Endless Jihad
The Truth about Islam and Violence
Though we don't agree with every point in the below article we are posting it so that people can get a Catholic perspective on this timely subject.
Jihad
It was once a word unfamiliar to
American ears. But in recent years it has become all too familiar.
The actions of Muslim militants and terrorists have seared the
word into American consciousness.
Yet even with thousands of innocent civilians killed on American
soil by Islamic terrorists, the full significance of the Muslim
concept of jihad has not
been grasped by the American public.
In the days after September 11, 2001, American leaders rushed to
portray Islam as a peaceful religion that had been "hijacked"
by a fanatical band of terrorists. One hopes that these
assurances were merely tacticalthat nobody was meant to
believe them and that they were meant to assure the Muslim world
that the inevitable American reprisals were not directed at their
religion as a whole.
If the world Muslim community perceived America as attacking
Islam in general then the duty of every Muslim to fight for his
religionthe duty of jihadwould
have been invoked on a broad scale. The war against terrorism,
instead of simmering with occasional flare-ups, like the Cold War,
would have boiled over into a global conflagration, with the
Muslim countries of the world1.2 billion
strongmobilizing against America and the West.
Muslim apologists also rushed forward to assure the public that
Islam was a peaceful religion. They disingenuously declared that
the word Islam means
"peace." And they tried to portray the terrorists as a
fringe group outside the mainstream of Islam.
These were lies.
The usual meaning of Islam
in Arabic is not "peace" but "submission."
And if the terrorists were so far outside the mainstream, why did
Muslims all over the world burst into joyful, spontaneous
celebrations when the hijacked jetliners slammed into the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon? Why are Islamic governments afraid
to show "too much" public support for the war against
terrorism? Further, why are all the governments that covertly
support terrorism centered in the Muslim world?
The truth is that Islam is not a religion of peace. This is not
to say that every Muslim is violent at heart. Many are not.
Muslims have the same aspirations for living peaceful lives that
people have the world over. But they also have the same potential
for violence as others, and Islam as a religion and an ideology
seeks to exploit that potential.
Though there are millions of Muslims who want peaceful relations
with the West, millions who aspire to live in free societies like
America, there nevertheless remains a deep and powerful strain of
violence within Islam, and it is important that Americans
understand it.
They will have to face it in the future.
The Muslim Worldview
To
understand the connection between Islam and violence, one must
understand certain facets of the Muslim worldview. One of the
most important is the fact that, according to the historic Muslim
understanding, there is no separation between religion and
governmentwhat in Christianity would be called the
separation of church and state.
We are not speaking here of the secularist idea that the state
should marginalize religion and discourage people from voting
their consciences as Christians. We are talking about the idea
that church and state are not the same thing
and that they have different spheres of activity.
This idea of a separation between religion and government is not
characteristic of most peoples in world history. It is a
contribution to the world of ideas that was made by
Christiansindeed, by Christ himself. In his book Islam
and the West, historian Bernard Lewis
explains:
"The notion that religion and political authority, church
and state, are different and that they can or should be separated
is, in a profound sense, Christian. Its origins may be traced to
the teachings of Christ, notably in the famous passage in Matthew
22:21, in which Christ is quoted as saying: Render
therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesars; and
unto God the things that are Gods. This notion was
confirmed by the experience of the first Christians; its later
development was shaped and in a sense even imposed by the
subsequent history of Christendom. The persecutions endured by
the early Church made it clear that a separation between the two
was possible."
During much of Christian history church and state were united in
that each Christian state had an official church, whether it was
the Catholic Church or one of the Orthodox or Protestant churches.
In many countries that is still the case. Nevertheless, the
awareness remained that the two institutions were distinct and
had different functions and different spheres of legitimate
authority. They could in principle disagree and go their separate
ways when necessary.
Most peoples in world history have not shared this understanding.
In most societies, religion and government have been inseparably
linked. This is true in Muslim society as well. Lewis explains:
"In pagan Rome, Caesar was God. Christians were taught to
differentiate between what is due to Caesar and what is due to
God. For Muslims of the classical age, God was Caesar, and the
sovereigncaliph or sultanwas merely his vice-regent on
earth. This was more than a simple legal fiction. For Muslims the
state was Gods state, the army Gods army, and, of
course, the enemy was Gods enemy. Of more practical
importance, the law was Gods law, and in principle there
could be no other. The question of separating church and state
did not arise, since there was no church, as an autonomous
institution, to be separated. Church and state were one and the
same."
