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Druze

The Druze (/ˈdrz/ DROOZ;[19] Arabic: دَرْزِيّ, darzī or دُرْزِيّ durzī, pl. دُرُوز, durūz), who call themselves al-Muwaḥḥidūn (lit. 'the monotheists' or 'the unitarians'),[20] are an Arab and Arabic-speaking esoteric ethnoreligious group[21][22][23][24] from Western Asia who adhere to the Druze faith, an Abrahamic, monotheistic, syncretic, and ethnic religion whose main tenets are the unity of God and the belief in reincarnation and the eternity of the soul.[25][26][27][28] Most Druze religious practices are kept secret.[29] The Druze do not permit outsiders to convert to their religion. Marriage outside the Druze faith is rare and strongly discouraged.

Druze
Al-Muwaḥḥidūn
موحدّون دروز


Total population
≈800,000[1][2][3]–2,000,000[4]
Founder
Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad[5]
Regions with significant populations
 Syria600,000[6][7]
 Lebanon250,000[8]
 Israel and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights143,000[9]
 Venezuela60,000[10][11]
 United States50,000[12][11]
 Canada25,000[13]
 Jordan20,000[14]
 Germany10,000[15]
 Australia4,268[16]
Religions
Druzism
Scriptures
Epistles of Wisdom
(Rasa'il al-hikma)
Languages

The Epistles of Wisdom is the foundational and central text of the Druze faith.[30] The Druze faith incorporates elements of Isma'ili Shia,[31] Christianity,[32][33] Gnosticism, Neoplatonism,[32][33] Zoroastrianism,[34][35] Buddhism,[36][37] Hinduism, Pythagoreanism,[38][39] and other philosophies and beliefs, creating a distinct and secretive theology based on an esoteric interpretation of scripture, which emphasizes the role of the mind and truthfulness.[20][39] Druze believe in theophany and reincarnation.[40] Druze believe that at the end of the cycle of rebirth, which is achieved through successive reincarnations, the soul is united with the Cosmic Mind (al-ʻaql al-kullī).[41]

The Druze have a special reverence for Shuaib, who they believe is the same person as the biblical Jethro.[42] The Druze believe that Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, Muhammad, and Imam Muhammad ibn Isma'il were prophets.[43] Druze tradition also honors and reveres Salman the Persian,[44] al-Khidr (whom they identify as Elijah, reborn as John the Baptist and Saint George),[45] Job, Luke the Evangelist, and others as "mentors" and "prophets".[46]

Video clips from the archive of Israel Channel 2 Israeli News Company showing Israeli Druze men in traditional clothing. The flags shown are Druze flags.

Even though the faith originally developed out of Isma'ilism, the Druze are not Muslims.[47][48] The Druze faith is one of the major religious groups in the Levant, with between 800,000 and a million adherents. They are found primarily in Lebanon, Syria, and Israel, with small communities in Jordan. They make up 5.5% of the population of Lebanon, 3% of Syria and 1.6% of Israel. The oldest and most densely-populated Druze communities exist in Mount Lebanon and in the south of Syria around Jabal al-Druze (literally the "Mountain of the Druze").[49]

The Druze community played a critically important role in shaping the history of the Levant, where it continues to play a significant political role.[50] As a religious minority in every country in which they are found, they have frequently experienced persecution by different Muslim regimes, including contemporary Islamic extremism.[51][52][53]

Etymology

The name Druze is derived from the name of Muhammad bin Ismail Nashtakin ad-Darazī (from Persian darzi, "seamster") who was an early preacher. Although the Druze consider ad-Darazī a heretic,[54] the name has been used to identify them, possibly by their historical opponents as a way to attach their community with ad-Darazi's poor reputation.

Before becoming public, the movement was secretive and held closed meetings in what was known as Sessions of Wisdom. During this stage a dispute occurred between ad-Darazi and Hamza bin Ali mainly concerning ad-Darazi's ghuluww ("exaggeration"), which refers to the belief that God was incarnated in human beings to ad-Darazi naming himself "The Sword of the Faith", which led Hamza to write an epistle refuting the need for the sword to spread the faith and several epistles refuting the beliefs of the ghulat.

In 1016 ad-Darazi and his followers openly proclaimed their beliefs and called people to join them, causing riots in Cairo against the Unitarian movement including Hamza bin Ali and his followers. This led to the suspension of the movement for one year and the expulsion of ad-Darazi and his supporters.[55]

Although the Druze religious books describe ad-Darazi as the "insolent one" and as the "calf" who is narrow-minded and hasty, the name "Druze" is still used for identification and for historical reasons. In 1018, ad-Darazi was assassinated for his teachings; some sources claim that he was executed by Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah.[54][56]

Some authorities see in the name "Druze" a descriptive epithet, derived from Arabic dārisah ("she who studies").[57] Others have speculated that the word comes from the Persian word Darazo (درز "bliss") or from Shaykh Hussayn ad-Darazī, who was one of the early converts to the faith.[58] In the early stages of the movement, the word "Druze" is rarely mentioned by historians, and in Druze religious texts only the word Muwaḥḥidūn ("Unitarian") appears. The only early Arab historian who mentions the Druze is the eleventh century Christian scholar Yahya of Antioch, who clearly refers to the heretical group created by ad-Darazī, rather than the followers of Hamza ibn 'Alī.[58] As for Western sources, Benjamin of Tudela, the Jewish traveler who passed through Lebanon in or around 1165, was one of the first European writers to refer to the Druze by name. The word Dogziyin ("Druzes") occurs in an early Hebrew edition of his travels, but it is clear that this is a scribal error. Be that as it may, he described the Druze as "mountain dwellers, monotheists, who believe in 'soul eternity' and reincarnation".[59] He also stated that "they loved the Jews".[60]

Location

The number of Druze people worldwide is between 800,000 and one million, with the vast majority residing in the Levant.[61] Druze people reside primarily in Syria, Lebanon, Israel and Jordan.[62][63]

The Institute of Druze Studies estimates that in 1998 40–50% of Druze live in Syria, 30–40% in Lebanon, 6–7% in Israel, and 1–2% in Jordan.[62] About 2% of the Druze population are also scattered within other countries in the Middle East, and according to The Institute of Druze Studies there were approximately 20,000 Druzes in the United States in 1998.[62][64] According to scholar Colbert C. Held of University of Nebraska, Lincoln the number of Druze people worldwide is around one million, with about 45% to 50% live in Syria, 35% to 40% live in Lebanon, and less than 10% live in Israel, with recently there has been a growing Druze diaspora.[65]

Large communities of Druze also live outside the Middle East, in Australia, Canada, Europe, Latin America (mainly Venezuela,[10] Colombia and Brazil[dubious ]), the United States, and West Africa. They are Arabs who speak the Arabic language and follow a social pattern very similar to those of the other peoples of the Levant (eastern Mediterranean).[66] In 2021 the largest Druze communities outside the Middle East are in Venezuela (60,000) and in the United States (50,000).[67] According to the Los Angeles Times in 2017 "there are about 30,000 in the United States, with the largest concentration in Southern California".[68]

History

Early history

The story of the creation of the Druze faith in the days between 1017 and 1018 is dominated by three men and their struggle for influence.

Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad arrives in Cairo

Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad, an Ismaili mystic and scholar from Zozan, Khorasan, in the Samanid Empire.[69] arrived in Fatimid Egypt in 1014 or 1016.[69] He assembled a group of scholars that met regularly in the Raydan Mosque, near the Al-Hakim Mosque.[70] In 1017, Hamza began to preach a Muwaḥḥidūn (Unitarian) doctrine.

 
Sixth Fatimid caliph, al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah

Hamza gained the support of the Fātimid caliph al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah, who issued a decree promoting religious freedom[71][72] and eventually became a central figure in the Druze faith.[73][74][75][page needed]

al-Darazi arrives in Cairo

Little is known about the early life of al-Darazi. According to most sources, he was born in Bukhara. He is believed to have been of Persian origins and his title al-Darazi is Persian in origin, meaning "the tailor".[76] He arrived in Cairo in 1015, or 1017, after which he joined the newly emerged Druze movement.[77]

Al-Darazi was converted early to the Unitarian faith and became one of its early preachers. At that time, the movement enlisted a large number of adherents.[78] As the number of his followers grew, he became obsessed with his leadership and gave himself the title "The Sword of the Faith". Al-Darazi argued that he should be the leader of the daʻwah rather than Hamza ibn Ali and gave himself the title "Lord of the Guides" because Caliph al-Hakim referred to Hamza as "Guide of the Consented". It is said that al-Darazi allowed wine, forbidden marriages and taught metempsychosis[79] although this may be exaggeration by contemporary and later historians and polemicists.

This attitude led to disputes between Ad-Darazi and Hamza ibn Ali, who disliked his behavior and his arrogance. In the Epistles of Wisdom, Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad warns al-Darazi, saying, "Faith does not need a sword to aid it", but al-Darazi ignored Hamza's warnings and continued to challenge the Imam.

al-Darazi issues the unitarian call

The divine call or unitarian call is the Druze period of time that was opened at sunset on Thursday, 30 May 1017 by Ad-Darazi. The call summoned people to a true unitarian belief that removed all attributes (wise, just, outside, inside, etc.) from God.[80] It promoted absolute monotheism and the concepts of supporting your fellow man, true speech and pursuit of oneness with God. These concepts superseded all ritual, law and dogma and requirements for pilgrimage, fasting, holy days, prayer, charity, devotion, creed and particular worship of any prophet or person was downplayed. Sharia was opposed and Druze traditions started during the call continue today, such as meeting for reading, prayer and social gathering on a Thursday instead of a Friday at Khalwats instead of mosques. Such gatherings and traditions were not compulsory and people were encouraged to pursue a state of compliance with the real law of nature governing the universe.[81] Epistle thirteen of the Epistles of Wisdom called it "A spiritual doctrine without any ritualistic imposition".[citation needed]

The time of the call was seen as a revolution of truth, with missionaries preaching its message all around the Middle East. These messengers were sent out with the Druze epistles and took written vows from believers, whose souls are thought to still exist in the Druze of today. The souls of those who took the vows during the call are believed to be continuously reincarnating in successive generations of Druze until the return of al-Hakim to proclaim a second Divine call and establish a Golden Age of justice and peace for all.[82]

al-Darazi is executed

By 1018, al-Darazi had gathered around him partisans – "Darazites" – who believed that universal reason became incarnated in Adam at the beginning of the world, was then passed to the prophets, then into Ali, and then into his descendants, the Fatimid Caliphs.[79] Al-Darazi wrote a book laying out this doctrine, but when he read from his book in the principal mosque in Cairo, it caused riots and protests against his claims and many of his followers were killed.

Hamza ibn Ali rejected al-Darazi's ideology, calling him "the insolent one and Satan".[79] The controversy led Caliph al-Hakim to suspend the Druze daʻwah in 1018.[83]

In an attempt to gain the support of al-Hakim, al-Darazi started preaching that al-Hakim and his ancestors were the incarnation of God.[78] An inherently modest man, al-Hakim did not believe that he was God, and felt al-Darazi was trying to depict himself as a new prophet.[78] In 1018 Al-Hakim had al-Darazi executed, leaving Hamza the sole leader of the new faith and al-Darazi considered to be a renegade.[78][83][79]

Disappearance of Al-Hakim

Al-Hakim disappeared one night while on his evening ride – presumably assassinated, perhaps at the behest of his formidable elder sister Sitt al-Mulk. The Druze believe he went into Occultation with Hamza ibn Ali and three other prominent preachers, leaving the care of the "Unitarian missionary movement" to a new leader, al-Muqtana Baha'uddin.[citation needed]

The call was suspended briefly between 19 May 1018 and 9 May 1019 during the apostasy of al-Darazi and again between 1021 and 1026 during a period of persecution by Ali az-Zahir for those who had sworn the oath to accept the call.[citation needed]

Persecutions started forty days after the disappearance into Occultation of al-Hakim, who was thought to have been converting people to the Unitarian faith for over twenty years prior.[citation needed] Al-Hakim convinced some heretical followers such as al-Darazi of his soteriological divinity and officially declared the Divine call after issuing a decree promoting religious freedom.[citation needed]

Al-Hakim was replaced by his underage son, ʻAlī al-Zahir. The Unitarian/Druze movement acknowledged al-Zahir as the caliph, but continued to regard Hamzah as its Imam.[56] The young caliph's regent, Sitt al-Mulk, ordered the army to destroy the movement in 1021.[54] At the same time, Bahāʼ al-Dīn was assigned the leadership of the Unitarians by Hamza.[56]

For the next seven years, the Druze faced extreme persecution by the new caliph, al-Zahir, who wanted to eradicate the faith.[84] This was the result of a power struggle inside of the Fatimid empire in which the Druze were viewed with suspicion because of their refusal to recognize the new caliph as their Imam. Many spies, mainly the followers of al-Darazi, joined the Unitarian movement in order to infiltrate the Druze community. The spies set about agitating trouble and soiling the reputation of the Druze. This resulted in friction with the new caliph who clashed militarily with the Druze community. The clashes ranged from Antioch to Alexandria, where tens of thousands of Druze were slaughtered by the Fatimid army,[54] "this mass persecution known by the Druze as the period of the mihna".[85] The largest massacre was at Antioch, where 5000 prominent Druze were killed, followed by that of Aleppo.[54] As a result, the faith went underground, in hope of survival, as those captured were either forced to renounce their faith or be killed. Druze survivors "were found principally in southern Lebanon and Syria".

In 1038, two years after the death of al-Zahir, the Druze movement was able to resume because the new leadership that replaced him had friendly political ties with at least one prominent Druze leader.[84]

Closing of the unitarian call

In 1043, Baha al-Din al-Muqtana declared that the sect would no longer accept new pledges, and since that time proselytism has been prohibited awaiting al-Hakim's return at the Last Judgment to usher in a new Golden Age.[86][84]

Some Druze and non-Druze scholars like Samy Swayd and Sami Makarem state that this confusion is due to confusion about the role of the early preacher al-Darazi, whose teachings the Druze rejected as heretical.[87] These sources assert that al-Hakim rejected al-Darazi's claims of divinity,[56][88][89][page needed] and ordered the elimination of his movement while supporting that of Hamza ibn Ali.[90]

During the Crusades

Wadi al-Taym, in Lebanon, was one of the two most important centers of Druze missionary activity in the 11th century[91] and was the first area where the Druze appeared in the historical record under the name "Druze".[92] It is generally considered the birthplace of the Druze faith.[93]

It was during the period of Crusader rule in Levant (1099–1291) that the Druze first emerged into the full light of history in the Gharb region of the Chouf Mountains. As powerful warriors serving the Muslim rulers of Damascus against the Crusades, the Druze were given the task of keeping watch over the crusaders in the seaport of Beirut, with the aim of preventing them from making any encroachments inland. Subsequently, the Druze chiefs of the Gharb placed their considerable military experience at the disposal of the Mamluk rulers of Egypt (1250–1516); first, to assist them in putting an end to what remained of Crusader rule in coastal Levant, and later to help them safeguard the Lebanese coast against Crusader retaliation by sea.[94]

In the early period of the Crusader era, the Druze feudal power was in the hands of two families, the Tanukhs and the Arslans. From their fortresses in the Gharb area (now in Aley District of southern Mount Lebanon Governorate), the Tanukhs led their incursions into the Phoenician coast and finally succeeded in holding Beirut and the marine plain against the Franks. Because of their fierce battles with the Crusaders, the Druze earned the respect of the Sunni Muslim caliphs and thus gained important political powers. After the middle of the twelfth century, the Ma'an family superseded the Tanukhs in Druze leadership. The origin of the family goes back to a Prince Ma'an who made his appearance in the Lebanon in the days of the 'Abbasid caliph al-Mustarshid (1118–35 CE). The Ma'ans chose for their abode the Chouf District in south-western Lebanon (southern Mount Lebanon Governorate), overlooking the maritime plain between Beirut and Sidon, and made their headquarters in Baaqlin, which is still a leading Druze village. They were invested with feudal authority by Sultan Nur ad-Din and furnished respectable contingents to the Muslim ranks in their struggle against the Crusaders.[95][page needed]

Ibn Taymiyyah believed that Druze had a high level of infidelity, besides being apostates. Thus, they were not trustworthy and should not be forgiven. He taught also that Muslims cannot accept Druze penitence nor keep them alive, and that Druze property should be confiscated and their women enslaved.[96] Having cleared the holy land of the Franks, the Mamluk sultans of Egypt turned their attention to the schismatic Muslims of Syria. In 1305, after the issuing of a fatwa by the scholar Ibn Taymiyyah calling for jihad against all non-Sunni Muslims like the Druze, Alawites, Ismaili, and Twelver Shia Muslims, al-Malik al-Nasir inflicted a disastrous defeat on the Druze at Keserwan, and forced outward compliance on their part to Orthodox Sunni Islam. Later, under the Ottoman, they were severely attacked at Saoufar in the 1585 Ottoman expedition after the Ottomans claimed that they assaulted their caravans near Tripoli.[95][page needed] As a result of the Ottoman experience with the rebellious Druze, the word Durzi in Turkish came, and continues, to mean someone who is the ultimate thug.[97] One influential Islamic sage of that time[who?] labeled them infidels and argued that, even though they might behave like Muslims on the outside, this is no more than a pretense. He also declared that confiscation of Druze property and even the death sentence would comply with the laws of Islam.[98]

Consequently, the 16th and 17th centuries witnessed a succession of armed Druze rebellions against the Ottomans, countered by repeated Ottoman punitive expeditions against the Chouf, in which the Druze population of the area was severely depleted and many villages destroyed. These military measures, severe as they were, did not succeed in reducing the local Druze to the required degree of subordination. This led the Ottoman government to agree to an arrangement whereby the different nahiyes (districts) of the Chouf would be granted in iltizam ("fiscal concession") to one of the region's amirs, or leading chiefs, leaving the maintenance of law and order and the collection of taxes in the area in the hands of the appointed amir. This arrangement was to provide the cornerstone for the privileged status ultimately enjoyed by the whole of Mount Lebanon, Druze and Christian areas alike.[94]

Ma'an dynasty

With the advent of the Ottoman Turks and the conquest of Syria by Sultan Selim I in 1516, the Ma'ans were acknowledged by the new rulers as the feudal lords of southern Lebanon. Druze villages spread and prospered in that region, which under Ma'an leadership so flourished that it acquired the generic term of Jabal Bayt-Ma'an (the mountain home of the Ma'an) or Jabal al-Druze. The latter title has since been usurped by the Hawran region, which since the middle of the 19th century has proven a haven of refuge to Druze emigrants from Lebanon and has become the headquarters of Druze power.[95][page needed]

Under Fakhr-al-Dīn II (Fakhreddin II), the Druze dominion increased until it included Lebanon-Phoenicia and almost all Syria, extending from the edge of the Antioch plain in the north to Safad in the south, with a part of the Syrian desert dominated by Fakhr-al-Din's castle at Tadmur (Palmyra), the ancient capital of Zenobia. The ruins of this castle still stand on a steep hill overlooking the town. Fakhr-al-Din became too strong for his Turkish sovereign in Constantinople. He went so far in 1608 as to sign a commercial treaty with Duke Ferdinand I of Tuscany containing secret military clauses. The Sultan then sent a force against him, and he was compelled to flee the land and seek refuge in the courts of Tuscany and Naples in 1613 and 1615 respectively.

In 1618, political changes in the Ottoman sultanate had resulted in the removal of many enemies of Fakhr-al-Din from power, signaling the prince's triumphant return to Lebanon soon afterwards. Through a clever policy of bribery and warfare, he extended his domains to cover all of modern Lebanon, some of Syria and northern Galilee.

In 1632, Küçük Ahmed Pasha was named Lord of Damascus. Küçük Ahmed Pasha was a rival of Fakhr-al-Din and a friend of the sultan Murad IV, who ordered the pasha and the sultanate's navy to attack Lebanon and depose Fakhr-al-Din.

This time the prince decided to remain in Lebanon and resist the offensive, but the death of his son Ali in Wadi al-Taym was the beginning of his defeat. He later took refuge in Jezzine's grotto, closely followed by Küçük Ahmed Pasha who eventually caught up with him and his family.

Fakhr-al-Din was captured, taken to Istanbul, and imprisoned with two of his sons in the infamous Yedi Kule prison. The Sultan had Fakhr-al-Din and his sons killed on 13 April 1635 in Istanbul, bringing an end to an era in the history of Lebanon, which would not regain its current boundaries until it was proclaimed a mandate state and republic in 1920. One version recounts that the younger son was spared, raised in the harem and went on to become Ottoman Ambassador to India.[99]

Fakhr-al-Din II was the first ruler in modern Lebanon to open the doors of his country to foreign Western influences. Under his auspices the French established a khān (hostel) in Sidon, the Florentines a consulate, and Christian missionaries were admitted into the country. Beirut and Sidon, which Fakhr-al-Din II beautified, still bear traces of his benign rule. See the new biography of this Prince, based on original sources, by TJ Gorton: Renaissance Emir: a Druze Warlord at the Court of the Medici (London, Quartet Books, 2013), for an updated view of his life.

Fakhr ad Din II was succeeded in 1635 by his nephew Mulhim Ma'n, who ruled through his death in 1658. (Fakhr ad Din's only surviving son, Husayn, lived the rest of his life as a court official in Constantinople.) Emir Mulhim exercised Iltizam taxation rights in the Shuf, Gharb, Jurd, Matn, and Kisrawan districts of Lebanon. Mulhim's forces battled and defeated those of Mustafa Pasha, Beylerbey of Damascus, in 1642, but he is reported by historians to have been otherwise loyal to Ottoman rule.[100]

Following Mulhim's death, his sons Ahmad and Korkmaz entered into a power struggle with other Ottoman-backed Druze leaders. In 1660, the Ottoman Empire moved to reorganize the region, placing the sanjaks (districts) of Sidon-Beirut and Safed in a newly formed province of Sidon, a move seen by local Druze as an attempt to assert control.[101] Contemporary historian Istifan al-Duwayhi reports that Korkmaz was killed in act of treachery by the Beylerbey of Damascus in 1662.[101] Ahmad however emerged victorious in the power struggle among the Druze in 1667, but the Maʿnīs lost control of Safad[102] and retreated to controlling the iltizam of the Shuf mountains and Kisrawan.[103] Ahmad continued as local ruler through his death from natural causes, without heir, in 1697.[102]

During the Ottoman–Habsburg War (1683–1699), Ahmad Ma'n collaborated in a rebellion against the Ottomans which extended beyond his death.[102] Iltizam rights in Shuf and Kisrawan passed to the rising Shihab family through female-line inheritance.[103]

Shihab Dynasty

 
Druze woman wearing a tantour during the 1870s in Chouf, Ottoman Lebanon

As early as the days of Saladin, and while the Ma'ans were still in complete control over southern Lebanon, the Shihab tribe, originally Hijaz Arabs, but later settled in Ḥawran, advanced from Ḥawran, in 1172, and settled in Wadi al-Taym at the foot of mount Hermon. They soon made an alliance with the Ma'ans and were acknowledged as the Druze chiefs in Wadi al-Taym. At the end of the 17th century (1697) the Shihabs succeeded the Ma'ans in the feudal leadership of Druze southern Lebanon, although they reportedly professed Sunni Islam, they showed sympathy with Druzism, the religion of the majority of their subjects.

The Shihab leadership continued until the middle of the 19th century and culminated in the illustrious governorship of Amir Bashir Shihab II (1788–1840) who, after Fakhr-al-Din, was the most powerful feudal lord Lebanon produced. Though governor of the Druze Mountain, Bashir was a crypto-Christian, and it was he whose aid Napoleon solicited in 1799 during his campaign against Syria.

Having consolidated his conquests in Syria (1831–1838), Ibrahim Pasha, son of the viceroy of Egypt, Muhammad Ali Pasha, made the fatal mistake of trying to disarm the Christians and Druze of the Lebanon and to draft the latter into his army. This was contrary to the principles of the life of independence which these mountaineers had always lived, and resulted in a general uprising against Egyptian rule.[104] The Druze of Wadi al-Taym and Ḥawran, under the leadership of Shibli al-Aryan, distinguished themselves in their stubborn resistance at their inaccessible headquarters, al-Laja, lying southeast of Damascus.[95][page needed]

Qaysites and the Yemenites

 
Meeting of Druze and Ottoman leaders in Damascus, about the control of Jebel Druze

The conquest of Syria by the Muslim Arabs in the middle of the seventh century introduced into the land two political factions later called the Qaysites and the Yemenites. The Qaysite party represented the Bedouin Arabs who were regarded as inferior by the Yemenites who were earlier and more cultured emigrants into Syria from southern Arabia. Druze and Christians grouped in political, rather than religious, parties; the party lines in Lebanon obliterated ethnic and religious lines and the people grouped themselves into one or the other of these two parties regardless of their religious affiliations. The sanguinary feuds between these two factions depleted, in course of time, the manhood of the Lebanon and ended in the decisive battle of Ain Dara in 1711, which resulted in the utter defeat of the Yemenite party. Many Yemenite Druze thereupon migrated to the Hauran region, laying the foundation of Druze power there.[95][page needed]

Civil conflict of 1860

The relationship between the Druze and Christians has been characterized by harmony and coexistence,[105][106][107][108] with amicable relations between the two groups prevailing throughout history, with the exception of some periods, including 1860 civil conflict in Mount Lebanon and Damascus.[109][110] In 1840, social disturbance started between Druze and their Christian Maronite neighbors, who had previously been on friendly terms. This culminated in the civil war of 1860.[95][page needed]

After the Shehab dynasty converted to Christianity, the Druze community and feudal leaders came under attack from the regime with the collaboration of the Maronite Catholic Church, and the Druze lost most of their political and feudal powers.[111] Also, the Druze formed an alliance with Britain and allowed Protestant missionaries to enter Mount Lebanon, creating tension between them and the Catholic Maronites.

