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Hazm sketched above. We must take the Qur'anic expressions as names and not as
indicating attributes to us. It is true that his creed shows signs of a philosophical
width lacking in Ibn Hazm. Like the Mu'tazilites, e.g. Abu Hudhayl, he defines
largely by negations. God is not this; is not affected by that. It is even phrased so as
to be capable of a pantheistic explanation, and we find that Ibn Rushd wrote a commentary
on it. But it may be doubted whether Ibn Tumart was himself a pantheist. All phases of
Islam, as we have seen, ran toward that; and here there is only a little indiscretion in
the wording. But it may easily have been that he had besides, like the Fatimids, a secret
teaching or exposition of those simpler declarations which were intended for the mass of
the people. Among his successors distinct traces of such a thing appear; both Aristotelian
philosophers and advanced Sufis are connected with the Muwahhid movement. That, however,
belongs to the sequel.
The success of Ibn Tumart, if halting at first, was eventually complete. As a simple
lawyer who felt called upon to protestas, indeed, are all good Muslims in virtue of a
tradition from Muhammadagainst the abuses of the time, he accomplished comparatively
little. As Mahdi, he and his supporter and successor, Abd al-Mu'min, swept the country.
For his movement was not merely Imamite and Muslim, but an expression as well of Berber
nationalism. Here was a man, sprung from their midst, of their own stock and tongue, who,
as Prophet of God, called there to arms. They obeyed his call, worshipped
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SYNCRETISM OF IBN TUMART
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him and fought for him. He translated the Qur'an for them into Berber; the call to
prayers was given in Berber; functionaries of the church had to know Berber; his own
theological writings circulated in Berber as well as in Arabic. As Persia took Islam and
moulded it to suit herself, so now did the Berber tribes. And a strange jumble they made
of it. With them, the Zahirite system of canon law, rejected by all other Muslim peoples,
enjoyed its one brief period of power and glory. Shi'ite legends and superstitions mingled
with philosophical free thought. The book of mystery, al-Jafr, written by Ali, and
containing the history of the world to the end of time, was said to have passed from the
custody of al-Ghazzali at his death to the hands of the Mahdi and was by him committed to
his successors. If only in view of the syncretism practised by both, it was fitting that
al-Ghazzali and Ibn Tumart should be brought closely together. Yet it is hard to explain
the persistence with which the great Ash'arite is made the teacher and guide of the semi-Zahirite.
There must have been something, now obscure to us, in their respective systems which
suggested to contemporaries such intimate connection.
The rule of the Muwahhids lasted until 667, nearly one hundred years, and involved in
its circle of influence many weighty personalities. With some of these we will now deal
shortly.
It has been told above how narrow in general were the intellectual interests of the
West. Canon law, poetry, history, geography were eagerly pursued, but little of original
value was produced. Originality
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