Complete Text of Murder in the Name of Allah
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Murder
in the. Name of Allah. Hazrat Mirza Tahir Ahmad. Translated by. Syed Barakat Ahmad. Revised edition. Nazarat Nashr-O-Ishaat. SADR ANJUMAN AHMADIYYA
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Ahmad, Hazrat Mirza Tahir. Murder in the Name of Allah
1. Islam. I. Title II. Mazhab Ke nam per khoon. English. ISBN 0-7188-2779-1. ISBN-81-7912-010-4 (INDIA). Copyright The London Mosque 1989, 1990. First edition 1989. Reprint 1989. Revised edition 1990. Present edition 2001. All rights reserved.. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored
in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means,
electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise,
without the prior permission in writing of the publisher.. Printed at. Printwell, 146, Industrial Focal Point, Amritsar
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Editor's Foreword. CONTENTS. V. Notes on this translation. Introduction
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1: Religion drips with Blood
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2: The Preaching of Islam: two conflicting views
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3: A Rebuttal of Maududian Philosophy
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4: Prophets and Troopers: a study in contrast
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5: The Maududian Law of Apostasy
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6: Recantation under Islam
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7: Punishment for Apostasy
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8: Mercy for the Universe.
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9: Islamic Terrorism?
104. Appendix: Quotations from the Holy Quran
121. Glossary
131. Notes
136. Index
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EDITOR'S FOREWORD. Hardly a day passes on which an Islamic event does not make headlines.. The president of a Muslim state is assassinated by the supporters of. Muslim Brotherhood; a European journalist is taken hostage by Islamic. Jihad; a Pan-Am aircraft is hijacked by another Muslim group; American
university professors are taken into custody by Hezbullah. The glare of
'Islamic' revolution in Iran is reflected through the flares of every Gulf
oil refinery.. In 1953 there were widespread demonstrations and anti-Ahmadi riots
throughout what was then West Pakistan, leading to an almost complete breakdown of law and order. The leading trouble-makers were
the Ahrar-i-Islam and the ulema (learned scholars), who had consistently opposed the creation of Pakistan. But it was Maulana Abul Ala. Maududi, the founder of the Jamaat-e-Islami (the counterpart of the. Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt), who became their voice. Martial law
was proclaimed and the chief minister of the Punjab was replaced. A
court of inquiry was set up jointly under Justice Mr Muhammad. Munir and Justice Mr M. R. Kayani to investigate the causes of the
disturbances.. No student of modern Islam should fail to read the report on the events
of 1953. It explains in detail some of the problems that the new Muslim
state was facing. But it is a judicial report and, as such, does not set itself
the task of warning or advising. The present book, however, is the
work of a man of God - not simply a work written out of duty by a
court official.. In 1955, Mirza Tahir Ahmad drew attention to certain aspects of
the Munir Commission Report and spelt out the dangers the new. Islamic state was facing. He showed how the Jamaat-e-Islami, despite
being a minute minority of the population, would destroy Islam in. Pakistan. In his book, Mazhab ke Nam per Khoon (Murder in the Name
of Religion), which he wrote thirty years before his election as the head
of the Ahmadiyyah Movement in Islam, Mirza Tahir Ahmad shows
how Islam is being exploited by the Mullahs and presented to the
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world as a medieval theocracy. Mirza Tahir Ahmad set the Munir. Commission Report within the context of the Quran, hadith and. Islamic history. He had separated fact from fiction and the law of the. Quran from the interpretations of the sultan-serving faqih.. This slender and compact, yet challenging, book originated from. Mazhab ke Nam per Khoon, originally published in Urdu, is addressed
to educated Muslims who know both their history and the basic
principles of their religion.. When I undertook the task of translating Mazhab ke Nam per Khoon,. I had no idea whether I was biting off more than I could chew. A literal
translation would be meaningless for all but experts in this field, while a
translation with long, boring and distracting notes would be self-defeating. The latter would be rather like a bad tailor trying to alter a quality,
made-to-measure suit for another customer - it might fit him adequately,
but it would not hang as well as it would on the person for whom it was
made.. This book is an updated version of Mazhab ke Nam per Khoon and
includes some new material.. All references to important figures and events in the history of Islam
which have become part of Muslim collective memory and have been
mentioned by the author are fully explained. The books of tradition, Ibn. Hisham's Sirat Rasul Allah and other primary sources have been used for
this information.. Finally, I have to admit that I have failed to convey the author's
perceptive and creative imagination. I have not been able to do justice to
the underlying force of his prose or the spiritual dimension of his rhetoric.. Mirza Tahir Ahmad's style combines learning with humour. These
qualities have been somewhat lost in translation, but I hope I have
succeeded in retaining the high academic standard of the original book,
which makes it a unique and inimitable work on the Islamic concept of
freedom of conscience and its expression. Though I have tried my best
to convey the spirit of the original - its reflective intellectuality interwoven with the mysteries of the soul - this book remains above all a
translation. Any mistakes of fact or interpretation are mine alone. If in
doubt, readers should check with the original, Mazhab ke Nam per. Khoon.. May Allah, the reader and, especially, the author forgive my
shortcomings.. Syed Barakat Ahmad
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NOTES ON THIS TRANSLATION. References in this book to verses of the Holy Quran count the opening
verse of each chapter as verse 1. Readers referring to texts which do not
use this system should deduct 1 from the number quoted to arrive at the
relevant verse.. The name of Muhammad, the Holy Prophet of Islam, has in general
been followed by a symbols for the salutation 'may peace and blessings
of Allah be upon him.' The names of other prophets and messengers of. God are followed by the symbolas, an abbreviation for '‘on whom be
peace'. The actual salutations have not been set out in full, except in
a few particular instances, in order to accommodate the text to the
non-Muslim readers. They should, nevertheless, be understood as
being repeated in full in each case.. In this translation the form ‘ibn' has been used in both initial and
medial positions in the names of persons, in order to conform with current
usage, although ‘bin' also occurs medially in some original texts (abbreviated usually as b.).. For the sake of consistency with quoted references, the words Mecca
and Medina have been used instead of the current local transliterations of Makkah and Madinah.
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INTRODUCTION. It was in the late 1950s that the original work in Urdu on which the
present book is based was first undertaken. This rendering of it into. English is now being offered for the benefit of English-speaking
readers. The original book was published under the title Mazhab ke. Nam par Khoon, literally translated as 'Bloodshed in the Name of. Religion'. Since then numerous editions have been printed, and it has
also been translated into Bengali and Indonesian.. The main source of Mazhab ke Nam per Khoon was the wide-scale
and most violent anti-Ahmadiyyah riots of 1953 in Pakistan. The
riots were long over by the time the book was written; the wounds
were almost healed, leaving some slowly fading scars behind.. But the issues those riots raised continued to live undiminished and
undiluted. Is Islam a religion of war or of peace? Does Islam advocate
violence, bloodshed, destruction and disorder? Does it condone persecution in any form? Does it give licence for loot, arson and murder on the
pretext of doctrinal differences within Islam or vis-à-vis other faiths?. The book was written, therefore, not with the purpose of highlighting
or resurrecting the dead and buried events of 1953, but in order to address
the issues raised thereby, some of which have been mentioned above. The
suffering, misery and turbulence of 1953 can be relegated to the past,
of course, but the issues raised at that time continue to be of relevance
and significance today. They are not confined to Pakistan or to Islam.. They give rise to timeless universal questions relating to every
religion: matters of peace and war, order and chaos, and the defence and
suppression of fundamental human rights.. In view of the importance of this subject, there had been a growing
demand to make Mazhab ke Nam per Khoon available to a much wider
readership than those using the Urdu, Bengali and Indonesian languages.. For some years, Syed Barakat Ahmad was pressing me for permission to translate my book. Syed Barakat Ahmad had a doctorate in Arab
history (from the American University of Beirut) and literature (from the. University of Tehran). He served in the Indian diplomatic service and
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retired as India's High Commissioner to the West Indies. He was also
an adviser to the Indian delegation to the United Nations, a fellow of
the Indian Council of Historical Research and a student of Arabic
teaching at the Al Azhar and Aligarh Universities.. Syed Barakat Ahmad suggested that as the original work in Urdu
was addressed to readers who were familiar with Islamic terminology
and the important events of early Islamic history, having been brought
up in the Muslim cultural background, some changes would be
necessary to make the translation of it into English fully comprehensible to readers less familiar with Islam. In view of this some portions
were appropriately amended and, at his suggestion, explanations
were provided wherever necessary.. Four years or so ago, when Syed Barakat Ahmad undertook this
work, he was already suffering from an advanced stage of cancer of the
bladder. Doctors had given him six months to live at the longest. He
repeatedly wrote to me asking for prayers and expressing his desire that. Allah might grant him the opportunity to finish not only the present work
but many other projects he was undertaking at the same time.. It is sad indeed that the translator is no longer with us today, having
died in early 1988. But, at the same time, one cannot but feel a deep sense
of satisfaction at the thought that he was given an extended lease of life
and did not die before he had completed most of the important works he
had undertaken. During his few final years, one of his important works
- which has drawn wide acclaim - is his book Introduction to Quranic. Script.. Just a few months before his demise, he was also able to write a very
scholarly article, 'Muhammad and the Jews', which was acknowledged
as a model of historical research. He was in extreme pain and discomfort
during his last days, but he was an outstandingly brave man and
continued to work almost till his last breath. May Allah rest his soul in
eternal peace.. When the translation was sent to the publishers, they conveyed to me
the opinion of one of the reviewers that the manuscript should be
expanded to include an appraisal of the use of capital punishment for
apostacy. They said that the text needed to be updated with reference to
growing terrorist tendencies and militancy in some Muslim countries.. In particular, what is understood of Khomeinism and Qaddafism by
the West gives people a very negative impression of the peaceful
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intent and teachings of Islam. In view of this, it was felt that it would
be highly appropriate if one or two chapters were added in order to
discuss the subject in relation to the more widely known current
events. Accordingly, three new chapters (7, 9 and 10) have been
added; these were written in English and do not, of course, appear in
the orginal Urdu text.. Finally, I would like to acknowledge my thanks to a number of
people who have assisted in preparing the present version: Mansoor. Ahmed Shah for transcribing from my notes and dictation; Malik. Saifur Rehman, Abdul Momin Tahir and Munir Ahmed Javed, who
collectively helped in finding references to the hadith; B. A. Rafiq for
co-ordinating with the publishers; and the publishers' copy editor for
rectifying typograhical errors.. Mirza Tahir Ahmad. Khalifatul Masih IV,. London 20 February 1989
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CHAPTER 1. RELIGION DRIPS WITH BLOOD. Did our history begin with the curse of Cain? It is a gory tale of murder,
assassination and torture in any event. So much blood has been spilled
throughout history that the whole world could be painted red with it - with
plenty to spare. When will man stop killing his fellow men? When will
his thirst for blood ever be quenched?. Abel was the first man to be killed, by his brother, for no reason. The
story of that murder has been preserved by the Quran and the Bible as a
lesson to us all - it will remain as an example till the end of time. Study
history, and one thing becomes clear: that man is an aggressive creature.. His aggressiveness has been untamed by the growth of civilisation. Man
is as cruel today as he was thousands of years ago. The story of his
ruthlessness, his tyranny and his aggression is long and painful. The fire
of human aggression has not been quenched even after thousands of
years of savagery.. Assassination of individuals and the annihilation of whole groups of
peoples are a repetitive theme of history. States have attacked states;
countries have fought against their neighbours and against nations far
from their borders. Hordes of people living in the steppes and deserts
conquered nations with ancient civilisations; blood was shed by Caesar
and by Alexander; Baghdad was destroyed by Hulagu and Gengiz; the
soil of Kurukshetra ran red with the blood of Kauravas and Pandavas.. Sometimes blood was spilled in the name of honour, sometimes in the
name of revenge for supposed wrongs. Sometimes angry hordes overran
peaceful lands in search of food, sometimes in search of world domination. But more often the blood of man - created in God's image - was shed
in the name of his Creator. Religion was used as an excuse for mass
murder. Seeing this aspect of human nature makes one wonder if
mankind is not the basest and most ruthless species on earth. One expects
religion to teach man to be civilised, yet religion itself drips with blood.. This fact recalls the incident which took place at the time of the creation
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of Adamas, described by both the Quran and the Bible. The Quran says:. And when thy Lord said to the angels, 'I am about to place a vicegerent
in the earth,' they said, 'Wilt Thou place therein such as will cause
disorder in it and shed blood? - and we glorify Thee with Thy praise and
extol Thy holiness.' He answered, ‘I know what you know not'. (2.31). This dialogue between the angels and God is baffling because any book
on religious history would seem to prove that the angels were right. If so,
why did God refuse to accept their ‘advice' or uphold their objection to. His plan? It was, in fact, an objection to prophecy itself and ultimately to
the prophethood of the Seal of Prophets, Muhammadsa.. The history of religion in any part of the world at any time is the
history of torture, repression, execution and crucifixion. It is disappointing indeed to find that religion, which is supposed to be the last refuge of
peace in a world of war and conflict, is cause of destruction and
bloodshed. Religion itself is not the real cause of mass murder. It is a
mistake to think it is. Religion was not given to man to encourage
killing.. When one discovers, with mixed feelings of satisfaction and surprise,
that God did not make religion for this purpose, one receives a ray of
hope. The vicegerent of God, whose creation the angels questioned, was
really a great reformer. The religion he preached was named Islam - the
religion of peace. The question remains: why, at first glance, does
history create the impression that religion sanctions bloodshed and
murder in the name of peace? The Quran points out very clearly why a
cursory glance at history can lead one to such a conclusion. It cites the
past to show that those who perpetuate brutality in religion's name are
either anti-religious or people whose religion has been corrupted. There
are also religious leaders who have no warmth, compassion, mercy or
piety. To be honest, they are hypocrites with a lust for power - cruelty
is their ruling passion. It would be a great mistake to associate religion
with the misdeeds of such men. The real truth is that God - the. Fountainhead of Mercy - does not allow the followers of any religion to
oppress His people.. The Quran quotes many historical examples to prove this point. The
early part of the prophets' lives is given by the Quran as a standard for
religious reform or for preaching. If physical force had been allowed by. God, then surely it would have been permitted by the founders of
religions. It is quite clear that force is forbidden. Those followers who
came long after the prophets and preached by force either inherited a
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religion corrupted by time or were themselves corrupt. They used force
in the name of religion, yet their religion opposed the use of force.. The Quran's religious history is full of examples of force and
violence used in the name of religion by people who had no religion.. People were tortured in the name of Allah by those who had not the
faintest clue about God. Noahs, who called people to righteousness and
piety, was not an oppressor - those who wished to suppress his voice were
in the wrong. On hearing Noah's message they said: 'If you don't desist,. O Noah, you shall surely be one of those who are stoned.' (26.117). The history of religious persecution, as told by the Quran, clearly
shows that followers of true religion are the victims of violence. The. Quran gives the example of Abraham, who called the people to God by
using love, sympathy and humility. He had no sword . . . not a single
weapon. But the elders of his people did exactly what the anti-religious
opponents of Noahas had done. Abraham's father, Azar, said: 'If you do
not desist from your belief I shall stone you.' The words used by Azar
were virtually identical to those used by Noah's as enemies. Both Noahas
and Abrahamªs were insulted and humiliated, both were beaten and
tortured, yet both accepted it all with patience and fortitude. Having lit
the fire of oppression and mischief, the tormentors of Abraham tried to
burn him alive.. Those who opposed Lots knew nothing whatsoever about religion.. Yet they were his enemies and opposed him and his followers in
religion's name. They threatened him with violence; they warned him
that he and his followers would be banished. They did their best to stop
him teaching his religion.. The persecutors of Shuaib* did the same and told him: ‘Assuredly we
will drive you out and the believers with you from our town or you
shall have to return to our religion.' (7.89). By citing these examples, the Quran proves there is a pattern of
conversion to true religion and also to the force used by the enemies of
truth against such conversion. Shuaib's reply to the threats typifies the
attitude of all God's prophets. He said: 'Even though we be unwilling?". Is it possible to change hearts by force, can a man be reconverted to a
religion he has discarded after discovering it to be false? And can he be
reconverted after he has discovered the truth of a new religion?. No dictator has ever been able to escape this logic. The historical fact
is that the sword has never ruled and will never rule men's hearts. If the
human body can be subdued by force, then the soul cannot. Belief is a
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thing of the heart. It is human nature which never changes. Innocent
people who are sentenced to death in the name of religion by those who
do not understand it will continue to raise their voice against this
injustice. They will forever pose the question: 'Do you want us to stick
to the beliefs our intelligence has rejected?" Whenever this question has
been asked, enemies of religion across the world have accused the
prophets of apostasy and sentenced them to death. Inhuman torture and
punishments were invented... the story of violence is one which never
ends.. Mosesas and his followers met the same fate at the hands of the socalled religious heads of the time - Pharaoh, Haman and Korah - who
said: 'Slay the sons of those who have believed with him and let their
women live.' (40.26) Conversion from one religion to another was not
punished by the prophets, yet they and their followers were punished
for the so-called apostasy. After Mosesas, Jesus as endured similar
torture and violence which culminated in an attempt to kill him on the. Cross. Bloodshed and violence have always been carried out in
religion's name: their victims have throughout time been those found
guilty of apostasy. Yet not a single revealed book sanctions the
punishment of those who changed from one religion to another. If the
texts of revealed Books have been altered by dishonest people, one
can hardly blame the Books themselves. By their very nature, Books
revealed to God's prophets cannot teach violence.. Making reference to the history of religions, the Quran proves that the
prophets and their followers were victims of violence; victims who,
nonetheless, accepted brutality with patience. It is beyond one's belief
that people who change faiths can be tortured in the name of religion, and
prophets of God, who are sent to convert us, cannot accept it either. It
makes nonsense of their own mission. The Quran also tells how a
prophet's followers are punished for conversion not only during his life,
but for hundreds of years after his death. Such oppression has no sanction
from God.. Then there is the Quranic story of the people of the cave. These. Christians were persecuted for 300 years, and I have seen the places
where these poor people were tortured - the amphitheatres intended for
gladiatorial combat with bulls and lions. It was in these places that naked. Christians were thrown to hungry wild animals. The animals howled and
made short shrift of the defenceless Christians. Sometimes these ‘apostates' were thrown to bulls which had been starved for several days. The
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starving creatures bellowed and snorted and, with hissing screeches,
attacked. The Christians were gored or trampled to death. And after this
festival of blood, the laughing Romans returned joyfully home. The
'apostates' had been fittingly punished. But while the Christians' legs
trembled, their hearts beat strongly with faith in God.. Their persecution went on intermittently for three centuries. And
when they found no place to hide, they fled underground to the catacombs. These long labyrinths exist today and they remind us that the. Christians could live with insects, scorpions and snakes but not with
religious leaders in their fine clothes.. As well as those people who fled underground - Ashabi Kahf - the. Quran also mentions other Christians who believed in the Unity of God
and were burned alive for their pains. God says:. By the heaven having mansions of stars, and the Promised Day, and the
witness and he to whom witness is borne, cursed be the Fellows of the. Trench - the fire fed with fuel - when they sat by it and they were the
witnesses of what they did to the believers. And they hated them not but
only because they believed in Allah, the Almighty, the Praiseworthy, to. Whom belongs the Kingdom of the heavens and the earth; and Allah is. Witness over all things. (85.2-10). The enormity of these atrocities is made worse because of the socalled religious protectors who actually prevent worship of Allah; their
victims feel a greater anguish from being prevented from worshipping
than they do from torture itself. The Quran says: 'And who is more unjust
than the man who prohibits the name of Allah being glorified in Allah's
mosques and seeks to destroy them?' (2.115) So the Quran totally rejects
the use of force to suppress religious freedom. It declares that though
such suppression takes place, true believers never use force to preach the
name of Allah.. So far we have told the story of the persecution of prophets who came
before the time when God's light was to illuminate the world. But
eventually the sun of eternal truth rose on the skies of the Arab peninsula
and the world was soon to bask in the light of Muhammad'ssa message.. For thousands of years the world had awaited the greatest prophet.. One hundred and twenty-four thousand prophets had lived and died in the
hope of welcoming this Seal of the Prophets. The man for whom the
whole world was created finally appeared, reflecting the full glory of his. Creator. He was greater than all the prophets; his religion was complete.. But he, too, was persecuted and his persecution was without precedence.. Our Master and Lord, Prophet Muhammad, endured every conceivable. S
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form of punishment, torture and torment suffered by the earlier prophets
and their followers.. Early Muslims were laid out in the blazing sun. Burning stones were
put on their chests; they were dragged through the streets of Mecca like
dead animals. They were shunned, and kept hungry and thirsty. They
were thrown into dungeons, their belongings were seized and their
families were broken up. Pregnant women were thrown off camels, their
inevitable deaths the cause of merriment. Their dead bodies were cut
asunder the liver of the Prophet's uncle was even eaten. They were cut
down with swords and pierced by arrows. The Prophetsa was stoned by
ruffians and vagabonds and was chased and pelted by urchins till the
cobblestones of Taif ran red with his blood. And at the battle-ground of. Uhud the Prophetsa was seriously wounded.. This bloodshed took place in the name of religion, because Muslims
said Rabbunallah, our Lord, is Allah. This persecution and torture was
perpetrated in the name of religion because, according to the polytheists
of Mecca, the Prophets and the Muslims were apostates. The polytheist
called the Prophets and his followers 'Sabi'- people who discard their
ancestral religion and adopt a new one. In order to put down this ‘evil”,
the Meccans adopted methods of torture and suppression which had been
used by their predecessors. Muhammadsa and his followers suffered
patiently and with fortitude for a long time to prove that evil is caused by
anti-religious people and not by followers of the truth.. The Prophets, exalted by Allah to a position with no equal, showed
his persecutors only unsurpassable love, mercy and forgiveness in return
for their evil. When victory finally came and the polytheists of Mecca
were subdued by the Prophets, he ordered a general amnesty. There was
no massacre and no punishment for his persecutors. No arrests were
made. No executions took place. Instead of retribution there was the. Quranic proclamation: 'Let no reproach be on you this day. May Allah
forgive you. He is the most merciful of the merciful.'. That day the cruellest of the cruel were pardoned. Those who had
tormented helpless slaves on the burning sand were forgiven. Those who
had dragged Muslims through the streets like dead animals were absolved. Those who had breached the peace were pardoned, as were those
who had stoned defenceless Muslims - even the woman who had eaten
the liver of the Prophet'ssa uncle.. If the history of the world from Adamas to the present day were ever
lost and with it the record of every persecution and of every charter of
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human rights a glance at the life of the Prophet would more than prove
that true religion does not cause hatred, persecution, repression or the
suppression of thought.. But the Prophet did not confine his teachings to calling for religious
tolerance. Since the Prophet of Islamsa is 'A mercy for the universe'
(21.108), a general proclamation is made by the Quran: 'There shall be
no compulsion in religion.' Compulsion is unnecessary because, 'Guidance and error have been clearly distinguished' (2.257) and there is no
possibility of confusing the two. On the face of it, this proclamation
seems unusual and anomalous. On one hand there was an arbitrary
authority, hell-bent on wiping out a small group of people becuase of
their 'apostasy' with every means at its disposal. And when this group of
‘apostasy' gained power, it was told by the Quran to proclaim that:. There shall be no compulsion in religion, for guidance and error have been
clearly distinguished; so whoever refuses to be led by those who transgress and
believes in Allah, has surely grasped a strong handle - one which knows no
breaking. (2.257). But it must be noted that this proclamation is made in the second chapter
of the Quran, Al-Baqarah, which was revealed in the first two or three
years after the Prophet's arrival in Medina, a place where Muslims were
not only free from Meccan persecution but also held power. What could
be a more human and generous proclamation of peace from a prophet
who, only a year or two earlier, had been persecuted for 'changing his
religion'?. People who persecute in the name of religion are totally ignorant of
the essence of religion. Religion is a metamorphosis of hearts. Religion
is not politics and its adherents do not make up political parties. Neither
is it a nationality with limited loyalties, nor a country with geographical
borders. It is the transformation of hearts - transformation for the good of
the soul. The home of religion is in the depths of the heart. It is beyond
the sway of the sword. Mountains are not moved by the sword, nor are
hearts changed by force. While persecution in the name of religion is the
repetitive theme in the history of human aggression, freedom of conscience is the Quran's repetitive theme.. The Prophet was asked again and again to proclaim: 'This is the truth
from your Lord; let him who will, believe, and let him who will,
disbelieve.' (18.30) Truth is obviously a matter of the heart; it has nothing
to do with force. Once it has been seen it cannot be blotted out by any
power. Hence the Quran's assertion that once truth is known it is our
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choice to accept or reject it. Yet, elsewhere, the Quran says: 'Verily, this
is a reminder. so whosoever wishes may take to the way that leads to his. Lord.' (76.30) No charter of human rights can surpass the clarity of the. Quranic phrase faman Shaa' (whosoever wishes). The word 'whosoever' is all inclusive. It is surprising that after such a clear declaration
anyone could possibly think that Islam supports the use of force.. Again, in the 39th chapter of the Quran, the Prophets is ordered to tell
unbelievers: 'It is Allah I worship in sincerest obedience.' Now, as far as
you are concerned, 'Worship what you like besides Him.' (39.16). Since freedom of conscience - freedom to believe and to preach - is
the cornerstone of religion, and repression of religious heresy is the aim
of anti-religious forces, the Quran lays great emphasis on the freedom of
conversion. The last line of Chapter 109 of the Quran sums up the basic
principle of a true religion. 'For you, your religion and for me, my
religion. In an earlier passage (10.100), God refers to the same
principle by asking a rhetorical question. Addressing the Holy Prophetsa, He says: 'If thy Lord had enforced His will, surely all those on
earth would have believed, without exception? Will thou, then, take
it upon thyself to force people to become believers?' In the scheme of
creation, man must have complete free will to believe or reject; there
is no compulsion; a man must use his reason and understanding. After
all, faith is a gift given by God to those He thinks deserve it.. One hundred and twenty-four thousand prophets were sent by God
and showed, by their teaching and example, that the bearers of the divine
message are the oppressed, not the oppressors. The prophets won over
hearts by moral and spiritual strength, not by physical force. It is a great
tragedy that the ordained priests and the turbaned Mullahs with their
flowing robes of ‘piety' became the tormentors of the innocent in the
name of oppressed prophets. They monopolised religion, yet they knew
nothing of it. They claimed to protect the honour of their prophets by
maligning others, by spreading malicious lies and, above all, by perpetrating crimes of violence which shamed humanity. They did it before the
birth of the Holy Prophetsa. They do it still.. In medieval Europe, the so-called followers of Christ* - the popes and
the prelates, cardinals and canons, and the elders of the Church - wrote
a chapter of terror into the history books. St Augustine called it 'righteous
persecution which the Church of Christ inflicts upon the impious'.¹. Today's Christian historians admit that this 'righteous persecution',
inflicted in Christ's as name, was a disgrace to the Church.
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Religion drips with Blood. Madame Tussaud's waxworks museum in London has a strange,
moving and terrifying exhibition of this persecution. The museum was
originally founded in Paris in 1770 and moved to England in 1802.. Its halls are lined with waxworks of famous and infamous people. Its. Chamber of Horrors is a kind of underground dungeon. The figures there
have been modelled into such uncanny likenesses that you can almost see
them breathing. Many visitors there have stopped to ask directions from
a friendly looking curator, only to find they have been talking to a
dummy! On display are the death-masks from the guillotined heads of. Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, which were personally cast by Madame. Tussaud. There is an authentic gallows with other instruments of torture:
pillory, stocks, whipping-post, ducking-stool, iron maiden rack, galleys,
bed of Procrustes, cross, gibbet, halter and many others. Some exhibits
are so gruesome that they are covered with screens to keep them away
from children and squeamish adults.. It is a strange world where a man can rise to the heights of prophethood and talk with his Creator, then sink to the depths of becoming
a priest and questioning Joan of Arc about her visions of angels. He can
sink even lower and become an inquisitor. The instruments of torture
shown at Madame Tussaud's tell the tragic story of the Spanish and. French Inquisitions. Innocent people were tortured for their so-called
apostasy; they were forced to confess that they had recanted from the true
religion. When they refused, they were whipped and flogged, put on the
rack, lynched, impaled, pilloried, branded and burned. The victims either
confessed or died a miserable death. These dignitaries of the Church in
all their finery, who tortured innocent Christians, remind one of Christ sa
with his crown of thorns, bleeding on the Cross and crying with a loud
voice: 'Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?' (Matthew 27:46). These were the
people who symbolically consumed the flesh and blood of Christas at. Communion services, yet could not recall that the Pharisees had asked. Pontius Pilate to crucify Christ as because he had 'apostasised' and
abandoned the religion of his forefathers. But the crucifixion of Christ as
pales into insignificance when compared with the Inquisition of medieval Christians. It is with a sense of relief and, indeed, pride that Islam,
with its declaration of 'no compulsion in the matter of belief, has finally
closed the door on such atrocities in religion's name. But this sense of
relief and pride is only short-lived. Any Muslim will lower his head with
shame when he sees today's ulema vying with what the Christian priests
of medieval Europe did to devise new ways of suppressing freedom of
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Murder in the Name of Allah
thought and conscience. And yet these are the very ulema who claim to
protect the honour of the Holy Prophet whom the Quran describes as a
'mercy for the universe'.. These ulema claim to be the very personification of mercy, but their
hearts are without compassion. Instead, they are filled with anger. The
use of force in the name of religion has now become part of their faith.. In the name of God's holy water - sent to cool our tempers - they kindle
the fires of hatred and anger in the hearts of the innocent. The followers
of the Prince of Peace, whose blood cleansed barbaric Arabia, are now
being persuaded to murder helpless people. In the name of the protector
of poor people's unguarded homes his followers are encouraged to rob
the homes of people who are powerless to defend themselves. In the name
of the Prophets who protected the honour of even ruffians' wives, the
happy and loving marriages of Muslim women are anulled and transformed into adulterous relationships. In the name of the builder of the
first mosque in Medina, who offered it to the Christians of Najran for. Sunday services, and in the name of the Prophets who taught his
followers to respect the temples of other faiths, today's ulema incite
the masses to destroy the mosques of a small group of people whose
lives are devoted to the spreading of shahada.2 The unjust acts the. Prophetsa condemned and banned forever are now being perpetrated
in his very name. What would the Holy Prophetsa think if he could see
the ulema of his umma falsely accusing the elders of other Muslim
groups of all sorts of misdeeds and shouting abuse about women and
housewives? How will an agnostic react to this demonstration of
'religious zeal'? What Muslim could think, even for a moment, that
our Prophets, would have advised the ulema of his umma to deliver
provocative, disruptive speeches; or that he would have ordered them
to deliver such fiery sermons that entire villages of poor and helpless
people were set ablaze? Not satisfied with all this, could the Prince of. Peaces have told religious leaders to treat as apostates all those. Muslims whose understanding of Islam did not conform to their own?. Would he have sanctioned the killing of them and their women and
the destruction of their mosques - said to be the only divine way to blot
out apostasy?. These are the questions we should all think seriously about. Muslims
should consider the attitude of these ulema. For suppression, torture,
execution, arson and the razing of mosques are not the Prophet's sa
tradition. Every stone in the streets of Mecca over which the so-called
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Religion drips with Blood
apostates were dragged bears witness to this. Every grain of burning. Arabian sand where helpless people were tortured for accepting Islam
does the same. The cobbles of Taif, where the blood of the Holy Prophet
was spilled, bear witness to the fact that our great Master - mercifully did not teach that religious belief was compulsory, that he did not order
the burning of houses of worship in the name of worship or the
dishonouring of women in the name of honour. Muslims hang their heads
in shame and their souls cry out over today's religious leaders who preach
violence in the name of the Prophetsa.