The Maronite-Druze conflict in 1840–60 was an outgrowth of the Maronite independence movement,[citation needed] directed against the Druze, Druze feudalism, and the Ottoman-Turks. The civil war was not therefore a religious war,[citation needed] except in Damascus, where it spread and where the vastly non-Druze population was anti-Christian.[citation needed] The movement culminated with the 1859–60 massacre and defeat of the Maronites by the Druze. The civil war of 1860 cost the Maronites some ten thousand lives in Damascus, Zahlé, Deir al-Qamar, Hasbaya, and other towns of Lebanon.

The European powers then determined to intervene, and authorized the landing in Beirut of a body of French troops under General Beaufort d'Hautpoul, whose inscription can still be seen on the historic rock at the mouth of Nahr al-Kalb. French intervention on behalf of the Maronites did not help the Maronite national movement, since France was restricted in 1860 by the British government, which did not want the Ottoman Empire dismembered. But European intervention pressured the Turks to treat the Maronites more justly.[112] Following the recommendations of the powers, the Ottoman Porte granted Lebanon local autonomy, guaranteed by the powers, under a Maronite governor. This autonomy was maintained until World War I.[95][page needed][113][page needed]

Rebellion in Hauran

The Hauran rebellion was a violent Druze uprising against Ottoman authority in the Syrian province, which erupted in May 1909. The rebellion was led by al-Atrash family, originated in local disputes and Druze unwillingness to pay taxes and conscript into the Ottoman Army. The rebellion ended in brutal suppression of the Druze by General Sami Pasha al-Farouqi, significant depopulation of the Hauran region and execution of the Druze leaders in 1910. In the outcome of the revolt, 2,000 Druze were killed, a similar number wounded, and hundreds of Druze fighters imprisoned.[114] Al-Farouqi also disarmed the population, extracted significant taxes, and launched a census of the region.

Modern history

In Lebanon, Syria, Israel, and Jordan, the Druzites have official recognition as a separate religious community with its own religious court system. Druzites are known for their loyalty to the countries they reside in,[115][page needed][verification needed] though they have a strong community feeling, in which they identify themselves as related even across borders of countries.[116]

Although most Druze no longer consider themselves Muslim, Al Azhar of Egypt recognized them in 1959 as one of the Islamic sects in the Al-Azhar Shia Fatwa due to political reasons, as Gamal Abdel Nasser saw it as a tool to spread his appeal and influence across the entire Arab world.[117][118][119][120][121]

Despite their practice of blending with dominant groups to avoid persecution, and because the Druze religion does not endorse separatist sentiments, but urges blending with the communities they reside in, the Druze have had a history of resistance to occupying powers, and they have at times enjoyed more freedom than most other groups living in the Levant.[116]

In Syria

 
Druze warriors preparing to go to battle with Sultan Pasha al-Atrash in 1925

In Syria, most Druzites live in the Jebel al-Druze, a rugged and mountainous region in the southwest of the country, which is more than 90 percent Druze inhabited; some 120 villages are exclusively so.[122][page needed] Other notable communities live in the Harim Mountains, the Damascus suburb of Jaramana, and on the southeast slopes of Mount Hermon. A large Syrian Druze community historically lived in the Golan Heights, but following wars with Israel in 1967 and 1973, many of these Druze fled to other parts of Syria; most of those who remained live in a handful of villages in the disputed zone, while only a few live in the narrow remnant of Quneitra Governorate that is still under effective Syrian control.

 
Druze celebrating their independence in 1925.

The Druze always played a far more important role in Syrian politics than its comparatively small population would suggest. With a community of little more than 100,000 in 1949, or roughly three percent of the Syrian population, the Druze of Syria's southwestern mountains constituted a potent force in Syrian politics and played a leading role in the nationalist struggle against the French. Under the military leadership of Sultan Pasha al-Atrash, the Druze provided much of the military force behind the Syrian Revolution of 1925–27. In 1945, Amir Hasan al-Atrash, the paramount political leader of the Jebel al-Druze, led the Druze military units in a successful revolt against the French, making the Jebel al-Druze the first and only region in Syria to liberate itself from French rule without British assistance. At independence the Druze, made confident by their successes, expected that Damascus would reward them for their many sacrifices on the battlefield. They demanded to keep their autonomous administration and many political privileges accorded them by the French and sought generous economic assistance from the newly independent government.[122][page needed]

 
Druze leaders meeting in Jebel al-Druze, Syria, 1926

When a local paper in 1945 reported that President Shukri al-Quwatli (1943–49) had called the Druze a "dangerous minority", Sultan Pasha al-Atrash flew into a rage and demanded a public retraction. If it were not forthcoming, he announced, the Druze would indeed become "dangerous", and a force of 4,000 Druze warriors would "occupy the city of Damascus". Quwwatli could not dismiss Sultan Pasha's threat. The military balance of power in Syria was tilted in favor of the Druze, at least until the military build up during the 1948 War in Palestine. One advisor to the Syrian Defense Department warned in 1946 that the Syrian army was "useless", and that the Druze could "take Damascus and capture the present leaders in a breeze".[122][page needed]

During the four years of Adib Shishakli's rule in Syria (December 1949 to February 1954) (on 25 August 1952: Adib al-Shishakli created the Arab Liberation Movement (ALM), a progressive party with pan-Arabist and socialist views),[123] the Druze community was subjected to a heavy attack by the Syrian government. Shishakli believed that among his many opponents in Syria, the Druze were the most potentially dangerous, and he was determined to crush them. He frequently proclaimed: "My enemies are like a serpent: The head is the Jebel al-Druze, the stomach Homs, and the tail Aleppo. If I crush the head, the serpent will die." Shishakli dispatched 10,000 regular troops to occupy the Jebel al-Druze. Several towns were bombarded with heavy weapons, killing scores of civilians and destroying many houses. According to Druze accounts, Shishakli encouraged neighboring Bedouin tribes to plunder the defenseless population and allowed his own troops to run amok.[122][page needed]

Shishakli launched a brutal campaign to defame the Druze for their religion and politics. He accused the entire community of treason, at times claiming they were in the employ of the British and Hashimites, at others that they were fighting for Israel against the Arabs. He even produced a cache of Israeli weapons allegedly discovered in the Jabal. Even more painful for the Druze community was his publication of "falsified Druze religious texts" and false testimonials ascribed to leading Druze sheikhs designed to stir up sectarian hatred. This propaganda also was broadcast in the Arab world, mainly Egypt. Shishakli was assassinated in Brazil on 27 September 1964 by a Druze seeking revenge for Shishakli's bombardment of the Jebel al-Druze.[122][page needed]

He forcibly integrated minorities into the national Syrian social structure, his "Syrianization" of Alawite and Druze territories had to be accomplished in part using violence. To this end, al-Shishakli encouraged the stigmatization of minorities. He saw minority demands as tantamount to treason. His increasingly chauvinistic notions of Arab nationalism were predicated on the denial that "minorities" existed in Syria.[124][page needed]

After the Shishakli's military campaign, the Druze community lost much of its political influence, but many Druze military officers played important roles in the Ba'ath government currently ruling Syria.[122][page needed]

In 1967, a community of Druze in the Golan Heights came under Israeli control, today numbering 23,000 (in 2019).[125][126][127]

The Qalb Loze massacre was a reported massacre of Syrian Druze on 10 June 2015 in the village of Qalb Loze in Syria's northwestern Idlib Governorate in which 20–24 Druze were killed. On 25 July 2018, a group of ISIS-affiliated attackers entered the Druze city of As-Suwayda and initiated a series of gunfights and suicide bombings on its streets, killing at least 258 people, the vast majority of them civilians.[128]

In Lebanon

 
Prophet Job shrine in Niha village in the Chouf region of Lebanon.[129]
A market in a Lebanese Druze town called Hasbaya, 1967

The Druzite community in Lebanon played an important role in the formation of the modern state of Lebanon,[130] and even though they are a minority they play an important role in the Lebanese political scene. Before and during the Lebanese Civil War (1975–90), the Druze were in favor of Pan-Arabism and Palestinian resistance represented by the PLO. Most of the community supported the Progressive Socialist Party formed by their leader Kamal Jumblatt and they fought alongside other leftist and Palestinian parties against the Lebanese Front that was mainly constituted of Christians. After the assassination of Kamal Jumblatt on 16 March 1977, his son Walid Jumblatt took the leadership of the party and played an important role in preserving his father's legacy after winning the Mountain War and sustained the existence of the Druze community during the sectarian bloodshed that lasted until 1990.

In August 2001, Maronite Catholic Patriarch Nasrallah Boutros Sfeir toured the predominantly Druze Chouf region of Mount Lebanon and visited Mukhtara, the ancestral stronghold of Druze leader Walid Jumblatt. The tumultuous reception that Sfeir received not only signified a historic reconciliation between Maronites and Druze, who fought a bloody war in 1983–1984, but underscored the fact that the banner of Lebanese sovereignty had broad multi-confessional appeal[131] and was a cornerstone for the Cedar Revolution in 2005. Jumblatt's post-2005 position diverged sharply from the tradition of his family. He also accused Damascus of being behind the 1977 assassination of his father, Kamal Jumblatt, expressing for the first time what many knew he privately suspected. The BBC describes Jumblatt as "the leader of Lebanon's most powerful Druze clan and heir to a leftist political dynasty".[132] The second largest political party supported by Druze is the Lebanese Democratic Party led by Prince Talal Arslan, the son of Lebanese independence hero Emir Majid Arslan.

In Israel

 
Israeli Druze Scouts march to Jethro's tomb. Today, thousands of Israeli Druze belong to such "Druze Zionist" movements.[133]

The Druzites form a religious minority in Israel of more than 100,000, mostly residing in the north of the country.[134] In 2004, there were 102,000 Druze living in the country.[135] In 2010, the population of Israeli Druze citizens grew to over 125,000. At the end of 2018, there were 143,000 in Israel and the Israeli-occupied portion of the Golan Heights.[9] Most Israeli Druze identify ethnically as Arabs.[136] Today, thousands of Israeli Druze belong to "Druze Zionist" movements.[133]

Some scholars maintain that Israel has tried to separate the Druze from other Arab communities, and that the effort has influenced the way Israel's Druze perceive their modern identity.[137][138] In 1957, the Israeli government designated the Druze a distinct ethnic community at the request of its communal leaders. The Druze are Arabic-speaking citizens of Israel and serve in the Israel Defense Forces, just as most citizens do in Israel. Members of the community have attained top positions in Israeli politics and public service.[139] The number of Druze parliament members usually exceeds their proportion in the Israeli population, and they are integrated within several political parties.

In Jordan

The Druzites form a religious minority in Jordan of around 32,000, mostly residing in the northwestern part of the country.[14]

Beliefs

God

The Druze conception of the deity is declared by them to be one of strict and uncompromising unity. The main Druze doctrine states that God is both transcendent and immanent, in which he is above all attributes, but at the same time, he is present.[140]

In their desire to maintain a rigid confession of unity, they stripped from God all attributes (tanzīh). In God, there are no attributes distinct from his essence. He is wise, mighty, and just, not by wisdom, might, and justice, but by his own essence. God is "the whole of existence", rather than "above existence" or on his throne, which would make him "limited". There is neither "how", "when", nor "where" about him; he is incomprehensible.[141][page needed]

In this dogma, they are similar to the semi-philosophical, semi-religious body which flourished under Al-Ma'mun and was known by the name of Mu'tazila and the fraternal order of the Brethren of Purity (Ikhwan al-Ṣafa).[95][page needed]

Unlike the Mu'tazila, and similar to some branches of Sufism, the Druze believe in the concept of Tajalli (meaning "theophany").[141][page needed] Tajalli is often misunderstood by scholars and writers and is usually confused with the concept of incarnation.

[Incarnation] is the core spiritual beliefs in the Druze and some other intellectual and spiritual traditions ... In a mystical sense, it refers to the light of God experienced by certain mystics who have reached a high level of purity in their spiritual journey. Thus, God is perceived as the Lahut [the divine] who manifests His Light in the Station (Maqaam) of the Nasut [material realm] without the Nasut becoming Lahut. This is like one's image in the mirror: One is in the mirror, but does not become the mirror. The Druze manuscripts are emphatic and warn against the belief that the Nasut is God ... Neglecting this warning, individual seekers, scholars, and other spectators have considered al-Hakim and other figures divine. ... In the Druze scriptural view, Tajalli takes a central stage. One author comments that Tajalli occurs when the seeker's humanity is annihilated so that divine attributes and light are experienced by the person.[141][page needed]

 
Druze dignitaries celebrating the Nabi Shu'ayb festival at the tomb of the prophet in Hittin, Israel.

Scriptures

Druze sacred texts include the Quran and the Epistles of Wisdom.[142] Other ancient Druze writings include the Rasa'il al-Hind (Epistles of India) and the previously lost (or hidden) manuscripts such as al-Munfarid bi-Dhatihi and al-Sharia al-Ruhaniyya as well as others including didactic and polemic treatises.[143]

Reincarnation

Reincarnation is a paramount principle in the Druze faith.[144] Reincarnations occur instantly at one's death because there is an eternal duality of the body and the soul and it is impossible for the soul to exist without the body. A human soul will transfer only to a human body, in contrast to the Neoplatonic, Hindu and Buddhist belief systems, according to which souls can transfer to any living creature. Furthermore, a male Druze can be reincarnated only as another male Druze and a female Druze only as another female Druze. A Druze cannot be reincarnated in the body of a non-Druze. Additionally, souls cannot be divided and the number of souls existing in the universe is finite.[145] The cycle of rebirth is continuous and the only way to escape is through successive reincarnations. When this occurs, the soul is united with the Cosmic Mind and achieves the ultimate happiness.[41]

Pact of Time Custodian

The Pact of Time Custodian (Mithāq Walī al-zamān) is considered the entrance to the Druze religion, and they believe that all Druze in their past lives have signed this Charter, and Druze believe that this Charter embodies with human souls after death.

I rely on our Moula Al-Hakim the lonely God, the individual, the eternal, who is out of couples and numbers, (someone) the son of (someone) has approved recognition enjoined on himself and on his soul, in a healthy of his mind and his body, permissibility aversive is obedient and not forced, to repudiate from all creeds, articles and all religions and beliefs on the differences varieties, and he does not know something except obedience of almighty Moulana Al-Hakim, and obedience is worship and that it does not engage in worship anyone ever attended or wait, and that he had handed his soul and his body and his money and all he owns to almighty Maulana Al-Hakim.[146][clarification needed]

The Druze also use a similar formula, called al-'ahd, when one is initiated into the ʻUqqāl.[147]

Sanctuaries

 
Druze clerics in Khalwat al-Bayada.

The prayer-houses of the Druze are called khilwa, khalwa, khilwat or khalwat. The primary sanctuary of the Druze is at Khalwat al-Bayada.[148]

Esotericism

The Druze believe that many teachings given by prophets, religious leaders and holy books have esoteric meanings preserved for those of intellect, in which some teachings are symbolic and allegorical in nature, and divide the understanding of holy books and teachings into three layers.

These layers, according to the Druze, are as follows:

  • The obvious or exoteric (zahir), accessible to anyone who can read or hear;
  • The hidden or esoteric (batin), accessible to those who are willing to search and learn through the concept of exegesis;
  • And the hidden of the hidden, a concept known as anagoge, inaccessible to all but a few really enlightened individuals who truly understand the nature of the universe.[149]

Druze do not believe that the esoteric meaning abrogates or necessarily abolishes the exoteric one. Hamza bin Ali refutes such claims by stating that if the esoteric interpretation of taharah (purity) is purity of the heart and soul, it doesn't mean that a person can discard his physical purity, as salat (prayer) is useless if a person is untruthful in his speech and that the esoteric and exoteric meanings complement each other.[150]

Seven Druze precepts

The Druze follow seven moral precepts or duties that are considered the core of the faith.[41] The Seven Druze precepts are:[151]

  1. Veracity in speech and the truthfulness of the tongue.
  2. Protection and mutual aid to the brethren in faith.
  3. Renunciation of all forms of former worship (specifically, invalid creeds) and false belief.
  4. Repudiation of the devil (Iblis), and all forces of evil (translated from Arabic Toghyan, meaning "despotism").
  5. Confession of God's unity.
  6. Acquiescence in God's acts no matter what they be.
  7. Absolute submission and resignation to God's divine will in both secret and public.

Taqiyya

Complicating their identity is the custom of taqiyya—concealing or disguising their beliefs when necessary—that they adopted from Ismailism and the esoteric nature of the faith, in which many teachings are kept secretive. This is done in order to keep the religion from those who are not yet prepared to accept the teachings and therefore could misunderstand it, as well as to protect the community when it is in danger. Some claim to be Muslim or Christian in order to avoid persecution; some do not.[152] Druze in different states can have radically different lifestyles.[153]

Theophany

Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad is considered the founder of the Druze and the primary author of the Druze manuscripts.[5] He proclaimed that God had become human and taken the form of man.[154][155][156][157][158][excessive citations] Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah is an important figure in the Druze faith whose eponymous founder ad-Darazi proclaimed him as the incarnation of God in 1018.[154][155]

Prophethood

Recognition of prophets in the Druze religion is divided into three sort-of subcategories, the prophet themselves (natiq), their disciples (asas), and witnesses to their message (hujjah).

The number 5 contains an unstated significance within the Druze faith; it is believed in this area that great prophets come in groups of five. In the time of the ancient Greeks, these five were represented by Pythagoras, Plato, Aristotle, Parmenides, and Empedocles. In the first century, the five were represented by Jesus Christ,[159][160] John the Baptist,[161] Saint Matthew, Saint Mark, and Saint Luke.[162] In the time of the faith's foundation, the five were Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad, Muḥammad ibn Wahb al-Qurashī, Abū'l-Khayr Salama ibn Abd al-Wahhab al-Samurri, Ismāʿīl ibn Muḥammad at-Tamīmī, and Al-Muqtana Baha'uddin.

Druze tradition honors and reveres Hamza ibn Ali Ahmad and Salman the Persian as "mentors" and "prophets", believed to be reincarnations of the monotheistic idea.[163][164]

Other beliefs

The Druze allow divorce, although it is discouraged, and circumcision is not necessary. Apostasy is forbidden,[165] and they usually have religious services on Thursday evenings.[166] Druze follow Sunni Hanafi law on issues which their own faith has no particular rulings about.[167][168]

Formal Druze worship is confined to weekly meeting on Thursday evenings, during which all members of community gather together to discuss local issues before those not initiated into the secrets of the faith (the juhhāl, or the ignorant) are dismissed, and those who are "uqqāl" or "enlightened" (those few initiated in the Druze holy books) remain to read and study.[166]

Religious symbol

 

The Druze strictly avoid iconography, but use five colors ("Five Limits" خمس حدود khams ḥudūd) as a religious symbol:[169][170] green, red, yellow, blue, and white. The five limits were listed by Ismail at-Tamimi (d. 1030) in the Epistle of the Candle (risalat ash-sham'a) as:

  • First limit: Hamza Ibn Ali (حمزة إبن علي إبن أحمد) (or Jesus according to other sources)[171]
  • Second limit: Ismail ibn Muhamed ibn Hamed at-Tamimi (Ismail at-Tamimi) (إسماعيل إبن محمد بن حامد التميمي)
  • Third limit: Muhamed ibn Wahb (محمد إبن وهب)
  • Fourth limit (as-Sabiq the anterior): Salama ibn abd al-Wahhab (سلامة إبن عبد الوهاب)
  • Fiifth limit (al-llahiq the posterior): Ali ibn Ahmed as-Samouqi (علي إبن أحمد السموقي)

Each of the colors representing the five limits pertains to a metaphysical power called ḥadd, literally "a limit", as in the distinctions that separate humans from animals, or the powers that make humans the animalistic body. Each ḥadd is color-coded in the following manner:

  • Green for ʻAql "the Universal Mind/Intelligence/Nous",
  • Red for Nafs "the Universal Soul/Anima mundi",
  • Yellow for Kalima "the Word/Logos",
  • Blue for Sābiq (السابق) "the anterior/potentiality/cause/precedent", the first intellect.
  • White for al-llahiq (اللاحق) "the posterior/future/effect/Immanence".

The mind generates qualia and gives consciousness.[172] The soul embodies the mind and is responsible for transmigration and the character of oneself. The word, which is the atom of language, communicates qualia between humans and represents the platonic forms in the sensible world. The Sābiq and Tālī is the ability to perceive and learn from the past and plan for the future and predict it.

 

The colors can be arranged in vertically descending stripes (as a flag), or a five-pointed star.[173] The stripes are a diagrammatic cut of the spheres in neoplatonic philosophy, while the five-pointed star embodies the golden ratio, phi, as a symbol of temperance and a life of moderation.

Prayer houses and holy places

 
Jethro shrine and temple of Druze in Hittin, northern Israel

Holy places of the Druze are archaeological sites important to the community and associated with religious holidays;[174] the most notable example being Nabi Shu'ayb, dedicated to Jethro, who is a central figure of the Druze religion. Druze make pilgrimages to this site on the holiday of Ziyarat al-Nabi Shu'ayb.[175]

 
Druze prayer house in Daliat al-Karmel, Israel

One of the most important features of the Druze village having a central role in social life is the khilwa or khalwat—a house of prayer, retreat and religious unity. The khalwat may be known as majlis in local languages.[176]

The second type of religious shrine is one associated with the anniversary of a historic event or death of a prophet. If it is a mausoleum the Druze call it mazār and if it is a shrine they call it maqām. The holy places become more important to the community in times of adversity and calamity. The holy places and shrines of the Druze are scattered in various villages, in places where they are protected and cared for. They are found in Syria, Lebanon and Israel.[174]

Initiates and "ignorant" members

 
Druze sheikh (ʻuqqāl) wearing religious dress

The Druze do not recognize any religious hierarchy.[177] As such, there is no "Druze clergy". Those few initiated in the Druze holy books are called ʿuqqāl,[178] while the "ignorant", regular members of the group are called juhhāl.[179]

Given the strict religious, intellectual and spiritual requirements, most of the Druze are not initiated and might be referred to as al-Juhhāl (جهال), literally "the Ignorant", but in practice referring to the non-initiated Druze.[180] However, that term is seldom used by the Druze. Those Druze are not granted access to the Druze holy literature or allowed to attend the initiated religious meetings of the ʻuqqāl. The "juhhāl" are the vast majority of the Druze community.[177] The cohesiveness and frequent inter-community social interaction, however, enables most Druze to have an idea about their broad ethical requirements and have some sense of what their theology consists of (albeit often flawed).

The initiated religious group, which includes both men and women (less than 10% of the population), is called al-ʻUqqāl (عقال "the Knowledgeable Initiates"). They might or might not dress differently, although most wear a costume that was characteristic of mountain people in previous centuries. Women can opt to wear al-mandīl, a loose white veil, especially in the presence of other people. They wear al-mandīl on their heads to cover their hair and wrap it around their mouths. They wear black shirts and long skirts covering their legs to their ankles. Male ʻuqqāl often grow mustaches, and wear dark Levantine-Turkish traditional dresses, called the shirwal, with white turbans that vary according to the seniority of the ʻuqqāl. Traditionally the Druze women have played an important role both socially and religiously inside the community.[177]

Al-ʻuqqāl have equal rights to al-Juhhāl, but establish a hierarchy of respect based on religious service. The most influential of al-ʻuqqāl become Ajawīd, recognized religious leaders, and from this group the spiritual leaders of the Druze are assigned. While the Shaykh al-ʻAql, which is an official position in Syria, Lebanon, and Israel, is elected by the local community and serves as the head of the Druze religious council, judges from the Druze religious courts are usually elected for this position. Unlike the spiritual leaders, the authority of the Shaykh al-ʻAql is limited to the country he is elected in, though in some instances spiritual leaders are elected to this position.[181]

The Druze believe in the unity of God, and are often known as the "People of Monotheism" or simply "Monotheists".[182] Their theology has a Neo-Platonic view about how God interacts with the world through emanations and is similar to some gnostic and other esoteric sects. Druze philosophy also shows Sufi influences.[183]

Druze principles focus on honesty, loyalty, filial piety, altruism, patriotic sacrifice, and monotheism.[184] They reject nicotine, alcohol, and other drugs and often, the consumption of pork (to the Uqqāl and not necessarily to the Juhhāl).[185] Druze reject polygamy, believe in reincarnation, and are not obliged to observe most of the religious rituals.[186] The Druze believe that rituals are symbolic and have an individualistic effect on the person, for which reason Druze are free to perform them, or not. The community does celebrate Eid al-Adha, however, considered their most significant holiday; though their form of observance is different compared to that of most Muslims.[187]

Culture

 
Israeli Druze family visiting Gamla; wearing religious dress.

