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THE RISE OF THE ARAB.

HISTORY OF THE RACE. UPHOLDERS OF CIVILISATION. All the world is hearing of Mesopolamia in these days, ages after its oldtime glory has passed away. It seems as if we may live to see tho ruins of ancient Babylon a scene of splendour again, for the Arabs are rising as a power in the world once more. They have their kingdom of Arabia, called Hedjas; and now the Emir Feisul has been elected king of their new State cf Irak, as Mesopotamia is in future to be called. It is one of the almost incredible things of national life that these dwellers in tents, amid the sands of the desert, should be descended from a race which was once a supreme power and the foremost intellectual race in the world. What has the untamed Arab of the wilds to do with cities and civilisations? The answer Is that he once ruled great cities and kept civilisation alive for centuries! The Arab is one of Nature’s miracle men, and we should have been intellectually lost without him. The Saracen, Moor ajid Arab of history are one. The nation is one of many tribes and of varying habits, but the strain of genius, generosity and fidelity to frienps seems to run through nil. These qualities, based on a passionate love of freedom and unwavering courage, made the Arab community the shining light of education when the rest of the world had sunk into ignorance. They were poets and warriors before Mohammed, nearlv 1400 years ago, but when they adopted the religion of Mohammed they became missioners. They conquered with the sword, proclaiming “ There is but one God. and Mohammed is his nroohet.” Their conquests extended from Egypt to India, from Lisbon to Samarkand. But no people of their fibre could devote themselves only to material gain and religious propaganda, and their old love of literature, which had asserted itself in the glorious poems chanted in the wilderness bv their bards, cropped up again in these Arab conquerors, and throughout the Middle Ages these men from the desert were t’:o great scholars and teachers of Europe. There were lev; branches of learning that they left untouched. They managed to get hold of copies' of Greek masterpieces, in which the learning of a vanished civilisation was embalmed. They saved much Greek literature for us. The study of the body they did net improve, for they were not allowed bv their religion to practise anatomy : hut they studied and taught medicine. TTiey taught the use of herbs; thev founded and established chemistry. Star-gazers from old time they began the modern study of astronomy. Coming from the East, thev brought with them a store of hereditary fairy lore. The Arabs had a noble literature of their own: they bad th > finest libraries in the world. Their schools in finain and elsewhere were so famous that scholars from all pnrt3 jjf Europe flocked to sit at the feet of men who had risen from the arid sands of the desert. They imparted knowledge wherever they went, and humbly learned whatever any people had to teach. Our present system of writing figures is Arabian, we say. though it is Arabian onl T # in the cense that the Arabs learned it in India and spread it throughout. Europe. Bur for them wo should still he writing XVTIT. for 18, and CXYTII. for 118. We do an act of justice in restoring to them something of the glory they Gained in former days. They were never oppressive or cruel in power, and we owe tTmm this historic act of generosity. Thev kept learning and culture alive when it was dead but for them, and we can never forget the debt wo owe to them.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TS19211105.2.6.2

Bibliographic details

Star (Christchurch), Issue 16574, 5 November 1921, Page 3

Word Count
629

THE RISE OF THE ARAB. Star (Christchurch), Issue 16574, 5 November 1921, Page 3

THE RISE OF THE ARAB. Star (Christchurch), Issue 16574, 5 November 1921, Page 3

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