MM commemorates the abolition of the Caliphate in 1924.
From The Mad Monarchist (4 March 2013)
It was on March 3, 1924 that the last Muslim caliphate was officially
abolished and Abdul Mejid II, the last Caliph of Islam (and heir to the
last Ottoman Sultan, his cousin) was removed from his position and
expelled from Turkey by the first republican and then secular government
of modern Turkey. Looking back, perhaps because of all that has
happened in the world of the Middle East since, it seems slightly
strange that the two positions did not disappear at the same time or
that it was the position of Padishah Sultan that was abolished first. To
be denied the title of Sultan while still retaining the title of Caliph
seems rather like telling someone, ‘we do not trust you to be the ruler
of our country but we still believe you are the representative of God
on earth”. Does not quite make sense to me. For Turks who hold fast to
their faith and the system of traditional authority embodied by the
Sultan and Caliph this can only be a sad anniversary. Yet, outsiders
should consider the occasion as well. The fall of the caliphate has not
yielded much benefit for anyone; Turkish or not, Muslim or not.
Whether things would be a great deal better if there was still a Caliph
in Turkey no one can say, but it could only be an improvement. Look
beyond the Turkish borders for a moment and consider the worldwide
problem today with terrorism. There are people of the worst sort, who
are both murderers and cowards, carrying out terrible and despicable
deeds all in the name of Islam. They butcher helpless innocents and call
themselves “holy warriors”. And no one should make any mistake about
what is in the hearts of these criminals, after all, the terrorists who
carried out the 9-11 attacks in America spent their last night on earth
at a strip club. The faithful these are certainly not. Yet, they have
fooled many people into thinking that they are and by making such a
claim they have blackened the name of Islam, perhaps worse than at any
other point in history. I say that because, even in the days of the
Crusades, a Christian like King Richard I could look at a Muslim like
Sultan Saladin and consider him a brave and worthy adversary. Even in
those days of open religious warfare Christians could respect the
gallantry of their Muslim foes who would send their doctors to care for
the Christian King.
There were terrible things that happened of course, but things were more
organized and certainly it would be helpful if there were a Caliph of
Islam who could speak with authority in denouncing the atrocities of the
terrorists who kill the defenseless and claim to be religious men.
However, as beneficial as that could be, there is also the very real
possibility that such a Caliph would be ignored. Would Arab and other
Muslims react positively to a Turkish Caliph of Islam? The question must
be asked, I think, because the Ottoman Empire, led by the Sultan and
Caliph, was brought down in part by Arab and other Muslims rising in
rebellion against the Turkish Sultan and joining with the Allies
(primarily the French and British) in bringing down and eventually
breaking up the Ottoman Empire; the last caliphate. When, in the midst
of World War I, the Sultan formally pronounced a jihad against the
Allied powers, he was, for the most part, ignored by the rest of the
Muslim world.
There is also the question as to whether or not our increasingly
anti-traditional world would even tolerate such a figure. Turkey, for
some reason which completely escapes my comprehension, seems desperate
to join the European Union and the E.U. has certainly not shown itself
to be favorably inclined toward organized religion. Would they allow
Turkey into the E.U. if the Caliph was restored? Personally, I think
that would be all the more reason to do it but I’m not Turkish and most
seem to want to join the European Union. However, although the amount of
wider good a restored Caliph might do is debatable, one certain thing
is that the people of Turkey would have a better form of moral guidance
and by going that extra step to restoring the monarchy there would be
greater consistency and a form of government more in keeping with
Turkish traditions and hearkening back to the days when Turkey was a
great nation, a major world power and not reduced to the status of
appealing for favors from the EU government in Brussels. As far as the
rest of the world is concerned, having the Sultan and Caliph back would
do none harm and possibly be of great benefit in countries far distant
as a voice of legitimate authority.
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