The religious life of the average Druze ("juhhāl") revolves around a very small number of events – birth and circumcision, engagement and marriage, death and burial – and is devoid of special Druze prayers or worship.[188]

Marriage outside the Druze faith is forbidden,[68] and if a Druze marries a non-Druze, the Druze may be ostracized and marginalized by their community.[189] Because a non-Druze partner cannot convert to Druze faith, the couple cannot have Druze children, because the Druze faith can only be passed on through birth to two Druze parents.[13]

Circumcision is widely practiced by the Druze.[190] The procedure is practiced as a cultural tradition, and has no religious significance in the Druze faith.[191] There is no special date for this act in the Druze faith: male Druze infants are usually circumcised shortly after birth,[188] however some remain uncircumcised until the age of ten or older.[188] Some Druze do not circumcise their male children, and refuse to observe this "common Muslim practice".[192]

Language

The mother tongue of Druze in Syria, Lebanon and Israel is Levantine Arabic,[193] except those born and living in the Druze diaspora such as Venezuela, where Arabic was not taught or spoken at home.[193] The Druze Arabic dialect, especially in the rural areas, is often different from the other regional Arabic dialects.[193] Druze Arabic dialect is distinguished from others by retention of the phoneme /q/,[193] the use of which by Druze is particularly prominent in the mountains and less so in urban areas.

The Druze citizens of Israel are Arabic in language and culture,[18] and linguistically speaking, the majority of them are fluently bilingual, speaking both a Central Northern Levantine Arabic dialect and Hebrew. In Druze Arab homes and towns in Israel, the primary language spoken is Arabic, while some Hebrew words have entered the colloquial Arabic dialect. They often use Hebrew characters to write their Arabic dialect online.[194]

Cuisine

 
Druze women making Druze pita in Isfiya, Israel.

Druze cuisine is similar to other Levantine cuisines and is rich in grains, meat, potato, cheese, bread, whole grains, fruits, vegetables, fresh fish and tomatoes. Perhaps the most distinctive aspect of Druze and Levantine cuisine is meze including tabbouleh, hummus and baba ghanoush. Kibbeh nayyeh is also a popular mezze among Druzes. Other famous foods among Druzes include falafel, sfiha, shawarma, dolma, kibbeh, kusa mahshi, shishbarak, muhammara, and mujaddara.[195] Druze pita is a Druze-styled pita filled with labneh (thick yoghurt) and topped with olive oil and za’atar,[196] and a very popular bread in Israel.[197] Al-Meleh a popular dish among Druze in Hauran region (As-Suwayda Governorate), cooked in a pressure cooker and served on huge special plates at weddings, holidays, and other special occasions. And consists of bulgur wheat immersed in ghee with lamb and yogurt, and served hot with fried kibbeh and vegetables.[198]

For reasons that remain unclear, the Mulukhiyah dish was banned by the Fatimid Caliph Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah sometime during his reign (996–1021). While the ban was eventually lifted after the end of his reign, the Druze, who hold Al-Hakim in high regard and give him quasi-divine authority,[158] continue to respect the ban, and do not eat Mulukhiyah of any kind to this day.[199]

Mate (in Levantine Arabic, متة /mæte/) is a popular drink consumed by the Druze brought to the Levant by Syrian migrants from Argentina in the 19th century.[200] Mate is made by steeping dried leaves of the South American plant yerba mate in hot water and is served with a metal straw (بمبيجة bambīja or مصاصة maṣṣāṣah) from a gourd (فنجان finjān or قَرْعَة qarʻah). Mate is often the first item served when entering a Druze home. It is a social drink and can be shared between multiple participants. After each drinker, the metal straw is cleaned with lemon rind. Traditional snacks eaten with mate include raisins, nuts, dried figs, biscuits, and chips.[201][200]

Druze and other religions

Relationship with Muslims

The Druze faith is often classified as a branch of Isma'ili; although according to various scholars Druze faith "diverge substantially from Islam, both Sunni and Shia".[202][203] Even though the faith originally developed out of Ismaili Islam, most Druze do not identify as Muslims,[204][205][206][207][208][209] and they do not accept the five pillars of Islam.[47] Historian David R. W. Bryer defines the Druzes as ghulat of Isma'ilism, since they exaggerated the cult of the caliph al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah and considered him divine; he also defines the Druzes as a religion that deviated from Islam.[210] He also added that as a result of this deviation, the Druze faith "seems as different from Islam as Islam is from Christianity or Christianity is from Judaism".[211]

Historically the relationship between the Druze and Muslims has been characterized by intense persecution.[106][212][213][214] The Druze have frequently experienced persecution by different Muslim regimes such as the Shia Fatimid Caliphate,[54][85] Mamluk,[95] Sunni Ottoman Empire,[215][102] and Egypt Eyalet.[216][217] The persecution of the Druze included massacres, demolishing Druze prayer houses and holy places, and forced conversion to Islam.[218] Those acts of persecution were meant to eradicate the whole community according to the Druze narrative.[219] Most recently, the Syrian Civil War, which began in 2011, saw persecution of the Druze at the hands of Islamic extremists.[220][221]

Since Druze emerged from Islam and share certain beliefs with Islam, its position of whether it is a separate religion or a sect of Islam is sometimes controversial among Muslim scholars.[222] Druze are not considered Muslims by those belonging to orthodox Islamic schools of thought.[223][224][225][226][227] Ibn Taymiyya, a prominent Muslim scholar muhaddith, dismissed the Druze as non-Muslims,[228] and his fatwa cited that Druze: "Are not at the level of ′Ahl al-Kitāb (People of the Book) nor mushrikin (polytheists). Rather, they are from the most deviant kuffār (Infidel) ... Their women can be taken as slaves and their property can be seized ... they are to be killed whenever they are found and cursed as they described ... It is obligatory to kill their scholars and religious figures so that they do not misguide others",[96] which in that setting would have legitimized violence against them as apostates.[229][230] The Ottoman Empire often relied on Ibn Taymiyya’s religious ruling to justify their persecution of Druze.[231] In contrast, according to Ibn Abidin, whose work Radd al-Muhtar 'ala al-Durr al-Mukhtar is still considered the authoritative text of Hanafi fiqh today,[232] the Druze are neither Muslims nor apostates.[233]

In 1959, in an ecumenical move driven by Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser's effort to broaden his political appeal after the establishment of the United Arab Republic between Egypt and Syria in 1958,[234] the Islamic scholar Mahmud Shaltut at Al Azhar University in Cairo classified the Druze as Muslims,[235] even though most Druze no longer consider themselves Muslim.[236][237] The fatwa declares that the Druze are Muslims because they recite the twofold Shahada, and believe in the Qur'an and monotheism and do not oppose Islam in word or deed.[238] This fatwa was not accepted by all in the Islamic world, many dissenting scholars have argued the Druze recite the Shahada as a form of taqiya; a precautionary dissimulation or denial of religious belief and practice in the face of persecution. Some sects of Islam, including all Shia denominations, don't recognize the religious authority of Al Azhar University, those that do sometimes challenge the religious legitimacy of Shaltut's fatwa because it was issued for political reasons, as Gamal Abdel Nasser saw it as a tool to spread his appeal and influence across the entire Arab world.[239][240] In 2012, due to a drift towards Salafism in Al-Azhar, and the ascension of the Muslim Brotherhood into Egyptian political leadership, the dean of the Faculty of Islamic Studies at Al-Azhar issued a fatwa strongly opposed to the 1959 fatwa.[241]

 
Shuaib (Jethro) grave near Hittin, Israel: Both religions venerate Shuaib.

Both religions venerate Shuaib and Muhammad: Shuaib (Jethro) is revered as the chief prophet in the Druze religion,[242] and in Islam he is considered a prophet of God. Muslims regard Muhammad as the final and paramount prophet sent by God,[243][244] to the Druze, Muhammad is exalted as one of the seven prophets sent by God in different periods of history.[159][160][32]

In terms of religious comparison, Islamic schools and branches do not believe in reincarnation,[40] a paramount tenet of the Druze faith.[144] Islam teaches dawah, whereas the Druze do not accept converts to their faith. Marriage outside the Druze faith is rare and is strongly discouraged. Islamic schools and branches allow for divorce and permit men to be married to multiple women, contrary to the views of the Druze in monogamous marriage and not allowing divorce. Differences between Islamic schools and branches and Druze include their belief in the theophany,[40] Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad is considered the founder of the Druze and the primary author of the Druze manuscripts;[5] he proclaimed that God had become human and taken the form of man, Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah.[154][155][156][157][158] Within Islam, however, such a concept of theophany is a denial of monotheism.

The Druze faith incorporates some elements of Islam,[32][33] and other religious beliefs. Druze Sacred texts include the Qur'an and the Epistles of Wisdom (rasail al-hikma رسائل الحكمة)[142] The Druze community does celebrate Eid al-Adha as their most significant holiday; though their form of observance is different compared to that of most Muslims.[187] The Druze faith does not follow Sharia nor any of the Five Pillars of Islam save reciting the Shahada.[245] Scholars argue that Druze recite the Shahada in order to protect their religion and their own safety, and to avoid persecution by Muslims.[245]

Relationship with Christians

 
Christian Church and Druze Khalwa in Shuf: Historically; the Druzes and the Christians in the Shuf Mountains lived in complete harmony.[108]

Christianity and Druze are Abrahamic religions that share a historical traditional connection with some major theological differences. The two faiths share a common place of origin in the Middle East and consider themselves to be monotheistic. The relationship between Druze and Christians has been characterized largely by harmony and peaceful coexistence.[105][106][107][108] Amicable relations between the two groups prevailed throughout most of history, though a few exceptions exist, including the 1860 civil conflict in Mount Lebanon and Damascus.[109][110] Conversion of Druze to Christianity used to be common practice in the Levant region.[246][189] Over the centuries, a number of Druze embraced Christianity,[247][248][249][250] such as some of Shihab dynasty members,[251] as well as the Abi-Lamma clan.[252][253]

Contact between Christian communities (members of the Maronites, Eastern Orthodox, Melkite, and other churches) and the Unitarian Druze led to the presence of mixed villages and towns in Mount Lebanon, Chouf,[108] Jabal al-Druze,[254] the Galilee region, Mount Carmel, and Golan Heights.[255] The Maronite Catholic and the Druze founded modern Lebanon in the early Eighteenth Century, through a governing and social system known as the "Maronite-Druze dualism" in the Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate.[130]

 
Left to right: Christian mountain dweller from Zahlé, Christian mountain dweller of Zgharta, and a Lebanese Druze man in traditional attire (1873).

Druze doctrine teaches that Christianity is to be "esteemed and praised" as the Gospel writers are regarded as "carriers of wisdom".[256] The Druze faith incorporates some elements of Christianity,[32][33] in addition to adoption of Christian elements on the Epistles of Wisdom.[257] The full Druze canon or Druze scripture (Epistles of Wisdom) includes the Old Testament,[258] the New Testament,[258] the Quran and philosophical works by Plato and those influenced by Socrates among works from other religions and philosophers.[258] The Druze faith shows influence of Christian monasticism, among other religious practices.[259]

In terms of religious comparison, mainstream Christian denominations do not believe in reincarnation or the transmigration of the soul, unlike the Druze.[40] Evangelism is widely seen as central to the Christian faith, unlike the Druze who do not accept converts. Marriage outside the Druze faith is rare and is strongly discouraged. Similarities between the Druze and Christians include commonalities in their view of monogamous marriage, as well as the forbidding of divorce and remarriage,[40] in addition to the belief in the oneness of God and theophany.[260]

Both mainstream Christian denominations and Druze does not require male circumcision,[261][191] even though male circumcision is commonly practiced in many predominantly Christian countries and many Christian communities,[262] and in Coptic Christianity and the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church as a rite of passage.[263][264][265][266][267] Male circumcision is also widely practiced by the Druze,[190] but as a cultural tradition, since circumcision has no religious significance in the Druze faith.[191]

 
The Druze Maqam Al-Masih (Jesus) in As-Suwayda Governorate: Both religions revere Jesus.[159]

Both faiths give a prominent place to Jesus:[159][160] In Christianity, Jesus is the central figure, seen as the messiah. To the Druze, Jesus is an important prophet of God,[159][160] being among the seven prophets (including Muhammad) who appeared in different periods of history.[268] The Druze revere Jesus "the son of Joseph and Mary" and his four disciples, who wrote the Gospels.[269] According to the Druze manuscripts Jesus is the Greatest Imam and the incarnation of Ultimate Reason (Akl) on earth and the first cosmic principle (Hadd),[269][171] and regards Jesus and Hamza ibn Ali as the incarnations of one of the five great celestial powers, who form part of their system.[270] In the Druze tradition, Jesus is known under three titles: the True Messiah (al-Masih al-Haq), the Messiah of all Nations (Masih al-Umam), and the Messiah of Sinners. This is due, respectively, to the belief that Jesus delivered the true Gospel message, the belief that he was the Saviour of all nations, and the belief that he offers forgiveness.[271]

Both religions venerate John the Baptist,[161][272] Saint George,[273] Elijah,[161] Luke the Evangelist,[274] Job and other common figures.[274] Figures in the Old Testament such as Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, and Jethro are considered important prophets of God in the Druze faith, being among the seven prophets who appeared in different periods of history.[159][160]

Relationship with Jews

 
Maqam Al-Khidr in Kafr Yasif.

The relationship between the Druze and Jews has been controversial,[275] Antisemitic material is contained in the Druze literature such as the Epistles of Wisdom; for example in an epistle ascribed to one of the founders of Druzism, Baha al-Din al-Muqtana,[276] probably written sometime between AD 1027 and AD 1042, accused the Jews of crucifying Jesus.[277] On the other hand, Benjamin of Tudela, a Jewish traveler[278] from the 12th century, pointed out that the Druze maintained good commercial relations with the Jews nearby, and according to him this was because the Druze liked the Jewish people.[279] Yet, the Jews and Druze lived isolated from each other, except in few mixed towns such as Deir al-Qamar and Peki'in.[279][280] The Deir el Qamar Synagogue was built in 1638, during the Ottoman era in Lebanon, to serve the local Jewish population, some of whom were part of the immediate entourage of the Druze Emir Fakhr-al-Din II.

The conflict between Druze and Jews occurs during the Druze power struggle in Mount Lebanon, Jewish settlements of Galilee such as Safad and Tiberias were destroyed by the Druze in 1660.[281][282] During the Druze revolt against the rule of Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt, the Jewish community in Safad was attacked by Druze rebels in early July 1838, the violence against the Jews included plundering their homes and desecrating their synagogues.[283][284][285]

 
Oliphant house in Daliyat al-Karmel.

During the British Mandate for Palestine, the Druze did not embrace the rising Arab nationalism of the time or participate in violent confrontations with Jewish immigrants. In 1948, many Druze volunteered for the Israeli army and no Druze villages were destroyed or permanently abandoned.[286] Since the establishment of the state of Israel, the Druze have demonstrated solidarity with Israel and distanced themselves from Arab and Islamic radicalism.[287] Israeli Druze citizens serve in the Israel Defense Forces.[288] The Jewish-Druze partnership was often referred as "a covenant of blood" (Hebrew: ברית דמים, brit damim) in recognition of the common military yoke carried by the two peoples for the security of the country.[289][277][290] From 1957, the Israeli government formally recognized the Druze as a separate religious community,[291] and are defined as a distinct ethnic group in the Israeli Ministry of Interior's census registration.[291] Israeli Druze do not consider themselves Muslim, and see their faith as a separate and independent religion.[291] While compared to other Israeli Christians and Muslims, Druze place less emphasis on Arab identity and self-identify more as Israeli. However, they were less ready for personal relationships with Jews compared to Israeli Muslims and Christians.[292]

In terms of religious comparison, scholars consider Judaism and the Druze faith as ethnoreligious groups,[24] both practicing endogamy,[23] and both typically do not proselytize. Belief in reincarnation (Gilgul) exist in some strands of Judaism influenced by the Kabbalah, such as Hasidic Judaism, but is rejected by mainstream Jewish denominations (Reformed Judaism, Conservative Judaism and Orthodox Judaism).[293] Figures in the Hebrew Bible such as Adam, Noah, Abraham, and Moses are considered important prophets of God in the Druze faith, being among the seven prophets who appeared in different periods of history.[159][160] Both religions venerate Elijah,[161] Job and other common figures. In the Hebrew Bible, Jethro was Moses' father-in-law, a Kenite shepherd and priest of Midian.[294] Jethro of Midian is considered an ancestor of the Druze who revere him as their spiritual founder and chief prophet.

Origins

Ethnic origins

Arabian hypothesis

The Druze faith extended to many areas in the Middle East, but most of the modern Druze can trace their origin to the Wadi al-Taym in Southern Lebanon, which is named after an Arab tribe Taym Allah (or Taym Allat) which, according to Islamic historian al-Tabari, first came from the Arabian Peninsula into the valley of the Euphrates where they had been Christianized prior to their migration into Lebanon. Many of the Druze feudal families, whose genealogies have been preserved by the two modern Syrian chroniclers Haydar al-Shihabi and Ahmad Faris al-Shidyaq, seem also to point in the direction of this origin. Arabian tribes emigrated via the Persian Gulf and stopped in Iraq on their route that would later to lead them to Syria. The first feudal Druze family, the Tanukhids, which made for itself a name in fighting the Crusaders was, according to Haydar al-Shihabi, an Arab tribe from Mesopotamia where it occupied the position of a ruling family and apparently was Christianized.[95][page needed]

Travelers like Niebuhr, and scholars like Max von Oppenheim, undoubtedly echoing the popular Druze belief regarding their own origin, have classified them as Arabs.

Druze as a mixture of Western Asian tribes

The 1911 edition of Encyclopædia Britannica states that the Druze are "a mixture of refugee stocks, in which the Arab largely predominates, grafted on to an original mountain population of Aramaic blood".[57]

Iturean hypothesis

According to Jewish contemporary literature, the Druze, who were visited and described in 1165 by Benjamin of Tudela, were pictured as descendants of the Itureans,[295] an Ismaelite Arab tribe, which used to reside in the northern parts of the Golan plateau through Hellenistic and Roman periods. The word Druzes, in an early Hebrew edition of his travels, occurs as Dogziyin, but it is clear that this is a scribal error.

Archaeological assessments of the Druze region have also proposed the possibility of Druze descending from Itureans,[296] who had inhabited Mount Lebanon and Golan Heights in late classic antiquity, but their traces fade in the Middle Ages.

Genetics

Lebanese Christians and Druze became a genetic isolate in the predominantly Islamic world.[297]

In a 2005 study of ASPM gene variants, Mekel-Bobrov et al. found that the Israeli Druze people of the Mount Carmel region have among the highest rate of the newly evolved ASPM- Haplogroup D, at 52.2% occurrence of the approximately 6,000-year-old allele.[298] While it is not yet known exactly what selective advantage is provided by this gene variant, the Haplogroup D allele is thought[by whom?] to be positively selected in populations and to confer some substantial advantage that has caused its frequency to rapidly increase.

A 2004 DNA study has shown that Israeli Druze are remarkable for the high frequency (35%) of males who carry the Y-chromosomal haplogroup L, which is otherwise uncommon in the Middle East (Shen et al. 2004).[299] This haplogroup originates from prehistoric South Asia and has spread from Pakistan into southern Iran. A 2008 study done on larger samples showed that L-M20 averages 27% in Mount Carmel Druze, 2% in Galilee Druze, 8% in Lebanese Druze, and it was not found in a sample of 59 Syrian Druze (Slush et al. 2008).[300]

Cruciani, in 2007, found E1b1b1a2 (E-V13) [a subclade of E1b1b1a (E-M78)] in high levels (>10% of the male population) in Cypriot and Druze lineages. Recent genetic clustering analyses of ethnic groups are consistent with the close ancestral relationship between the Druze and Cypriots, and also identified similarity to the general Syrian and Lebanese populations, as well as the major Jewish divisions (Ashkenazi, Sephardi, Iraqi, and Moroccan Jews) (Behar et al. 2010).[301]

Also, a new study concluded that the Druze harbor a remarkable diversity of mitochondrial DNA lineages that appear to have separated from each other thousands of years ago. But instead of dispersing throughout the world after their separation, the full range of lineages can still be found within the Druze population.[302]

The researchers noted that the Druze villages contained a striking range of high frequency and high diversity of the X haplogroup, suggesting that this population provides a glimpse into the past genetic landscape of the Near East at a time when the X haplogroup was more prevalent.[302]

These findings are consistent with the Druze oral tradition that claims that the adherents of the faith came from diverse ancestral lineages stretching back tens of thousands of years.[302] The Shroud of Turin analysis shows significant traces of mitochondrial DNA unique to the Druze community.[303]

A 2008 study published on the genetic background of Druze communities in Israel showed highly heterogeneous parental origins. A total of 311 Israeli Druze were sampled: 37 from the Golan Heights, 183 from the Galilee, and 35 from Mount Carmel, as well as 27 Druze immigrants from Syria and 29 from Lebanon (Slush et al. 2008). The researchers found the following frequencies of Y-chromosomal and MtDNA haplogroups:[300]

  • Mount Carmel: L 27%, R 27%, J 18%, E 15%, G 12%.
  • Galilee: J 31%, R 20%, E 18%, G 14%, K 11%, Q 4%, L 2%.
  • Golan Heights: J 54%, E 29%, I 8%, G 4%, C 4%.
  • Lebanon: J 58%, K 17%, Q 8%, R 8%, L 8%.
  • Syria: J 39%, E 29%, R 14%, G 14%, K 4%.
  • Maternal MtDNA haplogroup frequencies: H 32%, X 13%, K 12.5%, U 10 %, T 7.5%, HV 4.8 %, J 4.8%, I 3.5%, pre HV 3%, L2a3 2.25%, N1b 2.25%, M1 1.6%, W 1.29%.

According to a 2015 study, Druze have a largely similar genome with Middle Eastern Arabs, but they have not married outside of their clans in 1000 years and Druze families from different regions share a similarity with each other that distinguishes them from other Middle Eastern populations.[304]

A 2016 study based on testing samples of Druze in the historic region of Syria, in comparison with ancient humans (including Anatolian and Armenian), and on Geographic Population Structure (GPS) tool by converting genetic distances into geographic distances, concluded that Druze might hail from the Zagros Mountains and the surroundings of Lake Van in eastern Anatolia, then they later migrated south to settle in the mountainous regions in Syria, Lebanon and Israel.[305]

A 2020 study on remains from Canaanaite (Bronze Age southern Levantine) populations suggests a significant degree of genetic continuity in currently Arabic-speaking Levantine populations (including the Druze, Lebanese, Palestinians, and Syrians), as well as in most Jewish groups (including Sephardi Jews, Ashkenazi Jews, Mizrahi Jews, and Maghrebi Jews) from the populations of the Bronze Age Levant, suggesting that the aforementioned groups all derive more than half of their overall ancestry (atDNA) from Canaanite / Bronze Age Levantine populations,[306][307] albeit with varying sources and degrees of admixture from differing host or invading populations depending on each group.

In a principal component analysis of a 2014 study, Druze were located between Lebanese people and Mizrahi Jews.[308] In a PCA in a 2021 study, Druze were close to Lebanese people and a part of the larger Levant-Iraq cluster.[309]

See also

References

Citations

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    Remove ye the causes of fear and estrangement from yourselves. Do away with the corruption of delusion and conformity. Be ye certain that the Prince of Believers hath given unto you free will, and hath spared you the trouble of disguising and concealing your true beliefs, so that when ye work ye may keep your deeds pure for God. He hath done thus so that when you relinquish your previous beliefs and doctrines ye shall not indeed lean on such causes of impediments and pretensions. By conveying to you the reality of his intention, the Prince of Believers hath spared you any excuse for doing so. He hath urged you to declare your belief openly. Ye are now safe from any hand which may bring harm unto you. Ye now may find rest in his assurance ye shall not be wronged. Let those who are present convey this message unto the absent so that it may be known by both the distinguished and the common people. It shall thus become a rule to mankind; and Divine Wisdom shall prevail for all the days to come.