This means that, in the historic Muslim understanding, Islamic
society is or should be a theocracya society in which God
himself is the monarch, reigning on earth through subordinates.
In the earliest days of Islam, the subordinate was the prophet
Mohammed, who founded Islam and conquered the Arabian Peninsula.
Thereafter the subordinate was the caliphs and in the centuries
after Mohammeds death they expanded Muslim society by
conquering peoples as far west as Spain and as far east as India.
In the process, they absorbed half of Christian civilization.
Eventually, the power of the caliphs waned, and new
leaderssuch as the Ottoman sultanswere the
subordinates. Throughout it all, God himself was regarded as the
ruler of Islamic civilization.
Islam as Ideology
That
Islam sees itself as a theocracy has enormous ramifications for
how it regards itself and for the behavior of Muslims.
First, it means that Islam is not only a religion. It is also a
political ideology. If the government of the Muslim community
simply is Gods
government, then no other governments can be legitimate. They are
all at war with God. As a result, Muslims have typically divided
the world into two spheres, known as the Dar
al-Islamthe "house of Islam"
or "house of submission" to Godand the Dar
al-Harb, or "house of war"those
who are at war with God.
Second, it means that Muslims have believed themselves to have a
"manifest destiny." Since God must win in the end, the Dar
al-Harb must be brought under the control of
Muslim government and made part of the Dar al-Islam.
Third, since the Dar al-Harb
by its nature is at war with God, it is unlikely that it will
submit to God without a fight. Individual groups might be
convinced to lay down their arms and join the Muslim community by
various forms of pressureeconomic or militarythat
fall short of war. In history some groups have become Muslim in
this way, either fearing Muslim conquest, desiring Muslim
military aid against their own enemies, or aspiring to good trade
relations with the Muslim world. But many peoples would rather
fight than switch. This has been particularly true of Christians,
who have put up more resistance to the Muslim advance than have
pagan and animistic tribes.
Because of the need to expand Gods dominion by wars of
conquest, Islams ideology imposes on Muslims the duty to
fight for Gods community. This duty is known as jihad
(Arabic, "struggle, fight").
Although it is binding on all Muslims, it has been particularly
incumbent on those on the edges of the Muslim world, where there
was room for expansion. Only by continual jihad
could the manifest destiny of Islam to bring the world into
submission to God be fulfilled.
As eminent French sociologist Jacques Ellul notes, "Jihad
is a religious obligation. It forms part of the duties that the
believer must fulfill; it is Islams normal
path to expansion."
A fourth and final consequence of Islams view of itself as
a theocracy is that in theory all Muslims should not only form
one religious community but should be subject to one government
as wellGods government, a kind of Muslim super state.
Yet this has not happened. Muslims have been ruled by different
governments since the early days of Islam.
Ideology Meets History
The
fact that Muslims are not united under a single government is due
to a variety of historical factors. As Muslim territory expanded
the problems with the idea of uniting all Muslim peoples under a
single government became all too obvious. Islam grew from a
tribal base, and tribal societies are not known for stability.
The factions and rivalries that are inherent in such societies
manifested as Islam grew and made it difficult to keep Muslims
under a single head.
Another factor that kept a stable Muslim super state from
developing is the fact thatespecially in a pre-technological
worldlocal areas have to be governed locally. Large empires
have had to cede large amounts of autonomy to local governments,
and therein lay the seeds of their eventual dissolution. As local
governments grew in power, they desired more and more autonomy,
desiring eventually to throw off the yoke of their masters and to
be truly independent.
As a result, even in the classical period of Islam the Muslim
community was divided politically, with rivalries between various
partiesfor example, between the Ottomans and the Persians,
who maintained a tense and sometimes violent rivalry for
centuries. The conflicts within the Muslim community helped slow
its expansion and helped lead to stagnation and decay.
A threat also was
growing in the non-Muslim world.
Europe for centuries had been terrified by the Muslim advance,
with continual warfare on its borders to the west and to the east
as Christians struggled at first to check the Muslim advance and
later to reclaim their homelands.
