Islam's Public Enemy #1
Coptic priest Zakaria Botros
fights fire with fire.
By Raymond
Ibrahim
Though he is little known in the West, Coptic priest
Zakaria Botros named
Islam's Public Enemy #1 by the Arabic newspaper, al-Insan al-Jadid has
been making waves in the Islamic world. Along with fellow missionaries mostly
Muslim converts he appears frequently on the Arabic channel al-Hayat
(i.e., Life TV). There, he addresses controversial topics of theological
significance free from the censorship imposed by Islamic authorities or
self-imposed through fear of the zealous mobs who fulminated against the
infamous cartoons of Mohammed. Botros' excurses on little-known but embarrassing
aspects of Islamic law and tradition have become a thorn in the side of Islamic
leaders throughout the Middle East.
Botros is an unusual figure onscreen: robed, with a huge cross around his neck,
he sits with both the Koran and the Bible in easy reach. Egypt's Copts members
of one of the oldest Christian communities in the Middle East have in many
respects come to personify the demeaning Islamic institution of dhimmitude
(which demands submissiveness from non-Muslims, in accordance with Koran 9:29).
But the fiery Botros does not submit, and minces no words. He has famously made
of Islam
ten demands, whose
radical nature he uses to highlight Islam's own radical demands on non-Muslims.
The result? Mass conversions to Christianity if clandestine ones. The very
public conversion of high-profile Italian journalist Magdi Allam who was
baptized by Pope Benedict in Rome on Saturday is only the tip of the iceberg.
Indeed, Islamic cleric Ahmad al-Qatani stated on al-Jazeera TV a while
back that some six million Muslims convert to Christianity annually, many of
them persuaded by Botross public ministry. More recently, al-Jazeera
noted Life TV's unprecedented evangelical raid on the Muslim world. Several
factors account for the Botros phenomenon.
First, the new media particularly satellite TV and the Internet (the main
conduits for Life TV) have made it possible for questions about Islam to be made
public without fear of reprisal. It is unprecedented to hear Muslims from around
the Islamic world even from Saudi Arabia, where imported Bibles are confiscated
and burned call into the show to argue with Botros and his colleagues, and
sometimes, to accept Christ.
Secondly, Botross broadcasts are in Arabic the language of some 200 million
people, most of them Muslim. While several Western writers have published
persuasive critiques of Islam, their arguments go largely unnoticed in the
Islamic world. Botross mastery of classical Arabic not only allows him to reach
a broader audience, it enables him to delve deeply into the voluminous Arabic
literature much of it untapped by Western writers who rely on translations and
so report to the average Muslim on the discrepancies and affronts to moral
common sense found within this vast corpus.
A third reason for Botross success is that his polemical technique has proven
irrefutable. Each of his episodes has a theme from the pressing to the esoteric
often expressed as a question (e.g., Is jihad an obligation for all Muslims?;
Are women inferior to men in Islam?; Did Mohammed say that adulterous female
monkeys should be stoned? Is drinking the urine of prophets salutary according
to sharia?). To answer the question, Botros meticulously quotes always careful
to give sources and reference numbers from authoritative Islamic texts on the
subject, starting from the Koran; then from the canonical sayings of the prophet
the Hadith; and finally from the words of prominent Muslim theologians
past and present the illustrious ulema.
Typically, Botross presentation of the Islamic material is sufficiently detailed
that the controversial topic is shown to be an airtight aspect of Islam. Yet,
however convincing his proofs, Botros does not flatly conclude that, say,
universal jihad or female inferiority are basic tenets of Islam. He treats the
question as still open and humbly invites the ulema, the revered articulators of
sharia law, to respond and show the error in his methodology. He does demand,
however, that their response be based on al-dalil we al-burhan, evidence
and proof, one of his frequent refrains not shout-downs or sophistry.
More often than not, the response from the ulema is deafening silence which has
only made Botros and Life TV more enticing to Muslim viewers. The ulema who
have publicly addressed Botros conclusions often find themselves forced to
agree with him which has led to some amusing (and embarrassing) moments on live
Arabic TV.
