Modern Shia Islamic and Jewish Political Theosophy: An Elective Affinity?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“The most extreme example of modern theocracy is without a doubt the Islamic Republic of Iran. Its unelected head of State, who functions as a representative of the Hidden Imam responsible only to God, stands above the head of the judiciary, the Expediency Council of Parliament, the Guardian Council, and last but not least the instruments of state coercion projected both domestically and internationally. He functions as the dominant force vis a vis the elected parliament and the State President. In contradistinction to Israel, the fight between clerical theocracy and democracy heavily leans to theocracy in the “Divine State of Iran”. Indeed, the legality of legislation must be measured against the Quran and the Islamic tradition. And so, in the Israeli context, one must imagine the scenario of an attempt by Ultra-orthodox clerical scholars to assume power, certainly not in a revolution, but through the emergence of demographic realities, in which a modern theocracy emerges. This remains hard to imagine, but does the logic of the theocratic concept pushed to its radical conclusion not indicate the possible emergence of theocracy in the Jewish context? It remains naïve to assume that a Jewish theocracy would look too terribly different from Iran’s Islamic theocracy.”1
2. Shia–Jewish Elective Affinities: Histories and Possibilities
“For in a temporal lag—which led previous generations of social scientists to count them out—imami and rabbinic legists all along were interiorizing rationalization, just one step removed from the pace of the social sphere at large. Their “return” is, then, not a relic of another time but a product of our own. The present Twelver reappropriation of Iranian society itself, an appropriation not for mere postmodern ends but for fully post-historical ends, toward the ultimately just rule of the Mahdi himself, reflects developments akin to those also occurring within Judaism. The extent to which these apparently parallel developments were determined by an original symbiosis remains a question for scholarship fully to investigate”.
“The magical-astrological type [of religion] which rejects the feasibility of and need for divine revelation or contact between God and human beings, among other things, in the name of belief in the unity of the human species and the equality of individuals. Facing the Khazar King, who serves as a mouthpiece for the aforementioned stance, the author of the Kuzari situates the Jewish rabbi as a defender of revelatory religion and of the possibility of divine contact with the mundane. This position invokes a strict hierarchical premise that places the receivers of divine revelation on a separate and higher stratum in relation to the rest of humanity—a hierarchical difference analogous to that between human beings and animals”.11
“Whereas the attempted goal of the medieval Jewish philosophers was the presentation ofJewish Antiquity’s theology, cosmology, and anthropology through the devices of Greek–Arab philosophy, the Kabbalists attempted to pull off the opposite task. They tried to cloak the central ideas of philosophy in the garments of genuine Jewish tradition. It is here that philosophic positions not commensurate with Judaism force a new formulation of the central categories of Jewish thought.”17
3. Khomeini and Kook: Revolutionary Theosophic Politics and the Authority of the Perfected Cleric
“From the inspiration of the Torah, prophecy, and God’s spirit, the wise men of Israel have always known the secret of the Divine’s unity with the profane and were deeply versed in their intertwined nature. This understanding is derived through profound scholastic achievement, and a natural spiritual state arising from a deep well of piously innocent integrity that had always been buried in their souls. On this basis, their teachings branch out into eternity, and all that one suckles from them is full of permanent sweetness.”34
“The secular Zionist “rebellion against Halakha (practice of Jewish Law) is merely the flip side of a contemporary yearning for the breadth of prophetic vision. Viewed from the vantage point of eternity, such a generation is kulo zakai (fully worthy), reflecting an intuitive desire to extend their spiritual horizons beyond concern for personal reward and punishment and narrow observance of mitzvot (commandments) to collective expression in all facets of life. Rav Kook was convinced that responding to this desire would inevitably lead to a more satisfactory formulation of what faith in God really means, a knowledge previously held by rare individuals, but now demanded by the Jewish masses and eventually by the nations of the world at large. Once the leaders of the professedly religious camp would face the challenge of secularism and reformulate their expression of faith in less narrowly clerical terms, the antireligious trappings of Jewish nationalism would fall away, revealing its redemptive message to all”.