The fight was not easy for Europe and, for a long time, it did
not go well. Lewis notes of medieval Christendom: "Split
into squabbling, petty kingdoms, its churches divided by schism
and heresy, with constant quarrels between the churches of Rome
and the East, it was disputed between two emperors and for a
while even two popes. After the loss of the Christian shores of
the eastern and southern Mediterranean to the Muslim advance,
Christendom seemed even more local, confided in effect to a small
peninsula on the western edge of Asia which becameand was
by this confinement defined asEurope. For a
timeindeed, for a very long timeit seemed that
nothing could prevent the ultimate triumph of Islam and the
extension of the Islamic faith and Muslim power to Europe."
As chronicler of Muslim expansion Paul Fregosi notes, "From
the fury of the Mohammedan, spare us, O Lord was a prayer
heard for centuries in all the churches of central and southern
Europe. Fear of the jihad
has not entirely vanished even now, particularly among peoples
who have known Muslim domination." Muslims conducted raids
to capture slaves as far west as England and Ireland. They
attacked Iceland. And they plunged deep into Europe.
They captured Sicily and invaded the Italian mainland. "Naples,
Genoa, Ravenna, Ostia, and even Rome itself were all for a time
pillaged or occupied by the Saracens. Human beings became a cheap
and abundant commodity. In Rome, in 846 . . . the Muslims even
looted the churches of St. Peter and St. Paul, and the pope had
to buy off the invaders with the promised tribute of 25,000
silver coins a year. Pope Leo IV then ordered the construction of
the Leonine Wall around the city to protect St. Peters from
further assault."
The threat continued for centuries, with Muslim forces laying
siege in 1529 and 1683 to Vienna, the capital of the Holy Roman
Empire, located in the heart of Europe.
But as Islam stagnated, new doors opened to Europe, particularly
through the discovery of the New World and the vast material
resources it offered. As Europe grew economically,
technologically, and militarily through its colonies and the rise
of global trade, the balance of power shifted, and the Islamic
world became vulnerable.
Even before the discovery of the New World, Christians in both
western and eastern Europe had begun to reclaim their conquered
homelands from Muslim dominion, and the tremendous new resources
that Europe had at its disposal as a result of the Age of
Exploration only made things worse for Muslim aspirations to
world political supremacy. Their own governmental
structuresparticularly the Ottoman empirebegan to
lose power and disintegrate, with Europeans stepping in to take
control as colonialization progressed.
For three centuries the Muslim world lost ground, and by the
first half of the twentieth century almost all of it had been
reduced to being colonies or protectorates of European powers.
Lewis notes, "By 1920 it seemed that the triumph of Europe
over Islam was total and final. The vast territories and
countless millions of the Muslim peoples of Asia and Africa were
firmly under the control of the European empiressome of
them under a variety of native princes, most under direct
colonial administration. Only a few remote mountain and desert
areas, too poor and too difficult to be worth the trouble of
acquiring, retained some measure of sovereign independence."
What was the Muslim reaction to this alarming sequence of
developments?
Shock and Awe
In the
seventeenth century it had begun to sink into Muslim
consciousness that something was desperately wrong in the world.
Though Muslim society had previously been more advanced
economically and in some ways culturally than European society,
it began to dawn on Muslim leaders that the barbarian infidels of
Europe were catching up and in certain ways were ahead of Muslim
society.
It is difficult for Westerners to realize just how crushing a
realization this was, but it was devastating given Muslim self-perception.
The triumphal advance of Islam seemed to confirm to Muslim minds
that they were the chosen of God and that civilization itself was
identical with Islam, with only ignorant barbarians and infidels
outside its borders.
In What Went Wrong?: Western Impact and
Middle Eastern Response, Bernard Lewis notes
that Christian Europe was seen "as an outer darkness of
barbarism and unbelief from which there was nothing to learn and
little even to be imported, except slaves and raw materials. For
both the northern [European] and southern [African] barbarians,
their best hope was to be incorporated into the empire of the
caliphs, and thus attain the benefits of religion and
civilization."
Shock and awe thus were the responses of Muslims as they saw
their civilization collapsing and their former
enemiesChristian Europeansseizing control of their
homelands. How could this happen? How could Gods people
suffer such a reversal of fortune? How could their former might
be so completely outclassed by the overwhelming economic and
military might of Christendom, whose religion was their only
serious rival for the role of a world faith?
Angry about the present and fearful of the future, Muslims began
a process of introspection, explains Lewis.
