Monday, October 24, 2022

Global North and Global South

 

In modern International Relations, the terms Global North and Global South have become common defining features such that the Global North inflicted insurmountable Gordian knots in global political interdependence. The major problems of the Global South evolved 350 years ago as a result of subjugation by the rise of powerful European powers who were driven by the urge to colonize indigenous communities that were scattered all over the world.

Despite decolonization getting-off the ground after WWII, a web of new nations emerged even though the legacy of colonialism continued to ravage the struggling, rising up nations in the Global South especially those within the African continent and some parts of Asia. With the escalation of the Cold War, the terminology Third World became the common name for those nations that regained independence while First World nations was in reference to North America, Europe, and Japan who were more technologically and industrially advanced than the Soviet Union and its satellite states who were designated Second World powers. I’ve used the terminology ‘regained independence’ for those colonized nations because they have been independent long before the first surge of European powers like Portugal, Holland, Spain, Britain, and France started their expansionist melodramatic aims

To add insult to injury, those Global South nations suffered further demotion by being degraded to the category of the less-developed of the least-developed countries. However, modern scholars prefer the use of Global North and Global South instead of the former degrading epithets. The estimated population of the Global South is 85% with a staggering 20% global income generation. Surprisingly, the humiliating income disparity is related to the negative impact of neocolonialism that is a hoodoo to nation’s having the will to prosper. It was during the early fifteenth century when the first wave of European migrants started seafaring in search of new raw materials from new territories that they renamed colonies. The surge in ocean mercantilism continued until its demise in the eighteenth century when former colonies proclaimed independence and the global economic theories known as laissez-faire and liberal economics starting flourishing on a grand scale.

The second wave of European global movement plying world oceans continued until the 1870s, however, it was after the end of WWI when Europe and the United States and Japan commenced new territorial claims, to an extent that even former independent states and China became fragmented.

 

Saturday, October 22, 2022

The Khanates

With the history of the Mongols or Tatars lopsided, twisted and written according to every historian’s whim, one could see a lot of misconceptions and deficiencies in the era incidents happened and the periods the khanates carried out specific military actions or their time of rule. History is replete with erroneous calculations and time constraints. Even the names of the spelling names khanates cause alarms because of the linguistic differences and misspellings. Below is the succession of the most famous khans whose historical remains are still available for further elucidation by the modern researcher having the will to continue expounding regardless of the trivialities and malevolence of their global encounters or the adoration and high circumventions of their encounters with societies, communities or nations on a global scale. Reading through several research books and papers loaded with literary criticisms, the author of this book feels not all historians have the same opinions.

1.      Genghis Khan: Under Genghis Khan, the Mongols conquered the largest land empire, notably from Eastern and Western Asia. From Korea to Hungary, Genghis Khan displayed the most strategic military operations never seen before in modern human history. Tough and resilient in their attempts to invade new lands, the Mongols fought with vigilance and valor. The Mongols not only restricted their incursions into other lands primarily to suppress their new subjects but instead benefited from commerce especially fabrics made from gold and silk.[i] Apart from being a barbaric, merciless killer and plunderer, Genghis Khan was, as “…one biographer put it, his was “a persistent cycle of pragmatic learning, experimental adaptation, and constant revision driven by his uniquely disciplined and focused will.” He was the greatest conqueror the world ever knew because he was more open to learning than any other conqueror has ever been…”[ii] Born in 1162 or 1167 along the Onon or Herlen rivers, his father was Yesukhei while his mother was called Hoelun.[iii] After massively capturing his enemies and causing much destruction to his new enemies, Genghis Khan later created harmonious relationships with his new subjects. There are written records that state that he had a clot of blood on his right hand when he was conceived by his mother Hoelun–a sign that created much consternation among his people. Undoubtedly, he was perceived to become a great leader after growing up to adulthood–a sign that materialized in the end. “Genghis Khan by the help and leading of Mongol people captured the northwest of China in 1205 and Kin Empire in 1211, he later reached the coast of the yellow river and captured Beijing in 1215. Finally, he came through west in 1219 with a population of 700,000 people.” [iv]

2.      Chagatai Khan: After the death of Genghis Khan, his sons inherited different lands and amalgamation of communities. For Chagatai Khan, he extended his dominion to as far as eastern and western Turkistan. Chagatai Khan who was an inspiring leader did not harm the communities he captured nor did he interfere with their religious beliefs. Transoxiana was mainly inhabited by Muslims while local nomadic communities in Mongolia continued with their practices of Shamanism.[v] It was in 1326 when Tarmashirin took over the leadership of the Chagatai Khanate, thus bringing a lot of changes to the areas that were under his control. Chagatai and Ogedei were brothers.

