Author: Abdus Sattar Ghawri
Publisher: Al-Mawrid Institute of Islamic Sciences
Pages: 310
ISBN: 969-8799-00-01
The Only Son offered for Sacrifice Isaac or Ishmael? or a
book that was originally intended to be an appendix to another larger work,
namely Paran Prophecy of the Bible regarding the Prophet of Islam, its writer’s
opinion that Isaac or Ishmael? has, instead, become a modest attempt to solve a
long addressed problem on the principles of objective research is, indeed,
something of a humble understatement. Few Muslim scholars in the recent past
have addressed the question of the identity of the actual son of the Prophet
Abraham (sws) who was taken for sacrifice, with such vigour and tenacity as has
been done by Abdus Sattar Ghawri in his Isaac or Ishmael? What makes Ghawri’s
work of particular relevance is his almost total, albeit deliberate, reliance on
the Bible and the works of Biblical scholars to prove his point. Indeed, and as
the author himself whole-heartedly admits, the question that he addresses in his
book had been ‘settled once forever’ by the celebrated South Asian Muslim
scholar, Imam Hamid al-Din Farahi in his masterly Arabic work, al-Ray al-Sahih
fi man huwa al-dhabih. Muslim scholarship on the subject, which was based
primarily on Muslim sources, had, thus, probably effected a culmination with
Farahi’s work in the first quarter of the twentieth century. However, genuine
Muslim scholarship on the same subject, based on Judeo-Christian sources, was
not as forthcoming. It is, perhaps, into this genre of academic work on the
topic that Isaac or Ishmael? categorically falls, and in which it has become
something of a pioneering effort.
To say, today, that the work of an artist has an innate
tendency to grow on him as he progresses with it, is to say something that is
generally accepted as a matter of fact. Indeed, true art – and any effort worth
its time can be rendered to the sublimities of a quintessential art form –
presupposes an evolution of purpose within the artist in his work. True
scholarship, too, is not beyond the pale of such artistic renditions. That much,
at least, is in evidence as one reads through the path of discovery which Ghawri
charts out for us in the progression, indeed, the evolution of themes that
centres round the moot question: was it Isaac (sws) or Ishmael (sws) who was to
be sacrificed by Abraham (sws)? Doubtless, in this evolution of themes around
the central point, there has been a broadening of the very scope of the book
itself. Thus, it covers, and addresses a whole host of different, yet intimately
related, incidents and issues that must necessarily be of the greatest interest
to the genuine scholar, Muslim and non-Muslim alike. Amongst others, it covers
the relevant themes of the site of Makkah according to the Bible; pilgrimage to
Makkah as described in the Bible, the site of al-Marwah in the Bible, King
David’s (sws) visit and pilgrimage to Makkah and of his later yearning to be
there; the offering of sacrifices at Makkah as mentioned in the Book of Isaiah;
the well of Zamzam and a brief, yet significant, outline of the history of the
Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem.
The Judeo-Christian viewpoint on the subject has
consistently been one which asserts that it was Isaac, and not Ishmael, who was
taken for the sacrifice by the Patriarch Abraham (sws). Strangely enough,
however, and as Ghawri points out, in his introduction, while the Bible has
recorded the story of the sacrifice in a fairly detailed manner, the name of the
only son of Abraham (sws) as Isaac (sws) has been mentioned but once in the
whole of the narrative. Granted the strength of the contention over this issue
down the centuries, it can hardly be any advantage, whatsoever, for the
Judeo-Christian camp, that the son of Abraham (sws) offered for the sacrifice
has been referred to as Isaac (sws) but once in the whole of the Biblical
narrative. On the other hand, Ghawri also states that a majority of the Muslim
scholars affirm that it was Ishmael (sws), and not Isaac (sws), who was taken
for sacrifice. Interestingly, this implies that there is a minority of Muslim
scholars who, apart from the traditional accounts of the Muslims, are, at best,
unsure of the exact facts of history – the identity of the son of Abraham (sws)
who was offered for the sacrifice. In the main, such a minority opinion amongst
Muslims must necessarily owe itself to the fact that while the Qur’an describes
God’s command to Abraham (sws) and of Abraham’s (sws) willing submission in
taking his obedient son for the sacrifice, it does not, by itself, reveal the
exact identity of the son concerned.
However, to go by the Biblical version of the identity of
the son as being Isaac (sws) would be to trust in the fleeting opinion of a
redactor who penned down his wishful thinking, as presumably being part of the
Divine word, a full one thousand years after the incident of the sacrifice.
Evidently, serious historians would hardly take such naïve, or even pious,
assumptions as genuine facts of history, particularly when the only instance in
which the identity of the son is mentioned appears almost totally out of context
and in a manner which provides genuine grounds for suspicion. This, then, has
been the methodology adopted by Ghawri throughout his presentation of the
problem – a problem about which one observer noted very pertinently: ‘‘Lying at
the root of centuries old Judeo-Muslim differences, this controversy is all that
the Judeo-Muslim relations stand for.’’