"When things go wrong in a society, in a way and to a degree
that can no longer be denied or concealed, there are various
questions that one can ask. A common one, particularly in
continental Europe yesterday and today in the Middle East, is:
Who did this to us? The answer to a question thus
formulated is usually to place the blame on external or domestic
scapegoatsforeigners abroad or minorities at home. The
Ottomans, faced with the major crisis in their history, asked a
different question: What did we do wrong?"
A debate followed, with various Muslims trying to analyze and
propose remedies for the developing situation. "The basic
fault, according to most of these memoranda, was falling away
from the good old ways, Islamic and Ottoman; the basic remedy was
a return to them. This diagnosis and prescription still command
wide acceptance in the Middle East."
These twin explanations for the recent misfortune of
Islamthat it was caused by a failure to observe Islam in
its pure form and by the malicious meddling of foreigners (first
Europeans and now Americans)bode ill for tomorrow.
The Clash of Civilizations
European
domination of the Muslim world was short-lived, ending in the
1960s with the close of the de-colonialization that followed
World War II. Yet it had an enormous effect on the Muslim psyche.
This effect was somewhat muffled by the Cold War and the tense
balance of power between the Western and Soviet spheres. The new
Muslim statesthe borders of which had been largely and not
always skillfully drawn by the withdrawing colonial
powerswere too weak to be assertive and fell into the
orbits of either of the United States or the Soviet Union.
Nationalistic assertiveness was subsumed during the tense, global
standoff.
But with the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold
War, matters changed. At first, some hailed the event as "the
end of history," but other, wiser observers pointed to new
dangers in the world, including Islamic militancy.
Samuel Huntington, director of Harvard Universitys John M.
Olin Institute for Strategic Studies, presciently warned that the
end of the Cold War would lead to a period he referred to as
"the clash of civilizations." A major flash point he
envisioned in this conflict, unsurprisingly, was between Islam
and the West.
"After World War II, the West, in turn, began to retreat;
the colonial empires disappeared; first Arab nationalism and then
Islamic fundamentalism manifested themselves. . . . [The]
centuries-old military interaction between the West and Islam is
unlikely to decline. It could become more virulent. The Gulf War
left some Arabs feeling proud that Saddam Hussein had attacked
Israel and stood up to the West. It also left many feeling
humiliated and resentful of the Wests military presence in
the Persian Gulf, the Wests overwhelming military dominance,
and their apparent inability to shape their own destiny."
Huntington noted a common consensus that
an inevitable clash between Islam and the West, a clash initiated
by the former, was soon to come: "On both sides the
interaction between Islam and the West is seen as a clash of
civilizations. The Wests next confrontation,
observes M. J. Akbar, an Indian Muslim author, is
definitely going to come from the Muslim world. It is in the
sweep of the Islamic nations from the Maghreb to Pakistan that
the struggle for a new world order will begin."
That confrontation came with the terrorist attacks of September
11, 2001 and the inauguration of the war against terrorism.
What did the
terrorists hope for?
They hoped for a conflict with the West that would end the long,
dark winter that Islam has experienced. They hoped that the
fortunes of their religion and civilization would be reversed.
They hoped for a war that would smash the might of the West and
allow a wave Islamic revolutions to sweep away the worldly
tyrants ruling Muslim nations. They hoped for a return to purer,
stricter Islam, free of Western corruption and values. They hoped
that the blessings of God would descend upon their civilization,
allowing it to return to its rightful place at the head of
nations, with a resurgence of Muslim nationalism that would give
birth to the Islamic super state that long had eluded them.
And they hoped for a new wave of expansion that would allow Islam
to establish its destiny of bringing the entire world under
Muslim control. In the famous al-Qaeda "dinner conversation"
found on videotape in Afghanistan, Osama bin Laden expressed the
view that the war he initiated would lead to a wave of Muslim
expansion not seen since the religions first century, when
it consumed half of Christian civilization.
These dreams of a renewed, purified Islam, of the overthrow of
existing Muslim governments, of a triumphant smashing of the West,
and of expansion through a new jihad
are far from confined to bin Laden and his terrorists. They are
the dreams that inspire the seething rage of "the Arab
street," which so often breaks forth into violent
demonstrations at political events beyond its control.
Taming the Dragon?
