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Islam: Spread by the Sword?
SPREAD BY THE SWORD?
Is holy war against Christians and Jewsinfidelsa perversion
of Islam? Heres the evidence, from Islamic texts and history.
by Mark Hartwig, Ph.D.
For Westerners, the Arabic word jihad has long had an ominous
ringconjuring up a host of images, from turbaned warriors swinging
scimitars to wild-eyed fanatics waving Kalashnikov rifles. We instinctively
associate the word with holy war.
Given the history of Western-Islamic relationships, thats not
surprising. In the century immediately following the death of Muhammad (632),
Muslim forces conquered lands stretching from the borders of China and India
to Spains Atlantic coast. Historian Bernard Lewis notes:
For almost a thousand years ... Europe was under constant threat.
In the early centuries it was a double threatnot only of invasion
and conquest, but also of conversion and assimilation. All but the
easternmost provinces of the Islamic realm had been taken from Christian
rulers, and the vast majority of the first Muslims west of Iran and
Arabia were converts from Christianity. North Africa, Egypt, Syria,
even Persian-ruled Iraq, had been Christian countries, in which
Christianity was older and more deeply rooted than in most of Europe.
Their loss was sorely felt and heightened the fear that a similar
fate was in store for Europe.[1]
It is not surprising, then, that the word jihad would be
understood by most Westerners to mean holy war. But is that
what it really means? And how does that square with the claim that Islam
is a peaceful religion?
WHATS IN A WORD?
Muslims claim that jihad does not mean holy war. Technically,
they are correct.
In Arabic, the word jihad literally means struggle
or striving. It is related to the word, jahada,
defined as exerting ones utmost power, efforts, endeavors
or ability in contending with an object of [disapproval].[2] In the Quran,
the word is often part of a larger phrase jihad in the path
of God.
Jihad may be waged against a variety of targets: a human enemy,
ones own evil desires, even Satan. Contemporary Muslim societies
often use the word jihad the way Americans use the word crusade.
Hence, authorities in a Muslim country might declare, say, a jihad
against drugs.
So there are several kinds of jihad recognized within Islam: Jihad
of the heart, which is the struggle against oneself; jihad of
the tongue or jihad of the pen, which involve persuasion,
exhortation and instruction for the cause of Islam; jihad of the
sword; and so on.[3]
Still, the primary meaning of jihad is physical combat. According to
Reuven Firestone, professor of medieval Judaism and Islam at Hebrew Union
College in Los Angeles, When the term is used without qualifiers
such as of the heart or of the tongue ... it is
universally understood as war on behalf of Islam (equivalent to jihad
of the sword), and the merits of engaging in such jihad are
described plentifully in the most-respected religious works.[4]
JIHAD IN EARLY ISLAM
Jihad as physical warfare features prominently in the earliest Islamic
writings. The Quran alone contains many verses about it.
Pakistani Brigadier S.K. Malik, a Muslim, points out that the Quranic
injunctions cover the causes and object of war; its nature and characteristics;
limits and extents; dimensions and restraints.[5] The Quran even goes into strategy and
tactics, and critiques some Muslim battles.
Taken at face value, the verses in the Quran about warfare seem ambiguous
and contradictory. In some places, for example, the Quran urges Muhammad
and Muslims to confront opposition with patience and persuasion. These have
been called Verses of Forgiveness and Pardon:[6]
Invite (all) to the way of thy Lord with wisdom and beautiful
preaching; and argue with them in ways that are best and most
gracious: for thy Lord knoweth best, who have strayed from His path,
and who receive guidance. (16:125)[7]
Nor can goodness and evil be equal. Repel (evil) with
what is better. (41:34)
In other places, it gives them permission to engage in retaliatory
or defensive fighting:
To those against whom war is made, permission is given (to fight),
because they are wrongedand verily, God is most powerful for
their aid(They are) those who have been expelled from their
homes in defiance of right (for no cause) except that they say,
our Lord is God. (22:39-40a)
In yet other places, the Quran seems to command offensive warfare
against unbelievers:
Fighting is prescribed for you, and ye dislike it. But it is
possible that ye dislike a thing which is good for you, and that
ye love a thing which is bad for you. But God knoweth, and
ye know not. (2:216)
But when the forbidden months are past, then fight and slay
the pagans wherever ye find them, and seize them, beleaguer them,
and lie in wait for them in every stratagem (of war); but if they
repent, and establish regular prayers and practice regular charity,
then open the way for them: for God is Oft-forgiving, Most Merciful.
