Monday 28 October 2013

How Muslims Helped Cause the American Revolution - Lost Islamic History by Firas Alkhateeb

How Muslims Helped Cause the American Revolution.

Today’s American political landscape can be quite a confusing and frightening place. The ideas of the Founding Fathers are commonly cited as the foundation of the nation. The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution are seen as the infallible documents on which American life are based. Freedom, democracy, and liberty are the cornerstones of political and social ideas in the United States.

At the same time, however, the rising tide of Islamophobia is making its presence felt. Politicians support the characterization of Islamic life as incompatible with American society. Media “pundits” decry the supposed influence Muslims are having on destroying the basis of American political and social ideas.


The truly ironic part of this is that Muslims in fact helped formulate the ideas that the United States is based on. While this article will not argue that Islam and Muslims are the only cause of the American Revolution, the impact that Muslims had on the establishment of America is clear and should not be overlooked.


Islamic Philosophy and the Enlightenment

The political and social ideas that caused the American colonists to revolt against the British Empire were formulated in a movement known as the Enlightenment. The Enlightenment was an intellectual movement that argued that science and reason should be the basis of human society, not blind following of monarchs and church authority. On July 4th, 1776, in Philadelphia, the American revolutionaries signed the Declaration of Independence, a document written by Thomas Jefferson and heavily influenced by the Enlightenment, which made official their break from Great Britain and the establishment of the United States of America.

The Enlightenment was driven by a group of European philosophers and scientists who were going against the prevailing ideas of governance in Europe at the time. Among these thinkers were people such as John Locke, René Descartes, Isaac Newton and Montesquieu.


John Locke


John Locke, an Englishman who lived from 1632 to 1704, promoted some of the most influential ideas of the Enlightenment. He pioneered the idea that humans are naturally good, and are corrupted by society or government to becoming deviant. Locke described this idea in his An Essay Concerning Human Understanding as the tabula rasa, a Latin phrase meaning blank slate. The idea was not original to him, however. In fact, Locke directly took the idea from a Muslim philosopher from the 1100s, Ibn Tufail. In Ibn Tufail’s book, Hayy ibn Yaqdhan, he describes an identical idea about how humans act as a blank slate, absorbing experiences and information from their surroundings.


John Locke borrowed many of his Enlightenment ideas from the Muslim philosopher, Ibn Tufail

The same idea manifests itself in the life of Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him). He stated that “No child is born except on the fitra.” Fitra here can be defined as the natural, pure state of a person. According to Islamic thought, all humans are born in a natural state of purity, with belief in one God, and that as they grow older, they adopt the ideas and beliefs of the people around them, particularly their parents. This is the intellectual forerunner of the tabula rasa that Locke learned from Ibn Tufail.

Through Locke, this concept would influence the political idea that humans should not be constrained by an oppressive and intolerant government. His ideas, which he borrowed from Ibn Tufail, would end up forming a cornerstone of America’s revolutionary ideas that the colonists in America would be much better off if they were not under the oppressive British government. Locke further expanded on the subject by describing something he called the social contract. In this social contract theory, the people must consent to be ruled by a government that in turn agrees to protect the natural rights of its citizens.
This same concept is also seen in 1377 in the Muqaddimah of the great Muslim historian and sociologist, Ibn Khaldun. In it, he states, “The concomitants of good rulership are kindness to, and protection of, one’s subjects. The true meaning of royal authority is realized when a ruler defends his subjects.” Here Ibn Khaldun is explaining one of the main political ideas of the Enlightenment, 300 years before Locke proposes the same argument: that a government must defend, not infringe on, the rights of its citizens. Later, in 1776, the preamble of the Declaration of Independence stated a similar argument: “Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”
John Locke also pioneered the concept of natural rights: the idea that humans all have a set of God-given rights that should not be taken away by any government. In the Declaration of Independence, this is stated as “…they [men] are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”
While most American and European textbooks promote this as a unique “Western” idea, the truth is that it is far older than John Locke and Thomas Jefferson. Again, in the Muqaddimah, Ibn Khaldun explains: “Those who infringe upon property commit an injustice. Those who deny people their rights commit an injustice.” He goes on to explain that this leads to the destruction of a state, and cites examples from the life of the Prophet (Peace Be Upon Him) where he forbade injustice. The concepts that a Muslim government should not infringe upon rights was very clear in Islamic law and was a well-accepted idea throughout Muslim empires.


