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From
Jihad Watch
by Gregory M. Davis
author,
Religion of Peace? Islam’s War Against the World
producer/director, Islam: What the West Needs to
Know -- An Examination of Islam, Violence, and the Fate
of the Non-Muslim World
Islam 101 is meant as an educational tool for
people to become better educated about the fundamentals
of Islam and to help the more knowledgeable better
convey the facts to others.
Similarly, my book and documentary are meant to serve
as concise explanations of the major moving parts of
Islam and their implications for Western society. Islam
101 is a condensation of the book and documentary with
the aim of lending clarity to the public understanding
of Islam and of exposing the inadequacy of prevailing
views.
All should feel free to distribute and/or reproduce
it.
Table of Contents
1) The Basics
a) The Five Pillars of Islam
b) The Quran -- the Book of Allah
c) The Sunnah -- the “Way” of the Prophet Muhammad
d) Sharia Law
2) Jihad and Dhimmitude
a) What does “jihad” mean?
b) Muslim Scholar Hasan Al-Banna on jihad
c) Dar al-Islam and dar al-harb: the House of Islam
and the House of War
i) Taqiyya -- Religious Deception
d) Jihad Through History
i) The First Major Wave of Jihad: the Arabs,
622-750 AD
ii) The Second Major Wave of Jihad: the Turks,
1071-1683 AD
e) The Dhimma
f) Jihad in the Modern Era
3) Conclusion
4) Frequently Asked Questions
a) What about the Crusades?
b) If Islam is violent, why are so many Muslims
peaceful?
c) What about the violent passages in the Bible?
d) Could an Islamic “Reformation” pacify Islam?
e) What about the history of Western colonialism in
the Islamic world?
f) How can a violent political ideology be the
second-largest and fastest-growing religion on
earth?
g) Is it fair to paint all Islamic schools of
thought as violent?
h) What about the great achievements of Islamic
civilization?
5) Glossary of Terms
6) Further Resources
1. The Basics
a. The Five Pillars of Islam
The five pillars of Islam constitute the most basic
tenets of the religion. They are:
1. Faith (iman) in the oneness of Allah and the
finality of the prophethood of Muhammad (indicated
by the declaration [the Shahadah] that, "There is no
God but Allah and Muhammad is the messenger of
Allah").
2. Keeping of the five scheduled daily prayers
(salah).
3. Almsgiving (zakat).
4. Fasting (sawm).
5. Pilgrimage (hajj) to Mecca for those who are
able.
The five pillars in and of themselves do not tell us
a lot about the faith or what a Muslim is supposed to
believe or how he should act. The second through fifth
pillars -- prayer, almsgiving, fasting, pilgrimage --
are aspects shared by many religions. The finality of
the prophethood of Muhammad, however, is unique to
Islam. To understand Islam and what it means to be a
Muslim, we must come to understand Muhammad as well as
the revelations given through him by Allah, which make
up the Quran.
b. The Quran -- the Book of Allah
According to Islamic teaching, the Quran came down as
a series of revelations from Allah through the Archangel
Gabriel to the Prophet Muhammad, who then dictated it to
his followers. Muhammad's companions memorized fragments
of the Quran and wrote them down on whatever was at
hand, which were later compiled into book form under the
rule of the third Caliph, Uthman, some years after
Muhammad's death.
The Quran is about as long as the Christian New
Testament. It comprises 114 suras (not to be confused
with the Sira, which refers to the life of the Prophet)
of varying lengths, which may be considered chapters.
According to Islamic doctrine, it was around 610 AD in a
cave near the city of Mecca (now in southwest Saudi
Arabia) that Muhammad received the first revelation from
Allah by way of the Archangel Gabriel. The revelation
merely commanded Muhammad to "recite" or "read" (Sura
96); the words he was instructed to utter were not his
own but Allah's. Over the next twelve or so years in
Mecca, other revelations came to Muhammad that
constituted a message to the inhabitants of the city to
forsake their pagan ways and turn in worship to the one
Allah.
While in Mecca, though he condemned paganism (for the
most part), Muhammad showed great respect for the
monotheism of the Christian and Jewish inhabitants.
Indeed, the Allah of the Quran claimed to be the same
God worshipped by Jews and Christians, who now revealed
himself to the Arab people through his chosen messenger,
Muhammad. It is the Quranic revelations that came later
in Muhammad's career, after he and the first Muslims
left Mecca for the city of Medina, that transformed
Islam from a relatively benign form of monotheism into
an expansionary, military-political ideology that
persists to this day.
Orthodox Islam does not accept that a rendering of
the Quran into another language is a "translation" in
the way that, say, the King James Bible is a translation
of the original Hebrew and Greek Scriptures. A point
often made by Islamic apologists to defang criticism is
that only Arabic readers may understand the Quran. But
Arabic is a language like any other and fully capable of
translation. Indeed, most Muslims are not Arabic
readers. In the below analysis, we use a translation of
the Quran by two Muslim scholars, which may be found
here. All parenthetical explanations in the text are
those of the translators save for my interjections in
braces, { }.
Those Westerners who manage to pick up a translation
of the Quran are often left bewildered as to its meaning
thanks to ignorance of a critically important principle
of Quranic interpretation known as "abrogation." The
principle of abrogation -- al-naskh wa al-mansukh (the
abrogating and the abrogated) -- directs that verses
revealed later in Muhammad's career "abrogate" -- i.e.,
cancel and replace -- earlier ones whose instructions
they may contradict. Thus, passages revealed later in
Muhammad's career, in Medina, overrule passages revealed
earlier, in Mecca. The Quran itself lays out the
principle of abrogation:
2:106. Whatever a Verse (revelation) do We {Allah}
abrogate or cause to be forgotten, We bring a better
one or similar to it. Know you not that Allah is
able to do all things?
It seems that 2:106 was revealed in response to
skepticism directed at Muhammad that Allah's revelations
were not entirely consistent over time. Muhammad's
rebuttal was that "Allah is able to do all things" --
even change his mind. To confuse matters further, though
the Quran was revealed to Muhammad sequentially over
some twenty years' time, it was not compiled in
chronological order. When the Quran was finally collated
into book form under Caliph Uthman, the suras were
ordered from longest to shortest with no connection
whatever to the order in which they were revealed or to
their thematic content. In order to find out what the
Quran says on a given topic, it is necessary to examine
the other Islamic sources that give clues as to when in
Muhammad's lifetime the revelations occurred. Upon such
examination, one discovers that the Meccan suras,
revealed at a time when the Muslims were vulnerable, are
generally benign; the later Medinan suras, revealed
after Muhammad had made himself the head of an army, are
bellicose.
Let us take, for example, 50:45 and Sura 109, both
revealed in Mecca:
50:45. We know of best what they say; and you (O
Muhammad) are not a tyrant over them (to force them
to Belief). But warn by the Qur'an, him who fears My
Threat.
109:1. Say (O Muhammad to these Mushrikun and
Kafirun): "O Al-Kafirun (disbelievers in Allah, in
His Oneness, in His Angels, in His Books, in His
Messengers, in the Day of Resurrection, and in
Al-Qadar {divine foreordainment and sustaining of
all things}, etc.)!
109:2. "I worship not that which you worship,
109:3. "Nor will you worship that which I worship.
109:4. "And I shall not worship that which you are
worshipping.
109:5. "Nor will you worship that which I worship.
109:6. "To you be your religion, and to me my
religion (Islamic Monotheism)."
Then there is this passage revealed just after the
Muslims reached Medina and were still vulnerable:
2:256. There is no compulsion in religion. Verily,
the Right Path has become distinct from the wrong
path. Whoever disbelieves in Taghut {idolatry} and
believes in Allah, then he has grasped the most
trustworthy handhold that will never break. And
Allah is All-Hearer, All-Knower.
In contrast, take 9:5, commonly referred to as the
"Verse of the Sword", revealed toward the end of
Muhammad's life:
9:5. Then when the Sacred Months (the 1st, 7th,
11th, and 12th months of the Islamic calendar) have
passed, then kill the Mushrikun {unbelievers}
wherever you find them, and capture them and besiege
them, and prepare for them each and every ambush.
But if they repent and perform As-Salat
(Iqamat-as-Salat {the Islamic ritual prayers}), and
give Zakat {alms}, then leave their way free.
Verily, Allah is Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful.
Having been revealed later in Muhammad’s life than
50:45, 109, and 2:256, the Verse of the Sword abrogates
their peaceful injunctions in accordance with 2:106.
Sura 8, revealed shortly before Sura 9, reveals a
similar theme:
8:39. And fight them until there is no more Fitnah
(disbelief and polytheism: i.e. worshipping others
besides Allah) and the religion (worship) will all
be for Allah Alone [in the whole of the world]. But
if they cease (worshipping others besides Allah),
then certainly, Allah is All-Seer of what they do.
8:67. It is not for a Prophet that he should have
prisoners of war (and free them with ransom) until
he had made a great slaughter (among his enemies) in
the land. You desire the good of this world (i.e.
the money of ransom for freeing the captives), but
Allah desires (for you) the Hereafter. And Allah is
All-Mighty, All-Wise.
9:29. Fight against those who believe not in
Allah, nor in the Last Day, nor forbid that which
has been forbidden by Allah and His Messenger and
those who acknowledge not the religion of truth
(i.e. Islam) among the people of the Scripture (Jews
and Christians), until they pay the Jizya with
willing submission, and feel themselves subdued.
9:33. It is He {Allah} Who has sent His Messenger
(Muhammad) with guidance and the religion of truth
(Islam), to make it superior over all religions even
though the Mushrikun (polytheists, pagans,
idolaters, disbelievers in the Oneness of Allah)
hate (it).
The Quran's commandments to Muslims to wage war in
the name of Allah against non-Muslims are unmistakable.
They are, furthermore, absolutely authoritative as they
were revealed late in the Prophet's career and so cancel
and replace earlier instructions to act peaceably.
Without knowledge of the principle of abrogation,
Westerners will continue to misread the Quran and
misdiagnose Islam as a “religion of peace.”
c. The Sunnah -- the "Way" of the Prophet Muhammad
In Islam, Muhammad is considered al-insan al-kamil
(the "ideal man"). Muhammad is in no way considered
divine, nor is he worshipped (no image of Muhammad is
permitted lest it encourage idolatry), but he is the
model par excellence for all Muslims in how they should
conduct themselves. It is through Muhammad's personal
teachings and actions -- which make up the "way of the
Prophet," the Sunnah -- that Muslims discern what is a
good and holy life. Details about the Prophet -- how he
lived, what he did, his non-Quranic utterances, his
personal habits -- are indispensable knowledge for any
faithful Muslim.
