Eunuchs and Sacred Space in Islam, pt. 1
Posted: Wed Feb 27, 2002 8:24 pm
One of the important roles for eunuchs in traditional Moslem society was as guardians of the tombs of the dead. Shaun Marmon's book, Eunuchs and Sacred Boundaries in Islamic Society (1995, Oxford University Press) discusses this, along with other roles of eunuchs. I will quote below some long passages relating to this guardianship of the dead. In transliteration from Arabic script, it is usual to use the macron (long mark) on certain vowels. Because of the vagaries of some browsers, I have opted to double the vowel instead. E.g., "aa" represents a single "a" with a long mark in the normal transliteration, "uu" represents a single "u" with a long mark, etc.
One important location for eunuchs is as guardians of the tomb of the Prophet Mohammed. According to accounts which I have read, eunuchs were still being recruited for this role as recently as the late 1970s, and with the resurgence of chattel slavery in the Sudan and recent reports of young Afghan orphans being sold into slavery in the Middle East, recruiting may still be going on. It has, after all, only been a few years since Anti-Slavery International reported on the castration of slave boys in the Sudan (though for domestic use).
"In the literature of the cult of the Prophet, a great emphasis is placed on the 'hadiith' (tradition) which indicates that the Prophet is, in fact, still resident in his tomb/household. His body is incorruptible, 'for the worms dare not consume the bodies of martyrs.' His 'baraka,' the essence of his prophetic charisma, is very much alive in his tomb and infuses the entire sanctuary. On occasion he even returns the greeting of peace to pious men who visit his tomb/dwelling (hujra). The Prophet's death, in time, is not denied. But within his tomb and in the area immediately surrounding it, time is suspended. The sphere of 'baraka' becomes the sphere of no-time.
"Eunuchs, given their peculiar qualities as a human category, were particularly well suited to serve within this atemporal zone. Like most people of slave origin, eunuchs had been violently uprooted from their past. Their biological parents had been erased along with the names those parents had given them. The anonymity of the patronymic of the first-generation slave, 'ibn 'Abd Allaah,' 'son of the slave of God,' underscores the complete separation from one's parents and ancestors which was in theory a necessary aspect of the 'death' of enslavement. The destruction of the past was the first stage in a process of socialization which all slaves - male, female, and eunuch - underwent, and from which many would be 'resurrected' through manumission to a new Muslim identity. For the eunuch, however, the 'death' of enslavement suffered as a child was succeeded almost immediately by castration. If he survived the physical trauma of the operation, he would enter the Islamic world as a member of an unusual category, removed from the normal cycle of human maturation and deprived of a biological future.
"Islamic law divides the life cycle of the individual according to various stages of maturity. The most important moment of the cycle by far is puberty, or 'buluugh' (lit. 'readiness,' 'ripeness'), the physical transformation of the child into a 'complete man' (rajul kaamil) or a 'complete woman' (mar'a kaamila), that is, a person with a set sexual identity who is capable of playing his or her appropriate role in society. Once a person is pubescent (baaligh/baaligha), he or she crosses over the boundary between child and adult and takes on a new legal, moral, and social identity. The signs of 'buluugh' are the physical signs of sexual maturity: the growth of pubic hair, menarche, and the development of breasts in girls; nocturnal emissions, pubic hair, and facial hair in boys.
"The eunuch, castrated before adolescence, would never go through the change of 'buluugh.' Because Islamic law, like most sophisticated systems of jurisprudence, also recognized another standard of competence, intellectual maturity (rushd", the free adult eunuch was not condemned to a perpetual state of legal infancy but possessed full legal capacity in most areas of the law. In strictly legal terms a eunuch could thus be 'rashiid' (mentally competent), but, on a more profound level, he could never be 'kaamil' (complete). Within his own lifetime he was condemned to a strange kind of physical stasis. If he survived the painful urinary tract infections from which eunuchs often suffered, he would grow old as all men grow old. But the aging process would not manifest itself in the cycle of physical changes of 'complete' men, the progression from beardless boy (amrad) to black-bearded adult, to white-bearded old man. His oddly distorted body, warped by hormonal deprivation, would not age like the bodies of uncastrated men but would only become more wasted and cadaverous with time.
One important location for eunuchs is as guardians of the tomb of the Prophet Mohammed. According to accounts which I have read, eunuchs were still being recruited for this role as recently as the late 1970s, and with the resurgence of chattel slavery in the Sudan and recent reports of young Afghan orphans being sold into slavery in the Middle East, recruiting may still be going on. It has, after all, only been a few years since Anti-Slavery International reported on the castration of slave boys in the Sudan (though for domestic use).
"In the literature of the cult of the Prophet, a great emphasis is placed on the 'hadiith' (tradition) which indicates that the Prophet is, in fact, still resident in his tomb/household. His body is incorruptible, 'for the worms dare not consume the bodies of martyrs.' His 'baraka,' the essence of his prophetic charisma, is very much alive in his tomb and infuses the entire sanctuary. On occasion he even returns the greeting of peace to pious men who visit his tomb/dwelling (hujra). The Prophet's death, in time, is not denied. But within his tomb and in the area immediately surrounding it, time is suspended. The sphere of 'baraka' becomes the sphere of no-time.
"Eunuchs, given their peculiar qualities as a human category, were particularly well suited to serve within this atemporal zone. Like most people of slave origin, eunuchs had been violently uprooted from their past. Their biological parents had been erased along with the names those parents had given them. The anonymity of the patronymic of the first-generation slave, 'ibn 'Abd Allaah,' 'son of the slave of God,' underscores the complete separation from one's parents and ancestors which was in theory a necessary aspect of the 'death' of enslavement. The destruction of the past was the first stage in a process of socialization which all slaves - male, female, and eunuch - underwent, and from which many would be 'resurrected' through manumission to a new Muslim identity. For the eunuch, however, the 'death' of enslavement suffered as a child was succeeded almost immediately by castration. If he survived the physical trauma of the operation, he would enter the Islamic world as a member of an unusual category, removed from the normal cycle of human maturation and deprived of a biological future.
"Islamic law divides the life cycle of the individual according to various stages of maturity. The most important moment of the cycle by far is puberty, or 'buluugh' (lit. 'readiness,' 'ripeness'), the physical transformation of the child into a 'complete man' (rajul kaamil) or a 'complete woman' (mar'a kaamila), that is, a person with a set sexual identity who is capable of playing his or her appropriate role in society. Once a person is pubescent (baaligh/baaligha), he or she crosses over the boundary between child and adult and takes on a new legal, moral, and social identity. The signs of 'buluugh' are the physical signs of sexual maturity: the growth of pubic hair, menarche, and the development of breasts in girls; nocturnal emissions, pubic hair, and facial hair in boys.
"The eunuch, castrated before adolescence, would never go through the change of 'buluugh.' Because Islamic law, like most sophisticated systems of jurisprudence, also recognized another standard of competence, intellectual maturity (rushd", the free adult eunuch was not condemned to a perpetual state of legal infancy but possessed full legal capacity in most areas of the law. In strictly legal terms a eunuch could thus be 'rashiid' (mentally competent), but, on a more profound level, he could never be 'kaamil' (complete). Within his own lifetime he was condemned to a strange kind of physical stasis. If he survived the painful urinary tract infections from which eunuchs often suffered, he would grow old as all men grow old. But the aging process would not manifest itself in the cycle of physical changes of 'complete' men, the progression from beardless boy (amrad) to black-bearded adult, to white-bearded old man. His oddly distorted body, warped by hormonal deprivation, would not age like the bodies of uncastrated men but would only become more wasted and cadaverous with time.