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  224. ^ D. Grafton, David (2009). Piety, Politics, and Power: Lutherans Encountering Islam in the Middle East. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 14. ISBN 9781630877187. In addition, there are several quasi-Muslim sects, in that, although they follow many of the beliefs and practices of orthodox Islam, the majority of Sunnis consider them heretical. These would be the Ahmadiyya, Druze, Ibadi, and the Yazidis.
  225. ^ R. Williams, Victoria (2020). Indigenous Peoples: An Encyclopedia of Culture, History, and Threats to Survival [4 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 318. ISBN 9781440861185. As Druze is a nonritualistic religion without requirements to pray, fast, make pilgrimages, or observe days of rest, the Druze are not considered an Islamic people by Sunni Muslims.
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  228. ^ Roald, Anne Sofie (2011). Religious Minorities in the Middle East: Domination, Self-Empowerment, Accommodation. BRILL. p. 255. ISBN 9789004207424. Therefore, many of these scholars follow Ibn Taymiyya'sfatwa from the beginning of the fourteenth century that declared the Druzes and the Alawis as heretics outside Islam ...
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  249. ^ Hobby, Jeneen (2011). Encyclopedia of Cultures and Daily Life. University of Philadelphia Press. p. 232. ISBN 9781414448916. US Druze settled in small towns and kept a low profile, joining Protestant churches (usually Presbyterian or Methodist) and often Americanizing their names..
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  262. ^ Gruenbaum, Ellen (2015). The Female Circumcision Controversy: An Anthropological Perspective. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 61. ISBN 9780812292510. Christian theology generally interprets male circumcision to be an Old Testament rule that is no longer an obligation ... though in many countries (especially the United States and Sub-Saharan Africa, but not so much in Europe) it is widely practiced among Christians
  263. ^ Stearns, Peter N. (2008). The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern World. Oxford University Press. p. 179. ISBN 9780195176322. Uniformly practiced by Jews, Muslims, and the members of Coptic, Ethiopian, and Eritrean Orthodox Churches, male circumcision remains prevalent in many regions of the world, particularly Africa, South and East Asia, Oceania, and Anglosphere countries.
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  268. ^ A Political and Economic Dictionary of the Middle East. Routledge. 2013. ISBN 9781135355616. ...Druze believe in seven prophets: Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, Muhammad, and Muhammad ibn Ismail ad-Darazi..
  269. ^ a b Dana, Nissim (2008). The Druze in the Middle East: Their Faith, Leadership, Identity and Status. Michigan University press. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-903900-36-9.
  270. ^ Crone, Patricia (2013). The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought. Princeton University Press. p. 139. ISBN 9780691134840.
  271. ^ Swayd, Samy (2019). The A to Z of the Druzes. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 88. ISBN 9780810870024. Jesus is known in the Druze tradition as the "True Messiah" (al-Masih al-Haq), for he delivered what Druzes view as the true message. He is also referred to as the "Messiah of the Nations" (Masih al-Umam) because he was sent to the world as "Masih of Sins" because he is the one who forgives.
  272. ^ Brockman, Norbert C. (2011). Encyclopedia of Sacred Places, 2nd Edition [2 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 259. ISBN 9781598846553. They included Jesus, John the Baptist, Moses, and Mohammed—all teachers of monotheism
  273. ^ Murphy-O'Connor, Jerome (2008). The Holy Land: An Oxford Archaeological Guide from Earliest Times to 1700. OUP Oxford. p. 205. ISBN 9780191647666.
  274. ^ a b Swayd, Samy S. (2009). The A to Z of the Druzes. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 109. ISBN 9780810868366. They also cover the lives and teachings of some biblical personages, such as Job, Jethro, Jesus, John, Luke, and others
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  276. ^ Nettler, Ronald (2014). Muslim-Jewish Encounters. Routledge. p. 140. ISBN 9781134408542. ...One example of Druze anti—Jewish bias is contained in an epistle ascribed to one of the founders of Druzism, Baha al-Din
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  281. ^ Joel Rappel. History of Eretz Israel from Prehistory up to 1882 (1980), Vol.2, p.531. "In 1662 Sabbathai Sevi arrived in Jerusalem. It was the time when the Jewish settlements of Galilee were destroyed by the Druze: Tiberias was completely desolate and only a few former Safed residents had returned..."
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  283. ^ Sherman Lieber (1992). Mystics and missionaries: the Jews in Palestine, 1799-1840. University of Utah Press. p. 334. ISBN 978-0-87480-391-4. The Druze and local Muslims vandalised the Jewish quarter. During three days, though they enacted a replay of the 1834 plunder, looting homes and desecrating synagogues — no deaths were reported. What could not be stolen was smashed and burned. Jews caught outdoors were robbed and beaten.
  284. ^ Louis Finkelstein (1960). The Jews: their history, culture, and religion. Harper. p. 679. In the summer of 1838 the Druses revolted against Ibrahim Pasha, and once more the Jews were the scapegoat. The Moslems joined the Druses in repeating the slaughter and plunder of 1834.
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  297. ^ Haber et al. 2013. Quote:1-"We show that religious affiliation had a strong impact on the genomes of the Levantines. In particular, conversion of the region's populations to Islam appears to have introduced major rearrangements in populations' relations through admixture with culturally similar but geographically remote populations, leading to genetic similarities between remarkably distant populations like Jordanians, Moroccans, and Yemenis. Conversely, other populations, like Christians and Druze, became genetically isolated in the new cultural environment. We reconstructed the genetic structure of the