“Impeccability [ismāt] is nothing but perfect faith. The meaning of the impeccability of the prophets and the Friends of God [awlīyā] is not that, for instance, Gabriel took them by the hand. Of course, if Gabriel had taken the hand of Shimr, he would never have committed a sin. However, impeccability is the offspring of faith. If a man had faith in God, the Exalted, and if he saw God Almighty with the eyes of his heart as one sees the sun, it would not be possible for him to commit a sin, just as if he were standing before an armed power, he would find some impeccability.”39
“Narāqi quotes this tradition from “the rank of the faqīh in the current age is like that of the prophets of the Children of Israel”. Naturally, we may not be able to claim that the Fiqh-i Razāvi was composed by Imām Ridā (‘a), but it is permissible to quote it in further support for our thesis. It must be understood that “the prophets of the Children of Israel” refers to the prophets and not fuqāhā (jurists) who lived in the time of Moses and may or may not have been called prophets for one reason or other. The fuqāhā living at the time of Moses were all supplicant to his authority and performed their functions in obedience to him. It may be the case that when he dispatched them somewhere to convey a message, he would also appoint them as “bearers of authority” (ulu-l-amr), naturally, we are not precisely informed about these matters—but it is obvious that Moses himself was one of the prophets of the Children of Israel, and that all of the functions that existed for the Most Noble Messenger (s) also existed for Moses, with a difference, of course, in rank, station, and degree. We can therefore deduce from the general semantic range of the word “rank” in this tradition, therefore, that the identical function of rulership and governance that Moses performed is also applicable for fuqāhā.”41
“Now although one does not compare Israel’s leaders with Abraham, David, Solomon, or Moses—peace be upon them…in any case, today’s politicians can be called, if not prophets, then, certainly guardians, and can be likened to the other one-hundred and twenty four thousand prophets of Israel…these new guardians, each one with his own prophecies or—at least—a clear vision, built a guardianship state in the land of Palestine and called all the Children of Israel to it. We cannot but consider Israel a guardianship state, and its leaders guardians (awlīyā): those who march onward in the name of something loftier than human rights declarations. You could say the spirit of Yahweh is upon them and those prophecies … for it was not until Moses had murdered and fled into the wilderness that he had the brand of prophecy on his breast.”42
“Prima Facie, it seems untenable for the esoteric to serve as the basis for a sociopolitical movement, insofar as the latter calls for divulging and transparency and the former for obfuscation and opacity. To speak candidly, one would not expect that the spreading of secrets could serve as the spiritual underpinning of an ideological movement such as Zionism (or Khomeinism). It is reasonable, therefore, for Kook (or Khomeini) to have shifted from an elitist and exclusionary esotericism to an ideal of mysticism that is more inclusive and embracive. Kook transformed the rhetoric of esotericism as his thought matured and the Zionist (Islamic revolutionary) component became more central to his vision. Kook’s manner of disclosing seems not to be a revealing of the concealed by concealing the revealed, but rather the promulgation of a theomonistic belief that reality partakes of the light of the infinity…Thus, nature evolves to the point that there is an ever-increasing appreciation of the underlying unity of the untold differentiated beings to the one true source of life. In that respect, immersion in the depth of mysteries and hidden secrets has the task of enhancing the sense of good in the world and thereby rendering existence in its entirety nobler.”
“After all, if Al-e Ahmad was right that Israel was a guardianship state, who would be its ideal guardians? Clearly, the Scripture-loving hawks committed to pure collectives and a command economy, to the martyr’s version of Jewish history and authentic Jewish rights and law—activists carrying a forlorn hatred for the materialistic, corrupt, and treacherous West and promoting themselves as a vanguard for the Promised Land for World Jewry. In other words, the old Gush Emunim and other zealous West Bank settlers…So the Israeli forces Al-e Ahmad applauded found their culmination in fanatical rabbis who hate the ayatollahs and are hated in return—radically new Zionists, who as the novelist V S Naipaul once wrote of an Iranian cleric, slide down their theology to the confusion of their certainties. Al-e Ahmad’s little chronicle is instructive. It is not instructive in the way intended.”
“The heirs of Kook’s {and Khomeini’s} initial openness, his attempt to encompass all the competing viewpoints in a single harmonious whole, now run the risk of being closed in on themselves, imagining smugly that only they represent true integration. In the abstractness of a historiosophy there is room for a variety of stances, but concrete historical reality leaves room to choose only one, to the exclusion of all others. Avoiding this pitfall calls for a nobility of spirit, and a rare capacity to listen. But, as Eliezer Schweid has put it, “such brilliant intuition is not one of those things that can be passed on.””
