Tisdall compares the account from the Qur'an and hadith explanations
with Jewish sources:
The following is from the Araish al Majalis:-
The Commentators say that when the angels saw the evil doings of
mankind ascending up to heaven (and that was in the days of Idris),
they were distressed and complained thus against them: Thou hast
chosen these to be the rulers upon earth, and lo they sin against
thee. Then said the Almighty: If I should send you upon the earth,
and treat you as I have treated them, ye would do just as they do
They said, O our Lord, it would not become us to sin against thee.
Then said the Lord, Choose two angels from the best of you, and I
will send them down unto the earth. So they chose Harut and Marut;
who were among the best and most pious amongst them.
Al Kalby's version:-- The Almighty said: Choose ye three: so they
chose (Azz, i.e) Harut, and (Azabi, i.e.) Marut, and Azrael; and
the Lord changed the names of the two when they fell into sin, as
he changed the name of the Devil, which was Azazil. And God placed
in their heart the same fleshly lust as in the sons of Adam; and
sending them down to the earth, bade them to rule righteously
amongst mankind, to avoid idolatry, not to kill but for a just
cause, and to keep free from fornication and strong drink. Now
when Azrael felt lust in his heart, he prayed the Lord to relieve
him, and was taken up to heaven, and for forty years was unable
to raise his head for shame before his Maker. But the other two
remained steadfast, judging the people during the day, and when
night came ascending to the heavens, worshipping the name of the
Almighty. Catada [Qatada] tells us that before a month had
passed they fell
into temptation; for Zohra. one of the most beautiful of women (whom
Ali tells us was queen of a city in Persia), had a suit before
them, and when they saw her they fell in love with her, and sought
to have her, but she refused and went away. The second day she came
again, and they did the same; but she said, Nay, unless ye worship
what I worship, and bow down to this idol, or kill a soul, or drink
wine. They replied, It is impossible for us to do these things, which
God hath forbidden; and she departed. The third day again she came
holding a cup of wine, and her heart inclined towards them; so when
they desired her, she said the same as yesterday, but they replied,
To pray to other than God is a serious thing, and so is the killing
of anyone; the easiest of the three is to drink wine: so they drank
the wine, and becoming intoxicated, fell upon her and committed
adultery: and one saw it, and they slew him. And it is said that
they worshipped an idol, and the Lord changed Zohra into a star.
Ali and others tell us that she said, Come not near me till you
teach me that by which ye can ascend to the heavens. They said, We
ascend by the name of the great God. Again she said, Come not near
me till ye teach me what that is. So they taught her; and forthwith
she, repeating it, ascended to the skies, and the Lord changed her
into a star.
(W. St. Clair-Tisdall, The Sources of Islam)
Then comparing with Jewish Sources, Tisdall said:
Turning now to the Jews, the same account is given In two or three
places of the Talmud, especially in this extract from the Midrash Yalkut: (Capp 44)
Rabbi Joseph being asked by his disciples about Azael, told
them as follows:-- After the Flood, idolatrous worship
prevailing, the Holy One Was angry. Then two angels, Shamhazai
and Azael arose and addressing him Said, O Lord of the Universe,
when thou createdst the world, did we not say to thee, What is
man that thou art mindful of him? and now we are anxious about
him. The Lord replied: I well know that if ye be sent to rule
over the earth, your evil passions will have possession of you,
and ye will become tyrants over mankind. They answered: If thou
wilt give us leave, and we shall dwell amongst them, thou shalt
see in what wise we shall sanctify thy name. Go then, he said,
and dwell amongst them.
Soon after, Shamhazai saw a beautiful maiden called Esther, and
turning his eyes upon her to come and be with him, she said, I
cannot surrender myself to thee until thou teach me that great
name by which thou canst ascend to the heavens above. He told
her, and she having spoken it, ascended upwards undefiled. Then
said the Holy One, -- Since she hath kept herself clear from
defilement, she shall be raised aloft amid the Seven Stars, there
to give praise unto the Lord. Forthwith the two went forth and
consorted with the beautiful daughters of men, and children were
born unto them. And Azael adorned the women he was inclined to
with all kinds of beautiful ornaments.
