The Myth of Islam Busted
Review of The Myth of Islamic Tolerance. How Islamic Law Treats Non-Muslims,
ed. Robert Spencer.
by Bruce Thornton
Private Papers 

One of the greatest impediments in our war against jihadist terrorism is the
misinformation, half-truths, and outright lies about Islam entertained by
many of our public intellectuals. Examples are easy to find; here's one from
the otherwise intelligent Gregg Easterbrook, Atlantic Monthly contributor
and senior editor at The New Republic, from his recent book The Progress
Paradox: "Most Muslims are good-hearted, peace-loving people, just as are
most Christians and Jews. A small minority of Muslims are vicious fanatics.
But then the Christian ethos has spawned its share of hideous killers, among
them the terrorist Timothy McVeigh, and this tells us nothing about the
typical Christian." The obviously false analogy in the last sentence -
McVeigh didn't kill with the sanction of Christian theology or belief, which
has no doctrine remotely close to jihad, and millions of Christians didn't
dance in the streets after the bombing in Oklahoma City - could stand as a
textbook example of this logical fallacy.

Such ignorance - on display everywhere in the media, especially among those
eager to rationalize away the Islamic roots of the latest terrorist murder -
makes a book like The Myth of Islamic Tolerance particularly important.
Robert Spencer, in earlier books like Islam Unveiled, Onward Muslim
Soldiers, and the recent The Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam and the
Crusades, as well as on his invaluable website Jihad Watch
<http://www.jihadwatch.org/>  (jihadwatch.org <http://www.jihadwatch.org/>
), has already done yeoman's work in documenting Islam's fundamental
intolerance, martial aggressiveness, and sanctioning of violence against
non-Muslim infidels. The 58 essays in the current book attack root and
branch the widespread Orwellian myth, recently given cinematic sanction in
Kingdom of Heaven, that Islamic societies have been historically more
tolerant and friendly to minorities than has been Western culture.

Spencer sets the stage with an overview of the myth, its political uses, and
its refutation by the simple facts of history and Islamic jurisprudence and
theology. Politically, the myth provides psychic comfort for jaded
Westerners, especially Europeans, who have made the devil's bargain to
accept large numbers of Islamic immigrants as a source of cheap labor:
"European states eyeing the rapid growth of their Muslim populations console
themselves with tales of old al-Andalus, reassuring one another that Islamic
hegemony not only wasn't all that bad - it was a veritable golden age." Thus
European and American politicians cater to Islamic immigrants, whom they
believe will assimilate into Western society, their "tolerant" and
"peace-loving" religion merely enriching the multi-ethnic tapestry.

But as Spencer points out, and as history and Islamic doctrine show
repeatedly, "Islam doesn't accept a position as just one among a community
of disparate religions but must struggle to make itself supreme." Unable to
prosecute militarily the divine mandate to expand the House of Islam until
it encompasses the whole world, modern jihadists have been adept at
manipulating the various cultural pathologies of the West. As Ibn Warraq
points out in his Foreword, the old myth of the "noble savage," the habit of
idealizing more primitive or alien non-Western cultures in order to
castigate one's own, has from the beginning of Western contact with Islam
distorted the understanding of it. Later, Great Power geopolitical contests
reinforced these European idealizations of Islamic societies, particularly
the Ottoman Turks. The result has been centuries of mythic idealizations
that continue to obscure the true nature of Islam, leading to the strange
phenomenon we see nearly every day: non-Muslim Westerners "hastening," as
Spencer puts it, "to assure the public that the Islam of the terrorists is
not the 'true Islam,' which is, they maintain, a benign and tolerant thing."

Eager to display their sensitivity to and tolerance of the cultural "other,"
apologists like those Spencer liberally quotes end up arrogantly asserting
that millions of practicing Muslims don't understand their own religion. But
of course the jihadists know what their religion teaches about non-Muslims:
they are categorically inferior infidels, particularly the "People of the
Book," Jews and Christians, "renegades who have rejected this final
revelation [of Muhammad] out of corruption and malice and who have exchanged
truth for falsehood." They are accursed, and as such, it is the duty of
every Muslim "to fight them," in the words of the Qur'an, "until persecution
is no more, and religion is all for Allah." In a later verse this injunction
is specifically directed against Jews and Christians: "Fight those who
believe not in Allah nor the Last Day, nor hold that forbidden which hath
been forbidden by Allah and His Messenger, nor acknowledge the religion of
Truth, (even if they are) of the People of the Book, until they pay the
Jizya [a special tax on non-Muslims] with willing submission, and feel
themselves subdued."

As for those fantasies of intercultural harmony entertained by many Western
multiculturalists, consider this verse from the Qur'an: "O ye who believe!
Take not the Jews and the Christians for your friends and protectors. They
are but friends and protectors to each other. And he amongst you that turn
to them (for friendship) is of them." As Spencer reminds us, "This is the
Qur'an that pious Muslims cherish and memorize in its entirety; it is for
them their primary guide to understanding how they should make their way in
the world and deal with other people. It is nothing short of staggering that
the myth of Islamic tolerance could have gained such currency in the teeth
of the Qur'an's open contempt and hatred for Jews and Christians and
incitements to violence against them." Spencer's survey of the Hadith, the
words and deeds attributed to Muhammed and second in authority to the
Qur'an; the interpretations of the Hadith and Qur'an by centuries of Islamic
jurisprudence; and the writings of modern Islamic radicals like Sayyid Qutb,
the premier theorist of modern jihad, testifies to a consistent tradition of
intolerance towards non-Muslims and the divine sanction to subdue them to
Islam.