3.      Ogedei Khan: The son of Genghis Khan, Ogedei had two sons whose names were Cityük and Godan. The elder brother Cityük was born the year of the Cow and at the age of 28 took over the khanate throne, even though, six months later, in the year of the Kui-Serpent, he died. His younger brother Godan ascended the throne in the year of the Ke-Horse even though he died of leprosy in the year of the Ji-Sheep.[vi] In 1231, Ogedei ordered his commander Chormaghan Korchi to invade Iran, Azerbaijan, Anatolia and Georgia.[vii] With 30-40 thousand well-armed troops, the defeat of Jamaluddin’s forces ended systematically. Batu became the successor of Ogedei Khan. It was during Ogedei’s rule when religious freedom was accepted with Daoism and Buddhism and Islam and Christianity given credence even though the Mongols opposed Halaal slaughter of livestock.

4.      Mongke Khan: Mongke took the mantle of leadership after the death of his cousin Guyuk in 1248.[viii] Despite Batu being exempted from the succession of the Khanate, he was not in good terms with Guyuk, however, he had the chance to work with Mongke as his viceroy of the West while Mongke concentrated on the East.[ix] By 1242 the Kingdom of Hungary was in total wreckage and had to be abandoned by Batu, but despite encamping at the Steppes of the Volga, Batu’s focus was on the lower Volga Steppe where he built a capital he named Sarai. Batu was born to a concubine and that is why he was excluded by his father Jochai or Jochi who died early 1227 from the succession. The Mongols sent three envoys to Die Viet which is the current day Vietnam. By 1258, the Mongols defeated the Vietnamese.

5.      Hulagu Khan: Whether Hulagu or Hulegu, he rose to prominence during Caliph Mansur’s reign. Hulagu was more inclined to Islam than Machiavellianism.[x]

6.      Berke Khan: It is common for historians to narrate the congenial defining relationships between leaders and how they at times become avowed enemies due to differences of thoughts and ideas. Berke Khan was a formidable leader during the reign of the Muslim leader Mamluk Sultan Al-Zahir Baibars (ruled between 658 AH/ 1260 CE and 676 AH/ 1277 CE).[xi] Friendship between Al-Zahir Baibar and the Mongol Berke Khan flourished to the extent Berke reverted to Islam while Al-Zahir named his eldest son after Berke. With the Mamluks dynasty that ruled Egypt and Syria from 1250 until 1517 when the Ottoman occupation rose to prominence (1517-1798), did the Mamluks vanish from the scene. The term Mamluk was an amalgamation of slaves drawn from Turkmen, Arabs, Turkish and others from various regions. The two leaders enjoyed cordial relations with Berke hosting guests and clerics from Al-Zahir’s domain especially from Hijaz. He has been noted to have built mosques after reverting to Islam and abandoning his shamanistic beliefs. It was Hulagu Khan’s conquering of Baghdad in 656 AH (1258 CE) and his deliberate killing of Caliph Al Musta’sim that caused outcries in the Muslim world. Hulagu and Berke were cousins with Berke being the son of Chinggis Khan.[xii] After the death of Berke Khan in 676 AH (1266 CE), his son Abgha Khan succeeded him.

