What Muslims and Christians Share – A Christmas Meditation

Source: Qantara

There is a 16th-century manuscript in the British Museum which contains a painting of what – at first – looks like a traditional Nativity scene. In the middle is Mary holding the Christ child, whose arms are wrapped lovingly around his mother’s neck. In the foreground, hovering nervously, are the Three Wise Men, ready to offer their gifts. So far, so conventional. But look a little closer and you begin to notice just how strange the picture is. For the wise men are dressed as Jesuits, Mary is leaning back against the bolster of a musnud, a low Indian throne, and she is attended by Mughal serving girls wearing saris and dupattas.

Moreover, the Christ child and his mother are sitting under a tree outside a wooden garden pavilion – all strictly in keeping with the convention of Islamic lore, which maintains that Jesus was born not in a stable, but in an oasis beneath a palm tree, whose branches bent down so that the Virgin could pluck fruit during her labour.

In this Koranic version of the Nativity, the Christ child, still in his swaddling clothes, sits up and addresses Mary’s family with the words: “I am the servant of God. He has given me the Gospel and ordained me a prophet. His blessing is upon me wherever I go, and he has commanded me to be steadfast in prayer and to give alms to the poor as long as I shall live.” The miniature illustrating this Nativity scene was one of a great number commissioned by the Mughal court under the emperors Akbar and Jehangir.

Mughal enthusiasm for Christian devotions

It is one of the many moments in the history of Islamo-Christian relations that defies the simplistic strictures of Samuel Huntington’s “clash of civilisations” theory, for both Akbar (1542-1605) and his son Jehangir (1569-1627) were enthusiastic devotees of Jesus and his mother Mary, something they did not see as being in the least at variance with their Muslim faith or with ruling one of the most powerful Islamic empires ever to exist.
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Indeed, scholars are only now beginning to realise the extent to which the Mughal emperors adopted what most would assume to be outrightly Christian devotions. In 1580, Akbar began this process by inviting to his court near Agra a party of Portuguese Jesuit priests from Goa, and allowing them to set up a chapel in his palace. There they exhibited two paintings of the Madonna and Child before a large and excited crowd.
Subsequent Portuguese clerics found that the gospel books brought by their predecessors had led to murals of Christ, his mother and the Christian saints being painted on the walls not only of the palace but also on Mughal tombs and caravanserais: “[The emperor] has painted images of Christ our Lord and our Lady in various places in the palace,” wrote one Jesuit father, “and there are so many saints that (…) you would say it was more like the palace of a Christian king than a Moorish one.”

This unexpected Mughal enthusiasm for Christian devotions is a highly significant moment in the history of Islamo-Christian relations and one which has, of course, largely been forgotten today in the polarised world that has emerged from the Islamist attacks on America and the “War on Terror” that ensued.

“The world is a bridge, pass over it”

I first came across the Mughals’ surprising veneration of Jesus and his mother 21 years ago. I remember climbing, on a bleak December morning in 1984, the great flight of steps leading to the Friday Mosque at Fatehpur Sikri in northern India. I was an 18-year-old backpacker fresh out of school, and was enjoying the sensation of disorientation. It was just before Christmas, but not only was there not a Christmas tree in sight, there was nothing remotely Christian to be seen, or so I thought.
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But when I reached the top of the steps that rose to the Buland Darwaza – the arched victory gateway leading into the principal mosque – I saw something that startled me. Here was one of the greatest pieces of Muslim architecture, but the Naskh calligraphy that lined the inside of the arch leading to the mosque read as follows: “Jesus, Son of Mary (on whom be peace) said: The World is a Bridge, pass over it, but build no houses upon it. He who hopes for a day, may hope for eternity; but the World endures but an hour. Spend it in prayer, for the rest is unseen.”

The inscription was doubly surprising: not only was I taken aback to find an apparently Christian quotation given centre stage in a Muslim monument, but the inscription itself was unfamiliar. It certainly sounded like the sort of thing Jesus might have said, but did Jesus really say that the world was like a bridge? And even if he had, why would a Muslim emperor want to place such a phrase on the entrance to the main mosque in his capital city?

Lost Christian texts, retained in Islam

It was only much later, after I had lived and travelled in India and the Middle East for several years, that I began to be able to answer some of these questions. The phrase emblazoned over the gateway was, I learned, one of several hundred sayings and stories of Jesus that fill Arabic and Islamic literature. Some of these derive from the four canonical Gospels, others from now rejected early Christian texts such as the Gnostic Gospel of Thomas, others again from the wider oral Christian culture-compost of the Near East – possibly authentic sayings and stories, in other words, that Islam has retained but which western Christianity has lost.

These sayings of Jesus circulated around the Muslim world from Spain to China, and many are still familiar to educated Muslims today. They fill out and augment the profoundly reverential picture of Christ painted in the Koran where Jesus is called the Messiah, the Messenger, the Prophet, Word and Spirit of God, though – in common with some currents of heterodox Christian thought of the period – his outright divinity is questioned. There are also frequent mentions of his mother Mary who appears in no fewer than 13 surahs (chapters) and who is said to be exalted “above the women of the two [celestial and temporal] worlds” and, like Jesus, a “model” for Muslims.