4. Human Autonomy, the State, and Theosophic “Risk”: Rosenzweig and the Iranian Reformists in Dialogue
“Belief in the essential inferiority of the multitude (their being existentially—that is, really and not metaphorically—quadrupeds), along with the philosopher’s preoccupation with the movements of existence and unification with the higher world of intelligibles, does not expose much care for the everyday individual…such a philosopher is not haunted by the specter of the everyday individual’s call for being seen, respected and attended to—by the everyday individual’s call for having a noble private and political life…[a] Derrida[ean] hauntology” ”…in a different but no less vigorous manner, Sadra’s {theosophy} would be political philosophy [that] could ground the equality of citizens’ political rights as a condition of possibility of the existential perfection of man’s intellects.”
“The problem of vilāyat also includes at its fulcrum a theoretical component connected to the appearance and manifestation of God. Masters of Irfān [trans. theosophy] possess theoretical interpretations regarding such divine appearance and manifestation. They are not, however, supposed to derive ethical norms sui generis from it. These masters might be honorable and pious and capable of discerning evil, but their mastery of mystical material does not allow them to generate the basis for the evaluation of ethical values. They are capable of interpreting the world through God’s names and attributes, and this is the basis for their theoretical exercise of irfānī vilāyat [theosophic vilāyat] as valīs. For God manifests himself into the world through these names and attributes.”45
“Alongside the primacy of existence, substantive motion (al-ḥaraka aj-jawharīya) plays a key role in Sadra’s philosophy. Substantial motion also has a transcendental purpose. It connects the other-worldly with the world. It propels material towards the intellect, multiplicity towards singularity, appearance towards reality, the deficient towards perfection, all the while combining permanent renewal with eternal life inside of its unstable nature. It is the conduit whereby God brings forth new creation and anchors it in nature. Yet in Sadra’s existence philosophy, substantive motion along with permanent creation does not only have a narrow eschatological meaning, it also implies the relationship between the imperfect and the volatile on the one hand, and the absolute perfect essence. The deficient essence captured by the non-Being can hope for an eternal life through continual renewal and autonomy.”
“Coercion provides life with legal redress against law. By being coercive itself, the State remains hard on the heels of life. The point of all coercion is to institute new law. It is not the denial of law as one might think under the spell of cataclysmic behavior; on the contrary, it lays the basis for law. But a paradox lurks in the idea of a new law. Law is essentially old law. In the coercive act, the law constantly becomes new law. And the State is thus equally both lawful and coercive, refuge of the old law and the source of the new…At every moment the state is forcibly deciding the contradiction between conservation and renovation, between old law and new. It thus constantly resolves the contradiction, while the course of the people’s life only delays the solution through the onward flow of time. The State attacks the problem; indeed, the State is itself nothing but the constant resolution of this contradiction”.
“In Rozensweig’s new thinking, openness and boundedness as features at the same time means openness only through the concepts of creation, revelation, and redemption. To these categories the personal experience of the individual is subject. Immanence and transcendence to each “other” are characterized as alternating events. The event of revelation each time, at Sinai, Golgotha, or in a personal meeting, is itself a relationship between the easily violable boundaries of God and man. But divine revelation commands that there be relationships across the boundaries of the three elements. If relationships can never involve fewer than two, boundaries must remain. If two cannot reduce further, these two must co-relate in order to know anything important of the other”.
