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Revival in The Arab East:
Elsewhere in the Arab
world, meanwhile, the last vestiges of European political dominance
were being eliminated. Egypt, for example, after ousting in 1952 a
royal dynasty going back to the 1800s and installing Gamal Abdel
Nasser as president, forced the British to relinquish control of the
Suez Canal and withdraw from the country. Algeria, ten years later,
won its independence from France after six years of bitter warfare.
Even earlier, Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon had broken their ties with
Britain and France.
This tumultuous
period also saw an increase in the influence of the United States
and the Soviet Union in the Middle East. Neither power had played a
major role in the early phases of penetration, but this changed as
they developed conflicting interests with regard to the Arab-Israeli
dispute, the construction of the Aswan Dam in Egypt, the rise of a
number of radical governments in the area, and the emergence of the
Arab world as a pivotal supplier of oil to the world.
In the same period,
the Arab countries themselves, voluntarily and pragmatically,
continued to adopt Western techniques, forms, and to some extent
concepts. Most Arab countries, for example, have embraced the
concept of the sovereign nation-state and Western patterns of
political administration: parliaments, political parties, and
constitutions. Many, too, have adopted Western legal codes, have
accepted international and regional organizations and international
courts as means of dealing with other nations, and have organized
and equipped their armed forces along Western lines. In recent
years, most Arab countries have also adopted the modern industrial
economy as a national goal and introduced modern techniques of
agriculture and modern methods of transport and mass communications,
and invested vast sums in education. Even in recreation and
amusement, Western influences are strong.
If Western
influences are important in the Middle East, however, they are by no
means paramount. Western forms have been adapted as much as they
have been adopted, and healthy hybrid forms and concepts abound.
More importantly, traditional values are still deeply cherished and
promoted. In sum, modernization has not been entirely synonymous
with Westernization. By the end of the 1970s the Arabs, having
assumed control of their own destinies, had emerged as full and
independent participants in the affairs of the world. In the
forefront was Saudi Arabia, the heartland of Islam, and the site of
the momentous events which initiated Islamic history fourteen
centuries ago.
In the sixteenth
century three Muslim empires are at or close to the pinnacle of
their power and brilliance: the Ottomans under Suleiman the
Magnificent, Safavid Persia under Shah Abbas the Great, and Mogul
India under Akbar the Great. The Ottoman Turks have conquered and
maintain effective control over diverse peoples in a vast empire
stretching from Persia almost to the gates of Vienna and along the
north coast of Africa to Algiers. In the Arabian Peninsula the
Ottomans penetrate to al-Hasa on the Arabian Gulf and to Mocha on
the Red Sea. However, the sharifs of Mecca and Medina are virtually
independent. Throughout this period the Ottomans contest control of
the Arabian Gulf and the Red Sea with the Portuguese, who establish
themselves in Bahrain, Muscat, and Hormuz and assist Ethiopia in
repulsing the Turks from the coast of East Africa.
Islam numbers many
millions of adherents outside the Middle Eastern countries:

Sunset
silhouettes a minaret in Sarajevo,
a city of some
eighty mosques that bear witness to the
long Islamic
heritage of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The Mopti
Mosque
in the West
African Republic of Mali.

A Taiwanese
religious teacher.

A mosque in
Washington, D.C.,
a landmark for
millions of Muslims in North America

One of the
largest mosques of the Far East is in Bandar Seri Bagawan,
capital of the
Sultanate of Brunei in Southeast Asia.
Acknowledgements:
These pages were incorporated from "ARAMCO and Its World: Arabia And
The Middle East", Edited by Ismail I. Nawwab, Peter C. Speers & Paul
F. Hoye, Islam and Islamic History Section, published in 1980 by
Arabian American Oil Company, Washington D.C.

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