Answered by Fethullah Gulen
There are historical, social and psychological dimensions to this question,
which we must work through patiently, if we are to arrive at a satisfactory
answer.
First of all, it is useful to recall why the institution of slavery is thought
of or remembered with such revulsion. Images of the brutal treatment of slaves,
especially in ancient Rome and Egypt, provokes sorrow and deep disgust. That
is why even after so many centuries, our conception of slaves is of men and
women carrying stones to the pyramids and being used up in the building process
like mortar, or fighting wild animals in public arenas for the amusement of
their owners. We picture slaves wearing shameful yokes and chains around their
necks.
Nearer modern times there is the practice of slavery on an enormous scale by
the Western European nations; the barbarity and bestiality of this trade beggars
all description. The trade was principally in Africans who were transported
across the oceans, packed in specially designed ships, thought of and treated
exactly like livestock. These slaves were forced to change their names and abandon
their religion and their language, were never entitled to hope for freedom,
and were kept, again like livestock, for hard labouring or for breeding purposes-a
birth among them was celebrated as if it were a death. It is difficult to understand
how human beings could conceive of fellow human beings in such a light, still
less treat them thus. But it certainly happened: there is much documentary evidence
that shows, for example, how ship-masters would throw their human cargo overboard
in order to claim compensation for their loss. Slaves had no rights in law,
only obligations; their owners had absolute rights over them to dispose of them
as they wished-brothers and sisters, parents and children, would be separated
or allowed to stay together according to the owner’s mood or his economic convenience.
After centuries of this dreadful practice had made the West European nations
rich from exploitation of such commodities as sugar, cotton, coffee, they abolished
slavery-they abolished it, with much self-congratulation, first as a trade,
then altogether. Yet the Muslim regions had also known considerable prosperity
through the exploitation of sugar, cotton, coffee (these words in European languages
are of Arabic origin), and achieved that prosperity without the use of slave
labour. More important, let us also note, when the Europeans abolished slavery,
it was the slave-owners who were compensated, not the slaves-in other words,
the attitude to fellow human beings which allowed such treatment of them had
not changed. It was not many years after the abolition of slavery that Africa
was directly colonized by the Europeans with consequences for the Africans no
less terrible than slavery itself. Further, because the attitude to non-Europeans
has changed little, if at all, in modern times, their social and political condition
remains, even where they live amid the Europeans and their descendants as fellow-citizens,
that of despised inferiors. It is barely a couple of decades since the anthropological
museums in the great capitals of the Western countries ceased to display, for
public entertainment, the bones and stuffed bodies of their fellow human beings.
And such displays were not organized by the worst among them, but by the best-the
scientists, doctors, learned men, humanitarians.
In short, it is not only the institution of slavery that causes revulsion in
the human heart, it is the attitudes of inhumanity which sustain it. And the
truth is, if the institution no longer formally exists but the attitudes persist,
then humanity has not gained much, if at all. That is why colonial exploitation
replaced slavery, and why the chains of unbearable, unrepayable international
debt have replaced colonial exploitation: only slavery has gone, its structures
of inhumanity and barbarism are still securely in place. Before we turn to the
Islamic perspective on slavery, let us recall a name famous even among Western
Europeans, that of Harun al-Rashid, and let us recall that this man who enjoyed
such authority and power over all Muslims was the son of a slave. Nor is he
the only such example; slaves and their children enjoyed enormous prestige,
authority, respect and (shall we say it) freedom, within the Islamic system,
in all areas of life, cultural as well as political. How could this have come
about?