druze, confused, with, druse, drooz, arabic, darzī, durzī, وز, durūz, call, themselves, muwaḥḥidūn, monotheists, unitarians, arab, arabic, speaking, esoteric, ethnoreligious, group, from, western, asia, adhere, faith, abrahamic, monotheistic, syncretic, ethnic. Not to be confused with Druse The Druze ˈ d r uː z DROOZ 19 Arabic د ر ز ي darzi or د ر ز ي durzi pl د ر وز duruz who call themselves al Muwaḥḥidun lit the monotheists or the unitarians 20 are an Arab and Arabic speaking esoteric ethnoreligious group 21 22 23 24 from Western Asia who adhere to the Druze faith an Abrahamic monotheistic syncretic and ethnic religion whose main tenets are the unity of God and the belief in reincarnation and the eternity of the soul 25 26 27 28 Most Druze religious practices are kept secret 29 The Druze do not permit outsiders to convert to their religion Marriage outside the Druze faith is rare and strongly discouraged Druze Al Muwaḥḥidun موحد ون دروزDruze star and Druze flagTotal population 800 000 1 2 3 2 000 000 4 FounderHamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad 5 Regions with significant populations Syria600 000 6 7 Lebanon250 000 8 Israel and the Israeli occupied Golan Heights143 000 9 Venezuela60 000 10 11 United States50 000 12 11 Canada25 000 13 Jordan20 000 14 Germany10 000 15 Australia4 268 16 ReligionsDruzismScripturesEpistles of Wisdom Rasa il al hikma LanguagesArabic Levantine Arabic Hebrew L2 17 18 The Epistles of Wisdom is the foundational and central text of the Druze faith 30 The Druze faith incorporates elements of Isma ili Shia 31 Christianity 32 33 Gnosticism Neoplatonism 32 33 Zoroastrianism 34 35 Buddhism 36 37 Hinduism Pythagoreanism 38 39 and other philosophies and beliefs creating a distinct and secretive theology based on an esoteric interpretation of scripture which emphasizes the role of the mind and truthfulness 20 39 Druze believe in theophany and reincarnation 40 Druze believe that at the end of the cycle of rebirth which is achieved through successive reincarnations the soul is united with the Cosmic Mind al ʻaql al kulli 41 The Druze have a special reverence for Shuaib who they believe is the same person as the biblical Jethro 42 The Druze believe that Adam Noah Abraham Moses Jesus Muhammad and Imam Muhammad ibn Isma il were prophets 43 Druze tradition also honors and reveres Salman the Persian 44 al Khidr whom they identify as Elijah reborn as John the Baptist and Saint George 45 Job Luke the Evangelist and others as mentors and prophets 46 source source source source source source Video clips from the archive of Israel Channel 2 Israeli News Company showing Israeli Druze men in traditional clothing The flags shown are Druze flags Even though the faith originally developed out of Isma ilism the Druze are not Muslims 47 48 The Druze faith is one of the major religious groups in the Levant with between 800 000 and a million adherents They are found primarily in Lebanon Syria and Israel with small communities in Jordan They make up 5 5 of the population of Lebanon 3 of Syria and 1 6 of Israel The oldest and most densely populated Druze communities exist in Mount Lebanon and in the south of Syria around Jabal al Druze literally the Mountain of the Druze 49 The Druze community played a critically important role in shaping the history of the Levant where it continues to play a significant political role 50 As a religious minority in every country in which they are found they have frequently experienced persecution by different Muslim regimes including contemporary Islamic extremism 51 52 53 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Location 3 History 3 1 Early history 3 1 1 Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad arrives in Cairo 3 1 2 al Darazi arrives in Cairo 3 1 3 al Darazi issues the unitarian call 3 1 4 al Darazi is executed 3 1 5 Disappearance of Al Hakim 3 1 6 Closing of the unitarian call 3 2 During the Crusades 3 3 Ma an dynasty 3 4 Shihab Dynasty 3 5 Qaysites and the Yemenites 3 6 Civil conflict of 1860 3 7 Rebellion in Hauran 4 Modern history 4 1 In Syria 4 2 In Lebanon 4 3 In Israel 4 4 In Jordan 5 Beliefs 5 1 God 5 2 Scriptures 5 3 Reincarnation 5 4 Pact of Time Custodian 5 5 Sanctuaries 5 6 Esotericism 5 7 Seven Druze precepts 5 8 Taqiyya 5 9 Theophany 5 10 Prophethood 5 11 Other beliefs 6 Religious symbol 7 Prayer houses and holy places 8 Initiates and ignorant members 9 Culture 9 1 Language 9 2 Cuisine 10 Druze and other religions 10 1 Relationship with Muslims 10 2 Relationship with Christians 10 3 Relationship with Jews 11 Origins 11 1 Ethnic origins 11 1 1 Arabian hypothesis 11 1 2 Druze as a mixture of Western Asian tribes 11 1 3 Iturean hypothesis 11 2 Genetics 12 See also 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Bibliography 14 Further reading 15 External linksEtymologyThe name Druze is derived from the name of Muhammad bin Ismail Nashtakin ad Darazi from Persian darzi seamster who was an early preacher Although the Druze consider ad Darazi a heretic 54 the name has been used to identify them possibly by their historical opponents as a way to attach their community with ad Darazi s poor reputation Before becoming public the movement was secretive and held closed meetings in what was known as Sessions of Wisdom During this stage a dispute occurred between ad Darazi and Hamza bin Ali mainly concerning ad Darazi s ghuluww exaggeration which refers to the belief that God was incarnated in human beings to ad Darazi naming himself The Sword of the Faith which led Hamza to write an epistle refuting the need for the sword to spread the faith and several epistles refuting the beliefs of the ghulat In 1016 ad Darazi and his followers openly proclaimed their beliefs and called people to join them causing riots in Cairo against the Unitarian movement including Hamza bin Ali and his followers This led to the suspension of the movement for one year and the expulsion of ad Darazi and his supporters 55 Although the Druze religious books describe ad Darazi as the insolent one and as the calf who is narrow minded and hasty the name Druze is still used for identification and for historical reasons In 1018 ad Darazi was assassinated for his teachings some sources claim that he was executed by Al Hakim bi Amr Allah 54 56 Some authorities see in the name Druze a descriptive epithet derived from Arabic darisah she who studies 57 Others have speculated that the word comes from the Persian word Darazo درز bliss or from Shaykh Hussayn ad Darazi who was one of the early converts to the faith 58 In the early stages of the movement the word Druze is rarely mentioned by historians and in Druze religious texts only the word Muwaḥḥidun Unitarian appears The only early Arab historian who mentions the Druze is the eleventh century Christian scholar Yahya of Antioch who clearly refers to the heretical group created by ad Darazi rather than the followers of Hamza ibn Ali 58 As for Western sources Benjamin of Tudela the Jewish traveler who passed through Lebanon in or around 1165 was one of the first European writers to refer to the Druze by name The word Dogziyin Druzes occurs in an early Hebrew edition of his travels but it is clear that this is a scribal error Be that as it may he described the Druze as mountain dwellers monotheists who believe in soul eternity and reincarnation 59 He also stated that they loved the Jews 60 LocationThe number of Druze people worldwide is between 800 000 and one million with the vast majority residing in the Levant 61 Druze people reside primarily in Syria Lebanon Israel and Jordan 62 63 The Institute of Druze Studies estimates that in 1998 40 50 of Druze live in Syria 30 40 in Lebanon 6 7 in Israel and 1 2 in Jordan 62 About 2 of the Druze population are also scattered within other countries in the Middle East and according to The Institute of Druze Studies there were approximately 20 000 Druzes in the United States in 1998 62 64 According to scholar Colbert C Held of University of Nebraska Lincoln the number of Druze people worldwide is around one million with about 45 to 50 live in Syria 35 to 40 live in Lebanon and less than 10 live in Israel with recently there has been a growing Druze diaspora 65 Large communities of Druze also live outside the Middle East in Australia Canada Europe Latin America mainly Venezuela 10 Colombia and Brazil dubious discuss the United States and West Africa They are Arabs who speak the Arabic language and follow a social pattern very similar to those of the other peoples of the Levant eastern Mediterranean 66 In 2021 the largest Druze communities outside the Middle East are in Venezuela 60 000 and in the United States 50 000 67 According to the Los Angeles Times in 2017 there are about 30 000 in the United States with the largest concentration in Southern California 68 HistoryEarly history The story of the creation of the Druze faith in the days between 1017 and 1018 is dominated by three men and their struggle for influence Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad was an Ismaili mystic and scholar from Khorasan who arrived in Fatimid Egypt in 1014 or 1016 69 and began to preach a Muwaḥḥidun Unitarian doctrine al Hakim bi Amr Allah the sixth Fatimid caliph became a central figure in the faith being preached by Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad Muhammad bin Ismail Nashtakin ad Darazi arrived in Cairo in 1015 or 1017 possibly from Bukhara joined the movement and became an important preacher Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad arrives in Cairo Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad an Ismaili mystic and scholar from Zozan Khorasan in the Samanid Empire 69 arrived in Fatimid Egypt in 1014 or 1016 69 He assembled a group of scholars that met regularly in the Raydan Mosque near the Al Hakim Mosque 70 In 1017 Hamza began to preach a Muwaḥḥidun Unitarian doctrine nbsp Sixth Fatimid caliph al Hakim bi Amr AllahHamza gained the support of the Fatimid caliph al Hakim bi Amr Allah who issued a decree promoting religious freedom 71 72 and eventually became a central figure in the Druze faith 73 74 75 page needed al Darazi arrives in Cairo Little is known about the early life of al Darazi According to most sources he was born in Bukhara He is believed to have been of Persian origins and his title al Darazi is Persian in origin meaning the tailor 76 He arrived in Cairo in 1015 or 1017 after which he joined the newly emerged Druze movement 77 Al Darazi was converted early to the Unitarian faith and became one of its early preachers At that time the movement enlisted a large number of adherents 78 As the number of his followers grew he became obsessed with his leadership and gave himself the title The Sword of the Faith Al Darazi argued that he should be the leader of the daʻwah rather than Hamza ibn Ali and gave himself the title Lord of the Guides because Caliph al Hakim referred to Hamza as Guide of the Consented It is said that al Darazi allowed wine forbidden marriages and taught metempsychosis 79 although this may be exaggeration by contemporary and later historians and polemicists This attitude led to disputes between Ad Darazi and Hamza ibn Ali who disliked his behavior and his arrogance In the Epistles of Wisdom Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad warns al Darazi saying Faith does not need a sword to aid it but al Darazi ignored Hamza s warnings and continued to challenge the Imam al Darazi issues the unitarian call The divine call or unitarian call is the Druze period of time that was opened at sunset on Thursday 30 May 1017 by Ad Darazi The call summoned people to a true unitarian belief that removed all attributes wise just outside inside etc from God 80 It promoted absolute monotheism and the concepts of supporting your fellow man true speech and pursuit of oneness with God These concepts superseded all ritual law and dogma and requirements for pilgrimage fasting holy days prayer charity devotion creed and particular worship of any prophet or person was downplayed Sharia was opposed and Druze traditions started during the call continue today such as meeting for reading prayer and social gathering on a Thursday instead of a Friday at Khalwats instead of mosques Such gatherings and traditions were not compulsory and people were encouraged to pursue a state of compliance with the real law of nature governing the universe 81 Epistle thirteen of the Epistles of Wisdom called it A spiritual doctrine without any ritualistic imposition citation needed The time of the call was seen as a revolution of truth with missionaries preaching its message all around the Middle East These messengers were sent out with the Druze epistles and took written vows from believers whose souls are thought to still exist in the Druze of today The souls of those who took the vows during the call are believed to be continuously reincarnating in successive generations of Druze until the return of al Hakim to proclaim a second Divine call and establish a Golden Age of justice and peace for all 82 al Darazi is executed By 1018 al Darazi had gathered around him partisans Darazites who believed that universal reason became incarnated in Adam at the beginning of the world was then passed to the prophets then into Ali and then into his descendants the Fatimid Caliphs 79 Al Darazi wrote a book laying out this doctrine but when he read from his book in the principal mosque in Cairo it caused riots and protests against his claims and many of his followers were killed Hamza ibn Ali rejected al Darazi s ideology calling him the insolent one and Satan 79 The controversy led Caliph al Hakim to suspend the Druze daʻwah in 1018 83 In an attempt to gain the support of al Hakim al Darazi started preaching that al Hakim and his ancestors were the incarnation of God 78 An inherently modest man al Hakim did not believe that he was God and felt al Darazi was trying to depict himself as a new prophet 78 In 1018 Al Hakim had al Darazi executed leaving Hamza the sole leader of the new faith and al Darazi considered to be a renegade 78 83 79 Disappearance of Al Hakim Al Hakim disappeared one night while on his evening ride presumably assassinated perhaps at the behest of his formidable elder sister Sitt al Mulk The Druze believe he went into Occultation with Hamza ibn Ali and three other prominent preachers leaving the care of the Unitarian missionary movement to a new leader al Muqtana Baha uddin citation needed The call was suspended briefly between 19 May 1018 and 9 May 1019 during the apostasy of al Darazi and again between 1021 and 1026 during a period of persecution by Ali az Zahir for those who had sworn the oath to accept the call citation needed Persecutions started forty days after the disappearance into Occultation of al Hakim who was thought to have been converting people to the Unitarian faith for over twenty years prior citation needed Al Hakim convinced some heretical followers such as al Darazi of his soteriological divinity and officially declared the Divine call after issuing a decree promoting religious freedom citation needed Al Hakim was replaced by his underage son ʻAli al Zahir The Unitarian Druze movement acknowledged al Zahir as the caliph but continued to regard Hamzah as its Imam 56 The young caliph s regent Sitt al Mulk ordered the army to destroy the movement in 1021 54 At the same time Bahaʼ al Din was assigned the leadership of the Unitarians by Hamza 56 For the next seven years the Druze faced extreme persecution by the new caliph al Zahir who wanted to eradicate the faith 84 This was the result of a power struggle inside of the Fatimid empire in which the Druze were viewed with suspicion because of their refusal to recognize the new caliph as their Imam Many spies mainly the followers of al Darazi joined the Unitarian movement in order to infiltrate the Druze community The spies set about agitating trouble and soiling the reputation of the Druze This resulted in friction with the new caliph who clashed militarily with the Druze community The clashes ranged from Antioch to Alexandria where tens of thousands of Druze were slaughtered by the Fatimid army 54 this mass persecution known by the Druze as the period of the mihna 85 The largest massacre was at Antioch where 5000 prominent Druze were killed followed by that of Aleppo 54 As a result the faith went underground in hope of survival as those captured were either forced to renounce their faith or be killed Druze survivors were found principally in southern Lebanon and Syria In 1038 two years after the death of al Zahir the Druze movement was able to resume because the new leadership that replaced him had friendly political ties with at least one prominent Druze leader 84 Closing of the unitarian call In 1043 Baha al Din al Muqtana declared that the sect would no longer accept new pledges and since that time proselytism has been prohibited awaiting al Hakim s return at the Last Judgment to usher in a new Golden Age 86 84 Some Druze and non Druze scholars like Samy Swayd and Sami Makarem state that this confusion is due to confusion about the role of the early preacher al Darazi whose teachings the Druze rejected as heretical 87 These sources assert that al Hakim rejected al Darazi s claims of divinity 56 88 89 page needed and ordered the elimination of his movement while supporting that of Hamza ibn Ali 90 During the Crusades Wadi al Taym in Lebanon was one of the two most important centers of Druze missionary activity in the 11th century 91 and was the first area where the Druze appeared in the historical record under the name Druze 92 It is generally considered the birthplace of the Druze faith 93 It was during the period of Crusader rule in Levant 1099 1291 that the Druze first emerged into the full light of history in the Gharb region of the Chouf Mountains As powerful warriors serving the Muslim rulers of Damascus against the Crusades the Druze were given the task of keeping watch over the crusaders in the seaport of Beirut with the aim of preventing them from making any encroachments inland Subsequently the Druze chiefs of the Gharb placed their considerable military experience at the disposal of the Mamluk rulers of Egypt 1250 1516 first to assist them in putting an end to what remained of Crusader rule in coastal Levant and later to help them safeguard the Lebanese coast against Crusader retaliation by sea 94 In the early period of the Crusader era the Druze feudal power was in the hands of two families the Tanukhs and the Arslans From their fortresses in the Gharb area now in Aley District of southern Mount Lebanon Governorate the Tanukhs led their incursions into the Phoenician coast and finally succeeded in holding Beirut and the marine plain against the Franks Because of their fierce battles with the Crusaders the Druze earned the respect of the Sunni Muslim caliphs and thus gained important political powers After the middle of the twelfth century the Ma an family superseded the Tanukhs in Druze leadership The origin of the family goes back to a Prince Ma an who made his appearance in the Lebanon in the days of the Abbasid caliph al Mustarshid 1118 35 CE The Ma ans chose for their abode the Chouf District in south western Lebanon southern Mount Lebanon Governorate overlooking the maritime plain between Beirut and Sidon and made their headquarters in Baaqlin which is still a leading Druze village They were invested with feudal authority by Sultan Nur ad Din and furnished respectable contingents to the Muslim ranks in their struggle against the Crusaders 95 page needed Ibn Taymiyyah believed that Druze had a high level of infidelity besides being apostates Thus they were not trustworthy and should not be forgiven He taught also that Muslims cannot accept Druze penitence nor keep them alive and that Druze property should be confiscated and their women enslaved 96 Having cleared the holy land of the Franks the Mamluk sultans of Egypt turned their attention to the schismatic Muslims of Syria In 1305 after the issuing of a fatwa by the scholar Ibn Taymiyyah calling for jihad against all non Sunni Muslims like the Druze Alawites Ismaili and Twelver Shia Muslims al Malik al Nasir inflicted a disastrous defeat on the Druze at Keserwan and forced outward compliance on their part to Orthodox Sunni Islam Later under the Ottoman they were severely attacked at Saoufar in the 1585 Ottoman expedition after the Ottomans claimed that they assaulted their caravans near Tripoli 95 page needed As a result of the Ottoman experience with the rebellious Druze the word Durzi in Turkish came and continues to mean someone who is the ultimate thug 97 One influential Islamic sage of that time who labeled them infidels and argued that even though they might behave like Muslims on the outside this is no more than a pretense He also declared that confiscation of Druze property and even the death sentence would comply with the laws of Islam 98 Consequently the 16th and 17th centuries witnessed a succession of armed Druze rebellions against the Ottomans countered by repeated Ottoman punitive expeditions against the Chouf in which the Druze population of the area was severely depleted and many villages destroyed These military measures severe as they were did not succeed in reducing the local Druze to the required degree of subordination This led the Ottoman government to agree to an arrangement whereby the different nahiyes districts of the Chouf would be granted in iltizam fiscal concession to one of the region s amirs or leading chiefs leaving the maintenance of law and order and the collection of taxes in the area in the hands of the appointed amir This arrangement was to provide the cornerstone for the privileged status ultimately enjoyed by the whole of Mount Lebanon Druze and Christian areas alike 94 Ma an dynasty Main article Maan family With the advent of the Ottoman Turks and the conquest of Syria by Sultan Selim I in 1516 the Ma ans were acknowledged by the new rulers as the feudal lords of southern Lebanon Druze villages spread and prospered in that region which under Ma an leadership so flourished that it acquired the generic term of Jabal Bayt Ma an the mountain home of the Ma an or Jabal al Druze The latter title has since been usurped by the Hawran region which since the middle of the 19th century has proven a haven of refuge to Druze emigrants from Lebanon and has become the headquarters of Druze power 95 page needed Under Fakhr al Din II Fakhreddin II the Druze dominion increased until it included Lebanon Phoenicia and almost all Syria extending from the edge of the Antioch plain in the north to Safad in the south with a part of the Syrian desert dominated by Fakhr al Din s castle at Tadmur Palmyra the ancient capital of Zenobia The ruins of this castle still stand on a steep hill overlooking the town Fakhr al Din became too strong for his Turkish sovereign in Constantinople He went so far in 1608 as to sign a commercial treaty with Duke Ferdinand I of Tuscany containing secret military clauses The Sultan then sent a force against him and he was compelled to flee the land and seek refuge in the courts of Tuscany and Naples in 1613 and 1615 respectively In 1618 political changes in the Ottoman sultanate had resulted in the removal of many enemies of Fakhr al Din from power signaling the prince s triumphant return to Lebanon soon afterwards Through a clever policy of bribery and warfare he extended his domains to cover all of modern Lebanon some of Syria and northern Galilee In 1632 Kucuk Ahmed Pasha was named Lord of Damascus Kucuk Ahmed Pasha was a rival of Fakhr al Din and a friend of the sultan Murad IV who ordered the pasha and the sultanate s navy to attack Lebanon and depose Fakhr al Din This time the prince decided to remain in Lebanon and resist the offensive but the death of his son Ali in Wadi al Taym was the beginning of his defeat He later took refuge in Jezzine s grotto closely followed by Kucuk Ahmed Pasha who eventually caught up with him and his family Fakhr al Din was captured taken to Istanbul and imprisoned with two of his sons in the infamous Yedi Kule prison The Sultan had Fakhr al Din and his sons killed on 13 April 1635 in Istanbul bringing an end to an era in the history of Lebanon which would not regain its current boundaries until it was proclaimed a mandate state and republic in 1920 One version recounts that the younger son was spared raised in the harem and went on to become Ottoman Ambassador to India 99 Fakhr al Din II was the first ruler in modern Lebanon to open the doors of his country to foreign Western influences Under his auspices the French established a khan hostel in Sidon the Florentines a consulate and Christian missionaries were admitted into the country Beirut and Sidon which Fakhr al Din II beautified still bear traces of his benign rule See the new biography of this Prince based on original sources by TJ Gorton Renaissance Emir a Druze Warlord at the Court of the Medici London Quartet Books 2013 for an updated view of his life Fakhr ad Din II was succeeded in 1635 by his nephew Mulhim Ma n who ruled through his death in 1658 Fakhr ad Din s only surviving son Husayn lived the rest of his life as a court official in Constantinople Emir Mulhim exercised Iltizam taxation rights in the Shuf Gharb Jurd Matn and Kisrawan districts of Lebanon Mulhim s forces battled and defeated those of Mustafa Pasha Beylerbey of Damascus in 1642 but he is reported by historians to have been otherwise loyal to Ottoman rule 100 Following Mulhim s death his sons Ahmad and Korkmaz entered into a power struggle with other Ottoman backed Druze leaders In 1660 the Ottoman Empire moved to reorganize the region placing the sanjaks districts of Sidon Beirut and Safed in a newly formed province of Sidon a move seen by local Druze as an attempt to assert control 101 Contemporary historian Istifan al Duwayhi reports that Korkmaz was killed in act of treachery by the Beylerbey of Damascus in 1662 101 Ahmad however emerged victorious in the power struggle among the Druze in 1667 but the Maʿnis lost control of Safad 102 and retreated to controlling the iltizam of the Shuf mountains and Kisrawan 103 Ahmad continued as local ruler through his death from natural causes without heir in 1697 102 During the Ottoman Habsburg War 1683 1699 Ahmad Ma n collaborated in a rebellion against the Ottomans which extended beyond his death 102 Iltizam rights in Shuf and Kisrawan passed to the rising Shihab family through female line inheritance 103 Shihab Dynasty Main article Shihab family nbsp Druze woman wearing a tantour during the 1870s in Chouf Ottoman LebanonAs early as the days of Saladin and while the Ma ans were still in complete control over southern Lebanon the Shihab tribe originally Hijaz Arabs but later settled in Ḥawran advanced from Ḥawran in 1172 and settled in Wadi al Taym at the foot of mount Hermon They soon made an alliance with the Ma ans and were acknowledged as the Druze chiefs in Wadi al Taym At the end of the 17th century 1697 the Shihabs succeeded the Ma ans in the feudal leadership of Druze southern Lebanon although they reportedly professed Sunni Islam they showed sympathy with Druzism the religion of the majority of their subjects The Shihab leadership continued until the middle of the 19th century and culminated in the illustrious governorship of Amir Bashir Shihab II 1788 1840 who after Fakhr al Din was the most powerful feudal lord Lebanon produced Though governor of the Druze Mountain Bashir was a crypto Christian and it was he whose aid Napoleon solicited in 1799 during his campaign against Syria Having consolidated his conquests in Syria 1831 1838 Ibrahim Pasha son of the viceroy of Egypt Muhammad Ali Pasha made the fatal mistake of trying to disarm the Christians and Druze of the Lebanon and to draft the latter into his army This was contrary to the principles of the life of independence which these mountaineers had always lived and resulted in a general uprising against Egyptian rule 104 The Druze of Wadi al Taym and Ḥawran under the leadership of Shibli al Aryan distinguished themselves in their stubborn resistance at their inaccessible headquarters al Laja lying southeast of Damascus 95 page needed Qaysites and the Yemenites Main article Battle of Ain Darra nbsp Meeting of Druze and Ottoman leaders in Damascus about the control of Jebel DruzeThe conquest of Syria by the Muslim Arabs in the middle of the seventh century introduced into the land two political factions later called the Qaysites and the Yemenites The Qaysite party represented the Bedouin Arabs who were regarded as inferior by the Yemenites who were earlier and more cultured emigrants into Syria from southern Arabia Druze and Christians grouped in political rather than religious parties the party lines in Lebanon obliterated ethnic and religious lines and the people grouped themselves into one or the other of these two parties regardless of their religious affiliations The sanguinary feuds between these two factions depleted in course of time the manhood of the Lebanon and ended in the decisive battle of Ain Dara in 1711 which resulted in the utter defeat of the Yemenite party Many Yemenite Druze thereupon migrated to the Hauran region laying the foundation of Druze power there 95 page needed Civil conflict of 1860 Main article 1860 civil conflict in Mount Lebanon and Damascus The relationship between the Druze and Christians has been characterized by harmony and coexistence 105 106 107 108 with amicable relations between the two groups prevailing throughout history with the exception of some periods including 1860 civil conflict in Mount Lebanon and Damascus 109 110 In 1840 social disturbance started between Druze and their Christian Maronite neighbors who had previously been on friendly terms This culminated in the civil war of 1860 95 page needed After the Shehab dynasty converted to Christianity the Druze community and feudal leaders came under attack from the regime with the collaboration of the Maronite Catholic Church and the Druze lost most of their political and feudal powers 111 Also the Druze formed an alliance with Britain and allowed Protestant missionaries to enter Mount Lebanon creating tension between them and the Catholic Maronites The Maronite Druze conflict in 1840 60 was an outgrowth of the Maronite independence movement citation needed directed against the Druze Druze feudalism and the Ottoman Turks The civil war was not therefore a religious war citation needed except in Damascus where it spread and where the vastly non Druze population was anti Christian citation needed The movement culminated with the 1859 60 massacre and defeat of the Maronites by the Druze The civil war of 1860 cost the Maronites some ten thousand lives in Damascus Zahle Deir al Qamar Hasbaya and other towns of Lebanon The European powers then determined to intervene and authorized the landing in Beirut of a body of French troops under General Beaufort d Hautpoul whose inscription can still be seen on the historic rock at the mouth of Nahr al Kalb French intervention on behalf of the Maronites did not help the Maronite national movement since France was restricted in 1860 by the British government which did not want the Ottoman Empire dismembered But European intervention pressured the Turks to treat the Maronites more justly 112 Following the recommendations of the powers the Ottoman Porte granted Lebanon local autonomy guaranteed by the powers under a Maronite governor This autonomy was maintained until World War I 95 page needed 113 page needed Rebellion in Hauran Main article Hauran Druze Rebellion The Hauran rebellion was a violent Druze uprising against Ottoman authority in the Syrian province which erupted in May 1909 The rebellion was led by al Atrash family originated in local disputes and Druze unwillingness to pay taxes and conscript into the Ottoman Army The rebellion ended in brutal suppression of the Druze by General Sami Pasha al Farouqi significant depopulation of the Hauran region and execution of the Druze leaders in 1910 In the outcome of the revolt 2 000 Druze were killed a similar number wounded and hundreds of Druze fighters imprisoned 114 Al Farouqi also disarmed the population extracted significant taxes and launched a census of the region Modern historyIn Lebanon Syria Israel and Jordan the Druzites have official recognition as a separate religious community with its own religious court system Druzites are known for their loyalty to the countries they reside in 115 page needed verification needed though they have a strong community feeling in which they identify themselves as related even across borders of countries 116 Although most Druze no longer consider themselves Muslim Al Azhar of Egypt recognized them in 1959 as one of the Islamic sects in the Al Azhar Shia Fatwa due to political reasons as Gamal Abdel Nasser saw it as a tool to spread his appeal and influence across the entire Arab world 117 118 119 120 121 Despite their practice of blending with dominant groups to avoid persecution and because the Druze religion does not endorse separatist