Knowledge of the Sunnah comes primarily from the
hadiths ("reports") about Muhammad's life, which were
passed down orally until codified in the eighth century
AD, some hundred years after Muhammad's death. The
hadiths comprise the most important body of Islamic
texts after the Quran; they are basically a collection
of anecdotes about Muhammad's life believed to have
originated with those who knew him personally. There are
thousands upon thousands of hadiths, some running to
multiple pages, some barely a few lines in length. When
the hadiths were first compiled in the eighth century
AD, it became obvious that many were inauthentic. The
early Muslim scholars of hadith spent tremendous labor
trying to determine which hadiths were authoritative and
which were suspect.
The hadiths here come exclusively from the most
reliable and authoritative collection, Sahih Al-Bukhari,
recognized as sound by all schools of Islamic
scholarship, translated by a Muslim scholar and which
may be found here. Different translations of hadiths can
vary in their breakdown of volume, book, and number, but
the content is the same. For each hadith, the
classifying information is listed first, then the name
of the originator of the hadith (generally someone who
knew Muhammad personally), and then the content itself.
While the absolute authenticity of even a sound hadith
is hardly assured, they are nonetheless accepted as
authoritative within an Islamic context.
Because Muhammad is himself the measuring stick of
morality, his actions are not judged according to an
independent moral standard but rather establish what the
standard for Muslims properly is.
Volume 7, Book 62, Number 88; Narrated Ursa: The
Prophet wrote the (marriage contract) with Aisha
while she was six years old and consummated his
marriage with her while she was nine years old and
she remained with him for nine years (i.e. till his
death).
Volume 8, Book 82, Number 795; Narrated Anas: The
Prophet cut off the hands and feet of the men
belonging to the tribe of Uraina and did not
cauterise (their bleeding limbs) till they died.
Volume 2, Book 23, Number 413; Narrated Abdullah
bin Umar: The Jews {of Medina} brought to the
Prophet a man and a woman from amongst them who have
committed (adultery) illegal sexual intercourse. He
ordered both of them to be stoned (to death), near
the place of offering the funeral prayers beside the
mosque.
Volume 9, Book 84, Number 57; Narrated Ikrima:
Some Zanadiqa (atheists) were brought to Ali {the
fourth Caliph} and he burnt them. The news of this
event, reached Ibn 'Abbas who said, "If I had been
in his place, I would not have burnt them, as
Allah's Apostle forbade it, saying, "Do not punish
anybody with Allah's punishment (fire)." I would
have killed them according to the statement of
Allah's Apostle, "Whoever changes his Islamic
religion, then kill him."
Volume 1, Book 2, Number 25; Narrated Abu
Huraira: Allah's Apostle was asked, "What is the
best deed?" He replied, "To believe in Allah and His
Apostle (Muhammad). The questioner then asked, "What
is the next (in goodness)? He replied, "To
participate in Jihad (religious fighting) in Allah's
Cause."
In Islam, there is no "natural" sense of morality or
justice that transcends the specific examples and
injunctions outlined in the Quran and the Sunnah.
Because Muhammad is considered Allah's final prophet and
the Quran the eternal, unalterable words of Allah
himself, there is also no evolving morality that permits
the modification or integration of Islamic morality with
that from other sources. The entire Islamic moral
universe devolves solely from the life and teachings of
Muhammad.
Along with the reliable hadiths, a further source of
accepted knowledge about Muhammad comes from the Sira
(life) of the Prophet, composed by one of Islam's great
scholars, Muhammad bin Ishaq, in the eighth century AD.
Muhammad's prophetic career is meaningfully divided
into two segments: the first in Mecca, where he labored
for fourteen years to make converts to Islam; and later
in the city of Medina (The City of the Apostle of God),
where he became a powerful political and military
leader. In Mecca, we see a quasi-Biblical figure,
preaching repentance and charity, harassed and rejected
by those around him; later, in Medina, we see an able
commander and strategist who systematically conquered
and killed those who opposed him. It is the later years
of Muhammad's life, from 622 AD to his death in 632,
that are rarely broached in polite company. In 622, when
the Prophet was better than fifty years old, he and his
followers made the Hijra (emigration or flight), from
Mecca to the oasis of Yathrib -- later renamed Medina --
some 200 miles to the north. Muhammad's new monotheism
had angered the pagan leaders of Mecca, and the flight
to Medina was precipitated by a probable attempt on
Muhammad's life. Muhammad had sent emissaries to Medina
to ensure his welcome. He was accepted by the Medinan
tribes as the leader of the Muslims and as arbiter of
inter-tribal disputes.
Shortly before Muhammad fled the hostility of Mecca,
a new batch of Muslim converts pledged their loyalty to
him on a hill outside Mecca called Aqaba. Ishaq here
conveys in the Sira the significance of this event:
Sira, p208: When God gave permission to his Apostle
to fight, the second {oath of allegiance at} Aqaba
contained conditions involving war which were not in
the first act of fealty. Now they {Muhammad's
followers} bound themselves to war against all and
sundry for God and his Apostle, while he promised
them for faithful service thus the reward of
paradise.
That Muhammad's nascent religion underwent a
significant change at this point is plain. The scholarly
Ishaq clearly intends to impress on his (Muslim) readers
that, while in its early years, Islam was a relatively
tolerant creed that would "endure insult and forgive the
ignorant," Allah soon required Muslims "to war against
all and sundry for God and his Apostle." The Islamic
calendar testifies to the paramouncy of the Hijra by
setting year one from the date of its occurrence. The
year of the Hijra, 622 AD, is considered more
significant than the year of Muhammad's birth or death
or that of the first Quranic revelation because Islam is
first and foremost a political-military enterprise. It
was only when Muhammad left Mecca with his paramilitary
band that Islam achieved its proper political-military
articulation. The years of the Islamic calendar (which
employs lunar months) are designated in English "AH" or
"After Hijra."
The Battle of Badr was the first significant
engagement fought by the Prophet. Upon establishing
himself in Medina following the Hijra, Muhammad began a
series of razzias (raids) on caravans of the Meccan
Quraish tribe on the route to Syria.
Volume 5, Book 59, Number 287; Narrated Kab bin
Malik: The Apostle had gone out to meet the caravans
of Quraish, but Allah caused them (i.e. Muslims) to
meet their enemy unexpectedly (with no previous
intention).
Volume 5, Book 59, Number 289; Narrated Ibn
Abbas: On the day of the battle of Badr, the Prophet
said, "O Allah! I appeal to You (to fulfill) Your
Covenant and Promise. O Allah! If Your Will is that
none should worship You (then give victory to the
pagans)." Then Abu Bakr took hold of him by the hand
and said, "This is sufficient for you." The Prophet
came out saying, "Their multitude will be put to
flight and they will show their backs." (54:45)
Having returned to Medina after the battle, Muhammad
admonished the resident Jewish tribe of Qaynuqa to
accept Islam or face a similar fate as the Quraish
(3:12-13). The Qaynuqa agreed to leave Medina if they
could retain their property, which Muhammad granted.
Following the exile of the Bani Qaynuqa, Muhammad turned
to individuals in Medina he considered to have acted
treacherously. The Prophet particularly seems to have
disliked the many poets who ridiculed his new religion
and his claim to prophethood -- a theme evident today in
the violent reactions of Muslims to any perceived
mockery of Islam. In taking action against his
opponents, "the ideal man" set precedents for all time
as to how Muslims should deal with detractors of their
religion.
Sira, p367: Then he {Kab bin al-Ashraf} composed
amatory verses of an insulting nature about the
Muslim women. The Apostle said … "Who will rid me of
Ibnul-Ashraf?" Muhammad bin Maslama, brother of the
Bani Abdu'l-Ashhal, said, "I will deal with him for
you, O Apostle of God, I will kill him." He said,
"Do so if you can." … "All that is incumbent upon
you is that you should try" {said the Prophet to
Muhammad bin Maslama}. He said, "O Apostle of God,
we shall have to tell lies." He {the Prophet}
answered, "Say what you like, for you are free in
the matter."
Volume 4, Book 52, Number 270; Narrated Jabir bin
'Abdullah: The Prophet said, "Who is ready to kill
Kab bin Al-Ashraf who has really hurt Allah and His
Apostle?" Muhammad bin Maslama said, "O Allah's
Apostle! Do you like me to kill him?" He replied in
the affirmative. So, Muhammad bin Maslama went to
him (i.e. Kab) and said, "This person (i.e. the
Prophet) has put us to task and asked us for
charity." Kab replied, "By Allah, you will get tired
of him." Muhammad said to him, "We have followed
him, so we dislike to leave him till we see the end
of his affair." Muhammad bin Maslama went on talking
to him in this way till he got the chance to kill
him.
A significant portion of the Sira is devoted to
poetry composed by Muhammad's followers and his enemies
in rhetorical duels that mirrored those in the field.
There seems to have been an informal competition in
aggrandizing oneself, one's tribe, and one's God while
ridiculing one's adversary in eloquent and memorable
ways. Kab bin Malik, one of the assassins of his
brother, Kab bin al-Ashraf, composed the following:
Sira, p368: Kab bin Malik said: Of them Kab was left
prostrate there (After his fall {the Jewish tribe
of} al-Nadir were brought low). Sword in hand we cut
him down By Muhammad's order when he sent secretly
by night Kab's brother to go to Kab. He beguiled him
and brought him down with guile Mahmud was
trustworthy, bold.
The Meccan Quraish regrouped for an attack on the
Muslims at Medina. Muhammad got wind of the Meccan force
coming to attack him and encamped his forces on a small
hillock north of Medina named Uhud, where the ensuing
battle took place.
Volume 5, Book 59, Number 377; Narrated Jabir bin
Abdullah: On the day of the battle of Uhud, a man
came to the Prophet and said, "Can you tell me where
I will be if I should get martyred?" The Prophet
replied, "In Paradise." The man threw away some
dates he was carrying in his hand, and fought till
he was martyred.
Volume 5, Book 59, Number 375; Narrated Al-Bara:
… when we faced the enemy, they took to their heel
till I saw their women running towards the mountain,
lifting up their clothes from their legs, revealing
their leg-bangles. The Muslims started saying, "The
booty, the booty!" Abdullah bin Jubair said, "The
Prophet had taken a firm promise from me not to
leave this place." But his companions refused (to
stay). So when they refused (to stay there), (Allah)
confused them so that they could not know where to
go, and they suffered seventy casualties.
