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Book Review

BOOK REVIEW: The First Muslim: The Story of Muhammad

SHAFAQNA – The extraordinary life of the man who founded Islam, and the world he inhabited – and remade.
Muhammad’s was a life of almost unparalleled historical importance; yet for all the iconic power of his name, the intensely dramatic story of the prophet of Islam is not well known. In The First Muslim, Lesley Hazleton brings him vibrantly to life. Drawing on early eyewitness sources and on history, politics, religion, and psychology, she renders him as a man in full, in all his complexity and vitality.
Hazleton’s account follows the arc of Muhammad’s rise from powerlessness to power, from anonymity to renown, from insignificance to lasting significance. How did a child shunted to the margins end up revolutionizing his world? How did a merchant come to challenge the established order with a new vision of social justice? How did the pariah hounded out of Mecca turn exile into a new and victorious beginning? How did the outsider become the ultimate insider?
Impeccably researched and thrillingly readable, Hazleton’s narrative creates vivid insight into a man navigating between idealism and pragmatism, faith and politics, non-violence and violence, rejection and acclaim. The First Muslim illuminates not only an immensely significant figure but his lastingly relevant legacy.

Viewed through the lens of dogmatic perversions in the Soviet Union and China, communism is often seen as the antithesis of American society; an atheistic dystopia founded by Karl Marx, one of the post-Enlightenment’s wayward secular philosophers. But Marx came from a deeply religious background — generations of rabbis on both sides — and his original motivation lay in that most Christian of principles: helping humanity’s downtrodden. One might think Marx’s tenets would resonate in a predominantly Christian country like the United States, but America’s love of Christ’s teachings is only to be outdone by its deep and abiding worship of capitalism.

Likewise, most Westerners judge the Prophet Muhammad through the prism of Islamic extremism. After all, someone who inspires such rabid fundamentalism must have himself been a wild-eyed zealot. But the truth is, at least as told by Lesley Hazleton in her book The First Muslim, that Muhammad’s story is that of a noble man beset by extraordinary circumstances. This humble young merchant picked himself up by his bootstraps and changed the course of human history.

Even for practicing Muslims, separating the man from the myth can be difficult. As Hazleton states early on in her biography: “The purity of perfection denies the complexity of a lived life. For Muslims worldwide, Muhammad is the ideal man, the prophet, the messenger of God, and though he is told again and again in the Quran to say ‘I am just one of you’ — just a man — reverence and love cannot resist the desire to clothe him, as it were, in gold and silver.”

Hazleton, a Brit transplanted to the States and who blogs as The Accidental Theologist, does her best to reconstruct the circumstances in seventh century Arabia that led to the creation and spread of Islam. Like the image of Jesus from Christian Gospels, most of what we know of Muhammad was written down long after his death; an eighth century biography by Ibn Ishaq and a 39-volume (translated) history of early Islam by late-ninth century Baghdad resident al-Tabari. Hazleton doesn’t skip over the more mystical parts of Muhammad’s life (the archangel Gabriel’s visitation, the “satanic verses”), but the book’s focus is an effort to portray the prophet’s unique circumstances and recognizable humanity.

One of Hazleton’s more revelatory passages attempts to get at the heart of what many in the West see as Islam’s extreme overreaction to perceived slights and harmless satire. The Quraysh, who ruled Mecca in Muhammad’s time, belittled and exiled Muhammad for his dangerous teachings. The Quran urges patience, but it left a lasting mark. “Yet by its sheer insistence on ignoring mockery, the Quran would ensure that the sting of it lasted long into the future. Here, in the foundation text of Islam, is the source of the modern Muslim sensitivity to insult that has taken so many by surprise,” writes Hazleton. Despite the Quranic admonitions to ignore insults, the memory of Meccan rejection is still felt today, as Hazleton says, “one of the many indelible ironies of history and faith.”

Prophet Muhammad shows himself to be a very modern leader, well ahead of his time — a bona fide Hegelian “world-historical man” — as savvy a politician and military leader as he was divine messenger. Hazleton’s biography covers the broad strokes of his life with fairness — she doesn’t gloss over his more fallible moments — and insight, but the book is important for trying to explain just who he really was. “Just one of you,” as the Quran says.

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