7.      Kublai Khan: There were Christian monks of the Nestorian Church who paid a visit to Kublai Khan during his rein in Persia. Previously a large population of the followers of Nestorius who died July 28, 450, founder of Nestorianism, existed in the end of the fifth century up to the thirteenth century of the Christian Era (CE) especially in Asia. Quite different in religious tenets from the larger Catholicism and Protestantism, Nestorius’ Nestorianism was mainly immersed in the long-standing divinity of Jesus and that was whether he had two divine characteristics and how the two co-existed.[xiii] On the other hand, there was the monophyte belief that the nature of Jesus was partly divine, and partly subordinately human. The discovery of a stone tablet in 1623 (or 1625) in Xian in China broke barriers that the Nestorian tablet was a factual testament that the Assyrian Church foundations had reached China by the seventh century. It is amazing that monotheistic Christology that had its roots in Assyria, Byzantium, Persia and Egypt, finally fragmented in to different sections and with the arrival of Islam and later the Mongol invasion, Islam became the major religious force. Genghis Khan’s division of his empire was known as “Ulus.” His    eldest son Jochi died six months before his father though he was to have dominated between the Irtysh and Ural rivers to as West as the Pontic-Caspian Steppe and to the Aral Sea and Amu Darya River in northern Khorezm.[xiv]

8.      Ariq Borke: He was the grandson of Chinggis Khan of the Golden Horde.[xv] A Khwarezmian refugee who wrote a book called Ṭabaḳāt-i-Nāṣirï

9.      Temür Khan: Also known as Öljeytü Khan, he was the son of  Crown Prince Zhenjin and the grandson of Kublai Khan. Considered the sixth great khan of the Mongol Empire, he was succeeded by Külüg Khan. His reign was mainly in China and was known as Emperor Chengzong of Yuan. He ruled from May 10, 1294 to February 10, 1307.

10.  Mahmud Ghazan Khan: His reversion to Islam in A.H. 694/A.D. 1295 was an era of delight and great achievement for his kingdom and as well for his Muslim subjects. Even though Ghazan’s conversion to Islam was real, there was another objective: to win the hearts and minds of Mongols who had reverted earlier and to dedicate his strength and strategies to defeating Baiku, a man who was his rival. It was his viceroy or Na’ib Nawruz who was behind his reversion. His father, Arghun died a pagan. Though he left several wives behind, Ghazan got attracted to Bulughan Khatun who was a widow of his father. Even though it is forbidden for a male Muslim to marry a father’s widowed wife, in Mongol Yasa, it was permissible. “However, one of the 'ulama' offered a legal opinion which provided a solution to this impasse: since Arghun had been a pagan, his marriage to Bulughan Khatun was not legal, and therefore Ghazan could now wed her with impunity. The Khan was happy with this suggestion, married Bulughan Khatun (in a Muslim manner), and 'he adhered to Islam. Without this [solution], he would have apostatized.”[xvi]

11.  Tamer lane: The name Tamer Lane that has been westernized is a Turkic version, but to Persians, his real name is Timur-i-lang, meaning Timur the lame.[xvii] Some researchers refer to him as the most strategic fighter who moved with speed like a whirlwind to capture new lands and free Muslims and others who were subjugated by more powerful forces.

Summary

Even though each khan displayed different characteristics in terms of waging wars and dealing with subjects in captured lands, they had opposing indistinguishable objectives in their pursuit of territorial expansions. Some fought with valor and vigor by rending the world asunder while others were more reconciliatory and humanistic in approach. To the Muslim theologian or religious scholar, the most wretched of all was the one who died outside Islamic domain, because, dying out of the pale of Islam, is the gateway to hell on the Day of Judgment, though, the impending punishment is preceded by intolerable punishment in the grave–a punishment whose duration and nature of pain and desolation in terrible darkness is only known to Allaah Almighty. The Qur’an clearly states regarding the punishment for the disbelievers in the grave and the Hereafter:

وَأَمَّآ إِن كَانَ مِنَ الْمُكَذِّبِينَ الضَّآلِّينَ * فَنُزُلٌ مِّنْ حَمِيمٍ

And if he is one of the rejecters, the erring ones. He shall have an entertainment of boiling water… (56:92-93)

That is, in the grave he would be greeted by boiling water,

وَتَصْلِيَةُ جَحِيمٍ

And burning in hell. (56:94)

That is, in the hereafter, he would be consigned to Hell.”

Regarding the doom in the grave, Allaah expounds repeatedly in the Qur’an: While a dreadful doom encompassed Pharaoh’s folk.‏ The Fire; they are exposed to it morning and evening; and on the day when the Hour upriseth (it is said): Cause Pharaoh’s folk to enter the most awful doom (Ghafir 40:45-46). For every dead human being, after the Angel of Death takes away the soul, inside the grave, two angels whose names are Munkar and Nakir, are responsible for questioning. For the disbeliever, despite his or her requests rejected by the angels, will suffer tremendously unbearable squeezing that will last until the Day of Judgment.

