http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Printable.asp?ID=21088

The Legacy of Jihad
By Jamie Glazov
FrontPageMagazine.com | January 30, 2006

Frontpage Interview’s guest today is Andrew Bostom, M.D., M.S. (Providence,
RI), an  associate professor of medicine in the Division of Renal Diseases
of Rhode Island Hospital. He has published articles and commentary on Islam
in the Washington Times, National Review, Revue Politique, FrontPage
Magazine.com, The American Thinker, Investor’s Business Daily, and other
print and online publications. He is the author of the new book The Legacy
of Jihad: Islamic Holy War and the Fate of Non-Muslims. 

FP: Andrew Bostom, welcome to Frontpage Interview. 

Bostom: Thanks Jamie. 

FP: As a physician by profession, how did you become interested Islam in
general and in the topic of your book in particular?

Bostom: September 11, 2001 shocked me out of the complete absorption in my
career in medicine—specifically, epidemiology and clinical trials—and an
accompanying uninformed complacency about world affairs. I grew up in New
York City, spending the first 34 years of my life there, and the wife of one
of our nephrology fellowship trainees barely made it out of the second World
Trade Center tower before it collapsed. The cataclysmic events of 9/11 had
very little context for me, so I set out to learn about Islam, reading
voraciously. Starting with the writings of Karen Armstrong and John Esposito
(how naïve and ironic it seems in retrospect!), I became thoroughly
dissatisfied, in short order, with the entire genre of thinly veiled,
treacly apologetics, sadly characteristic of modern popular and “academic”
works on Islam. So I began what has become a ceaseless endeavor to educate
myself, making liberal use of the vast research resources of the Brown
University system. Learned, patient mentors, in particular Bat Ye’or and Ibn
Warraq, facilitated my efforts. They encouraged me to complete what became
The Legacy of Jihad, sharing my view, expressed so appositely by the
prominent Middle East Studies Professor, Dr. Raphael Israeli, that the book
filled a “yawning gap” in the literature on jihad. That is why in one rather
large volume I combined a comprehensive analysis of both jihad theory and
practice, the latter being a detailed survey of the brutal way jihad
campaigns have always been waged—using a physicians favorite learning and
teaching tool, the mnemonic, in this case “MPED”—massacre, pillage,
enslavement, and deportation.


FP: What is Islamic Jihad?

 

Bostom: There is only one historically relevant meaning of jihad regardless
of contemporary apologetics. The noted 19th century Arabic lexicographer
E.W. Lane, who studied the etymology of the term, observed, “Jihad came to
be used by the Muslims to signify wag[ing] war, against unbelievers”. The
origins of the Muslim institution of jihad are found in the Qur’an. Sura
(chapter) 9 is devoted in its entirety to war proclamations. There we read
that the Muslim faithful are to “slay the idolaters wherever you find them.
. . . Fight against such as those who have been given the scripture as
believe not in Allah. . . . Go forth, light-armed and heavy armed, and
strive with your wealth and your lives in the way of Allah. That is best for
you, if ye but knew.” From such verses in the Qur’an and in the hadith,
Muslim jurists and theologians formulated the Islamic institution of
permanent jihad war against non-Muslims to bring the world under Islamic
rule (Sharia law).

 

The consensus on the nature of jihad from major schools of Islamic
jurisprudence is clear. Summarizing this consensus of centuries of Islamic
thought, the seminal Muslim scholar Ibn Khaldun, who died in 1406, wrote:
 

In the Muslim community, the holy war is a religious duty because of the
universalism of the mission and (the obligation to) convert everybody to
Islam either by persuasion or by force. The other religious groups did not
have a universal mission, and the holy war was not a religious duty for
them, save only for purposes of defense.

 

Only Islam, Ibn Khaldun added, “is under obligation to gain power over other
nations.”

 

Muhammad himself waged a series of proto-jihad campaigns to subdue the Jews,
Christians and pagans of Arabia. For example, within a year after the
massacre of the Medinan Jewish tribe the Banu Qurayzah (described here),
Muhammad, according to a summary of sacralized Muslim sources,

 

..waited for some act of aggression on on the part of the Jews of Khaybar,
whose fertile lands and villages he had destined for his followers…to
furnish an excuse for an attack. But, no such opportunity offering, he
resolved in the autumn of this year [i.e., 628], on a sudden and unprovoked
invasion of their territory.

 

Ali (later, the fourth “Rightly Guided Caliph”, and especially revered by
Shi’ite Muslims) asked Muhammad why the Jews of Khaybar were being attacked,
since they were peaceful farmers, tending their oasis, and was told by
Muhammad he must compel them to submit to Islamic Law. The renowned early
20th century scholar of Islam, David Margoliouth, observed aptly:

 

Now the fact that a community was idolatrous, or Jewish, or anything but
Mohammedan, warranted a murderous attack upon it

Within two years of Muhammad's death, Abu Bakr, the first Caliph, launched
the Great Jihad. The ensuing three decades witnessed Islamdom's most
spectacular expansion, as Muslim armies subdued the entire Arabian
peninsula, and conquered territories which had been in Greco-Roman
possession since the reign of Alexander the Great.