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CHAPTER 2. THE PREACHING OF ISLAM:. TWO CONFLICTING VIEWS
1 When every method of persuasion (over 13 years of preaching) had
failed, the Prophet sa took to the sword... that sword removed evil and
mischief, the impurities of the heart and the filth of the soul. The sword did
something more. It removed their blindness - they could see the light of
truth and it also cured them of their arrogance; arrogance which prevents
people from accepting the truth... stiff necks and proud heads bowed with
humility.. Maulana Abul Ala Maududi. Muhammad preached Islam with a sword in one hand and the Quran in the
other.. Prof. Wilfred Cantwell Smith
2 The critics are blind. They cannot see that the only sword Muhammad
wielded was the sword of mercy, compassion, friendship and forgiveness
- the sword that conquers enemies and purifies hearts. His sword was
sharper than the sword of steel.. Gyanandra Dev Sharma Shastri. These are two conflicting views about the way in which the message of. Islam was conveyed to the world. Critics, especially orientalists, claim
that the wars the Prophet of Islam fought were offensive wars and that
people were converted by force. According to objective historians,
however, this view is not upheld by the facts. The Prophetsª did not use
force to preach and all the battles he fought were defensive. The
expansion of Islam was due to the Prophet's spiritual and moral power.. Nevertheless, the view that Islam was spread by force is, unfortunately, held by some Muslim leaders. They, like the orientalists, divide
the life of the Prophets into Meccan and Medinite periods. They maintain
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The Preaching of Islam
that at Mecca he was weak and powerless, hence that compromising and
submissive attitude of peaceful co-existence. Then, having gained some
power at Medina, he resorted to the sword, according to this school of
thought.. Had he not done so there would have been no spiritual revolution in. Arabia and Islam would not have spread. The late Maulana Abul Ala. Maududi' was a leading proponant of this view. In his book. Al-Jihad fil. Islam, the Maulana says:. The Messenger of Allaha invited the Arabs to accept Islam for 13 years.. He used every possible means of persuasion, gave them incontrovertible
arguments and proofs, showed them miracles and put before them his life
as an example of piety and morality. In short, he used every possible
means of communication, but his people refused to accept Islam.. It grieves my heart to quote the rest of this passage but it needs to be set
out.. When every method of persuasion had failed, the Prophetsa took to the
sword.. That sword removed evil mischief, the impurities of evil and the filth
of the soul. The sword did something more - it removed their blindness
so that they could see the light of truth, and also cured them of their
arrogance; arrogance which prevents people from accepting the truth,
stiff necks and proud heads bowed with humility.. As in Arabia and other countries, Islam's expansion was so fast that
within a century a quarter of the world accepted it. This conversion took
place because the sword of Islam tore away the veils which had covered
men's hearts.². The above statement is doubly unfortunate because it was made by a. Muslim scholar who claimed to be mizaj-shanasi-Rasul, the one who
found himself in complete harmony with the mind and heart of the. Prophet, so much so that he acquires a measure of authority in explaining the true meanings of the words and deeds of the Prophetsa - a claim
which, if accepted, would give the claimant as much or more right to
represent than the Holy Prophets enjoyed vis-à-vis his understanding of
the Word of God. This means that the Maulana's understanding is tragic
beyond words it has been made by a Muslim leader and repeats a
baseless assertion of Islam's enemies. It is the biased orientalists who
accused the Prophets of converting people by force. The Maulana's
phraseology appears to glorify Islam, but in reality it endorses the
accusation of the European critics of Islam. R. Dozy said: ‘Muhammad's
generals preached Islam with a sword in one hand and the Quran in the
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Murder in the Name of Allah
other.' Smith asserted that it was not the generals but the Prophetsa
himself who 'preached with a sword in one hand and the Quran in the
other'. George Sale wrote: 'When the followers of the Prophet increased
in number he claimed that God had allowed him to attack the unbelievers
so that idolatry be destroyed and true religion be established.'. The Revd Dr C. G. Pfander, who was actively engaged in missionary
work among Indian Muslims during the latter part of the nineteenth
century, provoked great unrest by writing controversial tracts to expose,
as he put it, 'The false Prophet of Islam'. In one such tract he said:
1. For 13 years Muhammad preached his new religion in conciliatory
terms and with great patience.
2. Now (in Medina) he became Al-Nabiyyu bis-Saif, 'The swordwielding Prophet', and since then Islam's strongest argument has been
the sword.
3. If we study the behaviour of Muhammad'ssa followers we notice that
they thought it was not necessary for them to follow a religious and moral
code. God demanded from them only one thing: that they should fight for. God with swords, arrows, daggers and sabres to continue to kill.³. And after this introduction the Revd Dr Pfander concluded: 'You have to
choose between Jesus, Word of God, and Hazrat Muhammad, son of. Abdullah; between one who devoted his life to acts of piety and one who
dedicated his life to the sword.”
'4. Aloy Spranger, Henry Copey and many other critics of Islam followed the same line of attack on both Islam and the Prophets. Washington Irving went a step further, printed on the title page of one of his books
is an imaginary painting of the Prophet with a sword in one hand and the. Quran in the other.". If one compares all that has been quoted above with the opening
quotation of Maulana Maududi's Al-Jihad fil Islam, one finds the. Prophet'ssa critics in agreement. Both the Maulana and the orientalists
maintained that Islam had a violent nature. Yet, despite this belief, the. Maulana believed in Islam while they rejected it. Apart from the wording,
there is no difference between paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of the quotation
from Dr Pfander above and the quotation from Maulana Maududi
above. But one shows the respect of a Muslim; the other, the sarcasm
of a bitter critic.. The snide remarks of the orientalists about the Prophet of Islamsa
are as unsurprising as they are hurtful. They are sometimes made out
of ignorance, but mostly out of malice. The hostility towards Islam
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The Preaching of Islam
colours the objectivity of even the most balanced historian. But most
hurtful of all are the writings of Muslims who claim devoutly to follow
the Prophetsa, yet present him, either through ignorance or arrogance,
as a barbarian who wielded the sword to convert and conquer.. Maulana Maududi was not convinced of the inherent beauty of. Islam or that it could conquer hearts by its spiritual force alone, either
in the past or present. He said:. Human relations and associations are so integrated that no state can have
complete freedom of action within its own principles, unless those same
principles are in force in a neighbouring country. Therefore, Muslim
groups will not be content with the establishment of an Islamic state in
one area alone. Depending on their resources, they should try to expand
in all directions. On one hand, they will spread their ideology and on the
other they will invite people of all nations to accept their creed, for
salvation lies only in it. If their Islamic state has power and resources it
will fight and destroy non-Islamic governments and establish Islamic
states in their place.. Maulana Maududi supports Sir William Muir's twisted views of the. Prophet and of Islam. In his biography of the Prophets, which he wrote
to expose 'the false Prophet of Islam" at the request of Dr Pfander, Sir. William Muir said: 'The sword of Mahomet, and the Coran are the most
fatal enemies of civilisation, liberty and truth which the world has yet
known."8. The great Hindu leader, Gandhiji, in his earlier days, must have been
influenced by a distorted picture of Islam such as this when he said:
'Islam was born in an atmosphere of violence. At that time its determining force was the sword and even today it is the sword.' But Gandhiji was
an observer of great insight and subsequently he corrected himself and
wrote in Young India: 'The more I study the more I discover that the
strength of Islam does not lie in the sword.". Other Hindus - even Arya Samajists, who made an objective study of. Islam followed Gandhiji in his 'discovery'. Pandit Gyanandra Dev. Sharma Shastri said:. Biased critics of Islam and especially those who want to provoke Hindu
- Muslim riots in the country say that Hazrat Muhammad after acquiring
power in Medina could not maintain his facade of mercy and kindness.. There he used force and violence and became a murderous prophet to
achieve his life-long aim of power, status and wealth. He fell short of his
own ideal of patience, moderation and endurance. But this is the view of
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Murder in the Name of Allah
those observers who are prejudicial and partisan, who are narrowminded and whose eyes are covered by a veil of ignorance. They see fire
instead of light, ugliness instead of beauty and evil instead of good.. They distort and present every good quality as a great vice. It reflects
their own depravity. . . .. The critics are blind. They cannot see that the only 'sword' Muhammad wielded was the sword of mercy, compassion, friendship and
forgiveness - the sword that conquers enemies and purifies their hearts.. His sword was sharper than the sword of steel.⁹. No comment! One only wishes that Maulana Maududi, a follower of the. Prophet Muhammadsa, had been as fair to the Prophet sa as a follower of. Krishna's had been. Non-Muslims who have studied the history of Islam
have had to admit that the Prophet was not only magnanimous and kind,
but also a paragon of human virtues. Another Hindu, the editor of the Sat. Updaish, wrote:. Some people say that Islam was preached by the sword, but we cannot
agree with this view. What is forced on people is soon rejected. Had Islam
been imposed on people through oppression, there would have been no. Islam today. Why? Because the Prophet of Islam had spiritual power, he
loved humanity and he was guided by the ideal of ultimate good.10. The anti-Muslim stance of the Arya Samaj movement is well known.. Its founder, Swami Dayanand, was highly critical of Islam and its. Prophets and yet the following statement was made by a Hindu at a
meeting sponsored by the Arya Samaj in Lahore. The editor of the Vedic. Magazine and a former professor of Gurukul, Kangri Ram Dev, said:. Sitting in Medina, Muhammad Sahib (peace be to him) held the Arabs
spellbound; he filled them with spiritual strength; strength that makes
devtas [gods] out of men …… it is incorrect to say that Islam spread with
the force of the sword. It is a fact that the sword was never wielded to
propagate Islam. If religion can be spread by force then let anyone try it
today.¹¹. The last sentence of the above passage is a challenge no one would
ever accept - not even Maulana Maududi. No sword can change a heart
and turn belief into disbelief. There was a long chain of prophets before
the Prophet of Islams and it is an historical truth that every prophet was
opposed by force. Every time a prophet taught the true religion he was
opposed by the sword and yet true religion spread and the sword failed
to cut it back. If all past prophets and their followers could stand against
the sword's might, how is it possible that Muhammad sa could have
adopted a different approach and taken to the sword - the instrument of
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The Preaching of Islam
oppression, not truth? There is no greater injustice than to accuse him
of using force to change people's beliefs.. Another non-Muslim scholar, Dr D. W. Leitz, in rebutting this false
charge, based his argument on the Quran itself. He said:. All these arguments, advanced to prove that the purpose of jihad was to
spread Islam by force, are contradicted by the Quran. The Quran says that
the purpose of jihad is to protect mosques, churches, synagogues and
cloisters.12. After such a clear defence of the Prophets, let so-called Muslims who
accuse him of wielding the sword answer this Quranic question: 'Do they
not ponder over the Quran, or is it that their hearts are locked up from
within? (47.25) Maulana Maududi, the author of the voluminous commentary on the Quran, Tafhim-ul-Quran, must have read this verse many
times. Did it not occur to him that interpreting the Quran for political
purposes might lead the commentator astray? The Maulana then says:. This was the policy which was adopted by the Prophetsa and his rightly
guided caliphs. Arabia, where the Muslim Party was first formed, was the
first to be subdued. After this, the Prophet sent invitations to all
neighbouring countries, but did not wait to see whether these invitations were accepted. As soon as he acquired power, he started the
conflict with the Roman Empire. Abu Bakr became the leader of the. Party after the Prophets and attacked both the Roman and Persian. Empires and Umar finally won the war.'
13. This is virtually a declaration of war against all non-Muslim neighbouring states they are safe only as long as the Muslim state is weak. Had
the above passage been written by a Marxist historian from the Communist Party, one would not have given it a second glance. But it is the
considered opinion of a Muslim leader of Maulana Maududi's stature. As
such, it is certainly far more insulting to the Prophets than all that Muir,. Pfander, Smith and other critics of Islam have written. The above passage
was translated from the Maulana's original Urdu. The words: 'Muslim. Party' were used deliberately by Maududi. He was degrading the Muslim
umma to the status of a political party. He was well aware of the
difference between the two words, for in another book he said: 'The other
word the Quran has used for "party" is umma."14 Having dubbed. Muslims a politcal party, the Maulana either subconsciously or, more
likely, deliberately, equates the Prophets with a political party leader,
assigning to him the morals of a politician. How else can one explain the
following passage written by the Maulana?
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Murder in the Name of Allah. After this the Prophet sa sent invitations to all the neighbouring
countries, but he did not wait to see whether these invitations were
accepted or not. As soon as he acquired power he started the conflict
with the Roman Empire.. It is amazing that a Muslim scholar could even by implication
suggest that the Prophet was guilty of a Hitler-style invasion Naaudhu billah.15 The Prophetsa was the Prince of Peace, not an
invader. Maulana Maududi loved political power and, unfortunately,
this colours his interpretation of Islamic history. But Islam does not
need politics to prop it up. In Bengal, now Bangladesh, Muslims were
an infinitesimal minority in the middle of the eighteenth century when
the British took over the administration from the Mughals. By the time. Bengal became independent in 1947 it had a Muslim majority.. Muslims had no political control of the area nor was there any
migration of Muslims from northern India during British rule. This
increase in Bengal's Muslim population was owing to peaceful
conversion by travelling sufis, the roving Muslim missionaries and the. Imams of the village mosques.. Thomas Arnold's observation on the subject is significant. He said:
'Islam has gained its greatest and most lasting missionary triumphs in
times and places in which its political power has been weakest.”. Maulana Maududi probably never read the history of Islam in Bengal,. Malaysia or Indonesia. He was so enthralled by the Turko-Afghan and. Mughal conquests that he never had time to note that the largest Musiim
country in the world, Indonesia, never had a Muslim conquerer - that
there was no fighting nor any violence there. That was the case also in. Malaysia.. The Prophet was obviously innocent. He took up the sword only in
self-defence and only when oppression became unbearable. Here is what
an objective Sikh has to say on the subject:. In the beginning the Prophet's enemies made life difficult for him and his
followers. So the Prophet asked his followers to leave their homes and
migrate to Medina. He preferred migration to fighting his own people,
but when oppression went beyond the pale of tolerance he took up his
sword in self-defence. Those who believe religion can be spread by force
are fools who neither know the ways of religion nor the ways of the
world. They are proud of this belief because they are a long, long way
away from the Truth. 17. Who knows better: a Sikh journalist or the mizaj shanasi nubuwwat?!
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CHAPTER 3. A REBUTTAL OF MAUDUDIAN. PHILOSOPHY. The Hindu revivalist movements took an aggressive turn in the early
1920s after the failure of the joint Hindu - Muslim khilafat movement.. The Hindu Mahasabha, founded at Hardwar in 1914 by Pandit Madan. Mohan Malaviya (1861-1946), joined the Arya Samaj in its campaign of
shuddi (reconversion and purification of Muslims, initially in the Punjab,
the United Provinces, now Uttar Pradesh, the Deccan and other parts
of India). By forcing Muslims to ‘wash away their pollution' with total
immersion in a river or water-tank, Hindu gangs provoked communal
rioting. Between 1922 and 1926 over 200 Hindu - Muslim clashes were
reported. Verbal and written attacks on Islam and Islam's Prophetsa
became widespread. In their religious zeal, the writers of shuddi literature made scurrilous attacks on the Holy Prophetsa. An Arya Samaj
preacher, Pandit Kalicharan Sharma, wrote his own account. He emphasised the Prophet'ssa alleged immorality and the fact that he married to
'correct' the view of history. His book, Vichitra Jiwan (Strange Life),
also stressed 'the spread of Islam by the sword'. All Muslims, according
to Pandit Sharma, were intent on looting, arson and rape. In May 1924,
a Lahore book-seller, Rajpal, published an Urdu tract by an anonymous
author criticising the Holy Prophetsa. The tract, Rangila Rasul (Playboy. Prophet) suggests that all great religious leaders are associated with sets
of ideas and symbols. For instance, the founder of Arya Samaj, Swami. Dayanand, had glorified celibacy and closely identified his reforms with
the Vedas. Similarly, the life and faith of the Prophet of Islamsa were
linked closely with relationships with women. Rajpal was later murdered
by two Muslim youths, which led to Hindu - Muslim rioting. Another. Hindu wrote an article, 'A trip to hell', in Risala-i-Vartman describing
the Prophetsa in hell and elaborating on his sufferings and 'sins'.. The Ahmadis of undivided India immediately got themselves to19
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Murder in the Name of Allah
gether and defeated the reconversion movement on its own ground. The. Imam of the Ahmadiyyah Movement in Islam at the time, Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmud Ahmad, also took a positive step. He decided that there
should be inter-faith conferences where the leaders of different faiths
should meet and explain their beliefs in order to pull down the walls of
ignorance and prejudice. He set up an annual conference for just this
purpose. It was called Yaum-i-Paishwayan-i-Madhahib (The Day of. Religious Founders). On that day, for instance, a Muslim would speak of
the greatness of Krishnaas or Buddha's, while a Hindu would talk of. Islam's Holy Prophetsa, putting right misunderstandings about him
which were being spread by propagandists. The Ahmadi attitude during
this unfortunate time of calumny and hatred was that non-Muslims
should be educated and given the message of love and peace which the. Prophet of Islams gave the world. Accusations and sectarian diatribes do
not help a missionary preach his faith. He should instead emphasise the
good points of his religion. The Imam of the Ahmadiyyah Movement
also persuaded the government of India - then British - to strengthen the
law to protect the honour of religious leaders. The Punjab governor,. William Hailey, who was briefed by Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmud Ahmad,
recommended that the government of India change the law by banning
material blatantly offensive to religious feeling.' The government accepted this recommendation. A bill was accordingly drafted to add a new
section to the Indian Penal Code, 295A, which made it an offence to insult
or to attempt to insult the religious beliefs of any class of people. The bill
was passed in 1927 by the Legislative Assembly.. But Indian Muslims were very upset and indignant at this time. A. Muslim calligrapher, Abdul Rashid, outraged by such malicious attacks
on the Holy Prophet's life, murdered Swami Shraddhanand, a shuddi
leader. Rashid was tried and hanged. Thousands of Delhi Muslims went
to the Delhi District jail to collect his body and he was buried as a martyi.. This glorification of murder enraged the Hindus, who called Islam a
religion of violence and force which relied on jihad and not reason or
virtue.² A young journalist, Abul Ala Maududi, answered these accusations in a series of articles in Al-Jamiyat, the newspaper of the Jamiyat. Ulama-i-Hind. These articles were subsequently published in book form
as Al-Jihad fil Islam.. In the first part of this book, Maududi convincingly proved that the
wars fought by the Prophet of Islams were defensive. He fought to
establish freedom of conscience and opposed all attempts to suppress the
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A Rebuttal of Maududian Philosophy
peaceful work of preaching Islam. Having convinced the reader that. Islam did indeed establish the freedom of conscience, the Maulana
himself seems to cast doubt on his own argument by adding this rider:. That freedom of conscience is limited to faith and religion only. It does
not mean that people have freedom to commit sin. Islam does not permit
the use of force for conversion, but force may be used - in fact, should be
used to prevent people from doing wrong. Non-Muslim countries and
cultures cannot be allowed to practice immoral deeds and force used to
keep these countries free of vice should be clearly distinguished from
that used to convert people to Islam.. Thus, the Maulana evolved a tortuous method of interpreting the. Quran and the tradition (hadith) of the Prophets to prove his point.. Maulana Maududi goes a little deeper in discussing the use of force
and explains the purpose of verse 29 of Chapter 9 in the Quran. Quoting
it out of context, he says:. The words: 'Until they pay the jizya' fully explain the purpose of war
[prevention of vice]. If the words were: ‘until they accept Islam' then, of
course, one could say that Islam uses force to spread its faith. But the
words, 'until they pay the jizya' are clear. Consent to pay the jizya ends
the war. After this, the life and property of non-Muslims are inviolable,
whether or not they accept Islam.. Maulana Maududi began writing his book to prove that Islam gives
complete freedom of conscience and that the Holy Prophets went to war
because his opponents were suppressing that very freedom. This was in
answer to non-Muslim claims that Islam is based on two main principles:
the forcing of people to do good and the prevention of them from
indulging in vice. Since forcing people to do good is against the freedom
of conscience, Islam refrains from it. But the Maulana is a little forgetful,
for he quotes the Quranic words which say that a war should be stopped
after non-Muslims have agreed to pay the jizya. How could a war, begun
purely to prevent vice, ever be won if the enemy pays the jizya without
promising to wipe out vice? The Maulana's aim was to impose the poll
tax. Since an agreement had been reached for its payment, the second
principle of Islam, prevention of vice, had been conveniently forgotten.. The final part of Maulana Maududi's logic, however, nullifies the
very purpose for which he wrote this book. He says:. When all methods of persuasion failed, the Prophets took to the sword.. That sword removed mischief, the impurities of evil and the filth of the
soul. The sword did something more - it removed their blindness so they
could see the light of truth - and it also cured them of their arrogance:
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Murder in the Name of Allah
arrogance which prevents people from accepting the truth, stiff necks and
proud heads bowed with humility.. As in Arabia, so in other countries, Islam's expansion was so fast that
within a century a quarter of the world accepted Islam. This conversion
took place because the sword of Islam cut away the veils which had
covered men's hearts.³. This portion of the Maulana's reasoning defeats his promise that. Islam establishes freedom of conscience. It also is repugnant to the spirit
of Islam. One mistake leads to another. Finally, after 137 pages of
sophistry, the Maulana declares: 'While it is incorrect to say that Islam
converts with the sword, it is also wrong to say that the sword did not play
any role in conversion'.4. The Maulana began his book with the declared intention of proving
that the wars fought by the Holy Prophets were ‘defensive'. He fought
to establish freedom of conscience, yet ends up joining hands with. Islam's enemies. In doing so, the Maulana opens the doors for an
orientalist onslaught. The prestige he enjoys among a small, but vocal,
minority of Western-educated Muslims helps the orientalists, who bolster their anti-jihad arguments with the Maulana's brandished sword to
'play a role in the preaching of Islam'.. Less than two years after the Hijrah (the Prophet'ssa migration from. Mecca to Medina), his companions were confronted by a thousand. Meccans, determined to blot out Islam, its Prophetsa and his followers. It
was dawn on Friday, 17th March AD 623 (17 Ramadan, 2 AH) when the. Meccans with 700 camels and a cavalry of 100 horses began descending
towards the valley of Badr from the slope of Aqanqal, twenty miles south
of Medina. There were just 313 Muslims there to defend Islam. They had
only two horses and were so short of arms that when Ukkashah's sword
was broken during the fighting, the Prophet could only replace it with
a wooden club, which he used instead. Their situation became so
desperate that the Prophetsa cried out: 'Allah! If this small band of. Muslims is annihilated today, no one will be left to worship Thee!". As Montgomery Watt puts it, Abu Jahl was ‘presumably hoping to get
rid of Muhammad once and for all'. Will Durant agrees with Watt: 'If. Mohammed had been defeated his career might have ended there and
then." Abu Jahl's hopes were, however, not fulfilled and the Muslims
successfully defended themselves against the well-equipped and far
superior Meccan forces.. Islamic history has preserved the names of all 313 Companions of the
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A Rebuttal of Maududian Philosophy. Prophets who defended Islam in the valley of Badr. One wonders what
role the sword played in converting these 300-odd Muslims. Among
them were Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman and Ali, who succeeded the. Prophet as his caliphs. Was it the sword which removed the 'dross' from
their hearts? Then there were Awf b. Harith, Umar b. Salimah, Muawwidh
and many others who fell that day. The exact details of their conversion
are not unknown. Can anyone say that the filth of their souls and the evil
of their hearts were cleansed by the blade of a sword?. The three great Companions who later fought so valiantly to defend
the faith were Sad b. Abi Waqqas, Abu Ubaydah b. al-Jarrah and Khalid
b. Walid. None was converted to Islam by force. Hundreds of Emigrants
(Muhajirun) and thousands of Helpers (Ansar) were converted and gave
the persecuted Prophetsa sanctuary. No sword was involved in their
conversion. These converts were the fruits of Islam, the pride of mankind, the signposts on the path to ultimate truth. What greater insult to
them than to say their hearts were purified by the sword, or to suggest that
it was 'fallacious to say that the sword did not play any role in [their]
conversion'?. What were these people before the advent of Islam? Before Muhammada, Arabia existed as a political unit only, as Will Durant pointed out.. He said: 'In the careless nomenclature of the Greeks, who called all the
population of the peninsula Sarakenoi ("Saracens), apparently from the. Arabic sharqiun, "easterners"." Previously they were called 'Scenite. Arabs' - Arabs who lived in tents (from the Greek word skene, a tent.. They lived in an arid land and communication problems meant there was
tribal self-sufficiency. During the second millenium before the Christian
era, the Arabs domesticated the camel, an animal perfectly suited to the
desert. It provided milk for sustenance and urine for medicinal use. Its
meat was tender and its hide and hair made tents and clothing. Even its
dung could be used for fuel. It could go for twenty-five days in winter
without water and five in summer. Small groups of nomads followed the
camels, the camels being their most important resource. Aloy Sprenger
summed up the whole pre-Islamic Saracen history by describing the. Arabs as the 'camel's parasites'.. The Arab felt no duty of loyalty to any group larger than his own tribe,
but the intensity of his devotion varied inversely to its extent; for his
tribe, he would do with conscience what civilised people do only for their
country, religion or race - i.e., lie, steal, kill and die.³. He was bound by no written laws and no state existed to enforce the law.
7
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Murder in the Name of Allah. Arabs mourned the birth of daughters and hid their faces in shame.. Sometimes daughters were killed at birth. If they survived, their natural
charm might earn them a few years of love from husbands and lovers who
would go to the ends of the earth to defend their honour. But they were
no more than pieces of property. They were part of the estate of their
fathers, husbands or sons and were bequeathed with other belongings.. They were also slaves, rarely friends of their fathers, husbands or
brothers.. The Arab gave scant thought to life after death. He offered human
sacrifice; he worshipped ‘sacred' stones. The centre of this stone worship
was Mecca. In pre-Muslim days, within the Kaba, were several idols
supposed to represent gods. The great god of Mecca was Hubal, an idol
made of cornelian. But in the Hijaz, three goddesses - Lat, Manat and. Uzza had pride of place as the daughters of God.. Well-built and strong, the Arab could live on just a few dates and
some camel's milk. From the date palm he made a wine which raised him
up into poetic flights of imagination and romance. His life alternated
between loving and fighting and he was quick to avenge insult and injury,
not only for himself but also on his tribe's behalf.. An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth was the law. Never-ending
shame awaited an avenger if he could not kill his tormentor. A large part
of his life was spent in tribal vendetta (Arabic tha'r). In the pre-Islamic. Arab history Ayyam ul-Arab, (Days of the Arabs), was the name applied
to the battles the Arabs fought among themselves. Particular days were
called, for example, Day of Buath or Days of al-Fijar. These inter-tribal
hostilities generally sprang from disputes over cattle, land or springs.. One of the most famous was fought between the Banu-Bakr and their
kinsmen the Banu-Taghlib over a she-camel, owned by an old woman
from Bakr called Basus. A Taghlib chief had wounded the camel... the
resulting war lasted forty years! It ended only when both tribes had
exhausted each other. Another famous war was the Day of Dahis and AlGhabra, which erupted over the unfair conduct of two chieftains in a race
between a horse (named Dahis) and a mare (called Al-Ghabra). War
broke out soon after the Basus conflict ended and continued at invervals
for several decades.. This was the social background in which Muhammad was brought
up and these were the people whom God gave the first opportunity of
embracing a persecuted prophet's faith.