For the Angel of Death whose name Malakul Mawt, his work of retrieving the souls of the believers and disbelievers is a daily, hourly occurrence and the speed he travels, is beyond human comprehension even though some commentators assume it to be the speed of light. “Thou could see, when the wrong doers reach the pangs of death and the angels stretch their hands out, saying: Deliver up your souls. This day ye are awarded doom of degradation for that ye spoke concerning Allah other than the truth, and scorned, His portents (Al-An`am 6:93).

And verily, for those who do wrong, there is a punishment beyond that. But most of them know not (At-Tur 51:47).



[i] Komaroff, L. (Ed.). (2012). Beyond the legacy of Genghis Khan (Vol. 64). Brill.

[ii] Holiday, R. (2019). Ego is the Enemy. Elex media komputindo.

[iii] Khan, G. (1971). Genghis Khan. Birth100, 1162.

[iv] SOLTANI, G., & REZAEI, D. (2019). THE EFFECTS OF INTERACTIONS WITHIN COMMUNAL CONDITIONS IN IRAN AND ANATOLIA WITH IL KH NIDS OVER 13TH AND 14TH CENTURIES. Turkish Online Journal of Design Art and Communication9(2), 159-177.

[v] Dr. Yunus Emre TANSÜ & Baran GÜVENÇ (2019). “A Brief Overview of The Era of The Chagatai Khan Tarmashirin.” International Social Sciences Journal.

[vi] Tsendina, A. (1999). Godan Khan in Mongolian and Tibetan historical works. Studia Orientalia Electronica85, 245-248.

[vii] Nasirov, N. P. Scientific Bulletin, № 1, 2021, pages 79-90.

[viii] May, T. (2018), The Mongol Empire, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University press: 135.

[ix] Dawson, C. THE REIGN OF NOGAI KHAN. Academia.edu. Retrieved August 13, 2022.

[x] Siddiq, S. A. (2016). Caliph Al-Mansur and Hulagu Khan and analysis of their political strategies in the light of Machiavellianism (Master's thesis, Gombak, Selangor: International Islamic University Malaysia, 2016).

[xi] Al Asfour, S. (2019). THE NATURE OF THE RELATION BETWEEN SULTAN AL-ZAHIR BAIBARS AND BERKE KHAN. Journal of Al-Tamaddun14(1), 117-128.

[xii] Wilson, J. The Conversion of Berke Khan.

[xiii] Adams, R. M. (2021). Nestorius and Nestorianism. The Monist104(3), 366-375.

[xiv] Schütz, E. (1991). THE DECISIVE MOTIVES OF TATAR FAILURE IN THE ILKHANID—MAMLUK FIGHTS IN THE HOLY LAND. Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae45(1), 3-22.

[xv] Wilson, J. The Conversion of Berke Khan.

[xvi] Amitai-Preiss, R. (1996). Ghazan, Islam and Mongol tradition: a view from the Mamlūk sultanate1. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies59(1), 1-10.

[xvii] Manz, B. F. (1999). The rise and rule of Tamerlane. Cambridge University Press.

Sunday, September 18, 2022

THE NORTHERN FRONTIER DISTRICT: The Struggles of Deghow Maalim Sambul

Authored By Adan Makina

Published By: Audi Publishers, Nairobi, Kenya

August 5, 2022.

A Book Review



The book, “The Northern Frontier District: The Struggles of Deghow Maalim Sambul” by author Adan Makina and published by Dr. Audi Publishing based in Nairobi, Kenya is an intermixture of descriptive, narrative and expository composition of recollections of tales of Somalis, even though it mainly focuses on the major events that occurred during Somalia’s claim to the Northern Frontier District (NFD) that was handed over to Kenya by the British colonial administration before its final departure in the early sixties. Among the legendary figures who took part in the struggle for NFD were a group of men hailing from different Somali clans together with the Boran–the first born of the nine sons of the Oromo plus the Rendille. While the main biographical character is the living octogenarian Sultan Deghow Maalim Sambul, the book carries captivating historical events that will hopefully give the reader the urge to keep on reading it to the end. With over 500 pages, the book brings together different topics such as anthropology, paleontology, ornithology, toponymy and etymology, history and historiography, theology, comprehensive pronunciamentos, botany and ethnography and other defining factors that are unique to Somalis only.