The essential pattern of the jihad war is captured in the classical Muslim
historian al-Tabari' s recording of the recommendation given by Umar b.
al-Khattab (the second “Rightly Guided Caliph”) to the commander of the
troops he sent to al-Basrah (636 C.E.), during the conquest of Iraq. Umar
reportedly said:

Summon the people to God; those who respond to your call, accept it from
them, (This is to say, accept their conversion as genuine and refrain from
fighting them) but those who refuse must pay the poll tax out of humiliation
and lowliness. (Qur'an 9:29) If they refuse this, it is the sword without
leniency. Fear God with regard to what you have been entrusted.

By the time of al-Tabari's death in 923, jihad wars had expanded the Muslim
empire from Portugal to the Indian subcontinent. Subsequent Muslim conquests
continued in Asia, as well as Eastern Europe. The Christian kingdoms of
Armenia, Byzantium, Bulgaria, Serbia, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Croatia, and
Albania, in addition to parts of Poland and Hungary, were also conquered and
Islamized. Arab Muslim invaders engaged, additionally, in continuous jihad
raids that ravaged and enslaved Sub-Saharan African animist populations,
extending to the southern Sudan. When the Muslim armies were stopped at the
gates of Vienna in 1683, over a millennium of jihad had transpired. These
tremendous military successes spawned a triumphalist jihad literature.
Muslim historians recorded in detail the number of infidels slaughtered, or
enslaved and deported, the cities and villages which were pillaged, and the
lands, treasure, and movable goods seized. Christian (Coptic, Armenian,
Jacobite, Greek, Slav, etc.), as well as Hebrew sources, and even the scant
Hindu and Buddhist writings which survived the ravages of the Muslim
conquests, independently validate this narrative, and complement the Muslim
perspective by providing testimonies of the suffering of the non-Muslim
victims of jihad wars.

 

FP: There are scholars and critics amongst us who argue that the terrorists
have exploited and hijacked Islam to serve their own violent ends. In their
view, Islamist terror is a perversion of the true Islam. What do you think?

 

Bostom: This is ahistorical prattle, which unfortunately appears to have
been accepted by President Bush and his key advisers. But Mr. Bush is our
President, not our theologian-in-chief. Neither he nor any of those you
alluded to have made informed comments about Islam, least of all the
utterance that Islam is a “religion of peace”. Ironically, the renowned 20th
century Muslim  ideologue Sayyid Qutb, perhaps the most brilliant Muslim
scholar of the 20th century, who is  demonized as a fomenter of “radical”
Islam, has also referred to Islam as a “religion of peace”. But Qutb’s
context is unapologetic and clear—he is referring to the Pax Islamica that
would prevail when the entire world was submitted to Islamic domination, and
the rule of Islamic law (i.e., the Shari’a), by jihad war.

 

Furthermore, in a recent speech President Bush insisted that the "ideology"
of the most notable Muslim terrorists, who he maintained "distort the idea
of jihad," is "very different from the religion of Islam" and indeed
"exploits Islam to serve a violent, political vision.” The President’s even
more specific and assertive comments regarding jihad were a profound
disappointment. Indeed, such words could have been written and uttered by
the most uninformed, or deliberately disingenuous apologists for this
devastating, and uniquely Islamic institution, well over a millennium old,
and still wreaking havoc today.

 

A prominent 14th-century Muslim treatise on jihad written by Ibn Hudayl
revealed the violent methods employed during the conquest of the Iberian
peninsula:
   

It is permissible to set fire to the lands of the enemy, his stores of
grain, his beasts of burden — if it is not possible for the Muslims to take
possession of them — as well as to cut down his trees, to raze his cities,
in a word to do everything that might ruin and discourage him.
 

Terrorism was often a prelude to conquest. The Muslim historian al-Maqqari,
commenting in the 17th century on the brutal tactics of Arab raiders, wrote,

 

Allah thus instilled such fear among the infidels that they did not dare to
go and fight the conquerors; they only approached them as suppliants, to beg
for peace.

Later centuries saw Muslim fortunes decline. Many conquered lands liberated
themselves from Muslim rule. But the ideology of jihad was handed down
unchanged to all future Muslim generations.