(Azrael is the same as in the Talmud is called
Azael)
Now anyone comparing the two stories together, must see that they
agree, excepting that in the Moslem one the angels are called
Harut and Marut, and in the Jewish, Shamhazai and Azael. But if
we search whence the names in the Koran and Tradition came, it
will be seen that Harut and Marut were two idols worshipped far
back in Armenia. For in writers of that country they are so
spoken of, as in the following passage from one of them:
Certainly Horot and Morot, tutelary deities of mount Ararat,
and Aminabegh, and perhaps others now not known, were Assistants
to the female goddess Aspandaramlt. These aided her, and were
excellent on the earth.
In this extract, Aspandaramlt is the name of the goddess worshipped
of old in Iran also; for we are told that the Zoroastrians regarded
her as the Spirit of the Earth, and held that all the good products
of the earth arise from her. Aminabegh also was held by the
Armenians to be the god of vineyards, and they named Horot and Morot
the assistants of the Spirit of the Earth, seeing that they held
them as spirits who had control over the wind so as to make it bring
rain. They sat on the top of the lofty mountain Ararat, and sent
down showers that fertilized the earth; the two were thus rulers of
the wind. [footnote: The origin of the name is traced still further
East to the ancient Sanskrit wind-gods the Maruls.]
The Armenians, - fancying that Morot came from Mor,
genitive of Mair, "Mother," - formed Horot in the same way from
Hair, "Father." When also it is said that the two angels came down
to propagate mankind, the meaning is that they caused the earth to
bring forth its produce for that end. Zohra in Hebrew reads as
Ishtar or Esther, the same as of old was worshipped in Babylon and
Syria as the goddess over the birth of children and promoter of
passion and desire. In proof of all this, we find in the ruins
between the Tigris and Euphrates the name Ishtar on the primeval
tiles. The story of one Gilgamesh, with whom Ishtar fell in love
but was rejected, has been deciphered in ancient Babylonian character
upon these tiles.
Ishtar came to him having the crown upon her head
and asked him to kiss her, and with many loving words and gifts to
be her husband, when he would in her Palace have a quiet and happy
life. Gilgamesh in derision rejected her offer, whereupon she
ascended to the sky and appeared before the God of the heavens.
[footnote: Genesis 6:2-4"The sons of God saw the daughters of men
that they were fair, and took them wives of all which they chose...
There were giants in those days,...when the sons of God came in
unto the daughters of men, and they bare children unto them, the
same became mighty men which were of old, men of renown." The "sons
of God," according to our Author, mean righteous men of the seed of
Seth. The Commentator quoted is Jonathan son of Uzziel. There is a
Sanskrit story of the similar ascent of two angels, and a Houry
like Zohra, from which the Armenians may possibly have taken their
tale; and from this idolatrous source the Jews no doubt received it;
and from them, the Moslems.]
It is remarkable that the idolaters of Babylon are shown in this
primeval story to have held that Ishtar, that is Zohra, ascended on
high, - exactly as is told us in Moslem tradition, as also in the
Jewish commentaries.
Now if we search for the Source of the above tale, we shall no doubt
find it in what the Talmud says of the angels associating with women,
in its commentary on the two verses in Genesis quoted below.1.
Speaking of the second verse, a Jewish commentator gives us the
following interpretation: - "It was Shamhazai and Uzziel who in
those days came down from heaven." Hence we see that the whole
imaginative tale has come out of the mistake of this and other
ignorant commentators. For the word giant, as shown below, was
misconstrued by them to signify not those who tyrannically "fell"
on the poor people around them, but angels who "came down, or fell,
from heaven." [footnote: The term is Nefilim, i.e. persons who fell
upon the helpless around them and committed violence and oppression
on the earth.]
And this unhappy mistake has led to the spread of the strange
idol-worship just narrated. Nor was there any apparent reason for
the mistake; since in the Targum we find the name (Nefilim)
explained in its right and natural sense as "giants." But by and
by the Jews came to love the wild tales that spread abroad; and so
in a counterfeit book ascribed to Enoch, we are told that 200 angels
under Samyaza (i.e. Shamhazai) came down from the heavens to commit
adultery on the earth, as we read:-
The angels of heaven having seen the daughters of men, fell in
love with them, and said to one another, Let us take for
ourselves these women, the daughters of mankind, and beget
children for ourselves. And Samyaza, who was their chief,
said....Azaziel taught men to make swords, daggers, and shields,
and taught them to wear breastplates. And for the women they
made ornaments of kinds, bracelets, jewels, collyrium to beautify
their eyelids, lovely stones of great price, dresses of beautiful
colours, and current money.
(W. St. Clair-Tisdall, The Sources of Islam)
|