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Appendix C - ‘The Last Orientalist’: a Valedictory Interview with Professor Watt
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2021
Summary
Professor Watt, how did you become interested in Islam and Christianity?
Well, I had studied Classics at Edinburgh University and ‘Greats’ – philosophy and ancient history – at Oxford. From 1934 to 1938 I taught moral philosophy at Edinburgh University. In 1937 when my mother died, I asked an Indian (later Pakistani) Muslim to come as a paying guest to help me pay for a housekeeper. Khwaja Abdul Mannan was a student of veterinary medicine and at that time, aged about twenty, a member of the Ahmadiyya Community – something he would have had to give up later when he became a colonel in the Pakistani army. Mannan, as he called himself, was an argumentative Muslim, and our many discussions over breakfast and evening meals raised my interest in the world of Islam. I believe that he is still alive in Lahore.
When I heard that the Anglican Bishop in Jerusalem wanted someone to work on Muslim–Christian relations I applied for the post. After studying theology and being ordained priest, I began to learn Arabic in London. Between 1941 and 1943 I completed my PhD at Edinburgh on freewill and predestination in early Islam. That was with Richard Bell, famous for translation of the Qur’an. Between 1944 and 1946 I worked in Palestine under the Bishop of Jerusalem. I had hoped to have discussions with Muslims, but Jerusalem proved not to be a good place to get in contact with intellectual Muslims. In 1946 things became difficult. I lost a friend when they blew up the King David Hotel. After leave I decided not to return to Jerusalem. In 1947 I became Head of the Department of Arabic and Islamic Studies at Edinburgh University and continued there until my retirement in 1979 at the age of seventy. In 1964 I received the title of Professor. I remain a priest in the Scottish Episcopalian Church and am presently writing another book about a Christian faith for today.
Your life's work has been devoted to dialogue between Islam and Christianity. Why is this important?
In the outburst of missionary activity around about the year 1800 the ideal was to go into the non-Christian parts of the world and convert everyone to Christianity; and this is still the ideal of some Christians. From Islam, however, there were very few converts.
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- The Life and Work of W. Montgomery Watt , pp. 146 - 155Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2018