 

Armand Abel, the esteemed mid-20th century Belgian scholar of Islam, has
provided this elegant analysis of the concept of “Dar ul Harb”, which is
critical to an overall understanding of the jihad, past and present:

 

Together with the duty of the “war in the way of God” (or jihad), this
universalistic aspiration would lead the Moslems to see the world as being
divided fundamentally into two parts.  On the one hand there was that part
of the world where Islam prevailed, where salvation had been announced,
where the religion that ought to reign was practiced;  this was the Dar ul
Islam.  On the other hand, there was the part which still awaited the
establishment of the saving religion and which constituted, by definition,
the object of the holy war.  This was the Dar ul Harb. The latter, in the
view of the Moslem jurists, was not populated by people who had a natural
right not to practice Islam, but rather by people destined to become Moslems
who, through impiousness and rebellion, refused to accept this great
benefit. Since they were destined sooner or later to be converted at the
approach of the victorious armies of the Prophet’s successor, or else killed
for their rebelliousness, they were the rebel subjects of the Caliph.  Their
kings were nothing but odious tyrants who, by opposing the progress of the
saving religion together with their armies, were following a Satanic
inspiration and rising up against the designs of Providence.  And so no
respite should be granted them, no truce:  perpetual war should be their
lot, waged in the course of the winter and summer ghazu. [razzias] If the
sovereign of the country thus attacked desired peace, it was possible for
him, just like for any other tributary or community, to pay the tribute for
himself and for his subjects.  Thus the [Byzantine] Empress Irene [d. 803]
“purchased peace at the price of her humiliation”, according to the formula
stated in the dhimma contract itself, by paying 70,000 pounds in gold
annually to the Caliph of Baghdad. Many other princes agreed in this way to
become tributaries – often after long struggles – and to see their dominions
pass from the status of dar al Harb to that of dar al Sulh.  In this way,
those of their subjects who lived within the boundaries of the territory
ruled by the Caliphate were spared the uncertainty of being exposed
arbitrarily, without any guarantee, to the military operations of the summer
ghazu and the winter ghazu:  indeed, anything within the reach of the Moslem
armies as they advanced, being property of impious men and rebels, was
legitimately considered their booty;  their men, seized by armed soldiers,
were mercilessly consigned to the lot specified in the Koranic verse about
the sword, and their women and children were treated like things.

 

The respected contemporary Muslim cleric Yusuf Al-Qaradawi, “spiritual”
leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, head of the “European Council for Fatwa
and Research”, and popular Al-Jazeera television personality, reiterated
almost this exact formulation of Dar ul Harb in July 2003:

 

It has been determined by Islamic law that the blood and property of people
of Dar Al-Harb [the Domain of Disbelief where the battle for the domination
of Islam should be waged] is not protected…in modern war, all of society,
with all its classes and ethnic groups, is mobilized to participate in the
war, to aid its continuation, and to provide it with the material and human
fuel required for it to assure the victory of the state fighting its
enemies. Every citizen in society must take upon himself a role in the
effort to provide for the battle. The entire domestic front, including
professionals, laborers, and industrialists, stands behind the fighting
army, even if it does not bear arms.

 

Thus it is the consensus view of orthodox Islamic jurisprudence regarding
jihad, since its formulation during the 8th and 9th centuries, through the
current era, that non-Muslims peacefully going about their lives—from the
Khaybar  farmers whom Muhammad ordered attacked in 628,  to those sitting in
the World Trade Center on 9/11/01—are “muba'a”, licit,  in the Dar ul Harb.
And these innocent non-combatants can be killed, and have always been
killed, with impunity simply by virtue of being “harbis” during endless
razzias and or full scale jihad campaigns that have occurred  continuously
since the time of Muhammad, through the present. This is the crux of the
institutionalized ideology that we are fighting, i.e., jihad,
notwithstanding  President Bush’s unfortunate public mischaracterization.

 

The larger, pervasive political correctness in this country, has engendered
a stultifying “Islamic correctness” among our academic, political and media
elites that prevents frank and meaningful discussions of Islam, jihad, and
their relationship to terrorism. Moreover, when Bin Laden criticizes America
for its “debauchery and secularism”, and seeks its replacement with an
Islamic entity, he is simply arguing in accord with widely held, orthodox
Islamic beliefs. That is why Bin Laden remains so popular in the Islamic
world, and few so-called moderate or traditional Muslims have actively
condemned Al-Qaeda, especially in Muslim societies, except when Muslims have
been victimized by Al-Qaeda attacks (as for example in Jordan).  And there
are very disturbing trends evident among Muslims living in the West,
particularly in Europe. For example, survey results from British Muslims
polled shortly after the 7/7/05 London bombings. revealed that one-third
were brazen enough to admit following 7/7/05, “Western society is decadent
and immoral and …Muslims should seek to bring it to an end”, expressing
ostensibly, their desire to replace Britain’s current liberal democracy with
a Shari’a-based theocratic model . Ultimately, the denial and intellectual
cowardice that accompany “Islamic correctness” as practiced by elites across
the political spectrum emboldens those Muslims most committed to jihad in
all its manifestations, including jihad terrorism

 

FP: Tell us a bit about the ruling conditions imposed by Muslim conquerors
on non-Muslims who have been conquered by jihad.

