Jan Just Witkam, the Battle of the Images

Jan Just Witkam, the Battle of the Images

The battle of the images Mekka vs. Medina in the iconographyof the manuscripts of al-Jazill's Dala'il al-Khajtrat JanJustWitkam" Introduction The prayer-book DalA'ilal-Khayat by the Moroccanmystical activist AbD Abdal- lah Mubammadb. Sulaymanal-Jazili (d,870/1465)1 is one of the most success- ful books in Sunni Islam, after the Qtr'an itself. It is known from the Islamic W'est,where it was written more than five hundred yearsago, till far in South- EastAsia, and everywherein-between. There must be many thousandsof manu- scriptsof it all over the world, and many hundredsof printed versions.The nu- merouseditions which are currentlyavailable in the entire Islamicworld2 prove that the book haslost nothing of its appeal.Most manuscriptsand all printed editionsof the Dala'il al-Khayat areprovided with two illustrations,showing ei- ther elementsof the Prophet'sMosque in Medina,or viewsof the GreatMosque of Mekka and the Prophet'sMosque in Medina.Why theseillustrations came to be insertedinto al-Jaztrli'sprayer-book in the first place,and how they changed from one representationinto anotheris the subjectof the presentpaper. TIteauthor Ab[ Abdallah Muhammad b. Sulaymanal-Jazili al-Simlali, the Moroccanmys- tical activistwho waskilled in 870(1465), originated from al-Susal-Aqsa, in the Southwestof present-dayMorocco.3 Of his life little is known, exceptfor ele- mentswhich all have evidenthagiographical features, and which are not easyto disentangle.He is said to have stayedfor a number of yearsin Mekka and Professorof Paleographyand Codicology of the Islamic World, Universiry of Leiden, The Netherlands. GAL G II, pp.252-253, S II, pp. 359-360.See for a compilation from severalbiographical sources:al-hbbas b. Ibrahim, al-l'lam,vol. 3, pp.40-103 (No. 625).The main sourcefor al- Jaznli's biography is the rather hagiographicalaccount in Muhammad al-Mahdr alFasi, Mumti' al-Asma'.pp. 1-34. During a walk of a few hours in the afternoon precedingthe Istanbul conferenceI found ten different editions in Istanbul's bookmarket (Sahaflar Qargrgr)and the book shops around the Fatih mosque. His first nisba refersto Jazila, a Berber tribe. Muhammad ai-Mahdi al-Fasigives his full genealogy,which goesback to the imam'Ali b. Abi Talib. His nisba al-SimlAlirefers to the sub-tribeSimlala. His patronym Sulaymanrefers to his great-grandfather(Munti', p. t). 68 JANJUSTwITKAM Medina; periodsof sevenyears and fortyyearsare both givenfor this stay.Upon his return to Morocco he went to Fes,where he studiedin the Qrrawiyyin Li- brary.On the basisof his study there,he wrote the prayer-bookthat would make him famous.At a certainstag€ he becamea member of the Shadhililya order.a He is said to havewithdrawn from societyfor a period of fourteenyears. Then he establishedhimself in Safi,on the Atlantic coast,where the number of his fol- lowersgrew quickly. When people startedto recognizein him the long-awaited Mahdl, the gouvernorof $afi had him expelled,or killed. During his lifetime, al-Jaznhsucceeded in organizinga network of zauiltastn a period of the history of Morocco which wasgenerally characterized as total an- archy.In addition, the Maghrib was under threat of Portugueseincursions, nor was the news about the constantChristian progressagainst the Muslims in al- Andalusvery reassuringto the Maghribis.lV'here the worldly rulersin the region failed to adequatelycounter these internal and externalthreats, the religious brotherhoodsonly becamestronger and more united and organizedthemselves into groupsof religion-inspiredfighters. All over the country from Tlemcenin the East to the valley of the Draa in the South-W'est,affiliations of al-Jazlli's brotherhood were established,not for quietist religiouscontemplation but for activeresistance against the unbelievers.sal-Jazuli became, especially in laterMo- roccanhistoriography, the championof an Islamicrevival against internal politi- cal and moral decayand againstexternal threats. The yearof his deathis not en- tirely certain.Several dates between 1465 and 1470are given.Strangely enough, al-Jaz0li'svicissitudes did not end with his death.His follower'IJmarb. Sulay- man al-Shayzami,not without reasonknown as al-Sayyaf('the executioner'), who had claimedprophethood, took possessionof al-Jaz0li'sbody, and let him- selfbe accompaniedby it during his twenty yearsof pillagingand burning in the Sus area.Nightly devotional sessionswith al-Jazuli'scorpse lying in stateon a bier are recorded in the sources.After al-Sayyaf'sviolent death in 890 (1485/1486),al-Jazill was buried in Afughal, in the Haha area,south of Es- saouira.Later his body wasmoved again,now by order of SultanAb[ al-Abbas al-Nraj (reignedover different areas923-955/15L7-I548), who had his father's body, which had been buried next to al-Jazuli's,together with the saint'sbody, transportedto Marrakechto be re-buriedtogether in a place called Riyad al- 'Arus,5 Another hagiographicaldetail is that the saint's body had not decom- posed when it was dug up for reburial. Both al-Jazlli's life and afterlife are wroughtwith so many miraculouselements that not eachand everydetail in the sourcesshould be acceptedas a historicalfact. 