(9:5)
Fight those who believe not in God nor the Last Day, nor hold
that forbidden which hath been forbidden by God and His Apostle,
nor acknowledge the religion of Truth, (even if they are) of the
People of the Book (Christians and Jews), until they pay the
jizya [tribute] with willing submission, and feel themselves
subdued. (9:29).
Early Islamic scholars resolved the conflict by appealing to a kind
of progressive revelation that was tailored to fit Muhammads
and his followers circumstances.
When Muhammad first began to receive revelations from God,
in 610, he lived in Mecca, a major center of polytheistic worship. As
he preached his monotheistic message, he encountered indifference and
then growing resistance. Over 13 years, persecution against him and
his small band of followers eventually became so severe that they
finally left Mecca and emigrated to Medina (then known as Yathrib)
about 220 miles to the north.
In Medina, Muhammad gathered many followersalong with political
and military power. After eight years of raids and battles, he conquered
Mecca and instituted Islam in place of the citys polytheism.
According to Firestone, Muslim scholars came to the conclusion
that the scriptural verses regarding war were revealed in direct relation
to the historic needs of Muhammad during his prophetic mission. At the
beginning of his prophetic career in Mecca when he was weak and his
followers few, the divine revelations encouraged avoidance of physical
conflict.
After the intense persecutions that caused Muhammad and his followers
to emigrate to Medina, however, they were given leave to engage in
defensive warfare. As the Muslim community grew in strength, further
revelations broadened the conditions under which war could be waged,
until it was concluded that war against non-Muslims could be waged
virtually at any time, without pretext, and in any place.[8]
The later verses, known as the Sword Verses (9:5 and 9:29),
were considered by Muslim scholars to have cancelled the previous verses
mandating kindness and persuasion. Expansionist jihad became the explicit
norm.
Rudolph Peters, professor of Islamic Law and Law of the Middle East
at the University of Amsterdam, observes, The crux of the doctrine
is the existence of one single Islamic state, ruling the entire umma
[Muslim community]. It is the duty of the umma to expand the
territory of this state in order to bring as many people under its rule
as possible. The ultimate aim is to expand the territory of this state
in order to bring the whole earth under the sway of Islam and to extirpate
unbelief.[9]
After the initial, massive conquests of Islam ended in the eighth
century, Muslim jurists ruled that the caliph (the supreme Muslim ruler)
had to raid enemy territory at least once a year in order to keep
the idea of jihad alive.[10]
This was the dominant view of jihad until modern times. If anything,
the last Islamic empirethe Ottoman Empirewas even more
zealous about expansionist jihad than the early empires.[11]
CONVERT OR DIE
The Quran teaches that people should not be converted by force:
Let there be no compulsion in religion (2:256a).
Nonetheless, the doctrine of jihad has led many to allege that Islam
was spread by the sword. This is a fair charge, but it needs to be qualified.
Muslims follow not only the Quran, which they believe is a literal
transcript of Gods words, but also the Hadith, accounts of
Muhammads words and deeds. These words and deeds are
considered inspired by God and an example for Muslims to follow.
According to one widely accepted hadith, whenever Muhammad would
send an out expedition, he would admonish his appointed commander:
When you meet your enemies who are polytheists, invite them
to three courses of action. If they respond to any one of these, you
also accept it and withhold yourself from doing them any harm.
Invite them to [accept] Islam; if they respond to you, accept it from
them and desist from fighting against them. ... If they refuse to accept
Islam, demand from them the jizya. If they agree to pay, accept
it from them and hold off your hands. If they refuse to pay the tax,
seek Allahs help and fight them.[12]
The jizya, a kind of tribute, was part of a larger deal in which
non-Muslims submitted to several conditions. In addition to paying
the jizya, non-Muslims were also required to wear distinctive
clothing and mark their houses (which must not be built higher than
Muslims houses), must not scandalize Muslims by openly
performing their worship services, nor build new churches or synagogues.
Those who owned land were also required to pay a land tax.[13]
According to some Muslim jurists, the jizya had to be paid
by each person at a humiliating public ceremony, in which the person
was struck on the head or the nape of the neck. According to historian
Bat Yeor, this ceremony survived unchanged till the
dawn of the twentieth century.[14]
Both the jizya and the land tax were often extorted through
torture, and were frequently so exorbitant that whole villages would
flee or go into hiding.
Technically, then, Christians and Jews were not forced to accept
Islam at the point of a sword. But their treatment nonetheless placed
them under severe pressure to convert.
And many idolaters were not even allowed to pay the jizya.
They were forced to either convert or die.