 

A hardcover book with colored picturesque, it took the author over five years to bring it to its current feature. From ancient times when Abyssinia and Somalia were both ruled by the Egyptians of aforetime, the book traces the history of Somalis in order to evade the fictional research penumbration (from penumbra) of foreign contemporary writers whose penmanship remain engrossed in suspicion to this day. According to Sultan Deghow Maalim sambul–an octogenarian who is loaded with tons of previously unrevealed hair-raising narrations, “Somali history is either in par with ancient Egyptian history if not older.”

 

Jailed by the British colonial administration in Kenya at the infamous Manyani (baboon) Prison that is surrounded by wild baboons like the Papio hamadryas–the baboon that inspired Queen Hatshepsut during her voyage to the “Land of Gods” or the “Land of Punt” and currently known as Manyani Maximum Prison, he was also placed behind bars by the new Republic of Kenya in Kajiado Prison after the British departure and likewise incarcerated in complete isolation by the military regime of Somalia. The prison that resembles the infamous Devil’s Island in French Guiana that held famous men like the innocent French artillery officer Alfred Dreyfus in 1894 on trumped up charges of spying for Germany even though he was later exonerated, the surroundings of Manyani Prison is also home to the African forest elephant (Loxodonta cyclotis). While in incarceration at Kajiado Prison in 1966, one night, the Kenya government hatched a plot to execute Sultan Deghow and his Deputy Wako Hapi Taro of the Boran/Oromo.

However, since there were dedicated Somalis who worked with the British administration, a young Somali man who hailed from the Sheikh Isxaaq clan of the Habr Yunis sub-clan, upon getting the security details, immediately took action to save them from the intended murderous acts. Sofe rescued them from the hands of Geel Qaad (camel rustler)–a Somali and cousin of Deghow and a Kikuyu by the name Kigandi. Both men were responsible for extra-judicial killings since they were from the Criminal Investigation Department (CID). The young man’s father worked for Karen Blixen, meaning Sofe was just like Karen’s child. Karen was a Danish lady from Copenhagen and it was Farah Aden, Sofe’s father, under instructions from his White male employer and coffee farmer who instructed him to travel to Kilindini Harbor in Mombasa and bring her to his farm in the White Highlands. On seeing him, Karen was overtaken by admiration for Farah because she mistook him for an Indian since he was handsome, tall and wore a turban on his head. Currently in Nairobi, there is a suburb named after her.

The reason behind constructing impenetrable maximum prisons like that of Devil’s Island by the French and Robben Island of South Africa by the Dutch that housed men like Imam Abdallah ibn Qadi Abdus Salaam (1780-1793) for his anti-colonial activities and Sayed Abdurahman Moturu– a former Prince of the Madura and one of Cape Town's first imams who was imprisoned in 1740 until his death in 1754, was to dissuade the prisoners from escaping and if it so happened, they would have been devoured by sea carnivores like the Killer Whales, Great White Sharks, and Barracudas and on land, Polar Bears would be in waiting. Others who were kept in solitude included Nelson Mandela, Walter Sisulu, Jacob Zuma, and Ahmed Kathrada etc. As for Manyani Maximum Prison, it was within the Tsavo National Park that was known for Man-Eaters like lions, leopards, cheetahs and other carnivores. Jailed with Deghow and Wako Hapi was Alex Kolkolle from the Rendille–an ethnic group known to Somalis as RerDiid, meaning those who abandoned their relatives but are currently RerDoon, denoting seekers of those they abandoned in the past.

 

The biographee, a man who has a degree in political science is also a military strategist trained abroad. Prior to the outbreak of the 1977-78 War between Somalia and Ethiopia over the Somali-occupied region in Ethiopia that was handed over to Ethiopia in 1957 by Britain, France and Italy who were referred to as Allied Powers after the Ethiopian Emperor complained that he was “surrounded by an ocean of Pagans”–a term implying Muslims from different ethnic groups, the first batch of fighters sent by Somalia’s military were primarily taken forcefully from Qoryooley Refugee Camp that was home to the former Northern Frontier District Liberation Front (NFDLF), the Somali Abbo or the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) and the Western Somali Liberation Front (WSLF), formerly the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF). Since the biographee was against the misuse of his guerilla fighters in the run up to the Somalia-Ethiopia, Major General Mohamed Siyad Barre, seeing the sultan as an opposition to his militaristic ideals, indefinitely placed him in total incarceration for a complete year.