Islam amended and educated the institution of slavery and the attitudes of masters
to slaves. The Qur’an taught in many verses that all human beings are descended
from a single ancestor, that none has an intrinsic right of superiority over
another, whatever his race or his nation or his social standing. And from the
Prophet’s teaching, upon him be peace, the Muslims learnt these principles,
which they applied both as laws and as social norms:
Whosoever kills his slave: he shall be killed. Whosoever imprisons his
slave and starves him, he shall be imprisoned and starved himself, and whosoever
castrates his slave shall himself be castrated. (Abu Dawud, Diyat, 70; Tirmidhi,
Diyat, 17; Al-Nasa’i, Qasama, 10, 16)
You are sons of Adam and Adam was created from clay. (Tirmidhi, Tafsir,
49; Manaqib, 73; Abu Dawud, Adab, 111)
You should know that no Arab is superior over a non-Arab and, no non-Arab
is superior over any Arab, no white is superior over black and no black is superior
over white. Superiority is by righteousness and God-fearing [alone]. (Ibn
Hanbal, Musnad, 411)
Because of this compassionate attitude, those who had lived their whole lives
as slaves and who are described in ahadith as poor and lowly received respect
from those who enjoyed high social status (Muslim, Birr, 138; Jannat,
48; Tirmidhi, Manaqib, 54, 65). ‘Umar was expressing his respect in this
sense when he said: ‘Master Bilal whom Master Abu Bakr set free’ (Bukhari, Fada’il
al-Sahaba, 23). Islam (unlike other civilizations) requires that slaves are
thought of and treated as within the framework of universal human brotherhood,
and not as outside it. The Prophet, upon him be peace, said:
Your servants and your slaves are your brothers. Anyone who has slaves should
give them from what he eats and wears. He should not charge them with work beyond
their capabilities. If you must set them to hard work, in any case I advise
you to help them. (Bukhari, Iman, 22; Adab, 44; Muslim, Iman, 38–40; Abu Dawud,
Adab, 124)
Not one of you should [when introducing someone] say ‘This is my slave’,
‘This is my concubine’. He should call them ‘my daughter’ or ‘my son’ or
‘my brother’. (Ibn Hanbal, Musnad, 2, 4)
For this reason ‘Umar and his servant took it in turns to ride on the camel
from Madina to Jerusalem on their journey to take control of Masjid al-Aqsa.
While he was the head of the state, ‘Uthman had his servant pull his own ears
in front of the people since he had pulled his. Abu Dharr, applying the hadith
literally, made his servant wear one half of his suit while he himself wore
the other half. From these instances, it was being demonstrated to succeeding
generations of Muslims, and a pattern of conduct established, that a slave is
fully a human being, not different from other people in his need for respect
and dignity and justice.
This constructive and positive treatment necessarily had a consequence on the
attitudes of slaves to their masters. The slave as slave still retained his
humanity and moral dignity and a place beside other members of his master’s
family. When (we shall explain how below) he obtained his freedom, he did not
necessarily want to leave his former master. Starting with Zaid bin Harith,
this practice became quite common. Although our Prophet, upon him be peace,
had given Zayd his freedom and left him a free choice, Zayd preferred to stay
with him. Masters and slaves were able to regard each other as brothers because
their faith enabled them to understand that the worldly differences between
people are a transient situation-a situation justifying neither haughtiness
on the part of some, nor rancour on the part of others. There were, in addition,
strict principles enforced as law:
Whosoever kills his slave, he shall be killed, whosoever imprisons his slave
and starves him, he shall be imprisoned and starved himself. (Tirmidhi,
al-Ayman wa l-Nudhur, 13)
Beside such sanctions which made the master behave with care, the slave also
enjoyed the legal right to earn money and hold property independently of his
master, the right to keep his religion and to have a family and family life
with the attendant rights and obligations. As well as personal dignity and a
degree of material security, the Islamic laws and norms allowed the slave a
still more precious opening-the hope and means of freedom.