sentiments but urges blending with the communities they reside in the Druze have had a history of resistance to occupying powers and they have at times enjoyed more freedom than most other groups living in the Levant 116 In Syria Main article Druze in Syria nbsp Druze warriors preparing to go to battle with Sultan Pasha al Atrash in 1925In Syria most Druzites live in the Jebel al Druze a rugged and mountainous region in the southwest of the country which is more than 90 percent Druze inhabited some 120 villages are exclusively so 122 page needed Other notable communities live in the Harim Mountains the Damascus suburb of Jaramana and on the southeast slopes of Mount Hermon A large Syrian Druze community historically lived in the Golan Heights but following wars with Israel in 1967 and 1973 many of these Druze fled to other parts of Syria most of those who remained live in a handful of villages in the disputed zone while only a few live in the narrow remnant of Quneitra Governorate that is still under effective Syrian control nbsp Druze celebrating their independence in 1925 The Druze always played a far more important role in Syrian politics than its comparatively small population would suggest With a community of little more than 100 000 in 1949 or roughly three percent of the Syrian population the Druze of Syria s southwestern mountains constituted a potent force in Syrian politics and played a leading role in the nationalist struggle against the French Under the military leadership of Sultan Pasha al Atrash the Druze provided much of the military force behind the Syrian Revolution of 1925 27 In 1945 Amir Hasan al Atrash the paramount political leader of the Jebel al Druze led the Druze military units in a successful revolt against the French making the Jebel al Druze the first and only region in Syria to liberate itself from French rule without British assistance At independence the Druze made confident by their successes expected that Damascus would reward them for their many sacrifices on the battlefield They demanded to keep their autonomous administration and many political privileges accorded them by the French and sought generous economic assistance from the newly independent government 122 page needed nbsp Druze leaders meeting in Jebel al Druze Syria 1926When a local paper in 1945 reported that President Shukri al Quwatli 1943 49 had called the Druze a dangerous minority Sultan Pasha al Atrash flew into a rage and demanded a public retraction If it were not forthcoming he announced the Druze would indeed become dangerous and a force of 4 000 Druze warriors would occupy the city of Damascus Quwwatli could not dismiss Sultan Pasha s threat The military balance of power in Syria was tilted in favor of the Druze at least until the military build up during the 1948 War in Palestine One advisor to the Syrian Defense Department warned in 1946 that the Syrian army was useless and that the Druze could take Damascus and capture the present leaders in a breeze 122 page needed During the four years of Adib Shishakli s rule in Syria December 1949 to February 1954 on 25 August 1952 Adib al Shishakli created the Arab Liberation Movement ALM a progressive party with pan Arabist and socialist views 123 the Druze community was subjected to a heavy attack by the Syrian government Shishakli believed that among his many opponents in Syria the Druze were the most potentially dangerous and he was determined to crush them He frequently proclaimed My enemies are like a serpent The head is the Jebel al Druze the stomach Homs and the tail Aleppo If I crush the head the serpent will die Shishakli dispatched 10 000 regular troops to occupy the Jebel al Druze Several towns were bombarded with heavy weapons killing scores of civilians and destroying many houses According to Druze accounts Shishakli encouraged neighboring Bedouin tribes to plunder the defenseless population and allowed his own troops to run amok 122 page needed Shishakli launched a brutal campaign to defame the Druze for their religion and politics He accused the entire community of treason at times claiming they were in the employ of the British and Hashimites at others that they were fighting for Israel against the Arabs He even produced a cache of Israeli weapons allegedly discovered in the Jabal Even more painful for the Druze community was his publication of falsified Druze religious texts and false testimonials ascribed to leading Druze sheikhs designed to stir up sectarian hatred This propaganda also was broadcast in the Arab world mainly Egypt Shishakli was assassinated in Brazil on 27 September 1964 by a Druze seeking revenge for Shishakli s bombardment of the Jebel al Druze 122 page needed He forcibly integrated minorities into the national Syrian social structure his Syrianization of Alawite and Druze territories had to be accomplished in part using violence To this end al Shishakli encouraged the stigmatization of minorities He saw minority demands as tantamount to treason His increasingly chauvinistic notions of Arab nationalism were predicated on the denial that minorities existed in Syria 124 page needed After the Shishakli s military campaign the Druze community lost much of its political influence but many Druze military officers played important roles in the Ba ath government currently ruling Syria 122 page needed In 1967 a community of Druze in the Golan Heights came under Israeli control today numbering 23 000 in 2019 125 126 127 The Qalb Loze massacre was a reported massacre of Syrian Druze on 10 June 2015 in the village of Qalb Loze in Syria s northwestern Idlib Governorate in which 20 24 Druze were killed On 25 July 2018 a group of ISIS affiliated attackers entered the Druze city of As Suwayda and initiated a series of gunfights and suicide bombings on its streets killing at least 258 people the vast majority of them civilians 128 In Lebanon Main article Druze in Lebanon nbsp Prophet Job shrine in Niha village in the Chouf region of Lebanon 129 source source source source A market in a Lebanese Druze town called Hasbaya 1967The Druzite community in Lebanon played an important role in the formation of the modern state of Lebanon 130 and even though they are a minority they play an important role in the Lebanese political scene Before and during the Lebanese Civil War 1975 90 the Druze were in favor of Pan Arabism and Palestinian resistance represented by the PLO Most of the community supported the Progressive Socialist Party formed by their leader Kamal Jumblatt and they fought alongside other leftist and Palestinian parties against the Lebanese Front that was mainly constituted of Christians After the assassination of Kamal Jumblatt on 16 March 1977 his son Walid Jumblatt took the leadership of the party and played an important role in preserving his father s legacy after winning the Mountain War and sustained the existence of the Druze community during the sectarian bloodshed that lasted until 1990 In August 2001 Maronite Catholic Patriarch Nasrallah Boutros Sfeir toured the predominantly Druze Chouf region of Mount Lebanon and visited Mukhtara the ancestral stronghold of Druze leader Walid Jumblatt The tumultuous reception that Sfeir received not only signified a historic reconciliation between Maronites and Druze who fought a bloody war in 1983 1984 but underscored the fact that the banner of Lebanese sovereignty had broad multi confessional appeal 131 and was a cornerstone for the Cedar Revolution in 2005 Jumblatt s post 2005 position diverged sharply from the tradition of his family He also accused Damascus of being behind the 1977 assassination of his father Kamal Jumblatt expressing for the first time what many knew he privately suspected The BBC describes Jumblatt as the leader of Lebanon s most powerful Druze clan and heir to a leftist political dynasty 132 The second largest political party supported by Druze is the Lebanese Democratic Party led by Prince Talal Arslan the son of Lebanese independence hero Emir Majid Arslan In Israel Main article Druze in Israel nbsp Israeli Druze Scouts march to Jethro s tomb Today thousands of Israeli Druze belong to such Druze Zionist movements 133 The Druzites form a religious minority in Israel of more than 100 000 mostly residing in the north of the country 134 In 2004 there were 102 000 Druze living in the country 135 In 2010 the population of Israeli Druze citizens grew to over 125 000 At the end of 2018 there were 143 000 in Israel and the Israeli occupied portion of the Golan Heights 9 Most Israeli Druze identify ethnically as Arabs 136 Today thousands of Israeli Druze belong to Druze Zionist movements 133 Some scholars maintain that Israel has tried to separate the Druze from other Arab communities and that the effort has influenced the way Israel s Druze perceive their modern identity 137 138 In 1957 the Israeli government designated the Druze a distinct ethnic community at the request of its communal leaders The Druze are Arabic speaking citizens of Israel and serve in the Israel Defense Forces just as most citizens do in Israel Members of the community have attained top positions in Israeli politics and public service 139 The number of Druze parliament members usually exceeds their proportion in the Israeli population and they are integrated within several political parties In Jordan Main article Druze in Jordan The Druzites form a religious minority in Jordan of around 32 000 mostly residing in the northwestern part of the country 14 BeliefsGod The Druze conception of the deity is declared by them to be one of strict and uncompromising unity The main Druze doctrine states that God is both transcendent and immanent in which he is above all attributes but at the same time he is present 140 In their desire to maintain a rigid confession of unity they stripped from God all attributes tanzih In God there are no attributes distinct from his essence He is wise mighty and just not by wisdom might and justice but by his own essence God is the whole of existence rather than above existence or on his throne which would make him limited There is neither how when nor where about him he is incomprehensible 141 page needed In this dogma they are similar to the semi philosophical semi religious body which flourished under Al Ma mun and was known by the name of Mu tazila and the fraternal order of the Brethren of Purity Ikhwan al Ṣafa 95 page needed Unlike the Mu tazila and similar to some branches of Sufism the Druze believe in the concept of Tajalli meaning theophany 141 page needed Tajalli is often misunderstood by scholars and writers and is usually confused with the concept of incarnation Incarnation is the core spiritual beliefs in the Druze and some other intellectual and spiritual traditions In a mystical sense it refers to the light of God experienced by certain mystics who have reached a high level of purity in their spiritual journey Thus God is perceived as the Lahut the divine who manifests His Light in the Station Maqaam of the Nasut material realm without the Nasut becoming Lahut This is like one s image in the mirror One is in the mirror but does not become the mirror The Druze manuscripts are emphatic and warn against the belief that the Nasut is God Neglecting this warning individual seekers scholars and other spectators have considered al Hakim and other figures divine In the Druze scriptural view Tajalli takes a central stage One author comments that Tajalli occurs when the seeker s humanity is annihilated so that divine attributes and light are experienced by the person 141 page needed nbsp Druze dignitaries celebrating the Nabi Shu ayb festival at the tomb of the prophet in Hittin Israel Scriptures Druze sacred texts include the Quran and the Epistles of Wisdom 142 Other ancient Druze writings include the Rasa il al Hind Epistles of India and the previously lost or hidden manuscripts such as al Munfarid bi Dhatihi and al Sharia al Ruhaniyya as well as others including didactic and polemic treatises 143 Reincarnation See also Reincarnation Druze Reincarnation is a paramount principle in the Druze faith 144 Reincarnations occur instantly at one s death because there is an eternal duality of the body and the soul and it is impossible for the soul to exist without the body A human soul will transfer only to a human body in contrast to the Neoplatonic Hindu and Buddhist belief systems according to which souls can transfer to any living creature Furthermore a male Druze can be reincarnated only as another male Druze and a female Druze only as another female Druze A Druze cannot be reincarnated in the body of a non Druze Additionally souls cannot be divided and the number of souls existing in the universe is finite 145 The cycle of rebirth is continuous and the only way to escape is through successive reincarnations When this occurs the soul is united with the Cosmic Mind and achieves the ultimate happiness 41 Pact of Time Custodian The Pact of Time Custodian Mithaq Wali al zaman is considered the entrance to the Druze religion and they believe that all Druze in their past lives have signed this Charter and Druze believe that this Charter embodies with human souls after death I rely on our Moula Al Hakim the lonely God the individual the eternal who is out of couples and numbers someone the son of someone has approved recognition enjoined on himself and on his soul in a healthy of his mind and his body permissibility aversive is obedient and not forced to repudiate from all creeds articles and all religions and beliefs on the differences varieties and he does not know something except obedience of almighty Moulana Al Hakim and obedience is worship and that it does not engage in worship anyone ever attended or wait and that he had handed his soul and his body and his money and all he owns to almighty Maulana Al Hakim 146 clarification needed The Druze also use a similar formula called al ahd when one is initiated into the ʻUqqal 147 Sanctuaries Main article Druze Khalwa nbsp Druze clerics in Khalwat al Bayada The prayer houses of the Druze are called khilwa khalwa khilwat or khalwat The primary sanctuary of the Druze is at Khalwat al Bayada 148 Esotericism The Druze believe that many teachings given by prophets religious leaders and holy books have esoteric meanings preserved for those of intellect in which some teachings are symbolic and allegorical in nature and divide the understanding of holy books and teachings into three layers These layers according to the Druze are as follows The obvious or exoteric zahir accessible to anyone who can read or hear The hidden or esoteric batin accessible to those who are willing to search and learn through the concept of exegesis And the hidden of the hidden a concept known as anagoge inaccessible to all but a few really enlightened individuals who truly understand the nature of the universe 149 Druze do not believe that the esoteric meaning abrogates or necessarily abolishes the exoteric one Hamza bin Ali refutes such claims by stating that if the esoteric interpretation of taharah purity is purity of the heart and soul it doesn t mean that a person can discard his physical purity as salat prayer is useless if a person is untruthful in his speech and that the esoteric and exoteric meanings complement each other 150 Seven Druze precepts Further information Seven pillars of Ismailism Druze list The Druze follow seven moral precepts or duties that are considered the core of the faith 41 The Seven Druze precepts are 151 Veracity in speech and the truthfulness of the tongue Protection and mutual aid to the brethren in faith Renunciation of all forms of former worship specifically invalid creeds and false belief Repudiation of the devil Iblis and all forces of evil translated from Arabic Toghyan meaning despotism Confession of God s unity Acquiescence in God s acts no matter what they be Absolute submission and resignation to God s divine will in both secret and public Taqiyya Complicating their identity is the custom of taqiyya concealing or disguising their beliefs when necessary that they adopted from Ismailism and the esoteric nature of the faith in which many teachings are kept secretive This is done in order to keep the religion from those who are not yet prepared to accept the teachings and therefore could misunderstand it as well as to protect the community when it is in danger Some claim to be Muslim or Christian in order to avoid persecution some do not 152 Druze in different states can have radically different lifestyles 153 Theophany Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad is considered the founder of the Druze and the primary author of the Druze manuscripts 5 He proclaimed that God had become human and taken the form of man 154 155 156 157 158 excessive citations Al Hakim bi Amr Allah is an important figure in the Druze faith whose eponymous founder ad Darazi proclaimed him as the incarnation of God in 1018 154 155 Prophethood Recognition of prophets in the Druze religion is divided into three sort of subcategories the prophet themselves natiq their disciples asas and witnesses to their message hujjah The number 5 contains an unstated significance within the Druze faith it is believed in this area that great prophets come in groups of five In the time of the ancient Greeks these five were represented by Pythagoras Plato Aristotle Parmenides and Empedocles In the first century the five were represented by Jesus Christ 159 160 John the Baptist 161 Saint Matthew Saint Mark and Saint Luke 162 In the time of the faith s foundation the five were Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad Muḥammad ibn Wahb al Qurashi Abu l Khayr Salama ibn Abd al Wahhab al Samurri Ismaʿil ibn Muḥammad at Tamimi and Al Muqtana Baha uddin Druze tradition honors and reveres Hamza ibn Ali Ahmad and Salman the Persian as mentors and prophets believed to be reincarnations of the monotheistic idea 163 164 Other beliefs The Druze allow divorce although it is discouraged and circumcision is not necessary Apostasy is forbidden 165 and they usually have religious services on Thursday evenings 166 Druze follow Sunni Hanafi law on issues which their own faith has no particular rulings about 167 168 Formal Druze worship is confined to weekly meeting on Thursday evenings during which all members of community gather together to discuss local issues before those not initiated into the secrets of the faith the juhhal or the ignorant are dismissed and those who are uqqal or enlightened those few initiated in the Druze holy books remain to read and study 166 Religious symbol nbsp The Druze strictly avoid iconography but use five colors Five Limits خمس حدود khams ḥudud as a religious symbol 169 170 green red yellow blue and white The five limits were listed by Ismail at Tamimi d 1030 in the Epistle of the Candle risalat ash sham a as First limit Hamza Ibn Ali حمزة إبن علي إبن أحمد or Jesus according to other sources 171 Second limit Ismail ibn Muhamed ibn Hamed at Tamimi Ismail at Tamimi إسماعيل إبن محمد بن حامد التميمي Third limit Muhamed ibn Wahb محمد إبن وهب Fourth limit as Sabiq the anterior Salama ibn abd al Wahhab سلامة إبن عبد الوهاب Fiifth limit al llahiq the posterior Ali ibn Ahmed as Samouqi علي إبن أحمد السموقي Each of the colors representing the five limits pertains to a metaphysical power called ḥadd literally a limit as in the distinctions that separate humans from animals or the powers that make humans the animalistic body Each ḥadd is color coded in the following manner Green for ʻAql the Universal Mind Intelligence Nous Red for Nafs the Universal Soul Anima mundi Yellow for Kalima the Word Logos Blue for Sabiq السابق the anterior potentiality cause precedent the first intellect White for al llahiq اللاحق the posterior future effect Immanence The mind generates qualia and gives consciousness 172 The soul embodies the mind and is responsible for transmigration and the character of oneself The word which is the atom of language communicates qualia between humans and represents the platonic forms in the sensible world The Sabiq and Tali is the ability to perceive and learn from the past and plan for the future and predict it nbsp The colors can be arranged in vertically descending stripes as a flag or a five pointed star 173 The stripes are a diagrammatic cut of the spheres in neoplatonic philosophy while the five pointed star embodies the golden ratio phi as a symbol of temperance and a life of moderation Prayer houses and holy places nbsp Jethro shrine and temple of Druze in Hittin northern IsraelHoly places of the Druze are archaeological sites important to the community and associated with religious holidays 174 the most notable example being Nabi Shu ayb dedicated to Jethro who is a central figure of the Druze religion Druze make pilgrimages to this site on the holiday of Ziyarat al Nabi Shu ayb 175 nbsp Druze prayer house in Daliat al Karmel IsraelOne of the most important features of the Druze village having a central role in social life is the khilwa or khalwat a house of prayer retreat and religious unity The khalwat may be known as majlis in local languages 176 The second type of religious shrine is one associated with the anniversary of a historic event or death of a prophet If it is a mausoleum the Druze call it mazar and if it is a shrine they call it maqam The holy places become more important to the community in times of adversity and calamity The holy places and shrines of the Druze are scattered in various villages in places where they are protected and cared for They are found in Syria Lebanon and Israel 174 Initiates and ignorant members nbsp Druze sheikh ʻuqqal wearing religious dressThe Druze do not recognize any religious hierarchy 177 As such there is no Druze clergy Those few initiated in the Druze holy books are called ʿuqqal 178 while the ignorant regular members of the group are called juhhal 179 Given the strict religious intellectual and spiritual requirements most of the Druze are not initiated and might be referred to as al Juhhal جهال literally the Ignorant but in practice referring to the non initiated Druze 180 However that term is seldom used by the Druze Those Druze are not granted access to the Druze holy literature or allowed to attend the initiated religious meetings of the ʻuqqal The juhhal are the vast majority of the Druze community 177 The cohesiveness and frequent inter community social interaction however enables most Druze to have an idea about their broad ethical requirements and have some sense of what their theology consists of albeit often flawed The initiated religious group which includes both men and women less than 10 of the population is called al ʻUqqal عقال the Knowledgeable Initiates They might or might not dress differently although most wear a costume that was characteristic of mountain people in previous centuries Women can opt to wear al mandil a loose white veil especially in the presence of other people They wear al mandil on their heads to cover their hair and wrap it around their mouths They wear black shirts and long skirts covering their legs to their ankles Male ʻuqqal often grow mustaches and wear dark Levantine Turkish traditional dresses called the shirwal with white turbans that vary according to the seniority of the ʻuqqal Traditionally the Druze women have played an important role both socially and religiously inside the community 177 Al ʻuqqal have equal rights to al Juhhal but establish a hierarchy of respect based on religious service The most influential of al ʻuqqal become Ajawid recognized religious leaders and from this group the spiritual leaders of the Druze are assigned While the Shaykh al ʻAql which is an official position in Syria Lebanon and Israel is elected by the local community and serves as the head of the Druze religious council judges from the Druze religious courts are usually elected for this position Unlike the spiritual leaders the authority of the Shaykh al ʻAql is limited to the country he is elected in though in some instances spiritual leaders are elected to this position 181 The Druze believe in the unity of God and are often known as the People of Monotheism or simply Monotheists 182 Their theology has a Neo Platonic view about how God interacts with the world through emanations and is similar to some gnostic and other esoteric sects Druze philosophy also shows Sufi influences 183 Druze principles focus on honesty loyalty filial piety altruism patriotic sacrifice and monotheism 184 They reject nicotine alcohol and other drugs and often the consumption of pork to the Uqqal and not necessarily to the Juhhal 185 Druze reject polygamy believe in reincarnation and are not obliged to observe most of the religious rituals 186 The Druze believe that rituals are symbolic and have an individualistic effect on the person for which reason Druze are free to perform them or not The community does celebrate Eid al Adha however considered their most significant holiday though their form of observance is different compared to that of most Muslims 187 Culture nbsp Israeli Druze family visiting Gamla wearing religious dress The religious life of the average Druze juhhal revolves around a very small number of events birth and circumcision engagement and marriage death and burial and is devoid of special Druze prayers or worship 188 Marriage outside the Druze faith is forbidden 68 and if a Druze marries a non Druze the Druze may be ostracized and marginalized by their community 189 Because a non Druze partner cannot convert to Druze faith the couple cannot have Druze children because the Druze faith can only be passed on through birth to two Druze parents 13 Circumcision is widely practiced by the Druze 190 The procedure is practiced as a cultural tradition and has no religious significance in the Druze faith 191 There is no special date for this act in the Druze faith male Druze infants are usually circumcised shortly after birth 188 however some remain uncircumcised until the age of ten or older 188 Some Druze do not circumcise their male children and refuse to observe this common Muslim practice 192 Language The mother tongue of Druze in Syria Lebanon and Israel is Levantine Arabic 193 except those born and living in the Druze diaspora such as Venezuela where Arabic was not taught or spoken at home 193 The Druze Arabic dialect especially in the rural areas is often different from the other regional Arabic dialects 193 Druze Arabic dialect is distinguished from others by retention of the phoneme q 193 the use of which by Druze is particularly prominent in the mountains and less so in urban areas The Druze citizens of Israel are Arabic in language and culture 18 and linguistically speaking the majority of them are fluently bilingual speaking both a Central Northern Levantine Arabic dialect and Hebrew In Druze Arab homes and towns in Israel the primary language spoken is Arabic while some Hebrew words have entered the colloquial Arabic dialect They often use Hebrew characters to write their Arabic dialect online 194 Cuisine nbsp Druze women making Druze pita in Isfiya Israel Druze cuisine is similar to other Levantine cuisines and is rich in grains meat potato cheese bread whole grains fruits vegetables fresh fish and tomatoes Perhaps the most distinctive aspect of Druze and Levantine cuisine is meze including tabbouleh hummus and baba ghanoush Kibbeh nayyeh is also a popular mezze among Druzes Other famous foods among Druzes include falafel sfiha shawarma dolma kibbeh kusa mahshi shishbarak muhammara and mujaddara 195 Druze pita is a Druze styled pita filled with labneh thick yoghurt and topped with olive oil and za atar 196 and a very popular bread in Israel 197 Al Meleh a popular dish among Druze in Hauran region As Suwayda Governorate cooked in a pressure cooker and served on huge special plates at weddings holidays and other special occasions And consists of bulgur wheat immersed in ghee with lamb and yogurt and served hot with fried kibbeh and vegetables 198 For reasons that remain unclear the Mulukhiyah dish was banned by the Fatimid Caliph Al Hakim bi Amr Allah sometime during his reign 996 1021 While the ban was eventually lifted after the end of his reign the Druze who hold Al Hakim in high regard and give him quasi divine authority 158 continue to respect the ban and do not eat Mulukhiyah of any kind to this day 199 Mate in Levantine Arabic متة maete is a popular drink consumed by the Druze brought to the Levant by Syrian migrants from Argentina in the 19th century 200 Mate is made by steeping dried leaves of the South American plant yerba mate in hot water and is served with a metal straw بمبيجة bambija or مصاصة maṣṣaṣah from a gourd فنجان finjan or ق ر ع ة qarʻah Mate is often the first item served when entering a Druze home It is a social drink and can be shared between multiple participants After each drinker the metal straw is cleaned with lemon rind Traditional snacks eaten with mate include raisins nuts dried figs biscuits and chips 201 200 Druze and other religionsRelationship with Muslims The Druze faith is often classified as a branch of Isma ili although according to various scholars Druze faith diverge substantially from Islam both Sunni and Shia 202 203 Even though the faith originally developed out of Ismaili Islam most Druze do not identify as Muslims 204 205 206 207 208 209 and they do not accept the five pillars of Islam 47 Historian David R W Bryer defines the Druzes as ghulat of Isma ilism since they exaggerated the cult of the caliph al Hakim bi Amr Allah and considered him divine he also defines the Druzes as a religion that deviated from Islam 210 He also added that as a result of this deviation the Druze faith seems as different from Islam as Islam is from Christianity or Christianity is from Judaism 211 Historically the relationship between the Druze and Muslims has been characterized by intense persecution 106 212 213 214 The Druze have frequently experienced persecution by different Muslim regimes such as the Shia Fatimid Caliphate 54 85 Mamluk 95 Sunni Ottoman Empire 215 102 and Egypt Eyalet 216 217 The persecution of the Druze included massacres demolishing Druze prayer houses and holy places and forced conversion to Islam 218 Those acts of persecution were meant to eradicate the whole community according to the Druze narrative 219 Most recently the Syrian Civil War which began in 2011 saw persecution of the Druze at the hands of Islamic extremists 220 221 Since Druze emerged from Islam and share certain beliefs with Islam its position of whether it is a separate religion or a sect of Islam is sometimes controversial among Muslim scholars 222 Druze are not considered Muslims by those belonging to orthodox Islamic schools of thought 223 224 225 226 227 Ibn Taymiyya a prominent Muslim scholar muhaddith dismissed the Druze as non Muslims 228 and his fatwa cited that Druze Are not at the level of Ahl al Kitab People of the Book nor mushrikin polytheists Rather they are from the most deviant kuffar Infidel Their women can be taken as slaves and their property can be seized they are to be killed whenever they are found and cursed as they described It is obligatory to kill their scholars and religious figures so that they do not misguide others 96 which in that setting would have legitimized violence against them as apostates 229 230 The Ottoman Empire often relied on Ibn Taymiyya s religious ruling to justify their persecution of Druze 231 In contrast according to Ibn Abidin whose work Radd al Muhtar ala al Durr al Mukhtar is still considered the authoritative text of Hanafi fiqh today 232 the Druze are neither Muslims nor apostates 233 In 1959 in an ecumenical move driven by Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser s effort to broaden his political appeal after the establishment of the United Arab Republic between Egypt and Syria in 1958 234 the Islamic scholar Mahmud Shaltut at Al Azhar University in Cairo classified the Druze as Muslims 235 even though most Druze no longer consider themselves Muslim 236 237 The fatwa declares that the Druze are Muslims because they recite the twofold Shahada and believe in the Qur an and monotheism and do not oppose Islam in word or deed 238 This fatwa was not accepted by all in the Islamic world many dissenting scholars have argued the Druze recite the Shahada as a form of taqiya a precautionary dissimulation or denial of religious belief and practice in the face of persecution Some sects of Islam including all Shia denominations don t recognize the religious authority of Al Azhar University those that do sometimes challenge the religious legitimacy of Shaltut s fatwa because it was issued for political reasons as Gamal Abdel Nasser saw it as a tool to spread his appeal and influence across the entire Arab world 239 240 In 2012 due to a drift towards Salafism in Al Azhar and the ascension of the Muslim Brotherhood into Egyptian political leadership the dean of the Faculty of Islamic Studies at Al Azhar issued a fatwa strongly opposed to the 1959 fatwa 241 nbsp Shuaib Jethro grave near Hittin Israel Both religions venerate Shuaib Both religions