Within
the Muslim world, government officials have been trying to cling
to power in the face of rising anger on their streets. Trying to
buy time, they have funded radical Islamic schools, media
establishments, and even the terrorists themselves, hoping to
direct and diffuse ineffectual Muslim rage toward the West as a
scapegoat.
The West has responded with the war against terrorism, which
Muslim governments would like to see succeed in ridding their
society of its most radical elements, which seek their overthrow.
Yet they hesitate to support the war too much lest they hasten
their own demise through coup d etats.
Some in the West have suggested trying to cure the economic roots
of the dissatisfaction and despair in Muslim society that
contribute to radicalism and terrorism. The problem is not lack
of wealth. Many Muslim countries are oil-rich and have had money
in abundance for decades, yet the elites have refused to pursue
policies leading to greater economic prosperity for their
populaces. Instead, they have enriched themselves and shut their
own people out of economic development.
Many in the West have proposed trying to spread freedom and
democracy in the Muslim world, thinking that greater political
involvement and opportunity would help dry up the roots of
terrorism.
While democracies generally have done better helping secure
economic development for their populations, it is unclear how
freedom and democracy could be brought to the Muslim world. It
would mean effective regime change in the countries in question,
and it is unlikely that many countries would change their own
regimes voluntarily, though some might be pressured into making
reforms in this direction. To introduce any form of truly
representative government in many countries would require armed
intervention, as it did in Afghanistan.
There is then the question of how democracy could be sustained in
the Muslim world. Muslims have no historical experience of
Western freedom and democracy. Middle Eastern society is still
largely dominated by tribalism, which has a tendency to subvert
the democratic process, with one tribe coming into power and then
brutally suppressing its rivals.
The only halfway democratic Muslim country is Turkey, which
actually is a country where the military holds power but does not
govern. It allows political parties to vie for and exercise
governance within Turkey, but only on condition that they do not
transgress limits set by the military.
If genuine democracy were achievable, what would the results be?
Given the current state of the Arab street, the results would not
be pretty. In his analysis, Samuel Huntington argued:
"Many Arab countries, in addition to the oil exporters, are
reaching levels of economic and social development where
autocratic forms of government become inappropriate and efforts
to introduce democracy become stronger. Some openings in Arab
political systems have already occurred. The principal
beneficiaries of these openings have been Islamist movements. In
the Arab world, in short, Western democracy strengthens anti-Western
political forces."
The introduction of freedom and democracy to the Muslim world is
thus fraught with problems and, in any event, is not a solution
to problems in the short term.
One thing that can be done in the short termas illustrated
by the interventions in Afghanistan and Iraqis the use of
military force. Could this help? It certainly has dealt a
tremendous blow to the al-Qaeda terrorist network, even though
that organization is not yet out of business.
Some have argued that the use of military force will inflame
Muslim hatreds and produce a new crop of terrorists. Undoubtedly
some Muslims will become terrorists on the pretext that the West
has used force. But then some Muslims would become terrorists if
the West didnt use force. Indeed, to a significant degree
the al-Qaeda terrorists of September 11 were the product of the
view that the United States was a faltering, weak superpower that
could be defeated just as the Soviet Union had been humiliated in
Afghanistan.
Muslims respect strength. They cheer whoever displays it.
Regardless of how many times their towns change hands during an
armed conflict, the populace will turn out to cheer their newest
liberators, whether they are genuinely on a mission of liberation
or not.
Due to its effectiveness in dealing at least temporarily with
problems in the Muslim world, the use of military force in
finding a long-term solution is likely to be essential. It
certainly must be wielded with discretion and in keeping with the
Churchs just war doctrine, but its use is likely
unavoidable. It also is certainly not sufficient. Military force
will have to be used in conjunction with other initiatives,
including diplomatic and economic ones.
But is a solution achievable?
Paradise and Power
Can
the historic connection between Islam and violence be broken?
Some would argue that it can. After all, our own forebears in
Christendom were more violent than we are. Europe was riven by
conflict between petty kingdoms for centuries, but eventually a
society developed from it that is stable and not at constant war
with either itself or its neighbors. Perhaps Muslim society could
be led or forced down the same path.
Perhaps. But the proposition is not quick, easy, or certain.
The development of a stable Europe took centuries of bloody
conflict that finally wore out the resolve of Europeans to keep
killing each other and prompted them to try a different path.