BLUNTING THE SWORD
By the late 1600s, the Islamic Ottoman Empire had pushed the
frontiers of Islam as far west as Austria. After being repelled from
the walls of Vienna in 1683, however, the empire became less and
less of a threat.
With the rise of Western power, expansionist jihad became
harder to maintain. Historian Bernard Lewis observes that defense
eventually became the pattern of jihad in the late 19th and
early 20th centuries, as one Muslim country after another was
threatened and then conquered by Christian European
powers.[15]
In addition to being put on the defensive militarily, Muslims
were increasingly confronted with Western institutions and ideas.
Some Muslim thinkers, notes Peters, were convinced of the
superiority of the West and Western culture [and] tried to show
that Islam was a respectable religion that fostered
the same values as Christendom and Western civilization.[16]
Other Muslims were less impressed with Western ideas and
resented what they perceived as unfair criticism from Western
scholars who viewed Islam as an aggressive religion. After all,
during their lifetimes, they had only seen Islam on the retreat.
They sought to defend Islam from what they perceived as
colonialist propaganda.
Both groups of Muslim thinkers reinterpreted jihad as
defensive warfare: The Sword Verses commanding Muslims
to slay the pagans were directed not at unbelievers in general,
but at the hostile Jews, Christians and Arab polytheists who
fought against Muhammad because they hated his religion.
By this view, the Sword Verses do not abrogate the other
verses. Rather, according to one of the leading Muslim scholars
of the mid-1900s, the Verses of Forgiveness and Pardon
remain fixed and unassailable.[17]
This is considered a "modernist" interpretation
of jihad, and those who embrace it consequently attach a great
deal of importance to the nonmilitary forms of jihad (e.g., jihad
of the heart, pen and so on).
It is unclear, however, just how many people subscribe to
this view. For one thing, some of the writings were designed
to make Muslims look better to their colonial rulers. In India,
for example, the British tended to favor Hindus over Muslims
partly because of the doctrine of jihad. Some Muslim writers
tried to counter that problem by denying expansionist jihadand
even some aspects of defensive jihad.[18]
Moreover, these writings exist side by side with other writings
that expound the traditional view. Such traditional writings
euphemize expansionist jihad, but include it as a legitimate option.
One often-cited text calls it warfare for idealistic
reasons, and justifies it by arguing, Every nation has
its own ideals which constantly inspire it. The deeper a nation
is convinced of them, the greater is its effort to realize them. ...
It is this mission to uproot godlessness and [polytheism] that is
referred to in Islamic literature by the expression, in the
path of God, which we have translated as idealistic
reasons for waging war.[19]
THE REVOLUTIONARIES
The modernist interpretation is also taking heat from growing
numbers of Islamic fundamentalists, who contend that those
promoting that interpretation suffer from defeatist and
apologetic mentalities.[20]
They have recast jihad as an ongoing Islamic world
revolution.[21]
The intellectual father of Islamic fundamentalism is Sayyid Qutb
(1903-1966). According to Bassam Tibi, professor of international
relations at the University of Göttingen, his writings can
be compared, in terms of spread and influence, with the Communist
Manifesto.[22]
An Egyptian teacher, Qutb came to New York and Greeley, Colorado
in 1948-1950 for further training. During his stay he was stung
by Americans anti-Arab sentiments and repulsed by their materialism
and sexual looseness.
As a result of this experience, Tibi said, Qutb returned
to Egypt as a furious anti-American and anti-Western Muslim
intent on laying the groundwork for a vision of Islam that would
offer an alternative to that of the West.[23]
His writings captured the imagination of many Muslims, and his
status only grew when the Egyptian government executed him
in 1966 for subversion.
Qutb believed that mankind today is on the brink of
a precipice ... because humanity is devoid of those vital values
which are necessary not only for its healthy development, but
also for its real progress.[24]
He asserted that mankind will never find salvation in manmade
lawswhether those of Western Europe and North America
or those of the Communist countries. Salvation can only be
achieved by replacing manmade laws and institutions with Gods
rule alone. Mankind must adopt Islamic law in total, and give up
such notions as democracy, which derives its authority from
people rather than God.
Qutb declared that anyone who doesnt accept Gods
law in every respectincluding professed Muslimsis an
unbeliever: Whoever observes something other than Gods
revelations in his judgment not only rejects a particular aspect of
Godhead but also claims for himself certain qualities of Godhead.
If that is not unbelief, I wonder what is. For what use is a verbal
claim of being a believer ... when such action denies such
a claim?[25]
As unbelievers, such people may be fought by physical means.
