Posted by Under The Black Flag on 3:29 μ.μ.
For centuries, historians         have debated the significance of one of the most stirring episodes in         the history of Britain’s         Muslim minority. Men such as Captain John Ward of Kent astounded         their compatriots by proudly adopting Islam to fight the Inquisition and         the expansionist powers of Europe. Contemporaries called such men ‘corsairs’; they themselves considered         themselves mujahidin. Some were among the most         pious Muslims this country has yet produced. Others were famous drunkards         and lechers.      Ward         and his likes were described by the adventurer John Smith. Later to be         Disneyfied thanks to his romance with Princess         Pocahontas, Smith was one English traveller who saw these Muslims at first         hand, having spent some years in the Ottoman army before sailing to New         England. He wrote a book, the True Travels and Adventures, to describe the         European Muslims who were fighting for the Crescent against the Cross.         Leading the list were men of Holland and England, who, disgusted by religious         wars in their own countries, and unpersuaded         by Trinities and Vicarious Atonements, ‘took the Turbant         of the Turke’. ‘Because they grew hateful to all Christian princes,’         Smith observed, ‘they retired to Barbary.’      Smith         was firmly of the opinion that the pirating lifestyle was introduced to         the Barbary States by         these Europeans, ‘who first taught the Moors to be men of war.’ His compatriots         were well aware of the names of the seaborne mujahidin,         particularly Captain Danseker and Captain Ward,         among the most skilled seamen in the annals of English history, who placed         their gifts at the disposal of emirs and sultans, and whose swashbuckling         exploits Smith was able to retell in hair-raising detail.      Until         the arrival of these European adventurers, the coastal ports of North         Africa had been unused to war. They         had, however, found new prosperity as the home of Spanish Muslims expelled         by King Phillip III in 1610, an event that was perhaps the greatest act         of racial brutality seen in Europe prior to the Nazi Holocaust. Most Moors knew little of the sea, and         still less of the infernal arts of gunpowder; but they welcomed Muslims         from the Mediterranean lands, and from the seafaring nations of the North,         who were willing to accept Islam in exchange for military service with         the Spanish exiles. By the middle of the sixteenth century, English Muslims         were at the forefront of this movement, ranging the seas to capture first         Spanish, and then any Christian ship, enslaving the crew, and selling         the cargo as spoils of war.      Horrified         priests regularly emerged from the churches of Algiers, Tunis and Sale, to witness the regular conversion celebrations in the streets. They         report that slaves who converted would accept Islam in a simple ceremony         in a mosque; but free men and women would do so at the tomb of a local         saint, to which they would be led in a great public procession, preceded         by a military band. Riding a horse, and holding an arrow in his hand to         symbolise commitment to the Jihad, a newly-circumcised Englishman would         then learn the basics of the Qur’an, and apply         himself to his new vocation. Only a minority took to the sea; others are         known to have made a living as tailors, or butchers, or even as imams         of mosques. To this day there is a building in the Moroccan town of Sale known as the ‘Englishman’s Mosque.’      Most         of these individuals took the secret of their lives with them to the grave.         Thanks to the Spanish Inquisition, however, historians have access to         information about a good number of them. Those who returned to a seafaring         life ran the risk of recapture and interrogation by the Inquisition’s         priests, and it is from the Inquisition’s meticulously-kept records that         we know the details of their conversion, and, often, their tragic fate.      One         Inquisition court, in the year 1610, investigated no fewer than thirty-nine         Britons. Twelve of them were from the ports of the West Country. Ten were         Londoners; six were from Plymouth, and others         originated in Middlesbrough, Lyme, and the Channel Islands. In 1631, the         Inquisition in the Spanish city of Murcia tried one Alexander         Harris, who as Reis Murad had become a prominent         Muslim seafarer. He was convicted, forced to convert to Catholicism, and         sentenced to seven years as a galley-slave. Another unfortunate Englishman         was Francis Barnes, who admitted to the inquisitors that he had faithfully         prayed and fasted ‘in the Mahometan manner’         while working as a ship’s pilot at Tunis, where he was captured by Spanish raiders. In 1626, Robin Locar of Plymouth, also known as Ibrahim, was captured by         Tuscan galleys and convicted of practising Islam. Captain Jonas of Dartmouth, known as         Mami al-Inglizi, was         yet another victim of these dreaded Spanish raiders.      An         interrogation by the Inquisition was meant to be terrifying. One survivor,         the Plymouth Muslim Lewis Crew, described how the priests, after using         various forms of torture, would ask the Muslim captive whether they would         accept papal teaching on six issues. Firstly came the Trinity, as the main point at issue between Islam         and Christianity. Second was the perpetual virginity of Mary. Third was         the Immaculate Conception. Fourthly, questions would be asked about the         doctrine of Purgatory. Fifthly, the accused would be required to demonstrate         his orthodoxy on the doctrine of papal supremacy. Finally, the Sacraments         of the Catholic Church would be the subject of a complex investigation,         which no doubt confused the simple sailors who made up the majority of         the Inquisition’s convicts. Like many others, Crew had steeled himself         for a religious debate of the kind held in public between converts and         Christians in Algiers; he found,         however, that the Inquisition was interested only in enforcing orthodoxy,         not in justifying it.      The         Inquisition’s writ counted for nothing in Protestant England; but even         here, those Muslim sailors who returned to their homes could face interrogation         and martyrdom. Sir Walter Raleigh, commenting on the gravity of the problem,         recorded that ‘Renegadoes, that turn Turke,         are impaled’, and this seems to have been the usual punishment for such         men. Three English martyrs are known in the year 1620, while in 1671,         a Welshman was put to death by impalement after refusing to reconvert         to Christianity. Archbishop Laud was so concerned by the Muslim presence         that he instituted a miniature English version of the Inquisition. His         ‘Form of Penance’, enforced in 1637, laid down strict rules to ensure         the sincerity of reconversions to Christianity,         including the use of penitential robes and white wands borrowed directly         from Catholic practice.      Despite         the best efforts of the inquisitors, the corsair cities continued to thrive.         By the end of the sixteenth century, the number of Englishmen and other         Europeans who had joined this adventure had become enormous. Diego de         Haedo, a Benedictine priest, estimated that         by 1600, half of the population of Algiers was made up         of European converts and their descendents. Later, Voltaire was to remark         on ‘the singular fact that there are so many Spanish, French and English         renegades, whom one may find in all the cities of Morocco.’      Most         of the corsairs were of humble origins. A few, however, were well-known         in their own lands. One such was Sir Francis Verney         (1584-1615), who ‘turned Turk in Tunneis’, and was later captured and served for two years         as a galley slave as a punishment for his conversion.      But         perhaps the two best-known English corsairs were the celebrated sea-dogs         John Ward and Simon Danseker. A seventeenth-century         ballad heard throughout the taverns of England         sang that               All           the world about has heard
          Of           Danseker and Captain Ward
          And           of their proud adventures every day.
      