 

Bostom: In The Laws of Islamic Governance al-Mawardi (d. 1058), a renowned
jurist of Baghdad, examined the regulations pertaining to the lands and
infidel (i.e., non-Muslim) populations subjugated by jihad. This is the
origin of the system of dhimmitude. The native infidel population had to
recognize Islamic ownership of their land, submit to Islamic law, and accept
payment of the poll tax (jizya). He notes that "The enemy makes a payment in
return for peace and reconciliation." Al- Mawardi then distinguishes two
cases: (I) Payment is made immediately and is treated like booty, "it does,
however, not prevent a jihad being carried out against them in the future.
". (II). Payment is made yearly and will "constitute an ongoing tribute by
which their security is established". Reconciliation and security last as
lone as the pavment is made. If the pavment ceases, then the jihad resumes.
A treaty of reconciliation may be renewable, but must not exceed 10 years.
In the chapter “The Division of the Fay and the Ghaneemah” (booty),
al-Mawardi examines the regulations pertaining to the land taken from the
infidels. With regard to land taken through treaty, specifically, he
indicates two possibilities: either the infidels convert or they pay the
jizya and their life and belongings are protected. And the nature of such
“protection” is clarified in this definition of jizya by the seminal Arabic
lexicographer, E.W. Lane, based on a careful analysis of the etymology of
the term:

 

“The tax that is taken from the free non-Muslim subjects of a Muslim
government whereby they ratify the compact that assures them protection, as
though it were compensation for not being slain”

 

Another important aspect of the jizya is the widely upheld view of the
classical schools of Islamic jurisprudence about the deliberately
humiliating imposition and procurement of this tax. Here is a discussion of
the ceremonial for collection of the jizya by the 13th century Shafi’i
jurist an-Nawawi:

 

…The infidel who wishes to pay his poll tax must be treated with disdain by
the collector: the collector remains seated and the infidel remains standing
in front of him, his head bowed and his back bent. The infidel personally
must place the money on the scales, while the collector holds him by the
beard, and strikes him on both cheeks…

 

A remarkable account from 1894 by an Italian Jew traveling in Morocco,
demonstrates the humiliating conditions under which the jizya was still
being collected within the modern era:

The kaid Uwida and the kadi Mawlay Mustafa had mounted their tent today near
the Mellah [Jewish ghetto] gate and had summoned the Jews in order to
collect from them the poll tax [jizya] which they are obliged to pay the
sultan. They had me summoned also. I first inquired whether those who were
European-protected subjects had to pay this tax. Having learned that a great
many of them had already paid it, I wished to do likewise. After having
remitted the amount of the tax to the two officials, I received from the
kadi's guard two blows in the back of the neck. Addressing the kadi and the
kaid, I said" 'Know that I am an Italian protected subject.' Whereupon the
kadi said to his guard: 'Remove the kerchief covering his head and strike
him strongly; he can then go and complain wherever he wants.' The guards
hastily obeyed and struck me once again more violently. This public
mistreatment of a European-protected subject demonstrates to all the Arabs
that they can, with impunity, mistreat the Jews. [10]

The “contract of the jizya”, or “dhimma” encompassed other obligatory and
recommended obligations for the conquered non-Muslim "dhimmi" peoples.
Collectively, these "obligations" formed the discriminatory system of
dhimmitude imposed upon non-Muslims-Jews, Christians, Zoroastrians, Hindus,
and Buddhists-subjugated by jihad. Some of the more salient features of
dhimmitude include: the prohibition of arms for the vanquished non-Muslims
(dhimmis), and of church bells; restrictions concerning the building and
restoration of churches, synagogues, and temples; inequality between Muslims
and non-Muslims with regard to taxes and penal law; the refusal of dhimmi
testimony by Muslim courts; a requirement that Jews, Christians, and other
non-Muslims, including Zoroastrians and Hindus, wear special clothes; and
the overall humiliation and abasement of non-Muslims.   It is important to
note that these regulations and attitudes were institutionalized as
permanent features of the sacred Islamic law, or Shari' a. The writings of
the much lionized Sufi theologian and jurist al-Ghazali (d. 1111) highlight
how the institution of dhimmitude was simply a normative, and prominent
feature of the Shari'a:

...the dhimmi is obliged not to mention Allah or His Apostle.. .Jews,
Christians, and Majians must pay thejizya [poll tax on non-Muslims]...on
offering up thejizya, the dhimmi must hang his head while the official takes
hold of his beard and hits [the dhimmt] on the protruberant bone beneath his
ear [i.e., the mandible]... They are not permitted to ostentatiously display
their wine or church bells...their houses may not be higher than the
Muslim's, no matter how low that is. The dhimmi may not ride an elegant
horse or mule; he may ride a donkey only if the saddler-work] is of wood. He
may not walk on the good part of the road. They [the dhimmis] have to wear
[an identifying] patch [on their clothing], even women, and even in the
[public] baths...[dhimmis] must hold their tongue.

