How Jihad Influenced the Norway Massacre

by Raymond Ibrahim
Hudson New York
<http://www.hudson-ny.org/2327/jihad-influenced-norway-massacre> 
August 8, 2011

http://www.raymondibrahim.com/10080/how-jihad-influenced-the-norway-massacre

In his manifesto, Anders Breivik, the perpetrator of the Norway massacre,
wherein some 80 people were killed, mentioned the Crusades and aspects of it
as an inspirational factor. Predictably, Western elites-especially through
the MSM-have begun a new round of moral, cultural, and historical
relativism, some
<http://www.nowpublic.com/culture/anders-behring-breivik-joins-bush-s-christ
ian-crusade-vs-islam>  even conflating the terrorist with former President
Bush, who once used the word "crusade."

 




Hassan i-Sabbah (d. 1124): Leader of the "Assassins," arguably the world's
first terrorist organization

 

The fact is, there are important parallels between the Crusades and
Breivik's actions-but hardly the way portrayed by the media. Rather, this
terrorist attack, like the historic Crusades themselves, was influenced by
the very doctrine of jihad.

While some are cognizant that the Crusades were a retaliation to centuries
of Muslim aggression (see Rodney Stark's
<http://www.victorhanson.com/articles/scambray041810.html> God's Battalions:
The Case for the Crusades), few are aware that the idea of Christian "holy
war"-notably the use of violence in the name of Christianity and the notion
that Crusaders who die are martyrs forgiven their sins-finds its ideological
origins in Muslim jihad.

As historian Bernard Lewis
<http://www.amazon.com/Middle-East-Brief-History-Years/dp/0684807122>  puts
it, "Even the Christian crusade, often compared with the Muslim jihad, was
itself a delayed and limited response to the jihad and in part also an
imitation." How? The popes offered

forgiveness for sins to those who fought in defence of the holy Church of
God and the Christian religion and polity, and eternal life for those
fighting the infidel. These ideas . clearly reflect the Muslim notion of
jihad, and are precursors of the Western Christian Crusade.

Still, Lewis makes clear some fundamental differences:

But unlike the jihad, it [the Crusade] was concerned primarily with the
defense or reconquest of threatened or lost Christian territory.. The Muslim
jihad, in contrast, was perceived as unlimited, as a religious obligation
that would continue until all the world had either adopted the Muslim faith
or submitted to Muslim rule.. The object of jihad is to bring the whole
world under Islamic law.

If the Crusades find their ideological origins in jihad, arguably, so too
does much of modern day terrorism. For instance, the medieval Hashashin-
archetypal terrorists who gave us the word "assassin"-were a Muslim sect
that pioneered the use of fear and terrorism for political gain during the
Crusading era (circa. eleventh-thirteenth centuries).

Because much of this is missed by the media, ironies abound. For example,
many point to Breivik's fascination with the Knights Templar, a Crusading
order, as proof that he was motivated by the Crusades. Yet, as one AP report
<http://news.yahoo.com/norway-suspect-wanted-european-anti-muslim-crusade-13
4428674.html>  titled "Norway suspect wanted European anti-Muslim crusade"
correctly asserts, "The Knights Templar was a medieval order created to
protect Christian pilgrims in the Holy Land after the First Crusade in the
11th century."

How exactly a military order devoted to protecting Christians inspired
someone to kill innocent children in Norway is left unanswered. As one
historian
<http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/europe/07/28/knights.templar.groups/index.htm
l>  put it, the original Knights Templar, a "very devout people," would be
"horrified" to be associated with Breivik.

Even more ironic, the Knights and Crusaders in general were frequently on
the receiving end of the Assassins' terror; that is, far from being
inspirations for terrorism, they bore the brunt of one of the earliest
manifestations of Islamic terrorism.

In short, Breivik's actions are more inspired by the Jihad than the
Crusades, by the Assassins than the Templars, by al-Qaeda-"which he
cherishes great admiration for
<http://www.jihadwatch.org/2011/07/statement-of-geert-wilders-concerning-the
-massacre-in-norway.html> "-than the IRA. Even CNN's Fareed Zakaria
<http://globalpublicsquare.blogs.cnn.com/2011/07/31/what-is-the-knights-temp
lar/?hpt=hp_c2>  correctly states that in Breivik's view, "the Knights
Templar resembles nothing so much as al Qaeda."

The parallels are evident: Medieval Europe, in an effort to retaliate to an
expansionist Islam, articulated a means that was influenced by the
jihad-"holy war," the Crusades; today, modern Europeans like Breivik, in an
effort to retaliate to an expansionist Islam, have articulated a means
influenced by al-Qaeda-jihadi-style terrorism.

Some may argue that there are non-Muslim terror groups for Breivik to draw
inspiration from. Even so, in a globalized world where Islam has by far the
lion's share of terrorism-where nonstop images of jihadi terror have
metastasized in the media, and thus the mind-it is clear where Breivik got
his inspiration.



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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