The indispensable and incomparable Robert Fisk writes:
In Syria these days, we are resorting to our
racist little maps. The Alawite mountains and the town of Qardaha, home of the
Assad family – colour it dark red. Will this be the last redoubt of the 12 per cent Alawite minority, to which the President
belongs, when the rebels “liberate” Damascus? We always like these divisive
charts in the Middle East. Remember how Iraq was always Shias at the bottom,
Sunnis in the middle, Kurds at the top? We used to do this with Lebanon: Shias
at the bottom (as usual), Shias in the east, Sunnis in Sidon and Tripoli,
Christians east and north of Beirut. Never once has a Western newspaper shown a
map of Bradford with Muslim and non-Muslim areas marked off, or a map of
Washington divided into black and white people. No, that would suggest that our
Western civilisation could be divvied up between tribes or races. Only the Arab
world merits our ethnic distinctions.
The problem, of course, is that Syria – as
secular and assimilated as any Arab nation before its current tragedy – doesn’t
lend itself to this neat distribution of religious minorities. Aleppo was
always a home to Christians, Sunnis and Alawites. The Alawites were “citified”
many years ago – hence their presence in Damascus – and many of them came not
from the mountains but from Alexandretta, which is now in the Turkish province
of Hatay. Yet even if we know where they live, there has been precious little research into this community – save,
perhaps, in France.
For now Sabrina Mervin, the French author and
researcher, has put together a remarkable document in which she traces the
history of a people who used to call themselves “Nusayris” – after the founder
of their faith, Muhammad Ibn Nusayr – and whose religion was founded “in the
bosom of Shiism” in the 9th and 10th centuries. Mervin’s work, published now in
that splendid French institution Le Monde Diplomatique, should be essential
reading for every Syria “expert”, for it suggests that the Alawites are
victims of a long history of religious dissidents, persecution and repression.
As long ago as 1903, the Belgian-born Jesuit and
Orientalist, Henri Lammens, was identifying the Alawites as former Christians –
until he met a Sheikh who insisted he belonged to Shia Islam. Lammens, a
typical imperialist, suggested that the Alawites – who appeared to believe in
the transmigration of souls and a trinity (the Prophet Muhammad, his cousin and
son-in-law Ali, and Salman, a companion) – might become Christians “which would
allow France to interfere in your favour”. Indeed, France did show
favour to the Alawites in later years.
The Ottomans had tried to integrate the Alawites
who, according to Ms Mervin, were exploited by Sunni landowners and often
illiterate. By 1910, their religious dignitaries were opening relations with
the Shias of southern Lebanon and Iraq, calling themselves “Alawites” after Ali
and distancing themselves from Nusayr. The French mandate authorities in Syria
went along with this, not least because they wished to divide them from the
Sunnis. Popular myth would have it that the Alawites collaborated with the
French while the Sunnis fought for independence. In fact, one prominent
Alawite, Saleh al-Ali, fought the French army in the mountains between December
of 1918 and 1921 – and was subsequently recognised as a national hero by the
first independent Syrian government in 1946. Another prominent Alawite, a
would-be shepherd-saint called Sulieman al-Mourchid, met a less happy end,
hanged in 1946 for treason.
The Alawites were themselves divided over French
rule, some favouring the short-lived Alawite state created by Paris, others the
Syrian nationalism espoused by the Sunnis. The latter stood behind Sulieman
al-Ahmed, claiming adherence to Islam and in 1936 publishing a text stating
that they were Muslim Arabs; and successfully seeking a “fatwa” from the grand
Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin al-Husseini, which included the Alawites in the
“umma”. And yes, this was the same Haj-Amin who would meet Hitler – though this
had nothing to do with the Alawites.
Supported by Iraqi Shias, the Alawites founded
their own religious institutions, constructed mosques and published works on
their faith, receiving the acknowledgement of the Mufti of Syria in 1952.
This rapprochement with the Shias continued under
the first Alawite president – Hafez, father of Bashar – and in 1973, Imam
Moussa Sadr, the most politicised of Shia leaders in Lebanon (later believed to
have been killed on the orders of a certain Muammar Gaddafi), declared that the
Alawites were indeed Muslims; Shia religious schools were then opened at Sayeda
Zeinab in the suburbs of Damascus – thus the story of the “shia-isation” of
Syria. And henceforth Alawites ascended in the Syrian military and in the Baath
party, albeit that most Syrian generals were Sunni.
Yet within the Alawite community, not everyone
found favour. Tribal organisations and religious influence, according to Ms
Mervin, declined under the Assads. So too did the great traditional families.
Poverty still undermines the Alawite hinterland north of Damascus. Even to
speak of the Alawites in sectarian terms has been, of course, forbidden.
Cruellest of all was the habit adopted by Syrians
of referring to the Alawites with the code word “Germans” – in Arabic, “alawiyyin”
(Alawites) and “almaniyyin” (Germans) are similar. What’s in a name? But
please, no more maps.
My unmethodical to be sure research into the subject has led me to believe that the esoteric doctrines of Nusaryianism were always taught by the "clergy" only to a relatively few Alawites, not to the rank and file and not to the women at all.
ReplyDeleteThe "distancing from Nusayr" circa 1910 is an awkward semantic. The question is, are the "orthodox" doctrines still held, but only by a few who are disseminating them to even fewer than the historical norm-and are they known by so few now, does it hardly matter at all in practical political terms?
There is an Alawite Bible equivalent- not named in the Fisk expert, nor in wiki apparently anymore which contained the orthodox doctrines and the book was
kept secret until very recently in historical terms.
The distinctive belief seemed to have been that Ali existed before and had created the world.
from wiki
"
Alawite man in Latakia, early 20th centuryMany of the tenets of the faith are secret and known only to a select few Alawites.[23][50] According to some sources, Alawites have integrated doctrines from other religions (syncretism), in particular from Ismaili Islam and Christianity.[9][23][45] Alawites are reported to celebrate certain Christian festivals, "in their own way",[45] including Christmas, Easter, and Palm Sunday, which make use of bread and wine.[34] The claim that Alawites believe Ali is a deity has been contested by scholars.[51 By some accounts, Alawites believe in reincarnation.[52]
Some sources have suggested that the non-Muslim nature of many of the historical Alawite beliefs notwithstanding, Alawite beliefs may have changed in recent decades. In the early 1970s a booklet entitled "al-`Alawiyyun Shi'atu Ahl al-Bait" ("The Alawites are Followers of the Household of the Prophet"), was issued in which doctrines of the Imami Shi'ah were described as Alawite, and which was "signed by of numerous `Alawi` men of religion".[54]
A scholar suggests that factors such as the high profile of Alawites in Syria, the strong aversion of the Muslim majority to apostasy, and the relative lack of importance of religious doctrine to Alawite identity may have induced Syrian leader Hafez al-Assad and his successor son to press their fellow Alawites "to behave like 'regular Muslims', shedding or at least concealing their distinctive aspects".[55]