Though deprived of victory at Uhud, Muhammad was by
no means vanquished. He continued making raids that made
being a Muslim not only virtuous in the eyes of Allah
but lucrative as well. In an Islamic worldview, there is
no incompatibility between wealth, power, and holiness.
Indeed, as a member of the true faith, it is only
logical that one should also enjoy the material bounty
of Allah -- even if that means plundering it from
infidels.
As Muhammad had neutralized the Jewish tribe of Bani
Qaynuqa after Badr, he now turned to the Bani Nadir
after Uhud. According to the Sira, Allah warned Muhammad
of an attempt to assassinate him, and the Prophet
ordered the Muslims to prepare for war against the Bani
Nadir. The Bani Nadir agreed to go into exile if
Muhammad permitted them to retain their movable
property. Muhammad agreed to these terms save that they
leave behind their armor.
In 627 AD, Muhammad faced the greatest challenge to
his new community. In that year, the Quraish of Mecca
made their most determined attack on the Muslims at
Medina itself. Muhammad thought it advisable not to
engage them in a pitched battle as at Uhud but took
shelter in Medina, protected as it was by lava flows on
three sides. The Meccans would have to attack from the
northwest in a valley between the flows, and it was
there that Muhammad ordered a trench dug for the city's
defense.
Volume 4, Book 52, Number 208; Narrated Anas: On the
day (of the battle) of the Trench, the Ansar {new
converts to Islam} were saying, "We are those who
have sworn allegiance to Muhammad for Jihad (for
ever) as long as we live." The Prophet replied to
them, "O Allah! There is no life except the life of
the Hereafter. So honor the Ansar and emigrants
{from Mecca} with Your Generosity."
And Narrated Mujashi: My brother and I came to
the Prophet and I requested him to take the pledge
of allegiance from us for migration. He said,
"Migration has passed away with its people." I
asked, "For what will you take the pledge of
allegiance from us then?" He said, "I will take (the
pledge) for Islam and Jihad."
The Meccans were foiled by the trench and only able
to send small raiding parties across it. After several
days, they turned back for Mecca. Following his victory,
Muhammad turned to the third Jewish tribe at Medina, the
Bani Quraiza. While the Bani Qaynuqa and Bani Nadir had
suffered exile, the fate of the Bani Quraiza would be
considerably more dire.
Sira, p463-4: Then they {the tribe of Quraiza}
surrendered, and the apostle confined them in Medina
in the quarter of d. al-Harith, a woman of Bani
al-Najjar. Then the apostle went out to the market
of Medina and dug trenches in it. Then he sent for
them and struck off their heads in those trenches as
they were brought out to him in batches. Among them
was the enemy of Allah Huyayy bin Akhtab and Kab bin
Asad their chief. There were 600 or 700 in all,
though some put the figure as high as 800 or 900. As
they were being taken out in batches to the Apostle
they asked Kab what he thought would be done with
them. He replied, "Will you never understand? Don't
you see that the summoner never stops and those who
are taken away do not return? By Allah it is death!"
This went on until the Apostle made an end of them.
Thus do we find the clear precedent that explains the
peculiar penchant of Islamic terrorists to behead their
victims: it is merely another precedent bestowed by
their Prophet.
Following yet another of the Muslims' raids, this
time on a place called Khaibar, "The women of Khaibar
were distributed among the Muslims" as was usual
practice. (Sira, p511) The raid at Khaibar had been
against the Bani Nadir, whom Muhammad had earlier exiled
from Medina.
Sira, p515: Kinana bin al-Rabi, who had the custody
of the treasure of Bani al-Nadir, was brought to the
Apostle who asked him about it. He denied that he
knew where it was. A Jew came to the Apostle and
said that he had seen Kinana going round a certain
ruin every morning early. When the Apostle said to
Kinana, "Do you know that if we find you have it I
shall kill you?" he said, Yes. The Apostle gave
orders that the ruin was to be excavated and some of
the treasure was found. When he asked him about the
rest he refused to produce it, so the Apostle gave
orders to al-Zubayr bin al-Awwam, "Torture him until
you extract what he has," so he kindled a fire with
flint and steel on his chest until he was nearly
dead. Then the Apostle delivered him to Muhammad bin
Maslama and he struck off his head, in revenge for
his brother Mahmud.
Muhammad's greatest victory came in 632 AD, ten years
after he and his followers had been forced to flee to
Medina. In that year, he assembled a force of some ten
thousand Muslims and allied tribes and descended on
Mecca. "The Apostle had instructed his commanders when
they entered Mecca only to fight those who resisted
them, except a small number who were to be killed even
if they were found beneath the curtains of the Kaba."
(Sira, p550)
Volume 3, Book 29, Number 72; Narrated Anas bin
Malik: Allah's Apostle entered Mecca in the year of
its Conquest wearing an Arabian helmet on his head
and when the Prophet took it off, a person came and
said, "Ibn Khatal is holding the covering of the
Kaba (taking refuge in the Kaba)." The Prophet said,
"Kill him."
Following the conquest of Mecca, Muhammad outlined
the future of his religion.
Volume 4, Book 52, Number 177; Narrated Abu Huraira:
Allah's Apostle said, "The Hour {of the Last
Judgment} will not be established until you fight
with the Jews, and the stone behind which a Jew will
be hiding will say. "O Muslim! There is a Jew hiding
behind me, so kill him."
Volume 1, Book 2, Number 24; Narrated Ibn Umar:
Allah's Apostle said: "I have been ordered (by
Allah) to fight against the people until they
testify that none has the right to be worshipped but
Allah and that Muhammad is Allah's Apostle, and
offer the prayers perfectly and give the obligatory
charity, so if they perform that, then they save
their lives and property from me except for Islamic
laws and then their reckoning (accounts) will be
done by Allah."
It is from such warlike pronouncements as these that
Islamic scholarship divides the world into dar al-Islam
(the House of Islam, i.e., those nations who have
submitted to Allah) and dar al-harb (the House of War,
i.e., those who have not). It is this dispensation that
the world lived under in Muhammad's time and that it
lives under today. Then as now, Islam's message to the
unbelieving world is the same: submit or be conquered.
d. Sharia Law
Unlike many religions, Islam includes a mandatory and
highly specific legal and political plan for society
called Sharia (pronounced “sha-rée-uh”), which
translates approximately as "way" or "path.” The
precepts of Sharia are derived from the commandments of
the Quran and the Sunnah (the teachings and precedents
of Muhammad as found in the reliable hadiths and the
Sira). Together, the Quran and the Sunnah establish the
dictates of Sharia, which is the blueprint for the good
Islamic society. Because Sharia originates with the
Quran and the Sunnah, it is not optional. Sharia is the
legal code ordained by Allah for all mankind. To violate
Sharia or not to accept its authority is to commit
rebellion against Allah, which Allah's faithful are
required to combat.
There is no separation between the religious and the
political in Islam; rather Islam and Sharia constitute a
comprehensive means of ordering society at every level.
While it is in theory possible for an Islamic society to
have different outward forms -- an elective system of
government, a hereditary monarchy, etc. -- whatever the
outward structure of the government, Sharia is the
prescribed content. It is this fact that puts Sharia
into conflict with forms of government based on anything
other than the Quran and the Sunnah.
The precepts of Sharia may be divided into two parts:
1. Acts of worship (al-ibadat), which includes:
Ritual Purification (Wudu)
Prayers (Salah)
Fasts (Sawm and Ramadan)
Charity (Zakat)
Pilgrimage to Mecca (Hajj)
2. Human interaction (al-muamalat), which
includes:
Financial transactions
Endowments
Laws of inheritance
Marriage, divorce, and child care
Food and drink (including ritual slaughtering and
hunting)
Penal punishments
War and peace
Judicial matters (including witnesses and forms of
evidence)
As one may see, there are few aspects of life that
Sharia does not specifically govern. Everything from
washing one's hands to child-rearing to taxation to
military policy fall under its dictates. Because Sharia
is derivate of the Quran and the Sunnah, it affords some
room for interpretation. But upon examination of the
Islamic sources (see above), it is apparent that any
meaningful application of Sharia is going to look very
different from anything resembling a free or open
society in the Western sense. The stoning of adulterers,
execution of apostates and blasphemers, repression of
other religions, and a mandatory hostility toward
non-Islamic nations punctuated by regular warfare will
be the norm. It seems fair then to classify Islam and
its Sharia code as a form of totalitarianism.
2. Jihad and Dhimmitude
a. What does “jihad” mean?
Jihad literally translates as "struggle.” Strictly
speaking, jihad does not mean "holy war" as Muslim
apologists often point out. However, the question
remains as to what sort of "struggle" is meant: an
inner, spiritual struggle against the passions, or an
outward, physical struggle?
As in any case of trying to determine Islamic
teaching on a particular matter, one must look to the
Quran and the Sunnah. From those sources (see above) it
is evident that a Muslim is required to struggle against
a variety of things: laziness in prayer, neglecting to
give zakat (alms), etc. But is it also plain that a
Muslim is commanded to struggle in physical combat
against the infidel as well. Muhammad's impressive
military career attests to the central role that
military action plays in Islam.
b. Hasan Al-Banna on jihad
Below are excerpts from Hasan Al-Banna's treatise,
Jihad. In 1928, Al-Banna founded the Muslim Brotherhood,
which today is the most powerful organization in Egypt
after the government itself. In this treatise, Al-Banna
cogently argues that Muslims must take up arms against
unbelievers. As he says, "The verses of the Qur'an and
the Sunnah … summon people in general (with the most
eloquent expression and the clearest exposition) to
jihad, to warfare, to the armed forces, and all means of
land and sea fighting."
All Muslims Must Make Jihad
Jihad is an obligation from Allah on every Muslim
and cannot be ignored nor evaded. Allah has ascribed
great importance to jihad and has made the reward of
the martyrs and the fighters in His way a splendid
one. Only those who have acted similarly and who
have modeled themselves upon the martyrs in their
performance of jihad can join them in this reward.
Furthermore, Allah has specifically honoured the
Mujahideen {those who wage jihad} with certain
exceptional qualities, both spiritual and practical,
to benefit them in this world and the next. Their
pure blood is a symbol of victory in this world and
the mark of success and felicity in the world to
come.
Those who can only find excuses, however, have
been warned of extremely dreadful punishments and
Allah has described them with the most unfortunate
of names. He has reprimanded them for their
cowardice and lack of spirit, and castigated them
for their weakness and truancy. In this world, they
will be surrounded by dishonour and in the next they
will be surrounded by the fire from which they shall
not escape though they may possess much wealth. The
weaknesses of abstention and evasion of jihad are
regarded by Allah as one of the major sins, and one
of the seven sins that guarantee failure.