5. Conclusions
“The consequential confrontation of the Divine Spheres with the operative attributes of the Divine is a proof that the Kabbala is closer to the Bible than Jewish philosophy, especially that of Maimonides. That this philosophy is considered more worthy of respect than the Kabbalah is only right in the sense that philosophy is in and of itself a response to the anxiety that is released by myth. Kabbala is more venerable than philosophy in that it does not even care about the problematique posed by the notion of the creation of the world.”52
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | (Schaefer 2017). Translation from the German is my own. |
2 | The two main texts which advance this argument are Strauss’s early 1933 (Strauss 1995) and his later 1952 collection of essays in (Strauss 1988). For a comprehensive compilation of Strauss’ writings in this genre, see (Strauss 2013). For seminal studies on the potentially fecund meeting of “medievals and moderns” for the sake of Western civilization in Strauss’ thought, see Georges Tamer (2011) and Kenneth Hart Green (1993). |
3 | See (Meier 2017) for a contemporary Straussian-inspired argument for the necessity of polemic political theology to defend the Western philosophic tradition against various religious fundamentalisms of our contemporary age. Georges Tamer along with other historically sensitive and critical scholars of Strauss will point out that many of the philosophers whom Strauss associated with contexts of religious persecution, such as Alfarabi and Maimonides (in the latter half of his career), were in fact free to philosophize “dangerously” in quite favorable conditions of aristocratic patronage and robust public debate against clerical opponents. See (Tamer 2011, pp. 27–34). |
4 | Such a view pushes back not just against Strauss’ position regarding medieval political philosophy but what are perhaps the most rigorous contemporary academic studies on medieval political thought in both traditions. See, for example, Menachem Lorberbaum’s treatment of Maimonides in (Lorberbaum 2002) or Alireza Shomali’s treatment of Alfarabi in (Shomali 2019, pp. 249–332). |
5 | For seminal academic biographies of both figures sensitive to their ideas, see (Mirsky 2019; Moin 2009; Amirpur 2021). |
6 | For excellent historically contextualized overviews of the various conceptual matrices at work, the canonical texts involved, and carefully marshalled bibliographies, see (Harvey 2013; Stroumsa 2009). |
7 | See the discussion on the najasat issue in reference to Shia–Jewish relations in (Amir-Moezzi 2013b, pp. 816–23). |
8 | (Wasserstrom 1995, pp. 93–135). Also see Amir-Moezzi (2013a) “Ismail’ism and Medieval Jewish Thought in Islamic Territories”, in (Ibid., pp. 824–27). |
9 | For more on the parallels between Jewish notions of galut and Twelver Shia notions of gheyba, see (Krinis 2013). |
10 | The exposure to Fatimid-era Ismaili missionaries and the texts they brought to medieval Andalusia led to the eclectic adoption of concepts not only from Ismaili Shiism, but to other streams within Shiism, such as the Imami-Twelvers. |
11 | |
12 | For a comprehensive bibliographical review on this history of intellectual exchange between Jewish and Shia thinkers in the medieval era, see (Krinis 2019). Krinis includes summaries of various academic oeuvres and works extending from the “founder” of “Shia–Jewish Studies” Israel Friedlander (1867–1920), who wrote on the impact of Shiism on Jewish heretical messianic movements to Wilferd Madelung who explores the Twelver Shia impact on the Karaite movement. Other contemporary prominent scholars exploring medieval Shia–Jewish theological connections include Meier Bar-Asher, Sabine Schmidtke, and Dennis Halft. Of course, the most robust period of Shia–Jewish exchange beyond the theological level occurred in the Fatimid era, as has been revealed in the copious scholarship on the Cairo Geniza. |
13 | For a thorough reception history of the Kuzari through the 19th century, see (Shear 2008). |
14 | Most recently, Ezra Tzfadya has systematically demonstrated how these Shia concepts constitutive to wilāya are ensconced within Halevi’s deployment of the term walī (or guardian). Halevi uses the term in connection with his conception of “the prophetic”, a status he ascribes to the rabbis of the Second Temple Era and the theopolitical aspirations of one of the text’s core protagonists, the Khazar emperor. Previous philologists such as Diana Lobel attributed the deployment of this term to the Sufi concept of sainthood considering the frequency of the term’s appearance in those texts of that era. See (Tzfadya 2022; Lobel 2000). Tzfadya’s arguments flesh out a line of thought briefly sketched in (Lorberbaum 2011). |
