Some thoughts on the death of 'anti-Marxist' Maxime Rodinson

By Michael Young 
Special to The Daily Star
Thursday, May 27, 2004


With the death of Maxime Rodinson on Monday, the world of Middle Eastern
studies has lost a French Marxist scholar who rarely succumbed to dogma,
and who always enriched his works through the intricacies inherent in his
own person - those of a working-class French Jew whose parents were
killed at Auschwitz, and who devoted his life to learning about the Arabs
and Islam.

For many outside the academy (where Marx lives on, beyond extradition)
Rodinson's Marxist approach to Middle Eastern history may now seem dated.
Yet his biography of the Prophet Mohammed, written in 1961, remains an
essential text today for its ambition to situate the rise of Islam
primarily in its social and economic context, from whence a Muslim empire
sprang. 

For Rodinson, embryonic Islam triumphed because it met the sociological
needs of the Arabian Peninsula, and Mohammed (the political actor rather
than the envoy of God) was its essential handmaiden. Rodinson's ambition
was "to make understandable, how and why this mystic, intoxicated with
the Divine, was able to become a head of state, a military commander and
an ideological leader."

Read today, the book provokes two thoughts: that Rodinson's approach
remains as useful as any to understand a modern rendering of political
Islam that can only really be grasped by delving into the "materialistic"
roots of its proponents; but also that militant Muslims have increasingly
embraced the image of the Prophet armed as their ideal.

Nor was Rodinson a suffocating determinist. As he wrote in his 1981 book
"Marxism and the Muslim World," there was indeed "an underlying core, a
constant, an inspiration, an initial elan which, whether it comes from
Allah or Mohammed, was encouraged if not determined, by social,
historical, political, cultural and other conditions." But it was also
true that "from the beginning this elan was embodied in ideologies and
active organizations (so that these and) the actions decided on ...
necessitated practical revisions."

What does Rodinson offer the Middle Eastern liberal? When he criticized
Edward Said's "Orientalism," he was slandered by the vindictive author as
"an ex-Stalinist incapable of understanding the nature of criticism, and
more generally the critical method." Yet what Said had written of
Rodinson earlier was more on the mark, namely that he "made a constant
attempt to keep (his) work responsive to the material (he was studying)
and not to a doctrinal preconception."

Rodinson's variegated career echoed his dislike for straightjackets. The
son of Russian immigrants, he spent seven years in Lebanon during the
1940s - six of them as a French civil servant and six months as a teacher
at a Maqasid high school in Sidon. He returned to France in 1947 and
remained in the French Communist Party until 1958, when he left following
Nikita Khruchev's revelations of Stalin's crimes at the 20th Party
Congress.

He later described himself as an "independent Marxist" who refused to
advise a course of militant action, particularly in the Arab world. This,
he admitted, opened him up to charges of being "anti-Marxist," and he
would later write that he had often been "a source of irritation and
despair" to his former comrades. However, Rodinson never recycled himself
into a neo-conservative. On Israel he always remained critical, admitting
to "a repugnance (for) Jewish nationalism" (though he did later say
Israel had legitimacy as "a new nationality").

This repugnance he expressed most fiercely in a pamphlet published in
Jean-Paul Sartre's journal "Les Temps Modernes" in 1967, at the end of
the Arab-Israeli war. It was later translated into English under the
title "Israel: A Colonial Settler State?" Rodinson, in dissecting
Zionism, wrote of it that the "belief in the infallibility of one's own
'ethnic' group is a frequent phenomenon in the history of human groups.
It is called racism." Though the passage conditioned racism on a sense of
faultlessness (which not all Jews, or indeed Zionists, necessarily
possessed), it surely nourished many an argument equating Zionism with
racism.

But Rodinson was more subtle than that, and in the closing lines of his
pamphlet he wrote of the Palestinians, in a passage that, regrettably,
has as much relevance today as it did then: "It is not easy to get a
conquered person to resign himself to defeat, and it is not made any
easier by loudly proclaiming how right it was that he was soundly beaten.
It is generally wiser to offer him compensation. And those who have not
suffered from the fight can (and, I believe, even must) recommend
forgiveness for the injuries inflicted. They are hardly entitled to
demand it." 

What has been written of Rodinson has focused on his work as an
"Orientalist." As my colleague Samir Kassir wrote in Al-Nahar, "he was
not an ordinary Orientalist ... he transcended classical Orientalism to
engage in critical analysis." The description is revealing in that it
makes Rodinson more palatable to those weaned on the milk of
anti-colonial academics that have regarded classic Orientalism as an
implement in European domination of the Middle East.

Rodinson would never have denied his anti-colonial antipathies. But he
also embodied the erudition that could come out of that colonial
experience, without feeling self-conscious about it. There was much
common sense in his writings, and therefore an alluring universality -
whether one bought into his arguments or not. His successors in academe
could learn much from that - but will they?


Michael Young is opinion editor of THE DAILY STAR


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