This was not achieved until, in the first half of the twentieth
century, Europe underwent two massive convulsions of violence,
the First and Second World Wars. Key to both of these was the
intervention of the United States, which at the end of the Second
World War pacified Europe and refused to let its states continue
to pursue their bitter, historic rivalries in ways that could
destabilize Europe and lead to another war.
Post-war Europe also was united by an outside threat: Soviet
Communism, which dominated Eastern Europe. It was the continued
presence of U.S. forces in Western Europe during the Cold War
that helped protect it from Soviet invasion while new, more
healthy political and economic ties were developing between its
states as they sought to form a united front against the Soviet
threat.
The sequence of events that led to the current state of affairs
in Europe is unique and may not be repeatable. Trying to force
the Muslim world down the same path is an uncertain proposition,
and, even if it could succeed, it might well require the same
dramatic military interventions and conflicts as the pacification
of Europe. It might require world wars and cold wars.
And then there is a factor that makes the pacification of Islam
less likely than the pacification of Europe.
The Roots of Muslim Violence
It is
simplistic to characterize any of the major religions as being
strictly "of violence" or "of peace." As
Solomon pointed out, "For everything there is a season; a
time to kill, and a time to heal; a time for war, and a time for
peace" (Eccles. 3:1, 3, 8). Thats the way life works
in a fallen world, and every religion capable of serving as the
basis of a culture has recognized both the need for peace and the
need for the use of force in certain circumstances.
Sects that are totally pacifistic have to rely on the good graces
of others who are willing to use force to protect them, while
sects that are totally given over to violence do not survive long
since they kill themselves off or are broken up by their
neighbors as a matter of self-protection. For a religion to serve
as the basis of a culture, it must seek to preserve peace but
also be willing to use force. All major religions tend toward
this mean.
Yet some religions are far more prone to violence than others.
Among the major religions, Islam is by far the most violent. This
may be seen by comparing it to the religions most closely related
to it, Judaism and Christianity.
Though belief in the true God goes back to the dawn of mankind,
Judaism in its traditional form was founded by Moses, who, if
evaluated politically, could be considered a warlord, leading the
tribes of Israel toward the Promised Land and the conquest that
would follow. The Old Testament contains numerous commands to use
violence to protect and promote the nation of Israel. This
potential for violence is reigned in, though, by the fact that
Judaism is a religion for just one ethnic group confined to one
territory.
Christianity, by contrast, is a universal religion, meant for all
peoples in all countries. It has much greater breadth, and much
lower intrinsic potential for violence. Its
founderChristwas a martyr, who refused to fight to
save his life. Though the New Testament acknowledges that the Old
Testament revelation is from God, it does not contain new
commands to use violence, as Christianity was not to be allied
from its birth to a state in the way Judaism was.
The fact that in Christianity church and state are distinct means
that as a religion Christianity has less potential for violence
since it is not called upon to use force in the way a state is.
This, coupled with Jesus own example and his "love thy
enemy" teachings (e.g., Matt. 5:44), gives Christianity less
innate potential for violence.
In contrast, Islams founder was a warlord who rose from
nowhere and who by his death was the undisputed master of Arabia
Peninsula. The holy book he produced is filled with commands to
use violence in the service of its religion and nation. This
potential for violence is similar to that possessed by Judaism
except it is immensely augmented by the fact that Islam views
itself, like Christianity, as a universal religion meant for all
peoples in all countries. It also makes no distinction between
church and state and is thus a political as well as religious
ideology.
As a result, Islam has been willing to employ violence on a
massive scale, as illustrated by the first century of its
existence, when the Islamic Empire exploded outward and conquered
much of the known world.
The attitude of Islam toward using violence against non-Muslims
is clear. Regarding pagans, the Quran says, "Slay the
idolaters wherever you find them. Arrest them, besiege them, and
lie in ambush everywhere for them. If they repent and take to
prayer and render the alms levy, allow them to go their way. God
is forgiving and merciful" (Surah 9:5). This amounts to
giving pagans a convert-or-die choice.
Regarding violence against Jews and Christians, the Quran says,
"Fight against those to whom the Scriptures were given as
believe in neither God nor the last day, who do not forbid what
God and his messenger have forbidden, and who do not embrace the
true faith, until they pay tribute out of hand and are utterly
subdued" (Surah 9:29). In other words, violence is to be
used against Jews and Christians unless they are willing to pay a
special tax and live in subjection to Muslims as second-class
citizens. For them the choice is convert, die, or live in
subjection.