Other Philosophers

Other Enlightenment philosophers were heavily influenced by earlier Muslims and Islamic ideas. Without going into great detail, the following are some examples:

Isaac Newton was greatly influenced by Ibn al-Haytham, the Muslim scientist who pioneered the scientific method, optics, and the laws of motion. In Europe, Ibn al-Haytham was well known, as were his ideas about science and philosophy. Isaac Newton borrowed from Ibn al-Haytham the idea that there are natural laws that run the universe (an idea first proposed by Caliph al-Ma’mun as his rationale for establishing the House of Wisdom in Baghdad). Later Enlightenment philosophers used the idea of natural laws to support concepts of natural rights, the government’s role, and economic systems. All of these ideas influenced the Founding Fathers of America who cited them as the basis of the United States.
Montesquieu is usually cited as the first to propose the ideas of separation of government into several branches. During his time in Europe, monarchs held absolute power and shared control of the state with no one. The Muslim world had historically never run in such a way. While caliphs in the Umayyad and Abbasid Empires held most of the power, there also existed the idea of shura, which was a council whose job it was to advise the caliph. In those governments there also existed ministers who carried out tasks under the supervision of the monarch. Perhaps the most important however, were the qadis, or judges, who formed a legal system based on Islamic law and were independent of the ruling caliph. A prime example of how Islamic governments are designed to work through a bureaucracy is Imam al-Mawardi’s Al-Ahkam Al-Sultaniyyah [On the Ordinances of the Government], written in the early 1000s. In it, al-Mawardi explains how the caliph and other government officials are to carry out their roles within their individual spheres, all while staying within the framework of Islamic law.
This system of government was well known in Europe from the Muslim European states in Spain and Sicily, where many European Christians traveled to study under Muslim scholars. Al-Mawardi’s work was translated into Latin and disseminated throughout Europe, where he was known as Alboacen, a Latin corruption of his name.


Coffee

All of the philosophical ideas already mentioned would not have had much effect if it were not for a curious black drink that came out of the Muslim world – coffee.

During the Middle Ages in Europe, the drink of choice was alcohol. In France and other areas that grew grapes, wine was the dominant drink, while beer and ale were popular further north. Drinking water was actually rare, as it was believed that alcoholic beverages were cleaner than water and more filling. The result of this belief was constant drunkenness among the European population.
In Yemen in the middle of the 1400s, a new drink that was made from coffee beans was beginning to become quite popular. The Yemenis were roasting and then boiling coffee beans in water to produce a drink that was rich in caffeine, a stimulant that causes the body to have more energy and the brain to think more clearly. Through the 1400s and 1500s, coffee spread throughout the Muslim world, and coffee shops began to pop up in major cities. These coffee shops became a center of urban society, as people met there to socialize and enjoy the company of others.


A British coffeehouse in the 1700s

By the 1600s, these coffee houses had spread to Europe as well. Although there was initial resistance to drinking a “Muslim drink” in Christian Europe, the beverage caught on. The coffeehouses became a central aspect of the Enlightenment, particularly in France. Whereas previously Europeans had been drinking alcohol regularly, they now met in coffee houses, where they discussed philosophy, government, politics, and other ideas that were the cornerstones of the Enlightenment. French Enlightenment philosophers such as Diderot, Voltaire, and Rousseau were all regular customers at the coffeehouses of Paris.

Were it not for this drink from the Muslim lands, Europe might never have had the Enlightenment, as the philosophers would never have met to discuss ideas, nor had the mental clarity (due to alcohol consumption) to think philosophically.


How Did This All Lead to Revolution?

As previously stated, the American Revolution was a direct effect of the European Enlightenment. The theories of rights, government, and the human self that were the basis of Enlightenment took form in the 1700s at the hands of great minds such as Locke, Newton, and Montesquieu. They, however, borrowed their ideas from earlier Muslim philosophers such as Ibn Tufail, Ibn Sina, and Ibn Khaldun. Were it not for their ideas which were rooted in Islam, the Enlightenment may not have been as insightful, or may not have even happened. Added to this was the effect that coffee had on Europe in giving the philosophers a forum to expand their ideas and learn new ones.

The signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776 in Philadelphia

Without the Enlightenment, the American colonists never would have had the intellectual backing they needed to revolt. The ideas of freedom, liberty, and human rights that America is founded on are originally Muslim ideas formulated by Muslim philosophers working with the Quran and Hadith as their basis. While it is not accurate to claim that Muslims single-handedly caused the American Revolution, their contributions and influences cannot be overlooked. Those who claim that Islamic ideas are not compatible with American society must remember that it was those Islamic ideas that helped form American society, freedom, and liberty in the first place.


Bibliography:

Khaldūn, I. (1969). The muqaddimah, an introduction to history. Bollingen.


Morgan, M. (2007). Lost history. Washington D.C. : National Geographic Society.

Russell, G. A. (1994). The ‘arabick’ interest of the natural philosophers in seventeenth-century england. Brill Publishers.

Wednesday 23 October 2013

A Date With A Literary Scholar (Refaat Alareer) by Ramdan Faudzi

A Date With a Literary Scholar

~ Refaat Alareer ~


~ Elits with Refaat Alareer ~



   21 October 2013 marked the day that open our eyes about the reality that people always do the opposite, denying the fact that it is inhuman. Palestine, the land of promises for certain religion where people, man, women, the old, children were killed without mercy. The brutality that oppressed the native people and threw them out of their birthplace where their blood spilled just trying to stand their ground. Mr.Refaat told us the situation when he was in Malaysia, and back in Gaza(Palestine) his family was about to get involve in the war when Israel play to attack Gaza. If we where in his position what would we do? Can we do something about it when we were hundred miles away from a place called home. It is a very critical time for him. He also Told us about his experience plucking the Olives from their tree, one by one, using their hand with care, with his family. He also make a poem out of it. I also ask him a question about how was it like in Palestine especially Gaza before the attacking took place and he replied that it was a simple life were everybody doing the same thing to live their life like the rest of the world. Plus, it was the land of agriculture. I learn a lot about Palestine and about the poem he wrote which he usually and like to use metaphor and simile. It is a experience that change me and grateful to live in a peaceful country.



The View from Above.
From our right we can see the the declining of Palestine land that was took over by the Israel Laknatullah since 1946 till today.



The Terror Tunnel | Tunnel of Victory


   We were told by Mr.Refaat about a tunnel that is connected from Gaza to Egypt and was their only way out of Gaza because the other was bordered with Israel's defenses. But i found out that there is one more tunnel built and this is the journal about it. 

   The Israelis was shocked by the discovery of an underground tunnel. A handmade border crossing from Khan Younis, up to the illegal Israeli settlements. The Tunnel was found near one of their kindergarten. The discovery of this tunnel causing fear to the people of Israel because it shows the "muqawamah" that means the Palestine defense is able to achieve a high level offensive strategy against the Zionist regime.

   Israel initially estimated that the length of the tunnel are around 2-3 km long, but mashaAllah, it is very long. And this handmade tunnels using over 500 tons of construction material, composed of cement and steel. So the Israelis are determined to block the passage of getting into Khan Younis again. The Israelis acknowledge that this tunnel was built by someone who is skilled in the art of construction.

   As for the Palestinians themselves, the discovery of this tunnel is commendable because it shows the strength possessed by their muqawamah lineup. Despite of what happened in their daily life, the people of Gaza still able to produce an extraordinary architecture that cultivates fear and terror in the enemy and so then named it "the Tunnel of Terror".




" Palestine will be Free " 

Sunday 20 October 2013

Hunting For Your Dream by Ramdan Faudzi Tribute to Galneryus

Hunting For Your Dream


To what extent are you in touch with your dreams?
There is something you’re aiming for
What is it that these hands desire?
Search for a certain thing.

Once you step forward
It is waiting for you there
The dazzling light

Hunting for your…

The great skies and the great earth
Absorb them into your body
Without stopping, surpass your future
And you can become stronger.

Don’t hesitate if you’re drenched in tears
Lay bare your feelings
Don’t fix your eyes on the times that are past
Freeze them in your memories.

If you reach up, one day
You will be able to seize it
The everlasting dancing light.

