Radulph of Caen, an eyewitness to events at Ma’arra in 1098, wrote,
“In Ma’arra our troops boiled pagan adults in cooking-pots; they impaled
children on spits and devoured them grilled.”
The chronicler Albert of Aix seemed to rank Muslims lower than dogs
when he wrote, “Not only did our troops not shrink from eating dead
Turks and Saracens; they also ate dogs!”
The People’s Crusade actually represented the first
major military confrontation
of the European West with Middle East, apart from Spain far to the west, which
experienced eight hundred years of often-contested Arab rule. The Crusades also
marked a historic major invasion of the Middle East by the European West—
with lasting impact. Tales of crusader barbarity were seared into Muslim folk
memory thereafter.
In later Crusades, more experienced knights responded to the call to go to
Jerusalem. But these same professional military forces now posed as great a
threat to Byzantium as they did to Muslims: these Western troops were operating
on Byzantine soil but outside Byzantine control. Byzantine fears were soon to be
richly realized in the Fourth Crusade.
When the troops of the First Crusade finally reached Jerusalem in 1099,
reconquest was a brutal affair, in extraordinary contrast to the manner in which
Jerusalem fell to disciplined Arab forces some five hundred years earlier. In 637
CE, we recall the second Caliph ‘Umar had personally entered the city after a
siege
of many months; Arab troop discipline was maintained and the city was
not pillaged, in accordance with a treaty ‘Umar had signed with the patriarch of
Jerusalem at the time of surrender. In reference to the Christians, that treaty had
stated that
their churches are not to be taken, nor are they to be destroyed, nor are
they to be degraded or belittled, neither are their crosses or their money,
and they are not to be forced to change their religion, nor is any one of
them to be harmed.
Jewish sources furthermore report that ‘Umar was
shocked at the condition of
the ruins of the Jewish temple, which had been turned into a garbage heap under
the Romans; since the site was sacred for Muslims as well, ‘Umar personally
helped clean the site by hand along with his men. Jews were allowed to practice
Judaism in the city for the first time since their expulsion by the Romans some
five hundred years earlier.
But the capture of Jerusalem by the first crusader forces in 1099 was quite a
different story. Jews, who feared the arrival of Christian rule, fought on the
Muslim side in defense of the city, but to no avail. After a long and costly siege,
the crusaders broke into the city on 15 July and in a twenty-four-hour period
murdered virtually every single inhabitant—men, women,
and children, Muslim,
Jew, and most Eastern Orthodox Christians—probably around sixty thousand
people. This included thousands of Jews taking refuge in their synagogue, and
many thousands more Muslims in the al-Aqsa mosque.
The Catholic
Encyclopedia reports tersely: “the Christians entered Jerusalem from all sides
and slew its inhabitants regardless of age or sex.”
Fulcher of Chartres, a crusader who participated in the conquest, wrote:
“Indeed, if you had been there you would have seen our feet coloured to our
ankles with the blood of the slain. But what more shall I relate? None of them
were left alive; neither women nor children were spared.”
There are numerous other accounts of immense cruelties inflicted by the
crusaders on Muslim towns and populations on the way to Jerusalem. It would,
of course, be foolish to suggest that cruelty and killing were all one-sided.
Warfare in all ages is brutal. The point of reporting a few of these selected
accounts here is not to suggest that the crusaders
were evil and Muslims mere
innocent victims. But European forces were in fact invading the heartland of the
Middle East. This was the first of what was going to be a long history of Western
armed intervention into the Middle East over many centuries to come. The
bloody-mindedness of the crusaders themselves is scarcely known in any
Western popular tales of crusader chivalry. Furthermore, there is a striking
contrast of religious and legal aspects between the Muslim conquest of
Jerusalem in 637 and the Christian conquest of Jerusalem in 1099. Muslims were
required by the tenets of Islam to respect the place of Christians and Jews in
Muslim society and largely did so (although there were, of course, other cases
where they did not observe Islamic strictures); yet Christians were in no way
required by Christian doctrine to protect the
place of Jews and Muslims in
Christian society and largely did not. And finally, the West needs to be aware of
the Muslim mirror-vision of the crusader tales; their own alternative narratives of
these events still influence Muslim culture today.