 

Regardless of the torturous detention by President Barre, Sultan Deghow narrates that in later years, the president transformed in to a Fidus Achates. In one encounter between the two men after the president tendered him an invitation, to avoid dying intestate, the leader of the military regime revealed to Deghow information that required dissemination to the Somali people in case he died before him. It was information related to the bloodless coup d’état of 1969 and how he mischievously took over power from the inheritor to-be. However, it was when SNM captured Hargeisa in 1991, that Barre sought the help of Sultan Deghow.

 

“In a face-to-face conversation between Barre and Deghow, the main agenda of the meeting centered on getting military help from Deghow since he had a strong guerrilla force inside Somalia who, had he accepted, would have energized the ailing Somali Army and denervated the forces that had complete control over the northern territories. By then the Somali army had fragmented tremendously with military desertions, indiscipline and disloyalty becoming the norm. Feeling defeated and on the verge of collapse, Barre did everything he could do to convince Deghow to provide him the necessary assistance to subdue the SNM that transformed into a force to reckon with. However, Deghow who was a man who believed in Somalinness without regard to clan moiety, totally opposed Barre’s militaristic obsessions.

In response to Barre’s request, Deghow reminded him that his forces were guests of Somalia and that their presence in Somalia had nothing to do with Somali internal affairs. Tempers cooled down after Barre’s son, General Maslax intervened by siding with Deghow on the issue of military assistance. By then, Deghow, who was a military strategist and also trained in political science had already made up his mind not to support Barre because he was well aware of the general injustices and the hardships, he imposed on the people of Somaliland who, voluntarily for the love of Somalinness, accepted the July 1, 1960 unification with southern Italian Somaliland to form what became known as the Somali Democratic Republic.

Furthermore, Deghow felt perturbed and flabbergasted every time he recalled how Barre placed his own Somali loving fighters from the NFDLF in the frontline during the Ogaden War of 1977-78 that exacerbated Somalia’s approaching collapse.”[1] It was the Ogaden War that set the stage for Jimmy Carter’s first foreign policy assignment and the demise of détente.[2]

On the other hand, Deghow met Muamar Qaddafi of Libya after a delegation from South Africa that was headed by Nelson Mandela left earlier even though he met delegates from Gibraltar and Liberia with Charles Taylor as the head of the delegation. After leaving Sirta in Libya, Deghow flew to London to meet with a half-dozen men from Mwakenya–an opposition movement from Kenya that wanted to have unity with NFDLF so they could topple the twenty-four years reigning President Daniel Toroitich Arap Moi (deceased). Deghow bluntly told them that he could not reach a decision alone without the presence or knowledge of his companions. The Mwakenya delegation was led by a famous professor from the Kikuyu ethnic group of Kenya–the same professor who described in one of his books the sultan’s cousin millionaire Mahat Kuno Roble “intelligent illiterate millionaire.”

With Somalis being the toughest in Africa in terms of business entrepreneurship and political participations especially by the Somali diaspora in foreign lands, and other sectors such as education and even sports, you may be surprised to learn that even among Somali mothers, historian and Canadian Professor Ray Beachey (deceased 2010)–a man who taught prominent leaders like Benedicto Kiwanuka, Uganda's first prime minister; Yusuf Lule, the country's provisional president in 1979 and Kenya’s former President Mwai Kibaki (deceased), at the former Makerere University of Uganda–later Makerere University–in his book The Warrior Mullah, 1990, recorded that, one of the three wives of Seyid Muhammad Abdullah Hassan, Xasna Dhoorre, commanded one of his nine well-armed divisions. Though we do not have her photo, the book contains the photo of her brother Commander Abshir Dhoorre and credit goes to Mohamed Nuh who provided the author of the book the photo of the male dervishes’ commander. Usually, a military division ranges from 10,000 to 25,000 well-armed soldiers and commanded by a Major General while assisted by two Brigadiers. For Xasna Dhorreh, she was short of attaining only three ranks to head a nation’s army: Lieutenant General, General and Field Marshall respectively.



