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CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
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community of Islam may have disputed over the individual to be appointed, but they
never doubted that the maintenance of the faith in its purity required a leader, and that
it was, therefore, incumbent on men to appoint one. The basis is Ijma, Agreement, not
Scripture or tradition from Muhammad or analogy based on these two.
It will be seen from this that the de facto ground to the claim of the Ottoman
Sultan is the best. The Muslim community must have a leader; this is the greatest Muslim
ruling Muslims; he claims the leadership and holds it. If the English rule were to become
Muslim, the Muslims would rally to it. The ground of election amounts to nothing, the
nomination to little more, except for antiquarians; the possession of the Prophetic relics
is a sentiment that would have weight with the crowd only; no canon lawyer would seriously
urge it. The guardianship of the two Harams is precarious. A Turkish reverse in Syria
would withdraw every Turkish soldier from Arabia and the great Sharif families of Mecca,
all of the blood of the Prophet, would proclaim a Khalifa from among themselves. At
present, only the Turkish garrison holds them in check.
But a Khalifa has responsibilities. He absolutely cannot become a constitutional
monarch in our sense. He rules under lawdivine lawand the people can depose him if
he breaks it; but he cannot set up beside himself a constitutional assembly and give it
rights against himself. He is the successor of Muhammad and must rule, within limitations,
as an absolute monarch. So impossible is the modern Khalifate,
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and so gigantic are its responsibilities. The millions of Chinese Muslims look to him
and all Muslims of central Asia; the Muslims of India who are not Shi'ite also look to
him. So, too, in Africa and wherever in the world the People of Muhammad have gone, their
eyes turn to the Bosphorus and the Great Sultan. This is what has been called the modern
Pan-Islamic movement; it is a modern fact.
The position of the other Muslim sects we have already seen. Of Shi'ite rulers, there
are the Imamites in Persia; scattered Zaydites still in south Arabia and fugitive in
Africa; strange secret bodies of Isma'iliansDruses, Nusayrites, Assassinsstill
holding their own in mountain recesses, forgotten by the world; oldest of all, the Sharifs
of Morocco, who are Sunnites and antedate all theological differences, holding only by the
blood of the Prophet. At Zanzibar, Uman and the Mzab in Algeria are the descendants of the
Kharijites. Probably, somewhere or other, there are some fossilized descendants of every
sect that has ever arisen, either to trouble the peace of Islam or to save it from
scholastic decrepitude and death. Insurrections and heresies have their own uses.
It only remains to make mention of two modern movements which have deeply affected the
Islam of today. The Pan-Islamic movement, noticed above, strives as much as anything to
bring the Muslim world into closer touch with the science and thought of the Christian
world, rallying all the Muslim peoples at the same time round the Ottoman Sultan as their
spiritual head and holding fast by the kernel of
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