Wednesday, August 26, 2009

MIS Comprehensive Examinations (Part III, 4 of 4)

Master in International Studies' Comprehensive Examinations
University of the Philippines-Diliman

August 24, 2009


B. Islamic Studies 221 (Arab Historiography)

Question number THREE:
Ibn Khaldun’s idea and method of historiography are rare elements in both classical and modern historical and sociological writings. Why? Discuss fully.


Ibn Khaldun’s thesis on the “Science of Sociology” is highly regarded as a rare phenomenon in both classical and modern historical and sociological writings because it is a convergence of history and sociology encompassing the temporal and spatial elements of classic and modern writings. It does not only tells past events as a historical alone but it also tells how did these past events affects the socio-development of a society and the psychological, even biological, developments of man - as a social being in a community.

His thesis transcends both time-bounded and place-bounded. He said, “there’s a clear delineation between History and Sociology: History has so many explanations with less theories while Sociology has so many theories but lacks explanations.” In this premise, he tried to bridge a gap by converging the two disciplinal fields. The rarity of his study was that classical writers of history and sociology refer him as a prime source while modern writers consider his study a ‘still’ appropriate and applicable in the contemporary times.

He questioned the veracity of other historians/sociologists in their works because he senses that there is normative bias in their writings. He warned future writers that they should be cautious in trying to describe and explain their studies so as not to accused of tending to favor something or someone. It is imperative to say that Robert Cox was right when he said, “theories are always for someone and for some purpose.”

He included the concept of umran or culture in trying to converge history and sociology. He classified umran into primitive and civilized cultures with differing characterizations. Primitive umran is located in rural places where there is a strong ‘Asabiya’ or sense of solidarity through blood kinship, while Civilized umran in cities (urban places) has weak ‘Asabiya’ because of a large mobilization of its population.

Moreover, when studying civilizations, he suggested three important cyclical evolutions of it. First is that when a group of people discovered ‘Asabiya’, then a civilizational birth takes place. Second is when the ‘Asabiya’ was strengthened and institutionalized, then you have a young civilization wherein a peak of exhausting the resources to suffice the luxurious way of life by the people especially by the leaders. Who will impose higher taxes on its subjects. Last, is the decaying stage when everybody is contended and all of its resources were exhausted. This is the age of senility.

Consequently, Ibn Khaldun’s Science of Sociology is an epitomic level of knowledge that can be applied in politics, economics, law, anthropology and various bodies of sciences. 

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MIS Comprehensive Examinations (Part III, 3 of 4)

Master in International Studies' Comprehensive Examinations
University of the Philippines-Diliman

August 24, 2009


B. Islamic Studies 221 (Arab Historiography)

Question number ONE:
Define and explain Arab historiography and discuss at least three (3) of its major features.


Arab historiography is a combined branch of learning of Philosophy of History and History that examines the past (whether pre-Islamic, medieval age, or contemporary) and the thinking, teachings, and approaches in the context of Islam as its main reference, and the Arab knowledge (from literature, positivist, to empirical studies) as its subtext.

It is also a way of describing, explaining, and articulating the events that happened in the past whether it is operated through unwritten (oral traditions or narratives) and written accounts. Muhammad Siddique in his work “An Islamic Concept of History” has presented differing variables from how a Western conception is dissimilar with the Muslim conception of history.

According to his thesis, there is a law of mechanical causality, i.e., A affected/caused by B is not tautologous to B or B is not tautologous to C. In explaining this prism, he gave two projections: 1) Hegelian approach, and 2) the Marxist approach or the historical materialism. The Hegelian approach is compounded on the significance of ‘ideas all the way down’; a change can be plausible in a dialectical process (or an intellectual exchange of ideas) even the opposite affects the change. Since ontology (what is out there?) precedes epistemology (how do we know it exist?), it represent a schema that there are no facts about the world, only ideas which are interconnected.

