Authors: James Michener
Though this victory of Ferdinand and Isabella was a Christian
triumph, in name at least, it was not a triumph of humanity; and
if the philanthropist or the colder economist, speculating with a
view to utility alone, were to inquire what use Christian Spain had
made of her dear-bought conquest, and how far the aggregate
happiness of mankind and the interests of civilization had been
promoted by the extermination of an heroic, ingenious, and
industrious people, a picture of fraud, cruelty, and oppression
would be presented, as frightful as the world has ever witnessed,
and followed by consequences equally ruinous to the oppressors
and the oppressed.
(Upon my return to America, I learned through the kindness of
the librarian at The Hispanic Society of America that the author
of this book was Alexander Slidell [1803-1848], the younger
brother of that famous John Slidell of New York City, who, after
graduating from Columbia College in that city, wound up as
United States senator from Louisiana, a post he surrendered when
Louisiana withdrew from the Union at the start of the Civil War.
As a diplomatic representative of the Confederacy, the older Slidell
earned a place in history when the northern navy lifted him from
a British ship in which he was traveling to Europe, thus
precipitating an incident which nearly brought Great Britain into
the war on the side of the Confederacy. Alexander Slidell published
his book on Spain at the age of twenty-six; three years later, on
August 20, 1832, the Spanish King Fernando VII issued a royal
decree banning him from Spain because of intemperate remarks
he had made against the country. In 1838 Slidell added the name
Mackenzie and was henceforth known as Slidell Mackenzie. In
1842, after three of his sailors were detected in a mutiny,
Mackenzie hung the trio from the yardarm of his ship, thus
involving himself in a scandal, since one of the hanged men was
the son of the Secretary of War. Seven years after the publication
of his first book on Spain, he issued a second,
By training and inclination I was disposed to agree with Slidell
Mackenzie’s attitude on the Muslim expulsion, but recently I had
come upon Bertrand and Petrie’s refreshing history, and
Bertrand’s austere judgments on Muslim Spain derived from his
experience and study in the Muslim colonies of French North
Africa. Bertrand knew Muslim culture and history in a way that
Washington Irving and the anonymous ‘Young American’ never
did, and his acerb views are a corrective to their romanticizing.
One of Bertrand’s repeated cautions is that we must be suspicious
of pro-Muslim writing because its real intention is anti-Catholic;
Protestant writers had found in the banished Muslims a
convenient club for beating Spaniards: ‘To judge Islamic
civilization reasonably, it is important not to let ourselves be
carried away by the hyperbolical admiration, the preconceptions,
and the prejudices of those who exalt Arab-Spanish culture to an
exaggerated extent only in order to degrade Catholic Spain in
proportion.’
I recommend especially Bertrand’s four-page chapter ‘The
Balance-Sheet of the Arab Conquest,’ in which he summarizes
his conclusions: Spain owed three positive debts to the Muslims.
The concept of the university was Muslim, even though the
teaching was “terrible in its verbalism and almost entirely
theological.’ Muslim art also exerted a strong influence, as did
Muslim poetry. More important, however, were the negative
influences upon Spanish character, and these manifested
themselves in various ways. The excessive individualism of the
Spaniard, his tendency toward anarchy, is a Muslim inheritance
‘to such a point that half a dozen Spaniards could not find
themselves together in a fort or a caravel without at once forming
two or three parties bent upon destroying one another.’ Especially
destructive to the Spanish character was ‘the sinuosity of these
Africans and Asiatics,’ for from this developed the Spaniard’s
tendency toward bad faith and the breaking of his word. The
bloodthirsty rapacity of the Spaniard and his lust for gold are
directly attributable to his contact with the Muslim, as is the
custom of keeping women behind bars. The worst of the borrowed
characteristics was the parasitism of the nomads whereby living
off one’s neighbor became an acceptable practice, but almost as
bad was the habit of putting the conquered to fire and sword
which the Muslims introduced into the peninsula. Bertrand
concludes his dismal summary by citing two influences that were
particularly destructive and persistent: the cruelty of the Muslim
warrior, which became the cruelty of the Spaniard, and the
incapacity of the Muslim to organize a government or to run it
methodically. ‘The traveler through the mournful solitudes of La
Mancha feels only too intensely that the Berbers of Africa have
passed that way.’
Elsewhere he makes an additional point of great importance.
Conceding that agriculture declined when the Moors were
expelled, he warns against interpreting this as proof of Muslim
accomplishment, because wherever the Moors went they destroyed
agriculture; they did not promote it. The secret was that the good
agriculture of the Moorish period was attributable to Spanish
farmers using Spanish methods. They had converted to Islam,
but when the Moors left, they left too, out of loyalty to their new
religion. Bertrand’s final comment is unqualified: ‘On balance,
it can fairly be said that the Muslim domination was a great
misfortune for Spain.’
If I were forced to choose between the sentimentalities of
Washington Irving and the hard analysis of Louis Bertrand, I
would be inclined toward the latter, but I suspect that Bertrand’s
strictures are somewhat more harsh than truth would dictate, for
I detect in his argument more a defense of France’s contemporary
policy vis-à-vis the difficult Muslims of North Africa than a
concern for Spain’s historic problems with those same people. It
seems to me that Bertrand underemphasizes the artistic
accomplishments of the Muslims while overstressing their cruelty;
but on one point he is eminently sound and it is one that has not
been stressed before: that Spain’s proven incapacity to govern
herself in the responsible French-English-American pattern is
due primarily to her extended experience with Muslims, who
fragmented their own holdings into a score of petty principalities
and who prevented Spain from doing otherwise until the habit
became so ingrained that regional economic separatism became
the curse of Spanish life, whether in the homeland or in the
Americas. It is this dreadful heritage of anarchy that keeps the
Spanish republics of our hemisphere in confusion.
I was restrained from accepting all of Bertrand’s conclusions
by a curious experience I was having in the Alhambra. Whenever
I was tempted to agree that the Moors were as bad as Bertrand
said, I would close my books and walk out into the gardens, and
there I would find myself face to face with that hideous stone
palace which Carlos V had caused to be built in the middle of the
grounds and juxtaposed to the loveliest of the Alhambra palaces.
One sight of that monstrous edifice, better suited to a cliff along
the Rhine than to Granada, satisfied me that although the Moor
may have had faults, he also had taste; this castle was so alien to
the spirit of the Alhambra that no reconciliation of Spanish ideals
and Moorish was possible.
The castle boasts a façade that is grotesquely ugly, as if someone
had set out to burlesque the worst taste of the time. Its lower
ranges consist of massive stones cut in that style which leaves the
central area six or eight inches higher than the edges, producing
an effect of brute strength, while the upper portions consist of
some of the heaviest and most overly ornamented windows I had
ever seen. Since the sides of the building form a square, what one
has is an undigested cube of rock, and whoever designed it failed
to realize that when plumped down beside the delicate Moorish
palaces upon which it encroaches, it could only look ridiculous.
There were reasons to forgive the intrusion of the cathedral in
the middle of Córdoba’s Great Mosque, but the Carlos V castle
in the Alhambra can have no justification.