Ward,         in particular, rose in the public eye until he became the best-known English         pirate since Sir Francis Drake. Born at Faversham, he spent his teenage         years working the fisheries. Late in the reign of Queen Elizabeth he joined         the Navy, where his rebellious temperament impelled him to the unofficial         capture of a ship rumoured to be carrying the treasure of Catholic refugees.         The ship turned out to be empty of treasure, but the enterprising Ward         used her to capture a much larger French ship off the south coast of Ireland, and to vanish from the Navy for good.      It         was in this ship, which he called the Little John to drive home his image         as a kind of latter-day Robin Hood, that he sailed to Tunis, hoping to join the campaign against the Catholic nations of the Mediterranean. He found favour         with Kara Osman, the commander of the local         janissary garrison, and at some point joined Islam.      His         maritime prowess soon put him, according to a French report of 1606, in         command of over five hundred Muslim and Christian volunteers. Among these         were Captain Samson, in charge of prizes, Richard Bishop of Yarmouth (Ward’s first lieutenant), and James Procter of Southampton, who served as his         gunner. Perhaps his greatest seaborne achievement was the capture of the         Venetian galleon Reinera e Soderina,         displacing 1500 tons, whose treasure amounted to over two million ducats.      By         the second decade of the seventeenth century, Ward was master of the central         Mediterranean. Another ballad has him send the following message to James I:               Go           tell the King of England, go tell him this           from me,
          If           he reign king of all the land, I will reign           king at sea.
      
Life         in Tunis, as in the         Muslim world generally, was more refined and comfortable than its equivalent         in Europe,         and despite several offers, Ward showed no sign of yearning for his home         shores. He built a palace, described by William Lithgow, the Scottish         raconteur who passed through Tunis in 1616, as ‘a fair palace beautified with rich marble and alabaster         stones. With whom I found domestics, some fifteen circumcised English         renegades, whose lives and countenances were both alike. Old Ward their         master was placable and diverse times in my         ten days staying there I dined and supped with him.’ Another visitor,         Edward Coxere, reported that Ward ‘always had         a Turkish habit on, he was to drink water and no wine, and wore little         irons under his Turk’s shoes like horseshoes’.      When         Ward died of the plague in 1622, England         seemed to be in two minds about him. There were many who hailed him as         the scourge of the Papist navies, or as a man of humble origins who rose         to humble the rich and powerful. Others found it harder to accept him,         because of his voluntary conversion to Islam, and his adoption of Turkish         ways and values. He was ‘the great English pirate … it is said that he         was the first that put the Turks in a way to turn pirates at sea like         himself’. But he was not soon forgotten. Later generations of English         Muslims, both at home and in North Africa, admired him as a superb mariner,         fearless in battle, and a doughty warrior for the Crescent against those         who expelled the Moriscos, and sought to impose         their implacable and cruel customs on the free lands of the South, where         church, mosque and synagogue coexisted for centuries, and where humble         birth was no barrier to glory.      
 
 
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