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A Rebuttal of Maududian Philosophy. To suggest that these fierce and warlike people - who would sound the
battle cry at the drop of a hat - could have been converted by force is to
contradict history. Moreover, it demeans the faith of those pioneers who
put their lives at stake to defend Islam at the battle of Badr.. Usayd b. Hudayr, Sad b. Khaythamah, Asd b. Zurahah, Abdullah b.. Rawahah, Sad b. Ubadah, Mundhirb. Amir, Bara b. Marur, Ubadah b.
as-Sami, Rafi b. Malik and many other Helpers travelled all the way from. Medina to Mecca to embrace Islam. Even to hint that the sword played
a part in their conversion is also to deny historical fact.. While in Christian history it is religion which converts swords into
ploughshares, Maulana Maududi's interpretation of Islamic history asks
us to believe it is the sword which prepares the soil of the soul to receive
religion's seed.10 Was it the Holy Prophet's sword or a few verses of the. Holy Quran which turned Umar b. Khattab - a sworn enemy of Islam into Islam's devoted servant?. In the early days of the Prophet's persecution, Umar, a headstrong
young man of 26, decided to kill the Prophets, thus wiping out the main
cause of division among the Quraysh. On his way to the Prophet's sa
house, he met Nuaim b. Abdullah, who sensed his evil intentions and
said: 'O Umar! Go back to the people of thy house! Thy sister, Fatima,
and thy brother-in-law, Saeed, have embraced the religion of Muhammad.' And, without a single word, Umar went straight to his sister's
house, where a Companion, Khabbab, was reciting the opening verses of
the Surah, Ta-Ha (XX). As soon as Umar went in, Khabbab hid in a
corner and Fatima hid the pages of the Quran in her clothing. But Umar
had overheard Khabbab's recital and attacked both Saeed and Fatima.. When Fatima was covered in blood, he softened and asked to see the
verses. He read them and exclaimed: 'How beautiful and how noble these
words are!' And he went straight to Arqam's house, where the Prophetsa
was sitting with his Companions. He cried out: 'O Messenger of Allah!. I have come to thee that I may declare my faith in Allah and His. Messenger and in what he hath brought from Allah.'. Why is Maulana Maududi so determined to paint a violent picture of. Islam? Why are there contradictions in his theory of jihad? A glance at
the Maulana's background and the conditions under which he wrote his
book, Al-Jihad fil Islam, can help us answer these questions.. Syed Abul Ala-Maududi spent his childhood and early youth in. Hyderabad (Deccan) where the Nizam still ruled in the style of the great. Mughal and where his Hindu prime minister sang the praises of the Holy
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11. Murder in the Name of Allah. Prophet. At the crossroads, from north to south and east to west, it was
the last stronghold of Mughal - predominantly Muslim - culture in India.. In a state where the population was overwhelmingly Hindu (more than
80 per cent) and Muslims were a small minority (just 10 per cent), the
ruler though without effective power, still recalled the past glory of. Mughal rule. It was an unreal world. The court, with its Paigah nobility,
chamberlains, household troops, brocade sherwanis, ceremonial dastar
(turban), bugloos (buckle) and gorgeous jewellery, was a reminder of the. Delhi Court before it was ravaged by Nadir Shah (1739). There were. Arab mercenaries with gilded daggers and long muskets and the regular
army with all the paraphernalia of modern warfare. The rajas and
maharajahs some of them reigning over areas larger than the Hindu
states of British India - occupied the highest places of honour in the. Nizam's government and were part of a surreal picture of Muslim
tolerance and Hindu loyalty.. Though the Hyderabadi culture was recognisably Indian based, it was
largely Muslim in shape. 'Social organisation was still feudal, but not in
any sense primitive. It was highly cultivated with a grace of manner, and,
above all, a tolerance and mutual respect which could speak volumes to
our generation if we could listen. 12. It was in this Hyderabad that the young Maududi's personality was
formed.¹³ Sensitive and impressionable, he started his journalistic career
in 1918 by joining the editorial staff of the Medina (Bijnore). After
working as editor of the Taj (Jabalpur) he took over the editorship of AlJamiyat (Delhi) in 1925. The shuddi movement was at its height and, as
mentioned earlier, at this time the young editor of Al-Jamiyat started
writing his articles. They were obviously written under the pressure of his
day-to-day work and they were all completed within six months. 14. Maududi began to write these articles 'more as a nationalist than a
religious zealot', but on further study of Islamic literature - as much as he
could read in six months and without Islamic schooling - he became a
religious revivalist.15 Both his articles in Al-Jihad fil Islam and the overall
evolution of his own thought were very much piecemeal. He started
writing the book as a nationalist Indian¹6 and, as such, his aim was to
prove to the Indian Hindus, and especially to Gandhiji, that Islam was not
a religion of violence. In a speech at Jami Masjid, Delhi, the great Indian. Muslim leader, Maulana Muhammad Ali Jowhar, said he wished that a. Muslim would write a book pointing out that Islam had nothing to do with
violence. Young Maududi was among the audience and decided to take
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17. A Rebuttal of Maududian Philosophy
the task. So, in the first instalments of his articles, he pointed out to. Hindus that Islam was not a religion of the sword. But our author was
born and bred in a Muslim kingdom where the Hindu majority was under
a Muslim leader.. The writer of two books on the history of Hyderabad¹³ was steeped in
the power of political authority. He soon contradicted his own arguments
against the jihad of the sword. This Hyderabadi Muslim was to assert: 'It
is fallacious to say that the sword did not play any role in conversion.' The
young journalist was neither a historian nor a scholar of religion. He
could not understand that though Muslim dynasties ruled the Deccan for
600 years, the overwhelming majority of that area remained Hindu.. Political power in Muslim hands has never helped conversion to Islam.. The author of Jihad fil Islam was just 24 years old. And the Maulana, even
at the age of 65, remained ‘superficial'. As Prof. Fazlur Rahman observed:. Maududi, though not an alim, was nevertheless a self-taught man of
considerable intelligence and sufficient knowledge.... He was by no
means an accurate or profound scholar, but he was undoubtedly like a
fresh wind in the stifling Islamic atmosphere created by the traditional
madrasas. . . . But Maududi displays nowhere the larger and more
profound vision of Islam's role in the world. Being a journalist rather
than a serious scholar he wrote at great speed and with resultant
superficiality in order to feed his eager young readers - and he wrote
incessantly………. Not one of Maududi's followers ever became a serious
student of Islam, the result being that, for the faithful, Maududi's
statements represented the last word on Islam - no matter how much and
how blatantly he contradicted himself from time to time on such basic
issues as economic policy and political theory. 19. The late Mufti Kifayatullah of Delhi held the same opinion. He said:
'I know Maulana Abul Ala Maududi. He has neither learned from nor
been disciplined by a scholar of repute. He is very well read but his
understanding of religion is weak.20. The late Maulana Husain Ahmad Madani foresaw the danger very
clearly and said:. His pamphlets and books contain opinions which are anti-religious and
heretic, though written with theological trappings. Lay readers cannot
see through these trappings. As a result they find the Islam brought by the. Holy Prophet repugnant; the Islam which has been followed by the. Ummat-i-Muhammadiya for the last 1350 years.21. In one of his letters, Maualana Qari Muhammad Tayyab wrote:
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Murder in the Name of Allah
'Having read Maududi Sahib's writings I have concluded that he did not
acquire the disciplines of Muslim legal philosophy and mysticism. He
cannot write on them with authority.22. The late Maulana Ahmad Ali Lahauri also wrote in the same vein:. Maududi Sahib wants to present a ‘New Islam' to the Muslims. And. Muslims will not accept a 'New Islam' unless the old Islam, which they
have followed for the last 1,350 years, is not fully destroyed and it is
proved that Islam has become irrelevant and impractical. 23. Maulana Maududi, as we have seen, was neither an historian nor a
religious scholar. he was essentially a journalist and he had the two basic
qualities of a journalist: a good command of the Urdu language and the
ability to write quickly. The Al-Jamiyat was a bi-weekly at that time and
he had to write his column on jihad within two or three days, in addition
to editing his newspaper. Having no background in research and no time
for it then, he mistook the battle of Hunayn (30 January 630), which came
soon after the submission of Mecca (11 January), as a turning-point in. Islamic history. Since Islam's enemies were decisively beaten at Hunayn,
the Maulana concluded that it was this victory and the political power
gained through it which helped the conversion of the whole of Arabia to. Islam. Maulana Maududi is not alone in drawing this conclusion. The
orientalists, who see no moral or spiritual force in Islamic teachings and
are unable to understand the great miracles performed by our Holy. Prophet, have always put Muslim expansion down to force. The orientalists divided the life of the Prophetsa into two sections, the first the
period of Meccan persecution and second the period of conquest after his
migration to Medina. Our young journalist, Abul Ala Maududi, with his
superficial knowledge of Islamic history, accepted this apparently simplistic but, in reality, very clever division of the Holy Prophet'ssa life.
sa. Sa. Armed conflict, war and threats of war were forced constantly on the. Prophet. After he migrated to Medina, the pagans of Mecca and the Jews
of Medina, encouraged by the hypocrites, busily plotted against Islam.. They inspired hatred against Muslims and worked pagan Arabs up to a
fever pitch against the Holy Prophetsa. All the defensive actions the. Muslims were forced to take obstructed the Prophet's sa basic mission.. Muslims needed peace but, as our examination will show, that peace was
deliberately disturbed to prevent them from spreading the new faith.
1 Islam's enemies used every means of communication against Islam.. For the Arabs, poets were historians, genealogists, satirists, moralists and
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A Rebuttal of Maududian Philosophy
founts of wisdom. 24 The poet was the ‘kindler of battles and 'the
journalist of the time' 26 The Ansar (the Muslims of Medina) were
accused of dishonouring themselves by submitting to an outsider. Asma
bint Marwan of Umayyah b. Zayd composed verses taunting and insulting Medinite Muslims. She said:. Cowards of Malik and Nabit. And cowards of Awf and Khazraj. You obey a stranger who does not belong to you. Who is neither a Murad nor a Mad'hij²8. Do you when your own chiefs have
been murdered - hope in him. Like the greedy people looking towards
a cooking pot of meal soup?. Is there no man of honour among you who will
take advantage of an unguarded moment. And cut off the gulls' hopes?29. The centenarian poet of Khazrajite class, Abu Afak, taunted the Medinites
with the following verses:. I have lived a long time, but I have
never seen. Either a house or gathering of people. More loyal and faithful to. Its allies, when they call on them,. Than those of the Children of Qayla³0
as a whole.. The mountains will crumble before they submit.. Yet here is a rider come among them
who has divided them.
(He says) "This is permitted, this is
forbidden'. To all kinds of things. But if you had believed in power. And in might, why did you not follow. Tubba?31. Tubbas were south Arabian kings of great reputation. Abu Afak, in
effect, asked the Ansar, ‘Once you resisted Tubba, now what has
happened to you that you have accepted the claims of a Meccan refugee?". While Asma and Abu Afak were putting the Ansar to shame, the Jewish
poet Kab b. al-Ashraf³2, enraged by the Muslim victory at Badr, went all
the way to Mecca to rouse the Quraish against the Holy Prophets. He
played on the Arab weakness for vengeance:
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Murder in the Name of Allah. Badr's mill ground out the blood of its people.. At events like Badr you should weep and cry.. The best people were killed round their cisterns.. Don't think it strange that princes were left lying. How many noble, handsome men,. The refuge of the homeless, were slain,. Liberal when the stars gave no rain.³³
2 The vendetta, as we have observed earlier, was one of the pillars of preIslamic Arab society. So, whenever a pagan combatant was killed by a. Muslim in armed conflict, his heirs took an oath to avenge his death and
the whole tribe accused Islam of his death. The fact that conflicts were
initiated by pagans themselves was conveniently forgotten.
3 The Holy Prophet'ssa mission was restricted to a small area of Arabia
because of the general hostility to him. Missionaries could not take the
message of Islam to the whole of the peninsula.
4 Many Arabs had accepted Islam, but fear of war made them afraid to
declare their new faith.
5 Conversion to a new religion requires commitment and courage, even
when honour and life itself are not at risk. Here, acceptance of Islam
demanded more than the joining of a religious society: it meant taking up
arms in its defence. Since Muslims at this time were unarmed and weak,
it was suicide to join them.
6 Self-defence kept the Muslims so busy that very little time was left for
spreading the faith.. If our premise is correct, the ending of hostilities should have
immediately boosted the spread of Islam. As we shall see, this is exactly
what happened. Mecca was conquered in January 630. That, according
to the orientalists and enemies of Islam, was the turning-point in Islamic
history. If that were true, one could indeed say that the sword had played
a role in the spread of Islam. But history tells a rather different story.. Hostilities between the Muslims and the pagan Arabs ended with the
truce of Al-Hudaybiah 34 (March 628). The terms of the truce appeared to
be so degrading that 'Umar could not contain himself, and asked the. Prophet: 'Why yield we in such lowly wise against the honour of our
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A Rebuttal of Maududian Philosophy
religion?' The Meccans thought it was a victory. But it was this respite
from armed conflict which gave the Holy Prophetsa much more time to
spread the faith. The extent of his success can be gauged by the 10,000. Muslims who marched to Mecca with him in January 630. Previously,
his largest force had been 3000 men. This was the strength of the. Muslim army which defended Medina when it was besieged by an
army of 10,000 pagan Arabs. 35 The additional 7000 men were
obviously converted to Islam during the two-year truce. People like. Amr b. al-As and Khalid b. Walid were converted at this time. The
success of this peaceful penetration by Islam was so great that a
puzzled Montgomery Watt counts it 'among the imponderabilia' and
adds: 'Foremost among the reasons for this success of Muhammad's
was the attractiveness of Islam and its relevance as a religious and
social system to the religious and social needs of the Arabs."36 Watt
also says, as if directly addressing Maulana Maududi himself:. Had Muhammad not been able to maintain and strengthen his hold on the. Muslims by the sway of religious ideas of Islam over their imaginations,
and had he not been able to attract fresh converts to Islam, the treaty of. Al-Hudaybiah would not have worked in his favour.... Any historian
who is not biased in favour of materialism must also allow as factors of
supreme importance Muhammad's belief in the message of the Quran,
his belief in the structure of Islam as a religious and political system, and
his unflinching devotion to the task to which, as he believed, God had
called him... This expedition and treaty mark a new initiative on the part
of Muhammad.37. It is sad to note that while an orientalist puts the Holy Prophet's success
down to 'the sway of the religious ideas of Islam', a leading Muslim of. Maulana Maududi's stature insists that it was through the sway of the
sword after the battle of Hunayn that teeming thousands of Arabs
accepted Islam. If these were the people whose souls were cleansed with
the blade of the sword, then these were also the people who were the first
to revolt after the Prophet's sa death. That answer to the Maulana's
argument, however, does not explain the revolt.. In the past travel was difficult. There were no roads and therefore
one's safety could not be guaranteed. It was, therefore, impossible for
every Arab to come to the Prophets to learn about Islam at first hand, nor
for the Prophet to visit every region of the peninsula. The Arab custom
was that either a tribal delegation would be sent to the Prophetsa or a. Muslim delegation would be sent to the tribes to deliver the message of. Islam. There were discussions and debates, and after every question had
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Murder in the Name of Allah
been asked the tribe accepted whatever the members of the delegation or
the elders of the tribe decided. So there was a large number of converts
who had no opportunity of benefiting directly from the Prophet's sa
teaching; they had never even seen him. They did not even have the
chance to spend time with the Prophet's sa Companions. Religion is a
personal experience and is learned especially by example and inspiration - things not available to the new converts. Misfortune was compounded by the death of the Holy Prophets soon after their conversion.. The Arab horizon was more than a little darkened by the passing away of. Muhammadsa. We can learn a great deal from that period of history.. When people reject the prophet of their time and extinguish his light by
force, they are severely punished for it.. One result of that punishment is that most people see the light of iman
(belief) when the source of that light is about to be extinguished.. Sometimes people only recognise a prophet long after his death. What a
punishment! To persecute a prophet while he is alive; to accept him only
after he has gone.. Since Maulana Maududi joined the worst enemies of Islam by
arguing that the sword played a part in the preaching of Islam, let us reexamine the Prophet's life to see if at any stage people were converted
against their will.. The division of the Holy Prophet's life into two periods, the Meccan
and the Medinite, seems logical, but it is in reality an over-simplification.. After the Hijrah, the Prophets and the Emigrants had escaped persecution, but the struggle for survival was not over. It would be more logical
to divide the Prophet's life into three phases: the first being the time up
to his migration to Medina, and the second the time from his migration
to the truce of Hudaybiyah, which was also a period of persecution; the
third from the truce to the surrender of Mecca. (Though the Muslims were
allowed to fight back, they were no match for the pagan opposition.. Medina was the only town where Muslims lived, but they did not control
it. The three Jewish tribes and the non-Muslim members of the Aws and
the Khazraj dominated the town. The size of the opposing armies at the
battle of Badr³8 represented their actual strength. Therefore, this period
should be considered an extension of the Meccan period of bitter
struggle.) The third period begins with the truce of Hudaybiyah and ends
with the surrender of Mecca. It was a period of peace. The Meccan pagans
did not attack the Muslims, though a few skirmishes took place with the. Jews and some Arab tribes who broke their agreements with the Muslims.
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A Rebuttal of Maududian Philosophy. The first period of persecution lasted thirteen years. During that time
there was no question of conversion by force. Even the orientalists agree
with that. In fact, people accepted Islam in spite of Meccan persecution.. Muslims who accepted Islam in Mecca at that time are known as. Muhajirs (Emigrants) and it is an historical fact that no Emigrant was
unwillingly converted.. The Muslims offered armed resistance during the second period of
their persecution. A critic might think that during that armed conflict at
least some might have been forced into accepting Islam. But the history
of the period is fully documented. The majority of Muslims in Medina
belonged to two Arab tribes, the Aws and the Khazraj. These were the
people who had invited the Holy Prophet to Medina. When they met him
at Aqbah, he said: 'I make with you this pact on condition that the
allegiance you pledge me shall bind you to protect me even as you protect
your women and children.' The Khazrajite chief, Bara, who rose to reply,
took the Prophet's sa hand and said:. By Him who sent thee with the truth, we will protect thee as we
protect them. So accept the pledge of our allegiance, O Messenger
of God, for we are men of war, possessed of arms that have been
handed down from father to son.. These were the people who travelled all the way from Yathrib (Medina)
to Mecca to offer their swords to the Prophet and who are now known
as Ansar (Helpers).. A few Jews in Medina and a small number of Arabs from outlying
towns also became Muslims, but none of them accepted their new faith
under duress or as a result of armed conflict. During this period the spread
of Islam in Mecca was relentless and, despite greater persecution, the. Meccan Arabs continued to accept Islam. Again, force did not enter into
it.. The conversion of prisioners-of-war is the only remotely possible
exception. Before we look at it, let us clear up one misunderstanding. The
words ghazwah and sariyah do not mean 'war' or even 'armed conflict'.. They only mean 'an expedition'. Scouts, patrols, embassies, rescue
parties, the chasing of highwaymen - even a single Companion's journey
to preach - are grouped under these titles. Expeditions were known as
sariyah; if the Prophets himself led them, as ghazwah. For instance, the
first expedition the Prophets led was to Al-Abwa, where his mother was
buried. He was accompanied by sixty Muhajirs. The Holy Prophetsa
stayed there for a few days and signed a treaty of friendship with the chief
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of the Bunu Damrah. Soon after, the Prophetsa had to follow Kurz alFihri. As Watt points out, 'It was an attempt to punish a freebooter of the
neighbouring region for stealing some of the Medinite pasturing camels. '39 The expedition, again in the words of Watt, 'Illustrates the dangers
against which he [the Holy Prophetsa] had to be constantly on guard.”40. There were about fifty such expeditions between Hijrah and the truce of. Hudaybiyah. Of them, three conflicts assumed the dimensions of fullscale war. Badr, Uhud and Ahzab. In the armed conflict with B. Mustaliq
over 100 prisoners were taken, but all of them were freed without ransom.. In some minor expeditions where one or two prisoners were seized, they
too were released without any conditions. It was at the battle of Badr that
seventy-two prisoners-of-war were taken. Two of them were executed
for past crimes; the rest were freed after a ransom was paid. That, in some
cases, was limited only to teaching the children of Ansar how to read and
write.. The third period began with the truce of Hudaybiyah and ended with
the surrender of Mecca. Twenty-two expeditions were made during this
period. Of them, only three conflicts saw any prisoners-of-war being
taken. The Prophetsa had sent Dihyah b. Khalifah al-Kalbi as an envoy
to Caesar. On his return journey, Dihyah was robbed of Byzantine
presents he was carrying for the Holy Prophets, by Al-Hunayd and other
members of the tribe of Jurham. The Prophets sent an expedition under. Zayd b. Haritha to punish Al-Hunayd and his allies. The prisoners taken
in the resulting skirmish were freed after they repented. Bashir b. Sad
successfully led an expedition against the Ghatfan, who were in alliance
with the Jews of Medina and the pagans of Mecca. A small number of
prisioners were taken, but it is not known what happened to them.. Similarly, an expedition was sent to punish B. Bani Kilab. A group of B.. Uraynah, who lived among the B. Kilab, came in distress to Medina and
accepted Islam. As they were suffering from a fever, they were sent to the. Prophet's pasture grounds to enjoy good food and milk. But, when they
recovered their strength, they cruelly killed the herdsmen and stole
fifteen camels. They were punished. There was probably a small number
of prisoners, but the details are not known.. This rather detailed examination shows that from the Hijrah to the
surrender of Mecca, not a single prisoner-of-war was forced to convert.. There is no evidence to suggest that the filth of their soul was removed
by the blade of the sword. Rather, these prisoners were allowed to return
to their paganism.
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A Rebuttal of Maududian Philosophy. The final period of the Holy Prophet'ssa life began with Mecca's
surrender - or the day of the conquering of hearts. That Islamic victory
over the Meccans conclusively proved that the spreading of Islam was
not even remotely connected with violence. Not one person was converted by force.. Abu Sufyan, the arch-enemy of Islam, who became a Muslim on the
eve of the Prophet's triumphant entry into Mecca, watched the Muslim
army from a vantage point near the city. The Holy Prophet'ssa uncle,. Abbas, was with him. What Abu Sufyan saw there has been vividly
described by Martin Lings:. Troop after troop went by, and, at the passing of each, Abu Sufyan asked
who they were, and each time he marvelled, either because the tribe in
question had hitherto been far beyond the range of influence of Quraish,
or because it had recently been hostile to the Prophet, as was the case with
the Ghatafanite clan of Ashja, one of whose ensigns was borne by. Nuaym, the former friend of himself and Suhayl.
‘Of all the Arabs,' said Abu Sufayn, 'These were Muhammad's
bitterest foes.'
'God caused Islam to enter their hearts,' said Abbas. 'All this is by the
grace of God."
$41. Was it the sword which converted them? And when the Prophets entered. Mecca with his 10,000 men, did he avenge the thirteen-year persecution?. The idea of settling scores was certainly in the minds of some. When Sad
ibn Ubada saw Abu Sufyan he said: 'O Abu Sufyan, this is the day of
slaughter: the day when the inviolable shall be violated: the day of God's
abasement of Quraish.' When Abu Sufyan repeated to the Holy Prophet
what Sad had said, the Prophet replied: 'This is the day of mercy, the day
on which God has exalted Quraish.' A general amnesty was proclaimed.. Using the words of Joseph, as reported in the Quran, Muhammad said:
'Verily I say as my brother Joseph said, this day there shall be no reproach
on you. May Allah forgive you. He is the Most Merciful of all those who
show mercy.' (12.93). Washington Irving, by no means a sympathetic observer of Islam,
describes the Holy Prophet'ssa entry into Mecca in the following way:. The sun was just rising as he entered the gates of his native city, with the
glory of a conqueror, but the garb and humility of a pilgrim. He entered,
repeating verses of the Koran, which he said had been revealed to him at. Medina, and were prophetic of the event. He triumphed in the spirit of a
religious zealot, not a warrior.ª
42. Meccan leaders who opposed the Prophet with every means at their
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Murder in the Name of Allah
disposal were not only magnanimously pardoned but also, as even. Montgomery Watt admits: 'Were not forced to become Muslims; they
and doubtless many others remained pagan, at least till after Al-Jiranah'.43. Maxime Rodinson agrees with Watt: 'No man seems to have felt under
constraint to embrace Islam.'44. Had there been even the remotest hint of conversion by force in our
primary sources of hadith or sirah, the critics of Islam would have had a
field day. Now compare again the opinions of Irving, Watt and Rodinson
with what Maulana Maududi said on the subject: 'When every method of
persuasion failed, the Prophets took to the sword. That sword removed
evil and mischief and the filth of the soul.'. The conquest of Mecca will be engraved on the pages of history for
ever. That day will continue to absolve the Prophetsa - the Mercy for. Mankind from charges of violence and force which Maulana Maududi
has imputed to him. That a non-Muslim orientalist, Stanley Lane-Poole,
should have to put right Maududi's mistake is a tragedy of great magnitude which should sadden the heart of every Muslim. Lane-Poole says:. The day of Muhammad's greatest triumph over his enemies was also the
day of his grandest victory over himself. He freely forgave the Quraish
all the years of sorrow and cruel scorn to which they had inflicted him,
and gave an amnesty to the whole population of Mecca.45. The last phase of the Prophet's sa life begins with Mecca's conquest
and ends with his death. There were seven expeditions during this time.. There was no fighting at all in three of them and no prisoners were taken.. In the remaining four, more than 6000 prisoners were seized. What
happened to these prisoners? Maududi's logic would lead us to
believe that this would have been the perfect occasion for removing filth
from prisoners' souls and converting them to Islam. History tells us
something different.. At the battle of Hunayn, 6000 prisoners were taken. The Holy. Prophet had spent his infancy with one of the clans of this tribe as a foster
child. Among the prisoners, an old woman protested to her captor saying,
'By God, I am the sister of your chief!' The woman was produced before
the Holy Prophetsa, who realised it was indeed one of his foster-sisters,. Shayma'. The Prophet spread his rug and bade her be seated. With tears
in his eyes he asked about Halimah, his foster-mother. There was no word
of reproach. The Prophetsa did not ask why the tribe had not thought of
its foster-son before going to war. Instead, he said: 'So far those who have
fallen unto me and unto the sons of Abd ul-Muttalib, they are yours; and
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A Rebuttal of Maududian Philosophy. I will plead with other men on your behalf.' When other Muslims heard
about this they said: 'What belongs to us, belongs to the Holy Prophetsa",
and they immediately presented their captives to him. Thus all 6000
prisoners were freed. The sword played no part in their conversion. The. Holy Propheta gave his foster-sister camels, sheep and goats as presents.. Harith, the brother of the Holy Prophet's foster-father, insisted that the
whole tribe of Hawazin be considered his foster-kinsmen. Their leader,. Malik, who had escaped to Taif, was recalled and given 100 camels. The. Holy Prophets also put him in command of the already increasing. Muslim community in Hawazin. Many others also received gifts.. Similarly, sixty-two prisoners were brought to Medina from the
expedition of Uyaynah b. Hisn. They asked for mercy and were released.. In the expedition to Fuls, a centre of idol worship, Adi, the leader of
the opposing tribe, Tayy, escaped but one of his sisters was captured.. When she was brought to Medina she threw herself at the Prophet's feet
and begged for mercy. She said: 'My father freed the prisoners, provided
hospitality for guests, fed the hungry and gave comfort to those in
distress. He never turned away anyone who came to his door seeking
help. I am the daughter of Hatim.'. The Holy Prophetsa spoke kindly to her and ordered her release,
saying: 'Her father loved noble ways, and Allah likewise loves them.". The Prophet gave her a camel and fine garments. Since she did not want
to be released alone, all other captives taken with her were also freed. All
this was done because she was the daughter of a great poet, whose
hospitality and generosity made Arabs proud. When Adi heard of his
sister's treatment he entered Islam and the Holy Prophets confirmed his
chieftancy of Tayy.. Surveying the orientalists' conflicting opinions about the Prophet's
personality, Maxime Rodinson has observed: 'Everyone has shaped him
after their own passions, ideas or fantasies."46 This observation applies
more to Maulana Maududi, a Muslim, than it does to non-Muslim
orientalists. His passion for political authority was fed on his childhood
impressions of fading Hyderabadi glory and strengthened by the political
struggle of his younger days, when he first admired Gandhiji and then
opposed Hindu communalism. This so dominated his thinking that in his
account he converted the life of the Holy Prophetsa - a blessing for all
mankind into that of a warrior... a warrior putting the world to rights
with the blade of a sword.
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CHAPTER 4. PROPHETS AND TROOPERS. A Study in Contrast. Remind them for thou (O Prophet) art an admonisher. Thou art not at all
a warder over them.. Quran, 88.22 - 3. It [Jamaati Islami] is not a missionary organisation or a body of preachers
or evangelists, but an organisation of God's troopers.. Maulana Abul Ala Maududi¹. The picture of Muhammad, the Prophet of Islam painted by nineteenthcentury orientalists has been examined in the previous chapter. It was a
picture of a fanatical warrior riding out of the Arabian deserts with a
drawn sword in one hand and the Quran in the other, offering his helpless
victims a choice between the two. The harshness of this picture, popularised by Edward Gibbon² has now been toned down by modern orientalists. Even the well-known Jewish scholar, Bernard Lewis, with his dry. British humour, had to admit that the picture, 'Is not only false but also
impossible unless we are able to assume a race of left-handed swordsmen. In Muslim practice, the left hand is reserved for unclean purposes,
and no self-respecting Muslim would use it to raise the Quran."³. But there is one 'self-respecting' Muslim, Maulana Maududi, who
clutched his drawn sword in his right hand, irrespective of its lack of
relevance to the teachings of the Holy Quran and the practices of the Holy. Prophets.. The Maulana claims to be a loyal follower of the Prophets, and, as
such, one would expect him to talk admiringly of his Master. Beauty is
in the eye of the beholder. But how can he see defects in his Lord which
even Islam's modern enemies reject? There are three answers to this
question.
1 That the Maulana's claim to be a loyal follower of Islam is false. In view
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:. Prophets and Troopers
of what the Maulana wrote in Al-Jihad fil Islam and his other works,
the reader may reasonably be led to believe that the author is not even
remotely concerned with the teachings of the Holy Prophets and that his
claim to be a loyal follower is false. That would be a very serious charge.. Since I belong to a sect which has been falsely accused of showing
disrespect to the Holy Prophetsa, I would be the last to doubt the. Maulana's loyalty to our Lord and Master, Muhammad - may Allah bless
him and grant him peace.
2 That the Maulana's sense of values has been confused, so he has as
much difficulty in telling good from evil as a colour-blind person does
in telling red from green.
