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Rabi'A

DOC Rabi'A by Smith in History

Description

The Mamluks were; at one distinct point in history; the greatest body of fighting men in the world and the quintessence of the mounted warrior. They were slave soldiers; imported as boys into the Islamic Empire from the pagan Steppes; but they became its savior; bringing defeat to the Mongols and forming the machine of jihad that ultimately destroyed the Crusader Kingdoms of Palestine and Syria. They entered the Islamic world as unlettered automatons and through a total application to the craft of the warrior they became more than soldiers. After a bloody seizure of power from their masters; the descendants of Saladin; they developed a martial code and an honor system based on barracks brotherhood; a sophisticated military society that harnessed the state's energies for total war and produced a series of treatises on warfare that more than compare to SunZi's Art of War in their complexity; beauty of language and comprehensive coverage of the bloody business of war. Their story embraces many of the great themes of medieval military endeavor. The Crusaders and the deadly contest between Islam and Christendom; the Mongols and their vision of World Dominion; Tamerlane the Scourge of God and the rise of the Ottoman Empire whose new slave soldiers; the Janissaries; would be the Mamluks' final nemesis.


#4651068 in Books 1995-01-01Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.00 x 1.00 x 6.00l; .0 #File Name: 1851680853246 pages


Review
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful. Relatively good; brief summary of the life of Rabi'a.By Muhammad (mfm@heartcaremw.com)This book; in general; is a well researched publication. It is nice to see intelligent works on Islam and specifically on the historical importance of women in Islam. Often; Islam is perceived as misogynistic. This work helps dispel many of these stereotypes. The one exception I do take with the book is the author's continual effort to introduce Christian concepts or comparisons into the subject at hand. One gets the distinct feeling that the author is trying to imply that Sufism was founded on Christian principles. It is almost as if the author is trying to justify Christian concepts despite her most profoundly Islamic subject of Sufism. While there are many similarities between Christianity and Islam (any Muslim would be the first to acknowledge this as a simple recognition of basic Islamic teaching); the fact is that Sufism evolved out of strict Islamic foundations and independently of Christian doctrine. The continued interruptions of her text by analogies or comparisons distracts rather than adds to the work. Otherwise; I found her history of Rabi'a very informative and have added her text to my collection of Islamic history.5 of 7 people found the following review helpful. Filled with many factual errors and inconsistenciesBy A CustomerThis work fails miserably in its attempt to disguise its distinctly un-Islamic bent under the guise of a scholarly work. The only informative part of this book is the brief and; necessarily so; incomplete history of Rabi'a herself. The author continually interrupts her thesis with unnecessary references to Christian theology. It is almost as if she is trying to prove the one superior to the other. She also indirectly is implying that Sufism has some kind of basis in Christian theology; which any historian of Sufism knows is a gross simplification. In fact; most historians have concluded just the opposite ... that Sufism influenced Christian mysticism heavily. Finally; Ms. Smith's final chapters on women mystics in Islam is patently offensive. Here her true anti-Islamic feelings are revealed in her gross distortions of the sayings of the Prophet and her deliberate mis-representations of Islamic law and Hadith literature. She idolizes pagan Arabian womanhood and implies that Islam took away their freedom. Unless she has discovered something new; this flies in the face of every single historian of the times who has concluded just the opposite. That it was Islam that first gave women any rights at all. One need only compare the rights of women in Christian lands of the time to realize this truth. Curiously; the author fails to reconcile her criticism of Islam with her open admiration for Rabi'a. Did the author somehow forget that this woman was a pious Muslim throughout her life? A woman as brilliant as she was would hardly have accepted the Islamic doctrine if she had found it to be as mysogynistic as Ms. Smith implies. Overall; a poor attempt to disguise Islam bashing in scholarly guise.

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