venerate Shuaib and Muhammad Shuaib Jethro is revered as the chief prophet in the Druze religion 242 and in Islam he is considered a prophet of God Muslims regard Muhammad as the final and paramount prophet sent by God 243 244 to the Druze Muhammad is exalted as one of the seven prophets sent by God in different periods of history 159 160 32 In terms of religious comparison Islamic schools and branches do not believe in reincarnation 40 a paramount tenet of the Druze faith 144 Islam teaches dawah whereas the Druze do not accept converts to their faith Marriage outside the Druze faith is rare and is strongly discouraged Islamic schools and branches allow for divorce and permit men to be married to multiple women contrary to the views of the Druze in monogamous marriage and not allowing divorce Differences between Islamic schools and branches and Druze include their belief in the theophany 40 Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad is considered the founder of the Druze and the primary author of the Druze manuscripts 5 he proclaimed that God had become human and taken the form of man Al Hakim bi Amr Allah 154 155 156 157 158 Within Islam however such a concept of theophany is a denial of monotheism The Druze faith incorporates some elements of Islam 32 33 and other religious beliefs Druze Sacred texts include the Qur an and the Epistles of Wisdom rasail al hikma رسائل الحكمة 142 The Druze community does celebrate Eid al Adha as their most significant holiday though their form of observance is different compared to that of most Muslims 187 The Druze faith does not follow Sharia nor any of the Five Pillars of Islam save reciting the Shahada 245 Scholars argue that Druze recite the Shahada in order to protect their religion and their own safety and to avoid persecution by Muslims 245 Relationship with Christians Main article Christianity and Druze nbsp Christian Church and Druze Khalwa in Shuf Historically the Druzes and the Christians in the Shuf Mountains lived in complete harmony 108 Christianity and Druze are Abrahamic religions that share a historical traditional connection with some major theological differences The two faiths share a common place of origin in the Middle East and consider themselves to be monotheistic The relationship between Druze and Christians has been characterized largely by harmony and peaceful coexistence 105 106 107 108 Amicable relations between the two groups prevailed throughout most of history though a few exceptions exist including the 1860 civil conflict in Mount Lebanon and Damascus 109 110 Conversion of Druze to Christianity used to be common practice in the Levant region 246 189 Over the centuries a number of Druze embraced Christianity 247 248 249 250 such as some of Shihab dynasty members 251 as well as the Abi Lamma clan 252 253 Contact between Christian communities members of the Maronites Eastern Orthodox Melkite and other churches and the Unitarian Druze led to the presence of mixed villages and towns in Mount Lebanon Chouf 108 Jabal al Druze 254 the Galilee region Mount Carmel and Golan Heights 255 The Maronite Catholic and the Druze founded modern Lebanon in the early Eighteenth Century through a governing and social system known as the Maronite Druze dualism in the Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate 130 nbsp Left to right Christian mountain dweller from Zahle Christian mountain dweller of Zgharta and a Lebanese Druze man in traditional attire 1873 Druze doctrine teaches that Christianity is to be esteemed and praised as the Gospel writers are regarded as carriers of wisdom 256 The Druze faith incorporates some elements of Christianity 32 33 in addition to adoption of Christian elements on the Epistles of Wisdom 257 The full Druze canon or Druze scripture Epistles of Wisdom includes the Old Testament 258 the New Testament 258 the Quran and philosophical works by Plato and those influenced by Socrates among works from other religions and philosophers 258 The Druze faith shows influence of Christian monasticism among other religious practices 259 In terms of religious comparison mainstream Christian denominations do not believe in reincarnation or the transmigration of the soul unlike the Druze 40 Evangelism is widely seen as central to the Christian faith unlike the Druze who do not accept converts Marriage outside the Druze faith is rare and is strongly discouraged Similarities between the Druze and Christians include commonalities in their view of monogamous marriage as well as the forbidding of divorce and remarriage 40 in addition to the belief in the oneness of God and theophany 260 Both mainstream Christian denominations and Druze does not require male circumcision 261 191 even though male circumcision is commonly practiced in many predominantly Christian countries and many Christian communities 262 and in Coptic Christianity and the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church as a rite of passage 263 264 265 266 267 Male circumcision is also widely practiced by the Druze 190 but as a cultural tradition since circumcision has no religious significance in the Druze faith 191 nbsp The Druze Maqam Al Masih Jesus in As Suwayda Governorate Both religions revere Jesus 159 Both faiths give a prominent place to Jesus 159 160 In Christianity Jesus is the central figure seen as the messiah To the Druze Jesus is an important prophet of God 159 160 being among the seven prophets including Muhammad who appeared in different periods of history 268 The Druze revere Jesus the son of Joseph and Mary and his four disciples who wrote the Gospels 269 According to the Druze manuscripts Jesus is the Greatest Imam and the incarnation of Ultimate Reason Akl on earth and the first cosmic principle Hadd 269 171 and regards Jesus and Hamza ibn Ali as the incarnations of one of the five great celestial powers who form part of their system 270 In the Druze tradition Jesus is known under three titles the True Messiah al Masih al Haq the Messiah of all Nations Masih al Umam and the Messiah of Sinners This is due respectively to the belief that Jesus delivered the true Gospel message the belief that he was the Saviour of all nations and the belief that he offers forgiveness 271 Both religions venerate John the Baptist 161 272 Saint George 273 Elijah 161 Luke the Evangelist 274 Job and other common figures 274 Figures in the Old Testament such as Adam Noah Abraham Moses and Jethro are considered important prophets of God in the Druze faith being among the seven prophets who appeared in different periods of history 159 160 Relationship with Jews nbsp Maqam Al Khidr in Kafr Yasif The relationship between the Druze and Jews has been controversial 275 Antisemitic material is contained in the Druze literature such as the Epistles of Wisdom for example in an epistle ascribed to one of the founders of Druzism Baha al Din al Muqtana 276 probably written sometime between AD 1027 and AD 1042 accused the Jews of crucifying Jesus 277 On the other hand Benjamin of Tudela a Jewish traveler 278 from the 12th century pointed out that the Druze maintained good commercial relations with the Jews nearby and according to him this was because the Druze liked the Jewish people 279 Yet the Jews and Druze lived isolated from each other except in few mixed towns such as Deir al Qamar and Peki in 279 280 The Deir el Qamar Synagogue was built in 1638 during the Ottoman era in Lebanon to serve the local Jewish population some of whom were part of the immediate entourage of the Druze Emir Fakhr al Din II The conflict between Druze and Jews occurs during the Druze power struggle in Mount Lebanon Jewish settlements of Galilee such as Safad and Tiberias were destroyed by the Druze in 1660 281 282 During the Druze revolt against the rule of Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt the Jewish community in Safad was attacked by Druze rebels in early July 1838 the violence against the Jews included plundering their homes and desecrating their synagogues 283 284 285 nbsp Oliphant house in Daliyat al Karmel During the British Mandate for Palestine the Druze did not embrace the rising Arab nationalism of the time or participate in violent confrontations with Jewish immigrants In 1948 many Druze volunteered for the Israeli army and no Druze villages were destroyed or permanently abandoned 286 Since the establishment of the state of Israel the Druze have demonstrated solidarity with Israel and distanced themselves from Arab and Islamic radicalism 287 Israeli Druze citizens serve in the Israel Defense Forces 288 The Jewish Druze partnership was often referred as a covenant of blood Hebrew ברית דמים brit damim in recognition of the common military yoke carried by the two peoples for the security of the country 289 277 290 From 1957 the Israeli government formally recognized the Druze as a separate religious community 291 and are defined as a distinct ethnic group in the Israeli Ministry of Interior s census registration 291 Israeli Druze do not consider themselves Muslim and see their faith as a separate and independent religion 291 While compared to other Israeli Christians and Muslims Druze place less emphasis on Arab identity and self identify more as Israeli However they were less ready for personal relationships with Jews compared to Israeli Muslims and Christians 292 In terms of religious comparison scholars consider Judaism and the Druze faith as ethnoreligious groups 24 both practicing endogamy 23 and both typically do not proselytize Belief in reincarnation Gilgul exist in some strands of Judaism influenced by the Kabbalah such as Hasidic Judaism but is rejected by mainstream Jewish denominations Reformed Judaism Conservative Judaism and Orthodox Judaism 293 Figures in the Hebrew Bible such as Adam Noah Abraham and Moses are considered important prophets of God in the Druze faith being among the seven prophets who appeared in different periods of history 159 160 Both religions venerate Elijah 161 Job and other common figures In the Hebrew Bible Jethro was Moses father in law a Kenite shepherd and priest of Midian 294 Jethro of Midian is considered an ancestor of the Druze who revere him as their spiritual founder and chief prophet OriginsEthnic origins This section s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Arabian hypothesis The Druze faith extended to many areas in the Middle East but most of the modern Druze can trace their origin to the Wadi al Taym in Southern Lebanon which is named after an Arab tribe Taym Allah or Taym Allat which according to Islamic historian al Tabari first came from the Arabian Peninsula into the valley of the Euphrates where they had been Christianized prior to their migration into Lebanon Many of the Druze feudal families whose genealogies have been preserved by the two modern Syrian chroniclers Haydar al Shihabi and Ahmad Faris al Shidyaq seem also to point in the direction of this origin Arabian tribes emigrated via the Persian Gulf and stopped in Iraq on their route that would later to lead them to Syria The first feudal Druze family the Tanukhids which made for itself a name in fighting the Crusaders was according to Haydar al Shihabi an Arab tribe from Mesopotamia where it occupied the position of a ruling family and apparently was Christianized 95 page needed Travelers like Niebuhr and scholars like Max von Oppenheim undoubtedly echoing the popular Druze belief regarding their own origin have classified them as Arabs Druze as a mixture of Western Asian tribes The 1911 edition of Encyclopaedia Britannica states that the Druze are a mixture of refugee stocks in which the Arab largely predominates grafted on to an original mountain population of Aramaic blood 57 Iturean hypothesis According to Jewish contemporary literature the Druze who were visited and described in 1165 by Benjamin of Tudela were pictured as descendants of the Itureans 295 an Ismaelite Arab tribe which used to reside in the northern parts of the Golan plateau through Hellenistic and Roman periods The word Druzes in an early Hebrew edition of his travels occurs as Dogziyin but it is clear that this is a scribal error Archaeological assessments of the Druze region have also proposed the possibility of Druze descending from Itureans 296 who had inhabited Mount Lebanon and Golan Heights in late classic antiquity but their traces fade in the Middle Ages Genetics See also Genetic history of the Middle East Lebanese Christians and Druze became a genetic isolate in the predominantly Islamic world 297 In a 2005 study of ASPM gene variants Mekel Bobrov et al found that the Israeli Druze people of the Mount Carmel region have among the highest rate of the newly evolved ASPM Haplogroup D at 52 2 occurrence of the approximately 6 000 year old allele 298 While it is not yet known exactly what selective advantage is provided by this gene variant the Haplogroup D allele is thought by whom to be positively selected in populations and to confer some substantial advantage that has caused its frequency to rapidly increase A 2004 DNA study has shown that Israeli Druze are remarkable for the high frequency 35 of males who carry the Y chromosomal haplogroup L which is otherwise uncommon in the Middle East Shen et al 2004 299 This haplogroup originates from prehistoric South Asia and has spread from Pakistan into southern Iran A 2008 study done on larger samples showed that L M20 averages 27 in Mount Carmel Druze 2 in Galilee Druze 8 in Lebanese Druze and it was not found in a sample of 59 Syrian Druze Slush et al 2008 300 Cruciani in 2007 found E1b1b1a2 E V13 a subclade of E1b1b1a E M78 in high levels gt 10 of the male population in Cypriot and Druze lineages Recent genetic clustering analyses of ethnic groups are consistent with the close ancestral relationship between the Druze and Cypriots and also identified similarity to the general Syrian and Lebanese populations as well as the major Jewish divisions Ashkenazi Sephardi Iraqi and Moroccan Jews Behar et al 2010 301 Also a new study concluded that the Druze harbor a remarkable diversity of mitochondrial DNA lineages that appear to have separated from each other thousands of years ago But instead of dispersing throughout the world after their separation the full range of lineages can still be found within the Druze population 302 The researchers noted that the Druze villages contained a striking range of high frequency and high diversity of the X haplogroup suggesting that this population provides a glimpse into the past genetic landscape of the Near East at a time when the X haplogroup was more prevalent 302 These findings are consistent with the Druze oral tradition that claims that the adherents of the faith came from diverse ancestral lineages stretching back tens of thousands of years 302 The Shroud of Turin analysis shows significant traces of mitochondrial DNA unique to the Druze community 303 A 2008 study published on the genetic background of Druze communities in Israel showed highly heterogeneous parental origins A total of 311 Israeli Druze were sampled 37 from the Golan Heights 183 from the Galilee and 35 from Mount Carmel as well as 27 Druze immigrants from Syria and 29 from Lebanon Slush et al 2008 The researchers found the following frequencies of Y chromosomal and MtDNA haplogroups 300 Mount Carmel L 27 R 27 J 18 E 15 G 12 Galilee J 31 R 20 E 18 G 14 K 11 Q 4 L 2 Golan Heights J 54 E 29 I 8 G 4 C 4 Lebanon J 58 K 17 Q 8 R 8 L 8 Syria J 39 E 29 R 14 G 14 K 4 Maternal MtDNA haplogroup frequencies H 32 X 13 K 12 5 U 10 T 7 5 HV 4 8 J 4 8 I 3 5 pre HV 3 L2a3 2 25 N1b 2 25 M1 1 6 W 1 29 According to a 2015 study Druze have a largely similar genome with Middle Eastern Arabs but they have not married outside of their clans in 1000 years and Druze families from different regions share a similarity with each other that distinguishes them from other Middle Eastern populations 304 A 2016 study based on testing samples of Druze in the historic region of Syria in comparison with ancient humans including Anatolian and Armenian and on Geographic Population Structure GPS tool by converting genetic distances into geographic distances concluded that Druze might hail from the Zagros Mountains and the surroundings of Lake Van in eastern Anatolia then they later migrated south to settle in the mountainous regions in Syria Lebanon and Israel 305 A 2020 study on remains from Canaanaite Bronze Age southern Levantine populations suggests a significant degree of genetic continuity in currently Arabic speaking Levantine populations including the Druze Lebanese Palestinians and Syrians as well as in most Jewish groups including Sephardi Jews Ashkenazi Jews Mizrahi Jews and Maghrebi Jews from the populations of the Bronze Age Levant suggesting that the aforementioned groups all derive more than half of their overall ancestry atDNA from Canaanite Bronze Age Levantine populations 306 307 albeit with varying sources and degrees of admixture from differing host or invading populations depending on each group In a principal component analysis of a 2014 study Druze were located between Lebanese people and Mizrahi Jews 308 In a PCA in a 2021 study Druze were close to Lebanese people and a part of the larger Levant Iraq cluster 309 See alsoSword Battalion Jaysh al Muwahhideen Jabal Druze State List of Druze Neoplatonism and Gnosticism Religious syncretism Christianity and DruzeReferencesCitations Carl Skutsch 7 November 2013 Skutsch Carl ed Encyclopedia of the World s Minorities Routledge p 410 ISBN 978 1 135 19388 1 Total Population 800 000 Robert Brenton Betts 1 January 1990 The Druze illustrated reprint revised ed Yale University Press p 55 ISBN 978 0 300 04810 0 The total population of Druze throughout the world probably approaches one million Donna Marsh 11 May 2015 Doing Business in the Middle East A cultural and practical guide for all Business Professionals revised ed Hachette UK ISBN 978 1 4721 3567 4 It is believed there are no more than 1 million Druze worldwide most live in the Levant Samy Swayd 10 March 2015 Historical Dictionary of the Druzes 2 ed Rowman amp Littlefield p 3 ISBN 978 1 4422 4617 1 The Druze world population at present is perhaps nearing two million a b c Hendrix Scott Okeja Uchenna eds 2018 The World s Greatest Religious Leaders How Religious Figures Helped Shape World History 2 volumes ABC CLIO p 11 ISBN 978 1440841385 Syria region map PNG gulf2000 columbia edu Irshaid Faisal 19 June 2015 Syria s Druze under threat as conflict spreads BBC News Lebanon International Religious Freedom Report 2008 U S Department of State Retrieved on 2013 06 13 a b The Druze population in Israel a collection of data on the occasion of the Prophet Shuaib holiday PDF CBS Israel Israel Central Bureau of Statistics 17 April 2019 Retrieved 8 May 2019 a b Tariq Alaiseme reportedly to be vice president of Venezuela in Arabic Aamama 2013 Referring governor Tareck El Aissami a b Sending relief and a message of inclusion and love to our Druze sisters and brothers Druze Traditions Institute of Druze Studies archived from the original on 14 January 2009 a b Dating Druze The struggle to find love in a dwindling diaspora www cbc ca Retrieved 1 May 2019 a b International Religious Freedom Report US State Department 2005 Drusentum Die geheime Religion 2020 Deutschlandfunk Retrieved 5 January 2021 Cultural diversity Census 2021 Australian Bureau of Statistics 10 August 2021 Retrieved 30 May 2023 Berdichevsky Norman 13 February 2004 Nations Language and Citizenship McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 2700 0 a b Brockman Norbert 2011 Encyclopedia of Sacred Places 2nd Edition 2 volumes ABC CLIO p 259 ISBN 9781598846546 Definition of druze Dictionary com 18 July 2013 Retrieved 26 August 2019 a b Doniger Wendy 1999 Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of World Religions Merriam Webster Inc ISBN 978 0 87779 044 0 Druze History Religion amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica 20 July 1998 Retrieved 21 June 2023 Quigley John B 2005 The Case for Palestine An International Law Perspective Duke University Press p 135 ISBN 978 0 8223 3539 9 a b Chatty Dawn 15 March 2010 Displacement and Dispossession in the Modern Middle East Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 81792 9 a b Harrison Simon 2006 Fracturing Resemblances Identity and Mimetic Conflict in Melanesia and the West Berghahn Books pp 121 ISBN 978 1 57181 680 1 Abulafia Anna Sapir 23 September 2019 The Abrahamic religions www bl uk London British Library Archived from the original on 12 July 2020 Retrieved 9 March 2021 Obeid Anis 2006 The Druze amp Their Faith in Tawhid Syracuse University Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 8156 5257 1 Dana Leo Paul 1 January 2010 Entrepreneurship and Religion Edward Elgar Publishing p 314 ISBN 978 1 84980 632 9 Morrison Terri Conaway Wayne A 24 July 2006 Kiss Bow Or Shake Hands The Bestselling Guide to Doing Business in More Than 60 Countries illustrated ed Adams Media p 259 ISBN 978 1 59337 368 9 Druze History Religion amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 13 November 2022 Abu Izzeddin Nejla M 1993 The Druzes A New Study of their History Faith and Society Brill p 108 ISBN 978 90 04 09705 6 Daftary Farhad 2 December 2013 A History of Shi i Islam I B Tauris ISBN 978 0 85773 524 9 a b c d e Quilliam Neil 1999 Syria and the New World Order Michigan University press p 42 ISBN 9780863722493 a b c d The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica 1992 p 237 ISBN 9780852295533 Druze religious beliefs developed out of Isma ill teachings Various Jewish Christian Gnostic Neoplatonic and Iranian elements however are combined under a doctrine of strict monotheism Philip Khuri Hitti 1928 The Origins of the Druze People and Religion With Extracts from Their Sacred Writings Library of Alexandria pp 27 ISBN 978 1 4655 4662 3 Salibi Kamal 2005 The Druze realities amp perceptions Druze Heritage Foundation pp 186 190 ISBN 978 1 904850 06 9 Conder Claude Reignier 20 September 2018 Palestine BoD Books on Demand pp 80 ISBN 978 3 7340 3986 7 Al Rafidan Kokushikan Daigaku Iraku Kodai Bunka Kenkyujo 1989 pp 2 Rosenthal Donna 2003 The Israelis Ordinary People in an Extraordinary Land Simon and Schuster p 296 ISBN 978 0 684 86972 8 a b Kapur Kamlesh 2010 History of Ancient India Sterling Publishers Pvt Ltd ISBN 978 81 207 4910 8 a b c d e Nisan 2002 p 95 a b c Druze druze org au 2015 Archived from the original on 14 February 2016 A Political and Economic Dictionary of the Middle East Routledge 2013 ISBN 9781135355616 Finegan Jack 1981 Discovering Israel An Archeological Guide to the Holy Land Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 1869 0 D Nisan Mordechai 2015 Minorities in the Middle East A History of Struggle and Self Expression 2d ed McFarland p 94 ISBN 9780786451333 Swayd Samy 2015 Historical Dictionary of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p 77 ISBN 978 1442246171 S Swayd Samy 2009 The A to Z of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p 109 ISBN 9780810868366 They also cover the lives and teachings of some biblical personages such as Job Jethro Jesus John Luke and others a b De McLaurin Ronald 1979 The Political Role of Minority Groups in the Middle East Michigan University Press p 114 ISBN 9780030525964 Theologically one would have to conclude that the Druze are not Muslims They do not accept the five pillars of Islam In place of these principles the Druze have instituted the seven precepts noted above Druze in Syria Harvard University The Druze are an ethnoreligious group concentrated in Syria Lebanon and Israel with around one million adherents worldwide The Druze follow a millenarian offshoot of Isma ili Shi ism Followers emphasize Abrahamic monotheism but consider the religion as separate from Islam Radwan Chad K June 2009 Assessing Druze identity and strategies for preserving Druze heritage in North America MA thesis University of South Florida Zabad Ibrahim 2017 Middle Eastern Minorities The Impact of the Arab Spring Taylor amp Francis p 125 ISBN 9781317096733 Although the Druze are a tiny community they have played a vital role in the politics of the Levant Stewart Dona J 2008 The Middle East Today Political Geographical and Cultural Perspectives Routledge p 33 ISBN 9781135980795 Al Khalidi Suleiman 11 June 2015 Calls for aid to Syria s Druze after al Qaeda kills 20 Reuters Syria ISIS Imposes Sharia on Idlib s Druze Archived from the original on 20 May 2015 Retrieved 12 May 2015 a b c d e f Moukarim Moustafa F About the Faith of The Mo wa he doon Druze archived from the original on 26 April 2012 Hodgson Marshall G S 1962 Al Darazi and Ḥamza in the Origin of the Druze Religion Journal of the American Oriental Society 82 1 5 20 doi 10 2307 595974 ISSN 0003 0279 JSTOR 595974 a b c d Swayd Samy 1998 The Druzes An Annotated Bibliography Kirkland Washington USA ISES Publications ISBN 978 0 9662932 0 3 a b Chisholm 1911 p 605 a b Al Najjar Abdullah 1965 Madhhab ad Duruz wa t Tawḥid The Druze Sect and Unism in Arabic Egypt Dar al Ma arif Hitti Philip K 2007 1924 Origins of the Druze People and Religion with Extracts from their Sacred Writings Columbia University Oriental Studies Vol 28 new ed London Saqi pp 13 14 ISBN 978 0 86356 690 5 Nisan 2002 p 283 Druze set to visit Syria BBC News 30 August 2004 Retrieved 8 September 2006 The worldwide population of Druze is put at up to one million with most living in mountainous regions in Syria Lebanon Jordan and Israel a b c Druzes Institute of Druze Studies archived from the original on 17 June 2006 Jordanian Druze can be found in Amman and Zarka about 50 live in the town of Azraq and a smaller number in Irbid and Aqaba Localities and Population by District Sub District Religion and Population Group PDF Archived from the original PDF on 14 June 2007 Dana 2003 p 99 Held Colbert 2008 Middle East Patterns Places People and Politics Routledge p 109 ISBN 9780429962004 Worldwide they number 1 million or so with about 45 to 50 percent in Syria 35 to 40 percent in Lebanon and less than 10 percent in Israel Recently there has been a growing Druze diaspora Halabi Rabah Citizens of equal duties Druze identity and the Jewish State in Hebrew p 55 Sending relief and a message of inclusion and love to our Druze sisters and brothers Los Angeles Times 6 April 2021 a b Finding a life partner is hard enough For those of the Druze faith their future depends on it Los Angeles Times 27 August 2017 a b c Hendrix Scott Okeja Uchenna eds 2018 The World s Greatest Religious Leaders How Religious Figures Helped Shape World History 2 volumes ABC CLIO p 11 ISBN 978 1 4408 4138 5 Luminaries Al Hakim PDF Druze archived from the original PDF on 20 August 2008 Remove ye the causes of fear and estrangement from yourselves Do away with the corruption of delusion and conformity Be ye certain that the Prince of Believers hath given unto you free will and hath spared you the trouble of disguising and concealing your true beliefs so that when ye work ye may keep your deeds pure for God He hath done thus so that when you relinquish your previous beliefs and doctrines ye shall not indeed lean on such causes of impediments and pretensions By conveying to you the reality of his intention the Prince of Believers hath spared you any excuse for doing so He hath urged you to declare your belief openly Ye are now safe from any hand which may bring harm unto you Ye now may find rest in his assurance ye shall not be wronged Let those who are present convey this message unto the absent so that it may be known by both the distinguished and the common people It shall thus become a rule to mankind and Divine Wisdom shall prevail for all the days to come Ismaili Islam Heritage Field archived from the original on 11 September 2019 retrieved 5 June 2008 al Hakim bi Amr Allah became a central figure in the Druze faith although his religious position was disputed among scholars John Esposito states that al Hakim believed that he was not only the divinely appointed religio political leader but also the cosmic intellect linking God with creation Potter William 2004 Melville s Clarel and the Intersympathy of Creeds Kent State University Press p 156 ISBN 978 0 87338 797 2 while others like Nissim Dana and Mordechai Nisan state that he is perceived as the manifestation and the reincarnation of God or presumably the image of God Nisan Mordechai 2015 Minorities in the Middle East A History of Struggle and Self Expression 2d ed McFarland p 98 ISBN 978 0 7864 5133 3 Dana 2003 Daftary Farhad 30 December 2011 Historical Dictionary of the Ismailis Scarecrow Press p 40 ISBN 9780810879706 Swayd Samy 27 July 2009 The A to Z of the Druzes annotated ed Scarecrow Press p xxxii ISBN 9780810870024 a b c d Westheimer Ruth Sedan Gil 10 June 2007 The Olive and the Tree The Secret Strength of the Druze Lantern Books ISBN 9781590561027 via Google Books a b c d First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 BRILL 10 June 1993 ISBN 9004097961 via Google Books Philip Khuri Hitti 1966 Origins of the Druze People and Religion Forgotten Books p 31 ISBN 978 1 60506 068 2 Betts Robert Brenton 1990 The Druze Yale University Press p 131 ISBN 978 0 300 04810 0 Clark Malcolm 2011 Islam For Dummies John Wiley amp Sons p 240 ISBN 978 1 118 05396 6 a b About the Faith of the Mo wa he doon Druze by Moustafa F Moukarim Archived from the original on 26 April 2012 a b c Erickson Rebecca The Druze PDF Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements Archived from the original PDF on 18 May 2015 a b Parsons L 2000 The Druze between Palestine and Israel 1947 49 Springer p 2 ISBN 9780230595989 With the succession of al Zahir to the Fatimid caliphate a mass persecution known by the Druze as the period of the mihna of the Muwaḥḥidun was instigated Beattie Andrew Pepper Timothy 1 July 2001 The Rough Guide to Syria Rough Guides p 2 ISBN 978 1 85828 718 8 Retrieved 2 October 2012 Meri Josef W 2006 Medieval Islamic Civilization An Encyclopedia Psychology Press p 217 ISBN 978 0 415 96690 0 Westheimer Ruth Sedan Gil 2007 The Olive and the Tree The Secret Strength of the Druze Lantern Books p 128 ISBN 978 1 59056 102 7 Swayd 2006 First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 BRILL 1993 p 921 ISBN 90 04 09796 1 Abu Izzeddin 1993 p 12 Hitti 1966 p 21 Khuri Hitti Philip 1996 The Origins of the Druze People With Extracts from Their Sacred Writings University of California Press p 10 ISBN 9781538124185 Lebanon therefore was the distributing center of the Druze people and Wadi al Taym was the birthplace of their faith a b History Druze Heritage archived from the original on 3 March 2016 a b c d e f g h i j Hitti 1924 a b Zabad Ibrahim 2017 Middle Eastern Minorities The Impact of the Arab Spring Taylor amp Francis p 126 ISBN 9781317096733 Stefan Winter 11 March 2010 The Shiites of Lebanon under Ottoman Rule 1516 1788 Cambridge University Press p 37 ISBN 978 1 139 48681 1 Druze Identity Religion Tradition and Apostasy PDF shaanan May 2015 archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 retrieved 12 May 2015 TJ Gorton Renaissance Emir a Druze Warlord at the court of the Medici London Quartet Books 2013 pp 167 75 Abu Husayn Abdul Rahim 2004 The View from Istanbul Lebanon and the Druze Emirate in the Ottoman Chancery Documents 1546 1711 I B Tauris pp 21 22 ISBN 978 1 86064 856 4 a b Abu Husayn Abdul Rahim 2004 The View from Istanbul Lebanon and the Druze Emirate in the Ottoman Chancery Documents 1546 1711 I B Tauris p 22 ISBN 978 1 86064 856 4 a b c d Abu Husayn Abdul Rahim 2004 The view from Istanbul Lebanon and the Druze Emirate in the Ottoman chancery documents 1546 1711 I B Tauris pp 22 23 ISBN 978 1 86064 856 4 a b Salibi Kamal S 2005 A house of many mansions the history of Lebanon reconsidered I B Tauris p 66 ISBN 978 1 86064 912 7 Safi Khaled M 2008 Territorial Awareness in the 1834 Palestinian Revolt in Roger Heacock ed Of Times and Spaces in Palestine The Flows and Resistances of Identity Beirut Presses de l Ifpo ISBN 9782351592656 a b Hazran Yusri 2013 The Druze Community and the Lebanese State Between Confrontation and Reconciliation Routledge p 32 ISBN 9781317931737 the Druze had been able to live in harmony with the Christian a b c Artzi Pinḥas 1984 Confrontation and Coexistence Bar Ilan University Press p 166 ISBN 9789652260499 Europeans who visited the area during this period related that the Druze love the Christians more than the other believers and that they hate the Turks the Muslims and the Arabs Bedouin with an intense hatred a b CHURCHILL 1862 The Druzes and the Maronites Montserrat Abbey Library p 25 the Druzes and Christians lived together in the most perfect harmony and good will a b c d Hobby 1985 Near East South Asia Report Foreign Broadcast Information Service p 53 the Druze and the Christians in the Shouf Mountains in the past lived in complete harmony a b Fawaz L T 1994 An Occasion for War Civil Conflict in Lebanon and Damascus in 1860 University of California Press ISBN 9780520087828 Retrieved 16 April 2015 a b Vocke Harald 1978 The Lebanese war its origins and political dimensions C Hurst p 10 ISBN 0 903983 92 3 