Slavery, the State, and Islam

Slavery, the State, and Islam is Fagan’s English rendering of Mohammed Ennaji’s 2007 work Le Sujet et le Mamelouk: Esclavage, Pouvoir et Religion dans le Monde Arab, a historical study of the economics of power in the relationship among slavery, Islam, and monarchy. Ennaji investigates the structur...

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Autor principal: Mourad Laabdi
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Publicado: International Institute of Islamic Thought 2015
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:fd9640e5f61640138816e2f3531cd67b2021-12-02T19:41:33ZSlavery, the State, and Islam10.35632/ajis.v32i1.9562690-37332690-3741https://doaj.org/article/fd9640e5f61640138816e2f3531cd67b2015-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/view/956https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3733https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3741 Slavery, the State, and Islam is Fagan’s English rendering of Mohammed Ennaji’s 2007 work Le Sujet et le Mamelouk: Esclavage, Pouvoir et Religion dans le Monde Arab, a historical study of the economics of power in the relationship among slavery, Islam, and monarchy. Ennaji investigates the structure and nature of the “bond of authority” as it manifests itself in servitude between the king and subject, master and slave, God and believers. The bulk of his primary historical material belongs to the first few centuries of Islam. However his intention, as he notes in the introduction, is to also make sense of contemporary modes of power that govern the scene of authority in the individuals’ proximity to the state and, in some instances, to one another. The opening chapter tells an anecdote of a nineteenth-century Moroccan official who was stripped of his title as Local Governor (in Arabic, Qaid), declared dead to the public, and kept as a slave in the sultan’s palace. Ennaji challenges the official narrative and weaves novel threads of the story to show the degree to which the bond of authority between the sultan and his servants depends upon uninterrupted flat obedience. The second chapter questions the issue of slavery during Islam’s early years. The author claims that the new religion made little practical changes to this institution and, in certain cases, made slaves even more abjectly submissive to their masters. Ennaji particularly details Islam’s termination of the statuses of sa’b (a sā’ib is a slave who has attained full unconditional freedom) and ṭalq (repudiation) and its admission of mawlā (freed slaves must remain loyal to their ex-master). He also elaborates on the non-provision of part of the public funds to free more slaves, as well as the practice of depriving freed slaves of the spoils of war and discouraging people from marrying them. In the third chapter, Ennaji undertakes the king-subject relation in light of the notion of servitude. He probes the sociolinguistic roots of several conceptualizations, including ‘ibādah, ra’īyah, and ṭā‘ah (translated successively as adoration, people, and obedience). He also examines the semiotics of various expressions of servitude and presents a prolonged discussion of the different uses of the hand in this context. Ennaji contends that the transition to Islam barely changed anything in the structure of authority and the masterslave relationship. As he puts it, with the advent of Islam there was “a reorganization of the authoritarian space that reshuffled the division of power between the king and the divine authority” (p. 82). This redistribution of power is elaborated in the fourth chapter, where the author draws on concepts used ... Mourad LaabdiInternational Institute of Islamic ThoughtarticleIslamBP1-253ENAmerican Journal of Islam and Society, Vol 32, Iss 1 (2015)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Islam
BP1-253
spellingShingle Islam
BP1-253
Mourad Laabdi
Slavery, the State, and Islam
description Slavery, the State, and Islam is Fagan’s English rendering of Mohammed Ennaji’s 2007 work Le Sujet et le Mamelouk: Esclavage, Pouvoir et Religion dans le Monde Arab, a historical study of the economics of power in the relationship among slavery, Islam, and monarchy. Ennaji investigates the structure and nature of the “bond of authority” as it manifests itself in servitude between the king and subject, master and slave, God and believers. The bulk of his primary historical material belongs to the first few centuries of Islam. However his intention, as he notes in the introduction, is to also make sense of contemporary modes of power that govern the scene of authority in the individuals’ proximity to the state and, in some instances, to one another. The opening chapter tells an anecdote of a nineteenth-century Moroccan official who was stripped of his title as Local Governor (in Arabic, Qaid), declared dead to the public, and kept as a slave in the sultan’s palace. Ennaji challenges the official narrative and weaves novel threads of the story to show the degree to which the bond of authority between the sultan and his servants depends upon uninterrupted flat obedience. The second chapter questions the issue of slavery during Islam’s early years. The author claims that the new religion made little practical changes to this institution and, in certain cases, made slaves even more abjectly submissive to their masters. Ennaji particularly details Islam’s termination of the statuses of sa’b (a sā’ib is a slave who has attained full unconditional freedom) and ṭalq (repudiation) and its admission of mawlā (freed slaves must remain loyal to their ex-master). He also elaborates on the non-provision of part of the public funds to free more slaves, as well as the practice of depriving freed slaves of the spoils of war and discouraging people from marrying them. In the third chapter, Ennaji undertakes the king-subject relation in light of the notion of servitude. He probes the sociolinguistic roots of several conceptualizations, including ‘ibādah, ra’īyah, and ṭā‘ah (translated successively as adoration, people, and obedience). He also examines the semiotics of various expressions of servitude and presents a prolonged discussion of the different uses of the hand in this context. Ennaji contends that the transition to Islam barely changed anything in the structure of authority and the masterslave relationship. As he puts it, with the advent of Islam there was “a reorganization of the authoritarian space that reshuffled the division of power between the king and the divine authority” (p. 82). This redistribution of power is elaborated in the fourth chapter, where the author draws on concepts used ...
format article
author Mourad Laabdi
author_facet Mourad Laabdi
author_sort Mourad Laabdi
title Slavery, the State, and Islam
title_short Slavery, the State, and Islam
title_full Slavery, the State, and Islam
title_fullStr Slavery, the State, and Islam
title_full_unstemmed Slavery, the State, and Islam
title_sort slavery, the state, and islam
publisher International Institute of Islamic Thought
publishDate 2015
url https://doaj.org/article/fd9640e5f61640138816e2f3531cd67b
work_keys_str_mv AT mouradlaabdi slaverythestateandislam
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