[1] Makina, A. (2022). The Northern Frontier District: The Struggles of Sultan Deghow Maalim Sambul (5th edition). Dr. Audi Publishing. ISBN 978-9914-40-480-7.

[2] Jackson, D. R. (2010). The Ogaden war and the demise of detente. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science632(1), 26-40.

 

RESEARCH PAPER ON HINDUISM

 

Hinduism

Hinduism is a religious tradition that originated in the Indian subcontinent and is often referred

Ganesha

to as Sanātana Dharma (सनातन धर्म) by its followers, a phrase from Sanskrit meaning ‘eternal law’. Having no single founder, “Hinduism is the world’s third largest religion after Christianity and Islam, with approximately a billion adherents, of whom 905,000 live in India. Other countries with large Hindu populations include Nepal, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Singapore, Mauritius, Fiji, Suriname, Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, Canada, and the United States.” i The name Hindu has its origin in Old Persian word ‘Hindu’–a reference to the Indus River. Muslim writers of Arab origin referred Hindu to include “the land of the people of modern day India.”ii

Hindu reform movements and revivalists started using the term Hinduism in the 19th century. Its widespread forbearance to differences and inflexible ingenuousness make it complicated to be classified as a religion according to conventional Western ideas. Hinduism is an Eastern religion, is non-missionary, belief in life is cyclical, and that god is ultimate reality and “immanent.” iii

In Hinduism, “God so conceived is called Saguna Brahman, or God-with-attributes as distinct from the philosophers’ more abstract Nirguna Brahman, or God-without-attributes. Nirguna Brahman is the ocean without a ripple; Saguna Brahman the same ocean alive with swells and waves.” iv

With Brahman being the absolute, this religion of 33 million gods, has its scriptural knowledge preserved in the Vedas written in Sanskrit-the language of the Hindu scriptures. The gods of Hinduism include Brahman who is the creator god, Vishnu the preserver god with 10 avatars, and Siva or Shiva who is the god of destruction. The Hindu path of knowledge is identified as Jnana Yoga with yoga being discipline or yoke. Hindus believe in Karma which entails cause/effect actions while Dharma implies law, duty, or correct behavior.

Denominations of Hinduism

Hinduism may be categorized into four denominations: Saivism, Shaktism, Smartism, and Vaishnavism.

  • Saivism. The followers of this denomination who believe in Shiva as ‘All and in all’ is the oldest of all the sects of Hinduism. They believe that Shiva is the creator, preserver, destroyer, revealer, and concealer of all that is.  Adherents can be found throughout India, Nepal, and Sri Lanka and most notably in Southeast Asia especially in Malaysia, Singapore, and Indonesia.
  • Shaktism. This sect focuses on the worship of the Hindu divine mother Shakti or Devi as the absolute, ultimate godhead. They regard Shakti as the supreme Brahman and the “one without a second”, having all forms of divinity, female or male, as divine expression. The most fundamental and crucial text of Shaktism is the Devi Mahatmya, compiled almost 1,600 years ago. Other important canonical texts include the Puranic literature and Devi Gita. Shaktism has transcended borders and is no longer restricted to India alone. Shakta temples can be found in Southeast Asia, the United States of America, Europe, and Australia where Indian Diaspora Hindus have become deeply rooted. Despite Hinduism being regarded a non-missionary religion; two major temples in the confines of major U.S. cities include the Kali Mandir in Laguna Beach, California, and the Sri Rajarajeshwari Peetam, a Srividya Shakta temple in rural Rush, New York. The proliferation of Shaktism in the U.S. and the East-West synthesis of ideological interchange have endeared many doubting agnostics to embrace it causing troubling and intricate enlightening appropriation.
  • Smartism. Worshippers of the six signs (Ganesha, Shiva, Shakti, Vishnu, Surya, and Skanda) or the resemblance of all the deities as the unanimity of godhead and the conceptualization of the myriad deities of India, Smartans believe Brahman is essentially without attribute or is attribute-less. Described as liberal or non-sectarian, Smartans “…follow a philosophical, meditative path, emphasizing man’s oneness with god through understanding.” v
  • Vaishnavism. This is the fourth branch of Hinduism. Adherents believe in reincarnation, samsara, karma, and various yoga practices with emphasis on bkati yoga (devotion) to Vishnu.