3 That the Maulana is obsessed - obsessed with a desire for political
power and authority. Obsession has been defined as ‘A persistent or
recurrent idea, usually strongly tinged with emotion, frequently involving an urge towards some form of action; the whole mental situation
being pathological.”4. Pierre Janet found that an obsessive person was scrupulous, everconscientious and stricken by a sense of worthlessness." Elton Mayo has
summarised Janet's and his own characterisation of obsessives in these
terms: 'They are the experts in arduous rethinking of the obvious - they
substitute an exaggerated precision in minor activities for that activity in
major affairs of which they are or feel themselves to be incapable.. The Maulana's childhood memories and adolescent experiences in. Hyderabad, as we have seen earlier, led him towards one source of
behavioural control - political power. Kurt Lewin has observed that if
an individual's behaviour is to be understood, it must be in terms of his
life-space- one has to relate the individual to his environment over the
course of time and at the particular moment. Lewin's field of interest is
thus: the life-space, containing the person and his psychological environment." Woodsworth and Sheehan elaborate Lewin's theory and say:. The psychological (or behavioural) environment is, of course, the environment as perceived and understood by the person, but more than
that, it is the environment as related to his present needs and quasineeds. Many objects which are perceived are of no present concern to
him and so exist only in the background of his psychological environment. Other objects have positive or negative ‘valence' - positive if they
promise to meet his present needs, negative if they threaten injury.. Objects of positive valence attract him, while objects of negative
valence repel him.³
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Murder in the Name of Allah. Psychology is not an absolute science and it is still evolving, but. Maulana Maududi's 'obsession' seems to fit the theory we have discussed. That is not to say, of course, that there might not be another
explanation of his obsessive behaviour. Whatever the explanation, the. Maulana's vision has undoubtedly been blurred by obsession. He trips
and, at times, stumbles into paths which have been traversed before him
by the enemies of God. It is this obsession which causes him to support
capital punishment for those who switch religions. This punishment has
always been demanded for prophets and their followers who change from
their traditional religion. It is the same obsession which impels him to put
a sword into the Holy Prophet's hand and, in doing so, to support those
enemies of Islam who paint a gory picture of Muhammad³ª. Since persuasion and force are mutually exclusive, the Maulana adopts the
sword as a means of reform and rejects reasoning as a method of
conversion. Persuasion and reasoning are difficult tasks of which he
is or feels himself to be incapable. They entail sacrifice and long
suffering in the face of opposition, as the Prophet'ssa Meccan life
showed. So the Maulana rejects them as objects of negative valence.. Force through political power seems to meet his present needs, so he
adopts it and relates it to the Holy Prophet's life with a process of
arduous thinking.. When I refer to the Maulana's obsession, I do not mean to show him
any disrespect, although, by putting a sword into the hands of my Lord
and Master Muhammad he has shown disrespect to the Prophet and all
he stood for. Reviewing Israel Shenker's book, Coat of Many Colors, a
collection of essays on Judaism, Hugh Nissenden says: 'Mr Shenker
dramatises his obsession in a way that makes the history of his people
accessible and illuminating to everyone.'10 I only wish the Maulana could
put his obsession to good use. Instead, he justifies force, not only as
legitimate, but also as an essential method of reform. He says: 'It is not
possible that they [the enemies of Islam] would sacrifice their interests in
the face of persuasion and reasoning. All that one can do is to acquire
political power¹¹ and force them to stop their mischief."12. This method of reform seems to be effective and also easier than
persuasion, which requires patience and persistence in the face of
ridicule, rebuffs and snubs. It is so easy to convert people by force. There
is no comparison between the two methods. One is easy and quick; the
other difficult and time consuming, requiring the patience of Jobas. All
reformers have had to endure ridicule and rejection. This is how the
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Prophets and Troopers. Quran describes their lot:. Those who were guilty used to laugh at those who believed; and
when they passed by them, they winked at each other. When they
came back to their families, they exulted over them; and when
they saw them they exclaimed: 'These indeed are the lost ones.'. But they were not appointed keepers over them. (83.30-4). The verses quoted above explain why the Maulana would not follow
the path of the reformers sent by God. People laugh at reformers and say:
'Look at these people whose only weapon is persuasion! They are so
weak we can crush them whenever we wish; and yet they claim to win
people over by their reasoning and advice.' So the Maulana rejected
peaceful argument and said instead:. Anyone who wants to uproot mischief and disorder from this world and
wants to reform mankind should realise that he cannot do so by mere
sermonising and counselling. It is useless. He should rise against the
government of false principles, he should seize power, remove the
wrongdoers from authority and set up a government based on sound
principles and just administration.13. But the Maududian method of reform, which is modelled on Marxism, is not the divine way of saving mankind. In God's plan, persuasion
is so important that, even in an age of general moral decline, only pious
believers 'who exhort one another with truth and steadfastness' (103.4)
will succeed. Even a cursory glance at history will reveal that for spiritual
and moral revolutions God asks his servants to win over the people with
truth and patience. Patience and prayer are the integral part of religious
revolution and they should continue to be exhorted till God's promise is
fulfilled. It is foretold that 'the [pleasing] end is for the righteous'.
(7.129). All God's messengers have followed this method of religious reform,
one which is totally opposed to the Marxist use of force. The Quran
preserves the account of many prophets and evangelists. According to
this divine account, Noah's as instrument of revolution was persuasion
and Abraham's as was also. It was the instrument of Shuaibas and Salehas. Lotas was also sent as a counsellor and so was Mosesas. Jesusªs caused a
revolution with his sermons. And, above all, the Seal of the Prophets, the
leading reformer of all time, our Master Muhammad was sent to bring
about a universal spiritual revolution with nothing but persuasion and
reasoning. But the Maulana not only ignores this tradition of God's holy
messengers; he also contradicts it in the following words: 'Anyone who
wants to uproot mischief and disorder from this world and wants to
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Murder in the Name of Allah
reform mankind should realise that he cannot do so by mere sermonising and counselling. It is useless.'. Let us compare this Maududian dictum with the unbroken tradition
of God's messengers. When Noah's as people accused him of spreading
'manifest error', he replied:. O my people, there is no error in me, but I am a Messenger from the Lord
of the world. I deliver to you the message of my Lord and give you sincere
advice, and I know from Allah what you do not know. (7.62-3). This is God's account of Noah's as ministry. According to the Maududian
dictum, Noahs should have said: 'I am the Messenger of God and I shall
impose upon you, whether you like it or not, a body of righteous men who
will take away your power.'. When the people of Ad told Hudas he was lost in foolishness, he did
not say: ‘Do not be deceived and consider me a fool because of the
harmlessness of the advice; you are not seeing the real me. In fact, I am
an oppressor and one day I will seize power from the hands of those who
have rebelled against God and give it to my own, righteous, people.'. Indeed, he did not. Instead, he followed the tradition of the prophets and
said:. O my people, there is no foolishness in me, but I am a Messenger from
the Lord of the worlds. I deliver to you the messages of my Lord and I am
to you a sincere and faithful counsellor. (7.68-9). The people of Thamud, like those of Ad, rejected Salehas and
accused him of all sorts of things. But, following Noahs and Hudas, he
told them: 'O my people, I did deliver the message of my Lord unto you
and offered you sincere counsel, but you love not sincere counsellors.'
(7.80). And then God sent Lotas, whose followers also made no attempt to
seize power from the misguided, and continued to reason with them till
they were punished. Before the appointed punishment came, Lots and his
followers left their homes with God's permission. And then came that
morning about which tyrants have always been admonished: 'Hopeless
will that morning be for those who have been warned.' (37.178). The seventh chapter of the Quran continues with the story of the
misguided people and the messengers* of God who tried to reform them.. After telling the story of Lotas, the Quran tells us how Shuaibas reasoned
with his arrogant people and pleaded with his cruel tormentors. When all
his advice was rejected, he turned away and said: 'O my people.
indeed, I deliver to you the messages of my Lord and give you sincere
counsel. How, then, should I sorrow for a disbelieving people?' (7.94)
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Prophets and Troopers. The Quran, which for Maulana Maududi and all Muslims is the. Word of God, tells us that all God's messengers give sermons and
advice and when these are rejected, they cry and pray before their. Lord. They have an unshakeable belief in their message and, instead
of seizing power from their enemies, they continue to offer love and
kindness. They reason gently, impart advice with humility and leave
the result to God. He alone is the Lord and He bestows the earth on
whoever He pleases. The wishes of all His messengers are epitomised
in Moses's words: ‘O Lord, send down on us steadfastness and make
us die as men who have surrendered to Thee.' (7.127) Mosesas advised
his people, 'to seek help from Allah and wait in patience and
constancy' (7.129) and told them that the 'Earth belongs to Allah; He
gives it as a heritage to whoever He pleases'. (7.129) It is not for
righteous men to seize power by force. All that we know is that 'the
end is best for the God-fearing'. (7.129). After Mosesas, Jesusas, too, spent his life exhorting and counselling
and never considered seizing power. Finally, the chief of all prophets,. Muhammad was sent as an exhorter and counsellor to invite the poeple
to be virtuous, not as a kind of a policeman or a soldier. God named him
'admonisher' and said: 'Remind them, for thou art an admonisher. Thou
hast no authority to compel them.' (88.22-3). But the Maulana insists that he and his followers ‘are not a body of
religious preachers and evangelists, but an organisation of God's troopers so that they "may be a witness against mankind"". (2.144) The task
of these 'troopers' is to use force to wipe out ‘injustice, mischief,
disorder, disobedience and exploitation from the world”. 14. God tells the greatest of his prophets: 'We have not appointed thee a
keeper over them, nor art thou over them a guardian'. (6.108) But. Maulana Maududi reserves for himself and his followers not only the
authority of a policeman, but also the powers of a magistrate. It is
surprising that God did not give the Prophetsa, His greatest reformer,
temporal authority over the hearts of unbelievers, but gave it instead to. Maulana Maududi and his followers. The Holy Prophet - the embodiment of mercy and compassion - prayed hard that he should become
instrumental in showing the path of righteousness to all mankind. But. God answered: 'Will thou, then, take it upon thyself to force people to
become believers?' (10.100) As far as believers are concerned, God told
the Holy Prophetsa: ‘And if Allah had enforced His will, they would not
have set up gods with Him. And We have not made thee as keeper over
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Murder in the Name of Allah
them, nor art thou over them a guardian.' (6.108). In contrast to the established conduct of all the messengers of God
mentioned in the Holy Quran by name or in general, Maulana Maududi
gave himself the authority to oppress and compel God's servants so that
the Jamaati Islami could eradicate injustice, mischief, disorders, disobedience and exploitation from the world'. 15. The Maulana's ambition of seizing power knew no bounds: he would
go to any lengths to achieve it. He was totally obsessed with political
authority and considered that the worship of God had been prescribed to
train Muslims to usurp power and rule the world. For him, worship had
no spiritual purpose. It was not a religious experience, a meeting ground
between man and his Creator, but a ritual of self-discipline. God says: 'I
have created Jinn and men that they may worship Me.' (51.57) The world
was created for the worship of God. Worship was not created for any
other purpose. But the Maulana insists:. The prayers (salat), fasting, charity (zakat) and pilgrimage have been
prescribed to prepare and train us for this purpose (jihad). All the
governments in the world give their armies special and specific training,
their police and civil service too. In the same way, Islam also trains those
who join its service - then requires them to go to jihad and establish the
government of God. 16. No religion in the world preaches such a materialistic concept of worship.. But even the worship of God can become nothing more than an army drill
for a person who is obsessed.. Ambition is impatient by definition, but of all ambitions power mania
brooks least delay. So the Maulana would not take the straight path - it
was too narrow and too long for him. And Marxism, too, will not take the
long and hard route of democracy to liberate the oppressed. Instead, it
adopts violence to try to overthrow the elected government of the day.. The Maulana's method of reform is no different from the Marxist
ideology of violent struggle. The Maulana says: 'Stand up to reform
people wherever you can. Try to replace wrong principles with correct
ones. Snatch away executive and legislative powers from those who do
not fear God. 17. It is surprising that a journalist of Maulana Maududi's long political
experience could not understand the principle that governments should
not be overthrown by force, whatever the reason. To break this basic rule
is to destroy law and order. The fires of civil war would consume the very
fabric of society.. Firstly, no party can be its own judge and decide its intentions are
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Prophets and Troopers
good. Secondly, even if those intentions are good, the opposition parties
cannot be condemned out of hand. It is inconceivable that every member
of the opposition is cruel, unjust or evil, while every member of 'God's
troopers' is pious, God-fearing and free from greed and lust. The fact is
that parties which start the work of reform with high-flying claims are the
ones which soon become greedy for power, their good intentions burned
up by the flames of greed. The Maulana himself explains how uncontrollable is the desire for power:. As everyone knows, power is such a dangerous demon that the very
desire of it is accompanied by an all-consuming greed. Man eagerly
looks forward to owning earthly treasures and controlling his fellow
creatures so that he may exercise absolute power over them.18. One problem in uttering such uncontrolled rhetoric is that even an
experienced journalist like Maududi forgets the inherent contradictions
within his writings. If the very thought of power can bring a dangerous
change of heart, what guarantee is there that the 'upright' members of the. Jamaati Islami would not be corrupted by absolute power? No doubt
these 'upright' men have undergone the 'civil service training' prescribed by God, i.e. Islamic worship (prayers, fasting and zakat), but this
'service training' is not restricted to the Jamaati Islami. Ahmadi worship
is not accepted as Islamic worship, according to Maulana Maududi, but
what about Brelvi and Deobandi worship? Is Shiite worship not Islamic
worship? Would anyone say that the prayers offered by Ahli Quran are
non-Islamic? If so, why should not these Muslim sects 'rise against
governments based on false principles, seize power, remove the wrongdoers and establish a government based on sound and just administration?' 'False', 'wrongdoers', 'sound' and 'just' are relative terms. What
is false according to the Jamaati Islami may not be false according to the. Deobandis. What is sound and just according to the Deobandis may not
be sound and just for the Brelvis. Then, what about non-Muslims? They,
too, have their own views about what is right and wrong. If their views
were no different from those of Muslims, they would have queued to join. Islam. Would they also have had a right to overthrow the government of
the day?. Good intentions or reform projects cannot become an excuse to
overthrow governments. There are such vast differences in the definition of 'uprightness' between different political parties that if all these
differences were accepted, no party could be considered 'upright'. For
instance, according to the Maulana, the Ahmadiyyah Movement has no
connection with Islam; the British government created it to divide the
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Murder in the Name of Allah. Muslim umma so that Muslims would be dissuaded from jihad and
their strength sapped. It is alleged that the movement was developed
to act as a fifth column to destroy the Muslim umma from within.. But the Ahmadi self-image is very different from that of the Jamaati. Islami. Ahmadis believe their movement was founded to establish
supremacy and to bring about a Muslim rebirth. It was not the British, but. God Himself, who planted its seed to fulfil a promise He made to the
people of Muhammad. He promised to send a Mahdi for the reform of
the umma and raise a Messiah who, with his irrefutable reasoning, would
destroy the Cross, the Cross which inflicted suffering on Jesusas. It is that. Mahdi and that Messiah who founded this community, now busy in the
selfless service of mankind. On one hand, the community humbly
counsels and advises people to change themselves, while, on the other,
it fights and defeats Christianity on every front. How can one believe that
the Ahmadiyyah Movement was set up by the British themselves. Christian? Does one expect the British to support, let alone found, a
community which is devoted to eradicating the Trinity and planting the
holy tree of the Unity of God? Wherever Ahmadis have gone, the weed
of the Trinity has withered and the ever-beautiful plant of the Unity has
flourished with fragrant flowers and sweet fruits. If that is the fruit of a
plant sown by the British, then one only wishes they had sown a few
more, so that the revival of Islam and the dissolution of Christianity had
been accelerated!. What Ahmadis believe about themselves is exactly the opposite of the. Maulana's views about them. In the Ahmadiyyah view, the founder of
their movement was deeply immersed in the love of the Holy Prophet,. Muhammads. The following lines from one of his poems show the
ecstasy of his love and the depth of his devotion for the Holy Prophetsa:. My intoxication in the loving of Muhammadsa is second only to that of. God. If this can be dubbed as disbelief, then God be my witness that I am the
greatest of disbelievers.. Durre Thameen. According to the Ahmadis, their belief is deeply rooted in the love of
the Seal of the Prophet, Muhammads. But Maulana Maududi asserts that
their roots go deep into the British soil of imperialism. The two views are
entirely opposed.. Let us examine the converse view. The Maulana asserts that the. Jamaati Islami has been founded to create a body of 'upright' men
through a long discipline of Islamic worship. These people should reach
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Prophets and Troopers
such a point of readiness that Islam can say to them: 'Yes, now you are
the most upright servants of God on earth. Forward, Muslim soldiers,
fight the rebels of God, dispossess them of authority and take the reins
of government in your hands.' Thanks to the Maulana's efforts, that
body of upright men is now ready and waiting to gain strength to
overthrow the government of the day.. The Maulana really believes that this body of ‘upright' men was
created to reform mankind and raise Islam's flag in the world. It will
abolish everything ungodly and carve with the sword the name of Allah
on every heart.. The Maulana's claim that the members of Jamaati Islami are the most
upright servants of God is believed to be baseless by the Ahmadis. As
a matter of principle, everyone has the right to consider himself and his
followers to be in the right. To be right is one thing. To be upright is quite
another. We cannot claim we are righteous and upright Man is lost in a
maze of self-deception, delusion and outright hypocrisy, so that he is
unable to describe himself with any accuracy. Who knows the secrets of
the heart, the lust of the mind and the hidden desires, except God? Only. He knows who is upright and who sins. There are exceptions, of course.. Some people exhibit unmistakeable and conclusive signs of their uprightness, so that the love of God is evident from their behaviour. God
talks with them as He talked with the upright people of the past. His light
shines over them as it did over the great mystics and saints of the umma
and His succour and support becomes manifest, both in words and deeds.. Therefore Ahmadis totally reject Maulana Maududi's claim that the. Jamaati Islami was founded to raise the flag of Islam. That is, in fact, a
degrading and defaming of the religion which he professes to follow. The
followers of Maulana Maududi can claim whatever they want within the
safety of a Muslim country like Pakistan or Saudi Arabia, but let them
take their creed of 'Islam by force' elsewhere and just see what reception
it gets. Can they convert Christians, with their belief in Jesus as living since
his crucifixion in heaven, to Islam? Can they destroy the Cross? Can
anyone raise the flag of Islam with these Maududian beliefs?. There is no doubt in an Ahmadi mind that the teaching of Maulana. Maududi brings Islam into disrepute and makes it a target of ridicule. The. Jamaati Islami is not only not a friend of Islam, but also it is a form of
communism. Devoid of spiritual values, hungry for power, the Jamaati. Islami is inspired by Moscow, not Mecca.. In short, Ahmadis censure the Jamaati Islami as greatly as the
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Murder in the Name of Allah. Maulana censures the Ahmadiyyah for supposedly being abusive and
vituperative. Multiply these two opposing views among other sects and
groups of the umma and you will see each of them tearing apart the
other's claim of uprightness. Who, then, should ‘Stand up to reform
people and snatch away the executive and legislative powers from people
who have no fear of God?'. Power obsession is the focal point of Maulana Maududi's concept of
reform. He sees the Prophet'ssa life in political terms, explains Islamic
worship in military jargon and interprets the Quran as pure power
politics. The Maulana knows he is incapable of reforming by persuasion,
patience and humility, so he puts forward a policy of violence and
disorder. The most generous interpretation of his aims is that his intentions were good. But the road to hell is paved with good intentions. The. Quranic verdict, however, is explicit: 'When it is said to them: Create not
disorder in the land, they retort: We are only seeking to promote peace.. Take note - most certainly it is they who create disorder, but they realise
it not. (2.12-13)
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CHAPTER 5. THE MAUDUDIAN LAW OF. APOSTASY. Surely, this is a reminder; so whoever wishes may take the way that leads
to his Lord.. Quran, 76.30. In our domain we neither allow any Muslim to change his religion nor
allow any other religion to propagate its faith.. Maulana Maududi¹. Maulana Maududi's desire for political power knew no bounds. The law
of apostasy which he evolved was an extension of his dictatorial and
intolerant personality - it had nothing to do with Islam. Dr Israr Ahmad,
who worked closely with Maududi, said that Maududi borrowed the
principles of his movement from Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and the. Khairi brothers and the style of his presentation from Niyaz Fatehpuri.. But he was so egocentric that he never acknowledged that his ideas came
from anyone but himself.². Similarly, the Maulana's ideas on apostasy, though originating from
an interpretive error of early Muslim jurisprudence (fiqh) are, in fact,
based on medieval Christianity. The Deoband school,³ which was on one
hand collaborating with a predominantly Hindu political organisation the Indian National Congress and on the other fighting a rearguard
action against the shuddi campaign, provided the gloss to Maududi's
thoughts on the subject. The influence of Marxist writings, which the. Maulana seems to have read when a young and impressionable editor, is
markedly noticeable in his thinking. The Tahrik-i Jamaati Islami is a
curious blend of medieval Christian practices, Deobandi/Wahabi intolerance and Marxist incitement to disruption.. As we saw in the first chapter of this book, the concept of religious
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Murder in the Name of Allah
liberty is not evolutionary or lineal - it is a cyclical phenomenon.. Whenever one of God's prophets or a religious reformer appears, he is
opposed. He is accused of dividing the community and breaking traditional conformity. He is pilloried as an apostate. Ultimately a prophet
always succeeds in establishing religious freedom. The true faith spread
by this religious freedom is hardened in rigid dogma, which actually
results in the loss of the right to dissent.. On his last visit to the Temple, Christas said: ‘Render unto Caesar the
things that are Caesar's, and unto God the things that are God's.' (Mark
12:17) This very clear statement separates religious belief from political
authority. However, within a year of obtaining political authority (312),
the Christian Church was torn by schism. For more than 300 years. Christians had been persecuted and flourished, and yet, soon after Constantine's conversion, the Church was confronted with monastic secession, Donatist schism and Arian heresy. Throughout the history of the. Christian Church, heresy, or deviation from orthodoxy, has been a matter
of deep concern. It invariably involves the very concept of deity, the
divinity of Christas.. If Christ was divine in an absolute sense, yet distinct from God, there
were two Gods and Christianity was a form of ditheism, not monotheism.. On the other hand, if the filial relationship were literally interpreted, then. God the Father would be the progenitor of God the Son. But the logic of
this relationship meant that Christ would not be fully God, since there
must have been a time when he ‘was not' and God the Father alone
existed.4. Orthodox Christians held Christ as to be identical in being (homousinous) to God the Father, while Arius (c. 256-336) considered him only
similar in being (homoiousios) to Him. Then there was the question of his
mother. Nestorious (died c. 451) declared that Jesus as was two distinct
persons, one human, one divine; and that Marys was the mother only of
the human, not the divine Christ. It would be better, therefore, to call her
the mother of Christas. The orthodox doctrine is that Maryas is the true
mother, not of the Godhead itself, but of the incarnate legos, or Word of. God, containing both the divine and the human natures of Christas 5. The first ecumenical Council of the Church met in 325 in Bithynian. Nicea and issued a creed on the mystery of the Trinity. The unrepentant. Arius was anathamatised by the council and exiled by Emperor Constantine. The emperor also ordered that all Arius's books should be
burned and their possession should be punished by death.. The cycle of religious liberty which began with Jesus of Nazarethas
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The Maududian Law of Apostasy
came full circle when Justinian (483-565) prescribed the death penalty
for apostasy. The penalty became part of the codification of Roman law
in AD535.. It is a tragic twist of fate that freedom of conscience was snuffed out
by the very Roman Christians whose newly converted forefathers were
burned to provide fire and fun in Nero's Rome (AD64). As long as. Christians were persecuted by non-Christian political authorities, Christian writers defended religious liberty. But once the imperial throne was
won over to Christianity, the Church looked 'with the same hostile eye
upon individualism in belief as the state upon secession or revolt'.6 By the
middle of the fifth century things that were and still are God's were
rendered unto Caesar. Political authority had become the right arm of the. Church. In the course of his campaign against the Donatists, St Augustine
(354-430) argued: 'There is a righteous persecution which the Church of. Christ inflicts upon the impious. She persecutes in the spirit of love. .
. that she may correct... that she may recall from error . . . [taking]
measures for their good, to secure their eternal salvation.". In 385 a Spanish bishop, Priscillian, was accused of preaching. Manicheism and universal celibacy. He denied the charge, but was tried,
condemned and burned at the stake with several companions.. Martin Luther (1483-1546), the German leader of the Protestant. Reformation, concurred with his Roman Catholic predecessor, Augustine, and said: 'The clergy had authority over conscience, but it was
thought necessary that they should be supported by the State with
absolute penalties of outlawry, in order that error might be exterminated,
although it was impossible to banish sin."8. But it was the French Protestant theologican John Calvin (1509-64)
who really inspired Maulana Maududi.. He [Calvin] wished to extend religion by the sword and reserve death as
the punishment of apostasy. . . . Catholics should suffer the same
penalties as those who were guilty of sedition, on the grounds that the
majesty of God must be as strictly avenged as the throne of the king.. While the inspiration came to the Maulana from Calvin, the rationale
was provided by the English thinker Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) in his
book, Leviathan. Since the power to work miracles is one of the signs of
a true prophet, and, according to Hobbes, the days of miracles were over,
there was no possibility of guidance by a prophet or through divine
inspiration. The sovereign alone had civil or religious authority. He alone
had the power to make law, ‘For whosoever hath a lawful power over any
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writing, to make it law, hath the power also to approve or disapprove the
interpretation of the same."10. Heresy, in Hobbes's view, was private judgement and action contrary
to popular belief as laid down by the sovereign:. It is not the intrinsic error of the judgment that makes the heresy punishable, but the private rebellion against authority. To make loyalty to the
commands of conscience the ruling principle would sanction all private
men to disobey their princes in maintenance of their religion, true or
false.11. According to Hobbes, this is subversion.. There is no apostasy without heresy and no heresy without dogma.. The Christian dogma was carefully spelled out in the Athanasian. Creed, which says: 'That we worship one God in Trinity, and Trinity
in Unity; Neither confounding the Persons: nor dividing the Substance.". It is in this tradition of medieval Christianity, and not of Islam, that. Maulana Maududi developed the original ideals of Maulana Abul Kalam. Azad and the Khairi brothers' Hukumat-i-Ilahiyya (Kingdom of God).12. St Augustine, Martin Luther, John Calvin and Thomas Hobbes provided
him with the non-Islamic concepts of orthodoxy, dogma and heresy - and
also with the rhetoric of intolerance.. Even the orientalists, who never miss an opportunity of criticising. Islam, agree there is no dogma and heresy in Islam. Goldziher says:. The role of dogma in Islam cannot be compared to that which it plays in
religious life of any of the Christian Churches. There are no Councils and. Synods which, after lively controversy, lay down the formulae, which
henceforth shall be deemed to embrace the whole of the true faith. There
is no ecclesiastical institution, which serves as the measure of orthodoxy,
no single authorised interpretation of the holy scriptures, on which the
doctrine and exegesis of the church might be built. The Consensus, the
supreme authority in all questions of religious practice, exercises an
elastic, in a certain sense barely definable jurisdiction, the very conception of which is moreover variously explained. Particularly in unanimity
what shall have effect as undisputed Consensus. What is accepted as. Consensus by one party, is far from being accepted as such by another.¹³. The contemporary Jewish orientalist, Bernard Lewis, who would
never be accused of being pro-Muslim, observes:. What matters was what people did - orthopraxy, rather than orthodoxy and Muslims were allowed on the whole to believe as they chose to do,
so long as they accepted the basic minimum, the Unity of God and the
apostolate of Muhammad, and conformed to the social norms.14
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The Maududian Law of Apostasy. True Islam had ceased to be the inspiring force for Maulana Maududi.. Having introduced the concepts of heresy and apostasy he could not
escape from Calvin's logic which prescribed 'death as the punishment
of apostasy'. But the Maulana had the audacity falsely to attribute the
authority for this punishment to the Holy Prophetsa. The Maulana
wrote a pamphlet on the subject in which he confidently quoted Abu. Bakr's military action against the rebel tribes as a proof that there was
a death penalty for apostasy. Before discussing this, one ought to
quote the Maulana's writings to show how heavily he was influenced
by his Christian models.. But first, in summary, to the Christian fathers of medieval Europe,
recantation from Christianity was punishable by death and the only
acceptable definition of Christianity was theirs. Similarly, the punishment for recantation from Islam was death and the only definition of. Islam was the one the Maulana or his successors laid down. It is clear
that under a Maududian government, the Maududian ruler would
decide who was and who was not a Muslim. What would that decision
be? The Maulana's writings are quite clear.. According to Maududi, Ahmadis are apostates and a 'non-Muslim
minority'. But Ahmadis are not the only heretics - the Ahl-i-Quran,
the followers of Mr Parvez's school of thought, are also heretics. They
are kafir and apostates. In fact, their heresy is far more serious than
that of the Qadiyanis. The following order of banishment given by. Maulana Amin Ahsan Islahi, who had not yet renounced the. Maududian teaching - and was still considered the right-hand man of. Maududi was published in the Tasnim, the official organ of the. Jamaati Islami:. Some people advise that since there is no possibility of the promulgation of the Islamic Sharia, the government of this country [Pakistan]
should be formed on the principles laid down in the Quran. If, by this,
these people mean that the Sharia is confined only to the Quran and
that other rules are not Sharia, then it is clearly heresy. This heresy is
similar to that of the Qadiyanis, in fact, much more serious.". This verdict is clearly against the Ahmadis and the Ahl-i-Quran. To
discover whether 'heresy' and consequent apostasy is confined to only
these two groups needs a closer look.. According to Maulana Maududi's writings, anything not Maududian
is heresy. The Maududian teachings are like the Athanasian Creed and
any deviation from them is kufr. The Maulana says:
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Murder in the Name of Allah. Ninety-nine point nine per cent of the Muslim nation has no knowledge of Islam or the ability to tell right from wrong. They have
directed neither their moral values nor their thoughts towards Islam.. A Muslim is a Muslim because his father was a Muslim and the faith
is passed from generation to generation. These Muslims have not
accepted this right because they believe it to be right, and neither have
they rejected the wrong because they know it to be wrong. If Muslim
affairs are ever handed over to these people and anyone thinks Muslim
affairs will be properly run, he's living in fool's paradise.16. He continues:. The process of democratic elections is like churning milk to obtain
butter. If poisoned milk is churned, the butter will be poisonous too. So
people who think that the Kingdom of God [Hukumat-i-Ilahiyya] will
automatically result if Muslim areas are liberated from the Hindu
majority, are wrong. They will end up with a heretic government of. Muslims [Kafirana hukumat]."
