1 / 13

Middle East & Islam Chapter 12 - Nationalism

Middle East & Islam Chapter 12 - Nationalism. GLS-220 Dr. Maggio. Nationalism. Religion of the modern world? Desire of a large group of people to create and maintain statehood To have their own rulers, laws, government institutions Loyalty to a desired political community

aelan
Download Presentation

Middle East & Islam Chapter 12 - Nationalism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Middle East & IslamChapter 12 - Nationalism GLS-220 Dr. Maggio

  2. Nationalism • Religion of the modern world? • Desire of a large group of people to create and maintain statehood • To have their own rulers, laws, government institutions • Loyalty to a desired political community • Special characteristics Egypt, Persia

  3. Nationalism foreign to Islam • Umma – community of believers • Islam was the sole object of political loyalty • Defend Islamic lands against rulers or peoples of other faiths • All true Muslims are brothers and sisters, regardless of race, language, culture • Clear distinctions Arabs, Persians, Turks • BUT Nationalism should not exist in Islam

  4. Influence of Religion • In Middle East, religion has deeply influenced nationalism • Arab nationalism initially included Christians and Jews • Opposition to Christian control in Lebanon • Opposition to Jewish colonization in Palestine (Israel since 1948)

  5. Arab Nationalism • Confusion among: • Arab nation(s) • Islamic umma • Such as when an Arab nationalist cause is characterized as a Jihad • Disagreements among Arabs (OPEC) • Disagreements among Muslims (Iran)

  6. This Period • Late 1800s • Arabs, Persians, Turks, developing nationalist feelings • Strongly influenced by religion • A reaction to rising western influence and imperialism • Middle Easterners start to learn from Europeans, work like Europeans

  7. Views of Government • Middle Easterners start to think that: • Bad governments need not be endured • Individuals have rights • Freedoms from coercive rulers • People form nations • Liberal (liberty) and nationalist ideas adopted by many young Muslims 1870s

  8. Three Nationalist Movements • Egyptians • Turks in Ottoman Empire • Persians under the Qajar Shahs

  9. Later • Later we will cover: • Arab Nationalism • Nationalism of Christian peoples in the Ottoman Empire such as the Greeks and the Armenians • Zionism

  10. Zionism defined • Calls for Israel’s creation as a Jewish state • An ideology that holds that Jews are a people, or a nation • Should gather together in single homeland • Jewish national movement to establish a Jewish homeland in Palestine • Christian Evangelicals: Jews return to Israel to hasten the Second Coming of Christ

  11. Egyptian Nationalism • “Land of Paradox” • 1540, from L. paradoxum "paradox, statement seemingly absurd yet really true," from Gk. "contrary to expectation, incredible,“– statement that disagrees with itself • Most westernized country Middle East/Mamluks? • Clothing, foods, languages • Cairo, Alexandria, Ismailia, Port Said • Ancient relics monuments, yet very progressive • Straight Avenues, Suez Canal

  12. Khedive Ismail1863-1879 • Ottomans ruling Egypt – • Khedive is Governor or Viceroy title granted by the Ottoman Sultan • Built RRs, bridges, docks, canals, factories, sugar refineries • Cotton market, borrowings, taxes • Ran up huge debts 3 M – 93 M pounds p. 189 • Appoints Cabinet to draft a Constitution, like the Ottomans 1876 • Sultan dismisses Ismail 1879, now son Tawfiq

  13. Ismail and Nationalism • His success and failures foster nationalist feelings • Drew Egyptians closer together (newspapers) • Institutions and infrastructure he built • Europeans became models for modernization, but also targets of native resentment

More Related