Islam is concerned with the question of jihad and
the drafting and the mobilisation of the entire Umma
{the global Muslim community} into one body to
defend the right cause with all its strength than
any other ancient or modern system of living,
whether religious or civil. The verses of the Qur'an
and the Sunnah of Muhammad (PBUH {Peace Be Unto
Him}) are overflowing with all these noble ideals
and they summon people in general (with the most
eloquent expression and the clearest exposition) to
jihad, to warfare, to the armed forces, and all
means of land and sea fighting.
Here Al-Banna offers citations from the Quran and the
reliable hadiths that demonstrate the necessity of
combat for Muslims. The citations are comparable to
those included in Islam 101 section 2b and are here
omitted.
The Scholars on Jihad
I have just presented to you some verses from the
Qur'an and the Noble Ahadith concerning the
importance of jihad. Now I would like to present to
you some of the opinions from jurisprudence of the
Islamic Schools of Thought including some latter day
authorities regarding the rules of jihad and the
necessity for preparedness. From this we will come
to realise how far the ummah has deviated in its
practice of Islam as can be seen from the consensus
of its scholars on the question of jihad.
The author of the 'Majma' al-Anhar fi Sharh
Multaqal-Abhar', in describing the rules of jihad
according to the Hanafi School, said: 'Jihad
linguistically means to exert one's utmost effort in
word and action; in the Sharee'ah {Sharia -- Islamic
law} it is the fighting of the unbelievers, and
involves all possible efforts that are necessary to
dismantle the power of the enemies of Islam
including beating them, plundering their wealth,
destroying their places of worship and smashing
their idols. This means that jihad is to strive to
the utmost to ensure the strength of Islam by such
means as fighting those who fight you and the
dhimmies {non-Muslims living under Islamic rule} (if
they violate any of the terms of the treaty) and the
apostates (who are the worst of unbelievers, for
they disbelieved after they have affirmed their
belief).
It is fard (obligatory) on us to fight with the
enemies. The Imam must send a military expedition to
the Dar-al-Harb {House of War -- the non-Muslim
world} every year at least once or twice, and the
people must support him in this. If some of the
people fulfill the obligation, the remainder are
released from the obligation. If this fard kifayah
(communal obligation) cannot be fulfilled by that
group, then the responsibility lies with the closest
adjacent group, and then the closest after that
etc., and if the fard kifayah cannot be fulfilled
except by all the people, it then becomes a fard
'ayn (individual obligation), like prayer on
everyone of the people. …
The scholarly people are of one opinion on this
matter as should be evident and this is irrespective
of whether these scholars were Mujtahideen or
Muqalideen and it is irrespective of whether these
scholars were salaf (early) or khalaf (late). They
all agreed unanimously that jihad is a fard kifayah
imposed upon the Islamic ummah in order to spread
the Da'wah of Islam, and that jihad is a fard 'ayn
if an enemy attacks Muslim lands. Today, my brother,
the Muslims as you know are forced to be subservient
before others and are ruled by disbelievers. Our
lands have been besieged, and our hurruma'at
(personal possessions, respect, honour, dignity and
privacy) violated. Our enemies are overlooking our
affairs, and the rites of our din are under their
jurisdiction. Yet still the Muslims fail to fulfill
the responsibility of Da'wah that is on their
shoulders. Hence in this situation it becomes the
duty of each and every Muslim to make jihad. He
should prepare himself mentally and physically such
that when comes the decision of Allah, he will be
ready.
I should not finish this discussion without
mentioning to you that the Muslims, throughout every
period of their history (before the present period
of oppression in which their dignity has been lost)
have never abandoned jihad nor did they ever become
negligent in its performance, not even their
religious authorities, mystics, craftsmen, etc. They
were all always ready and prepared. For example,
Abdullah ibn al Mubarak, a very learned and pious
man, was a volunteer in jihad for most of his life,
and 'Abdulwahid bin Zayd, a sufi and a devout man,
was the same. And in his time, Shaqiq al Balkhi, the
shaykh of the sufis encouraged his pupils towards
jihad. …
Associated Matters Concerning Jihad
Many Muslims today mistakenly believe that
fighting the enemy is jihad asghar (a lesser jihad)
and that fighting one's ego is jihad akbar (a
greater jihad). The following narration [athar] is
quoted as proof: "We have returned from the lesser
jihad to embark on the greater jihad." They said:
"What is the greater jihad?" He said: "The jihad of
the heart, or the jihad against one's ego."
This narration is used by some to lessen the
importance of fighting, to discourage any
preparation for combat, and to deter any offering of
jihad in Allah's way. This narration is not a saheeh
(sound) tradition: The prominent muhaddith Al Hafiz
ibn Hajar al-Asqalani said in the Tasdid al-Qaws:
'It is well known and often repeated, and was a
saying of Ibrahim ibn 'Abla.'
Al Hafiz Al Iraqi said in the Takhrij Ahadith
al-Ahya':
’Al Bayhaqi transmitted it with a weak chain of
narrators on the authority of Jabir, and Al Khatib
transmitted it in his history on the authority of
Jabir.'
Nevertheless, even if it were a sound tradition,
it would never warrant abandoning jihad or preparing
for it in order to rescue the territories of the
Muslims and repel the attacks of the disbelievers.
Let it be known that this narration simply
emphasises the importance of struggling against
one's ego so that Allah will be the sole purpose of
everyone of our actions.
Other associated matters concerning jihad include
commanding the good and forbidding the evil. It is
said in the Hadeeth: "One of the greatest forms of
jihad is to utter a word of truth in the presence of
a tyrannical ruler." But nothing compares to the
honour of shahadah kubra (the supreme martyrdom) or
the reward that is waiting for the Mujahideen.
Epilogue
My brothers! The ummah that knows how to die a
noble and honourable death is granted an exalted
life in this world and eternal felicity in the next.
Degradation and dishonour are the results of the
love of this world and the fear of death. Therefore
prepare for jihad and be the lovers of death. Life
itself shall come searching after you.
My brothers, you should know that one day you
will face death and this ominous event can only
occur once. If you suffer on this occasion in the
way of Allah, it will be to your benefit in this
world and your reward in the next. And remember
brother that nothing can happen without the Will of
Allah: ponder well what Allah, the Blessed, the
Almighty, has said:
'Then after the distress, He sent down security
for you. Slumber overtook a party of you, while
another party was thinking about themselves (as
to how to save themselves, ignoring the others
and the Prophet) and thought wrongly of Allah -
the thought of ignorance. They said, "Have we
any part in the affair?" Say you (O Muhammad):
"Indeed the affair belongs wholly to Allah."
They hide within themselves what they dare not
reveal to you, saying: "If we had anything to do
with the affair, none of us would have been
killed here." Say: "Even if you had remained in
your homes, those for whom death was decreed
would certainly have gone forth to the place of
their death: but that Allah might test what is
in your hearts; and to purify that which was in
your hearts (sins), and Allah is All-Knower of
what is in (your) hearts."' {Sura 3:154}
c. Dar al-Islam and dar al-harb: the House of Islam
and the House of War
The violent injunctions of the Quran and the violent
precedents set by Muhammad set the tone for the Islamic
view of politics and of world history. Islamic
scholarship divides the world into two spheres of
influence, the House of Islam (dar al-Islam) and the
House of War (dar al-harb). Islam means submission, and
so the House of Islam includes those nations that have
submitted to Islamic rule, which is to say those nations
ruled by Sharia law. The rest of the world, which has
not accepted Sharia law and so is not in a state of
submission, exists in a state of rebellion or war with
the will of Allah. It is incumbent on dar al-Islam to
make war upon dar al-harb until such time that all
nations submit to the will of Allah and accept Sharia
law. Islam's message to the non-Muslim world is the same
now as it was in the time of Muhammad and throughout
history: submit or be conquered. The only times since
Muhammad when dar al-Islam was not actively at war with
dar al-harb were when the Muslim world was too weak or
divided to make war effectively.
But the lulls in the ongoing war that the House of
Islam has declared against the House of War do not
indicate a forsaking of jihad as a principle but reflect
a change in strategic factors. It is acceptable for
Muslim nations to declare hudna, or truce, at times when
the infidel nations are too powerful for open warfare to
make sense. Jihad is not a collective suicide pact even
while "killing and being killed" (Sura 9:111) is
encouraged on an individual level. For the past few
hundred years, the Muslim world has been too politically
fragmented and technologically inferior to pose a major
threat to the West. But that is changing.
i. Taqiyya -- Religious Deception
Due to the state of war between dar al-Islam and dar
al-harb, reuses de guerre, i.e., systematic lying to the
infidel, must be considered part and parcel of Islamic
tactics. The parroting by Muslim organizations
throughout dar al-harb that “Islam is a religion of
peace,” or that the origins of Muslim violence lie in
the unbalanced psyches of particular individual
“fanatics,” must be considered as disinformation
intended to induce the infidel world to let down its
guard. Of course, individual Muslims may genuinely
regard their religion as “peaceful” -- but only insofar
as they are ignorant of its true teachings, or in the
sense of the Egyptian theorist Sayyid Qutb, who posited
in his Islam and Universal Peace that true peace would
prevail in the world just as soon as Islam had conquered
it.
A telling point is that, while Muslims who present
their religion as peaceful abound throughout dar
al-harb, they are nearly non-existent in dar al-Islam. A
Muslim apostate once suggested to me a litmus test for
Westerners who believe that Islam is a religion of
“peace” and “tolerance”: try making that point on a
street corner in Ramallah, or Riyadh, or Islamabad, or
anywhere in the Muslim world. He assured me you wouldn’t
live five minutes.
In his book, Some to Mecca Turn to Pray, Mervyn
Hiskett discusses taqiyya:
{A} problem concerning law and order {with respect
to Muslims in dar al-harb} arises from an ancient
Islamic legal principle -- that of taqiyya, a word
the root meaning of which is “to remain faithful”
but which in effect means “dissimulation.” It has
full Quranic authority (92:17 and 49:13) and allows
the Muslim to conform outwardly to the requirements
of unislamic or non-Islamic government, while
inwardly “remaining faithful” to whatever he
conceives to be proper Islam, while waiting for the
tide to turn.
Volume 4, Book 52, Number 269; Narrated Jabir bin
'Abdullah: The Prophet said, "War is deceit."