The subsequent essays in The Myth of Islamic Tolerance elaborate with
precise detail the more specific consequences of Islamic doctrine for
religious minorities living in Muslim countries. All are valuable and repay
careful reading; the Herculean efforts of David G. Littman over the years to
force the United Nations to acknowledge the abuse of non-Muslims' human
rights in Islamic nations should be more widely known and acknowledged. As
important as these documents are, the 18 essays and presentations by
historian Bat Ye'or offer the most exhaustive and meticulous documentation
of Islamic intolerance and oppression of  "dhimmi," those non-Muslims
subjected not just to a tax (the "jizya") but to institutionalized
oppression and humiliation, a whole host of repressive restrictions covering
dress, public behavior, and the practice of their religion. The particulars
of dhimmitude as documented by Bat Ye'or are strikingly similar to the Jim
Crow laws in the segregated South, and served a similar purpose: to remind
Jews and Christians every day of their inferiority to Muslims, and to
reinforce the dhimmi's precarious position, since the "covenant" by which
Muslims allowed the dhimmi to keep their lives could be revoked at any time,
whereupon the dhimmi could be justly plundered and slaughtered.

As well as documenting this practice in Islamic history and jurisprudence,
Bat Ye'or's essays also detail how the dynamic of dhimmitude continues to
inform relations between Europe and Islam today, as seen particularly in the
scapegoating and marginalization of Israel, the one nation comprising former
dhimmi who have shaken off their inferior status and thus challenged the
Islamic confidence in its own divinely sanctioned superiority: "Israel's
struggle is none other than a fight to destroy a dhimmi archetype that has
bewitched the Arab consciousness with a destructive and nostalgic dream of
hegemony, irreconcilable with principles of decolonization or with the
rights and liberties of peoples."

Indeed, the myth of Islamic tolerance is itself an expression of the dhimmi
mentality already characterizing many Westerners, their acceptance of their
culture's crimes and inferiority codified in multiculturalism and currently
facilitating jihadist terrorism. In this regard the late Edward Said's
Orientalism stands as one of the most pernicious and influential peddlers of
virulent anti-Westernism, in this instance one tarted up in the sort of
postmodern jargon that impresses badly educated humanities professors. Said
was the consummate academic hustler, a Westernized Egyptian child of
privilege who invented a Palestinian refugee persona that gratified the
American university's insatiable appetite for oppressed victims "of color"
(see the article by Justus Reid Weiner in the September 1999 issue of
Commentary). The logical, historical, and philosophical sins of Orientalism
have been noted by Bernard Lewis (reprinted in Islam and the West) and Keith
Windschuttle (New Criterion, January 1999), and to this list should be added
Ibn Warraq's devastating critique. Warraq is the brave author of Why I Am
Not a Muslim, a devastating exposure of Islam's intolerant and illiberal
principles and practices. His careful demolition of Said's dishonest and
intellectually incoherent book is alone worth the price of The Myth of
Islamic Tolerance.

For as Warraq makes clear, Said's book has indirectly sanctioned Islamic
terrorism by giving an apparent scholarly justification for blaming the
problems of the Middle East on Western colonial and imperial sins rather
than on flaws in Islam and Arab regimes, the social, cultural, economic, and
religious dysfunctions that prevent them from accommodating themselves to
the modern world. And it has reinforced among many American intellectuals
the bad habit of cultural self-loathing that leeches away moral support for
any action that would defend America's interests and security. Finally,
Orientalism has contributed to the corruption of Middle Eastern studies in
the West as manifested in the politically and ideologically skewed
"scholarship" that has obscured the truth of Islam, a sampling of which can
be read in Daniel Pipes's "Jihad and the Professors," another gem reprinted
in Spencer's book. As Warraq concludes, "Said has much to answer for."

The eagerness of Western intellectuals to betray their professional duty to
seek truth, and their zeal for idealizing a culture which wouldn't tolerate
their existence for five seconds, are both from the perspective of the
jihadists evidence that the West is a spiritually bankrupt dhimmi culture
ripe for submission to Islamic hegemony. Unfortunately, too many of our
leaders who otherwise understand the nature of the enemy endorse many of the
same myths exploded in this indispensable volume; just listen to one of Tony
Blair's closest aides, in a 2004 report on counter-terrorism: Britain's
strategy should be "to prevent terrorism by tackling its underlying causes,
to work together to resolve regional conflicts to support moderate Islam and
reform and to diminish support for terrorists by influencing relevant social
and economic issues." Meanwhile government-subsidized mosques were preaching
jihad and creating the bombers who murdered over 50 Londoners. If we are to
prevail in the struggle against jihad, we must first acknowledge the truth
about the enemy and his motivations. The Myth of Islamic Tolerance is a good
place to start.

 

http://www.victorhanson.com/articles/thornton080605.html
 


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