

  SALAD I N

  and were - apart from his close family - the nearest and dearest to him. They

  were his historians, propagandists and spin doctors and they were not mere

  scribes or witnesses to history but rather participants and contributors to it.

  The three were different from each other but their differences were tran-

  scended by the shared value and ideology which permeated the age in which

  they lived. And Saladin owed al-Qadi al-Fadil, Imad al-Din al-Isfahani and

  Baha ul-Din Ibn Shaddad a great debt.

  Chapter 1

  The Weakening of the Abbasid

  Caliph and the Sunni Revival

  All you can cluim from me is the na-me which is uttered from your pulpits

  as a, means of pacifying your subjects; and if you want me to renounce that

  privile£ie too, I am prepared to do so and leave everything! to you.

  The Abbasid caliph al-Muti to the Buyid amir

  By the mid-tenth century it had become clear that the Abbasid caliphate

  as a political institution had failed. The second of the two great Sunni


  dynasties, the Abbasids, had overthrown the Umayyad caliphate in 750 and

  moved the seat of power from Damascus to Baghdad, which was established

  as the new capital city on the west side of the Tigris river and which, until

  its destruction by the Mongols in 1258, would remain the most important

  and vibrant city in the Muslim world. Claiming descent from the Prophet

  Muhammad's uncle Abbas Ibn Abd al-Muttalib, the Abbasid's close Idnship

  to the Prophet had undeniably helped them gain popular support, as did

  their claim of reasserting the orthodox rule of Islam as opposed to what they

  claimed had been the Umayyad Arab secular and ethnocentric ways. For

  two centuries the Abbasid empire flourished, reaching a peak under the

  caliphate of Harun al-Rashid, but gradually the decline set in and the caliph

  became unable to exercise religious or political authority. By the middle of

  the tenth century, power was assumed by provincial governors, who rapidly

  • 9 •

  SALAD I N

  founded hereditary dynasties,^ reducing the caliph to a mere pawn in an

  empire of usurpers. Loss of revenue from the provinces meant loss of

  militaiy authority that was needed to bring recalcitrant governors back into

  line, for this was an age of private armies and mercenaries where loyalty was

  a commodity which bowed to the highest bidder.^ Now a lion in winter, the

  Abbasid caliph barely controlled the streets of his imperial city. In 945

  his political authority effectively came to an end when the Buyids, a Shiite

  'clan of freebooters'® who emerged from the province of Dailam, seized

  Baghdad. Allotting the Sunni caliph a humiliating pension, they reduced

  him to a figurehead with little authority outside his household, and placed

  their names on the coins and in the Friday prayer.

  Disputes between Sunnis and Shiites

  There were many disputes between the Sunnis and the Shiites, but ultimately

  there was only one, and that revolved around the nature of the caliphate.

  Central to the Shiite tenet was the belief that following the Prophet's death

  the only rightful heads of the Islamic community, the imams, were Ali (the

  Prophet's son-in-law), his sons al-Hasan and al-Husayn, and the descendants

 

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