Those feelings that you maintained
Release all of it at once
Without stopping, surpass time
And you can become stronger.

The shape of the uniqueness that you found
While you were fumbling about and losing your way
Will surely change who you are today,
You will shine brightly.

Once you step forward
It is waiting for you there
The dazzling light

Hunting for your dream.


By,
Ramdan Faudzi,
Tribute to,
Galneryus.



"This artificial poem inspired me, so will you be, I hope"

Saturday 12 October 2013

War Poetry : Anthem for Doomed Youth by Wilfred Owen

War Poetry

Anthem for Doomed Youth


What passing-bells for these who die as cattle?
    Only the monstrous anger of the guns.
    Only the stuttering rifles' rapid rattle
Can patter out their hasty orisons.
No mockeries now for them, no prayers nor bells;
    Nor any voice of mourning save the choirs, – 
The shrill demented choirs of wailing shells;
    And bugles calling for them from sad shires.

What candles may be held to speed them all?
    Not in the hands of boys but in their eyes
Shall shine the holy glimmers of goodbyes.
    The pallor of girls' brows shall be their pall;
Their flowers the tenderness of patient minds,
And each slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds.



By
Wilfred Owen

Brief Biography of Wilfred Owen.


   Wilfred Owen was one of the great or even the best of war poet during World War I. He was born on the 18th of March 1893 in Oswestry, Shropshire, England. He was very religious and against the brutal reality of the war. He was under the influence of Siegfried Sassoon who was his mentor and fellow friend. He was best known through his poem Dulce Et Delcorom Est and Anthem for Doomed Youth. He died on the Forth of November 1918 at the age of 25 and buried in Sambre Oise Canal, France.

The Poem Analysis.

Overview.


   What Wilfred Owen wants to highlight in the poem is that no matter how much we memorialize, tribute, or honor the fallen, we can't ever really know what it was like for them in those horrible moments before death. "Anthem for Doomed Youth" strives to make it impossible for us to ignore those realities, and to realize that in the face of all that horror, our anthems might ring hollow, no matter how much we seek meaning in them.

Theme.


Warfare.
   This poem is all about the universal topic of the terrible cost, realities, and and the inability of our rituals to alleviate the death and suffering it brings about. It is not about some specific battle or individual love lost.

Death.
   Death is a cliche of war. We know the result, but still, we figure it's worth pointing out that even though "Anthem for Doomed Youth" doesn't directly mention death after the first line, it's still completely obsessed with the concept. It is in the manual that death is upon us when we play the guns but human nature still sees it as a way to solve the puzzle.

Symbolism and Imagery

War imagery.
   The poem is about the exploring of how war can twist the way we see the world. Men become cattle, artillery shells become choirs, and tears become candles. Things in a world at war are not as they seem. In our speaker's eyes, the rituals of mourning the fallen become mockeries, because they ring so hollow in the face of war's true horrors.

Mourning Rituals imagery.
   When a Hero of the war died. People go to the funeral with songs and grieving, feeling the loss and sadness but are those people really understand the experience felt by the fallen hero. Probably not. the heat was much higher than just sitting there mourning about someone's death.

Setting.

World War I battlefield.
   The place that the war is presented where bullets and grenades fly unknowing its true target. the place where hero's fall. a place where they realize the truth, reality and brutality of the war.

Graveyard.
   It is the place where the funeral took place. A place where family, relatives, and friend came to grieve. The place where realizing about something has become just only a dream. The place to mourn.

Form and Meter.

   This poem is a Sonnet written in a iambic pentameter. For example "What passing-bells for these who die as cattle?" in the first line.




"My subject is War, and the pity of War. The Poetry is in the pity".
Wilfred Owen.

Saturday 5 October 2013

Drama by Ramdan Faudzi

Drama


What is Drama?

   Drama has many meaning that characterize the word. Drama a piece of writing that tells a story and is performed on a stage. A play, movie, television show, or radio show that is about a serious subject and is not meant to make the audience laugh. The art or activity of performing a role in a play or show. Drama is also a composition in verse or prose intended to portray life or character or to tell a story usually involving conflicts and emotions through action and dialogue and typically designed for theatrical performance.

History.