Botros spent three years bringing to broad public attention a scandalous and
authentic hadith stating that women should breastfeed strange men with whom they
must spend any amount of time. A leading hadith scholar, Abd al-Muhdi, was
confronted with this issue on the live talk show of popular Arabic host Hala
Sirhan. Opting to be truthful, al-Muhdi confirmed that going through the motions
of breastfeeding adult males is, according to sharia, a legitimate way of making
married women forbidden to the men with whom they are forced into contact the
logic being that, by being breastfed, the men become like sons to the women and
therefore can no longer have sexual designs on them.
To make matters worse, Ezzat Atiyya, head of the Hadith department at al-Azhar
University Sunni Islam's most authoritative institution went so far as to issue
a fatwa legitimatizing Rida al-Kibir (sharia's term for breastfeeding the
adult), which prompted such outrage in the Islamic world that it was
subsequently
recanted.
Botros played the key role in exposing this obscure and embarrassing issue and
forcing the ulema to respond. Another guest on Hala Sirhans show, Abd al-Fatah,
slyly indicated that the entire controversy was instigated by Botros: I know you
all [fellow panelists] watch that channel and that priest and that
none of you [pointing at Abd al-Muhdi] can ever respond to him, since he
always documents his sources!
Incapable of rebutting Botros, the only strategy left to the ulema (aside from a
rumored $5-million bounty on his head) is to ignore him. When his name is
brought up, they dismiss him as a troublemaking liar who is backed by who else?
international Jewry. They could easily refute his points, they insist, but will
not deign to do so. That strategy may satisfy some Muslims, but others are
demanding straightforward responses from the ulema.
The
most dramatic example of
this occurred on another famous show on the international station, Iqra.
The host, Basma a conservative Muslim woman in full hijab asked two prominent
ulema, including Sheikh Gamal Qutb, one-time grand mufti of al-Azhar University,
to explain the legality of the Koranic verse (4:24) that permits men to freely
copulate with captive women. She repeatedly asked: According to sharia, is
slave-sex still applicable? The two ulema would give no clear answer dissembling
here, going off on tangents there. Basma remained adamant: Muslim youth were
confused, and needed a response, since there is a certain channel and a
certain man who has discussed this issue over twenty times and has
received no response from you.
The flustered Sheikh Qutb roared, low-life people like that must be totally
ignored! and stormed off the set. He later returned, but refused to admit that
Islam indeed permits sex-slaves, spending his time attacking Botros instead.
When Basma said Ninety percent of Muslims, including myself, do not understand
the issue of concubinage in Islam and are having a hard time swallowing it, the
sheikh responded, You don't need to understand. As for Muslims who watch and are
influenced by Botros, he barked, "too bad for them!" If my son is sick and
chooses to visit a mechanic, not a doctor that's his problem!
But the ultimate reason for Botros' success is that unlike his Western
counterparts who criticize Islam from a political standpoint his primary
interest is the salvation of souls. He often begins and concludes his programs
by stating that he loves all Muslims as fellow humans and wants to steer them
away from falsehood to Truth. To that end, he doesn't just expose troubling
aspects of Islam. Before concluding every program, he quotes pertinent biblical
verses and invites all his viewers to come to Christ.
Botros' motive is not to incite the West against Islam, promote Israeli
interests, or demonize Muslims, but to draw Muslims away from the dead legalism
of sharia to the spirituality of Christianity. Many Western critics fail to
appreciate that, to disempower radical Islam, something theocentric and
spiritually satisfying not secularism, democracy, capitalism, materialism,
feminism, etc. must be offered in its place. The truths of one religion
can only be challenged and supplanted by the truths of another. And so
Father Zakaria Botros has been fighting fire with fire.
The
Christian Falangist Party prays for the success of Father Botros and for his
well being. Any Muslim who converts to Christianity becomes our brother and
ceases to be our enemy. It would be our greatest desire that all Muslims come to
Jesus Christ.
Raymond Ibrahim is editor of
The Al Qaeda Reader.