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The Holy Cities, The Pilgrimage and
The World of Islam Sultan Ghalib al-Qu'aiti
Paperback Price: $29.95; Hardback Price: $49.95
Now Available 2007 FONS VITAE |
“Mecca and Medina, the world’s most forbidden cities, have long been a symbol of
mystery and fascination to outsiders...In this unique, ground-breaking book, one
of the world’s leading experts in Arabian history investigates the colourful,
often astonishing story of these two great cities. Carefully sifting fact from
legend, Sultan Ghalib describes their architecture, religious life, society, and
politics, and shows how they have played a pivotal role in the history of Islam.
All those with an interest in Islamic civilization, religion, and current
affairs, will find this volume an indispensable resource.”
– T.J. Winter, Professor of Islamic Studies, Cambridge University
“The product of years of painstaking research drawing on thousands of sources
inaccessible to all but rare scholars of Islam, The Two Holy Cities, The
Pilgrimage and the World of Islam by Sultan Ghalib al-Qu’aiti uses the single
lens of the pilgrimage and the holy cities of Mecca and Medina to look deep into
the history of Islamic civilization. Not only scholars but all who are
interested in how Islamic religion and culture have exerted power and
fascination down through centuries of intricate Muslim social and political
history will benefit from this book.”
– Frank Vogel, Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Adjunct
Professor of Islamic Legal Studies, Harvard Law School
“...The book offers the reader an inspiring review of the various aspects of
cultural life in the two Holy Cities across the centuries, based on authentic
journals of contemporary [to each period] travelers and expeditions...This book
is the product of an extensive and commendable effort on the part of the author
to present the reader with a wide and comprehensible insight into the
vicissitudes of time which encompassed the two Holy Mosques, the most sacrosanct
and venerated sanctuaries in Islam.”
– Professor Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu,
Secretary General of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OLC)
About the Author of Holy Cities:
Sultan Ghalib bin ‘Awadh al-Qu’aiti, the last ruler of the Qu’aiti State,
Hadhramaut (presently Yemen), was born in 1948 and educated mostly in England,
with an MA from Oxford in Oriental Studies (Islamic history) and another in
Arabian Studies from Cambridge, both with honors. The sultan has been a Saudi
resident since 1968, presently residing in Jeddah. He has working knowledge of
Arabic, English, Urdu/Hindi, French, Persian, and German, allowing for a rare
depth in his research of various historical periods and geographic regions.
This is an invaluable reference work including 3
useful appendices:
A: Islamic Dynasties involved with the Holy Cities (632 CE – 1953)
B: Amirs (Governors) of Makkah (630 CE – 1924)
C: Amirs (Governors) of al-Madinah (622 CE – 1936)
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A Note from the Publisher on 'The Holy Cities' volume:
How fortunate that we may at once benefit from both an Arab and an Indian point
of view on the faith, history, politics and civilization of the Islamic World
and its sacred sites from the earliest of times. Sultan Ghalib, whose mother is
the eldest grand-daughter of the sixth Nizam of Hyderbad, India, was the last
ruler of the Hadramaut (South Yemen) and since resides in the Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia, near Makkah and Medina, which are the focus of this monumental work.
As this volume literally brings alive the history of many centuries, it has
something of interest for everyone, be he or she a scholar of the Middle East
and the Islamic World, a Muslim longing for precious details of the Holy
Sanctuaries and pilgrimage, or an art historian drawn to the great architectural
complexes the world over.
In his royal style of English, the author transports us on an intriguing journey
where we are introduced to hitherto little- or un-known places, personages and
events. A real education altering one’s world-view!
What astounded me personally were the fascinating details – and even cataloging
– of the enormous and fervent support and involvement over the centuries of the
entire Muslim world, stretching from South East Asia to West Africa, in the
maintenance of Makkah, Medina and Jerusalem. It is surprising to hear of India’s
funding the Dome of the Rock and Mosque of al-Aqsa. Staggering sums were
consistently donated not only for expansion and the repairs necessitated by such
natural disasters as floods, earthquakes and fire, but also for the cities’
indigent population. International patronage was devoted towards education and
various charitable endowments. The needed Hijaz railway was financed by
individuals as well as the Muslim public from Iran, Morocco, Bokhara, Egypt,
Europe, Aden, South East Asia, India, et al.
Included would appear to be mention of nearly all the rulers and key people from
the Caliphate onwards. Struggles for power read like tales of mystery and
intrigue. The sheer inclusion of the names and dates of all these important
personages through time provides the reader with a reference work of substance.
One comes to understand what a privilege and responsibility has been the role of
those called “the Servitors of the Two Holy Sanctuaries.”
For a Muslim to follow the development of each key element found in the three
sacred sanctuaries is deeply moving, such as the story of the Kiswa over tine,
the enclosure of the Prophet’s tomb, the Maqam Ibrahim, and the exact
circumstances of how Prophetic relics reached the Topkapi. And what a bonus to
have included the very prayers which are to be said by Muslims making Tawaf,
performing the Sa’y or standing in the Prophet’s garden, ar-Rauda. These prayers
will also be of interest to the outsider who may wonder what the
circumambulating pilgrims, for example, are saying. How exciting to have a
letter from Al-Ghazali (d. 1111 CE) regarding insiring moments at the Hajj.
For the art historian who, for example, studies the Mughal period in India and
has seen the portraits of Akbar and Jahangir, it is interesting to be able to
envision these sultans alive, in their enthusiasm and involvement while readying
the Hajj caravans. We mostly think of Shah Jahan only in association with the
Taj Mahal, but now we meet him as a donor to the Holy Cities. Here we learn of
the involvement of the Mughal court with Arabia.
I was brought to tears when Umar Fakhrad-din Pasha refused to leave his sworn
post in defense of the Prophet’s mosque in Medina. He had held out against all
odds and when at last he was torn away from his station, he fell weeping at the
tomb of the Prophet, begging his forgiveness for having been forced to forego
his oath.
Against the captivating backdrop of history, whether it be World War I, a
famine, or the yoke of colonization, we witness the strength of the Muslim ummah
working as one.
Quoting from Ihsanoglu’s introduction to the book, I agree that “Possibly the
greatest benefit of this valuable book is that to the Western reader it provides
a rare and truthful display of the development of events [in the Muslim world]
from an Arab perspective which we hope will contribute to redressing the
stereotypical misconceptions through which many Western writers have portrayed
Islam, Muslim, and heir causes.”