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The Arabic Language
indissolubly connected with Arabic. Thus, for instance, Šakīb ʾArslān (1896–1946)
held that the community was defined by its religion, and since Arabs formed the
core of the Islamic
ʾumma
, Arabic was the true language of Islam, so that every
Muslim had to learn Arabic. Arguing the other way round, Sāṭiʿ al-Ḥuṣrī (1880–
1968) asserted that it was precisely language that defined a nation, and therefore,
the Arab nation should include all those who spoke Arabic. In this respect, he
opposed both the Islamic nationalists, who wished to unite all Muslims, and the
regional nationalists, such as the Egyptians, whose first priority was to obtain
statehood for a geographically defined nation.
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