The Quran also has stern words for Muslims who would be slow and
reluctant to attack unbelievers: "Believers, why is it that
when you are told: March in the cause of God, you
linger slothfully in the land? Are you content with this life in
preference to the life to come? . . . If you do not go to war, he
[God] will punish you sternly, and will replace you by other men"
(Surah 9:38-39).
And, of course, there is the promise of reward in the afterlife
for waging jihad in this
one: "Believers! Shall I point out to you a profitable
course that will save you from a woeful scourge? Have faith in
God and his messenger, and fight for Gods cause with your
wealth and with your persons. . . . He will forgive you your sins
and admit you to gardens watered by running streams; he will
lodge you in pleasant mansions in the gardens of Eden. This is
the supreme triumph" (Surah 61:10-12).
It must be pointed out that there are people of peace and people
of violence in all religions. There are violent Christians. There
are peace-loving Muslims. Changing historical circumstances do
much to bring out tendencies toward violence and peace among the
followers of different religions. Yet, even when these
qualifications are made, it is clear that Islam as a religion and
an ideology has by far the greatest tendency to violence.
There are, indeed, many Muslims who desire peace, but, their
views often do not count for much in Muslim society. Author Serge
Trifkovic notes: "Some critics may object that this account
of Islam in the modern world does not pay much attention to
Islamic moderation, to the everyday wish of everyday Muslims for
a quiet life. This is not because such moderates are rare, but
because they are rarely important. Religions, like political
ideologies, are pushed along by money, power, and tiny vocal
minorities. Within Islam, the money and the power are all pushing
the wrong way. So are the most active minorities. The urgent need
is to recognize this. Our problem is not prejudice about Islam,
but folly in the face of its violence and cruelty. And in any
case, the willingness of moderates to be what are objectively bad
Muslims, because they reject key teachings
of historical Islam, may be laudable in human terms but does
nothing to modify Islam as a doctrine."
The prospect of modifying Islams doctrine regarding
violence is problematic. Although some Muslims in history have
tried to "spiritualize" the Qurans declarations
regarding violence, there is always a countervailing
fundamentalist push to return to the sources of Islam and take
them literally.
Indeed, this reaction is what characterizes the Wahhabite
movement that dominates Saudia Arabia and inspired Osama bin
Ladens ideology. Philosopher Roger Scruton notes that in
the Wahhabite view, "whoever can read the Quran can judge
for himself in matters of doctrine."
This attitude, which is tantamount to an Islamic version of sola
scriptura, is likely to prove as durable in
Muslim circles as it has been in Protestant Fundamentalist
circles. As long as that is the case, there will be fresh waves
of Muslim "martyrs" willing to take the Qurans
statements on killing literally, apply them to today, and then
hurl themselves into combat with whomever they perceive as "the
Great Satan."
Conclusion
We
have seen the roots of Islamic violence in the life and teachings
of Mohammed. We have seen that world events have conspired to
place Islam and Christianity in a conflict of civilizations that
has stretched from the sixth to the twenty-first century.
What the future holds is unknown. What is
known is that Islamic civilization has a strong tendency to
violence that stretches back to the days of Mohammed and that has
begun to flare up in resurgent terrorist and revolutionary
movements.
The conflict with militant Islam may last a long
timecenturies, potentiallysince even if curing Muslim
society of its violent tendencies is possible, it would involve
ripping out or otherwise neutralizing a tendency that has
dominated Muslim culture since the days of its founder.
This is not an easy task, for Muslims willing to make the change
would be portrayed as traitors to their religion, amid renewed
calls to practice Islam in its original, pure, and more violent
form in order to regain the favor of God. The signs of the times
suggest that we are, indeed, in for a "clash of
civilizations" that will be neither brief nor bloodless.
But what also is known is that God has a plan for history and
that his grace can work miracles. It is yet possible
thatthrough one means or anotherGod will bring about
a more peaceful world in which militant Islam either is not a
threat or nowhere near the threat that it is today.
If this is to happen, our cooperation with Gods grace will
require prayer, courage, resourcefulness, and a realistic
understanding of the threat we are facing. Until then there can
be no illusions about Islam and its endless jihad.
Source: http://www.catholic.com/library/endless_jihad.asp