15 | Indeed, any Persian language source engaging in an overview of Wilāya will offer 30 or so different definitions and Persian translations for the word, including master, owner, friend, and sign. All imply some type of “correlative” dimension. See, for example, the introduction to Mohsen Kadivar’s seminal (Kadivar 1998). |
16 | For a synthetic overview of the medieval Islamic philosophic tradition’s conceptual apparatus vis-à-vis and often melding into mysticism in the works of what is often termed the “Illuminationist” tradition, represented most famously by the great thinkers Ibn Arabi and Suhrawardi, see (Walbridge 1988). Excellent representative medieval parallels in the Jewish tradition would be the figures of Nahmanides and Ibn Ezra, both of whom are famous for integrating this form of intellectualized mysticism in their “esoteric” biblical commentaries. For an excellent and hitherto canonical contemporary study on Nahmanides intellectual context, see (Halbertal 2020). For an excellent conceptually synthetic overview of Ibn Ezra’s ideas, see (Langermann 2021). Shia Islam contains numerous denominations and sects. This study’s treatment of early-modern through contemporary Shiism will focus on the denomination of Shiism known as Twelver Shiism, which dominates contemporary Lebanon, Iraq, and Iran and is the official form of Shiism in the Islamic Republic. Briefly put, Twelver Shiism is distinguished from other denominations within Shia Islam due to its theory of an “occulted” twelfth Imam referred to as the Mahdi who will return to augur in the messianic age. All subsequent references to “Shiism” or the “Shia” in this study refer to the Twelver denomination. For an excellent introduction to Shiism that covers the emergence of denominations (i.e., Twelver, Ismaili, Zaydi), see (Haider 2014). |
17 | (Groezinger 2005). Translation is my own. |
18 | For an excellent historical and conceptual contextualization of this process of mystical “theosophication” from the Safavid era, see (Anzali 2017). For an introduction to the roots and consequences of the Shia conceptual preoccupation with cosmology due to its theory of the Imamate, see (Amir-Moezzi 1994). |
19 | There are too many excellent introductions to Hassidism to list here. For an excellent and innovative recent overview of the state of scholarship on Hassidism, see (Biale et al. 2017), in conjunction with a series of essays critiquing nearly every chapter within the volume by (Heschel and Magid 2020). For an excellent introduction to Mullah Sadra’s thought, see (Kalin 2015) in their “Makers of Islamic Civilization” book series. |
20 | (Lorberbaum 2017, p. 234). For the seminal history of the Sabbatian revolt, see (Scholem 2016). |
21 | For an excellent collection of articles detailing the “flattening out” of philosophical and mystical processes in the transition from Islamic Illuminationism and (Neo)Platonism to Sadra’s theosophy, see (Hajatpour 2021). |
22 | For an excellent description of the Hassidic “vita aktiva” and the relationship between the tzaddik and his followers, see (Magid 2014, pp. 51–80). Also see Lorberbaum, “Rethinking Halakha in Modern Eastern Europe: Mysticism, Antinomianism, Positivism”, for a comprehensive account of the revolutionary concepts of orthopraxic Jewish legal theology rooted in the esoteric-exoteric dynamics negotiated by via the figure of the Hassidic Tzadik, and the parallel processes of emphatic disassociation between esoteric mysticism and exoteric law advocated by the movement of “Mitnagdism”. |
23 | See the excellent conceptually synthetic account of Tabatabai’s oeuvre and his significance in laying the intellectual basis for the Islamic Revolution in (Dabashi 2017, pp. 273–323). It must be noted that while Tabatabai supported both the removal of the Shah and a strong clerical influence on national politics, he publicly did not subscribe to Khomeini’s theory of the political rule of a singular jurist (Wilāyat al-Faqīh). This complex theological-political stance has made him a canonical thinker both within and outside pro-regime clerical circles in Iran. |
24 | For more on doctrinal conceptions of Shia occultation and its relationship to claims on religious and political authority in the post-occultation era, see (Mavani 2013, pp. 135–77). |
25 | It is beyond the scope of this introductory note to provide a sociological-historical explanation for, or hermeneutical reflection upon, the genealogy of this phenomenon in the respective traditions. |
26 | |