4 So calledafier its founderAbu al-Hasanal-Shadhili (d. 556/1258),GAL G l, p. 449. 5 Seethe resum6in A. Cour,titablissement,pp.29-35. 6 Seethe slightlydifferent accounts by MohamedBen Cheneb,in E1, first edition,vol. l "B1aznli," (1913),and secondedition, vol. II (1955),s.v. and thesourcesquoted there. I havenot seenJaafar Kansoussi's essay. THE BATTLEOF THE IMAGES 69 Apart from his prayer-book DalA'il al-Khayat, aI-Jaznliis the author of two other prayers.One is entitledflizb al-Falal1,a shorttext which is sometimescop- ied in the samecollective volume in which alsothe Dala'il al-Khaltratoccurs,but it hasnot attainedthe samecult statusas the Dala'il al-Khayat.The other prayer is entitledflizb al-Jazulz,or rhyming on that tttle Hizb subbanaal-Dd'imlajtazul, and is written in the vernacular,supposedly the Berberlanguage of the S[s.7Two more treatisesby al-Jazlh are known, one a work on Qra'at, Qrr'anic readings, the other an untitled treatiseof Sufi content. As Brockelmannonly mentions one manuscriptwitness for eachtext, thesetwo cannot havebecome very popu- lar, if they are authentic at all and not a bibliographicalhoax. Other, shorter, textswhich areascribed to al-Jazillare known aswell.8 All of his otherworks are overshadowedby the immensepopularity of the Dala'il al-Khayat. Thebook The full title of al-Jazuli'sprayer-b ook ts DalA'il al.Khayat ua-ShaudriqaLAnwarfi 'alA 'Guidelines Dhikr al-Salat al-Nabl al-Mukhtar which literally means to the blessingsand the shiningsof lights,giving the sayingof the blessingprayer over the chosenProphet.' In daily usethe work is referredto by the first two wordsof its title, Dal"a'ilal-Khayat, or just Dala'il or Dahl. The work readsas a long litany of blessingsover the ProphetMuhammad. It is organisedas a manual for Mu- hammaddevotion. Although there areclear differences between the manuscripts amongthemselves and alsoberween the printed editionsof the Dala'il al-Kha2rat, especiallyas far the introductoryand concludingprayers are concerned,and cer- tainlyin the choiceof accompanyingtexts, most versions contain at leastthe fol- lowing elements:the introductoryprayer; the sectionon the virtue of invoking blessingsover the Prophet;the list of the Prophet'snames and epithets;and the descriptionof the Prophet'sgrave in Medina.These short sectionsare followed by the body of the text,consisting of the blessingprayers over the Prophet,which are nowadaysdivided into eightAhzab, ritual sections,which arelinked to eight suc- cessivedays (Monday-Monday), and a concludingprayer. An apparentlyolder di- vision of the text in quarters,thirds and a half can be seenin many of the manu- scripts.Other elementsthat one may find in the work were apparentlyfreely addedto the text. The order of the differentelements is subjectto variationsbe- tween the editions from different countries.The subject-mattervouches for a luxuriousexecution of the manuscripts(and printed editions).In this, the skillsof Qrr'anic calligraphers,especially in the Maghrib and in Istanbul, came to full 'vernacular' / As M. Ben Cheneb in his E1 articlescalls it. With the term only Berbercan be meant here. ' E.g. an UrjuzaMukhta;ara, in MS Leiden Or.25.619 (24). Such referencesneed a careful analysisand will eventually contribute to an increasedknowledge of al-Jazuli'sliterary output. 70 JAN]UST \TITKAM fruition. In courseof time severalcommentaries were written on the text,the best known of which are the Arabic one by al-Fasie(a factualcommentary), and the Turkishone by QLra Daw[d10(a devotionalcommentary). There exists a privately printed Englishtranslation byJohn B. Pearsonof the text aswell. Somemanuscripts of the Daln'il al-Khryratare provided with detailedinstruc- tions for the readertelling him how the handle the book. Ritual purity before readingis one of them,the way of holdingthe book in one'shands is another.rl Suchrules give the impressionthat a copy of the Dala'il al.Kha2ratwas nearly as holy asa mu;ltaf.In Morocco till the presentday it is saidthat havinga beautiful copy of the Dala'il al-Khayat at home, preferablyan attractivemanuscript, bringsluck.12 And, aswe shallsee, the book may at a certainstage indeed have beenconsidered a rival to the Qtr'arc. TheDala'rl al-Khayratin thestrugle against the unbelieaers One important aspectof the Prophet Muhammad'slife must have particularly appealedto al-Jazih,namely his struggleagainst the unbelievers.In

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