18. The Maulana is more explicit in the following passage of the same book:. The nation called Musulman is made up of all kinds of rubbish. All types
of characters found among unbelievers are found here. The number of
liars appearing in law courts is no less than in the courts of other nations.. Bribery, theft, adultery, falsehood, in short, there is no form of moral
depravity in which they are second to the unbelievers. [kuffar].". These Maududian edicts and injunctions are very comprehensive.. However, some may still doubt that these injunctions refer to the ordinary
99.99 per cent of Muslims and that Muslim leadership and intellectuals
are exempt from these constraints. But the Maulana made another
statement about Muslim leaders and uiema to make it clear that any. Muslim who does not accept the Maududian creed has gone astray. The. Maulana says:. Western educated political leaders, ulema, and the scholars of Muslim
jurisprudence, all these leaders are as misguided as each other, both in
their means and their ends. They have lost the path of truth and have
wandered blindly into the darkness. Not one of them has a Muslim point
of view.19. So, according to the Maulana, neither the 99.99 per cent of Muslims nor
their religious or secular leaders are on the right path. They have gone
astray, their point of view is not Muslim, and all types of criminals found
among the kuffar are also found among Muslims. If one were to have
dubbed the umma a 'bunch of apostates' on hearing this description,. Maududi would have replied: 'You said it.' He was not in the habit of
mincing his words. Referring to those who quit the Jamaati Islami, he
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1.. The Maududian Law of Apostasy
said: 'This is not the path on which to retreat. To retreat means to
apostasise. '20 If quitting the Jamaati Islami and joining another. Muslim group is apostasy, then that other organisation is automatically
kafir. So are Muslims who pray for favours at saints' tombs and also
the Shiites, who consider the first three caliphs to be usurpers. It is well
known that according to the Maulana - and all the ulema of Deoband
agree with him - the mainstream Ahli Sunnat wal Jamaat of India and. Pakistan, known as Brelvis, are kafir.. Now that the Maulana has, virtually declared all non-Maududians to
be apostates, he deals in great detail with the subject of people who are. Muslim by birth. It is one of the most difficult pieces of Maududi's
argument. Discussing his own Islam, the Maulana said: 'I have cast away
the collar of inherited Islam ... I read the Quran and studied the life of. Muhammad ... and now I am a new (converted) Muslim.' On the same
basis, he devised a scheme for the reconversion of other Muslims. He
unveils his plan in the following words:. Whenever the death penalty for apostasy is enforced in a new Islamic
state, then Muslims are kept within Islam's fold. But there is a danger that
a large number of hypocrites will live alongside them. They will always
pose a danger of treason.. My solution to the problem is this. That whenever an Islamic revolution takes place, all non-practising Muslims should, within one year,
declare their turning away from Islam and get out of Muslim society.. After one year all born Muslims will be considered Muslim. All Islamic
laws will be enforced upon them. They will be forced to practice all the
fara id and wajibat of their religion and, if anyone then wishes to leave. Islam, he will be executed. Every effort will be made to save as many
people as possible from falling into the lap of kufr. But those who cannot
be saved will be reluctantly separated from society forever [executed].. After this purification Islamic society will start afresh with Muslims who
have decided voluntarily to remain Muslims."1. The Maulana does not tell us under what rules of ijtihad a law laying
down the death penalty for apostasy will be relaxed. In any case this law
will be relaxed only at the time an Islamic state is established - a one-off
concession. After this period of grace, Muslims who are born kafirs will
lose out. The Maulana explains why he is unable to make any exception
for these unfortunates. He says:. There is one final question about capital punishment which may
disturb many of us. A non-Muslim who freely embraced Islam then
returned to kufr can be said to have made a deliberate mistake. He
could have remained a dhimmi, so why enter a religion of collective
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responsibility from which there is no escape? But what of the person
who was born of Muslim parents and who has not embraced Islam?. He is a Muslim by birth. If, on reaching adulthood, he wants to reject
the faith, you threaten him with execution and he remains Muslim; this
would be unjust. And it also provides sustenance to the ever-growing
number of born hypocrites in Muslim society. There are two answers
to this question, one deals with the practical aspect, the other with the
principle. In principle there can be no distinction between the born
followers of a religion and that religion's converts. And no religion has
ever made that distinction. Both converts and born followers are
governed by the same laws. It is both impossible and a logical
absurdity to treat the children of the followers of a religion as kufar
or aliens till they are adults, then give them the choice of choosing or
rejecting the religion (or citizenship, for that matter) of their birth. No
society in the world could manage its affairs in this way.²²
22. Even if we accept the Maududian law that Islam prescribes death
for apostasy and that all Muslims except Jamaati Islami are kafir, we
cannot treat non-Maududian Muslims as apostates - even according
to the Maulana's own logic. They are ‘born kafir'. The Maulana wants
to have his cake and eat it too! Muslims who disagree with the. Maududian concept of Islam are first described as both ‘born Muslims' and kafir, because they were brought up by their parents in a
kafirana environment. Then they are called apostates because on
reaching the age of consent they did not reject their parents' Islam in
preference to Maududian Islam. A non-Muslim who joins Islam and
then recants should be executed because he became Muslim knowing
full well there was no escape. Similarly, a non-Maududian-born. Muslim should also be treated as an apostate because he did not
accept Maulana Maududi's version of Islam on reaching adulthood.. This is the argument which clearly shows the Maulana's dictatorial,'
manipulative and intolerant personality. No Muslim, convert or born,
is out of his reach. The Quranic ordinance that 'there shall be no
compulsion in religion' is explained away in the following words:. This means we do not compel anyone to embrace our religion. This is
true. But we must warn anyone who wishes to recant that this door is
impassable to free traffic. If you wish to come, do so with the firm
decision that you cannot escape.. A leading scholar of the Ahl-i Quran, Ghulam Ahmad Parvez, referring to this Maududian commentary on the Quranic verse, said 'Maududi. Sahib's Islam is a mouse-trap: the mouse can get into it, but cannot
escape.
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The Maududian Law of Apostasy. The central point of the Maulana's argument is that every religion
considers the descendants of its followers as its followers. Therefore,
descendants of Muslim parents - even where the parents are practically
kafir - will be Islamic property. If a right of ownership has been
established over these children, how can they be free to choose another
religion on reaching adulthood? In explaining this point, the Maulana
seems to have overlooked the following saying of the Prophetsa 'Every
infant has an in-born predisposition to be a Muslim, but his parents make
him a Jew or a Christian or a Zoroastrian.2³ If the central point of the. Maulana's argument is correct, then why confine it to the descendants of. Muslims? Why not apply it to those of non-Muslims too, since they,
according to the hadith, were also born with a 'predisposition to be. Muslim'? This would give full control of every non-Muslim child to the. Maududian government. It makes no difference whether a child is within
the Maududian realm or not. While the Maulana seems to have overlooked that hadith quoted above, the force of his logic leads him to this
absurdity.. Maulana Maududi has, in fact, reproduced medieval Christianity
almost word for word in the Jamaati Islami movement. Commenting on
his policy of intolerance, Elisabeth Labrousse, an historian of medieval. Christianity, observes: 'On the individual level, it creates only martyrs or
hypocrites. 24 Now compare Labrousse's observation with the following
passage from Maududi's The Punishment of Apostasy in Islam: 'If he [the
apostate] is really so honest in not wishing to live as a hypocrite and really
does wish to remain steadfast in his own faith, why does he not present
himself for death?'25. Since the Maududian concept of religion is the only way to salvation,
the Maulana would not allow the same rights and privileges to the
followers of any other religion. The missionary work of other religions
would be forbidden in a Maududian state. The Maulana says:. The execution of apostates has already decided the issue. Since we do not
allow any Muslim to embrace any other religion, the question of allowing
other religions to open their missions and propagate their faiths within
our boundaries does not arise. We cannot tolerate it.26. But can a kafir propagate his religion among other kafirs? For
instance, can a Christian open missions to work among Jews or Hindus?. Could Arya Samajists, who do not believe in idol worship and believe in
one God, preach to the followers of pantheist Sanatan Dharma? The. Maulana says:
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Murder in the Name of Allah. Islam can never tolerate that false religions should spread in the
world. How can the missionaries of false religions be given a licence
to spread falsehood and attract others to the fire towards which they
themselves are advancing?27. Maududi himself accepts that Jews and Christians are Ahl-i Kitab
(people of the Book). But if they wish to convert idol worshippers, fire
worshippers or polytheists to the worship of one God - the God of. Mosesas and Jesusas - thus bringing them nearer to Islam, they would
be forbidden.. In short, the Maulana concedes only that a born kafir cannot be kiiled
if he does not accept Islam. But if this is so, why kill a new kafir who has
recanted? If a new kafir is to be punished at all, why the death penalty?. Why not exile, or life imprisonment, so that Muslim society may not be
disrupted? Here Maulana Maududi, true to St Augustinian logic, explains
that the apostate is executed in his own interests. He says:. There are only two methods of dealing with an apostate. Either make him
an outlaw by depriving him of his citizenship and allowing him mere
existence, or end his life. The first method is definitely more severe than
the second, because he exists in a state in which 'he neither lives nor
dies'.28 Killing him is preferable. That way both his agony and the agony
of society are ended simultaneously.29. But the punishment to which the Maulana is sentencing apostates is
not actually St Augustine's 'spirit of love' persecution. There is a life
after death and by killing an apostate, the Maulana is directly consigning
him to the fires of hell. By saving an apostate from the temporary agonies
of an outcast's life, the Maulana is sending him to the far greater agonies
of hell. Above all, the Maulana is depriving the tragic apostate of the
opportunity of repentance and therefore salvation. While a kafir has the
opportunity of repenting at any stage in his life, the apostate cannot return
to Islam and benefit from the compassion of the Great Forgiver (AlGhaffar) and the Acceptor of Repentance (Al-Tawwab).. Reducing the Maulana's logic to its absurd conclusion, one might as
well ask: 'Since the death penalty is meant to discourage people who take
change of faith lightly from entering our society, how do you propose to
stop such wavering people from being born into Muslim homes?'. This draconian policy of force and brutal intolerance is not restricted to the Maududian state. Its foreign policy is also based on
force and intolerance. The Maulana says:. Islam does not want to bring about this revolution in one country or
a few countries. It wants to spread it to the entire world. Although it
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The Maududian Law of Apostasy
is the duty of the 'Muslim Party' to bring this revolution first to its own
nation, its ultimate goal is world revolution.. Of course, the final goal of Islam is world revolution. But Islam wants
a spiritual revolution, not the communist revolution which the Maulana
has borrowed from communist ideology. It is no accident that. Maududian polemic closely follow communist argument. Substitute
the words 'Communist Party' and you find the echoes of Marx and. Lenin in Maulana Maududi's writings. The Maududian revolution is
not based on adl (justice) but on materialism and consequent personal
dictatorship. Maududian policy towards neighbouring states and
communist foreign policy are not very much different. He writes:. Human relations are so integrated that no state can have complete
freedom of action under its principles unless the same principles are not
in force in a neighbouring country. Therefore, both for its own safety
and the general reform, a 'Muslim Party' will not be content with the
establishment of Islam in just one area alone. It should try to expand
in all directions. On one hand it will spread its ideology, on the other
it will invite people of all nations to accept its creed, for salvation lies
only therein. If this Islamic state has power and resources it will fight
and destroy non-Islamic governments and establish Islamic states in
their place.30. The paragraph is virtually a copy of the Communist Manifesto.. The Maulana has no hesitation in attributing his aggressive policy
to the Holy Prophetsa himself. The Maulana says:. This was the policy adopted by the Prophetsa and his rightly guided
caliphs. Arabia, where the Muslim Party was first formed, was the first
to be subdued. After this the Prophets sent invitations to all neighbouring
countries. But he did not wait to see whether they were accepted or not.. As soon as he acquired power, he started the conflict with the Roman. Empire. Abu Bakr became the leader of the Party after the Prophetsa
and attacked both the Roman and Persian Empires, and Umar finally
won the war. 31. This is a general declaration of war against all non-Muslim neighbouring
states - they are safe only as long as the Maududian state is weak. As soon
as the Maududian state has given one year's notice to its Muslim-born
subjects to opt for Maududian Islam or get out and has subdued domestic
opposition, it will engage in a war of conquest against its neighbours.. Maududi does not agree with the generally held Muslim view that war
was forced upon the Prophetsa, Abu Bakr and Umar by powerful. Christian and Zoroastrian empires wishing to crush Islam, and that. Muslims, with fewer resources, had to fight back in self-defence.
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CHAPTER 6. RECANTATION. Write down for me the name of everyone who calls himself a Muslim.. Muhammad. The concept of apostasy, as it existed in medieval Christianity and as
expounded by Maulana Maududi, is alien to Islam. There is not even a
word for it in the Arabic language. There is no doubt that some early. Muslim scholars of law considered recantation from Islam to be a
capital offence, but their definition of ‘Muslim' was so broad that no one
calling himself a Muslim could be called a recanter. The Prophet gave
us two definitions of a Muslim. At the time of the first census of Medina,
the Prophetsa said: 'Write down for me the name of everyone who calls
himself a Muslim." On another occasion the Prophets said: 'Whoever
prays as we pray and turns to our Qiblah and eats what we ritually
slaughter is a Muslim; he is dhimmat-Allah and dhimmat al-rasul. So do
not put Allah in contravention of his dhimmah [responsibility].2. But Maulana Maududi and the ulema, supporting dictatorships and
autocracies in Muslim countries, have added various qualifications to the. Prophet's simple definition. In the words of Al-Ghazali (450-505AH/. AD1058-1113) they have limited: 'The vast Mercy of God to make
paradise the preserve of a small clique of theologians." The result of their
effort has been summed up by the former chief justice of Pakistan,. Muhammad Munir, who presided over the Court of Inquiry into the. Punjab (Pakistan) Disturbances in 1953. He said:. Keeping in view the several definitions given by the ulema, need we
make any comment except that no two learned divines are agreed on
this fundamental? If we attempt our own definition, as each learned
divine has, and that definition differs from all others, we all leave. Islam's fold. If we adopt the definition given by any one of the ulema,
we remain Muslims according to the view of that alim, but kafirs
according to everyone else's definition.4
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Recantation under Islam. Justice Munir's observation must be read with reference to the. Prophet's reprimand to Usama b. Zayd. In the raid of Ghalib b. Abdullah
al-Kalbi, according to Ibn Ishaq, a man was killed by Usama b. Zayd and
another. Reporting this incident, Usama b. Zayd said:. When I and a man of Ansar overtook him and attacked him with our
weapons he pronounced the Shahadah, but we did not stay our hands and
killed him. When we came to the Prophetsa and told him what had
happened, he said: ‘Who will absolve you, Usama, from ignoring the
confession of faith?' I told him that the man had pronounced the words
merely to escape death, but he repeated his question and continued to do
so until I wished that I had never been a Muslim before that day and that. I had never killed the man. I asked him to forgive me and promised that. I would never kill a man who pronounced the Shahadah. The Prophetsa
said: 'You will say it after me (after my death), Usama?' and I said that. I would.5. The Prophetsa knew that despite his concern for the lives of Shahadah-pronouncing Muslims, they would still be killed by misguided
people under Islam's name. According to the report in the Musnad Imam. Ahmad Hanbal, the Prophets also asked Osama whether he had opened
his victim's heart to check the authenticity of his faith. And yet the
power-hungry and politically orientated ulema continue to incite ignorant Muslims to kill their Muslim brothers - Muslims whose viewpoint
differed slightly from their own - as if, on opening their hearts, they had
discovered the faith of such Muslims was false.. Regarding recantation, the Quran uses the word irtadda, which
means that no one has the right to declare any other Muslim murtadd. As. Imam Raghib Isfahani explains, the word irtidad means to retrace one's
steps back to the point from where one came. The word is especially
associated with recantation - returning to kufr (disbelief) from Islam, e.g.
'Lo! Those who turn their backs after the guidance hath been manifested
unto them'; (47.26) and 'whoso of you becometh renegade from his
religion'. (5.55). The Holy Quran has used the word 'ridda' in the intransitive
measure (i.e. iftial) which means that everyone has an option but noone has been given the right to declare another an apostate. It is a
voluntary action and no outside agency can play any part in it. It is this
aspect of free will which distinguishes irtidad from the Christian and. Maududian concept of apostasy, which we discussed in the last
chapter. Apostasy and its punishment requires an external authority,
the church or state. It is like execution or, rather, murder. Irtidad is like
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suicide. One can execute or murder, but no one can 'suicide' someone.. Surah Al-Kafirun, revealed in the early period of the Prophet'ssa
ministry, is a direct statement of policy on the subject of freedom of
conscience. The Prophetsa was asked to tell unbelievers there was
absolutely no meeting-point between their way of life and his. As they
were in complete disagreement, not only with regard to the basic
concepts of religion, but also with regard to its details and other aspects,
there could not possibly be any compromise between them. Hence, ‘For
you, your religion, for me, my religion'. (109.7). The Prophetsa was also repeatedly told not to worry if unbelievers
were not ready to accept his message. He was not their wakil (guardian).. God says: 'Thy people have rejected the message that We have sent
through thee, though it is the truth. Say: “I am not appointed a wakil over
you. .” This statement was made in the Meccan period, when the. Prophets and his followers were persecuted. Yet on his arrival in Medina,
the statement was exactly the same, even though he now had power. It
was, in fact, made even more explicit.. The first Medinite surah in which the subject of freedom of conscience was discussed was Al-Baqarah. The 257th verse of the surah
contains the clearest pronouncement on the subject:. There shall be no compulsion in religion. Surely guidance has become
distinct from error, whosoever refuses to be led by those who transgress
and believes in Allah has surely grasped a strong handle which knows no
breaking. And Allah is All-Hearing, All-Knowing.. This is the confident declaration of a prophet who has organised an umma
in a town where his power is supreme. Lest the subject of jihad be
misunderstood, Muslims are told that true virtue lies in good works and
good faith (255-258) and the Majesty of God is called to mind in the. Throne verse (256). The commandment of 'no compulsion in religion' comes immediately after the Throne verse. Readers of the. Quran might have thought God wanted Muslims to spread Islam by
force, because of its call to fight the umma's enemies and to offer
special sacrifices to Allah. So the verse tells Muslims in no uncertain
terms not to resort to violence in the name of conversion. The
importance of this verse can be gauged from a hadith quoted in Jami
of Tirmidhi. He said that the peak of the Quran is Al-Baqarah and that. Satan shall not enter the house of anyone who recites ten verses of this
chapter (i.e. the first four verses, the Throne verse, the two verses
which follow it -257-258- and the last three verses).
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Recantation under Islam. This principle of no compulsion was reiterated after the victory of. Badr (3.21) and again in Al-Ma'idah, which is the last revealed surah.. Now that Muhammad'ssa authority was fully established, not only in. Medina but also in Mecca, it was vital to emphasise that the Prophet'ssa
only role was to convey the word of Allah. 'Obey Allah and obey the. Messenger, and be on your guard, but if you turn away, then remember
that the duty of our Messenger is only to convey the message clearly.'
(5.93) And finally: 'The Messenger's duty is only to convey the message.. And Allah knows what you reveal and what you hide.' (5.100) Religious
belief is a personal matter. It is God alone - not the state or the religious
authorities who knows what one reveals to God or what one hides.. This verse leads to the subject of munafiqun - the hypocrites. The term
munafiqun describes those inhabitants of Medina who had outwardly
accepted Islam, but whose belief was suspect for various reasons. There
are many references to them in the Quran, but in four passages they are
defined as murtadd (recanters). The first reference is in Surah Muhammad. This is a Medinite surah which briefly describes the aims of war
according to Islam. It says that while believers welcome a revelation
calling on them to fight for Allah, munafiqun feel as if they are being led
to their slaughter. In this way, true believers are separated from those
whose faith is shallow or false. It goes on to say:. Surely those who turn their backs [artaddu] after guidance has become
manifest to them, Satan has seduced them, and holds out false hopes to
them. That is because they said to those who hate what Allah has
revealed, ‘We will obey you in some matters' and Allah knows their
secrets. (47:26-27). The verses quoted above mention no punishment for these people.. The next reference to the munafiqun is in the Surah Al-Munafiqun,
which was revealed towards the end of 6AH/AD628. The surah exposes
the infidelity and dishonesty of the munafiqun and condemns their open
profession of faith as false and treacherous. This was a public reprimand:. Allah bears witness that the munafiqun are liars. Their faith is a pretext
so that they may turn people away from the way of Allah. Evil is that
which they practice. That is because they believed and thereafter disbelieved; so a seal was set upon their hearts and they have no understanding.. They are the enemy, so beware!... it is the same for them whether
thou ask for forgiveness for them or not. Allah will never forgive them,
surely Allah guides not a rebellious people. (63.2-7). The last two references to the munafiqun are in one of the last revealed
surahs, Al-Taubah: ‘Offer no excuse. You have certainly disbelieved
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after having believed. If We forgive a group of you, a group shall We
punish, for they have been guilty.' (9.66) Those to be forgiven are
obviously such of the munafiqun who repented and became sincere. Muslims. As regards those who are to be punished, one verse further
down we read: 'Allah promises the munafiqun - both men and women
- and the disbelievers the fire of hell, wherein they shall abide. It will
suffice them. And they shall have everlasting punishment.' (9.68). And, finally:. They swear by Allah that they said nothing, but they did say the word
of disbelief and did disbelieve after they had embraced Islam. . . . So if
they repent, it will be better for them, but if they turn away, Allah will
punish them with a grievous punishment in this world and the
hereafter. And they shall have neither friend nor helper in the earth.
(9.74)⁹. The Prophetsa knew that Abdullah b. Ubayy b. Salul was the leader of
the munafiqun, but he took no action against him. On the contrary, the. Propheta prayed for him when he died. Umar b. al-Khattab is reported to
have said:. When the Prophetsa went and stood by the dead body of Abdullah b.. Ubayy and was about to pray, I asked him: 'Are you going to pray over. God's enemy?' The Prophetsa smiled and said: 'Get behind me, Umar. I
have been given a choice and I have chosen. It was said to me: 'Ask
pardon for them or ask it not. Even if you ask pardon for them seventy
times God will not pardon them' If I knew that by asking pardon more
than seventy times he would be forgiven, I would do it.' Then he
prayed over him and walked with his dead body and stayed at his
grave until he was buried.10. Freedom of conversion is the acid test of 'no compulsion in religion'.. It cannot be a one-way freedom - the freedom to enter Islam, but not to
leave it. There are ten direct references to recantation in the Quran: one
in the Meccan surah of Al-Nahl and the remaining nine in the Medinite
surahs. In none of these verses is there the slightest hint of capital
punishment for those who recant.. One of the Quran's most explicit statements on recantation is the
143rd verse of Al-Baqarah. The Qiblah was changed from Jerusalem to. Mecca in the second year of Hijrah. Ibn Ishaq reports:. And when the Qiblah was changed from Syria to the Kabah, Rifaa b.. Qays, Qardam b.Amr, Kab b. al-Ashraf, Rafib Abu Rafi, al-Hajjaj b.. Amr and an ally of Kab's, al-Rabi b. al-Rabi b. Abul-Huqayq and Kinana
b. al-Rabi b. Abul Huqayq came to the Prophets and asked: 'Why have
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you turned your back on the Qiblah you used to face when you claimed
to follow the religion of Abraham? If you returned to the Qiblah in. Jerusalem we would follow you and declare you to be true.' Their sole
intention was to seduce him from his religion. So God said: 'We
appointed the Qiblah, which you formerly observed, only to distinquish
between he who will follow the Messenger and those who will not - to test
and fetch them out. In truth, it was a hard test except for those whom. Allah guided.". The Quran prescribes no punishment for these recanters. And history
records the punishment of no one who recanted after the change of the. Qiblah.. Surah Al-Imran, which was revealed after the victory of Badr, 2AH/. AD/624, contains the following two verses which mention the recantation of some of the Jews of Medina:. O People of the Scripture: why do you confound the truth with falsehood
and knowingly conceal the truth? (3:72). And a party of the People of the Scripture says: 'Believe in that which has
been revealed to those who believe at sunrise and disbelieve at sunset. In
order that they may return.' (3:73). Ibn Ishaq has given the names of those who hatched this plot:. Abdullah b. Sayf and Adiy b. Zayd and Al-Harith b. Auf agreed to
pretend to believe in the message of Muhammadsa and his Companions
at one time, deny it another to confuse them. The object was to get them
to follow their example and give up their religion.". None of these three Jews was punished.
12. Another reference is in Al-Nisa. It says: 'Those who believe then
disbelieve, then believe again, then disbelieve and then increase in
their disbelief will never be forgiven by Allah, nor will He guide them
to the way.'(4.138) A recanter cannot enjoy the repeated luxury of
believing and disbelieving if the punishment is death. A dead man has
no further chance of again believing and disbelieving.. The sunnah, the divinely inspired behaviour of the Holy Prophetsa,
is the second source of the sharia. And there is no penalty for
conversion from Islam in the sunnah either. The names of those who
were executed by the Prophets are preserved in the sirah and the
hadith and the names of people who recanted and rejected Islam in his
life are also preserved. A Bedouin Arab was converted to Islam by the. Prophets and soon after suffered a fever while in Medina. He asked
the Prophets to release him from his pledge. He made this request
three times and was refused three times. He left Medina unmolested.
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Murder in the Name of Allah. The Prophets, on hearing of his departure, observed: 'Medina is like
a furnace which separates the dross from what is pure.'
'13. Ibn Ishaq reports that the Prophetsa had instructed his commanders when they entered Mecca to fight only those who resisted them.. The only exceptions were the following criminals who were to be
killed even if they were found wrapped within the curtains of the. Kabah.14
1. Abdullah b. Sad b. Abi Sarah.
2,3,4. Abdullah b. Khatal of B. Tayam b. Ghalib and his two dancing
girls, who used to sing satirical songs about Islam. One of them was. Fartana, the name of the other is not given by Ibn Ishaq.
5.Al-Huwayrith b. Nuqaydh b. Wahb b. Abd b. Qusayy.
6. Maqees b. Subabah.
7. Sarah, freed slave of one of the B. Abdul Muttalib.
8. Ikrama b. Abu Jahl.". Abdullah b. Sad was one of the Prophet'ssa scribes in Medina. He
recanted and defected to the Meccan unbelievers. Since he wrote down
the revelation, dictated by the Prophets, and enjoyed a position of trust,
his defection was bound to create confusion among the Quraish of Mecca
about the authenticity of the revelation itself. After peace returned to. Mecca, his foster brother, Uthman b. Affan, interceded with the Prophet
on his behalf and he was pardoned. 16 Had there been a Quranic penalty
for recantation, the Prophets could not have done so. The Prophet's sa
policy on intercession in respect of hadd punishment is well illustrated by
the incident of the Makhzumi woman who was found guilty of theft.. When Usamah b. Zayd pleaded for her, the Prophetsa rebuked him and
said: ‘Do you intercede in respect of a punishment prescribed by Allah?. Witness this: that if Fatima, daughter of Muhammad, were ever guilty of
theft, I would certainly cut off her hand.'. Abdullah b. Khatal was sent by the Prophets to collect zakat,
accomapnaied by an Ansar who served him. When they stopped, he
ordered his companion to kill a goat for him and prepare some food
before going to sleep. When he awoke the man had done nothing, so he
killed him in anger and then recanted and defected to the Meccan. Quraish.17 He was executed for the murder of an Ansari Muslim by Said
b. Hurayth al-Makhzumi and Abu Barzh al-Aslami. 18. One of Ibn Khatal's two singing girls was killed for creating unrest
by singing satirical songs; the other was pardoned. 19. Al-Huwayrith b. Nuqaydh was in the party of Habbar b. al-Aswad b.
al-Muttalib b. Asad who overtook the Prophet'ssa daughter, Zaynab,
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when she was travelling from Mecca to Medina. Al-Huwayrith goaded. Zaynab's camel. Zaynab was pregnant and had a miscarriage because of
the attack and had to return to Mecca. The Prophetsa sent a number of
people with orders that if they found Habbar b. al-Aswad or AlHuwayrith they should kill them, 20 but Al-Huwayrith escaped. In another
report, Hisham says that Al-Abbas b. Abd al-Muttalib put Fatima and. Umm Kulthum, the two daughters of the Prophetsa on a camel to take
them from Mecca to Medina. Al-Huwayrith goaded the beast so it threw
the two women.21 Finally, Ali killed him in Mecca. 22. Maqees b. Subabah came to Medina from Mecca and said: 'I come to
you as a Muslim seeking recompense for my brother, who was wrongly
killed.' The Prophetsa ordered that he should be paid for his brother. Hisham. Having received recompense, Maqees stayed with the Prophets
for a while. But, as soon as he got an opportunity he killed his brother's
slayer, recanted and defected to Mecca.23 Maqees was executed by. Numaylah b. Abdullah for killing an Ansar, on whose behalf the payment
for killing his brother had already been paid.24. Sarah, who was accused of creating disorder, was not killed during
the Prophet's lifetime.. Ikrama b. Abu Jahl fled to the Yemen. His wife, Umm Hakim,
became a Muslim and asked immunity for him and this was granted by
the Prophetsa 25. There appears to be no evidence to show that the Prophet sa punished
anyone for recantation from Islam.. The death of the Prophetsa in 11AH/AD632 confronted the young. Muslim administration with a major crisis. Disorder broke out in parts of
the peninsula and many tribes detached themselves from Medina by
refusing to pay zakat. This movement is known as Al-Riddah. The main
task of the Prophet's successor, Abu Bakr, was to put down this unrest.. His first job, however, was to send the expedition the Holy Prophets had
ordered before his death. So an army under the command of Usamah b.. Zayd b. Harith was sent to the Syrian border on the second day after the
proclamation of his caliphate.. After Usamah and his army had departed, most of the tribes fell away
from Medina. Only Mecca, Medina and their surroundings remained
loyal to the central administration. Muslim agents appointed to the rebel
tribes by the Prophet just before his death were forced to flee their posts
and to return to Medina. It was a full-fledged revolt.. Having decided to fight the rebels, Abu Bakr sent messengers to
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some loyal tribes calling them to come to his aid. While Abu Bakr was
waiting for reinforcements, Kharjah b. Hism, led by Unaynah b. Hism
al-Fazari and Al-Aqra b. Habis al-Tamimi, staged a surprise attack on
the Muslims. The Muslims fled in confusion, but they re-assembled and
counter-attacked Kharjah's men, who were defeated.. Before the skirmish at Dhu al-Qassa, a delegation of Arab tribes went
to Medina to negotiate with Abu Bakr over the question of zakat, but Abu. Bakr refused. Some early and prominent muhajirun disagreed with Abu. Bakr's decision to fight those who withheld the zakat. That these tribes
were anxious to negotiate showed they had not recanted, and did not want
to sever their relations with Medina, yet were not prepared to accept. Medina's control over them. The issue was not belief in Allah and His. Prophet, but the zakat (tax). A group of well-known friends led by Umar
objected to Abu Bakr's decision to fight the rebels. Umar is reported to
have said to Abu Bakr. 'What right do you have to fight these people? The. Prophetsa has said, "I was ordered to fight people until they say there is
no God but Allah. If they say this, they safeguard themselves and their
property from me.”26. After the departure of the delegation from Medina, Abu Bakr gathered the Muslims of Medina and addressed them as follows:
"The delegation has observed just how few of you there are in Medina.. You do not know whether they will attack you by day or night. Their
vanguard is only a stone's throw from Medina. They wanted us to accept
their proposals and make an agreement with them, but we have rejected
their request. So make ready for their attack.' Within three days they
attacked Medina.27. The war of Riddah caused a great deal of bloodshed. It was inexplicable to the subsequent historians of the Arabian state that after the death
of Muhammad so many wars were necessary on Arabian soil; they accounted for this fact by a Ridda, 28 a religious movement against Islam.. The jurists, who had failed to find Quranic or sunnah authority for the
execution of Muslims accused of kufr,, or war, against opposing. Muslim political powers, accepted the assumption without more ado.. Discussing the legality of Abu Bakr's war against Muslim rebels,. Imam Al-Shafi'i says: 'Riddah is falling back from a previously adopted
religion into disbelief and refusing to fulfil previously accepted responsibility.29 Recantation is not enough. It must be aggravated by allegations of the breach of an agreement. Ibn Abi al-Hadid, a scholar of a very
different school, in his commentary of the Nahj al-Balaghah, clarified
the matter when he said: "The tribes which refused to pay zakat were
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not recanters. They were called so, metaphorically, by the Companions of the Prophetsa¸ '30. According to Wellhausen, Riddah was a break with the leadership in. Medina and not with Islam itself. Most of the tribes wanted to continue
worshipping Allah, but without paying tax. Caetani agrees with. Wellhausen and says the Riddah was not a movement of recantation and
that these wars were purely about politics. Becker, following Wellhausen
and Caetani, concludes:. The sudden death of Mahomet gave new support to the centrifugal
tendencies. The character of the whole movement, as it forces itself on
the notice of the historian, was of course hidden from contemporaries.. Arabia would have sunk into particularism if the necessity caused by the
secession of Al-Riddah had not developed in the State of Medina an
energy which carried all before it. The fight against the Ridda was not a
fight against apostates, the objection was not to Islam, per se, but to the
tribute which had to be paid to Medina; the fight was for political
supremacy over Arabia. 31. Bernard Lewis makes it quite clear that Riddah ‘represents a distortion of the real significance of events by the theologically coloured
outlook of later historians'. He goes on to say:. The refusal of the tribes to recognise the succession of Abu Bakr was, in
effect, not a relapse by converted Muslims to their previous paganism,
but the simple and automatic termination of a political contract by the
death of one of the parties. The tribes nearest to Medina had in fact been
converted and their interests were so closely identified with those of the
umma that their separate history has not been recorded. For the rest, the
death of Muhammad automatically severed their bonds with Medina,
and the parties resumed their liberty of action. They felt in no way bound
by the election of Abu Bakr in which they had taken no part, and at once
suspended both tribute and treaty relations. In order to re-establish the
hegemony of Medina, Abu Bakr had to make new treaties.³2. Ali was assassinated in 661. With him went the concept of a Muslim
ruler who combined the functions of head of state and of religion. The
dynastic reign of the Ummayyads (661-750), the political rulers of. Islam, began with Muawiyah. They had none of the religious outlook of
the pious caliphs and were regarded more or less as secular kings. As
guardians of the sharia the ulema came to occupy a position comparable
in many ways to that of the clergy after the conversion of Constantine.. Like the clergy in medieval Europe, they were respected for learning
and piety and their support was sought to legalise the political power of
a despot or unpopular ruler. They also acted as the leaders of the
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opposition and tried to influence political power rather than assume
it themselves.. Political and social revolts were now justified in religious terms and
dynastic struggles over political power soon hardened into deep rifts in
religious doctrine. Kharijism and Shiism, the two main movements that
split off from the main body after the assassination of the third caliph,. Uthman (644), originated during a struggle for succession. Kharijites
were the first Muslims to suggest that a grave sinner no longer remained. Muslim. They were also the first to proclaim jihad against Muslims who,
according to them, were not true believers, and originally belonged to. Ali's party; they left him, however, over a disagreement about arbitration.
between him and Muawiyah, intended to settle their differences arising
out of Uthman's murder. They said: 'judgement belongs to Allah alone'
and not to human tribunals. Kharijites were key figures in the development of dogma. They were particular about a Muslim's qualifications
and his attitude towards his fellow men, Muslim or non-Muslim. This
group was the first distinct sect to appear in Islam, and was also the first
to reject the principle of justification by faith. They maintained that a
grave sinner no longer remained a Muslim and could not re-enter the
faith; instead, he should be killed with his family. They considered all
non-Kharijites to be outlaws and non-Muslim. As we saw earlier, the. Prophetsa knew the munafiqun of Medina and their leader, Abdullah b.. Ubayy, and yet he took no action against him. He did not judge the quality
of a Muslim's faith.