27 | For an excellent description of the evolution of Khomeini’s religious and political thought alongside his personal biography and polemical revolutionary leadership, see (Dabashi 2017, pp. 409–84). |
28 | For a discussion on Naraqi’s juridical construction of religious authority in conjunction with a historically sensitive hermeneutics of the sole surviving hagiography on his life, see (Tzfadya 2022). For more on al-Ansārī’s quietist consolidation of religious authority in the figure of the Marj‘a at-Taqlid and his status as the sole Marj‘a of his generation, see (Sachedina 1988). Khomeini and his successor Ali Khamenei have attempted, with little success, to make the Supreme Leader of Iran the sole legitimate Marj‘a of the Shia worldwide. |
29 | For a more theoretically sophisticated analysis on the resonance of Karbala on the contemporary Shia theopolitical imagination, see (Dabashi 2014, pp. 73–102). |
30 | To answer questions of this sort, scholars and laypeople will often look to hints within Khomeini’s mystical corpus to ascertain whether Khomeini himself believed he completed the four theosophic journeys Mullah Sadra that lead towards human perfection (described in the treatise al-Asfār al-Arb‘a, trans. The Four Journeys) or other modes of ultimate mystical and prophetic ascent suggested by the medieval Illuminationist philosophers. See (Moin 2009, pp. 39–52). Alternatively, they will ponder over the nature of Khomeini’s refusal to overtly contradict those who would address him with the honorific of “Imam” or clerical opposition to his reading of mystical poetry on state TV in the early years of the Islamic Republic to argue against that position. See (Rigeon 2014). In the case of Reza Hajatpour, his incredibly thorough accounting of Khomeini’s political and legal thought leads him to posit the legal innovation of Khomeini made with the Wilāyat al-Faqīh idea in terms of a religiously anarchic/autarchic sovereign decision connected to a thoroughgoing politicization of Shia Islam and the cheapening mythologization of its collective spiritual memory. He does not see Khomeini in terms of any kind of fealty to theological imperatives emanating from either the Shia Islamic legal tradition or the Islamic mystical corpus. See (Hajatpour 2002, p. 212). “With the politicization of Islam, Khomeini achieved its thoroughgoing temporalization. He contributed to the fact that the clerics would, from thereon out, be considered as political instantiations rather than pastoral or moral leaders (which had formerly been central to their roles)” (Translation from German is my own). Hamid Enayat posits Khomeini’s support for the erecting of an Islamic Republic in purely juridical terms: “keeping well within the bounds set by the great masters of the past”, despite Khomeini’s mystical scholarship. See (Enayat 1983, p. 160). |
31 | See George Sieg’s illuminating study for the most rigorous argument so far “in favor”, an approach I hope to affirm, complement, and complicate. G. J Sieg. (Sieg 2021). Also see Alexander Nachman’s treatment of the legacy of Khomeini’s personalized model of “esotericist perfection” affecting specific legal matters within the Islamic Republic even after his death in (Nachman 2019). |
32 | For an excellent discussion of Rav Kook’s conceptual engagement with 19th century continental philosophy, see (Fischer 2007; Ross 2020, pp. 197–200). For a masterful comprehensive discussion of Rav Kook’s early thought before he assumed an institutional imprimatur in the Zionist community, see (Mirsky 2021). |
33 | For more on Rav Kook’s institutionalist visions, see (Ravitzky 1993). |
34 | (Kook 1980, p. 92). Translation from Hebrew is my own. |
35 | For more on the potentially heretical elements of Rav Kook’s diaries, which were long kept hidden, see (Mirsky 2019, pp. 92–120). |
36 | This conceptual transvaluation achieved by Rav Kook’s son Zvi Yehuda and his followers is best explicated in (Ravitzky 1993, pp. 131–44). |
37 | For an excellent discussion on Rav Kook’s cosmology of perfection and perfectibility, see (Ross 2020, pp. 193–97). |
38 | |
39 | Khomeini. Al-Jihād al-akbar, pp. 46–47. |
40 | For more on the doctrine of ‘ismā, see (Mavani 2013, pp. 89–92), and on the parameters of possible dissent included within the doctrine, pp. 127–29. Mavani notes that it is not theologically axiomatic across the historical and geographical breadth of Twelver Shia tradition that the Imams were infallible in an absolute sense. |
41 | Khomeini, Vilāyat-i Faqīh. p. 77 |
42 | (Al-e Ahmad and Daneshvar 2017, pp. 54–55). For a seminal, comprehensive historical and conceptually synthetic discussion of al-e Ahmad’s “Islamist ideology”, see (Dabashi 2017, pp. 39–101). For an accessible yet thoroughly contextualized treatment of the Al-e Ahmad travelogue, see (Sadeghi-Boroujerdi and Yadgar 2021). |
