Ottoman History Podcast - Religion, Science, and an Arab Renaissance Man
Episode Date: September 16, 2024with Peter Hill hosted by Matthew Ghazarian | Across the 19th century Arab East, or Mashriq, there were two simultaneous but seemingly contradictory trends afoot. On the one hand, new... ways of understanding religion, science, and community, often associated with the intellectual 'revival' of the Arab Nahda, ushered in new forms of thought and more fluid subjectivities. On the other hand, movements emerged to reinscribe, intensify, and uphold stricter communal boundaries between religious groups. How did these two trends coexist? The life and thought of Mikha'il Mishaqa (1800-1888) offer some answers. Mishaqa was a doctor, merchant, moneylender, and writer who was raised in Greek Catholicism, lost his faith, regained it, and then converted to Protestantism. Through his many-sided life, his voluminous writings, and his obstinate commitment to 'reason', Mishaqa offers an example of how a single life could integrate these seemingly contradictory trends of 19th century Arab East.   « Click for More »
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This is the Ottoman History Podcast. I'm Matthew Gazarian, here to talk about science,
faith, and community in Greater Syria and Lebanon across the 19th century during
the era of cultural and intellectual enlightenment often called the Nahdta.
To do that I'll be speaking with Peter Hill, Assistant Professor of History at
Northumbria University in Newcastle in England. And we'll be talking today about
these contradictory tendencies of the Nahda that at once opened up,
but also foreclosed the possibility of new kinds of communal relations among faith groups in the region.
Looking at the 19th century in the Arab world, at least, it can be read in two quite different and contradictory ways. On the one hand, there's, I suppose, the idea,
the possibility of a more secular kind of society. On the other hand, there's these
movements which are really out to affirm religious identity and draw quite sharp boundaries around
and between religious communities. How do these two tendencies interact?
How do they manage to happen alongside each other?
So we'll talk today about the life and thought
of a single man, Mikhail Mishaka.
The respected, wealthy man of reputation for learning,
a medical doctor, but also a money lender and merchant,
US vice consul.
Mishaka's born to relative wealth
and privilege and he's able to seek an education and embrace the developing science and rationality
of his time. For a while things don't change very much and he's kind of living his best life.
But that certainty disappears quickly with the violence and changes of his lifetime. What he calls the taqallubat ad-dahr, the vicissitudes of time,
the instabilities of the world.
And those changes are not only intellectual and cultural,
but also very viscerally felt by Mishaka himself.
He's beaten on the head with an axe.
He loses his sense of taste and smell.
So we'll talk today about Mishaka's life and thought and the changes in the world,
Mount Lebanon of Greater Syria, the Middle East during his time.
We'll also talk a little bit about the advantages and the drawbacks of trying to do such a study
that focuses on an individual life.
How can you take this, you know, wacky guy and make any general arguments on the basis
of that about the society as such?
Could you set the stage for us a little bit?
Who is this man and what is the world he inhabits?
Right, so Michael Mishoka is born in 1800. He grows up at the court of the Emir of Mount
Lebanon, Bashir Sheherbi, so in this mountainous, quite distinctive region of the Ottoman Empire.
And he's from a wealthy Christian family. His father is the banker
to the Emir, he's very closely connected to the court and basically his life then unfolds in
response to a series of quite dramatic changes in that world through the rest of the 19th century.
He lives through most of the century until 1888 when he dies. So the
Sheherbi Emirate that he grew up in is no longer there after 1842. It's replaced by a very different
system of politics in Mount Lebanon and, you know, heavy involvement of European powers as well as
of the kind of reforming Ottoman state. And his life changes through that process as well. He plays a lot of different roles in his life.
He's a merchant, he's a banker, he's an advisor to the local rulers, he gets involved in diplomatic
circles, he becomes a polymath and writes a whole range of different kind of disciplines of knowledge,
mathematics, the music, he writes his autobiography. But the part of his life that I'm really
interested in in the book principally
is his changes of belief, so religion and wider kind of worldview.