Human freedom is by God, that is, it is the natural and proper condition which
must be regarded as the norm. Thus, to restore a human life, wholly or partly,
to this condition is one of the highest virtues. To set free half of a slave’s
body has been considered equal to saving half of one’s own from wrath in the
next world. In the same way to set free a slave’s whole body is considered equal
to assurance of one’s whole body. Seeking freedom for enslaved people is one
of the causes for which the banner of war may be raised in Islam. Muslims were
encouraged by their faith to enter into agreements and contracts which enabled
slaves to earn or be granted their freedom at the expiry of a certain term or,
most typically, on the death of the owner. Unconditional emancipation was, naturally,
regarded as the most meritorious kind, and worthiest of recognition in the life
hereafter. There were occasions when whole groups of people, acting together,
would buy and set free large numbers of slaves in order to obtain thereby the
favour of God.
Emancipation of a slave was also the legally required expiation for certain
sins or failures in religious duties, for example, the breaking of an oath or
the breaking of a fast: a good deed to balance or wipe out a lapse. The Qur’an
commands that he who has killed a believer by mistake must set free a believing
slave and pay the blood-money to the family of the slain (al-Nisa’, 4.92). A
killing has repercussions for both society and the victim’s family. The blood-money
is a partial compensation to the family of the victim. Similarly, the emancipation
of a slave is a bill paid to the community-from the point of view of gaining
a free person for that community. To set free a living person in return for
a death was considered like bringing someone back to life. Both personal and
public wealth were expended to obtain the freedom of slaves: the examples of
the Prophet, upon him be peace, and of Abu Bakr are well known; later, especially
during the rule of ‘Umar bin ‘Abd al-’Aziz, public zakat funds were used for
this purpose.
Alas, there are, even among Muslims themselves, people who feel the need to
somehow ‘disprove’ the worth of Islam, especially on socio-political issues.
In reality they feel this need because they have been more or less seduced by
Western values, even though these values are only formal, theoretical utterances
of law and principle and not, not by any means, lived realities. Such people
do not go among the wretched and poor of the so-called ‘third world’ and ask
them about the merits of Western values as they are practised. Rather, they
listen to an account such as we have given of the practised reality of Islamic
values and claim, on purely theoretical grounds, that Islam is lacking in the
best principles. This is what they say:
‘It is true that Islam has commended humanity in the treatment of slaves, and
encouraged most forcefully their emancipation. We can see from the history of
many different peoples in the Islamic world that slaves quickly integrated into
the main society and achieved positions of great prestige and power, some even
before they gained their freedom. And yet, if Islam regards slavery as a social
evil, why did the Qur’an or the Prophet not ban it outright? There are, after
all, other social evils which pre-existed Islam, and which Islam sought to abolish
altogether-for example, the consumption of alcohol, or gambling, or usury, or
prostitution. Why does Islam, by not abolishing slavery, appear to condone it?’
Until the evil of the European trade in black slaves, slavery was largely a
by-product of wars between nations, the conquered peoples becoming the slaves
of their conquerors. In the formative years of Islam, no reliable system existed
of exchanging prisoners of war. The available means of dealing with them were
either (i) to put them all to the sword; or (ii) to hold them and attend to
their care in prison; or (iii) to allow them to return to their own people;
or (iv) to distribute them among the Muslims as part of the spoils of war.
The first option must be ruled out on the grounds of its barbarity. The second
is practicable only for small numbers for a limited period of time if resources
permit-and it was, of course, practised-prisoners being held in this way against
ransom, many so content with their treatment that they became Muslims and changed
sides in the fighting. The third option is imprudent in time of war. This leaves,
as a rule for general practice, only the fourth option, whence followed the
humane laws and norms instituted by Islam for what is, in effect, the rehabilitation
of prisoners of war.
The slave in every Muslim house had the opportunity to see at close quarters
the truth of Islam in practice. His heart would be won over by kind treatment
and the humanity of Islam in general, especially by the access the slave had
to many of the legal rights enjoyed by Muslims, and, ultimately, by getting
his freedom. In this way, many thousands of the very best people have swelled
the numbers of the great and famous in Islam, whose own example has then become
a sunna, a norm, for the Muslims who succeeded them-imams such as Nafi’, Imam
Malik’s sheikh, and Tawus bin Qaisan, to name only two.
