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113. Christ: a modern Muslim view (excerpts)

  • ʿAbbas Mahmud al-ʿAqqad
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An Anthology of Arabic Literature
This chapter is in the book An Anthology of Arabic Literature
© 2022, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

© 2022, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Acknowledgements xv
  4. Introduction xvi
  5. PART I PRE-MODERN TEXTS
  6. SECTION I POETRY
  7. Mock-heroic
  8. 1. The poet and the wolf 3
  9. 2. A love and wine song 4
  10. 3. Elegy for a drinking companion 5
  11. Bedouin chivalry
  12. 4. A Bedouin and his guest 7
  13. Frivolous love
  14. 5. A girl called Hind 9
  15. Melancholy
  16. 6. A rain cloud 10
  17. Heretical verse
  18. 7. Faith and unbelief 10
  19. Elegies I
  20. 8. A poetess mourns her brother 11
  21. 9. Elegy for the celebrated vizier Nizam al-Mulk 11
  22. 10. Elegy for a friend 11
  23. Humour
  24. 11. Grey hairs 12
  25. Poets and their daughters
  26. 12. A poet to his daughter 13
  27. 13. A dying poet to his daughter 13
  28. Elegies II
  29. 14. Elegy for the fall of al-Andalus (Muslim Spain) 14
  30. 15. Elegy for the vizier Ibn Baqiyya, killed then crucified in 978 15
  31. Elegies III: humorous
  32. 16. Elegy for a tomcat 16
  33. 17. Elegy for an extracted molar tooth 17
  34. Exile
  35. 18. A poet dying in exile 18
  36. Imagery
  37. 19. A woman bathing 19
  38. Poetic fragments by various poets
  39. 20. On nature and natural objects 20
  40. 21. On the joys and agonies of love 25
  41. Seduction
  42. 22. A poet defends his seduction of a young and innocent girl 28
  43. SECTION II PROSE
  44. Jahiz
  45. 23. On authors and authorship 29
  46. 24. Advice to public speakers I 29
  47. 25. Advice to public speakers II 30
  48. 26. The power of suggestion 30
  49. Animal fables
  50. 27. The lion, the wolf, the raven, the jackal and the camel 31
  51. 28. The flea and the mosquito 32
  52. Snappy answers
  53. 29. Al-Ajwiba al-muskita 34
  54. Heretics
  55. 30. On Ibn al-Shalmaghani, his execution and a brief mention of his heretical views 36
  56. 31. On Abu Talib al-Makki, the famous mystic 36
  57. 32. Rival Qurʾans 36
  58. 33. Last will and testament 37
  59. Psychology
  60. 34. The psychology of old age 38
  61. 35. Education of the young (excerpts) 39
  62. 36. Firasa (physiognomy) (excerpts) 40
  63. Foreign lands
  64. 37. England 43
  65. 38. The land of the Franks 43
  66. 39. Ireland 44
  67. 40. A medieval Lilliput 44
  68. 41. Emperor Frederick II (d. 1250) tricks his rivals 45
  69. 42. Propaganda during the Third Crusade, 1190 46
  70. 43. A Byzantine emperor’s finery 46
  71. 44. Diplomacy: embassy of Queen Bertha, daughter of Lothar 47
  72. Literary anecdotes
  73. 45. A lesson in generosity 49
  74. 46. A brilliant judge 50
  75. 47. Poetic justice: revenge 51
  76. 48. A clown at a caliph’s court 52
  77. 49. A classic children’s story: Tanburi’s shoe 53
  78. 50. Three real-life stories on the theme of ‘Ease following hardship’ 55
  79. 51. Pre-Islamic Arabian lore 59
  80. 52. What kings must avoid 60
  81. Argument
  82. 53. Theology as defined by a philosopher (excerpts) 61
  83. 54. On marvels and oddities of nature (excerpts) 62
  84. 55. Can a woman be a prophet? 63
  85. 56. Paradise is a bore 64
  86. 57. What is laughter? 65
  87. 58. A division of existents 65
  88. 59. A humorous exchange on the subject of miserliness 65
  89. 60. An argument over date wine 66
  90. 61. The symptoms of love 67
  91. Sexuality
  92. 62. Sexual manners 69
  93. Reflections on history
  94. 63. Civilisations and religious beliefs 70
  95. 64. Were the ancients taller and longer lived than us? 72
  96. 65. Dismissing a vizier 72
  97. 66. Biographers 73
  98. 67. Dynastic transitions 73
  99. 68. The Mongol invasions 74
