http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=83A537CA-7F5D-4A3D-8897-
2F93FCD45C4D
 
Islam's Peace Offensive         
By
<file:///C:/Program%20Files/Common%20Files/Microsoft%20Shared/Stationery/aut
hors.aspx?Name=Stephen Brown and Jamie Glazov> Stephen Brown and Jamie
Glazov
FrontPageMagazine.com | Tuesday, October 16, 2007 

In a move eerily reminiscent of the Soviet "peace offensives", 138 leading
Muslim scholars have composed a
<http://www.timesonline.co.uk/multimedia/archive/00218/Open_letter_from__M_2
18459a.pdf> letter to Christianity's leaders, with Pope Benedict's name
heading the list, requesting a meeting to discuss the "common essentials of
our two religions." The authors warn that "the survival of the world" is at
stake if the two religions do not make peace, which, the Muslim authors
believe, is possible since the basis of Islam and Christianity is "the two
commandments of love."

While it is at least admirable that these learned representatives of Islam
acknowledge that their religion is at war with Christianity (since much of
the Christian world is in denial), the main sticking point, the letter makes
clear, is the aggressive nature of Christianity. The Muslim scholars
emphasize that: "As Muslims, we say to Christians that we are not against
them and that Islam is not against them - so long as they do not wage war
against Muslims on account of their religion, oppress them and drive them
out of their homes."

The problem with this theme, however, is that the religious believers being
oppressed and driven out of their homes in the world today are Christians,
and other non-Muslims, who find themselves trapped under Muslim rule. It is
not surprising that the Muslim scholars' "peace" letter nowhere mentions the
murder of Palestinian Christian Rami Ayyad, who was
<http://www.nysun.com/article/64354> recently abducted, tortured and
murdered in Gaza City. Six months earlier, a bomb had destroyed his
Christian bookstore, the Holy Bible Society. Ayyad's murder and the bombing
of his bookstore are consistent with the pattern of barbaric violence that
is being
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=9636F146-135E-4387-BCFB
-32EED21805AChttp://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=4072499F-54
22-4FC8-A8AC-4B068A934FE5> carried out by Muslims against Christians in the
Gaza strip today, particularly by a jihadist group that calls itself "The
Righteous Swords of Islam."

Christians living under the Palestinian Authority
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=%7bBBA7075E-B5C6-42CE-9
53D-0480F0B784EC%7d> are habitually brutalized and must now practice their
religion in secret. Hamas is planning to enforce the jizya, the special tax
mandated by the Qur'an (9:29) for Jews and Christians. Christian women,
meanwhile, must veil themselves or face dire consequences. A few years ago,
members of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=9636F146-135E-4387-BCFB
-32EED21805AChttp://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=4072499F-54
22-4FC8-A8AC-4B068A934FE5> shot dead two Christian women for not wearing the
Islamic veil. The Muslim group explained: "We wanted to clean the
Palestinian house of prostitutes." 

It is no wonder then that a mass exodus of Christians is occurring under the
Palestinian Authority - just as has been the case almost everywhere where
Christians have been trapped under Islamic rule. Bethlehem used to be 85 per
cent Christian sixty years ago. Today, after decades of Muslim persecution,
Christian believers in one of Christianity's most holy sites comprise only
15 per cent of the population.

In Iraq, meanwhile,
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=4072499F-5422-4FC8-A8AC
-4B068A934FE5> Christians are the victims of a reign of terror being waged
by Muslims - a tragedy epitomized by the murder of Syrian Orthodox priest,
Fr. Boulos Iskander, by Muslims in the Iraqi city of Mosul. To be sure, Rami
Ayyad's and Fr. Iskander's tragic fates represent the victimization of all
Christians, everywhere from  <http://www.copticpope.org/> Egypt to Pakistan
and from Sudan to Nigeria, at the hands of Muslims.
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=4072499F-5422-4FC8-A8AC
-4B068A934FE5> Christians in these Islamic settings suffer constant
discrimination, harassment and persecution.

In the context of these ugly realities, the question must be asked: why did
the Muslim authors of the "peace" letter not mention these ingredients of
Muslim-Christian "relations"? Why did they not condemn the persecution of
Christians by Muslims and denounce the teachings on which this persecution
is based? Why did they not acknowledge that it is Muslims, not Christians,
who are killing other Muslims and driving them out of their homes today? For
instance, the United Nations calls Darfur the worst human rights situation
in the world today. It is a place where Muslims have killed about 300,000 of
their fellow Muslims. And the worst case of war being waged against Muslims
on account of their religion exists between Shiites and Sunnis -- who
slaughter each other off in Islamic countries like Iraq and Pakistan in the
thousands. Al Qaeda and its extremist allies are no slackers when it comes
to killing Muslims, the Algerian civil war being a good example. Oppression
and honor murders of Muslim women in both Islamic and western countries are
also not committed by Christians and peoples of other faiths. It is Muslim
men who oppress them, not just driving them out of their homes, but also
throwing them to their deaths over the balconies of their domiciles. Why did
the Muslim authors of the "peace" letter not mention these facts?