The reality is that in Islam it is overwhelmingly the case that being a slave
was a temporary condition. Unlike Western civilisation, whose values are so
much in fashion, slavery was not passed down, generation after generation in
a deepening spiral of degradation and despair, with no hope for the slaves to
escape their condition or their status. On the contrary, regarded as fundamentally
equal, the slaves in Muslim society could and did live in secure possession
of their dignity as creatures of the same Creator, and had steady access to
the mainstream of Islamic culture and civilisation-to which, as we have noted,
they contributed greatly. In the Western societies where slavery was widespread,
particularly in North and South America, the children of the slaves, generations
after their formal emancipation, remain for the most part on the fringes of
society, as a sub-culture or anti-culture-which is only sometimes tolerated,
and mostly despised, by the still dominant community.
But why, our critics will ask, when the Muslims were secure in their conquests
did they not grant emancipation wholesale to former captives or slaves? The
answer has, again, to do with realities not theories. Those former captives
or slaves would not have either the personal, psychological resources or the
economic resources needed to establish a secure, dignified independence. Those
who doubt this would do well to examine the consequences upon the slaves in
the former European or American colonies of their sudden emancipation-many were
abruptly reduced to destitution, rendered homeless and resourceless by owners
who (themselves compensated for their loss of property) no longer accepted any
kind of responsibility for their former slaves. We have already noted the failure
of these ex-slaves to enter upon or make a mark in the wider society from which
they had been so long excluded by law.
By contrast, every good Muslim who embraced his slave as a brother, encouraged
him to work for his freedom, observed all his rights, helped him to support
a family, to find a place in the society before emancipating him, might well
be pleased with an institution that opened to him a means of pleasing God. The
example that comes first to mind: Zayd bin Harith who was brought up in the
Prophet’s own household and set free, who married a noblewoman, who was appointed
as the commander of a Muslim army which included many of noble birth. But one
might swell the list of examples to many thousands if one had the space.
Ah yes, our critics will say, it may be so, but now there are exchanges of prisoners
if there are wars, now the institution of slavery does not exist, so are not
the Islamic injunctions, however good, an irrelevance? No, indeed. There is
nothing in Islam whose origin is in the commands and guidance of the Qur’an
which can ever become irrelevant. Rather, we would say to these critics: open
your eyes, study by what subtle means wars are now conducted, by what cunning
devices whole nations are now conquered; how they are reduced to a state of
absolute slavery (which is yet not called slavery) and made to devote their
whole energies, indeed to dedicate the lives of their children for generations
to come, to sustain their masters (who are yet not called masters) in a lifestyle
of unbelievable affluence. We say, study how national currencies are bought
and sold, how impossible sums of money are lent on terms of extraordinary brutality,
not in order to help the poor nations, but in order to permanently entrap them
in a state of dependence. To those who say, now there is no slavery, we say
look into the faces of the earth’s poor peasants, striving to grow (in an increasingly
barren soil) commodities which are not food for themselves but luxuries for
the rich, and only if they have grown enough of these, have they some hope of
buying something to eat-but there are still millions of others too poor to be
poor peasants, who live upon mountains of urban rubbish, earn from it, eat from
it. If you study the expressions of such people, locked in endless, fruitless
toil, you will understand that slavery is not an evil that Western civilisation
has eradicated, rather one which Western civilization has ably disguised and
distanced from itself.
Let no person, at least let no Muslim, claim that mankind has nothing now to
learn from Islamic values about how to deal with the problem of slavery. On
the contrary, we have everything to learn. How urgent, then, is our need to
pray for guidance of God lest we persist in error, for His forbearance lest
we persist in arrogance, for His help in finding a sure way to end the domination
of those who do not know compassion except as a fine-sounding word.
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