No Mohammed
Part Two:
Did Ishmael father the Arab nations?
by
Damien F. Mackey
“According to Sir Fergus Millar, Professor Emeritus of
Ancient History at Oxford University, it was Josephus, a Jewish historian
writing in the first century CE, who first advanced the idea that Ishmael was
the ancestor of the Arabs. In The
Antiquities of the Jews Josephus stated that Ishmael was ‘the founder’
of the Arabian nation, and Abraham was ‘their father’. From Josephus, this
assumed connection between the Arabs and Abraham, through Ishmael, passed into
the historical consciousness of Christians, and then made its way into early
Islam”.
Mark Durie
According to the same Mark Durie, “Ishmael is not
the Father of the Arabs”:
….
The Qur’an does not speak of Ishmael or Abraham as ancestors of the
Arabs – although it does have Abraham and Ishmael praying for Allah to make
their descendants a Muslim people – but the link is established in the hadith
literature, in traditions about Muhammad’s own genealogy. In this way Abraham
and Ishmael came to be considered, in Islamic tradition, not only a spiritual
antecedent of Muhammad as an Islamic prophet, but also the physical
ancestor of (at least some of) the Arabs.
What does the Bible say?
The Bible speaks both of Ishmaelites, the descendants of Ishmael, and of
Arabs, but does not join them together. I. Ephʿal has pointed out that
the references to Ishmaelites are earlier in the Bible, and the references to
Arabs later. Both refer to non-sedentary, nomadic peoples, but they are
separated by centuries. Ephʿal concludes that references to ‘Ishmaelites’ cease
by the mid 10th century BCE, and the references to ‘Arabs’ only commence in the
mid-8th century BCE, so “there is no historical basis to the tradition of
associating Ishmaelites with the Arabs”.
The Bible does link the Ishmaelites with the Midianites, using these
names as synonyms in two places. Genesis describes Joseph as being sold to a
caravan of camel-riding Ishmaelites who are also called Midianites (Genesis
37:25–28, 36; 39:1; see also Judges 8:22-24). ….
The Egyptian Connection
What may get overlooked in discussions of Ishmael
and his mother Hagar is the pervasive Egyptian
element.
Hagar was an Egyptian
(Genesis 16:3): “So after Abram had been living in Canaan ten years,
Sarai his wife took her Egyptian slave Hagar and gave her to her husband to be
his wife”.
That Ishmael was thoroughly Egyptianised
is apparent, so I think, from a comparison of his toledôt history of Abram and Sarai with that of the Palestine-based
Isaac (Abraham and Sarah).
{For an explanation of toledôt, see:
Book of
Genesis and those ancient patriarchal histories
Ishmael’s account of the abduction of “Sarai” by “Pharaoh”
is different enough from Isaac’s account of the
very same incident of the abduction of “Sarah” by “Abimelech”, that
commentators - unaware of the implications of toledôt and of the true sources and structure of the Book of
Genesis - tend to presume that these are two entirely separate incidents.
For my contrary
view of these, see e.g. my article:
Toledôt
Explains Abram's Pharaoh
Rabbinic traditions, however, may have kept well alive the Egyptian element:
Rabbinical
commentators in the Midrash Genesis Rabbah also say that Ishmael's mother Hagar
was the Pharaoh's daughter, making Ishmael the Pharaoh's grandson. This could
be why Genesis 17:20 refers to Ishmael as the father of 12 mighty princes.
and:
According
to Genesis 21:21, Hagar married Ishmael to an Egyptian woman, and if Rabbinical
commentators are correct that Hagar was the Pharaoh's daughter, his marriage to
a woman she selected could explain how and why his sons became princes.
Some
Jewish traditions actually identify Hagar with Keturah:
According
to other Jewish commentators, Ishmael's mother Hagar is identified with Keturah, the
woman Abraham sought out and married after Sarah's death. It is suggested that
Keturah was Hagar's personal name, and that "Hagar" was a descriptive
label meaning "stranger".[30][31][32] This interpretation is discussed in the Midrash[33] and is supported by Rashi, Gur Aryeh, Keli Yakar,
and Obadiah of Bertinoro. Rashi (Rabbi Shlomo
Itzhaki) argues that "Keturah" was a name given to Hagar because her
deeds were as beautiful as incense (Hebrew, ketoret), and that she
remained chaste (literally "tied her opening", with the verb tied
in Aramaic being k-t-r) from the time she was separated from Abraham.
….
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