Historically, examples of taqiyya include permission
to renounce Islam itself in order to save one’s neck or
ingratiate oneself with an enemy. It is not hard to see
that the implications of taqiyya are insidious in the
extreme: they essentially render negotiated settlement
-- and, indeed, all veracious communication between dar
al-Islam and dar al-harb -- impossible. It should not,
however, be surprising that a party to a war should seek
to mislead the other about its means and intentions.
Jihad Watch’s own Hugh Fitzgerald sums up taqiyya and
kitman, a related form of deception.
“Taqiyya” is the religiously-sanctioned doctrine,
with its origins in Shi’a Islam but now practiced by
non-Shi’a as well, of deliberate dissimulation about
religious matters that may be undertaken to protect
Islam, and the Believers. A related term, of broader
application, is “kitman,” which is defined as
“mental reservation.” An example of “Taqiyya” would
be the insistence of a Muslim apologist that “of
course” there is freedom of conscience in Islam, and
then quoting that Qur’anic verse -- “There shall be
no compulsion in religion.” {2:256} But the
impression given will be false, for there has been
no mention of the Muslim doctrine of abrogation, or
naskh, whereby such an early verse as that about “no
compulsion in religion” has been cancelled out by
later, far more intolerant and malevolent verses. In
any case, history shows that within Islam there is,
and always has been, “compulsion in religion” for
Muslims, and for non-Muslims. …
“Kitman” is close to “taqiyya,” but rather than
outright dissimulation, it consists in telling only
a part of the truth, with “mental reservation”
justifying the omission of the rest. One example may
suffice. When a Muslim maintains that “jihad” really
means “a spiritual struggle,” and fails to add that
this definition is a recent one in Islam (little
more than a century old), he misleads by holding
back, and is practicing “kitman.” When he adduces,
in support of this doubtful proposition, the hadith
in which Muhammad, returning home from one of his
many battles, is reported to have said (as known
from a chain of transmitters, or isnad), that he had
returned from “the Lesser Jihad to the Greater
Jihad” and does not add what he also knows to be
true, that this is a “weak” hadith, regarded by the
most-respected muhaddithin as of doubtful
authenticity, he is further practicing “kitman.”
In times when the greater strength of dar al-harb
necessitates that the jihad take an indirect approach,
the natural attitude of a Muslim to the infidel world
must be one of deception and omission. Revealing frankly
the ultimate goal of dar al-Islam to conquer and plunder
dar al-harb when the latter holds the military trump
cards would be strategic idiocy. Fortunately for the
jihadists, most infidels do not understand how one is to
read the Quran, nor do they trouble themselves to find
out what Muhammad actually did and taught, which makes
it easy to give the impression through selective
quotations and omissions that “Islam is a religion of
peace.” Any infidel who wants to believe such fiction
will happily persist in his mistake having been cited a
handful of Meccan verses and told that Muhammad was a
man of great piety and charity. Digging only slightly
deeper is sufficient to dispel the falsehood.
d. Jihad Through History
In 622 AD (year one in the Islamic calendar, AH 1),
Muhammad abandoned Mecca for the city of Medina
(Yathrib) some 200 farther north in the Arabian
peninsula. In Medina, Muhammad established a
paramilitary organization that would spread his
influence and that of his religion throughout Arabia.
Because there has never been a separation of the
political-military and the religious in Islam, this
development was entirely natural by Islamic principles.
By the time of his death in 632 AD, Muhammad had
extended his control in a series of raids and battles
over most of southern Arabia. The conquered populations
of these areas either had to submit to Muslim rule and
pay a protection tax or convert to Islam.
i. The First Major Wave of Jihad: the Arabs, 622-750
AD
Near the end of his life, Muhammad sent letters to
the great empires of the Middle East demanding their
submission to his authority. This dispels any notion
that the Prophet intended Islam's expansion to stop with
Arabia. Indeed, it is only logical that the one true
religion, revealed by the final and fullest prophet,
should have universal sway. Thus, as Muhammad had fought
and subdued the peoples of the Arabian peninsula, his
successors Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman, and Ali (known as
"the four rightly-guided Caliphs") and other Caliphs
fought and subdued the people of the Middle East,
Africa, Asia, and Europe in the name of Allah.
Volume 4, Book 53, Number 386; Narrated Jubair bin
Haiya: Umar {the second Caliph} sent the Muslims to
the great countries to fight the pagans. … When we
reached the land of the enemy, the representative of
Khosrau {Persia} came out with forty-thousand
warriors, and an interpreter got up saying, "Let one
of you talk to me!" Al-Mughira replied, … "Our
Prophet, the Messenger of our Lord, has ordered us
to fight you till you worship Allah Alone or give
Jizya (i.e. tribute); and our Prophet has informed
us that our Lord says: "Whoever amongst us is killed
(i.e. martyred), shall go to Paradise to lead such a
luxurious life as he has never seen, and whoever
amongst us remain alive, shall become your master."
Unleashing upon the world the blitzkrieg of its day,
Islam rapidly spread into the territories of Byzantium,
Persia, and Western Europe in the decades after
Muhammad's death. The creaking Byzantine and Persian
powers, having battled each other into mutual decline,
offered little resistance to this unanticipated
onslaught. The Arab Muslim armies charged into the Holy
Land, conquered what is now Iraq and Iran, then swept
west across North Africa, into Spain, and finally into
France. The Muslim offensive was finally halted in the
West at the Battle of Poitiers/Tours, not far from
Paris, in 732 AD. In the east, the jihad penetrated deep
into Central Asia.
As Muhammad had plundered his foes, so his successors
also stripped the conquered areas -- incomparably richer
both materially and culturally than the desolate sands
of Arabia -- of their wealth and manpower. Almost
overnight, the more advanced civilizations of the Middle
East, North Africa, Persia, and Iberia saw their
agriculture, native religions, and populations destroyed
or plundered. Save for a handful of walled cities that
managed to negotiate conditional surrenders, the
catastrophes those lands suffered were very nearly
complete.
Bat Ye'or, the leading scholar of Islam's expansion
and its treatment of non-Muslims, has provided an
inestimable service through the compilation and
translation of numerous primary source documents
describing centuries of Islamic conquest. She includes
these documents in her works on Islamic history and the
plight of non-Muslims under Islamic rule. In the history
of jihad, the slaughter of civilians, the desecration of
churches, and the plundering of the countryside are
commonplace. Here is Michael the Syrian's account of the
Muslim invasion of Cappodocia (southern Turkey) in 650
AD under Caliph Umar:
… when Muawiya {the Muslim commander} arrived {in
Euchaita in Armenia} he ordered all the inhabitants
to be put to the sword; he placed guards so that no
one escaped. After gathering up all the wealth of
the town, they set to torturing the leaders to make
them show them things [treasures] that had been
hidden. The Taiyaye {Muslim Arabs} led everyone into
slavery -- men and women, boys and girls -- and they
committed much debauchery in that unfortunate town:
they wickedly committed immoralities inside
churches. They returned to their country rejoicing.
(Michael the Syrian, quoted in Bat Ye'or, The
Decline of Eastern Christianity under Islam,
276-7.)
The following description by the Muslim historian,
Ibn al-Athir (1160-1233 AD), of razzias (raiding
expeditions) in Northern Spain and France in the eighth
and ninth centuries AD, conveys nothing but satisfaction
at the extent of the destruction wrought upon the
infidels, including noncombatants.
In 177 <17 April 793>, Hisham, prince of Spain, sent
a large army commanded by Abd al-Malik b. Abd
al-Wahid b. Mugith into enemy territory, and which
made forays as far as Narbonne and Jaranda .
This general first attacked Jaranda where there was
an elite Frank garrison; he killed the bravest,
destroyed the walls and towers of the town and
almost managed to seize it. He then marched on to
Narbonne, where he repeated the same actions, then,
pushing forward, he trampled underfoot the land of
the Cerdagne {near Andorra in the Pyrenees}. For
several months he traversed this land in every
direction, raping women, killing warriors,
destroying fortresses, burning and pillaging
everything, driving back the enemy who fled in
disorder. He returned safe and sound, dragging
behind him God alone knows how much booty. This is
one of the most famous expeditions of the Muslims in
Spain.
In 223 <2 December 837>, Abd ar-Rahman b. al
Hakam, sovereign of Spain, sent an army against
Alava; it encamped near Hisn al-Gharat, which it
besieged; it seized the booty that was found there,
killed the inhabitants and withdrew, carrying off
women and children as captives.
In 231 <6 September 845>, a Muslim army advanced
into Galicia on the territory of the infidels, where
it pillaged and massacred everyone.
In 246 <27 March 860>, Muhammad b. Abd ar-Rahman
advanced with many troops and a large military
apparatus against the region of Pamplona. He
reduced, ruined and ravaged this territory, where he
pillaged and sowed death. (Ibn al-Athir, Annals,
quoted in Bat Ye'or, The Decline of Eastern
Christianity under Islam, 281-2.)
This first wave of jihad engulfed much of the
Byzantine, Visigothic, Frankish, and Persian Empires and
left the newborn Islamic Empire controlling territory
from Southern France, south through Spain, east across
North Africa to India, and north to Russia. Early in the
second millennium AD, the Mongol invasion from the east
greatly weakened the Islamic Empire and ended Arab
predominance therein.
ii. The Second Major Wave of Jihad: the Turks,
1071-1683 AD
Some twenty-five years before the first Crusading
army set out from central Europe for the Holy Land, the
Turkish (Ottoman) armies began an assault on the
Christian Byzantine Empire, which had ruled what is now
Turkey since the Roman Empire’s capital was moved to
Constantinople in 325 AD. At the battle of Manzikert, in
1071, the Christian forces suffered a disastrous defeat,
which left much of Anatolia (Turkey) open to invasion.
This second wave of jihad was temporarily held up by the
invading Latin Armies during the Crusades (see Islam 101
FAQs), but, by the beginning of the 14th century, the
Turks were threatening Constantinople and Europe itself.