 

Bat Ye'or is an accomplished contemporary scholar of those unique Islamic
institutions which regulate the relations between Muslims and non-Muslims:
jihad, and its corollary institution, dhimmitude, the repressive and
humiliating system of governance imposed upon those non-Muslims (i.e.,
dhimmis) subjugated by jihad. Although she coined the term dhimmitude, Bat
Ye'or's characterization of the salient features of this institution is
entirely consistent with the views of seminal scholars from the early and
mid 20th century. Sir Jadunath Sarkar, for example, a pre-eminent historian
of Mughal India, wrote the following in 1920 regarding the impact of
centuries of jihad and dhimmitude on the indigenous Hindus of the Indian
subcontinent:

 

Islamic theology, therefore tells the true believer that his highest  duty
is to make 'exertion (jihad) in the path of God', by waging war against
infidel lands (dar-ul-harb) till they become part of the realm  of Islam
(dar-ul-Islam) and their populations are converted into true  believers.
After conquest the entire infidel population becomes theoretically reduced
to the status of slaves of the conquering army. The men taken with arms are
to be slain or sold into slavery and their wives and children reduced to
servitude. As for the non-combatants among the vanquished, if they are not
massacred outright, - as the canon lawyer Shaf'i declares to be the Qur'anic
injunction,- it is only to give them a respite till they are so wisely
guided as to accept the true faith.

 

The conversion of the entire population to Islam and the extinction of every
form of dissent is the ideal of the Muslim State. If any infidel is suffered
to exist in the community, it is as a necessary evil, and for a transitional
period only. Political and social disabilities must be imposed on him, and
bribes offered to him from the public funds, to hasten the day of his
spiritual enlightenment and the addition of his name to the roll of true
believers...

 

A non-Muslim therefore cannot be a citizen of the State; he is a member of a
depressed class; his status is a modified form of slavery. He lives under a
contract (zimma, or 'dhimma') with the State: for the life and property
grudgingly spared to him by the commander of the faithful he must undergo
political and social disabilities, and pay a commutation money. In short,
his continued existence in the State after the conquest of his country by
the Muslims is conditional upon his person and property made subservient to
the cause of Islam.

 

He must pay a tax for his land (kharaj), from which the early Muslims were
exempt; he must pay other exactions for the maintenance of the army, in
which he cannot enlist even if he offers to render personal service instead
of paying the poll-tax; and he must show by humility of dress and behavior
that he belongs to s subject class. No non-Muslim can wear fine dresses,
ride on horseback or carry arms; he must behave respectfully and
submissively to every member of the dominant sect.

As the learned Qazi Mughis-ud-din declared, in accordance with the teachings
of the books on Canon Law: ‘The Hindus are designated in the Law as ‘payers
of tribute’ (kharaj-guzar); and when the revenue officer demands silver from
them, they should, without question and with all humility and respect,
tender gold. If the officer throws dirt into their mouths, they must without
reluctance open their mouths wide to receive it. By these acts of
degradation are shown the extreme obedience of the zimmi [dhimmi], the
glorification of the true faith of Islam, and the abasement of false faiths.
God himself orders them to be humiliated , (as He says, ‘till they pay
jaziya) with the hand and are humbled…The Prophet has commanded us to slay
them, plunder them, and make them captive…No other religious authority
except the great Imam (Hanifa) whose faith we follow, has sanctioned the
imposition of jaziya on Hindus. According to all other theologians, the rule
for Hindus is ‘Either death or Islam’.


The zimmi is under certain legal disabilities with regard to testimony in
law courts, protection under criminal law, and in marriage…he cannot erect
new temples, and has to avoid any offensive publicity in the exercise of his
worship…Every device short of massacre in cold blood was resorted to in
order to convert heathen subjects. In addition to the poll-tax and public
degradation in dress and demeanor imposed on them, the non-Muslims were
subjected to various hopes and fears. Rewards in the form of money and
public employment were offered to apostates from Hinduism. The leaders of
Hindu religion and society were systematically repressed, to deprive the
sect of spiritual instruction, and their religious gatherings and
processions were forbidden in order to prevent the growth of solidarity and
sense of communal strength among them. No new temple was allowed to be built
nor any old one to be repaired, so that the total disappearance of Hindu
worship was to be merely a question of time. But even this delay, this slow
operation of Time, was intolerable to many of the more fiery spirits of
Islam, who tried to hasten the abolition of ‘infidelity’ by anticipating the
destructive hand of Time and forcibly pulling down temples.