34. The Kharijites conflicted directly with the teaching of the Quran and
the sunnah of the Prophets. Their declaration that 'judgement belongs to. Allah alone' (la hukma illa lillah)³³ was in total contradiction to the
sunnah. The Prophetsa appointed Sad b. Muadh as hakam to decide the
fate of the Jewish tribe of B. Qurayzah and his sentence was carried out.³. Commenting on the Sahih Muslim report of Sad's judgement, AlNawawi (d. AH127/AD676) said: 'In their disputes Muslims are allowed to resort to tahkim'.35 In fact, if two Muslim groups are at war,
it is the duty of other Muslims to make peace between them. The. Quran says: 'All believers are brothers, so make peace between
brothers, and be mindful of your duty to Allah that you may be shown
mercy.' (49.11) Declaring Muslims to be ‘disbelievers' and then punishing them just because their standards are different from the
standards of a certain religious authority - takfir - is alien to Islam. The
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Recantation under Islam. Prophets himself defined a Muslim as one who declares faith in the. Unity of Allah and the prophethood of Muhammadsa 36 This is the only
definition by which a Muslim can be judged. Discussing the subject
of takfir, Bernard Lewis says:. Even open rebellion did not automatically involve takfir. In 923 the
chief Qadi ibn Buhal refused to denounce the Carmathian rebels as
unbelievers since they began their letters with invocations to God and
the Prophet and were therefore, on the face of it, Muslims. The Shafi'i
law insists that the sectarian, even in revolt, is entitled to be treated as
a Muslim; that is to say, his family and property are respected, and that
he cannot be summarily despatched or sold into slavery once he
becomes a prisoner.³
37. Takfir³8 was, however, founded by jurists. As we saw earlier, it was
a Kharijite excuse for denouncing Ali. But having adopted this. Kharijite innovation, the jurists could not arrive at an agreed definition of a Muslim.. To comb 1300 years of Islamic history to find the number of Muslims
executed because of their conversion from Islam would prove futile.. There were unsuccessful attempts to execute Maimonides in Cairo,39 the. Maronite Amir Yunis in Lebanon, 40 and to persecute Rashid-ud-Din in. Tabriz,41 but such instances were very rare. In Mughal India, there is only
one recorded case. A Portuguese friar had embraced Islam and then
reverted to his former faith. He was executed at Aurangabad.42 The
reasons for his execution were political, not religious. The friar was under
strong suspicion of spying for the Portuguese under the cover of Islam.. Jadd ibn Dirham was put to death on the orders of Hisham b. Abd alMalik in Kufa or Wasit in 124 or 125AH/AD746 or 747. He was accused
of having advanced the Mutazili doctrines of the created Quran and of
freewill. In 167 or 168AH/AD788 the Iraqi poet Bashir b. Burd was
accused of zandaqah, beaten and thrown into a swamp in Batiha. AlHusain b. Mansur al-Hallaj was executed in 309AH/AD930 for blasphemy because he claimed to have substantial union with God (hulul).. Shihab-ul-Din Yahya al-Suhrawardi was put to death on the orders of. Al-Malik al-Zahir (578AH/AD1199). His crime was to regard all that
lives, moves or has its being as truth and he even based his proof of God
upon the symbol of light.. The seventeenth-century martyr was Muhammad Said Sarmad. Born
of Jewish parents at Kashan, Sarmad was a rabbi before embracing. Islam. A great Persian poet, he was a monist and denied the existence of
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matter. He was executed in the reign of Aurangzib (reigned 16581707). His mazar (tomb) which is opposite the Jami Masjid in Delhi,
attracts daily hundreds of Muslims, offering flowers and Fatihah.. In Afghanistan, two Ahmadis were executed for accepting the
claim of Mirza Ghulam Ahmadas of Qadian to be the Promised. Messiah: Sahibzadah Abdul Latif, who performed the coronation
ceremony of Amir Habib Ullah Khan, was stoned to death in 1903
and Maulwi Nimat Ullah in 1924. Both were given the chance of
renouncing the claims of Mirza Ghulam Ahmadas, but they refused.. Muhammad Mahmud Taha was executed in the Sudan in 1985.. He believed the Medinite part of the Quranic law was no longer
applicable.. Significantly, the Ottoman sultan, though the head of a religious
empire and caliph of all Muslims, did not order the execution of Baha. Ullah (1817-92) for irtidad. Baha Ullah declared himself to be the. Promised One, foretold by Bab,43 and founded Bahaism as a religion.. Bahaism was and is totally different from Islam. It declares that the
arrival of Baha Ullah makes the Quran and the teachings of Muhammad
- may peace and blessings of Allah be upon him - out of date. Baha Ullah
was jailed in Akka (Acre) near Haifa, then in Palestine, now Israel. But
when Sabbatai Zevi (1627-76), a Jewish mystic, proclaimed himself the. Messiah in 1648, the Shaykh-ul-Islam of the Ottoman Empire ordered
his execution. He was arrested, recanted from his claim simply to escape
death, and embraced Islam. Baha Ullah claimed to be a new manifestation of God and left Islam, but was not executed despite his apostasy
because he was not a danger to law and order in the Ottoman Empire.. As we have already seen, the concept of apostasy is alien to Islam and
there is no punishment in this world for recanting. But the ulema who
appeared before the Court of Inquiry, constituted under the Punjab Act. II of 1954 to enquire into the Punjab disturbances of 1953, asserted that
'apostasy in an Islamic state is punishable by death'. They were:. Maulana Abul Hasanat Sayyad Muhammad Ahmad Qadri, President,. Jamiat-ul-Ulamai-Pakistan, Punjab; Maulana Ahmad Ali, Sadr Jamiatul-Ulama-e-Islam, West Pakistan; Maulana-Abul Ala Maududi, founder
and ex-Amir-i-Jamaati Islami, Pakistan; Mufti Muhammad Idris, Jami. Ashrafia, Lahore, and member, Jamiat-ul-Ulamai-Pakistan; Maulana. Daud Ghaznavi, President, Jamaati Ahl-i-Hadith, Maghribi Pakistan;. Maulana Abdul Haleem Qasimi, Jamiat-ul-Ulamai-Islam, Punjab; and. Mr Ibrahim Ali Chishti.4
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Recantation under Islam. Commenting on this assertion, the Court of Inquiry observed:. According to this doctrine, Chaudhri Zafrullah Khan must be executed if he has not inherited his present religious beliefs, but has
elected of his own free will to be an Ahmadi. And the same fate should
befall Deobandis and Wahabis, (including Maulana Muhammad. Shafi Deobandi, member, Board of Talimat-i-Islami attached to the. Constituent Assembly of Pakistan, and Maulana Daud Ghaznavi) if
any one of the ulema (shown perched on every leaf of a beautiful tree
in the fatwa (Ex. D.E. 14) were the head of such an Islamic state. And
if Maulana Muhammad Shafi Deobandi were the head of the state,
he would exclude those who have been pronounced by Deobandis to
be kafirs from Islam. He would then execute them, if they came within
the definition of murtadd, namely, if they had changed and not
inherited their religious views.. The genuineness of the fatwa (Ex. D.E. 13) by the Deobandis
(which says that Ithnashri Shias are kafirs and murtadds) was questioned in the course of our inquiry. But Maulana Muhammad Shafi
examined the subject from Deoband and received from the records of
that institution the copy of a fatwa signed by all the teachers of the. Darul Uloom, including Maulana Muhammad Shafi himself. The
records say, in effect, that those who do not believe in the sahabiyyat
of Hazrat Siddiq Akbar and who are qazif of Hazrat Aisha Siddiqa and
have been guilty of tehrif of the Quran, are kafirs. This opinion is also
shared by Mr Ibrahim Ali Ghishti who knows and has studied this
subject. He thinks the Shias are kafirs because they believe that Hazrat. Ali shared the prophethood with our Holy Prophets. He refused to
answer the question of whether a Sunni who changed his views and
agrees with the Shias is guilty of irtidad, thus deserving death. According to the Shias, all Sunnis are kafirs and Ahl-i-Quran - persons who
consider hadith unreliable and therefore not binding - are also kafirs.. So are all independent thinkers. The net result is that neither Shias nor. Sunnis nor Deobandis nor Ahl-i-Hadith nor Brelvis are Muslims. And
that, if the government of the state is run by a party which considers
the other party to be kafirs, then any change from one view to another
must result in the death penalty.. It does not take much imagination to judge the consequences of this
doctrine when it is remembered that no two ulema have ever agreed
before us on the correct definition of a Muslim. Indeed, if all their
definitions are taken in total, the grounds on which someone may be
indicted for apostasy would be too numerous even to count.4
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CHAPTER 7. PUNISHMENT FOR APOSTASY. In earlier chapters we have given numerous references from the Holy. Quran and the history of Islam to expose the fallacy that Islam prescribes
any corporal punishment for those who renounce Islam as their faith. We
examined at length the most common arguments presented by the
advocates of death for apostasy, namely the report of Ikramah and the
incident of zakat in Hazrat Abu Bakr's time. Some other arguments are
examined in this chapter.. It is difficult to assess whether the concept of coercion in Islam had
its birth on Islamic soil or was the child of the orientalists' imagination
and was later on transferred to the lap of Islam. Having examined this in
the light of Islamic history, I honestly believe that the idea first took root
in the Islamic world itself and that it is wrong of us to blame the
orientalists for having initiated it. They picked it up from the Muslims:
before the orientalists were even born, the idea seems to have been
present in medieval Islamic thought. It originated in the late Umayyad
dynasty. Throughout the Abbaside period, the idea continued to flourish
and was further strengthened because the Abbaside sovereigns wanted to
use force not only against the enemies of Islam but also against their own
people. A licence for this was not infrequently sought from Muslim
scholars under their influence. The concept has therefore arisen from the
conduct and policies of the post-Khilafat-i Rashida' Muslim governments of Baghdad.. Looking on from the outside, Western scholars believed that this was
an Islamic teaching, but the fact was that it was not Islamic at all. It was
the basis of the behaviour of some Muslim governments. We should
remember that the idea had its birth in an age when all over the world the
use of force for the spread of influence and ideology was a common
feature and no exception was taken to this.. It is clear that the allegation that Islam advocates the use of force for
the spread of its ideology does not originate from a study of the sources
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of Islamic teachings but from a study of the conduct of some Muslim
states. Now that a new era has dawned in which all the Islamic literature
and traditions are available to us and the Holy Quran has been translated
into so many languages - when Western scholars have direct access to the
sources of Islamic teachings - their persistence in making the allegation
is unjustified. They should go to the sources and study the teachings of
the Holy Quran, the traditions and the conduct of the Holy Prophet,. Muhammadsa, himself.. This work is an attempt to examine the whole issue, not in the light
of how Muslims of a certain era behaved, but in the light of the
fundamental teachings of the Holy Quran and the exposition of those
teachings by the words of the Holy Prophetsa and by his conduct.. The tendency to judge teachings by the conduct of their followers has
often misled people about the original teachings. It is universally observed that after a while all religions lose their influence on the conduct
of their adherents. For illustrations of this, study the behaviour of the. Buddhists of today or of earlier eras, study the behaviour of the Hindu
governments, and so on and so forth; it often has no relationship
whatsoever with the original teachings. In particular, politics must not be
confused with religion; political behaviour of a nation should not be
treated as a mirror reflecting the teachings of the religion which its people
are supposed to follow.. It is against this background that we examine the arguments presented by the advocates of death as a punishment for apostasy.. Definition of an apostate. The Holy Quran states:. They will not stop fighting you until they turn you back from your
faith, if they can. The works of those from among you who turn
back from their faith and die in a state of disbelief shall be vain in
this world and the next. These are the inmates of the fire, therin
shall they abide. (2.218). This means that whoever, out of fear of the sword (or the pain of
punishment), decides to abjure Islam has a fundamental right to do so but
no one else has the right to declare him to be an apostate. The right to
declare himself to be an apostate lies only with him. Nowhere in the Holy. Quran has this right been granted to others. That is to say, one is free to
renounce one's own religion but has no right to impose renunciation of
religion on others. According to Islamic teachings, an apostate, therefore, cannot be manufactured by religious scholars or the clergy or any
non-tolerant individual or government.
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Murder in the Name of Allah. The Holy Quran also states: “Surely, those who have turned away
after guidance has been made manifest to them have been deceived by. Satan who has beguiled them with false hopes.' (47.26). Other verses from the Holy Quran on apostasy. The Holy Quran says:
○
ye who believe, whoso from among you turns back from his
religion let him remember that in place of such a person, Allah.
will soon bring a people whom He will love and who will love. Him, who will be kind and considerate towards the believers and
firm and unyielding towards the disbelievers. They will strive
hard in the cause of Allah and will not at all take to heart the
reproaches of fault finders. That is Allah's grace; He bestows it
upon whosoever He pleases. Allah is the Lord of vast bounty, AllKnowing. (5.55). Whoso disbelieves in Allah after he has believed, excepting the
case of one who is forced to make a declaration of disbelief while
his heart rests securely in faith, but one who opens his mind wide
to disbelief; on him is Allah's wrath and he shall have a grievous
punishment. (16.107). Those who believe, then disbelieve, then again believe, then
disbelieve and thereafter go on increasing in disbelief, Allah will
never forgive them, nor guide them to any way of deliverance.
(4.138). Muhammad is but a Messenger; of a surety, all Messengers
before him have passed away. If then, he dies or be slain, will you
turn back on your heels? He who turns back on his heels shall not
harm Allah a whit. Allah will certainly reward the grateful.
(3.145). No corporal punishment can be understood to have been mentioned
by any stretch of imagination in the foregoing passages from the Holy. Quran.. Surah Al-Tauba. In a desperate search for at least one verse in the Holy Quran which might
lend support for death as a punishment for apostasy, recourse has been
made to verses 12 and 13 of Chapter 9 (Surah Al-Tauba). We quote
below verses 3-14 of that chapter. These speak for themselves and defy
all attempts on the part of anyone who would have them understood
differently:
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3. This is a public proclamation on the part of Allah and His Messenger
on the day of the Great Pilgrimage, that Allah is free of all obligation to
the idolators, and so is His Messenger. So now, having witnessed this. Sign, if you will repent and make peace, it will be better for you; but if
you turn away, then know that you cannot frustrate Allah's design. Warn
the disbelievers of a painful chastisement.
4. Excepting those of them with whom you have a pact and who have
not defaulted in any respect, nor supported anyone against you. Carry out
the obligations you have assumed towards them till the end of their terms.. Surely, Allah loves those who are mindful of their obligations.
5. When the period of four months during which hostilities are
suspended expires, without the idolaters having settled the terms of peace
with you, resume fighting with them and kill them wherever you find
them and make them prisoners and beleaguer them, and lie in wait for
them at every place of ambush. Then if they repent and observe prayers
and pay the zakat, leave them alone. Surely, Allah is Most Forgiving,. Ever Merciful.
6. If any one of the idolaters seeks asylum with thee, grant him asylum
so that he may hear the Word of Allah; then convey him to a place of
security for him, for they are a people who lack knowledge. .
7. How could there be a guarantee for the idolaters on the part of Allah
and His Messenger, except in favour of those with whom you entered into
an express treaty at the Sacred Mosque? So long as they carry out their
obligations thereunder, you must carry out your obligations. Surely,. Allah loves those who are mindful of their obligations.
8. How can there be a guarantee for the others who, if they were to
prevail against you, would have no regard for any tie of kinship or pact
in respect of you. They seek to please you with words, while their hearts
repudiate them; most of them are perfidious.
9. They have bartered the Sign of Allah for small gains and hindered
people from His way. Evil indeed is that which they have done.
10. They show no regard for any tie of kinship or any pact in respect of
a believer. It is they who are the transgressors.
11. If they repent and observe prayer and pay the zakat, then they are your
brethren in faith. We expound our commandments for a people who
know.
12. But if they break faith after pledging it and ridicule your religion, then
fight these leaders of disbelief that they may desist, for they have no
regard for their pledged word.
13. Will you not fight a people who have violated their oaths, who plotted
to turn out the Messenger from his home, and who were the first to start
hostilities against you? Do you fear them? It is Allah Who is Most
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Murder in the Name of Allah. Worthy that you should fear Him, if you are believers.
14. Fight them: Allah will punish them at your hands, and will humiliate
them, and will help you to overcome them, and will relieve the minds of
the believers of fear and distress.. Those who deduce from verses 12 and 13 that the punishment for
apostasy is death offer no explanation of the contradiction this creates
with numerous other verses. These verses relate to the period after the
migration from Mecca to Medina (see verse 3) when the Quraish of. Mecca had embarked upon hostilities to wipe out Islam by force.. The advocates of capital punishment for apostasy should remember
that these verses refer to idolaters who have broken their pledges and
ridicule religion; there is no mention of people renouncing their faith.. They have broken their pledge after their firm commitment to it. Those
who have become hostile to your religion are the first to initiate hostilities
against you. The permission for you to fight them is restricted to their
leaders whose covenants are worthless and false. The permission is given
in order to stop them from entering into hostile acts against you.. This is the true meaning of these verses which have been misconstrued by the advocates of capital punishment. There is not even the
remotest reference to people who renounce their faith being forced to
become Muslims. The same people are discussed in another part of the. Holy Quran:. It may be that Allah will bring about amity between you and those with
whom you are at enmity. Allah has the power; Allah is Most Forgiving,. Ever Merciful. Allah does not forbid you to be kind and act equitably
towards those who have not fought you because of your religion, and
who have not driven you forth from your homes. Surely Allah loves those
who are equitable. Allah only forbids you that you make friends with
those who have fought against you because of your religion and have
driven you out of your homes and have aided others in driving you out.. Whoso makes friends with them, those are the transgressors. (60.8-10). Temporary disbelief. Another verse of the Holy Quran states:. A section of the people of the Book urge some from among themselves:
why not affirm, in the early part of the day, belief in that which has been
revealed unto the believers and repudiate it in the latter part of the day,
perchance they may turn away from their faith. (3.73). The people of the Book mentioned in this verse are the Jews of Medina.. Theirs was a Jewish tactic to create doubt among the Muslims in the hope
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that some of them might thereby by beguiled into repudiating Islam. How
could it be possible for the Jews to have enacted this plan if death was a
penalty for apostasy? Had anyone been executed for commiting this
crime, that would have been a deterrent for others who would not follow
in their footsteps.. The advocates of the death penalty urge that this verse merely refers
to a Jewish philosophy which was never put into practice by them. Even
if it was merely a philosophy, this verse is conclusive proof of there being
no punishment in this world for apostasy because the Jews could never
have conceived the idea had there been such a punishment. Moreover, it
is wrong to say that the idea was a hypothetical case; the books of
tradition mention that it was put into practice by twelve Jewish divines of. Khaibar and Urainah.2(See also p.65). All commentaries agree that this chapter of the Holy Quran was
revealed between the victory of Mecca and the demise of the Holy. Prophet. This conclusively proves that the Jews put it into practice after. Islam became firmly established in Arabia. How could the Jews ever
think of such a suicidal and insane strategy if death was prescribed as a
punishment for apostasy? How could they encourage Muslims to follow
their faith by affirming it during the day and repudiating it at the end of
the day if they knew that the Muslims would be executed for changing
their faith?. Traditions. The advocates of capital punishment for apostasy misconstrue out of all
proportion the traditions narrated about the Holy Prophets. Traditions
lend no support to their thesis. On the contrary, there are many traditions
which clearly show that there is no punishment for apostasy in this life.. However, for the sake of completeness, we set out those traditions
which are most often cited by advocates of capital punishment for
apostasy.
a) Abu Qalabah reports on the authority of Anas that the Holy Prophet
told the people of Akal or Uraynah to go and stay among his she-camels
outside Medina. These people killed the keeper of the camels and ran
away with the herd. Although it is true that these people had become
apostates, their punishment was not a result of their apostasy but of their
murder of the keeper of the she-camels. (See also page 34.)
b) Whereas Ibn Khatal, who was without doubt one of the four executed
on the fall of Mecca, was an apostate, he had also committed the crime
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of murdering his travelling companion. His execution was, therefore,
obviously ordered as a result of his having been convicted as a murderer.
(See also page 66.)
c) Another incident is that of Maqees b. Sababah who killed an Ansar in
revenge for Hisham, his brother, who was accidentally killed during the
campaign of Zeeqard. Thereafter, Maqees became an apostate. He was
executed on account of the murder of the Ansar. (See also page 67.). In each one of the above incidents, the executed person had committed
murder. The three people had also happened to renounce their faith, but
how can anyone shut his eyes to the murders and attribute their
executions to their acts of apostasy?
d) The advocates of capital punishment for apostasy rely heavily on a
tradition which mentions the execution of a woman for apostasy. This
tradition is most unreliable, to say the least. The truth of the matter is that
the Holy Prophets never ordered the execution of a woman on account
of her apostasy. The well-known treatise of jurisprudence, Hedayah, sets
out the following:. The Holy Prophetsa forbade the killing of women for apostasy, because
the principle of punitive regulations is that in such cases the penalty
should be left for the hereafter, as a penalty imposed in this life would
contravene the purpose of apostasy, being a trial calling to account what
pertains to God alone. This can be departed from only when the object in
view is to restrain the person concerned from continuing hostilities
(during times of war). As women, by their very nature, are not capable
of fighting, a woman apostate cannot be punished in any case.. Strangely enough, scholars like Maududi, who might be supposed to
be fully aware of serious flaws in the reliability of these traditions, still
adhere to weak traditions which have been rejected by most eminent. Muslim scholars.
e)The incident of Abdullah Bin Sad has already been quoted on page 66.. Had there been any Quranic penalty for apostasy, the Holy Prophet's sa
words to the effect that no one is above the law would be a clear
reminder of his strict observance of God's laws. If death was the
punishment for apostasy, how could the Holy Prophetsa disobey the
commandments of God?. Companions. We have observed that neither the Holy Quran nor any reliable traditions
of the Holy Prophetsa lend any support to those who advocate capital
punishment for apostasy. But those advocates have some other tricks up
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their sleeves. It is necessary to examine their remaining arguments at
greater length. Those arguments are based on the opinions of the. Companions of the Holy Prophet, and not directly on his own personal
judgement. Let it be known at the outset that observations or opinions of. Companions can only be a commentary; they have no right to be treated
with as much respect as an injunction of the Holy Quran. At best they can
only be regarded as an opinion.
a) The incident of the widespread apostasy in relation to the payment of
zakat has been discussed (pages 69-72). The Abs and the Zubyan were
the tribes which initiated hostilities by attacking Medina. Hazrat Abu. Bakr fought them before the return of Osama from his expedition. The
apostates were the aggressors. They not only refused to pay zakat, but
also took up the sword against the Muslims. Thus they rebelled against
the Islamic state, slaughtered the Muslims amongst them by burning
some alive and mutilated those they had killed.³ Those who advocate
execution for apostasy on the authority of this incident are either ignorant
of the facts or deliberately seek to mislead people by playing down the
killing of innocent Muslims by the rebels.
b) The advocates then pose the question that if there was no punishment
for apostasy, why was Musailmah the imposter not left alone? The truth
is that Musailmah aspired to political power. He had accompanied Abu. Hanifa and offered to the Holy Prophets his submission subject to his
being nominated as his successor. The Holy Prophetsa told Musailmah
that he would not yield him even a twig of a date palm tree. Musailmah
returned and claimed that half of Arabia belonged to him. He sent a letter
to the Holy Prophets in which he claimed: 'I have been appointed your
partner in authority.' The Holy Prophetsa responded by quoting to him
verse 129 of chapter 7 of the Holy Quran.* After Musailmah's claim of
prophethood, he captured Habeeb b. Zaid, a Companion of the Holy. Prophets, dismembered him limb from limb, and then burned his remains. The advocates of capital punishment ignore this gruesome murder
and claim that apostasy was the only crime attributable to Musailmah.. Had he not commited murder, would he have been killed for the crime of
apostasy alone? Was he not brought to justice for the murder and for the
mayhem and disorder which he created in the land? There is not the
slightest shred of evidence that having heard of Musailmah's rejection of
his prophethood, the Holy Prophets condemned Musailmah to death or
exhorted any of his Companions to kill him. Having failed to find
evidence of any specific condemnation by the Holy Prophets, Maulana
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Murder in the Name of Allah. Maududi had to seek recourse in a wish which the Holy Prophets is said
to have expressed during his dying moments, that Musailmah should be
done away with. Had there been such a wish, it is impossible for us to
believe that the Holy Prophet's first successor, Hazrat Abu Bakr, would
have ignored it and not sent an expedition in compliance with the wish
of the Holy Prophets. Why did Hazrat Abu Bakr wait until the time when. Musailmah himself took the offensive and openly rebelled against the. Muslims? We find that Musailmah mustered a force of 40,000) warriors
of Banu Hanifa alone when he fought Khalid b. Walid. Musailmah
initiated hostilities and moved against Medina. It was only then that. Hazrat Abu Bakr gave orders to march against him on account of his
rebellion and his gruesome murder of Habeeb bin Zaid."