Drama was originated from ancient Greek in 600-700 BC. The word drama means 'action' or 'to-do' in Greek. The actor wore a facial mask to show the expression clearly. There are two types of the mask that is 'Talia' for comedy and 'Melpomene" for the tragedy. After Italian Renaissance Operas in 1500 which music plays an important role in it, English drama is growing with the encouragement of Queen Elizabeth.

Types of Drama.

1. Tragedy
  A tragedy is a play that ends up unhappily. A tragedy is commonly associated with right and wrong, justice and injustice, and life and death as their universal theme. Tragedies pit human limitation against the large force of destiny.

2. Comedy
   Comedy is a play that end with a happy ever after endings. The play always centers on a romantic conflict. The fun part is that the protagonist could be anybody not like tragedy drama that prefers a Tragic Hero as the protagonist. Usually ends with a wedding.

3. Melodrama

   Melodrama is another type of exaggerated drama. The formulaic storyline of the classic melodrama typically involves a villain a heroine, and a hero who must rescue the heroine from the villain. So basically it is about a fight between good and evil.

4. Modern Drama
   A modern drama may be tragedy, may be comedy or could be both. It is focus on personal issues and about ordinary people. Modern playwrights often experiment wit unconventional plot structures like a very long flashback, music and a visual projection of a characters private thought.


Plot Structure of A Drama.




Famous Playwright.

William Shakespeare.
Sophocles.
Christopher Marlowe.

Famous Drama.

Romeo and Juliet.
Death Of A Salesman. 
Cyrano de Bergerac. 
Oedipus Rex.



Friday 4 October 2013

Poetry by Ramdan Faudzi

What is Poetry?


   According to the dictionary, poetry is a literary work that made by poets in verse to indicates the expression of feeling and idea through meaning, rhythm and sound.

"Poetry is when an emotion has found its thought and the thought has found words".
Robert Frost.

   In Greek understandings, poetry is an art form in which human language is used for its aesthetic qualities in addition to, or instead of, its notional and semantic content. The use of rhythm and rhetorical device such as metaphor and simile with were felt by the users.

These are some type of a poem. 


1. Sonnet
   Sonnet is a 14 lines poem that originated from Italy and the brought to England. Literally a “little song,” the sonnet traditionally reflects upon a single sentiment, with a clarification or “turn” of thought in its concluding lines.

2. Villanelle
   Villanelle is a five of three-line stanzas and a final quatrain, with the first and third lines of the first stanza repeating alternately in the following stanzas. These two refrain lines form the final couplet in the quatrain. It is basically a French Verse.

3. Ghazal
   Ghazal is a  is a poetic form consisting of rhyming couplets and a refrain, with each line sharing the same meter. Using Arabic Verse, Ghazal is one of the principal poetic forms which the Indo-Perso-Arabic civilization offered to the eastern Islamic world.

4. Haiku
   Haiku is a is a three-line poem with seventeen syllables, written in a 5/7/5 syllable count. Often focusing on images from nature, haiku emphasizes simplicity, intensity, and directness of expression.

These are some types the poetry genres.


1. Narrative poetry
Narrative poetry is a poem that that tells a story. It is generally with more appeal to human interest. Narrative poetry may be the oldest type of poetry.

2. Satirical poetry
Satirical poem is all about ridicule and denunciation. A satirical poem is one that makes fun of some example of vice or foolishness or injustice or moral failing. Although satire is usually meant to be funny, its greater purpose is often constructive social criticism, using wit as a weapon and as a tool to draw attention to both particular and wider issues in society.

3. Elegy
Elegy is a is a mournful, melancholy or plaintive poem, especially a lament for the dead or a funeral song. An elegy may also reflect something that seems to the author to be strange or mysterious. The elegy, as a reflection on a death, on a sorrow more generally, or on something mysterious, may be classified as a form of lyric poetry.

Reflection.

This is one of the types of poetry that i choose that is a Haiku.
Here are three examples of the haiku of Basho Matsuo, the first great poet of haiku in the 1600s:


Basho Matsuo


An old silent pond...

A frog jumps into the pond,

splash! Silence again.


Autumn moonlight—

a worm digs silently

into the chestnut.


Lightning flash—

what I thought were faces

are plumes of pampas grass.

by
Basho Matsuo