Rebranding the caliphate - a never-ending dystopian myth
 
With the image of pious Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan reciting the Quran in Hagia
Sophia, and his head Mufti holding the sword of conquest, it is no wonder that
slogan appeared on social media.
The dream of an Islamic caliphate is not new. Ever since
the birth of the mother group of political Islam, the Egyptian Muslim
Brotherhood, the Quran and the sword have been used as logos symbolising the
dream of retrieving the caliphate. Watching the sword and the Quran live on TV
from Hagia Sophia has rekindled the yearning for the caliphate within the
Islamist social sphere, and portrayed it as a potential reality, not just a
distant nostalgia.
But what kind of caliphate do the Islamists want?
Rather than providing a clear, detailed portfolio of
their aspired project, most Islamists tend to indulge in selling their desired
outcomes of Islamic rule, and reject the qualities of other modes of
governance. In particular, all Islamists assert their rejection of what they
see as “Un-Islamic aspects” of Western modernity and Western “imperialism”.
Moreover, they also reject the already crushed Islamic State (ISIS) caliphate,
as they see it as a cynical exploitation of the concept they cherish.
Turkish writer Yusuf Kaplan wrote in the staunchly
pro-Erdoğan
newspaper Yeni Şafak: “A caliphate is a
multilateral, multi-layered, multifunctional institution that not only has a
political dimension but also an administrative, economic, cultural and
intellectual one. From time to time, it takes on religious dimensions as well.”
Kaplan added a caveat to his utopian fancy; he
asserted that a caliphate has to be independent of the control of imperialist
powers and “their puppets and satellites”. This is a cynical way to evade
revealing the detail of his proposed project that fits with Erdoğan's
opposition to declaring a caliphate, at least for now.
Kaplan is not alone. Most Islamist visionaries and
thinkers have avoided delving into the thorny details of their caliphate
project, and how their proposed “multilateral, multi-layered, multifunctional
institution” will govern the Muslim world and provide its subjects with a fair
and just Islamic doctrine. Will that happen via an absolute caliph? A
constitutional caliphate? A symbolic caliph?
The idea of a modern caliphate is not new. Nostalgic
Muslim thinkers in the late 19th and early 20th centuries contemplated the
concept of a caliphate ruled by a
“fair, firm, pious
Muslim tyrant,”
who  could implement an administrative,
political, and social system that unites all Islamic countries. The idea of a
fair tyrant was popular among some, for example through writings by Abdul
Rahman Al-Kawakibi in his book "Natures of Despotism", Jamal El-Din
al-Afghani, Muhammad Abdu, and others.
They interpret the idea of tyranny
as “firmness, strength, and
justice” and claim it differs from the Western concept of tyranny, which means
“exclusivity by rule”. And how firmness does not mean injustice and abuse.
Later, those ideas inspired Arab nationalists like Nasser and Saddam Hussein,
and we all know their disastrous outcomes. The idea that an Islamist caliph
will and can perform better than those Arab nationalists is mere dystopia, as
Islamists fail to set a clear mechanism that will prevent their caliphs from
slipping into the path of injustice after they come to power.
In fact, if the history of Muslim caliphs is our
guide, we can say with certainty how the Umayyad, Abbasid, or Ottoman Empire
did not witness a single case in which the Muslim peoples were able to prevent
unjust rule. On the contrary, everyone who revolted against the unjust ruler
was branded a traitor and an apostate. This is the same method President Erdoğan
is now following with his political opponents, from Kurds to secular people.
The application of justice is also a major dilemma
in the concept of the caliphate. The Islamists reduced the concept of justice
in the application of Sharia rulings, but they ignored how Muslim societies
were from the beginning, from the Umayyad era until the end of the Ottoman
caliphate - class societies par excellence. In the history of the Muslim
caliphs we have not heard about a blacksmith who came to power or a carpenter
who managed the affairs of his city.
The problem of young Islamists is how they dream of
societies in which they are the leaders, the rich and mighty people. But they
do not consider what their situation would be if they became slaves or servants
in the palaces of their dreamed caliphs.
To evade the thorny pitfalls of an absolute
caliphate, many modern Islamists advocate a “constitutional caliphate” citing
the early tenure of Sultan Abdülhamid II when he established a general
assembly. But they forget how Abdülhamid disrupted the constitution and
returned the country to absolute authoritarian rule later, and they decline to explain
what would prevent any future successor from doing the same. How can Erdoğan's
fans expect fairness and justice from their beloved leader, who cites Hitler’s rule as an example of
effective government?
Facing such a tricky question, the Erdoğanists
have a ready-made answer: “Turkey is a democratic country.” This is a
fallacious response that overlooks Erdoğan's
authoritarianism; it also ignores how the current Turkish system is built on
secular rather than religious foundations, and if the ruling Justice and
Development Party loses the upcoming elections, the next president will not
adopt the caliphate doctrine.
In truth, the idea of electing
a caliph itself is a comical idea, because it takes away the doctrine of the
caliphate from the basis of its establishment and turns it into a system that
is not very different from any secular system.
This is precisely why most of Erdoğan's
Turkish fans advocate a softer version of the caliphate, in which they see
Turkey as a soft power, and other Muslim societies revolving in its orbit,
connecting via strong cultural, economic, and political bonds.
Most of the advocates of Turkey’s soft power,
however, vehemently reject Arab nationalism, but they have no problem with
Turkish nationalism. They only pay lip service to equality of races within the
Turkish sphere, but subtly consider the Turkish race as superior to others.
Such superiority has triggered several revolts among Arabs and other citizens
of the medieval Ottoman Caliphate against their past caliphs.
The concept of a Muslim Caliphate provides a
valuable sense of historical continuity for those who believe Islam is a faith
as well as a political system.
Nevertheless, the branding of the caliphate is a
project that will always be doomed to failure. For over a century Islamists
have failed to formulate a clear framework and practical mechanisms to implement
their dream into a workable  reality that
could avoid its past pitfalls.
It is easy to hold a sword from a bygone era, and
blame Western imperialism; however, it is difficult to have the intellectual
honesty to admit the many fallacies behind what this sword represents and what
it can, or cannot, achieve.
          
     
                               
 
 