6
c) Another incident cited is that of Tulaiha, another pretender to prophethood. Again, he was not just a pretender but had murdered Ukasha
b. Mohsin and Thabit b. Aqram Ansari. Before Khalid b. Walid commenced battle with him, he sent an emissary to Tulaiha to agree peace
terms and avoid bloodshed. The advocates of capital punishment overlook the fact that if there had been capital punishment for apostasy, there
was no point in sending an emissary offering forgiveness to Tulaiha.
d) A similar case is that of Aswad Anasi who raised the standard of
rebellion with his apostasy. He killed the Muslim governor of Yemen,
'Shahr b. Bazan, forcibly married his widow and made himself ruler of. Yemen. When the Holy Prophet learned of his rebellion, he sent a letter
to Muaz b. Jabal and the Muslims to oppose Aswad Anasi, who was
subsequently killed in a skirmish with the Muslims. (News of his death
arrived one day after the demise of the Holy Prophetsa.)
e) Similarly, Laqbeet b. Malik Azdi became an apostate and claimed to
be a prophet. He expelled Jafar and Abad who had been appointed as
functionaries in Oman.8 He, like all these claimants to prophethood, had
no concern with religion. He had his own political axe to grind. His search
for political domination was through open rebellion against the Islamic
state he lived in, so the question of apostasy is irrelevant here. Let us
suppose for a moment that all these people had not recanted their faith but
had merely rebelled against the Muslim state. The state would have had
to take the step of quelling the rebellion; for the crime of creating disorder
in the land, the Holy Quran prescribes capital punishment. That punishment is not for apostasy.
f) The advocates of capital punishment for apostacy cite also the case of. Umm Qarfah, a woman who became an apostate during the time of
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Punishment for Apostasy. Hazrat Abu Bakr. She had thirty sons whom she constantly exhorted to
fight the Muslims. She paid the price for her treason and for her
complicity in murder, not on account of her apostasy.⁹
g) The case of Hazrat Ali fighting the Khawarij is often cited. The. Khawarij created disorder in the land, killed Muslim men and women, the
governor appointed by Hazrat Ali, his female slave, and also Ali's
emissary.10 (This incident has been discussed on p.70.)
h) Reference needs to be made to the appointments of Muaz b. Jabal and. Abu Musa Ashari, each as governor of a part of Yemen. As they were
about to leave, the Holy Prophets instructed them: 'Make things easy for
people and do not put them into difficulty. Talk to them cheerfully and
not in a manner that might repel them' One day Muaz came to meet Abu. Musa Ashari and noticed a person sitting there who had been secured
with a rope. When Muaz enquired about this he was told that that person
was a Jew who had become a Muslim and then became an apostate. The
narrator adds that for the past two to three months the Muslims had
reasoned with him in order to persuade him to become a Muslim but to
no avail. Muaz declared that he would not dismount until the person had
been executed and observed that this was the judgement of God and His. Messenger. This last remark indicates no more than his personal opinion
of what he understood to be the Will of God and His prophet. Such
opinions carry no weight in law unless they are completely substantiated
by references which verify the claim. (This principle is elaborated
subsequently in this chapter.). Now let us examine the reliability of this tradition. Muaz's remark
contradicts the instruction of the Holy Prophets to make things easy for
people and not in a manner which might repel them. To place reliance on
one tradition without investigating Muaz's understanding of Islam on a
key issue where human rights are involved is sheer absurdity.. Considerable doubt prevails regarding this tradition, the chain of
narrators and their authenticity. Wherever such disputes arise, the tradition is rejected outright. It should be remembered that these traditions
were compiled some three to four centuries after the advent of Islam and
that, over a passage of time, memories are prone to error. According to
one tradition, the Jew was beheaded upon Muaz's instructions." In the
second tradition, Muaz himself beheaded the Jew. 12 When such fundamental differences occur in a key incident, how can anyone accept the
authenticity of these traditions? People may forget what someone said,
but if they were eye-witnesses they would at least remember what
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ultimately happened to the 'apostate' in question.. Next we turn to a tradition which has obtained much attention
because it is strongly emphasised and relied upon by the school advocating capital punishment for apostacy. This has deliberately been deferred
to the end of this chapter so that justice may be done to it without
interfering with the general flow of the subject matter.. Before a detailed examination of this tradition, a few words concerning the application of certain principles accepted by Islamic scholars
throughout the ages would not be out of place. These principles help to
resolve controversies concerning the apparent contradiction between the. Holy Quran and hadith (tradition) on the one hand and some traditions
vis-à-vis other traditions.
1. The Word of God stands supreme.
2. This is followed by the actual practices of the Holy Prophet of. Islams. This is known as sunnah.
3. This is followed by hadith, the words reported to be those of the. Holy Prophetsa
a) If the authenticity of the words of the Holy Prophetsa is established
unquestionably, the words concerned are words put into the mouth of the. Holy Prophets by God Almighty. Where there is no apparent contradiction between the word of the Holy Prophets and the Quran, the tradition
may be accepted as authentic.
b) There are no two opinions regarding the accepted fact that whenever
any so-called tradition attributed to the Holy Prophet of Islam contradicts any clear injunction of the Holy Quran, such a tradition is rejected
as false and is not accepted as the word of the Holy Prophetsa.
c) If such a tradition does not glaringly violate any injunction of the Holy. Quran and there is room for compromise, then ideally an attempt should
be made to search for a suitable compromise before the final rejection of
the tradition.
d) In attempting to reconcile a tradition attributed to the Holy Prophets
with the Holy Quran, it must always be borne in mind that the clear
teachings of the Holy Quran are not to be compromised for the sake of a
so-called tradition, but a genuine attempt is to be made to find an
explanation of the tradition. Therefore in all cases of doubt, the tradition
is put to the anvil of the Holy Quran and judged accordingly.
e) If there is no contradiction between the Holy Quran and hadith, then
their mutual merit of credibility would be determined according to the
reliability of the sources and the chain of narrators.
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f) Such a tradition will also be compared with other authentic and widely
accepted traditions to make sure that the tradition does not conflict with
other traditions.
g) Lastly, another reliable method of investigating the credibility of a
tradition is to study its internal evidence critically. If the contents of the
tradition clash with the image of the Holy Prophet of Islamsa which has
emerged from a study of his conduct and bearing throughout his life, then
such a tradition would be rejected as a false attribution to the Holy. Prophet or as being against the principles of logic and common sense.. In the light of the above principles, let us examine¹³ the tradition in
question.. Tradition. It is recorded in Bukhari that:. Ikramah relates that he heard that some Zindeeqs were presented before. Hazrat Ali whereupon he directed the burning alive of these people. Ibn. Abbas stated that had it been him, he would not have ordered this because
the Holy Prophetsa had said that the torment of the fire may only be
decreed by God but the Prophet had also said, “Slay whosoever changes
his religion'14. This tradition, with some variation, may also be found in Tirmidhi, Abu. Daud, Al-Nasai and Ibn Majah's compilations.. Contradiction with the Holy Quran. It is not possible for a fair-minded person to reconcile the following
verses of the Holy Quran with this tradition:
2.57, 100, 109, 218, 257, 273
3.21, 73, 86-92, 145
4.83, 138, 139, 146
5.55, 62, 91-3, 99-100
5.55,62,91-3,
6.67, 105-8, 126
7.124-9
22.40
24.55
25.42-4
26.117
28.57
29.19
39.30-42
9.11-14
10.100-9
13.41
15.10
16.83, 105-7, 126
17.55
18.30
85
40.26, 27
42.7,8,48,49
47.26
50.46
51.57
64.9-13
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19.47
20.72-4
66.7
88.22-3. In addition to these and other passages quoted earlier, see the
appendix. The following passage is typical:. Whoso seeks a religion other than Islam, it shall not be accepted from
him, and in the life to come he shall be among the losers. How shall. Allah guide a people who have disbelieved after having believed and
who had borne witness that the Messenger is true and to him clear
proofs had come? Allah guides not the wrongdoers. Of such the
punishment is that on them shall be the curse of Allah and of angels
and of men, all together; thereunder shall they abide. Their punishment shall not be lightened nor shall they be granted respite; except
in the case of those who repent thereafter and amend. Surely, Allah is. Most Forgiving, Ever Merciful. Those who disbelieve after having
believed, and then continue to advance in disbelief, their repentance
shall not be accepted. Those are they who have gone utterly astray.. From anyone of those who have disbelieved, and die while they are
disbelievers, there shall not be accepted even an earthful of gold,
though he offer it in ransom. For those there shall be a grievous
punishment, and they shall have no helper.
(3.86-92). It is obvious from these verses that no punishment is to be inflicted by
one man on another for apostacy. The words 'thereunder shall they abide'
clearly refer to the life hereafter. By no stretch of imagination can any
sane person interpret the words 'curse of Allah' to be a licence to murder
anyone whom he considers to be an apostate. No capital punishment is
mentioned. If it had, according to the strict requirements of the law, the
punishment would have been clearly defined, as in the case of all other
hodud (punishments specifically prescribed in the Holy Quran). On the
contrary, the Holy Quran mentions the possibility of repentance by such
persons and subsequent forgiveness by God. How can anyone repent and
atone for his sins in this world if he has been killed?. The advocates of capital punishment for apostasy need to consider
how, if their tradition is presumed to be accurate, the clear contradiction
between it and the Holy Quran is to be resolved. In particular, they should
reconsider their stance in view of the verses quoted above and re-examine
those with an impartial mind. How could anyone accredit greater weight
to such a dubious tradition than to these manifestly clear dictates of the. Holy Quran:. If thy Lord had enforced His Will, surely all those on the earth would
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have believed without exception. Will thou than take it upon thyself
to force people to become believers? Except by Allah's leave no one
can believe and He will afflict with His wrath those who will not use
their understanding. (10.100-1). When God Himself does not force people to believe, who are we
to raise the sword to force belief or to set Maududian mouse-traps?. The problem with the advocates of capital punishment for apostasy
is that they invariably accept literally traditions compiled hundreds of
years after the Holy Prophets which obviously contradict the teachings contained in the Holy Quran.. Conflicts with the practice of the Holy Prophetsa. Our second source of law is the conduct and personal example of the Holy. Prophet. We have already demonstrated the hollowness of the claim that
anyone has ever been executed for the crime of apostasy.. After all, what was the stand of the Holy Prophetsa against the. Meccans? It was that he should be allowed to profess and proclaim the
message of God in peace. The Meccans did not grant him this freedom
and punished those who began to believe in him. As far as the Meccans
were concerned, those who believed in the message of Muhammadsa
were the apostates, having recanted their faith of idol worship.. The Holy Prophetsa spent his entire life fighting in defence of the
fundamental human rights that everybody should be free to choose his
religion, no one should change another person's religion by force, and
everybody has a right to change his own religion, whatever that religion
is.. In fact, this has been the true meaning of 'Holy War', waged by all
messengers of God against their opponents throughout the history of
religion. The Holy Quran has repeatedly mentioned this with reference
to earlier prophets of God (see 2.5; 6.113; 21.42; 25.32; 36.8, 31; 43.8).. To name but a few, these are Abrahams (6.75-9; 19.47; 21.53, 59, 61, 69
-70; 37.89-91,98); Eliasas (37.126-7); Lotas (26.166-8; 27.57;15.71);. Noahs (7.60; 10.72; 11.26-7; 26.117; 71.2-21); Moses as (7.105-6, 1247; 10.76-9; 17.102-3; 20.44-5; 50-3; 26.19-34); and Jesusas (3.52-6;
5.118; 19.37; 43.65). What was their struggle about? It was simply a
response to the claim of the opponents of the prophets as that they had no
right to change the faith of their contemporaries. In fact everybody has
a right to choose his faith and as long as the message of peace and love
is spread by peaceful means, no one has the right to prevent this by force.
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Murder in the Name of Allah. The obstinate response of the opponents to this most logical and.
humane stance was that they positively rejected the prophets' position
and stuck to their claim that the prophets had no right to change the
faith of their people. If they did not desist from this course, the
prophets were to be ready to accept the penalty for apostasy which
was (in the opponents' opinion) no other than death or exile.. The Holy Prophet's sa struggle with his opponents was consistent with
the practice of all prophets of the past. How can any sane person deny the
lifetime mission of the Holy Prophetsa and challenge his firm stance on
this fundamental principle? The Holy Quran, the practice of the Holy. Prophetsa, and the other traditions provide ample contradiction to the
tradition in question. One cannot over-emphasise the utter unreliability
of this tradition.. Reliability of the sources and narrators. Prima facie, the tradition refuted here has been authenticated by the
reputable compilers Bukhari, Tirmidhi, Abu Daud, Al-Nasai and Ibn. Majah; it is included in five out of the six generally accepted compilations
of hadith. But there ends its claim to authenticity.. For a tradition to be declared authentic it is not enough for it to be
found in an authentic compilation. There are other established measures
which are applied to every tradition. The most important among these
measures is the examination in depth and detail of the reputation and
character of the narrators forming the links in the chain of narrators.. There are scholars who have devoted their whole lifetime to such
studies and, thanks to their most painstaking and thorough investigations, we are today in a position to examine every link of the chain of
narrators in any compilation. Let us turn our attention to the tradition
under consideration. This hadith falls into the category of ahad gharib
(i.e., a tradition in which there is only one chain of narrators connected
to the same single source) because all the five books of hadith derive their
chain of narrators from Ikramah as their ultimate source.. The late Maulana Abdul Hayy of Lucknow specifically refers to. Ikramah, pointing out that merely because Bukhari had included him in
his compilation, others followed suit without carrying out independent
research. 15. A tradition may be authentic and reliable even if it is quoted through
a single chain of narrators. However, it cannot be regarded as being as
reliable as traditions which have more than one chain of reliable narra88
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tors. Such traditions are not permitted to influence edicts regarding the
rights, liabilities and penalties; in particular, extra caution is required in
relation to hodud. Hodud is a term strictly applicable to punishments
specifically prescribed in the Holy Quran. The exponents of death as the
penalty for apostasy consider their view to be based on Quranic injunctions falling within the category of hodud. In fact, we have disproved this
claim earlier.. It is important to bear in mind that the tradition under discussion is a
tradition quoted by a single chain of narrators and has no jurisprudence
even if it is considered to be correct by some. In this context, it is essential
to learn more about Ikramah and his reputation.. Ikramah. Ikramah 16 was a slave of Ibn Abbas, and also his pupil - a very indifferent
pupil, for that matter, and a back-bencher of the first order. He confirms
this himself by saying that Ibn Abbas was so infuriated with his lack of
interest in his studies and by his truancy that he would bind his hand and
foot to compel him to remain present during his sermons.17. He was an opponent of Hazrat Ali, the fourth caliph of Islam, and was
inclined towards the Khawarij in particular at the time when differences
between Hazrat Ali and Ibn Abbas began to emerge. Later, during the. Abbaside period, (the Abbasides, it should be borne in mind, were
extremely antagonistic to all those who were in any way allied to Hazrat. Ali's progeny because of political apprehensions), Ikramah acquired
great renown and respect as a versatile scholar, obviously because of his
hostility towards Hazrat Ali and links with the Khawarij.18. Dhahbi states that because Ikramah was a Kharijite, his traditions
were unreliable and dubious. An expert on the punishment for apostasy,. Imam Ali b. Al-Medaini, is of the same opinion. Yahya b. Bekir used to
say that the Kharijites of Egypt, Algiers and Morocco were strongly
allied to Ikramah.. It has generally been observed that the traditions of capital punishment for apostasy emanate mainly from incidents in Basra, Kufa and. Yemen. The people of the Hejaz (Mecca and Medina) were totally
unfamiliar with them. One cannot shut one's eyes to the fact that the
tradition from Ikramah under discussion is known as an Iraqi tradition.. Let us recall the famous Meccan Imam, Taus b. Kaisan, who used to say
that Iraqi traditions were generally doubtful.19. That is not all. A great scholar, Yahya b. Saeed Al-Ansari, has
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strongly censured Ikramah for his unreliability in general and has
gone to the extent of calling him a kadhab, 20 that is to say an extreme
liar of the first order.. Abdullah b. Al-Harith quotes a very interesting incident which he
witnessed himself when he visited Ali b. Abdullah b. Abbas. He was
deeply shocked and dismayed to find Ikramah bound to a post outside the
door of Ali b. Abdullah b. Abbas. He expresseed his shock at this cruelty
by asking Ali b. Abdullah b. Abbas if he had no fear of God in him. What
he obviously meant was that Ikramah, with all his renown of piety and so
on, did not deserve such a base and cruel treatment at the hands of his late
master's own son. In response to this, Ali b. Abdullah b. Abbas justified
his act by pointing out that Ikramah had the audacity to attribute false
things to his late father, Ibn Abbas.21 What better judge of the character
of Ikramah could there be than Ali b. Abdullah b. Abbas? No wonder,
therefore, that Imam Malik b. Anas (95-179 AH), the pioneer compiler
of hadith and an Imam of jurisprudence held in the highest repute
throughout the Muslim world, held that the traditions narrated by. Ikramah were unreliable. 22. The following scholars of great repute have declared that Ikramah
had a strong disposition towards exaggeration: Imam Yayha b. Saeed AlAnsari, Ali b. Abdullah b. Abbas and Ata b. Abi Rabae.²
23. This, then, is the man who we are dealing with and on whose sole
authority the matter of the lives of all those people who change their faith
is left hanging till the end of time.. Ibn Abbas. Whenever the name of Ibn Abbas24 appears at the head of a chain of
narrators, the vast majority of Muslim scholars is overawed. They forget
the fact that because of his name and reputation concocters of false
traditions tended to trace their fabricated chain of narrators back to him.. Therefore, all traditions beginning with the name of Ibn Abbas must be
properly judged and examined.. Moreover, even if Ibn Abbas is honestly reported by a narrator, the
possiblity of human error on Ikramah's part regarding what Ibn Abbas
might have said cannot be ruled out. The following would be a good
illustration of the case in point:. Ibn Abbas says that Umar used to say that the Holy Prophets said that
crying over the dead brought chastisement to the dead. Ibn Abbas further
said that after Umar died, he related this tradition to Ayesha who said,
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'God forgive Umar!' By God, the Holy Prophets said nothing of the
kind. He only said that if the descendants of a disbeliever cried over
his dead body, their action tended to augment his punishment, and by
way of argument, Ayesha also said, 'Sufficient for us is the saying of
the Quran: “Verily no soul can bear the burden of another.”25. If a man of Hazrat Umar's stature and integrity can misunderstand
the Holy Prophetsa, however rarely it might have happened, how much
more is there danger of ordinary narrators misunderstanding the
reports of Ibn Abbas?. With such wide possibilities for the miscarriage of the message of the. Holy Prophet of Islamsa, how can a sane person rely entirely on the
evidence of this hadith and draw conclusions of far-reaching import
regarding matters of life and death and fundamental human rights?. It is likely that Ikramah concocted this tradition, attributing it to Ibn. Abbas, as it was his wont to do, according to Ali b. Ibn Abbas.. Other internal criteria. When we examine the subject matter of the tradition under consideration,
we find the contents to be erroneous in several ways.
a) A person of Hazrat Ali's stature is presumed to be unaware of the fact
that Islam categorically prohibits a person to be punished by fire.
b) 'The words 'slay whosoever changes his faith' are so general that they
can be interpreted in many ways. They can apply to men, women and
children, whereas according to Imam Abu Hanifa and some other schools
of jurisprudence, an apostate woman can never be slain.
c) The Arabic word deen (religion) used in this tradition is a general word
meaning any religion, not Islam specifically. Even the faith of idolaters
is referred to as deen. (Sura Al-Kafiroon). In the light of the general nature of the language used, how can one
restrict the application of this tradition to a Muslim who renounces his
faith? In strict legal terms, according to this tradition anyone who
changes his religion, whatever that religion is, would have to be put to
death. It would mean slaying the Jew who became a Christian, slaying the. Christian who became a Muslim, and slaying the pagan who adopted any
new faith. 'Whosoever' also transcends the geographical boundaries of. Muslim states, implying that anywhere in the world, anyone who
changes his faith - be he an aborigine of Australia, a pygmy of Africa or
an indian of South America - must be slain forthwith the moment he
renounces his previous faith and accepts another one.
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Murder in the Name of Allah. Islam lays a great deal of emphasis on proselytizing, so that it is
binding upon every Muslim to become a preacher in the path of Allah.. How ironical it is therefore that many renowned Muslim scholars today
negate the very spirit of Islamic jihad by audaciously sticking to the
narrow-minded view that Islam dictates that whosoever changes his
faith, meaning in this context Islam, must be put to death forthwith. What
about those of other faiths? Islam declares it to be an obligation upon. Muslims to stand committed to the noble goal of constantly endeavouring to change the faith of all non-Muslims around them by peaceful
means. This task is so important and demanding that every Muslim is
instructed to stick to the endeavour till his last breath.. The Holy Quran states:. Call unto the way of thy Lord with wisdom and goodly exhortation, and
reason with them on the basis of that which is best. Thy Lord knows best
those who have strayed away from His way; and He knows best those
who are rightly guided. (16.126). The advocates of the bigoted inhumane doctrine of death upon
apostasy never visualise its effect on international and interreligious
human relationships. Why can they not see that according to their view
of Islam, adherents of all religions have a fundamental right to change
their faith but not so the Muslims, and that Islam has the prerogative of
converting others but all adherents of different faiths are deprived of any
right to convert Muslims to their faith? What a sorry picture of Islamic
justice this presents!. To conclude, apostasy is the clear repudiation of a faith by a person
who formerly held it. Doctrinal differences, however grave, cannot be
deemed to be apostasy. The punishment for apostasy lies in the hand of. God Almighty, against whom the offence has been committed. Apostasy
which is not aggravated by some other crime is not punishable in this
world. This is the teaching of God. This was the teaching of the Holy. Prophets. This is the view confirmed by Hanafi jurists, 26 Fateh alKadeer, 27 Chalpi, 28 Hafiz ibn Qayyim, Ibrahim Nakhai, Sufyan Thauri
and many others. The Maududian claim of consensus, concerning
the tradition they hold to be true, is a mere fiction.
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CHAPTER 8. MERCY FOR THE UNIVERSE. They were clever enough to realise that a Musalman's feelings are never
more easily aroused than over a real or fancied insult to the Holy Prophet.. They, therefore, began to proclaim that their activites were meant to
preserve the nabuwwat [prophethood] of the Holy Prophet and to
repel attacks on his namus [honour]. ... The trick succeeded and they
began to attract large audiences to their meetings. Since some of the. Ahrar speakers are experts in the choice of words and expression and
the use of similes and metaphors and can intersperse their speeches
with flashes of humour of however low an order, they soon began
gaining in popularity.. Justice Mohammad Munir¹. Disparaging a prophet of God is as old as prophecy itself. Even. Muhammadsa could not escape it. He was mocked, not only during the. Meccan period of his life, but also in Medina where he had the authority
to punish. The Jews of Medina had sharp tongues and a sick sense of
humour, and did not miss an opportunity of ridiculing the Prophetsa.. After the Hijrah, the Quraish of Mecca joined forces with these Jews
to stop the progress of Islam. The hypocrites were already there, starting
work as fifth columnists. Apart from intrigue and war, they also employed the communications network for propaganda. The propagandist poets, whom Maxime Rodinson has described as 'the journalists
of the time' and Carmichael as ‘kindlers of battle' ? accused the. Muslims of dishonouring themselves by submitting to an outsider.. Abu Afak taunted the children of Qayla (the Aws and the Khazraj):. I have lived a long time, but I have never seen. Either a house or gathering of People. More loyal and faithful to. Its allies, when they call on it,. Than that of the children of Qayla
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(the Aws and the Khazraj) as a whole.. The mountains will crumble before they submit. Yet here is a rider come among them who had divided them.
(He says) 'This is permitted; this is forbidden'. To all kinds of things.. But if you had believed in power. And in might, why did you not follow a tubba?³. Abu ‘Afak in effect was saying, 'The tubba was, after all, a south. Arabian king of great reputation, yet you resisted him. Now what has
happened to you that you have accepted the claims of a Meccan refugee?". Meanwhile, Kab was elected chief of the Jews, replacing Malik b. alSayf who also lamented the loss of Quraish at Badr." In an elegy he said:. Drive out that fool of yours that you may be safe. From talk that has no sense!. Do you taunt me because I shed tears. For people who loved me sincerely?. As long as I live I shall weep and remember. The merits of people whose glory is the houses of Mecca.. Obviously, the main purpose of this vulgar and abusive campaign
was to sow the seeds of dissention between the Ansar and the Muhajirs
on the one hand and between the Aws and the Khazraj on the other. The
campaign seemed to pay off when a Jew from the Banu Qua'inq'ua,. Shas b. Qays, ordered a Jewish youth to recite some poems composed
at the battle of Buath. They were recited to a mixed gathering of. Muslims, comprising the Aws and the Khazraj. Eventually, both sides
got worked up and challenged each other, saying: 'If you wish we will
do the same thing again.' They both replied: 'We will! Your meeting
place is outside - that being the volcanic tract. To arms! To arms!” As
soon as the Holy Prophetsa heard the news he hurried to the spot with
the Emigrants and addressed the men of the Aws and the Khazraj:. O Muslims! Remember God, remember God. Will you act like pagans
while I am with you? After God has guided you to Islam and honoured
you and saved you from paganism? After he has delivered you from
unbelief and made you friends by so doing?³. The following verses of the Quran were revealed on the occasion:". O ye who believe... if you obey any of those who have been given the. Book, they will turn you again into disbelievers after you have believed.. When you are the people to whom the signs of Allah are given and among
whom the Messenger of Allah is present, how can you disbelieve? He
who holds fast to Allah is indeed guided to the right path.
.10
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Mercy for the Universe. O ye who believe, be mindful of your duty to Allah in all respects,
every moment of your lives, so that whenever death overtakes you, it will
find you in a state of complete submission to Him. All of you, take hold
of Allah's rope which He gave you when you hated each other. He united
your hearts in love so that by His grace you became brethren.
(3:101-104). This was the atmosphere of unrest in Medina when the Prophetsa
decided to stop the poets' propaganda campaign and asked for volunteers to execute them. It was clear they had become a grave danger
to peace. To say that they were killed because they reviled and
insulted the Prophetsa is to twist historical fact. To use these executions as a precedent for the execution of those who defame the. Prophetsa is either deliberate dishonesty or sheer historical ignorance.. Defaming the Prophetsa, known technically as sabb, is neither a hadd
offence according to the Quran nor a capital offence according to the. Sunnah. In fact it is not punishable at all, unless there are contributing
circumstances. Its punishment, like that of apostasy, is in the hands of. Allah alone. The Quran uses goodwill to uphold the honour of Allah
and his prophets, not the sword. The Quran says:. Revile not those to whom they pray besides Allah, lest they wrongfully
revile Allah through ignorance. Thus unto every nation have We made
their deed seem fair. Then unto their Lord is their return, and He will tell
them what they used to do. (6.109). Respect, honour, love and esteem for someone come from the heart.. Force can shut mouths, create terror and result in disrespect and irreverence. This is why the Quran takes a positive view in matters of the heart.. As regards respect for the Holy Prophetsa, the Quran says:. Lo! Allah and His angels shower blessings on the Prophet. O ye who
believe! Ask blessings on him and honour him with a worthy salutation.. Lo! Those who malign Allah and His Messenger Allah hath cursed them
in this world and in the next and hath prepared for them the doom of the
disdained. And those who malign believing men and women undeservedly, they bear the guilt of slander and manifest sin. (33:57-59). The Quran is very clear about sabb. It asks Muslims not to scorn even
the false gods of unbelievers and it does not lay down any punishment for
those who show disrespect to the Prophet - for them, God has prepared
the 'doom of the disdained'.. And how did the Excellent Examplers treat those who reviled him?. Let us return to the leader of the munafiqun, Abdullah b. Ubayy. After the
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battle of Al-Mustaliq (6AH/AD737), while the Holy Prophetsa was
staying by the watering-place of Al-Muraysi, an unpleasant dispute took
place between the Muhajirs and Ansar. A hired servant of Umar, Jahjah
b. Masud, and Sinan b. Wabar al-Juhani, an ally of Ansar, began fighting.. According to Ibn Ishaq:. The Juhani called out: 'Men of Al-Ansar!' and Jahjah called out 'Men
of the Muhajirun!' Abdullah b. Ubayy b. Salul was enraged. With him
were some of his people, including Zayd b. Arqam, a young boy. He
said: 'Have they actually done this? They dispute our priority, they
outnumber us in our country. Nothing is more apt for us and the
vagabonds of Quaraish than the ancient saying, "Feed a dog and it will
devour you." By Allah, when we return to Medina the most honourable
will drive out the meanest.' Then he went to his people and said: 'This
is what you have done to yourselves. You have let them occupy your
country and you have divided your property among them. Had you only
kept your property from them they would have gone elsewhere.' Zayd
b. Arqam heard this and, when he had disposed of his enemies, went and
told the Prophetsa. Umar, who was with him, said: 'Tell Abbad b. Bishr
to go and kill him.' The Prophetsa answered: 'What if men should say. Muhammad kills his own Companions? No, but give orders to set off.". The Holy Prophetsa was, of course, greatly upset. The tribal appeal of. Juhani to Ansar and Jahjah's call to 'the men of Mahajirun' reminded him
of the Day of Buath and the war of Basus, which lasted forty years. Had. Abdullah b. Ubayy succeeded the Ansar, the Muhajirs would have gone
back to their tribal wars. The message of Islamic unity, which changed
these disunited tribes into a mighty Arab nation, would have been lost
forever. The Holy Prophetsa was so upset that he gave orders to move,
although, as Ibn Ishaq reports, 'This was at a time when the Prophet was
not used to travelling." Referring to this incident, the Quran says:
'10. They [the Munafiqun] say: 'When we return to Medina the one most
honourable shall surely drive out the meanest.' True honour belongs
to Allah, to His Messenger and believers; but the hypocrites know it
not. (63.9). When Abdullah, son of Abdullah b. Ubayy, heard of this affair, he went
to the Prophetsa and said:. I have heard that you want to kill Abdullah b. Ubayy for what you heard
about him. If you must, order me to do it and I will bring his head, for AlKhazraj know they have no man more dutiful to his father than I. I am
afraid that if you order someone else to kill him, I could not bear to see
his executioner walking around and might kill him. I would therefore be
killing a believer for an unbeliever and I would certainly be damned.' The
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Mercy for the Universe. Prophet said: 'No, but let us deal kindly with him and make much of his
companionship while he is with us.
'12. Muslim rulers, who understood why the Holy Prophets treated. Abdullah b. Ubayy and other hypocrites and Jews as he did, have been
extremely reluctant to create false martyrs in the process of protecting the
honour of the Prophet (Namus-i-Rasul). In Cordova, between 850 and
859, a group of Christian zealots was formed under the leadership of. Eulogius. The members of this group were determined to denounce the. Holy Prophets publicly and to accept martyrdom. The qadis of Cordova,
however, refused to oblige them and jailed them instead. Will Durant
reports one such incident:. Isaac, a Cordovan monk, went to the qadi and professed a desire for
conversion; but when the judge, well pleased, began to expound Mohammedanism, the monk interrupted him: 'Your Prophet', he said, 'has lied
and deceived you. May he be cursed, who has dragged so many wretches
with him down to hell!' The qadi reproved him and asked had he been
drinking? The monk replied: ‘I am in my right mind. Condemn me to
death.' The qadi had him imprisoned, but asked permission of Abd-ur. Rahman II to dismiss him as insane.13. Shaykhul Islam Ebus'u'ud Effendi, chief mufti of the Ottoman. Empire during the reign of the Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent,
allowed the death penalty, but only for habitual and public defamers
of the Holy Prophetsa. Shaykhul Islam went out of his way to insist that
execution should not be ordered lightly. He clearly wished to avoid
frivolous and malicious prosecutions and laid down that an offender
could not be treated as habitual ‘merely on the word of one or two
persons'. The habitual character of the offender had to be proved to
the authorities by impartial (begharaz) Muslims, who had no axe to
grind. But there was an important rider to this which showed that
though Shaykhul Islam Ebussuud issued a fatwa without any Quranic
or hadith authority, he knew the punishment of sabb was Allah's
alone. The fatwa was issued, probably under political pressure,
because he nullified its entire effect by stating that unbelievers were
not held guilty for declaring 'that which constitutes their disbelief':
that is, for rejecting Muhammad'ssa prophetic mission.. The quality of a Muslim's faith and the measure of respect he holds
for the Prophet cannot be legally defined. Conversely, an unbeliever can
neither be forced to embrace Islam nor to honour its Prophets at gunpoint. This is why God has prescribed no punishment for irtidad or sabb
in this world. Despite the disparaging words uttered by Abdullah b.