In the West, Roman Catholic armies were bit by bit
forcing Muslim forces down the Iberian peninsula, until,
in 1492, they were definitively expelled (the
Reconquista). In Eastern Europe, however, Islam
continued in the ascendant. One of the most significant
engagements between the invading Muslims and the
indigenous peoples of the region was the Battle of
Kosovo in 1389, where the Turks annihilated a
multinational army under the Serbian King, St. Lazar,
though their progress into Europe was significantly
slowed. After numerous attempts dating back to the
seventh century, Constantinople, the jewel of Eastern
Christendom, finally fell in 1453 to the armies of
Sultan Mahomet II. Lest one ascribe the atrocities of
the first wave of jihad to the "Arabness" of its
perpetrators, the Turks showed they were fully capable
of living up to the principles of the Quran and the
Sunnah. Paul Fregosi in his book Jihad describes the
scene following the final assault on Constantinople:
Several thousand of the survivors had taken refuge
in the cathedral: nobles, servants, ordinary
citizens, their wives and children, priests and
nuns. They locked the huge doors, prayed, and
waited. {Caliph} Mahomet {II} had given the troops
free quarter. They raped, of course, the nuns being
the first victims, and slaughtered. At least four
thousand were killed before Mahomet stopped the
massacre at noon. He ordered a muezzin {one who
issues the call to prayer} to climb into the pulpit
of St. Sophia and dedicate the building to Allah. It
has remained a mosque ever since. Fifty thousand of
the inhabitants, more than half the population, were
rounded up and taken away as slaves. For months
afterward, slaves were the cheapest commodity in the
markets of Turkey. Mahomet asked that the body of
the dead emperor be brought to him. Some Turkish
soldiers found it in a pile of corpses and
recognized Constantine {XI} by the golden eagles
embroidered on his boots. The sultan ordered his
head to be cut off and placed between the horse's
legs under the equestrian bronze statue of the
emperor Justinian. The head was later embalmed and
sent around the chief cities of the Ottoman empire
for the delectation of the citizens.
Next, Mahomet ordered the Grand Duke Notaras, who
had survived, be brought before him, asked him for
the names and addresses of all the leading nobles,
officials, and citizens, which Notaras gave him. He
had them all arrested and decapitated. He
sadistically bought from their owners {i.e., Muslim
commanders} high-ranking prisoners who had been
enslaved, for the pleasure of having them beheaded
in front of him. (Fregosi, Jihad, 256-7.)
This second, Turkish wave of jihad reached its
farthest extent at the failed sieges of Vienna in 1529
and 1683, where in the latter instance the Muslim army
under Kara Mustapha was thrown back by the Roman
Catholics under the command of the Polish King, John
Sobieski. In the decades that followed, the Ottomans
were driven back down through the Balkans, though they
were never ejected from the European continent entirely.
Still, even while the imperial jihad faltered, Muslim
land- and sea-borne razzias into Christian territory
continued, and Christians were being abducted into
slavery from as far away as Ireland into the 19th
century.
e. Dhimmitude
Islam's persecution of non-Muslims is in no way
limited to jihad, even though that is the basic
relationship between the Muslim and non-Muslim world.
After the jihad concludes in a given area with the
conquest of infidel territory, the dhimma, or treaty of
protection, may be granted to the conquered "People of
the Book" -- historically, Jews, Christians, and
Zoroastrians. The dhimma provides that the life and
property of the infidel are exempted from jihad for as
long as the Muslim rulers permit, which has generally
meant for as long as the subject non-Muslims -- the
dhimmi -- prove economically useful to the Islamic
state. The Quran spells out the payment of the jizya
(poll- or head-tax; Sura 9:29), which is the most
conspicuous means by which the Muslim overlords exploit
the dhimmi. But the jizya is not merely economic in its
function; it exists also to humiliate the dhimmi and
impress on him the superiority of Islam. Al-Maghili, a
fifteenth century Muslim theologian, explains:
On the day of payment {of the jizya} they {the
dhimmi} shall be assembled in a public place like
the suq {place of commerce}. They should be standing
there waiting in the lowest and dirtiest place. The
acting officials representing the Law shall be
placed above them and shall adopt a threatening
attitude so that it seems to them, as well as to
others, that our object is to degrade them by
pretending to take their possessions. They will
realize that we are doing them a favor in
accepting from them the jizya and letting them
go free. (Al-Maghili, quoted in Bat Ye'or, The Decline of Eastern
Christianity under Islam 361.)
Islamic law codifies various other restrictions on
the dhimmi, all of which derive from the Quran and the
Sunnah. Several hundred years of Islamic thought on the
right treatment of dhimmi peoples is summed up by
Al-Damanhuri, a seventeenth century head of Al-Azhar
University in Cairo, the most prestigious center for
learning in the Muslim world:
… just as the dhimmis are prohibited from building
churches, other things also are prohibited to them.
They must not assist an unbeliever against a Muslim
… raise the cross in an Islamic assemblage … display
banners on their own holidays; bear arms … or keep
them in their homes. Should they do anything of the
sort, they must be punished, and the arms seized. …
The Companions [of the Prophet] agreed upon these
points in order to demonstrate the abasement of the
infidel and to protect the weak believer's faith.
For if he sees them humbled, he will not be inclined
toward their belief, which is not true if he sees
them in power, pride, or luxury garb, as all this
urges him to esteem them and incline toward them, in
view of his own distress and poverty. Yet esteem for
the unbeliever is unbelief. (Al-Damanhuri, quoted in
Bat Ye'or, The Decline of Eastern Christianity
under Islam, 382.)
The Christian, Jewish, and Zoroastrian peoples of the
Middle East, North Africa, and much of Europe suffered
under the oppressive strictures of the dhimma for
centuries. The status of these dhimmi peoples is
comparable in many ways to that of former slaves in the
post-bellum American South. Forbidden to construct
houses of worship or repair extant ones, economically
crippled by the jizya, socially humiliated, legally
discriminated against, and generally kept in a permanent
state of weakness and vulnerability by the Muslim
overlords, it should not be surprising that their
numbers dwindled, in many places to the point of
extinction. The generally misunderstood decline of
Islamic civilization over the past several centuries is
easily explained by the demographic decline of the
dhimmi populations, which had provided the principle
engines of technical and administrative competence.
Should the dhimmi violate the conditions of the
dhimma -- perhaps through practicing his own religion
indiscreetly or failing to show adequate deference to a
Muslim -- then the jihad resumes. At various times in
Islamic history, dhimmi peoples rose above their
subjected status, and this was often the occasion for
violent reprisals by Muslim populations who believed
them to have violated the terms of the dhimma. Medieval
Andalusia (Moorish Spain) is often pointed out by Muslim
apologists as a kind of "multicultural" wonderland, in
which Jews and Christians were permitted by the Islamic
government to rise through the ranks of learning and
government administration. What we are not told,
however, is that this relaxation of the disabilities
resulted in widespread rioting on the part of the Muslim
populace that killed hundreds of dhimmis, mainly Jews.
By refusing to convert to Islam and straying from the
traditional constraints of the dhimma (even at the
behest of the Islamic government, which was in need of
capable manpower), the dhimmi had implicitly chosen the
only other option permitted by the Quran: death.
f. Jihad in the Modern Era
Following its defeat at the walls of Vienna in 1683,
Islam entered a period of strategic decline in which it
was increasingly dominated by the rising European
colonial powers. Due to its material weakness vis-à-vis
the West, dar al-Islam was unable to prosecute
large-scale military campaigns into infidel territory.
The Islamic Empire, then ruled by the Ottoman Turks, was
reduced to fending of the increasingly predatory
European powers.
In 1856, Western pressure compelled the Ottoman
government to suspend the dhimma under which the
Empire’s non-Muslim subjects labored. This provided
hitherto unknown opportunities for social and personal
improvement by the former dhimmis, but it also fomented
resentment by orthodox Muslims who saw this as a
violation of the Sharia and their Allah-given
superiority over unbelievers.
By the late 19th century, tensions among the European
subjects of the Empire broke out into the open when the
Ottoman government massacred 30,000 Bulgarians in 1876
for allegedly rebelling against Ottoman rule. Following
Western intervention that resulted in Bulgarian
independence, the Ottoman government and its Muslim
subjects were increasingly nervous about other
non-Muslim groups seeking independence.
It was in this atmosphere that the first stage of the
Armenian genocide took place in 1896 with the slaughter
of some 250,000 Armenians. Both civilians and military
personnel took place in the massacres. Peter Balakian,
in his book, The Burning Tigris, documents the whole
horrific story. But the massacres of the 1890s were only
the prelude to the much larger holocaust of 1915, which
claimed some 1.5 million lives. While various factors
contributed to the slaughter, there is no mistaking that
the massacres were nothing other than a jihad waged
against the Armenians, no longer protected as they were
by the dhimma. In 1914, as the Ottoman Empire entered
World War I on the side of the central powers, an
official anti-Christian jihad was proclaimed.
To promote the idea of jihad, the sheikh-ul-Islam’s
{the most senior religious leader in the Ottoman
Empire} published proclamation summoned the Muslim
world to arise and massacre its Christian
oppressors. “Oh Moslems,” the document read, “Ye who
are smitten with happiness and are on the verge of
sacrificing your life and your good for the cause of
right, and of braving perils, gather now around the
Imperial throne.” In the Ikdam, the Turkish
newspaper that had just passed into German
ownership, the idea of jihad was underscored: “The
deeds of our enemies have brought down the wrath of
God. A gleam of hope has appeared. All Mohammedans,
young and old, men, women, and children must fulfill
their duty. … If we do it, the deliverance of the
subjected Mohammedan kingdoms is assured.” … “He who
kills even one unbeliever,” one pamphlet read, “of
those who rule over us, whether he does it secretly
or openly, shall be rewarded by God.” (quoted in
Balakian, The Burning Tigris, 169-70.)
The anti-Christian jihad culminated in 1922 at
Smyrna, on the Mediterranean coast, where 150,000 Greek
Christians were massacred by the Turkish army under the
indifferent eye of Allied warships. All in, from
1896-1923, some 2.5 million Christians were killed, the
first modern genocide, which to this day is denied by
the Turkish government.
Since the breakup of the Islamic Empire following
World War I, various jihads have been fought around the
globe by the independent Muslim nations and sub-state
jihadist groups. The most sustained effort has been
directed against Israel, which has committed the
unpardonable sin of rebuilding dar al-harb on land
formerly a part of dar al-Islam. Other prominent jihads
include that fought against the Soviets in Afghanistan,
the Muslim Bosnians against the Serbs in the former
Yugoslavia, the Muslim Albanians against the Serbs in
Kosovo, and the Chechens against the Russians in the
Caucasus. Jihads have also been waged throughout
northern Africa, the Philippines, Thailand, Kashmir, and
a host of other places throughout the world. In
addition, the overwhelming majority of terrorist attacks
around the world have been committed by Muslims,
including, of course, the spectacular attacks of 9/11/01
(USA), 3/11/04 (Spain), and 7/7/05 (UK). (For a more
comprehensive list of Muslim attacks, visit
www.thereligionofpeace.com.)
The fact is, the percentage of conflicts in the world
today that do not include Islam is pretty small. Islam
is making a comeback.