Masters Bruce Alan 2010 Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Infobase Publishing p 352 ISBN 9781438110257 Abraham Antoine 1977 Lebanese Communal Relations Muslim World 67 2 91 105 doi 10 1111 j 1478 1913 1977 tb03313 x Churchill Charles 1862 The Druzes and the Maronites under the Turkish Rule from 1840 to 1860 Rogan E L 11 April 2002 Frontiers of the State in the Late Ottoman Empire Transjordan 1850 1921 Cambridge University Press p 192 ISBN 9780521892230 Retrieved 1 September 2013 Totten Michael J 2014 Tower of the Sun Stories from the Middle East and North Africa Belmont Estate Books ISBN 978 0 692 29753 7 a b Kjeilen Tore Druze Archived from the original on 1 October 2018 Retrieved 31 May 2007 Reforming Islam in Egypt Economist 18 February 2017 Nisan Mordechai 2 October 2015 Minorities in the Middle East A History of Struggle and Self Expression McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 5133 3 Kayyali Randa 2006 The Arab Americans Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 0 313 33219 3 Sorenson David 12 November 2009 Global Security Watch Lebanon A Reference Handbook A Reference Handbook ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 36579 9 Abdul Rahman Muhammed Saed December 2003 Islam Questions And Answers Schools of Thought Religions and Sects AMSA Publication Limited ISBN 5 551 29049 2 a b c d e f Landis Joshua 1998 Philipp T Schabler B eds Shishakli and the Druzes Integration and intransigence The Syrian Land Processes of Integration and Fragmentation Stuttgart Franz Steiner Verlag pp 369 96 Syrian History Syria s Kurds History Politics and Society Taylor amp Francis 29 August 2008 ISBN 978 0 203 89211 4 Localities 1 and Population by Population Group District Sub District and Natural Region PDF CBS Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics 31 December 2017 Archived PDF from the original on 20 November 2019 Melhem Ahmad 11 April 2019 Trump paves way for Israel to expand settlements in Golan Al Monitor Retrieved 9 May 2019 Kershner Isabel 23 April 2019 Netanyahu Seeks to Name a Golan Heights Settlement for President Trump The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 1 January 2022 Retrieved 9 May 2019 ISIS kidnaps dozens of women girls in deadly Syria raids CBS News 30 July 2018 Panagakos Anastasia 2015 Religious Diversity Today Experiencing Religion in the Contemporary World 3 volumes Experiencing Religion in the Contemporary World ABC CLIO p 99 ISBN 9781440833328 a b Deeb Marius 2013 Syria Iran and Hezbollah The Unholy Alliance and Its War on Lebanon Hoover Press ISBN 9780817916664 the Maronites and the Druze who founded Lebanon in the early eighteenth century Nasrallah Boutros Sfeir Meib May 2003 archived from the original dossier on 11 June 2003 Who s who in Lebanon BBC News 14 March 2005 Retrieved 13 August 2011 a b Eli Ashkenazi 3 November 2005 הרצל והתקווה בחגיגות 30 לתנועה הדרוזית הציונית Herzl and hope in celebrating 30 years of the Druze Zionist movement Haaretz in Hebrew Retrieved 14 October 2014 The Druze Jewish virtual library retrieved 23 January 2012 Amara Muhammad Schnell Izhak 2004 Identity Repertoires among Arabs in Israel Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 30 175 193 doi 10 1080 1369183032000170222 S2CID 144424824 Israel s Religiously Divided Society Pew Research Center 8 March 2016 Retrieved 8 December 2017 Virtually all Muslims 99 and Christians 96 surveyed in Israel identify as Arab A somewhat smaller share of Druze 71 say they are ethnically Arab Other Druze respondents identify their ethnicity as Other Druze or Druze Arab Firro Kais 1999 The Druzes in the Jewish State A Brief History BRILL pp 9 171 ISBN 90 04 11251 0 a Druze ethnicity and ethnic issues still are instruments in the hands of Israel government officials as well as interested parties among the Druze elite And of course with an ethnie as pronounced as that of the Druze there was from the start a ready core that could be made use of and a plethora of givens in which to embed new invented traditions b The timing of the articles just when the process of separating the Druze from the other Arabs in Israel was in full swing Weingrod Alex 1985 Studies in Israeli Ethnicity After the Ingathering Taylor amp Francis pp 259 279 ISBN 978 2 88124 007 2 This subdivision of the Arab population enables the administration to relate to the non Jewish minority in Israel as if it lacks any overall Arab identity and specifically to the Druze as if they are at once Arabs and non Arabs An analysis of this situation which sees Druze ethnicity simply as an internally generated product of Druze history and culture or as a product of some independent Druze strategy and which ignores the nature of the Israeli State is bound to obscure the latter s manipulative role in the generation of political consciousness Jonathan Oppenheimer The Druze in Israel as Arabs and non Arabs Manipulation of Categories of Identity in a non Civil State Religious Freedoms Druze The Israel project archived from the original on 14 September 2012 retrieved 23 January 2012 Makarem Sami Nasib The Druze Faith a b c Swayd SDSU Dr Samy Druze Spirituality and Asceticism Eial archived from the original an abridged rough draft RTF on 5 October 2006 a b Religion AU Druze archived from the original on 14 February 2016 Grolier Incorporated 1996 The Encyclopedia Americana Grolier Incorporated ISBN 9780717201303 a b Seabrook W B Adventures in Arabia Harrap and Sons 1928 chapters on Druze religion Dwairy Marwan 2006 The Psychosocial Function of Reincarnation Among Druze in Israel Culture Medicine and Psychiatry page 29 53 Ḥamza ibn ʻAli ibn Aḥmad and Baha a El Din The Druze holy book Epistles of Wisdom page 47 Elmithaq PDF Christoph Heger Archived PDF from the original on 23 October 2007 Retrieved 18 March 2011 Hanna Batatu 17 September 2012 Syria s Peasantry the Descendants of Its Lesser Rural Notables and Their Politics Princeton University Press pp 15 16 ISBN 978 1 4008 4584 2 I son of being sane of spirit and body and duly qualified attest on my soul without compulsion or constraint that I renounce all the different cults religions and creeds and acknowledge nothing other than obedience to our Lord al Hakim revered be his name and obedience is worship that in his worship I associate no past present or future being that I commit my soul my body my property and my offspring to our Lord al Hakim and accept all his decrees be they in my favour or against me He who attests that there is in heaven no adored god and on the earth no living imam other than our Lord al Hakim belongs to the triumphant muwahhidin unitarians Signed in the year of the slave of our Lord Hamzah bin Ali bin Ahmad the guide of those who respond to the divine call and the avenger on the polytheists with the sword of our Lord Nissim Dana 2003 The Druze in the Middle East Their Faith Leadership Identity and Status Sussex Academic Press p 38 ISBN 978 1 903900 36 9 The Druze h2g2 UK BBC 8 April 2005 The Epistle Answering the People of Esotericism batinids Epistles of Wisdom Vol Second a rough translation from the Arabic Hitti 1924 p 51 Firro Kais 1992 A History of the Druzes Volume 1 BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 09437 6 Dana 2003 p 18 a b c Willi Frischauer 1970 The Aga Khans Bodley Head p Which page a b c Ismail K Poonawala Review The Fatimids and Their Traditions of Learning Journal of the American Oriental Society 119 3 542 doi 10 2307 605981 JSTOR 605981 a b Minorities in the Middle East A History of Struggle and Self expression Page 95 by Mordechai Nisan a b The Druze in the Middle East Their Faith Leadership Identity and Status Page 41 by Nissim Dana a b c Encyclopaedic Survey of Islamic Culture Page 94 by Mohamed Taher a b c d e f g Hitti Philip K 1928 The Origins of the Druze People and Religion With Extracts from Their Sacred Writings Library of Alexandria p 37 ISBN 9781465546623 a b c d e f Dana Nissim 2008 The Druze in the Middle East Their Faith Leadership Identity and Status Michigan University press p 17 ISBN 9781903900369 a b c d Swayd Samy 2015 Historical Dictionary of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p 77 ISBN 978 1442246171 S Swayd Samy 2009 The A to Z of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p 109 ISBN 9780810868366 They also cover the lives and teachings of some biblical personages such as Job Jethro Jesus John Luke and others Dana Leo Paul 2010 Entrepreneurship and Religion Edward Elgar Publishing p 314 ISBN 9781849806329 D Nisan Mordechai 2015 Minorities in the Middle East A History of Struggle and Self Expression 2d ed McFarland p 94 ISBN 9780786451333 Farhad Daftary 20 September 2007 The Isma ilis Their History and Doctrines 2 illustrated revised ed Cambridge University Press p 189 ISBN 978 1 139 46578 6 a b Samy S Swayd 2009 The A to Z of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p xxxix ISBN 978 0 8108 6836 6 Morgan Clarke 15 January 2013 Islam And New Kinship Reproductive Technology and the Shariah in Lebanon Berghahn Books p 17 ISBN 978 0 85745 382 2 Samy S Swayd 2009 The A to Z of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield pp 44 61 147 ISBN 978 0 8108 6836 6 Schmermund Elizabeth 2017 Lebanon Cultures of the World 3rd ed Cavendish Square Publishing LLC p 87 ISBN 9781502626127 While the Druze do not permit iconography in their religion they have a religious symbol known as the Druze Star Stewart Dona J 2008 The Middle East Today Political Geographical and Cultural Perspectives Routledge ISBN 9781135980788 The Druze symbol is a five colored star with each color representing cosmic principles believed by the Druze a b Massignon Louis 2019 The Passion of Al Hallaj Mystic and Martyr of Islam Volume 1 The Life of Al Hallaj Princeton University Press p 594 ISBN 9780691610832 Swayd Sammy 2015 Historical Dictionary of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p 8 ISBN 9781442246171 Swayd Sammy 2015 Historical Dictionary of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p 8 ISBN 9781442246171 The five colors that form the Druze flag and five pointed star are religious symbols of the luminaries a b Holy places of the Druze Aamama Kais Firro 1999 The Druzes in the Jewish State A Brief History BRILL p 95 ISBN 9004112510 Khalwah the prayer place of the Druze Druze sect site 29 August 2010 Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 a b c Raudvere Catharina 2005 Alevi Identity Cultural Religious and Social Perspectives Routledge p 163 ISBN 9781135797256 Druze History Religion amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica 12 May 2023 Kellner Heikele Barbara 2018 Syncretistic Religious Communities in the Near East Collected Papers of the International Symposium Alevism in Turkey and Comparable Syncretistic Religious Communities in the Near East in the Past and Present Berlin 14 17 April 1995 BRILL p 230 ISBN 9789004378988 Council of Europe 2010 Mosaic The Training Kit for Euro mediterranean Youth Work p 214 Vloeberghs Ward 2015 Architecture Power and Religion in Lebanon Rafiq Hariri and the Politics of Sacred Space in Beirut BRILL p 285 ISBN 9789004307056 Lampros Monroe Chloe 2014 A Darkling Plain Cambridge University Press p 231 ISBN 9781107034990 L Stanton Andrea 2012 Cultural Sociology of the Middle East Asia and Africa An Encyclopedia SAGE p 330 ISBN 9781412981767 L Torstrick Rebecca 2004 Culture and Customs of Israel Greenwood Publishing Group p 48 ISBN 9780313320910 R Williams Victoria 2020 Indigenous Peoples An Encyclopedia of Culture History and Threats to Survival 4 volumes ABC CLIO p 318 ISBN 9781440861185 W Lesch David 2021 Historical Dictionary of Syria Rowman amp Littlefield p 129 ISBN 9781538122860 a b Eid al Adha celebrated differently by Druze Alawites a b c Dana 2003 p 56 a b Refugee Review Tribunal What is the attitude of the Druze community toward inter religious marriages PDF Refworl 6 June 2006 a b Ubayd Anis 2006 The Druze and Their Faith in Tawhid Syracuse University Press p 150 ISBN 9780815630975 Male circumcision is standard practice by tradition among the Druze a b c Jacobs Daniel 1998 Israel and the Palestinian Territories The Rough Guide Rough Guides p 147 ISBN 9781858282480 Circumcision is not compulsory and has no religious significance Brenton Betts Robert 2013 The Sunni Shi a Divide Islam s Internal Divisions and Their Global Consequences Potomac Books Inc p 56 ISBN 9781612345239 There are many references to the Druze refusal to observe this common Muslim practice one of the earliest being the rediscoverer of the ruins of Petra John Burckhardt The Druses do not circumcise their children a b c d Swayd 2006 p 50 Gaash Amir 2016 Colloquial Arabic written in Hebrew characters on Israeli websites by Druzes and other non Jews Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 43 44 15 Ashkenazi Michael 2020 Food Cultures of Israel Recipes Customs and Issues ABC CLIO p XXIII ISBN 9781440866869 Isalska Anita 2018 Lonely Planet Israel amp the Palestinian Territories Lonely Planet p 5 ISBN 9781787019249 A Taste of Druze Cuisine Tabletmag 20 November 2019 Aryain Ed 2006 From Syria to Seminole Memoir of a High Plains Merchant Texas Tech University Press p 213 ISBN 9780896725867 R Williams Victoria 2020 Indigenous Peoples An Encyclopedia of Culture History and Threats to Survival 4 volumes ABC CLIO p 318 ISBN 9781440861185 a b South American mate tea a long time Lebanese hit Middle East Online 22 March 2018 Archived from the original on 12 March 2014 Retrieved 11 March 2014 Barceloux Donald 3 February 2012 Medical Toxicology of Drug Abuse Synthesized Chemicals and Psychoactive Plants John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 118 10605 1 Zaman Muhammad Qasim Stewart Devin J Mirza Mahan Kadi Wadad Crone Patricia Gerhard Bowering Hefner Robert W Fahmy Khaled Kuran Timur 2013 The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought Princeton University Press p 139 140 ISBN 9780691134840 Druze who survive as a small minority in Syria Lebanon Israel and Jordan their estimated number in these countries totaled around one million in the beginning of the 21st century diverge substantially from Islam both Sunni and Shiʿa R W Bryer David 1979 The Origins of the Druze Religion An Edition of Ḥamza s Writings and an Analysis of His Doctrine University of Oxford Press p 239 ISBN 9780030525964 Are the Druze People Arabs or Muslims Deciphering Who They Are Arab America 8 August 2018 Retrieved 13 April 2020 J Stewart Dona 2008 The Middle East Today Political Geographical and Cultural Perspectives Routledge p 33 ISBN 9781135980795 Most Druze do not consider themselves Muslim Historically they faced much persecution and keep their religious beliefs secrets Yazbeck Haddad Yvonne 2014 The Oxford Handbook of American Islam Oxford University Press p 142 ISBN 9780199862634 While they appear parallel to those of normative Islam in the Druze religion they are different in meaning and interpretation The religion is considered distinct from the Ismaili as well as from other Muslims belief and practice Most Druze consider themselves fully assimilated in American society and do not necessarily identify as Muslims Cohen Hillel 2010 Good Arabs The Israeli Security Agencies and the Israeli Arabs 1948 1967 University of California Press p 170 ISBN 9780520944886 the Druze connection to the Muslims remained a matter of controversy Jacobs Martin 2014 Reorienting the East Jewish Travelers to the Medieval Muslim World University of Pennsylvania Press p 193 ISBN 9780812290011 Though their religion is related to that of the Ismailis from a historical standpoint the Druze who see themselves as true unitarians muwah h idun are usually not considered Muslims Hajjar Lisa 2005 Courting Conflict The Israeli Military Court System in the West Bank and Gaza University of California Press p 279 ISBN 9780520241947 Druze although today it is widely considered to be a separate religion some still consider it an Islamic sect Bryer David R W 1975 The Origins of the Druze Religion Der Islam 52 1 52 65 doi 10 1515 islm 1975 52 1 47 ISSN 1613 0928 S2CID 201807131 Bryer David R W 1975 The Origins of the Druze Religion Fortsetzung Der Islam 52 2 239 262 doi 10 1515 islm 1975 52 2 239 ISSN 1613 0928 S2CID 162363556 Swayd Samy 2015 Historical Dictionary of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p 132 ISBN 9781442246171 Some Muslim rulers and jurists have advocated the persecution of members of the Druze Movement beginning with the seventh Fatimi Caliph Al Zahir in 1022 Recurring period of persecutions in subsequent centuries failure to elucidate their beliefs and practices have contributed to the ambiguous relationship between Muslims and Druzes K Zartman Jonathan 2020 Conflict in the Modern Middle East An Encyclopedia of Civil War Revolutions and Regime Change ABC CLIO p 199 ISBN 9781440865039 Historically Islam classified Christians Jews and Zoroastrians as protected People of the Book a secondary status subject to payment of a poll tax Nevertheless Zoroastrians suffered significant persecution Other religions such as the Alawites Alevis and Druze often suffered more Layis Aharon 1982 Marriage Divorce and Succession in the Druze Family A Study Based on Decisions of Druze Arbitrators and Religious Courts in Israel and the Golan Heights BRILL p 1 ISBN 9789004064126 the Druze religion though originating from the Isma lliyya an extreme branch of the Shia seceded completely from Islam and has therefore experienced periods of persecution by the latter C Tucker Spencer C 2019 Middle East Conflicts from Ancient Egypt to the 21st Century An Encyclopedia and Document Collection 4 volumes ABC CLIO pp 364 366 ISBN 9781440853531 Taraze Fawaz Leila An occasion for war civil conflict in Lebanon and Damascus in 1860 p 63 Goren Haim Dead Sea Level Science Exploration and Imperial Interests in the Near East p 95 96 C Tucker Spencer C 2019 Middle East Conflicts from Ancient Egypt to the 21st Century An Encyclopedia and Document Collection 4 volumes ABC CLIO p 364 ISBN 9781440853531 Zabad Ibrahim 2017 Middle Eastern Minorities The Impact of the Arab Spring Routledge ISBN 9781317096726 Syria conflict Al Nusra fighters kill Druze villagers BBC News 11 June 2015 Retrieved 27 July 2015 Nusra Front kills Syrian villagers from minority Druze sect thestar com 11 June 2015 Retrieved 27 July 2015 M Firro Kais 2021 The Druzes in the Jewish State A Brief History BRILL p 94 ISBN 9789004491915 Hunter Shireen 2010 The Politics of Islamic Revivalism Diversity and Unity Center for Strategic and International Studies Washington D C Georgetown University Center for Strategic and International Studies University of Michigan Press p 33 ISBN 9780253345493 Druze An offshoot of Shi ism its members are not considered Muslims by orthodox Muslims D Grafton David 2009 Piety Politics and Power Lutherans Encountering Islam in the Middle East Wipf and Stock Publishers p 14 ISBN 9781630877187 In addition there are several quasi Muslim sects in that although they follow many of the beliefs and practices of orthodox Islam the majority of Sunnis consider them heretical These would be the Ahmadiyya Druze Ibadi and the Yazidis R Williams Victoria 2020 Indigenous Peoples An Encyclopedia of Culture History and Threats to Survival 4 volumes ABC CLIO p 318 ISBN 9781440861185 As Druze is a nonritualistic religion without requirements to pray fast make pilgrimages or observe days of rest the Druze are not considered an Islamic people by Sunni Muslims Allah has spoken to us we must keep silent In the folds of secrecy the Holy Book of the Druze Aix Marseille University 30 January 2017 Orientalist literature frequently affiliates the Druze religion with the Muslim faith although it seems as different from Islam as Islam is from Christianity or Christianity is from Judaism Bryer 1975b 239 The Muslim consider Druze doctrine to be heresy specifically because it extols the transmigration of the soul taqammoṣ el arwaḥ and the repeal of religion Nestorovic Cedomir 2016 Islamic Marketing Understanding the Socio Economic Cultural and Politico Legal Environment Springer p 66 ISBN 9783319327549 As far as the Druze are concerned many Muslims regard them suspiciously arguing that they are not in fact Muslims but rather a religion in their own Roald Anne Sofie 2011 Religious Minorities in the Middle East Domination Self Empowerment Accommodation BRILL p 255 ISBN 9789004207424 Therefore many of these scholars follow Ibn Taymiyya sfatwa from the beginning of the fourteenth century that declared the Druzes and the Alawis as heretics outside Islam Knight Michael 2009 Journey to the End of Islam Soft Skull Press p 129 ISBN 9781593765521 S Swayd Samy 2009 The A to Z of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p 37 ISBN 9780810868366 Subsequently Muslim opponents of the Druzes have often relied on Ibn Taymiyya s religious ruling to justify their attitudes and actions against Druzes S Swayd Samy 2009 The Druzes An Annotated Bibliography University of Michigan Press p 25 ISBN 9780966293203 an Nubala 2011 Ahmad A 2009 Islam Modernity Violence and Everyday Life Springer p 164 ISBN 9780230619562 Aburish Said K 2004 Nasser the last Arab illustrated ed Duckworth pp 200 201 ISBN 9780715633007 But perhaps the most far reaching change initiated by Nasser s guidance was the fatwa commanding the readmission to mainstream Islam of the Shia Alawis and Druze They had been considered heretics and idolaters for hundreds of years but Nasser put an end to this for once and for all While endearing himself to the majority Shia of Iraq and undermining Kassem the communist ruler of Iraq at the time might have played a part in that decision there is no doubting the liberalism of the man in this regard Rainer Brunner 2004 Islamic Ecumenism In The 20th Century The Azhar And Shiism Between Rapprochement And Restraint revised ed Brill p 360 ISBN 9789004125483 Pintak Lawrence 2019 America amp Islam Soundbites Suicide Bombs and the Road to Donald Trump Bloomsbury Publishing p 86 ISBN 9781788315593 Jonas Margaret 2011 The Templar Spirit The Esoteric Inspiration Rituals and Beliefs of the Knights Templar Temple Lodge Publishing p 83 ISBN 9781906999254 Druze often they are not regarded as being Muslim at all nor do all the Druze consider themselves as Muslim Asian and African Studies Vol 19 No 3 p 271 Asian and African Studies Vol 19 No 3 p 277 Keddie Nikki R Rudolph P Matthee 2002 Iran and the Surrounding World Interactions in Culture and Cultural Politics illustrated ed University of Washington Press p 306 ISBN 9780295982069 Al Araby Mohamed 25 April 2013 Identity politics Egypt and the Shia Al Ahram Weekly Archived from the original on 21 April 2014 Retrieved 20 April 2014 Sandra Mackey 16 March 2009 Mirror of the Arab World Lebanon in Conflict illustrated reprint ed W W Norton amp Company p 28 ISBN 9780393333749 Esposito 1998 p 12 Clark Malcolm 2003 Islam for Dummies Indiana Wiley Publishing Inc p 100 ISBN 978 1 118 05396 6 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 a b James Lewis 2002 The Encyclopedia of Cults Sects and New Religions Prometheus Books Retrieved 13 May 2015 Frazee Charles A 2006 Catholics and Sultans The Church and the Ottoman Empire 1453 1923 Cambridge University Press p 191 ISBN 9780521027007 the conversion to Christianity of several Muslim and Druze families aided this growth immeasurably Kayyali Randa A 2006 The Arab Americans Greenwood Publishing Group p 21 ISBN 9780313332197 some Christians mostly from the Orthodox faith as well as Druze converted to Protestantism Kayyali Randa A 2006 The Arab Americans Greenwood Publishing Group p 21 ISBN 9780313332197 Many of the Druze have chosen to deemphasize their ethnic identity and some have officially converted to Christianity Hobby Jeneen 2011 Encyclopedia of Cultures and Daily Life University of Philadelphia Press p 232 ISBN 9781414448916 US Druze settled in small towns and kept a low profile joining Protestant churches usually Presbyterian or Methodist and often Americanizing their names Granli Elisabet 2011 Religious conversion in Syria Alawite and Druze believers Master s thesis University of Oslo hdl 10852 16181 Mishaqa p 23 Gabor Agoston Bruce Alan Masters 1 January 2009 Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Infobase Publishing p 530 ISBN 978 1 4381 1025 7 Retrieved 25 May 2013 al H azin Farid 2000 The Breakdown of the State in Lebanon 1967 1976 Harvard University Press p 35 ISBN 9780674081055 So did other amirs like the originally Druze Abi llamah family which also became Maronite The Druze and Assad Strategic Bedfellows Fadwa N Kirrish Druze Ethnicity in the Golan Heights The Interface of Religion and Politics Journal of the Institute of Muslim Minority Affairs 13 1 1992 122 135 On the Horizon The Strange World of the Druzes Commentary Magazine 20 January 1956 D De Smet Ismaʻil Tamimi Ḥamzah ibn ʻAli ibn Aḥmad 2007 Les Epitres Sacrees Des Druzes Rasa il Al hikma Introduction Edition Critique Et Traduction Annotee Des Traites Attribues a Hamza B ali Et Isma il At tamimi Peeters ISBN 978 90 429 1943 3 Retrieved 17 March 2011 a b c Mordechai Nisan 2002 Minorities in the Middle East a history of struggle and self expression McFarland pp 96 ISBN 978 0 7864 1375 1 Retrieved 17 March 2011 Stanton Andrea L 2012 Cultural Sociology of the Middle East Asia and Africa An Encyclopedia SAGE p 330 ISBN 9781412981767 Nisan 2002 p 95 Ellwood Robert S 2008 The Encyclopedia of World Religions Infobase Publishing p 95 ISBN 9781438110387 It is obligatory among Jews Muslims and Coptic Christians Catholic Orthodox and Protestant Christians do not require circumcision Starting in the last half of the 19th century however circumcision also became common among Christians in Europe and especially in North America Gruenbaum Ellen 2015 The Female Circumcision Controversy An Anthropological Perspective University of Pennsylvania Press p 61 ISBN 9780812292510 Christian theology generally interprets male circumcision to be an Old Testament rule that is no longer an obligation though in many countries especially the United States and Sub Saharan Africa but not so much in Europe it is widely practiced among Christians Stearns Peter N 2008 The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern World Oxford University Press p 179 ISBN 9780195176322 Uniformly practiced by Jews Muslims and the members of Coptic Ethiopian and Eritrean Orthodox Churches male circumcision remains prevalent in many regions of the world particularly Africa South and East Asia Oceania and Anglosphere countries Male circumcision Global trends and determinants of prevalence safety and acceptability PDF World Health Organization 2007 Archived PDF from the original on 22 December 2015 Thomas Riggs 2006 Christianity Coptic Christianity Worldmark Encyclopedia of Religious Practices Religions and denominations Thomson Gale ISBN 978 0 7876 6612 5 Archived from the original on 18 January 2016 Circumcision Columbia Encyclopedia Columbia University Press 2011 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Clark M 10 March 2011 Islam For Dummies John Wiley amp Sons p 170 ISBN 978 1 118 05396 6 Archived from the original on 18 January 2016 A Political and Economic Dictionary of the Middle East Routledge 2013 ISBN 9781135355616 Druze believe in seven prophets Adam Noah Abraham Moses Jesus Muhammad and Muhammad ibn Ismail ad Darazi a b Dana Nissim 2008 The Druze in the Middle East Their Faith Leadership Identity and Status Michigan University press p 47 ISBN 978 1 903900 36 9 Crone Patricia 2013 The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought Princeton University Press p 139 ISBN 9780691134840 Swayd Samy 2019 The A to Z of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p 88 ISBN 9780810870024 Jesus is known in the Druze tradition as the True Messiah al Masih al Haq for he delivered what Druzes view as the true message He is also referred to as the Messiah of the Nations Masih al Umam because he was sent to the world as Masih of Sins because he is the one who forgives Brockman Norbert C 2011 Encyclopedia of Sacred Places 2nd Edition 2 volumes ABC CLIO p 259 ISBN 9781598846553 They included Jesus John the Baptist Moses and Mohammed all teachers of monotheism Murphy O Connor Jerome 2008 The Holy Land An Oxford Archaeological Guide from Earliest Times to 1700 OUP Oxford p 205 ISBN 9780191647666 a b Swayd Samy S 2009 The A to Z of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p 109 ISBN 9780810868366 They also cover the lives and teachings of some biblical personages such as Job Jethro Jesus John Luke and others Parsons L 2011 The Druze between Palestine and Israel 1947 49 Springer p 7 ISBN 9780230595989 Nettler Ronald 2014 Muslim Jewish Encounters Routledge p 140 ISBN 9781134408542 One example of Druze anti Jewish bias is contained in an epistle ascribed to one of the founders of Druzism Baha al Din a b L Rogan Eugene 2011 The War for Palestine Rewriting the History of 1948 Cambridge University Press p 73 ISBN 9780521794763 Benjamin of Tudela www jewishvirtuallibrary org Retrieved 5 November 2017 a b L Rogan Eugene 2011 The War for Palestine Rewriting the History of 1948 Cambridge University Press p 71 ISBN 9780521794763 Abraham David 24 May 2010 To Come to the Land Immigration and Settlement in 16th Century Eretz Israel University of Alabama Press pp 27 28 ISBN 978 0 8173 5643 9 Joel Rappel History of Eretz Israel from Prehistory up to 1882 1980 Vol 2 p 531 In 1662 Sabbathai Sevi arrived in Jerusalem It was the time when the Jewish settlements of Galilee were destroyed by the Druze Tiberias was completely desolate and only a few former Safed residents had returned Barnay Y The Jews in Palestine in the eighteenth century under the patronage of the Istanbul Committee of Officials for Palestine University of Alabama Press 1992 ISBN 978 0 8173 0572 7 p 149 Sherman Lieber 1992 Mystics and missionaries the Jews in Palestine 1799 1840 University of Utah Press p 334 ISBN 978 0 87480 391 4 The Druze and local Muslims vandalised the Jewish quarter During three days though they enacted a replay of the 1834 plunder looting homes and desecrating synagogues no deaths were reported What could not be stolen was smashed and burned Jews caught outdoors were robbed and beaten Louis Finkelstein 1960 The Jews their history culture and religion Harper p 679 In the summer of 1838 the Druses revolted against Ibrahim Pasha and once more the Jews were the scapegoat The Moslems joined the Druses in repeating the slaughter and plunder of 1834 Ronald Florence 18 October 2004 Blood libel the Damascus affair of 1840 Univ of Wisconsin Press p 47 ISBN 978 0 299 20280 4 There had been pogroms against the Jews in Safed in 1834 and 1838 Internal Displacement Monitoring Center Israel Archived from the original on 3 September 2006 Retrieved 22 April 2009 The Druze in Israel Questions of Identity Citizenship and Patriotism PDF Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 9 February 2022 Stern Yoav 23 March 2005 Christian Arabs Second in a series Israel s Christian Arabs don t want to fight to fit in Haaretz Archived from the original on 10 December 2007 Retrieved 7 January 2006 Firro Kais 15 August 2006 Druze Herev Battalion Fights 32 Days With No Casualties Arutz Sheva Archived from the original on 24 December 2018 Retrieved 15 August 2006 Nisan Mordechai 2015 Minorities in the Middle East A History of Struggle and Self Expression 2d ed McFarland p 284 ISBN 9780786451333 This Jewish Druze partnership was often referred to as a covenant of blood in recognition of the common military yoke carried by the two peoples for the security of the country a b c Sabri Jiryis 1969 second impression The Arabs in Israel The Institute for Palestine Studies p 145 ISBN 978 0 85345 377 2 Israel of Citizens Arab of Attitudes Index Democracy Israeli 2016 The PDF Trachtenberg Joshua 1 January 2021 Jewish Magic and Superstition Beyond Books Hub Harris Stephen L Understanding the Bible Palo Alto Mayfield 1985 Hitti P K 1966 The Origins of the Druze People and Religion With Extracts from Their Sacred Writings Library of Alexandria ISBN 978 1 4655 4662 3 Dar Shimon 1988 The History of the Hermon Settlements Palestine Exploration Quarterly 120 1 26 44 doi 10 1179 peq 1988 120 1 26 ISSN 0031 0328 Heretofore studies of the Ituraeans have been based on historical sources and written history Archaeological surveys from 1968 to Proposes the possibility that the Druze descended from the Ituraeans Haber et al 2013 Quote 1 We show that religious affiliation had a strong impact on the genomes of the Levantines In particular conversion of the region s populations to Islam appears to have introduced major rearrangements in populations relations through admixture with culturally similar but geographically remote populations leading to genetic similarities between remarkably distant populations like Jordanians Moroccans and Yemenis Conversely other populations like Christians and Druze became genetically isolated in the new cultural environment We reconstructed the genetic structure of the, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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