Indeed, they must be fought because they will not peaceably
relinquish the ability to legislate for themselves:
It is not that Islam loves to draw its sword and chop off
peoples heads with it. The hard facts of life compel
Islam to have its sword drawn and to be always ready and
careful. God knows that those who hold the reigns of power
are hostile to Islam and that they will always try to resist
it.[26]
This was the ideology followed by the militants who assassinated
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1981. It is also the ideology that
is behind most Islamic terrorism todayincluding that of Osama
bin Laden and his al-Qaida network.
THE REAL THING
Modernist interpretations notwithstanding, it is clear that military
jihadeven in its expansionist formis an authentic part
of Islam.
No matter how you cut it, Muhammad was not only a religious
leader, but a military leader who waged war against his enemies as
soon as he had the means. Following his example, Muslims quickly
carved out an enormous empire. And what ended Muslim expansion
was not a change of heart or doctrine, but European military might.
Furthermore, the traditional doctrine of jihad remains alive to this day.
This means that Christians should not accept the sweeping claim
that Islam is a religion of peace. Theres just too much contrary
evidence.
On the other hand, Christians shouldnt jump to the
conclusion that their Muslim neighbors are bomb-toting fanatics:
Even Muslims who believe in militant jihad dont necessarily
like violence.
Instead of fearing or hating Muslims, Christians should view
them in light of our duty to preach the gospel. For as 2 Tim. 1:7
reminds us, God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of
power and of love and of a sound mind.[27]
Mark Hartwig, Ph.D., has followed Islamic issues for several
years. In 1999, he traveled on assignment to Sudan, to cover the war
that the Islamic government was waging against its people in the south.
[1] Bernard Lewis,
Islam and the West (New York: Oxford University Press, 1993), p. 13.
[2] Edward Lane,
An Arabic-English Lexicon, book 1 (London: Williams and Norgate, 1865),
part 2, p. 473. Cited in Reuven Firestone, Jihad: The Origin of Holy War in Islam
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1999), p. 139.
[3] See Firestone, 1999;
Rudolph Peters, Jihad in Classical and Modern Islam, (Princeton: Markus
Wiener Publishers), 1996; Lt. Col. M.M. Qureshi, Landmarks of Jihad
(Lahore, Pakistan: Skeik Muhammad Ashraf Publishers, 1970); Abdullah bin Muhammad
bin Humaid, Jihad in the Quran and Sunnah (Riyadh, Saudi Arabia: Maktaba
Dar-us-Salam Publishers), no date.
[4] Firestone, 1999.
[5] Brig. S.K. Malik,
The Quranic Concept of War (Dehli, India: Adam Publishers, 1979), p. 1.
[6] Mahmud Shaltut,
The Koran and Fighting, in Peters, 1996, p. 81.
[7] Unless otherwise indicated,
all passages of the Quran are taken from the translation by Abdullah Yusuf Ali,
The Meaning of the Holy Quran.
[8] Firestone, 1999, p. 50.
[9] Peters, 1996, p. 3.
[10] Ibid.
[11] Bernard Lewis,
The Middle East: A Brief History of the Last 2,000 Years (New York:
Simon & Schuster, 1995), p. 237.
[12] Sahih Muslim,
Book 19, Number 4294.
[13] Joseph Schacht,
An Introduction to Islamic Law (London: Oxford University Press, 1964), p. 131.
[14] Bat Yeor,
The Decline of Eastern Christianity under Islam: From Jihad to Dhimmitude
(London: Associated University Presses), pp. 73-79.
[15] Lewis, 1995, p. 237.
[16] Peters, 1996, p. 109.
[17] Mahmud Shaltut,
1996, p 82. Shaltut was rector of al-Azhar University in Cairo, Egypt,
the most prestigious university in the Muslim world.
[18] Peters, 1996, p. 109.
[19] See Muhammad Hamidullah,
The Muslim Conduct of State (Lahore, Pakistan: Sheik Muhammad Ashraf Publishers,
1941), p. 169.
[20] Sayyid Qutb,
Milestones (Salimiah, Kuwait: International Islamic Federation of Student
Organizations, 1978), p. 102.
[21] Peters, 1996, p. 129;
Bassam Tibi, The Challenge of Fundamentalism: Political Islam and the
New World Disorder (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998), p. 56.
[22] Ibid.
[23] Tibi, 1998, p. 56.
[24] Qutb, 1978, p. 7.
[25] Sayyid Qutb,
In the Shade of the Quran, Volume IV (Leicester, UK: The Islamic
Foundation, 2001), p. 123.
[26] Sayyid Qutb,
Volume III, p. 282.
[27] NKJV.
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