So Mikhail Mishukha is the son of this Christian family in the emirate of the Shahabi emirs in
Mount Lebanon. And he lives to see the ebb and flow of many overlapping political powers in this region, the Shahabi
emirs, the Ottomans, Egyptians, European states and so on, but you're interested in following
changes in his beliefs.
So where does that story actually begin?
So in a sense, the story starts not long before his 13th birthday in Deir el-Qamar, the capital
of the Mount Lebanon Emirate, when there's a solar eclipse and this is followed a few days
later by a big snowstorm which is very dramatic and isolates villages and the
snow and kills people and destroys crops and so on. And along with a lot of other
people in the mountain he gives this an astrological interpretation. So the eclipse has predicted
the snowstorm. And so that's his first way of trying to understand, I guess, the instabilities,
the insecurities of the world around him. But he doesn't stop there. So, you know, a
few years later, we find him in the port city of Damietta in the Dumyat, in the Nile Delta in Egypt. And here he encounters a group
of people who've been translating European scientific works and enlightenment writings into
Arabic for the first time. And through reading these, he comes to reject not only things like
astrology and magic, but also religion as such. So as an adolescent
then, Mikhail Mishaka goes to this port city of Damietta in Egypt and he's
learning about trade and parts of the family business but while he's there he
also reads translations into Arabic of Enlightenment thought and he begins to
question his religious beliefs and adopt a sort of scientific, rational worldview.
He goes back to Mount Lebanon, and then what happens?
Then again, he goes back to the court of Bashar al-Habib,
and that's still there.
And then he, you know, for a while,
things don't change very much,
and he's kind of living his best life.
I mean, you know, he's quite powerful, he's wealthy,
he's still quite young, he's respected,
he's learning a lot of different forms of knowledge and science and so on.
But then what happens is the Egyptian army of Mehmed Ali, the governor of Egypt, invade
and occupy Syria.
And this starts off a whole series of quite rapid and dramatic changes through the 1830s
and 40s.
And there's a number of rebellions against him, the Ottomans want to kick him out, but there's a whole set of sort of negotiations. And
what it does is to draw European powers much more heavily into the internal
politics of Syria, and particularly of Mount Lebanon. And in 1840, there's a
military intervention by not only the Ottomans, but their European allies, the
British and the Austrians, along with a rebellion in Mount Lebanon,
and this kicks out the Egyptians, but it also leads quite quickly to the start of a power contest
among different local groups, the most sort of famous consequences of which is sectarian violence
between Maronite and Druze communities in the mountain in 1841. And the Mount Lebanon
Emirate of the Sheherbes goes in the process and is replaced by a different sort of setup
based on power sharing between Maronite and Druze communities under the auspices of the
Europeans as well as the Ottoman state. So there's this rather particular sort of set
of changes. So do sort of set of changes.
So do these particular set of changes affect his faith?
Well this is one of the interesting questions. He doesn't explicitly say that it does. But
I don't think it's a coincidence that it's at this point in the 1840s that he starts
being interested in religion again. I think he starts to view his deist, skeptical, science-based
position as somewhat insufficient because these changes were unexpected
and they're very shocking. One of his brothers is killed, another one is wounded,
the family flee to him in Damascus and I think that through this process he's
beginning to think, well I thought I had it sed, perhaps back in the 1820s, I understood
the local politics, I understood the natural worlds, I had got a
handle on these, what he calls the to call a better to the
vicissitudes of time, the instabilities of the world, he
thought he understood them. Now suddenly, there's a new set of
vicissitudes
that he doesn't understand. And his response is to look for a different form of knowledge,
a different form of truth.
So he's on this quest to find a form of truth that he can sort of rely on. And how does
this search for truth lead him to embrace Protestantism?