43 | Such “normalized sacralization” was achieved via seemingly de-sanctifying principles of legal expediency (Maṣlaḥa) and “elastic law” (Fiq-i pūyā) on behalf of a theopolitical principle of “regime preservation” (Ḥefẓ-i nizām) in the theological visions used to buttress Iranian constitutional reforms in the late 1980s. The Vilayat-i Faqīh (Guardianship of Supreme Jurisconsult) doctrine, in this constellation, transforms into a doctrine of the Absolute Guardianship of the Supreme Jurisconsult. For more on these theological-political transformations in Khomeini’s later thought, see (Mavani 2013, pp. 180–84). |
44 | For more discussions of Soroush’s legal epistemology and rigorous syntheses of his works, see (Dahlen 2003, pp. 187–333). Heydar (2018) demonstrates the epistemological contours of Soroush’s negotiation of historicism and a concept of an “Absolute” within an overarching theory of religion. For an excellent situating of Soroush’s ideas and person in historical context, see (Ghamari Tabrizi 2008; Amirpur 2003). |
45 | (Soroush 1999). Translation from Persian is my own. |
46 | It is clear, as Gil Anidjar has most expertly demonstrated in Jew and Arab: A History of the Enemy, that Rosenzweig’s positing of the Muslim as an enemy of the Christian and Jew is an inversion of the long-standing European-Christian positing of the Arab qua. Muslim as the political enemy and the Jew as the theological-racial enemy. (Anidjar 2003). For a collection of Rosenzweig’s texts on Islam alongside a critical introduction, see (Rosenzweig 2003). |
47 | For more on the sources which informed Rosenzweig’s theologically narrow view of Islam, see (Roozen 2022). As Roozen notes, even Rosenzweig’s reference to “Imams” (Imamlehre) derived from an examination of Goldzieher’s Vorlesungen uber den Islam does not make the distinction between Sunni and Shia Islamic notions of the doctrine presented in that text. |
48 | For more on the role of tzimtzum in Rosenzweig’s thought, a concept he derives from both Lurianic Kabbalah and Friedrich Schelling, see (Pollock 2021; Horwitz 2006). |
49 | For more on Rosenzweig’s relationship to German Idealism, see (Pollock 2009). |
50 | For a philosophically fecund discussion of Rosenzweig’s ethical-metaphysical dialogism, see (Gibbs 1994). |
51 | For more on the potential within Rosenzweig’s thought to unlock a political critique, see (Batnitzky 1997; Honig 2011), and Eric Santner in (Santner 2001; Vatter 2021). |
52 | (Scholem and Strauss 2006, p. 23). Translation from French is my own. |
53 | The term “co-production” is a relatively recent and helpful term used by scholars Katharina Hayden and David Nirenberg to describe the reflexive simultaneous reconstitution and preservation of religious nomoi based on polemic encounter. Both see the medieval Judeo-Islamic tradition as a helpful example for their historiographical construct. See (Hayden 2022; Nirenberg 2016). For a reflection and critique of how modern Jewish philosophers deeply steeped in both the medieval Jewish tradition transformed the polemic refutative literary element essential to the Judeo-Islamic medieval tradition into one rooted in dialogic subjectivity that has perhaps led to romanticized perspectives on that era of exchange, see (Hughes 2012). For a helpful overview of the current historiographical debates related to the medieval Islamic–Jewish “convivencia”, see (Cohen 2014). |
54 | For a representative, comprehensive, and conceptually synthetic work with the normative bent explicated above, see (Fraenkel 2014). This work has fed into his reflective account of using the medieval tradition as a bridge between Muslims and Jews in the context of the Palestinian–Israeli conflict in (Fraenkel and Walzer 2015). |
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Tzfadya, E. Modern Shia Islamic and Jewish Political Theosophy: An Elective Affinity? Religions 2023, 14, 176. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020176
Tzfadya E. Modern Shia Islamic and Jewish Political Theosophy: An Elective Affinity? Religions. 2023; 14(2):176. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020176
Chicago/Turabian StyleTzfadya, Ezra. 2023. "Modern Shia Islamic and Jewish Political Theosophy: An Elective Affinity?" Religions 14, no. 2: 176. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020176
APA StyleTzfadya, E. (2023). Modern Shia Islamic and Jewish Political Theosophy: An Elective Affinity? Religions, 14(2), 176. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020176