 

When a class are publicly depressed and harassed by law and executive
caprice alike, they merely content themselves with dragging on an animal
existence. With every generous instinct of the soul crushed out of them, the
intellectual culture merely adding a keen edge to their sense of
humiliation, the Hindus could not be expected to produce the utmost of which
they were capable; their lot was to be hewers of wood and drawers of water
to their masters, to bring grist to the fiscal mill, to develop a low
cunning and flattery as the only means of saving what they could of their
own labor. Amidst such social conditions, the human hand and the human
spirit cannot achieve their best; the human soul cannot soar to its highest
pitch. The barrenness of intellect and meanness of spirit of the Hindu upper
classes are the greatest condemnation of Muhammadan rule in India. The
Muhammadan political tree judged by its fruit was an utter failure.

 

Nearly four decades later, Antoine Fattal, whose 1958 Le Statut Legal de
Musulmans en Pays' d'Islam remains the benchmark analysis of non-Muslims
(especially Christians and Jews) living under the Shari'a (i.e., Muslim
Law), observed:

 

…Even today, the study of the jihad is part of the curriculum of all the
Islamic institutes. In the universities of Al-Azhar, Nagaf, and Zaitoune,
students are still taught that the holy war [jihad] is a binding
prescriptive decree, pronounced against the Infidels, which will only be
revoked with the end of the world... If he [the dhimmi] is tolerated, it is
for reasons of a spiritual nature, since there is always the hope that he
might be converted; or of a material nature, since he bears almost the whole
tax burden. He has his place in society, but he is constantly reminded of
his inferiority...In no way is the dhimmi the equal of the Muslim. He is
marked out for social inequality and belongs to a despised caste; unequal in
regard to individual rights; unequal in the Law Courts as his evidence is
not admitted by any Muslim tribunal and for the same crime his punishment is
greater than that imposed on  Muslims...No social relationship, no
fellowship is possible between Muslims and dhimmis...

 

FP: If jihad war is a permanent and uniquely Islamic institution, as you
argue, what hope is there for a peaceful Islam? What can good-intentioned
Muslim reformers and moderates do to try to bring Islam into the democratic
and modern world?

 

Bostom: Fifteen years ago (September, 1990)  Bat Ye’or made these prescient
observations regarding what  needed to be done by the Muslim leadership and
clerical and intellectual elites to initiate an Islamic version of Vatican
II, a  sort of  “Mecca-Cairo-Qom-Najaf One (I) ” self-examination, mea
culpa, and reform process:

 

…this effort cannot succeed without a complete recasting of mentalities, the
desacralization of the historic jihad and an unbiased examination of Islamic
imperialism. Without such a process, the past will continue to poison the
present and inhibit the establishment of harmonious relationships. When all
is said and done, such self-criticism is hardly exceptional. Every scourge,
such as religious fanaticism, the crusades, the inquisition, slavery,
apartheid, colonialism, Nazism and, today, communism, are analyzed,
examined, and exorcized in the West. Even Judaism - harmless in comparison
with the power of the Church and the Christian empires- caught, in its turn,
in the great modernization movement, has been forced to break away from some
traditions. It is inconceivable that Islam, which began in Mecca and swept
through three continents, should alone avoid a critical reflection on the
mechanisms of its power and expansion. The task of assessing their history
must be undertaken by the Muslims themselves…there is room to hope that the
ending of the contentious dhimmi past will open the way to harmonization of
the whole human family….

 

Sadly, a decade and one half later, most Muslim (and many Western)
intellectuals continue to justify the concept of jihad as an inoffensive
spiritual engagement with one’s own evil instincts, or purely “defensive”
combat for “justice”, and dhimmitude is still completely denied, ignored or
obfuscated. Therefore non-Muslims of all ilks who have been victimized and
continue to be victimized by these heinous Muslim institutions must abandon
their silence and be encouraged to describe this history openly in the hope
that this process will elicit a sincere movement of acknowledgement, reform,
and reconciliation within the world Muslim community. Admittedly, we seem
generations away from such an overall process now. Thus in the interim,
those preaching the bigoted and murderous doctrines of jihad within the West
should be deported. Moreover, we in the West must press our political and
religious leaders to demand that such bellicose, hate-mongering
"educational" practices be abolished in all Islamic nations, without
exception, under threat of severe, broad ranging economic sanctions. 

 

Finally, I think Ibn Warraq highlighted the strategies required for genuine
reform of Islam and Muslim societies in a thoughtful essay published May
2003:

 

There are some (I believe, misguided) liberal Muslims who deny any such
transformation is necessary, that Islam need not be marginalized for liberty
to flourish. These liberals often argue that the real Islam is compatible
with liberal democracy, that the real Islam is feminist, that the real Islam
is egalitarian, that the real Islam tolerates other religions and beliefs,
and so on. They then proceed to some truly creative re-interpretation of the
embarrassing, intolerant and misogynist verses of the Koran. But
intellectual honesty demands that we reject just such dishonest tinkering
with the Koran’s text, which, while it may be open to some
re-interpretation, is not infinitely elastic. The truth is there is no real
difference between Islam and Islamic fundamentalism – at most there is a
difference of degree, but not of kind. There are moderate Muslims, but Islam
itself is not moderate. All the tenets of so-called Islamic fundamentalism
are derived from the Koran, the Sunna, and the Hadith – the defining texts
of Islam – and elaborated in intimate detail by the classical Muslim jurists
from all four schools of Sunni Islamic jurisprudence, as well as by Shi’ite
jurists. The only solution is to bring the questions of human rights out of
the religious sphere and into the sphere of the civil state, in other words
to separate religion from the state and promote a secular state where Islam
is relegated to the personal. Here, Islam would continue to provide
consolation, comfort, and meaning, as it has to millions of individuals for
centuries, yet it would not decree the mundane affairs of state.