  100. 69. The caliph ʿUthman and the First Civil War in Islamic history 75
  101. 70. Arab history comes full circle 76
  102. 71. Causes of the decline of states 77
  103. 72. Military feudalism in Andalusia 77
  104. 73. Religions and policies of ancient nations 78
  105. 74. Are the conquests of Alexander the Great credible as reported? 78
  106. History: direct witnesses
  107. 75. The death of Saladin, 1193 (excerpts) 80
  108. 76. Ibn Khaldun and Tamerlane: the great world historian meets the great world conqueror, 1401 (excerpts) 81
  109. Society
  110. 77. Arts and crafts in cities (excerpts) 84
  111. Sufism (Islamic mysticism)
  112. 78. Sufi sayings and stories 86
  113. 79. Licit and illicit as colours: a Sufi view 88
  114. 80. Sufi solitude (excerpts) 88
  115. 81. How Satan enters the human heart (excerpts) 89
  116. Proverbs and aphorisms
  117. 82. Proverbs popular among the common people of Baghdad in the tenth century 91
  118. Literary judgements
  119. 83. The celebrated poet al-Farazdaq (d. 728) to a man who showed him his inferior verse 93
  120. 84. The famous critic al-Asmaʿi (d. 828) on poetry 93
  121. 85. On verse and prose 93
  122. 86. The introduction to a famous literary anthology 94
  123. 87. The famous poet Abu Tammam on his verse 94
  124. 88. When can a simile be considered truly remarkable? [excerpts] 95
  125. Reflections on the state
  126. 89. The democratic city-state 96
  127. 90. Inaugural address by the Umayyad caliph Yazid III, a ‘democratic’ caliph 97
  128. Polemic
  129. 91. Christian Arabic polemics against Islam 98
  130. 92. Debates with Jews and Christians 99
  131. Jesus
  132. 93. Passages on Jesus in the Qurʾan Commentary (Tafsir) of Tabari 101
  133. Wisdom literature
  134. 94. A famous scholar describes how he spends his days 104
  135. 95. Sayings of the Prophet Muhammad 104
  136. 96. Sayings of ʿAli ibn Abi Talib 105
  137. 97. Sundry wisdom sayings 106
  138. PART II MODERN TEXTS
  139. SECTION I POETRY
  140. Political protest 111
  141. 98. Three popular political songs 111
  142. 99. Two poems 113
  143. Heretics
  144. 100. A poet’s heretical credo 116
  145. Jesus
  146. 101. Christ after the Crucifixion 117
  147. Elegies
  148. 102. Elegy for a woman (Scenes from a Baghdad alley) 120
  149. 103. It’s time this heart withdrew 120
  150. 104. To devotees of bullfighting 122
  151. SECTION II PROSE
  152. Popular historiography
  153. 105. A Damascene barber records the life around him 123
  154. 106. A child’s secret 125
  155. 107. Three short stories by Zakariyya Tamir 128
  156. Feminism
  157. 108. A lecture given in Cairo in 1914 (excerpts) 131
  158. 109. Two autobiographical accounts 132
  159. Personal experience
  160. 110. An Egyptian Muslim cleric defrocks (circa 1927) 134
  161. 111. An encounter with George Bernard Shaw (circa 1910) 135
  162. Humour
  163. 112. The fat person 136
  164. Jesus
  165. 113. Christ: a modern Muslim view (excerpts) 138
  166. Personal experiences of war
  167. 114. Scenes from the First World War (Palestine) 139
  168. 115. Scenes from the First World War (Lebanon) 139
  169. 116. The Versailles Peace Conference (1919): an Arab perspective 140
  170. 117. Two encounters with Anatole France (1844–1924) 141
  171. Heretics
  172. 118. Fanaticism 143
  173. Foreign lands
  174. 119. England in the 1840s 144
  175. Political writings: editorials
  176. 120. Who owns the ‘weapon’ of democracy? 150
  177. 121. Hatred of America 151
  178. 122. Modern Syria’s literary and national renaissance (excerpts) 153
  179. 123. A Marxist analysis of the term ‘civilisation’ (excerpts) 154
  180. Muslim law
  181. 124. A modern Muslim jurist on punishments in Muslim sacred law (excerpts) 156
  182. Aphorisms for our times
  183. 125. Aphorisms for our times 158
  184. Sources 160
  185. Index of Authors 165
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