3. Conclusion
The chief barrier today to a better understanding of
Islam -- apart, perhaps, from outright fear -- is sloppy
language. Let us take, to start with, the much-vaunted
"war on terror." Upon scrutiny, the phrase "war on
terror" makes as much sense as a war on "blitzkrieg,"
"bullets," or "strategic bombing." The "war on terror"
implies that it is perfectly fine if the enemy seeks to
destroy us -- and, indeed, succeeds in doing so -- as
long as he does not employ "terror" in the process.
"Terrorism," it should be obvious, is a tactic or
stratagem used to advance a goal; it is the goal of
Islamic terrorism that we must come to understand, and
this logically requires an understanding of Islam.
As we have seen, contrary to the widespread
insistence that true Islam is pacific even if a handful
of its adherents are violent, the Islamic sources make
clear that engaging in violence against non-Muslims is a
central and indispensable principle to Islam. Islam is
less a personal faith than a political ideology that
exists in a fundamental and permanent state of war with
non-Islamic civilizations, cultures, and individuals.
The Islamic holy texts outline a social, governmental,
and economic system for all mankind. Those cultures and
individuals who do not submit to Islamic governance
exist in an ipso facto state of rebellion with Allah and
must be forcibly brought into submission. The
misbegotten term "Islamo-fascism" is wholly redundant:
Islam itself is a kind of fascism that achieves its full
and proper form only when it assumes the powers of the
state.
The spectacular acts of Islamic terrorism in the late
20th and early 21st centuries are but the most recent
manifestation of a global war of conquest that Islam has
been waging since the days of the Prophet Muhammad in
the 7th Century AD and that continues apace today. This
is the simple, glaring truth that is staring the world
today in the face -- and which has stared it in the face
numerous times in the past -- but which it seems few
today are willing to contemplate.
It is important to realize that we have been talking
about Islam -- not Islamic "fundamentalism,"
"extremism," "fanaticism," "Islamo-fascism," or
"Islamism," but Islam proper, Islam in its orthodox form
as it has been understood and practiced by
right-believing Muslims from the time of Muhammad to the
present. The mounting episodes of Islamic terrorism in
the late 20th and early 21st centuries are due largely
to the geostrategic changes following the end of the
Cold War and the growing technical options available to
terrorists.
With the collapse of Soviet hegemony over much of the
Muslim world, coupled with the burgeoning wealth of the
Muslim oil-producing countries, the Muslim world
increasingly possesses the freedom and means to support
jihad around the globe. In short, the reason that
Muslims are once again waging war against the non-Muslim
world is because they can.
It is paramount to note, however, that, even if no
major terrorist attack ever occurs on Western soil
again, Islam still poses a mortal danger to the West. A
halt to terrorism would simply mean a change in Islam’s
tactics -- perhaps indicating a longer-term approach
that would allow Muslim immigration and higher birth
rates to bring Islam closer to victory before the next
round of violence. It cannot be overemphasized that
Muslim terrorism is a symptom of Islam that may increase
or decrease in intensity while Islam proper remains
permanently hostile.
Muhammad Taqi Partovi Samzevari, in his “Future of
the Islamic Movement” of 1986, sums up the Islamic
worldview.
Our own Prophet … was a general, a statesman, an
administrator, an economist, a jurist and a
first-class manager all in one. … In the Qur’an’s
historic vision Allah’s support and the
revolutionary struggle of the people must come
together, so that Satanic rulers are brought down
and put to death. A people that is not prepared to
kill and to die in order to create a just society
cannot expect any support from Allah. The Almighty
has promised us that the day will come when the
whole of mankind will live united under the banner
of Islam, when the sign of the Crescent, the symbol
of Muhammad, will be supreme everywhere. … But that
day must be hastened through our Jihad, through our
readiness to offer our lives and to shed the unclean
blood of those who do not see the light brought from
the Heavens by Muhammad in his mi’raj {“nocturnal
voyages to the ‘court’ of Allah”}. … It is Allah who
puts the gun in our hand. But we cannot expect Him
to pull the trigger as well simply because we are
faint-hearted.
It must be emphasized that all of the analysis
provided here derives from the Islamic sources
themselves and is not the product of critical Western
scholarship. (Indeed, most modern Western scholarship of
Islam is hardly “critical” in any meaningful sense.) It
is Islam’s self-interpretation that necessitates and
glorifies violence, not any foreign interpretation of
it.
4. Frequently Asked Questions
There are a handful of questions that invariably
arise when the point is made that Islam is violent.
These questions for the most part are misleading or
irrelevant and do not contest the actual evidence or
arguments that violence is inherent to Islam.
Nonetheless, they have proven rhetorically effective in
deflecting serious scrutiny from Islam, and so I deal
with some of them here.
a. What about the Crusades?
The obvious response to this question is, “weill,
what about them?” Violence committed in the name of
other religions is logically unconnected to the question
of whether Islam is violent. But, by mentioning the
Crusades, the hope of the Islamic apologist is to draw
attention away from Islamic violence and paint religions
in general as morally equivalent.
In both the Western academia and media as well as in
the Islamic world, the Crusades are viewed as wars of
aggression fought by bloody-minded Christians against
peaceful Muslims. While the Crusades were certainly
bloody, they are more accurately understood as a belated
Western response to centuries of jihad than as an
unprovoked, unilateral attack. Muslim rule in the Holy
Land began in the second half of the 7th century during
the Arab wave of jihad with the conquests of Damascus
and Jerusalem by the second “rightly-guided Caliph,”
Umar. After the initial bloody jihad, Christian and
Jewish life there was tolerated within the strictures of
the dhimma and the Muslim Arabs generally permitted
Christians abroad to continue to make pilgrimage to
their holy sites, a practice which proved lucrative for
the Muslim state. In the 11th century, the relatively
benign Arab administration of the Holy Land was replaced
with that of Seljuk Turks, due to civil war in the
Islamic Empire. Throughout the latter half of the 11th
century, the Turks waged war against the Christian
Byzantine Empire and pushed it back from its strongholds
in Antioch and Anatolia (now Turkey). In 1071, Byzantine
forces suffered a crushing defeat at the Battle of
Manzikert in what is now Eastern Turkey. The Turks
resumed the jihad in the Holy Land, abusing, robbing,
enslaving, and killing Christians there and throughout
Asia Minor. They threatened to cut off Christendom from
its holiest site, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in
Jerusalem, rebuilt under Byzantine stewardship after it
was destroyed by Caliph Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah in 1009.
It was in this context of a renewed jihad in the
Middle East that the Roman Pope, Urban II, issued a call
in 1095 for Western Christians to come to the aid of
their Eastern cousins (and seems to have harbored the
hope of claiming Jerusalem for the Papacy after the
Great Schism with Eastern Christianity in 1054). This
“armed pilgrimage,” in which numerous civilians as well
as soldiers took part, would eventually become known
years later as the First Crusade. The idea of a
“crusade” as we now understand that term, i.e., a
Christian “holy war,” developed years later with the
rise of such organizations as the Knights Templar that
made “crusading” a way of life. It worth noting that the
most ardent Crusaders, the Franks, were exactly those
who had faced jihad and razzias for centuries along the
Franco-Spanish border and knew better than most the
horrors to which Muslims subjected Christians. At the
time of the First Crusade, the populations of Asia
Minor, Syria, and Palestine, though ruled by Muslims,
were still overwhelmingly Christian. The “Crusading”
campaigns of the Western Christian armies were justified
at the time as a war liberating the Eastern Christians,
whose population, lands, and culture had been devastated
by centuries of jihad and dhimmitude. Conquering
territory for God in the mode of jihad was an alien idea
to Christianity and it should not be surprising that it
eventually died out in the West and never gained
ascendancy in the East.
Following the very bloody capture of Jerusalem in
1099 by the Latin armies and the establishment of the
Crusader States in Edessa, Antioch, and Jerusalem, the
Muslim and Christian forces fought a see-saw series of
wars, in which both parties were guilty of the usual
gamut of wartime immorality. Over time, even with
reinforcing Crusades waged from Europe, the Crusader
States, strung out on precarious lines of communication,
slowly succumbed to superior Muslim power. In 1271, the
last Christian citadel, Antioch, fell to the Muslims. No
longer having to divert forces to subdue the Christian
beachhead on the Eastern Mediterranean, the Muslims
regrouped for a 400-year-long jihad against Southern and
Eastern Europe, which twice reached as far as Vienna
before it was halted. In geostrategic terms, the
Crusades can be viewed as an attempt by the West to
forestall its own destruction at the hands of Islamic
jihad by carrying the fight to the enemy. It worked for
a while.
Significantly, while the West has for some time now
lamented the Crusades as mistaken, there has never been
any mention from any serious Islamic authority of regret
for the centuries and centuries of jihad and dhimmitude
perpetrated against other societies. But this is hardly
surprising: while religious violence contradicts the
fundaments of Christianity, religious violence is
written into Islam’s DNA.
b. If Islam is violent, why are so many Muslims
peaceful?
This question is a bit like asking, “If Christianity
teaches humility, tolerance, and forgiveness, why are so
many Christians arrogant, intolerant, and vindictive?”
The answer in both cases is obvious: in any religion or
ideology there will be many who profess, but do not
practice, its tenets. Just as it is often easier for a
Christian to hit back, play holier-than-thou, or disdain
others, so it is often easier for a Muslim to stay at
home rather than embark on jihad. Hypocrites are
everywhere.
Furthermore, there are also people who do not really
understand their own faith and so act outside of its
prescribed boundaries. In Islam, there are likely many
Muslims who do not really understand their religion
thanks to the importance of reciting the Quran in Arabic
but not having to understand it. It is the words and
sounds of the Quran that attract Allah’s merciful
attention rather than Quranic knowledge on the part of
the supplicant. Especially in the West, Muslims here are
more likely to be attracted by Western ways (which
explains why they are here) and less likely to act
violently against the society to which they may have
fled from an Islamic tyranny abroad.
However, in any given social context, as Islam takes
greater root -- increasing numbers of followers, the
construction of more mosques and “cultural centers,”
etc. -- the greater the likelihood that some number of
its adherents will take its violent precepts seriously.
This is the problem that the West faces today.
c. What about the violent passages in the Bible?
First, violent Biblical passages are irrelevant to
the question of whether Islam is violent.