Yeah. Mikhail Meshok at some point in the 1840s becomes intellectually interested in
religion again through reading this book by Alexander Keith and also through conversations
with the American missionaries. He's becoming quite close friends from 1844 onwards with Eli
Smith, who's the main American missionary in Beirut, a Protestant mission there. And one of
the major sources for this period of his life
is the very frequent correspondence that he wrote back and forth with Smith between Beirut and
Damascus, which is in Harvard. So for these reasons, he's becoming interested in Protestantism
specifically. And at some point, I think he's intellectually convinced for his own sort of inner self that Protestantism is the most
defensible, rational form of religion. So there's this interesting intellectual and
spiritual trajectory here from faith to reason and back again with a kind of synthesis of faith and
reason through Protestantism. But ultimately, this is coming from the writings of a single man who's
relatively well off, born into a prosperous Christian family in Mount Lebanon. So to what
extent can this one life of relative privilege tell us about broader trends and changes in the
region and in the world at this time? Obviously, I'm going to argue that it does,
that it is important for those questions,
but it's true that Mishoka is quite an eccentric character.
And this is, I suppose, the question
of any sort of micro-historical attempt
to answer these kinds of problems,
that how can you take this wacky guy
and make any general arguments on the basis of that
about the society as such.
I mean, the problem in a sense that I think Meshoka's story speaks to is that looking
at the 19th century in the Arab world, at least, it can be read in two quite different
and contradictory ways.
On the one hand, there's, I suppose, the idea, the possibility of a more
secular kind of society. On the other hand, there's these
movements which are really out to affirm religious identity and
draw quite sharp boundaries around and between religious
communities. On the one hand, the beginnings of an interest in
modern style science, the idea of a secular society,
the whole sort of Arab Nathla movement, which I've worked on myself,
the idea that you can discuss with people of different religions in terms of things like civilization and society,
without making that dependent on religious belief necessarily.
So you can trace that sort of tradition back to 19th century
origins. On the other hand, you can also, as people like Osama
Mactasee have done, trace the origins of sectarian violence and
sectarian conflict of the modern kind, to the 19th century, and
specifically to Mount Lebanon and Damascus and the places that
Meshach is living in. Or, you know, you can read histories the 19th century and specifically to Mount Lebanon and Damascus and the places that we shockers living or
You know you can read histories that are tracing back things like the early Salafi movement religious
Revivalism and we could also talk about Christian revivalist movements and the question then which is one that to some amateurs even
Has raised you know, it's not it's not necessarily original to me is how do these two tendencies interact? How do they manage to happen alongside each other if they're so
contradictory? Or what's the relationship between them? So as I would see it, the
idea of secularity, in a rather broad and fuzzy sense, and the idea of sort of
religious identitarianism of bounded religious identities on the other. And I guess
the interesting thing then about Meshoka is that he belongs to the history of both of
these tendencies in a way that may kind of confound our expectations, because, you know,
he takes science and reason in particular very seriously. On the other hand, he also
takes religion and religious belief very seriously. And he's debating and arguing his way
between these things from quite an early stage in the 19th century, when it's not so common to do
that. Could you give an example? There's a nice little sort of vignette in Jurgis Edan's book.
So Jurgis Edan is one of the people who, I suppose, invent the idea of the Arab Nahda.
Looking back from the early 20th century
to the 19th century, saying there has been this great sort of revival of Arabic culture. And for
him, it's all about things like science and progress. And he goes to meet Michal Meshokha
in Damascus towards the very end of Michal Meshokha's life. And he sees him in some ways as someone to admire,
I think. This is somebody who's, you know, intensely interested in things like science
and reason and has this great sort of faith in his own abilities to think his way to the end of any
problem. But on the other hand, he's also a bit of a kind of old fashioned character, because he's
there in his house in Damascus in the sort of, you you know old world turban and robes and so on and rather unlike the the forms of dress that
are becoming fashionable in Beirut but also he's somebody that takes religion extremely seriously
as Zayden writes in his book most of what he published in his lifetime was religious controversy
it wasn't about science or rationalism without religion, the kinds
of things that Zaydan himself is more interested in. So he doesn't quite fit in that version
of the Nahtta, I suppose. He's a precursor, but a rather awkward one. And to make him
fit, you have to sort of disregard some of these other aspects of his identity. So in the context of the Arab Notta, Mikhail Mishaka occupies a sort of in-between position at the
moment of transition and ideas about faith and reason. But a transition between what and what?