 

Warraq stressed the crucial need to encourage scholarly criticism of the
Koran, in particular, and more generally, to promote secular education
emphasizing critical thought:

 

First, we who live in the free West and enjoy freedom of expression and
scientific inquiry should encourage a rational look at Islam, should
encourage Koranic criticism. Only Koranic criticism can help Muslims to look
at their Holy Scripture in a more rational and objective way, and prevent
young Muslims from being fanaticized by the Koran’s less tolerant verses. It
does not make sense to lament the lack of a reformation in Islam, and at the
same time boycott books like Why I am Not A Muslim nor to cry ‘Islamophobia’
(or ‘fatwah!’) every time a critique of Islam is offered. Instead, political
leaders, journalists and even scholars are bent on protecting the tender
sensibilities of the Muslims. We are not doing Islam any favors by
protecting it from Enlightenment values. … We can encourage rationality by
secular education. This will mean the closing of religious madrassas where
young children from poor families learn only the Koran by heart, learn the
doctrine of Jihad – learn , in short, to be fanatics… What kind of
education? My priority would be the wholesale rewriting of school texts,
which at present preach intolerance of non-Muslims, particularly Jews. One
hopes that education will encourage critical thinking and rationality. Again
to encourage pluralism, I should like to see the glories of pre-Islamic
history taught to all children.

 

FP: Ok fair enough. But, Mr. Bostom, I think it is crucial for us to keep in
mind that Muslims have the power to reform their religion and, in the
context of something like Islam’s gender apartheid, make the liberal and
tolerant teachings of their religion cancel out the rigid and misogynist
ones.

 

For instance, it is common sense that Muslims under the influence of
Wahhabism will obviously be far more oppressive toward their women than
Muslims who follow more liberal and moderate understandings of Islam.
Moreover, great hope remains that a Muslim “feminist” movement can
reinterpret Islamic teachings and empower women within an Islamic framework.

 

As you know, Moroccan sociologist Fatima Mernissi has put forward a strong
thesis showing that successive Muslim leaders manipulated Islamic texts to
enforce male privileges and that Muslims can, therefore, reinterpret many
Islamic teachings in a way to bring rights back to women under Islam.

 

You can’t deny that Muslim feminists like Irshad Manji have provided much
optimism in showing how Muslims can renew their religion and allow it to
empower women and to promote pluralism and diversity. And you can’t deny
that there are positive precedents for this process.

 

As Isobel Coleman points out in the current issue of Foreign Affairs in her
article, “Women, Islam, and the New Iraq,” in recent years in Morocco and
Indonesia reformers have made significant gains in pushing through
legislation that promote gender equality on Islamic grounds, thus
demonstrating that progressive change can come from within Islam.

 

Right Mr. Bostom? We must work with Muslim progressives and feminists who
are really, in the end, our greatest hope in our battle with Islamist terror
and extremism. Correct?

 

Bostom: It is axiomatic that starting with courageous individual Muslims,
and expanding outward, ultimately only Muslims can reform their
societies—i.e., reforms cannot be imposed by the West. I disagree
completely, however, with the notion that Muslims, especially Muslim women
must pin their hopes on mythical notions of Islamic feminism alleged to be
contained within the core texts of Islam—the Koran, the hadith, and the
sira—and some unfulfilled utopian opportunities from pre-modern Islamic
history. This is patently absurd. And unfortunately, the evolution of
Mernissi’s own thought took a tragic turn backwards between 1975 and 1991,
when she felt compelled to embrace a so-called Islamic reformist agenda.
Originally Mernissi’s goal was to expose the ideological connections between
the normative Islamic system and the practices of patriarchy, not to
reinvent Islam in a contemporary mold and reclaim a new meaning for it.
Beyond the Veil (first published in the U.S. in 1975) was a searing assault
on the systematic Muslim patriarchy of Islam. Mernissi strove to
demonstrate:

 

Sexual equality violates Islam’s premise, actualized in its laws, that
heterosexual love is dangerous to Allah’s order. Muslim marriage is based on
male dominance. The desegregation of the sexes violates Islam’s ideology on
women’s position in the social order : that women should be under the
authority of fathers, brothers, or husbands. Since women are considered by
Allah to be a destructive element, they are to be spatially confined and
excluded from matters other than those of the family. Female access to
non-domestic space is put under the control of males.