The Hindu Caste System

“The Hindu caste system is unique in the world, but resembles in some ways Plato’s ideal society of philosophers, warriors and commoners. A caste is a division of society based on occupation and family lineage. Hindu caste system recognized four distinct classes or divisions among people based on these criteria and enforced it through a rigid code of conduct that was specific to each class and rooted in the dharmashastras (law books) of the later Vedic period.” vi

From the cry of the author of above article, we learn that in Hinduism, caste is an important factor in determining where one belongs as categorized below:

  • Brahmins. These are the priestly class or caste that enjoys the highest degree of honor. They dedicate their entire lives to learning and preserving the Vedas, perform rituals and procedures, and observe self-punishment. They show exemplary behavior and are the caretakers of knowledge and traditions. As recorded in the Dharma (sacred tradition), a Brahmin is raised to look after and serve the Dharma. The Brahmins are regarded as a noble class endowed with knowledge and intellect.
  • Kshatriyas. They belonged to the warrior and landowner caste and were empowered to protect the people, shower the Brahmins with gifts, abstain from sensual cravings, present sacrifices to the gods and the ancestors, learn the holy texts, and bestow righteousness.
  • Vaishyas. Though not allowed to marry women of higher castes, they enjoyed the advantage of merchants and peasants, they studied the Vedas, they were traders and money lenders, and were allowed to participate in certain rituals.
  • Shudras. Their main duty was to serve the three higher castes. Traditionally, they were looked upon as laborers and were not duty bound to read or study the Vedas.
  • Chandalas. The lowest of all castes, they were considered impure and unholy. Living on the fringes of society, they were regarded as untouchables because they practiced magic and had unclean habits, were considered loathsome and despicable by the upper castes. Perhaps, seeing the living disparities of the Indian people and the abject poverty this group lived in is what drove Mahatma Gandhi to classify them as “Harijans” or “god’s people.” 

Regardless of the existence of Bhakti (love/devotion) in the Vedas, and the prevalent categorization of society as a result of Karma, the visual focus known as Tantra, the daily reverent gesture of Namaste and the all-encompassing overall responsibility of Ahimsa (non-injury), if we are go by the admonitions of the Vedas, exclusively for the unconditional observance of the Mantra which is the sacred word or formula, we are led to the conclusion that Hinduism will undergo revivalism if equality and justice is to be attained before the revered Brahma regardless of equanimity of Samsara (cycle of birth). Many in India see their mode of governance as far from being a democracy but a ‘castocracy’-a system of administration where people vote for the leader in observance of the caste system that is so ingrained in the mental make-up of the general population.

Hinduism Goddesses

  • Ganesha. “All Tantric and spiritual worship in the Hindu tradition begins with the invocation of Ganesha (Ganesh), the elephant-headed god.” vii There are many historical versions regarding how Ganesha got her elephant head. One version relates how Parvati (Shiva’s wife) created Ganesha in the absence of Siva (Shiva) to watch over her quarters. When Shiva wanted to see Parvati, Ganesha objected to which Shiva cut off her head. Later on, Shiva gave Ganesha the head of an elephant because there was no replacement.
  • Annapurna. She is the Hindu goddess of food and cooking. An incarnation of the Hindu goddess Parvati, wife of Shiva, Annapurna is said to have the power to nourish indefinite number of people.
  • Saraswati. She is described as the Hindu goddess of knowledge, music, and the creative arts. Also called the goddess of speech, Saraswati is often seen dressed in white, riding on a swan and sometimes on a peacock, and is depicted holding a palm leaf-an indication of knowledge.

 NB: This paper was first written on October 11, 2008



ii Thapar, R.1993. Interpreting Early India. Delhi: Oxford University Press. P. 77

iii Encarta Dictionary: English (North America). Existing in all parts of the universe. Describes God as existing in and extending into all parts of the created universe.

iv Huston Smith: The World Religions. Harper Collins Publishers Inc. 10 East 53rd Street, New York, NY 10022

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