Second, the violent passages in the Bible certainly
do no amount to a standing order to commit violence
against the rest of the world. Unlike the Quran, the
Bible is a huge collection of documents written by
different people at different times in different
contexts, which allows for much greater interpretative
freedom. The Quran, on the other hand, comes exclusively
from one source: Muhammad. It is through the life of
Muhammad that the Quran must be understood, as the Quran
itself says. His wars and killings both reflect and
inform the meaning of the Quran. Furthermore, the strict
literalism of the Quran means that there is no room for
interpretation when it comes to its violent injunctions.
As it is through the example of Christ, the “Prince of
Peace,” that Christianity interprets its scriptures, so
it is through the example of the warlord and despot
Muhammad that Muslims understand the Quran.
d. Could an Islamic “Reformation” pacify Islam?
As should be plain to anyone who has examined the
Islamic sources, to take the violence out of Islam would
require it to jettison two things: the Quran as the word
of Allah and Muhammad as Allah’s prophet. In other
words, to pacify Islam would require its transformation
into something that it is not. The Western Christian
Reformation, that is often used as an example, was an
attempt (successful or not) to recover the essence of
Christianity, namely, the example and teachings of
Christ and the Apostles. Trying to get back to the
example of Muhammad would have very different
consequences. Indeed, one may say that Islam is today
going through its “Reformation” with the increasing
jihadist activity around the globe. Today, Muslims of
the Salafi (“early generations”) school are doing
exactly that in focusing on the life of Muhammad and his
early successors. These reformers are known to their
detractors by the derogative term Wahhabi. Drawing their
inspiration from Muhammad and the Quran, they are
invariably disposed to violence. The unhappy fact is
that Islam today is what it has been fourteen centuries:
violent, intolerant, and expansionary. It is folly to
think that we, in the course of a few years or decades,
are going to be able to change the basic world outlook
of a foreign civilization. Islam’s violent nature must
be accepted as given; only then will we be able to come
up with appropriate policy responses that can improve
our chances of survival.
e. What about the history of Western colonialism
in the Islamic world?
Following the defeat of the Ottoman army outside
Vienna on September 11, 1683 by Polish forces, Islam
went into a period of strategic decline in which it was
overwhelmingly dominated by the European powers. Much of
dar al-Islam was colonized by the European powers who
employed their superior technology and exploited the
rivalries within the Muslim world to establish colonial
rule.
While many of the practices of the Western imperial
powers in the governance of their colonies were clearly
unjust, it is utterly unwarranted to regard Western
imperialism -- as it often is -- as an endemic criminal
enterprise that is the basis of modern resentment
against the West. It was only due to the assertive role
of the Western powers that modern nation-states such as
India, Pakistan, Israel, South Africa, Zimbabwe, etc.
came to exist in the first place. Without Western
organization, these areas would have likely remained
chaotic and tribal as they had existed for centuries.
When one looks at the post-colonial world, it is
apparent that the most successful post-colonial nations
have a common attribute: they are not Muslim. The United
States, Australia, Hong Kong, Israel, India, and the
South American nations clearly outshine their
Muslim-majority post-colonial counterparts -- Iraq,
Algeria, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia, etc. -- by
just about any standard.
f. How can a violent political ideology be the
second-largest and fastest-growing religion on earth?
It should not be surprising that a violent political
ideology is proving so attractive to much of the world.
The attractive power of fascist ideas has been proven
through history. Islam combines the interior comfort
provided by religious faith with the outward power of a
world-transforming political ideology. Like the
revolutionary violence of Communism, jihad offers an
altruistic justification for waging death and
destruction. Such an ideology will naturally draw to it
violent-minded people while encouraging the non-violent
to take up arms themselves or support violence
indirectly. Because something is popular hardly makes it
benign.
Furthermore, the areas in which Islam is growing most
rapidly, such as Western Europe, have been largely
denuded of their religious and cultural heritage, which
leaves Islam as the only vibrant ideology available to
those in search of meaning.
g. Is it fair to paint all Islamic schools of
thought as violent?
Islamic apologists often point out that Islam is not
a monolith and that there are differences of opinion
among the different Islamic schools of thought. That is
true, but, while there are differences, there are also
common elements. Just as Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and
Protestant Christians differ on many aspects of
Christianity, still they accept important common
elements. So it is with Islam. One of the common
elements to all Islamic schools of thought is jihad,
understood as the obligation of the Ummah to conquer and
subdue the world in the name of Allah and rule it under
Sharia law. The four Sunni Madhhabs (schools of fiqh
[Islamic religious jurisprudence]) -- Hanafi, Maliki,
Shafei, and Hanbali -- all agree that there is a
collective obligation on Muslims to make war on the rest
of the world. Furthermore, even the schools of thought
outside Sunni orthodoxy, including Sufism and the Jaferi
(Shia) school, agree on the necessity of jihad. When it
comes to matters of jihad, the different schools
disagree on such questions as whether infidels must
first be asked to convert to Islam before hostilities
may begin (Osama bin Laden asked America to convert
before Al-Qaeda’s attacks); how plunder should be
distributed among victorious jihadists; whether a
long-term Fabian strategy against dar al-harb is
preferable to an all-out frontal attack; etc.
h. What about the great achievements of Islamic
civilization through history?
Islamic achievements in the fields of art,
literature, science, medicine, etc. in no way refute the
fact that Islam is intrinsically violent. Roman and
Greek civilizations produced many great achievements in
these fields as well, but also cultivated powerful
traditions of violence. While giving the world the
brilliance of Virgil and Horace, Rome was also a home to
gladiatorial combat, the slaughter of Christians, and,
at times, rampant militarism.
Furthermore, the achievements of Islamic civilization
are pretty modest given its 1300 year history when
compared to Western, Hindu, or Confucian civilizations.
Many Islamic achievements were in fact the result of
non-Muslims living within the Islamic Empire or of
recent converts to Islam. One of the greatest Islamic
thinkers, Averroes, ran afoul of Islamic orthodoxy
through his study of non-Islamic (Greek) philosophy and
his preference for Western modes of thought. Once the
dhimmi populations of the Empire dwindled toward the
middle of the second millennium AD, Islam began its
social and cultural “decline.”
5. Glossary of Terms
Allah: "God"; Arabic Christians also worship
"Allah," but an Allah of a very different sort.
Allahu Akhbar: "God is Great (-est)"; term of
praise; war cry of Muslims.
AH: “after Hijra”; the Islamic calendar’s system
of dating; employs lunar rather than solar years; as
of January 2007, we are in AH 1428.
Ansar: "aiders" or "helpers"; Arabian tribesmen
allied with Muhammad and the early Muslims.
Badr: first significant battle fought by Muhammad
and the Muslims against the Quraish tribe of Mecca.
Caliph: title of the ruler or leader of the Umma
(global Muslim community); the head of the former
Islamic Empire; the title was abolished by Kemal
Attaturk in 1924 following the breakup of the
Ottoman Empire and the founding of modern Turkey.
dar al-Islam: “House (Realm) of Islam”; Islamic
territory ruled by Sharia law
dar al-harb: “House (Realm) of War”: territory
ruled by infidels
dar al-sulh: “House (Realm) of Truce”: territory
ruled by infidels but allied with Islam; territory
ruled by Muslims but not under Sharia law
Dhimma: the pact of protection extended to
non-slave "People of the Book", usually Jews,
Christians, and Zoroastrians, which permitted them
to remain nominally free under Muslim rule.
dhimmi: "protected"; people under the protection
of the dhimma.
dhimmitude: word coined by historian Bat Ye'or to
describe the status of dhimmi peoples
hadith: "report"; any of thousands of episodes
from the life of Muhammad transmitted orally until
written down in the eighth century AD; sahih
(reliable or sound) hadiths are second only to the
Quran in authority.
Hijra: "emigration"; Muhammad's flight from Mecca
to Medina (Yathrib) in AD 622.
Islam: "submission" or "surrender."
jizya: the poll or head tax prescribed by Sura
9:29 of the Quran to be paid by Christians and Jews
in Muslim-held territory.
Kaba: "cube"; the Meccan temple in which numerous
pagan idols were housed before Muhammad's conquest
of Mecca in AD 632, which is still the most
venerated object in Islam; the Kaba's cornerstone,
which is believed to have fallen from heaven, is the
stone on which Abraham was to sacrifice his son,
Ishmael (not Isaac).
Mecca: holiest city of Islam; place of Muhammad's
birth in AD 570; its Great Mosque contains the Kaba
stone; early period in Muhammad's life where more
peaceful verses of the Quran were revealed; site of
Muhammad's victory over the Quraish in AD 630.
Medina: "city," short for "city of the Prophet";
second holiest city of Islam; destination of
Muhammad's Hijra (emigration) in AD 622; later
period in Muhammad's life where more violent verses
of the Quran were revealed; site of third major
battle fought by Muhammad against the Quraish tribe
from Mecca; formerly called Yathrib.
Muhammad: "the praised one."
Muslim: one who submits.
Quran (Kuran, Quran, etc.): "recitation";
according to Islam, the compiled verbatim words of
Allah as dictated by Muhammad.
razzia: "raid"; acts of piracy on land or sea by
Muslims against infidels
Sira: "life"; abbreviation of Sirat Rasul Allah,
or "Life of the Prophet of God"; the canonical
biography of the Prophet Muhammad written in the
eighth century by Ibn Ishaq and later edited by Ibn
Hisham; modern translation by Alfred Guillaume.
Sunnah: the "Way" of the Prophet Muhammad;
includes his teachings, traditions, and example.
Sura: a chapter of the Quran; Quranic passages
are cited as Sura number:verse number, e.g., 9:5.
Uhud: second major battle fought by Muhammad
against the Quraish tribe of Mecca.
Umar: second "rightly-guided" Caliph; ruled AD
634--44, succeeded Abu Bakr; conquered the Holy
Land.
Umma (ummah): the global Muslim community; the
body of Muslim faithful.
Uthman: third "rightly-guided" Caliph; ruled AD
644--56, succeeded Umar; compiled the Quran in book
form.
Yathrib: city to which Muhammad made the Hijra
(emigration) in AD 622/AH 1; renamed Medina.
6. Further Resources
As JihadWatch readers are likely familiar with the
works of Robert Spencer, I omit them here. Needless to
say, you will not go wrong with any of his books.
Online
Center for the Study of Political
Islam
Chronicles Magazine
Dhimmi.org
FaithFreedom.org
HistoryofJihad.com
U Michigan's searchable online
version of the Quran translated by Shakir.
USC's Muslim Students Association's
website with multiple searchable translations of the
Quran and hadiths.
Islam: What the West Needs
to Know homepage.
Canadian Muslim website with
various writings on Islamic doctrine and events in the
Muslim world.
Also see Jihad Watch Books
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