The Marxist materialism is compounded on the significance of a material reality, whereby a change is referred only to the realms of reality and its material afflictions. Arnold Toynbee has a different take on the matter; he added the imperative of a unit of civilization in the study of historiography. It is through civilizations that the historiographers were able to examine the differing views between Philosophy of History to History.

Thomas Naff’s “Towards a Muslim Theory of History” emphasized that within the Islamic context, a historical reform is possible if it’s for a moral betterment and not physical development of the Muslim civilizations. Moral piety is an important ingredient in Islamic theory of History. He elaborated of looking and going back to the community established by Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) as the sole and pure Islamic community in the world.

Franz Rosenthal in his work “Arabs Historiography” presented the tools utilized by Muslim historiography in examining the past. He firstly introduced “habar” or a form of narratives that tells a single story which was an important channel in the pre-Islamic age. It is a type of oral traditions among the Arab people. Second, the Analytical historiography that is composed of three categories of history: 1) chronography, 2) biography and 3) prosopography. Chronography is describing stories that are in chronological order embedded with the element of time. An example of biography is Majul’s Muslims in the Philippines. Prosopography is describing a group of people in its historicity and not collectivity as an individual member of a community. An example of this is Salibi’s Genealogy of the Sultanate system and the Sarsila.

Rosenthal added some lesser forms of Arab historiographies, these are: 1) Dynastic historiography 2) Tuqqaba historiography and 3) the Genealogy historiography. Dynastic is attributed to the scholars who are controlled by different Arab dynasties/families who have political power or member of the political elites. They only tell the positive aspects of these dynasties if they do not follow, they will face persecutions. The Tuqqaba historiography emphasizes the handing of a story/historical event from one generation to another. Tuqqaba in English means “layer.” The Genealogy historiography introduced the lineage system among the powerful families in a Muslim community, e.g., Sultans, Emirs, Kings, etc.

In sum, Arab historiography does not only tell the past but it also gives importance to interlocking aspects of knowledge between Philosophy (regarded as the Queen of all the sciences) and History (regarded as the foot of all the sciences).

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MIS Comprehensive Examinations (Part III, 2 of 4)

Master in International Studies' Comprehensive Examinations
University of the Philippines-Diliman

August 24, 2009


A. Islamic Studies 231 (Islamic Political Thought)

Question number TWO:
Discuss Al-Afghani’s “Pan-Islamism” and its various manifestations today


Al-Afghani was one of the revolutionary philosophers and political scientists who expounded on the idea of Pan-Islamism. He explained the necessity of the idea to the lost glory of the Islamic golden age during the advent of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) up to the four rightly-guided Caliphs.

It is different with Pan-Arabism which connotes the idea of unity among all the Arab people regardless of religion, ethnic affinity, and geographical context. Pan-Islamism is an aspiration of oneness and unity of all Muslims regardless of nationality, race, ethnicity, and other demographic elements. It is somehow paralleled to the idea of Ummah.

According to Al-Afghani, it can be attained through a people’s revolution pantheistically opposing the ideals that poisoned the sanctity of Islamic principles. He operationalized the idea by creating an institution that will protect, guide, and supervise the Pan-Islamic community. He commissioned the idea of going back to the era of the Khilafa (Caliphate) system with a Caliph that is selected based on the ijtimah of the maturity of the population through a shura process.

Consensus and communal integrity among the Muslims were the ingredients for the materialization of Pan-Islamism.

The idea of Pan-Islamism is highly manifested in international organizations and supranational organizations with common norms, values, mores, rules, principles and folkways. The European Union is an example of a pan-Europeanism with one free market, one judicial system, one banking system, one parliament, and soon there would be one government which they are now working on proposing it through their charter with one President as one of its provision.

The Arab League which is composed of Arab nations from the Southwest Asia to North Africa. They have a common language, culture, and state religion. The organization of Islamic Conference is also an example with member-countries that are predominantly Muslims. Another is the African Union wherein the members are situated in the continent of Africa. Also, the Organization of American State whereby the state-members are in North and South American continents except Cuba.

Every supranational society and/or international organizations are developed because of common understanding with areas that they have common interests with.

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