If the Muslim authors of the "peace" letter truly wanted to make peace with
Christians, one would also think that their letter would have contained a
categorical rejection of traditional Islamic law that mandates the death
penalty for any Muslim who leaves Islam, in accordance with
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=4072499F-5422-4FC8-A8AC
-4B068A934FE5> Muhammad's command: "Whoever changed his Islamic religion,
then kill him." Indeed, this is still the position of all the schools of
Islamic jurisprudence. Thus, Muslims who have converted to
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=9636F146-135E-4387-BCFB
-32EED21805AChttp://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=4072499F-54
22-4FC8-A8AC-4B068A934FE5> Christianity have suffered -- and continue to
suffer -- vicious persecution all over the Islamic world. Christianity,
meanwhile, has no equivalent of such a teaching and Christians are free all
around the world to convert to the religion of their choosing -- including
to Islam without a fear for their lives.

It is also curious: why did the Muslim authors not include a condemnation of
Sura 9:29 of the Qur'an, which commands Muslims to fight Jews and Christians
until they "pay the jizya with willing submission, and feel themselves
subdued"?

At the same time, why did they also not renounce the imperative in Islam to
subjugate the world under the rule of Islamic law, which is deeply embedded
within Islamic theology (see Qur'an 9:29, discussed above; Sahih Muslim
4294; and a host of other evidence from all the Sunni madhahib and Shi'ite
sources as well). Indeed, all the schools of Islamic jurisprudence teach
that it is part of the responsibility of the umma to subjugate the
non-Muslim world through jihad. Muslims waging jihad against the West
perpetually justify their acts on the basis of what they read in the Qur'an.
If Islam and Christianity are truly to exist peacefully, isn't it vital that
this reality be dealt with by Muslims who want true peace with Christianity?

If the Muslim authors of the letter truly wanted peace, one would also think
that they would have mentioned and repudiated Qur'an 5:17, which says that
those who believe in the divinity of Christ are unbelievers, or 4:171, which
says that Jesus was not crucified, or 9:30, which says that those who
believe that Jesus is the Son of God are accursed. One would think they
would know it is common sense that renouncing these teachings is a mandatory
stepping stone to better relations with Christians.

Overall, the main issue ignored by this letter is that it is the Christian
West that has shown its tolerance and respect for the Muslim religion by
allowing millions of its adherents to immigrate here, to build their mosques
and religious schools (sometimes with taxpayers' money), proselytize and
practice their faith unmolested, protected by scores of laws and human
rights codes. Which begs the question: if Christianity was so aggressive and
thought itself at war with Islam, why would it allow millions of the enemy's
followers to settle within its borders? Church leaders in Muslim countries
would be overjoyed to enjoy just a slight percentage of the freedoms and
legal protections granted to Islam in western countries. And what has the
West received in return for its tolerance? The attacks of 9/11, the Paris
riots, the Madrid and London bombings, and countless other thwarted
terrorist attacks - not to mention "peace" letters accusing it of an
exterminating aggression.

The Muslim "peace" letter and its calling of a Christian-Muslim peace
conference reminds one of the old Soviet practices of always claiming victim
status and talking peace while waging war around the world -- and at home
against its own people. And the Soviets always approached peace talks with
the one-way street attitude: what's ours is ours; what's yours is
negotiable. Even from the theological point of view, the Bishop of Rochester
in England, Pakistani-born Dr. Nazir-Ali, says that the Muslim scholars'
letter "seems to verge" on dictating "the terms on which the dialogue must
be conducted." Again, that manipulative, one-way street approach.

Before any "peace talks" are held, it would be wise -- and fair - for the
Muslim scholars to prove their sincerity in desiring real peace and
tolerance between the two religions. They must unequivocally condemn the
terrorism committed in the name of Islam; they must renounce violent jihad
and dhimmitude as obstacles to peace; they must renounce the more offensive
parts of Sharia law, such as slavery and discriminatory laws against women
and non-Muslims; and they must call for the end of all restrictions on
minority religions in Islamic countries. If these Muslim scholars signed a
letter supporting the building of Christian churches, even just one, in
places such as Saudi Arabia, then one could believe their desire for peace
was genuine.

But if these things are not done, then the peace "letter" of the Muslim
scholars can be seen to be what it really is: a passive-aggressive,
disingenuous, Soviet-style tactic to psychologically disarm the enemy in a
larger war that these learned Muslims admit their religion is already
waging. 

 



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