Middle East Forum

Other MEF Websites:   Campus Watch   |   Daniel Pipes   |   Islamist Watch

Middle East Forum

 

 

 

 

 

 

  1. Assessing English Translations of the Qur'an
  2. Iran's Revolutionary Guards - A Rogue Outfit?
  3. The Middle East's Tribal DNA
  4. Beheading in the Name of Islam
  5. Ahmadinejad and the Mahdi

 

  1. Iran's Revolutionary Guards - A Rogue Outfit?
  2. Obama or McCain, Iran stance won't change
  3. The Middle East's Tribal DNA
  4. Ahmadinejad and the Mahdi
  5. Does Islam Justify Honor Killings?

SEPTEMBER 1995 • VOLUME II: NUMBER 3

Subscribe   |    Archive   |    Submit Manuscript   |    Board of Editors   |    Contact Editor   |   

Under Crescent and Cross: The Jews in the Middle Ages

by Mark R. Cohen
Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1994. 280 pp. $14.95, paper.

Reviewed by Daniel Pipes

Middle East Quarterly
September 1995

Print Send RSS

It has often been asserted that in medieval times, Jews living in the Muslim lands had it better than their co-religionists in Christendom. Is that assessment accurate? Cohen, professor of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University, attempts an answer in this first-ever book on the comparative history of Jewish life in the two civilizations.

Yes, he concludes, Jews were better off in the Muslim world. In part, this was a matter of physical security. "The Jews of Islam, especially during the formative and classical centuries (up to the thirteenth century), experienced much less persecution than did the Jews of Christendom." Living among Sunni Muslims brought other benefits as well, which Cohen meticulously and convincingly documents: in Dar al-Islam, Jews enjoyed a more regular legal status, they participated far more in the mainstream cultural life, and they had more social interaction with the majority community. In all, Jews living among Muslims were less excluded, making them less vulnerable to assault. Of particular interest, while Christians had a horror of intermarriage, Muslims allowed it on condition that the man was a Muslim. Indeed, Islamic law requires the Muslim husband to permit his Jewish wife to observe her religious rituals, to pray within the family house, to keep the Sabbath, and to maintain the kosher requirements. She may also read her Scriptures, on the important condition that she not do so out loud.

Cohen's study ends with the thirteenth century; we would be much in his debt were he to follow this pathbreaking and excellent study with another on the subsequent deterioration of the Jewish position in the Muslim world.

Related Topics: History, Jews and Judaism

To receive articles regularly by email, join the MEF News mailing list.
To receive the full, printed version of the Middle East Quarterly, please see details about an affordable subscription.

Related Items

©1994-2008 The Middle East Forum • 1500 Walnut St. • Suite 1050 • Philadelphia, PA 19102 • Tel: 215-546-5406 • Fax: 215-546-5409 • E-mail: info@meforum.org