Ghawri’s has been an effort to, among other things,
present a logical appreciation of the statements, factual or otherwise, that
appear in the Bible. In thus providing a logical context for the narratives in
the Bible, and with his own sure-footed understanding of history and data
handling, his has been a thorough study of the subject which owes its
authentication not to Muslim scholarship, but to the opinions and considered
judgements of some of the greatest names in modern Biblical scholarship within
the Judeo-Christian world. It is in this connection that attention must be drawn
to the remarkable number of books and authorities which the learned author has
consulted in the making of this ground-breaking research. Indeed, the extensive
footnotes to which the attention of the reader is constantly invited in almost
every page of the book constitutes a significant, if not a major, part of the
work itself. In fact, the footnotes and annotations form a parallel world that
operates on the reader’s understanding in tandem with the main body of the book.
The end result, of course, has been an overwhelming body of evidence in favour
of Ishmael having been the son who was offered for the sacrifice: a conclusion
made even more pertinent by the fact that it was derived almost in its entirety
from the Bible, and from the works of renowned scholars of the Bible.
Of especial consideration, with regard to Ghawri’s
approach, must certainly be his eye for detail and his ability to go directly to
the point; to the heart of the matter, as it were. While this approach has
necessitated a seeming repetition of relevant aspects throughout the course of
the study, when read in conjunction with the immediate context of the author’s
arguments, however, these repetitions almost never end in the dry monotony that
would be otherwise expected of them. Contrariwise, they result in a further
consolidation of the strength of the argument. One instance wherein the author’s
ability to go directly to the substance of the argument is seen quite early on
in the work. A classical stance of the modern Judeo-Christian world with regard
to the identity of the son taken for the sacrifice has been that while Ishmael
(sws) was, indeed, the first born of Abraham (sws), he need not be considered as
such owing to his low birth through Hagar, a mere bondservant of Abraham (sws).
As such, it must be Isaac (sws), born through Sarah, the ‘real’ wife of Abraham,
who needs to be considered as the first-born and the only son of Abraham (sws).
In a manner that amply illustrates the way in which he demolishes all such
false, egotistic pretensions of the Judeo-Christian world, Ghawri quite simply
brings the attention of the reader to the following passage from Deuteronomy:
If a man have two wives, one beloved, and another hated,
and they have born children, both the beloved and the hated; and if the first
born son be her’s that was hated: then it shall be, when he maketh his son to
inherit that which he hath, that he may not make the son of the beloved first
born before the son of the hated, which is indeed the first-born: But he shall
acknowledge the son of the hated for the first-born, by giving him a double
portion of all that he hath: for he is the beginning of his strength; the right
of the first born is his. (Deuteronomy xxi: 15-17, KJV, p.181)
It would not be too much to say that Ghawri has merely
allowed facts, and aberrations, from the Bible to speak for themselves. The rest
of the matter should be easily settled by the common sense and intellectual
logic of the impartial seeker after truth. The author’s committed labours lend
credence to the fact that scriptural aberrations or corruptions, far from hiding
the facts, actually leave, in their wake, a string of clues and trails which the
real historian, working with the advantage of hindsight, can sift and reassemble
to reconstruct a semblance of what might, indeed, be the real Truth.
The sections appended to the book as Appendix I, II and
III (titled respectively as Beersheba, the Well of Seven or the Well of Zamzam,
The Text of the Bible and Some Types of Corruptions in it, and A Brief Account
of the History of the Temple of Solomon might very well have formed integral
portions of the book, which, technicalities apart, they actually do. This is
very much so because they supplement the arguments in the core sections of the
book, and the book would have been all the poorer for their absence from it. A
useful index and a complete table of bibliographical references (which include
25 versions of the Bible, 39 commentaries on the Bible, 53 encyclopaedias and 16
other Biblical studies, all by Christian scholars) must further place the work
of Ghawri amongst the top-most references on the subject today. Indeed, it is
hardly an exaggeration to say that Isaac or Ishmael? has substantially altered
the way in which the academic world must view the answer to the age-old question
that it poses.
A fellow of the prestigious Al-Mawrid Institute of Islamic
Sciences, Lahore, Abdus Sattar Ghawri is the author of a number of articles on
the Biblical text that has special reference to the prophecies heralding the
advent of Prophet Muhammad (sws). He has also lectured extensively on the
subject. This robust experience in treating the subject at hand is fairly
visible in Ghawri’s Isaac or Ishmael? If the results of his honest labours are
accepted in a spirit of impartiality and good-will within the community of Jews
and Christians, it goes without saying that it will help in clearing the
international atmosphere between the Muslims and the Judeo-Christian world, so
much vitiated by misunderstanding and hostility begotten of centuries of
ignorance and mistrust. To this end has surely been the author’s motivation, and
in this end-result, most certainly lies, his higher reward. His highest reward,
of course, must, like all other sincere efforts in the Islamic cause, finds its
expression in the presence of his Maker, the Changer of Hearts, the Lord of all
Creation.
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