Mary is in fact the only woman mentioned by her proper name in the entire Koran, and appears more often in the Koran (34 times) than she does in the Gospels, where she is mentioned only 19 times. This should not be a surprise. After all, both Islam and Christianity grew out of the same culture-compost of the late-antique Middle East, and Islam accepts much of the Old and New Testaments, and obeys the Mosaic laws about circumcision and ablutions.

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Author William Dalrymple is a British historian and travel writer. He is the author of “The White Mughals”, which won the Wolfson Prize for History, and “The Last Mughal”, which won the Duff Cooper Prize. His new book, “Nine Lives: In Search of the Sacred in Modern India”, was published this year in 2009.

6 replies

  1. I can only wonder why the story differs in the Quran from the Bible. Surely if both are the word of God, there should not be so many discrepencies in stories re-told in the Quran which first appeared in the Bible.

  2. All the scriptures before the Holy Quran were not preserved in their original form, neither it was promised by God to keep those scriptures untouched. With the passage of time the followers of those scriptures mixed a lot of things in the original teachings, according to their conveniences and understandings. Secondly most of the old scriptures are not available in their original forms so nothing can be said firmly that it is as it was revealed by God.

    The Holy Quran says that:

    “O People of the Book! why do you deny the Signs of Allah, while you are witnesses thereof?

    O People of the Book! why do you confound truth with falsehood and hide the truth knowingly?” [3:71-72]

    It is a miracle and sign of the Holy Quran that it remained untouched and God preserved it in an original shape. God Almighty says in the Holy Quran:

    “Verily, We Ourself have sent down this Exhortation, and most surely We will be its Guardian.” [15:10]

    Please continue reading further through the link below: http://www.alislam.org/quran/tafseer/?page=1263&region=E1&CR=EN,E2

  3. Religion and science cannot be reconciled, so there is no way in which science can either prove or disprove religion. Religion is a human invention. We know how and why religions start and there have been thousands of them. New religions are still being started today! For food to fall from the skies, seas to part, a man to live to 900 years or for winged donkeys, djinns, witches, wizards, talking snakes and all the other childish fairy-tale creatures that feature in the Bible and the Koran to exist, science would have to be totally re-thought. And, whereas it takes ‘faith’ to believe in the supernatural because there is no proof of it, we know that science works because its achievements are all around us. We don’t need ‘faith’ to believe a ‘plane can fly or that electricity exists because we can test them and experience them ourselves.

  4. @Jo: I dont know why you are so sure that religion is a human invention. There is nothing stated in the history as such. Religions and believe in one God is as old as humans. Details on this topic can be read in the book “revelation, rationality, knowledge and truth” here you can read about the idea of Religion and God, if it is human made or not: http://www.alislam.org/library/books/revelation/part_3_section_1.html
    Now the question about a man lived 900 years, djins,wizards and so on need interprettion. Surelly there are no such creature as told in fairy tales, but creatures that do lies beyond our understanding. Like some phenomena in science, which you cannnot explain yet or understand yet. Best examples are our unvierse made of more then just 4 dimensions, perhaps 5 or 10 or 11. But we cannot see them we yet cannot explain them.
    And how can you say science explain everything, so explain the more dimensional universe, or do you believe in them because scientists say it should be. You believe in Gravity, no one has ever seen it, but just feel it. You believe in blackholes perhaps, never seen them but their existence is proved through indirect observations and through theoretical proves. Explain the big bang theory, no one has seen it, but it also has been proved through theories. But you stil believe in them as facts and not as fairy tales.
    Don’t mix up religion with human made theories. We as mankind can interpret things according to our own understanding and our knowledge. Don’t think we know everything and can explain everything with our resources or thinking. We can’t, not even gravity or time can be explaind by the best minds on earth. Why should the creature of all things then can be explained so easilly by anyone. Not that you cannot explain the need of one Creature, or his existence. I do request to read the book mentioned above, it explains many things you actually asked. And do read Quran, it is surelly not a fairytale.

  5. The problem starts with the belief in a Creator. Muslims know that Quran is the word of God and Science is the work of God. There is no discrepancy between the word of God and the work of God. They are in alignment, agreement. There is no conflict.

    The atheists also have some beliefs, such as: “They will not believe in anything they cannot see, or show.”
    But they flout their belief and go against it in many ways. As mentioned by Bilal, the scientists believe in gravity and time. They have never seen it. They have felt it only that there is gravitational force. It can be felt and cannot be denied. Similarly, for time. Nobody has seen it but scientists are measuring the time. And they believe that there is such a thing as time.

    Scientists believe in one dimension, two dimension and three dimensions. They even believe in zero dimension ( a point or period .) They should be kind and careful and friendly towards religions and a Creator. Just like the Scientists are believing in some unseen things, so are the believers in God believing in heaven (paradise) and hell and angels.

    There is no need to raise objections against religion. Muslims believe in time and gravity. The Atheists should also give some respects to the religious matters.
    Atheists believe in love and hate and pain and suffering and sympathy,,, so many abstract things. They should shun belief in all such things, as per their own principle.

    Moreover, religion teaches decency and good moral conduct and happy way of living. Science also helps make life enjoyable. There is no conflict between Islam (as found in Quran) and Science.

    If some religious belief is not understood, it can be explained. Just like science needs to be taught, the religion also needs guided teachers.

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