What exactly is changing about ideas of religion at this time?
Yeah, well, I mean, yeah, and I should preface this by saying, yeah, I'm very much drawing
on the work that has been done on this, the work of people like James Green or L.A. de
Belger or Heather Sharkey and so on. But that aside, the way that I think of it is if you take
two different images, as it were, of how different religious traditions interact. And one of them is the religious processions
that you used to get in a city like Damascus
when there was plague or a drought
or another kind of great calamity.
And you had in these processions,
Muslims, Christians and Jews all setting off
to do the procession together in order.
Muslims went first.
This is a hierarchical religious order,
but it's also a shared one.
There is a sense in which people participate in the sacred
in shared ways,
rather than only as distinct religious groups
and communities.
And then you look at the kinds of religious classification
that you're getting of different religions coming
through in say writings of the missionaries or orientalists writing about Syria from the 1840s
onwards but also in a sense in the kind of new style millet regime of the Ottoman state that
the tons of matters producing the idea that there are these separate modular religions that
are the same kind of thing, and they're all distinct, and they all have a set of boundaries,
and a rather similar kind of internal structure that they have a, you know, a holy book and
a sort of religious hierarchy. And then that they relate individually and separately to the state or to each other or
to other entities.
Again, these are images.
But if you can think about the distinction between those images as the kind of transition
that is being operated, at least in some people's minds, as a project, it's not necessarily
successful.
I mean, not all of these shared forms of, you know, religiosity are in fact unpicked. And the idea of hierarchy isn't unpicked
either. But the idea of, you know, these religious communities as, as it were, separate, but equal, is
something that a lot of people are invested in some Ottoman bureaucrats, some of the religious
leaders themselves, some of the European diplomats who are trying to
influence things like the conditions of religious
conversion. And I think that you can see this in a slightly kind
of fuzzier way than the stuff I was talking about earlier,
because we're now outside of the realm of simply, you know,
intellectual debate about religion. But you can see this
as relating to that sort of rationalistic
way of thinking that these religions have to be understood in a way that prevents overlaps
and prevents vagueness. So once Mishaka is officially a member of the Protestant Church,
he comes to reckon with the consequences of this new order of more strictly bounded and often more antagonistic
religious groups. He's present in Damascus in 1860 when serious violence erupts.
Yeah, yeah. And he experiences this violence. I mean, he's quite lucky to escape alive. He's
badly beaten and, you know, is partially
paralyzed for some time. And in fact, a detail that's that's not in many of the public accounts
is he because he's beaten on the head with an axe, he loses his sense of taste and smell.
He can't eat meat or spicy food for some time afterwards, because they taste disgusting. So
that it really has a very, very kind of profound effect on him,
you know, physically and personally.
His family also survived,
but again, some of them are attacked, they're in danger.
People come and attack his house in Damascus.
The crowd of Muslims who were enraged against Christians,
particularly wealthy ones like himself,
he flees with two small children
and other members of the family go off in different directions. It's this very kind
of chaotic and traumatic moment.
Does it shake his faith? Does he question his religion?
Not really. I mean, what he tries to do after 1860 is to reconstitute what he had before.