However, in her 1991 The Veil and the Male Elite,  Mernissi’s criticism no
longer emphasized that the image of an ideal woman in the Qur’an and the
hadith was one of submission and passivity, her language became reverential
toward Allah and Muhammad, and her self-contradictory re-interpretation of
Qur’anic verses devolved into distressing apologetics. A cogent rebuttal of
Mernissi’s newly evolved positions in 1991 was provided by Marlene Kanawati
in a review of The Veil and the Male Elite. Kanawati dismissed Mernissi’s
creation of a mythical pre-modern egalitarian Islamic message, which remains
the cornerstone of so-called “neo-feminist”  Islam :

Given the socio-political milieu of the (pre-modern) time, if partisans of
the "ethical-spiritual" dimension had overthrown the established order, it
is inconceivable that an empire with radically different mores, in harmony
with modern feminism, would have ensued. It is not clear to me that a
fundamentally different Islam would have been created for women if, say, the
kharijis had prevailed over the orthodoxy. Were they not Islam’s first
fundamentalists ? The authoritative canonical version that they might have
created would have equally served the interests of the male dominant
classes, notwithstanding the spiritual pretensions so characteristic of a
political and religious dissent when it is confined to the political
wilderness. Given the pre-modern mind-set and the socioeconomic conditions
of the time, the alternative to the Umayyid or Abbasid caliphate was not the
"egalitarianism" of the Kharijites, the "rationalism" of the Mu‘tazilis, or
the "humanism" of the Sufis. It was anarchy.

 

True reformers, such as the Iranian secularist Reza Afshari, and others
vying for the rights of Muslim women, in particular, have criticized those
such as Fatima Mernissi for their misleading, disingenuous attempts to graft
modern Western concepts such  (rationalism, liberalism, and feminism) onto
the pre-modern Islamic paradigm.

 

The Islamically correct pseudo-reforms of Fatima Mernissi lead quite
logically to the empowerment of authentic Muslim women like Martyr Mom Umm
Nidal, along with her victorious Hamas female supporters in the Palestinian
Legislative Council, and larger Palestinian society. Following the path
outlined by serious reformers such as Ibn Warraq and Reza Afshari, who
embrace, without equivocation, modern conceptions of human rights developed
uniquely in the West, has empowered, in stark contrast, the intrepid secular
Muslim Dutch Parliamentarian Hirsi Ali. Which is the preferred outcome?

 

I also think it is incumbent upon the media to highlight lesser known and
certainly less media savvy reformers like Homa Arjmand, rather than Irshad
Manji. The indefatigable and courageous Arjmand almost singlehandedly
defeated the initiative to create Shari'a courts in Canada; Manji only lent
late, tepid support to this important effort, and seems far more dedicated
to self-promotion.

 

And lastly, to end on a truly optimistic note, MEMRI recently uncovered that
most scarce, but cherished commodity—Dr. Iqbal Al-Gharbi, a Muslim reformer
willing to acknowledge, and offer mea culpa for the living legacy of jihad
(including jihad slavery), and dhimmitude.

 

Al-Gharbi on jihad: “We still insist that we are always the victims, and
that we are always innocent. Our history is angelic, our imperialism was a
welcome conquest [futuhat], our invaders [ghuzah] were liberators, our
violence was a holy Jihad, our murderers were Shahids…”

 

Al-Gharbi on jihad slavery: “We must assess Islamic history objectively, and
issue an historic public apology to the Africans who were abducted,
enslaved, and expelled from their homes... The Arabs and the Muslims played
a sizeable role in this loathsome trade. They alone caused the uprooting of
20 million people…”

 

Al-Gharbi on dhimmitude: “We must renounce the dhimmi laws that fill the
books of jurisprudence, and apologize to the Christian and the Jewish
minorities [for the past]. We must put an end to our changing of the facts,
and to the miserable fabrications that we created in an attempt to prove
that these minorities enjoyed a high status in the Islamic state, based on
specific historical events presented in a truncated fashion and not in full.
…The best example of this is the famous Pact of Omar that we present as the
supreme example of tolerance and coexistence [when in fact it set
restrictions on minorities].”

 

Dr. Al Gharbi suggests this practical step: “The Islamic [world] must
renounce, once and for all, the Islam…that divides the world into the camp
of Islam and the camp of unbelief, the camp of war and the camp of peace.
This division destroys any serious dialogue between religions and cultures.”

 

Historical acknowledgement and mea culpa, linked to a formal end to the
bigoted Islamic concept of Dar al Harb—Dr. Gharbi's welcomed prescription
for initiating genuine reform within Muslim societies.

 

FP: Dr. Bostom, thank you for joining us today.

 

Bostom: Thanks again Jamie.




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