Further reading: Helena Cobban, The Palestinian Lib-
eration Organisation: People, Power and Politics (Cam-
bridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984); David Hirst,
The Gun and the Olive Branch: The Roots of Violence in
the Middle East (New York: Thunder’s Mouth/Nation
Books, 2003); Graham Usher, Palestine in Crisis: The
Struggle for Peace and Political Independence after Oslo
(London: Pluto Press, 1995).
pan-Islamism
(pan-Islam)
One of the responses Muslim leaders had to the
colonization of their lands by European powers
in the 19th century was what Europeans called
pan-Islamism. This was an attempt to forge a
modern Islamic political unity (ittihad-i Islam)
based not on nationality, ethnicity, or geography,
but on membership in the
umma
, the universal
community of Muslims. Although this idea has
its roots in memories of Islamic unity in the
foundational era of m
Uhammad
(d. 632) and
the first caliphs, it was more directly inspired
by 19th-century nationalist movements among
Slavs, Greeks, and others.
The pan-Islamist idea first took hold during
the 1870s in the lands of the Ottoman Empire,
which had been losing territory to the Russian
and Austro-Hungarian empires since the 17th
century. It was promoted by Sultan Abd al-
Hamid II (r. 1876–1909) and supported by the
Islamic reformer/activist J
amal
al
-d
in
al
-a
Fghani
(1838–97) and later by Said Nursi (1878–1960).
The Ottomans had already initiated extensive
administrative reforms, the t
anzimat
, aimed at
modernizing the state and limiting the influence
of traditional Islamic authorities and other oppo-
nents. As part of his pan-Islamist program Abd
al-Hamid revived the symbolic importance of the
caliphate
in an effort to win the support of Mus-
lims even beyond the boundaries of the Ottoman
Empire, where he sought to convince Muslims
that he was upholding the faith on their behalf.
He also built a new railway that carried pilgrims
to the sacred cities of m
edina
and m
ecca
from
Istanbul, the Ottoman capital, and other locations
along its path. In the 1870s al-Afghani traveled to
Afghanistan and other Muslim lands, including
Iraq, India, Iran, and Russia to promote the pan-
Islamist cause. Al-Afghani returned to Istanbul
from his mission in 1892, where he died a few
years later.
Abd al-Hamid’s efforts on behalf of Muslim
unity enjoyed little success. He encountered strong
opposition from a well-organized coalition of secu-
larist reformers known as the Young Turks, who
succeeded in forcing him to leave the throne in
1909. Pan-Islamism was also undermined by other
nationalist currents that were stirring in Ottoman
lands and India, and it failed to rally non-Sunni
Muslim minorities like the Shia. British support
for the Hashimites in the Arabian Hijaz helped end
Ottoman control and paved the way for Saudi con-
quest in the 1920s. Abd al-Hamid’s own authoritar-
ian character was also detrimental. Pan-Islamism
was used to rally Muslim support for the Ottoman
alliance with Germany against Britain, France, and
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