So to rebuild his life on the pattern of what it was, which is as a respected, wealthy man of
reputation as for learning, a medical doctor, but also a money lender and merchant, US vice consul,
so diplomatic representative for the United States in Damascus, a man of influence and lots of
different contacts. And you know, so he reconstitutes himself as that successfully. Afterwards, his house is rebuilt, he gets
compensation from the Ottoman state. And he continues to live
the rest of his life as a Protestant until he dies in
1888. But I mean, his account of 1860 is probably the the most
detailed and eyewitness account that we have. And he tells the
story in different versions at different times. But there's a lot of it, for instance, in Eugene Rogan's book that also just came out recently,
the Damascus events. I mean, a lot of this is told through Mashaka's relation of the 1860 events,
because it's such a kind of vivid and compelling accounts of it. But one thing that it does affect
to some extent is his views of sectarianism or the kinds of identification politically
that one should have and how that relates to religion. And again, you know, Eugene Rogan
has written about this in the moment of 1860 itself. He's appealing to the US authorities
and other Christians to come and save the Christians of Damascus. So a sectarian identification of that
kind. By the time he's writing his
memoirs in the 1870s, he's no longer viewing things quite that way. He's loyal to the Ottoman
state as a kind of order that encompasses different religions. He doesn't think that
Christians should be seeking those affiliations to outside powers that can make things dangerous for them. But again,
those ideas were ones that he had kind of worked through already. Because in 1841, similarly,
when he writes about 1841 in the East of the moment, his family's just been attacked as
Christians by Druze in Deir el-Kamr. He writes in a very similar way to other Christian writers who
are very much identifying with Christian defeats or victories over the Druze in the 1840s. But when he comes to write about those
events later in his memoirs, and also when he's writing as a Protestant, he's very much
against the idea of the clergy meddling in politics and creating these allegiances outside of the shared community of other Syrians
and Ottoman subjects, because that can endanger, you know, Christians. And that's part of the
problem. And he lives the rest of his life, you know, some of it in semi retirement, which may
well have been affected by the fact that he had, you know, he'd been badly injured in 1860. And
around the time he writes his memoirs in 1873,
he passes on most of his business to his sons.
He writes his will, but he's still a Protestant
and his children inherited that from him as well.
So we have this intellectual biography of Mikhail Mishaka,
but biography and intellectual history are both fields
that lend themselves to this illusion
of the individual life being traceable at all, or at least traceable without accounting
for the many lives around it that made it possible.
So who's missing here from this story?
There's rather little, and it's one of my regrets about the book, that there is so little
about the women in the story that one could find from the sources that I was
able to find and therefore they're rather absent but there is a certain
amount about Elizabeth or her name much of her his wife she remained a Catholic
and this was a bit of a bone of contention I think and she doesn't like
the idea of him converting and doesn't become a Protestant herself and there's
a bit of contention over their son,
the eldest son, Nassif, who, well,
Micheal says to Eli Smith, the missionary,
his Protestant friend, she's trying to kind of turn him
against me and against Protestantism.
So I need to get him away from his mother
and send him to the missionary school instead.
But yeah, there's, I mean, there's other,
a lot of this came from the family archival material,
because you don't really find a lot of this came from the family archival material.
Because you don't really find a lot of these sort of, you know, personal family references
and particularly references to the women in the story and the more public facing accounts
that Michal Shokker left.
But in these sort of private notes that he kept on the fly leaves of a book or in other
things that are destined really for the family, you can find some of this sort of information.
The names of the midwives who delivered their children, for instance, you don't
find that kind of detail in his memoirs that were written for a wider group of
people. Even the, you know, the Christian name of his wife, Elizabeth, a baptismal
name, he doesn't mention it in any of these in any of these public facing
accounts because
she was called Khernam Mashaka. I mean you know it's a sort of honorific meaning lady but it
seemed to be the name that she had taken on within the family as well because it's on her tomb. Professor Peter Hill, thank you so much for joining us today.
Thanks very much.
It's been a pleasure.
For those of you who want to find out more, you can visit our website, OttomanHistoryPodcast.com,
where we will post a bibliography on this and many other topics on Ottoman history. Until next time. The neighborhood still can't do anything to stop this killing