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Murder in the Name of Allah. Ubayy at the watering-hole of Al-Muraysi, the Holy Prophets did not
punish him.. The punishment of these two offences is easily exploited by politically orientated ulema who would debase religious causes by using them
for materialist purposes and exploit religious belief for their own ends.14. At the moment, Deobandi/Ahli Hadith ulema are accusing the. Ahmadis of disparaging the Prophetsa. Little do they realise that in
doing so they have created the means of their own destruction. In
comparison with mainstream Sunnis, who constitute the majority of. Muslims in the subcontinent, 15 Turkey, and many other Muslim
countries, the Deobandis/Ahli Hadith and the followers of the Najdi
reformer Abdul Wahhab are in a minority throughout the Muslim
world (except in Nejd). They are accused of belittling the Prophetsa.. The Deobandi/Wahhabi ulema consider the mainstream Sunnis to be
kafir for attributing to the Prophetsa qualities which, to say the least,
are polytheist. For instance, they say that his body did not cast a
shadow because he was filled with light. When Meauud-i-Sherif,
popularised by the Turkish poet Suleyman Chelebi of Busra (1410),
is concluded with ya Nabi Salam Alaika (peace be with you), the. Prophet's soul is present at the event, and, therefore, everyone
attending should stand to show respect. In the same manner, praying
at his tomb, kissing the grillework surrounding it and many other such
beliefs and practices of the Sunnis/Brelvis are shirk according to. Deobandis. The Wahhabis, having demolished the historical graveyard of Jannat ul- Baqi, wished to destroy even the dome of the. Prophet's mosque and were prevented from doing so only by the
strong reaction in the Muslim world. For these acts of destruction of
graves, tombs and domes, Sunnis all over the world accuse the. Wahhabis of denigrating and belittling the Holy Prophets. The. Brelvis consider that it was the Deoband scholars Maulana Muhammad Qasim Nanautwi and Maulana Ashraf Ali Thanwi, who did not
believe in Khatm-i-nabuwatt. In a booklet, Deobandi Maulwiyon ka. Iman, Maulana Abdul Mustafa Abu Yahya Muhammad Muinuddin. Shafi'i Qadri Rizvi Thanwi writes:. O Muslims! Look how this accursed, unholy, satanic assertion has
destroyed the very basis of Khatm-i-nabuwatt.... See that Maulwi. Qasim Nanautwi does not believe in Khatm-i-nabuwatt, while Maulwi. Rashid Ahmad, Maulwi Khalil Ahmad and other Wahhabi ulema have
declared those who reject Khatm-i-nabuwatt as kafir.16
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Mercy for the Universe. Brelvi-Deobandi polemics - all in the name of protecting the. Holy Prophets, the very paragon of modesty - have reached such
vulgarity that even the mildest examples are offensive. Shourish. Kashmiri, a supporter of the Deobandi school, said in his pamphlet
'Kafir saz Mulla' that anyone who declares the great leader of. Deoband as kafir (unbeliever) is a liar. In the same pamphlet he said
that the Brelvi ulema sell religion and the Sharia of the Prophetsa to
make a living, that they are the born slaves of Lord Clive's household,
the enemies of the Muslim League and Qaid-i-Azam Jinnah. In
another pamphlet, he said that these people were even lower than a
brick in Maulana Husain Ahmad's and Syed Ataullah Shah Bukhari's
lavatory. 16 The Brelvi reply to these abusive charges was tasteless.. They said that the man slandering them and the Holy Prophetsa had
spent his life wandering the red-light districts. 'The man who called. Nehru a prophet is now accusing us of selling the Shari'a of the. Prophets, they cried. 'Why shouldn't Muhammad Qasim Nanautwi
be called a kafir and how can we accept Ashraf Ali Thanwi as a. Muslim? Aren't they the men who said the door of prophethood was
open? Aren't they the pathfinders of the Qadiyanis? Who has taught
you how to denigrate Mustafa? Who has taught you unbelief? You
have taken your clothes off, have you no sense of decency or modesty?. You have created disorder under the name of khatm-i-nabuwwat and
spread mischief under the name of peace. You are collecting money
under the name of nabuwwat and begging under the name of the. Prophetsa.'. Another poet, Sayyad Muhammad Tanha, said:. How can you appreciate the high status of Ahmad Raza?. Go and smell the stinking underpants of Hindus.. Gold is your prophet, gold is your God. You belong to the party of those who show you gold. You have spent all your life with Kufr. How can you, a Khatri Hindu by caste, join Islam?. O Nimrod, how can you glorify Allah?. Your place is with Hindus, go there and praise
there the name of Hari, Hari."
18. Compare the language, the style and the contents of this Barelvi attack on. Deobandi ulema with the tirade of Deobandi scholars against Ahmadis:
1. Ahmadis deny khatm-i-nabuwwat,
2. Ahmadis denigrate the Holy Prophets;
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3. Ahmadis created British imperialism in India;
4. Ahmadis opposed the creation of Pakistan;
5. Ahmadis are opposed to jihad;
6. Ahmadis associate with non-Muslims;
7. Ahmadiyat is a racket in religion's name.. Both the Ahli-Sunnat wal Jamaat (Brelvi) and Deobandi ulema
accuse each other of disparaging the Holy Prophets. As we saw earlier,
the Jamaati Islami described the Ahl-i Quran as being worse than the. Ahmadis. But the Shias have not been spared either they have been
accused of degrading the status of the Holy Prophets by claiming that Ali
shared the prophethood with him.. The Canadian scholar, Wilfred Cantwell Smith, who visited the
subcontinent and closely observed the Muslim society of India and. Pakistan, has accused Muslims of ‘a fanaticism of blazing vehemence'.. In his book, Islam in Modern India, he says:. Muslims will allow attacks on Allah: there are atheists and atheistic
publications and rationalistic societies, but to disparage Muhammad will
provoke from even the most liberal sections of the community a fanaticism of blazing vehemence.19. This is an incorrect assessment of Muslim temperament. Prof. Cantwell. Smith has generalised. Actually, it is the Mullahs and the politicallyorientated leadership which recognised: 'that the feelings of a Musulman
are never more easily aroused and his indignation awakened than over a
real or fancied insult to the Holy Prophet. 20. No doubt the rich and the poor, the intellectuals, the uneducated, the
pious and impious have always been united in the love of the Prophetsa
and considered fana fir-rasul (annihilation in the name of the Prophet)
to be the peak of religious experience. But no Muslim is unmindful that
the Holy Prophet's highest experience was the miraj, when he, surrounded by clouds of angels, soared high into the Divine Presence, where
even the angel Gabriel has no access. The power-hungry Muslim leadership forgets that the exhortation 'Muhammad is the Messenger of God'
is only the second part of the confession of the Muslim faith. The first is:
'There is no God but Allah.'. There is no way to measure love or respect. Lovers and mystics wrote
diwans after diwans and finally devoted their lives to trying to express
feelings no language could really convey. The mullahs can scan the poem
of love, but cannot understand it. It is no mere accident that the founder
of the Ahmadiyyah Movement in Islam was named Ghulam Ahmadas.
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Mercy for the Universe. What an honour! What a status! What a glory! In the following three
couplets he answers those who accuse him of disparaging the Holy. Prophets and critics, like Cantwell Smith, who accuse Muslims of being
negligent of Allah's honour:. After the love of Allah it is Muhammad's love
which has captivated my heart;. If this love be kufr, by God I am a great kafir.21. My Love! My Benefactor! Let my life be sacrificed in Thy way,. For when hath Thou shown indifference in Thy goodness to this slave?". If it be the custom that claimants of. Thy love be beheaded at Thy threshold,. Then let it be known I am the first to claim that reward.23. The founder of the Ahmadiyyah Movement in Islam has clearly and
honestly declared his faith in the supreme authority of the Holy Prophetsa
as the Khatam-un-nabiyyin. He said:. The basis of our religion and the essence of our belief is that there is no. God but Allah and Muhammad is His Prophet. The faith that we follow
in this earthly life and the faith in which, by the grace of God, we shall
depart from this transitory abode, is that of our Lord and great Master,. Muhammad may peace and blessings of Allah be upon him.. And, again:
24. A superior status, comprising all that is good, belongs to our Lord and. Master, Seal of the Prophets, Muhammad Mustafa. It is unique to him,
it is unapproachable. 25. The writer of the four quotations given above, Mirza Ghulam. Ahmadas, and his followers have been declared non-Muslims by Muslims
described by Sir Muhammad Iqbal (1875-1938) in the following stanzas
of a long Urdu poem:. Hands are impotent and nerveless,
hearts unfaithful and infidel,. The Community a heartbreak to
their Prophet and a shame;. Gone are the idol-breakers, in their
places idol-makers dwell;. Abraham their father was: the
children merit Azar's name.2
26
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Murder in the Name of Allah. New and strange the band of drinkers,
and their wine is strange and new,. A new shrine to house their Ka'aba,
new and strange the idols too.. Very heavy on your spirits weighs the
charge of morning's prayer;. How much more would you prefer sleeping, than
rising up to worship me.. Ramadan is too oppressive for you
tempers free to bear;. Tell me now, do you consider that the
law of loyalty?. Nations come to birth by faith; let
faith expire, and nations die. So, when gravitation ceases, the
throngéd stars asunder fly.. Why, you are a people utterly bereft
of every art;. No other nation in the world so lightly
spurns its native place;. You are like a barn where lightnings
nestle, and will not depart;. You would sell your fathers' graveyards,. And say that such a thing was right;. Making profit out of tombstones has
secured you such renown Why not set up shop in idols, if you
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chance to hunt some down?. Loud the cry goes up 'The Muslims?. They are vanished, lost to view',. We re-echo, 'Are true Muslims to be
found in any place?'. Christian is your mode of living, and
your culture is Hindu;. Why, such Muslims to the Jews would
be a shame and a disgrace.. Sure enough, you have your Syeds,. Mirzas, Afghans, all the rest;. But can you claim that you are Muslims
if the truth must be confessed?27. Having claimed that the Muslims of the day would shame even Jews,
and that they would even sell their ancestors' tombstones, the 'poet,
philosopher, political thinker and altogether most eminent figure in. Indian Islam of the twentieth century 28 decided to distinguish between. Muslims and Ahmadis. So in 1936 he wrote in an open letter to Pandit. Jawaharlal Nehru, the leader of the predominantly Hindu Indian National. Congress and, later, first prime minister of India, demanding that Ahmadis should be declared a non-Muslim minority. In the constitution of
secular India the demand was, of course, ignored. But for the ulema of. Deoband it was a matter of life and death. Hindus have occupied Babari. Masjid in Ayodhya and converted it under police protection into the Ram. Janma Bhoomi temple. Another section of Hindus demand the conversion of Benares and Kashi mosques into temples. Most Hindus are
agitating for the abolition of Muslim personal law.. This is what becomes of people who reject prophets of God and men
of peace. They stand disunited and bereft of the blessings of the peace
they sought to disturb. They breed violence and terrorism.
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CHAPTER 9. ISLAMIC TERRORISM?. What is 'Islamic' terrorism, I wonder? Islam is as closely related to
terrorism as light is to darkness or life is to death or peace is to war. They
do come into contact with each other, of course, but from directions
diametrically opposed. They are found grappling with each other but
never walking hand in hand happily together.. However, one cannot deny that on many occasions some Muslims are
found involved in terrorist activities either on behalf of a group or on
behalf of a country with a predominately Muslim population.. Are there not equally, other groups involved in terrorism and subversion throughout the world? Would it be fitting to label all brands of
terrorism by using the same principle which gave birth to the term
'Islamic terrorism' creating a list of Sikh terrorism, Hindu terrorism,. Christian terrorism, Jewish terrorism, atheist terrorism, Buddhist terrorism, Animist terrorism and pagan terrorism?. It is not easy to close one's eyes to various brands of terrorism which
unfortunately flourish all over the world; in fact, it is impossible for an
observer not to be aware of the persecution, bloodshed and murder, often
in the name of some purported ideal or noble cause. Terrorism is a global
problem and needs to be studied in its larger perspective. Unless we
understand the forces behind the violence, we shall not be able to
understand why some Muslim groups and states are turning to terrorism
to achieve certain objectives.. I am fully convinced that almost every form of communal violence
witnessed in the world today, wherever that is and whatever cloak it
wears, is essentially political in nature. Religion is not the exploiter, it is
itself exploited by internal or external political interests.. For instance, we find terrorism generated by racialism - but that, in
the final analysis, is essentially political in nature. There are other small
expressions of terrorism born out of rebellion and hatred against prevail104
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ing social systems and cultures. These are generally regarded as acts of
madmen and anarchists. There is a special kind of terrorism which is
related to the Mafia's struggle for supremacy; this terrorism is directed
by certain factions against other factions within the Mafia. Obviously,
this terrorism is really a power struggle and therefore political.. When we examine so-called 'Islamic terrorism', we discover political forces working behind an Islamic facade. More often than not, the real
manipulators and exploiters are not even Muslims themselves. Let us
turn to some particular illustrations of terrorism in order to diagnose the
underlying maladies. We shall begin with Iran and see how Khomeinism
came to be born.. It is common knowledge that in the days of the Shah there was great
prosperity. The highly ambitious industrial and economic development
plans augered a bright future for the country. But can man live by bread
alone? As far as Iranians under the despotic rule of the Shah were
concerned, the answer was an emphatic 'No'. They wanted to have a
responsible share in the running of affairs in their own country. They
could no longer just be satisfied with full stomachs. Their hunger for
self-respect and dignity and their craving for freedom and liberation from
a highly regimented system of oppression made them more and more
restive and volatile. This situation was ripe for a violent and bloody
revolution.. If the nature of this imminent revolution had not been essentially. Islamic, it would have been a communist revolution and could have been
even bloodier and more extreme. The turmoil which was to shake Iran
from north to south and east to west was a natural and inevitable
consequence of a long political oppression and negation of fundamental
human rights and liberties, and also of subversion and exploitation by a
great Western foreign power. Iran was aware of the fact that the despotic
regime of the Shah was fully backed, supported and sanctioned by the
government of the United States of America. The people's hatred and
urge for revenge did not stop at the toppling of the Shah's regime and the
destruction of all internal forces which in one way or another had been
responsible for the maintenance of the monarchy.. The consciousness of American support had brought out in the Shah
the very worst of his despotic tendencies. He had been held in awe to
begin with, but gradually awe gave way to terror. The fear of revolt
stiffened his attitude even more with the passage of time. Gradually a
police state of the worst type came to be born in Iran. With the passage
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of time Iranians became aware that the police state was fully and unequivocally supported by the government of the USA. The Shah played
the part of a mere puppet whose strings were tied to the subtle, manipulating fingers of USA. This, as has been mentioned above, led to a
situation ripe for revolution motivated by a consuming fire of hatred.. The situation was capitalised upon by Ayatollah Khomeini. The
ideology which he propounded to give colour and complexion to his
revolution was Shia Islam. But was it really a love of Shia Islam which
generated hatred against the USA, or was the name of Islam a mere facade
to hide the underlying motives? Had Khomeini not raised the banner of. Islam, would there not have been a revolution in some other name? Is it
not a fact that had Khomeini not exploited the situation and given it an. Islamic colour and complexion, the same situation of hatred could have
been equally well exploited by a non-religious philosophy such as
nationalism or scientific socialism?. In fact Khomeini outpaced forces which were coming fast at his heels
and which, given time, might have overtaken him and all he stood for.. That is why the situation in Iran became extremely complicated and
confused. The basic urge of the revolution was not against communism
or any leftist philosophy but was aimed at the Shah and his mentors. But
because there was a real likelihood of leftist leadership taking over the
reins of revolution from Khomeini, he had to fight on three fronts
simultaneously. After toppling the Shah, he not only undertook to
eradicate and exterminate all supporters of the former Shah, but also to
root out American influcence wherever it was suspected to be. That in
itself could have lent support to the leftist ideology which, if permitted
to flourish unchecked, might have succeeded in snatching the power
from Khomeini's hands and replacing the Islamic ideology with Marxism-Leninism.. Fortunately for Ayatollah Khomeini, he was shrewd and powerful
enough to wield the double-edged sword of Islamic ideology not only
against American rightism but as effectively against Russian leftism.. But when all is said and done, it is clear that, whatever else it was, it
certainly was not Islam which guided and instructed the Iranian revolution. At best, you can, if you wish, call what happened and is happening
in Iran Khomeinism. The real forces at work are not truly and essentially
religious in character. Political powers have exploited the reaction of the. Iranians against the Shah to achieve purely political ends.
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Islamic Terrorism. There is a long history of a growing Iranian consciousness of its
exploitation and enslavement by foreign powers of one type or another.. Despite the fact that a very large majority of Iranians are Muslims, one
cannot ignore the fact that Iranians have never been able to forget or
forgive the conquest by Arabs of their homelands. Although the wounds
appeared to have been healed long ago, and many potent factors such as
commonality of religion and common enmity against other countries
have played an important role in cementing the Iranians to the Arabs, it
cannot be denied that there is still an undercurrent of dissatisfaction at the. Arab domination of Iran for the past few centuries. One must also bear
in mind that in the pre-Islamic era, Iran could boast one of the most
powerful and illustrious civilisations ever to have influenced mankind
anywhere in the world. At the inception of Islam, the Arabs knew of only
two worlds - that in the West, dominated by the Roman Empire, and that
in the East, commanded and governed by the Chosroes of Iran. The
memories of that remote and glorious past, though subdued to some
extent by the strong influence of Islamic brotherhood, could not entirely
be wiped out. There always has been a long and lingering shadow of the
great Iranian civilization in the hearts of Iranian intellectuals.. The long history of Iranian-Arab feuds and Iranian punitive excursions into Arabia also left ugly and irritating scars on the Arab minds
which even the great healer, time, could not obliterate. This is only
human. People throughout the world may sometimes find it difficult to
dissociate themselves from the past or to forget injuries and insults to
their honour. Such chapters of history are never permanently closed but
are opened again and again.. Enough of Arab-Iranian feuds of the past. Let us now turn to more
modern times. It is not against the Arabs alone that the Iranians have been
nursing their grievances. During the Second World War, the Iranians
were subjected to a worse kind of domination by predominantly British
forces. Whilst in the Arab case there had at least been the redeeming
factor of a common cultural and religious bond, in the case of the British
the chasm between the ruler and the ruled, rather than narrowing, grew
wider. Nor could it be bridged by any social, cultural or religious
similarities.. After the decline of British influence there followed an era of indirect
control and subjugation of Third World countries by the major powers
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imperialism that the Iranian protégé was transferred from the British lap
to the American lap. The Shah of Iran thus became a symbol of American
imperialism which supported conflicting ideologies to its own as it does
today, for example, in Poland, Nicaragua, Israel and South Africa.. The fuel of hatred which was ultimately sparked off by the Khomeinian revolution was not only a product of American oppression but had
been accumulating for centuries, like the subterranean reserves of oil and
gas. The important point to note is that this hatred was not essentially
religious in origin. If Khomeini had not exploited the hatred in the name
of Islam, some communist leader would certainly have exploited it in the
name of social justice. Whatever religious or irreligious name was given
to the revolution, the underlying forces and factors would remain the
same.. I have pointed out many times to those who regard excesses committed by Khomeini against some of his own people, and acts of revenge
perpetrated in other countries, as Islamic in character that Islam as a
religion has nothing to do with the expression of Iranian dissatisfaction.. In a manner of speaking, the West should treat Ayatollah Khomeini as
their benefactor rather than as their enemy. I say this because I am quite
postive that if Khomeini had not exploited the situation and given it an. Islamic face in order to support and perpetuate a junta of Muslim 'clergy',
the situation would most certainly have been exploited by Iranian leaders
of leftist inclination. The same Iran which we see as green sprinkled with
red today would have instead appeared to us entirely red. It would be
naïve to say that the communist leadership created and trained by Dr. Mossadeq had been weakened and enfeebled to such a degree at the time
of the Shah's overthrow that it could not have played an effective and
revolutionary role at this epoch-making juncture of Iranian history. In
fact, the communist leadership was well supported and trained. It was
entirely ready to seize an opportunity. But for Ayatollah Khomeini, Iran
could well have ended up as a radical Marxist regime. Such an event
would have had disastrous consequences for the oil-rich but militarily
weak Middle East. So even Khomeinian Islam - however gory and
loathsome it may appear to the West - could be seen as a blessing in
disguise. The role of Ayatollah Khomeini should be seen in this perspective.. The Iraq-Iran war may not appear to be relevant to the subject under
discussion but it does throw some light on the nature of explosive events
in a part of the world of Islam. Both countries claim to be Muslim and
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purport to draw their inspiration for hating, destroying, and annihilating
each other from the sacred name of Islam.. All the soldiers who died in the battle on the Iraqi side were applauded
as great martyrs by the Iraqi media. All the Iranian soldiers who died at
the hands of the Iraqis were condemned as infidels despatched straight to
hell by the Iraqi media. Exactly the same story was repeated in reverse
day in and day out on the other side of the border in Iran. Whenever an. Iraqi soldier was bayoneted to death the battlefield resounded with the
cry of ‘Allaho Akbar' (God is the greatest). On which side was Islam?. One wonders! All this demonstrates the hollowness of these slogans. The
only point which can be proved beyond a shadow of doubt is that the Iraqi
and Iranian soldiers who laid down their lives for an apparently noble
cause were duped by their leadership. Islam was neither here nor there.. The Holy Quran states:. Allah will surely defend those who believe, Allah loves not the perfidious and the ungrateful. Permission to fight is granted to those against
whom war is made, because they have been wronged, and Allah indeed
has the power to help them. They are those who have been driven out of
their homes unjustly only because they affirmed: our Lord is Allah. If. Allah did not repel the aggression of some people by means of others,
cloisters and churches and synagogues and mosques, wherein the name
of Allah is oft commemorated, would surely be destroyed. Allah will
surely help him who helps His cause; Allah is indeed Powerful, Mighty.
(22.39-41). Whenever they kindle a fire to start a war, Allah puts it out. They strive
to create disorder in the land and Allah loves not those who create
disorder. (5.65). If two parties of believers should fall out with each other and start
fighting, make peace between them. Then if one of them should transgress against the other, fight the one that transgresses until it submits
to the command of Allah. Then if it should so submit, make peace
between them with equity, and act justly. Verily, Allah loves the just.. All believers are brothers; so make peace between your brothers, and
be mindful of your duty to Allah that you may be shown mercy.
(49.10-11). During the war, the above teachings were ignored by the warring
nations. In Mecca during the times of the annual pilgrimages some
attempts were made by Iran to deliver the message of Khomenian
revolution to the rest of the Muslim world through the pilgrims who came
there. Unfortunately, these attempts sometimes resulted in very ugly
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situations, to the extreme embarrassment of Muslims. For instance,
what happened in Mecca during the 1987 pilgrimage and the extreme
counter-measures taken by Saudi Arabia were much talked about in
the Western media. The Holy Quran, however, teaches all Muslims:
'But fight them not in the proximity of the Sacred Mosque unless they
fight you therein, should they fight you even there, then fight them;
such is the requital of disbelievers.' (2.192). One benefit which all the great powers (which have overtly or
covertly been supporting Israel), chief among them being the USA, have
drawn from Khomeini and Khomeinism is that Khomeini was left with
no choice but to prolong the Iraq-Iran war. That diverted the attention of
the Muslim world from a most irritating thorn in their side, Israel, towards
a completely different issue. The consciousness of an external enemy
threat gave way to a growing mistrust between one Muslim and another.. The Middle Eastern world was torn apart. The 'fear' of Israel was
shelved as a minor and latent danger which could be attended to later. The
fear of one section of Muslims for another was a far more pressing and
demanding factor which put into oblivion real or imaginary fears about
an external enemy. Of course, to dupe the simple common soldier, the
slogan that Islam was in danger was often used on both sides. In reality,
what was happening was the revival of historic rivalries and jealousies
between the Arabs and the Iranian ajm (non-Arabs, aliens). It was not a
question of Islamic versus non-Islamic forces or Shiaism versus Sunnism, but a simple and straightforward re-enactment of feuds surviving
over thousands of years. That is why even those Arabs who had formerly
been critical of Iraq and Saudi Arabia were inevitably led to taking the
side of Iraq. It was simply a matter of Arab survival against the growing
challenge and threat from Iran.. The Arabs indulged in prolonged inter-tribal feuds over petty matters
before the advent of Islam. Islam put a stop to this. It joined Muslims into
a brotherhood, free of rivalries and discrimination of any sort. But when. Muslims ceased to live by the teachings of Islam, brothers became foes
and tribal rivalries returned to the forefront. So what we observe in the
world of Islam is not truly Islamic in character. It is another case of the
revival of old feudalistic tendencies.. The great powers roundly condemned the war and repeatedly demanded a cessation of hostilities, but they were themselves responsible
for a constant supply of arms to both Iraq and Iran. After all, warplanes,
rockets, missiles, cannons, tanks, other artillery vehicles and destructive
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weapons which were freely used by both warring factions were not
manufactured on their own soils. Overtly and covertly, Middle. Eastern oil and Western weapons changed hands. The fire of war was
fuelled, in the ultimate analysis, by the oil which was produced by Iraq
and Iran and converted into weapons by Western and Eastern nonMuslim powers. As far as the West was concerned, this was not a bad
bargain at all Middle Eastern oil was bought in exchange for
obsolete or relatively old weapons. What more advantageous bargain
could be envisaged than this?. As we have seen, even the Israeli arch-enemy was totally forgotten. Muslims killed Muslims. The oil of the Muslim world was used
to burn and destroy the economy of the Muslim world. The painstaking economic achievements of the previous decade were nullified. As
far as progress and prosperity were concerned, instead of moving
forwards both Iraq and Iran started to travel backwards in time.. Of course, all wars have devastating effects on economic development, material and human resources, cultural achievements and industry.. But in the case of advanced countries, the war industry can be supported
from their own resources or those of their allies. The demands and
pressures of war and the struggle for survival do not simply drain their
resources; it enriches their scientific knowledge and technical know-how
to a remarkable degree in a short span of time. The knowledge and
expertise gained during times of war can be employed immediately
afterwards not just to rehabilitate the economy but to give it a tremendous
boost. The destructive wars give rise to new constructive ideas and
breakthroughs in scientific and industrial achievements. Therefore,
though impoverished materially as a result of a prolonged war, they can
be greatly enriched in order to build a better future.. Such, alas, is not the case in the scientifically and economically
backward countries which indulge in the luxury of war. Their only choice
is to sell whatever they have and even pawn their future by making
arrangements with scientifically and industrially advanced countries to
supply them with war materials. Without doing that, it would be impossible for any war in the Third World to be prolonged for such a long time
and with such devastating effect, as happened in the Iraq - Iran war. The
responsibility for whatever attrocities these countries commit against
each other and occasionally against other countries must, to some extent,
be shared by those who are responsible for the supply of arms and ammunition to them.
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Murder in the Name of Allah. When all has been said and done, all debts settled, and the
exchange of commodities taken into account, perhaps it would be
pertinent to consider the question of who after all is the beneficiary of
the hostilities?. We have seen that Islam is condemned as a barbaric religion which
upholds terrorism, preaches hatred and intolerance and divides adherents
into opposing camps of bloodthirsty foes. This is not surprising. There
are fringe benefits to be obtained by those who design, plot, implement
and provide the instruments of destruction to the most unfortunate
warring factions of the Muslim umma.. Incidentally, the term 'Islamic terrorism' leads to another interesting
term which has been coined by the Western media in the last decade:
'Islamic nuclear bomb'. Pakistan is alleged to possess this. Of course,
there has to be an Islamic nuclear bomb if there is any such thing as. Islamic terrorism. Maybe some other terms applicable to various modes
of war will become attached to the prefix 'Islamic'. Why do we not hear
of a Christian nuclear bomb, a Jewish nuclear bomb, a Hindu nuclear
bomb, an Apartheid bomb or a Shinto bomb? It is strange that with the
possibility of referring to thousands of other 'religions' bombs, the. Western media has chosen only to pick upon, identify and censure the
single Islamic bomb, whose very existence is doubtful.. As stated earlier, the real forces at work are not truly and essentially
religious in character. Why single out 'Islamic' whenever terrorist forces
are at work today in Muslim groups or countries? Those powers responsible for the prolongation of the Iraq-Iran war by ensuring a constant
supply of arms cannot escape their responsibility for the immense waste
of life and property and the indescribable human suffering that has
resulted from it. Whatever their ulterior motives may have been, they will
only help Khomeinism to survive longer. Had the warring countries been
left alone with their meagre resources, Khomeinism might have started
to decline.. Among other things, this war revived and strengthened a nationalist
spirit which diverted the attention of the Iranians from internal problems
towards the threat of an external enemy. But for the war, the Iranians
might have become disillusioned much more rapidly with the overly
intolerant and stiff cult of Khomeinism. Within Iran, there is a very
strong tendency towards assessing the values of the revolution and
judging its pros and cons. Though a major part of the élite has been
wiped out, the intellectuals who have survived are bound to reassess
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their losses and gains during the Khomeinian revolution. A move
towards finding a new order for Iran could be imminent.. During the war, the need to keep up the morale of the common
masses in Iran was amply met by the excitement of the conflict. When. Iran runs out of morale, that will be the day of great uncertainty.. Whether the present regime is replaced by leftist or rightist forces or
by whatever is left of the middle-roaders, there will certainly be a
great battle to gain supremacy and take over the government.. Everything will go back into the melting-pot and nobody can say for
certain what is in store for Iran. Allah knows best. I can only pray for
the people of Iran that their difficult times may come to a peaceful and
happy conclusion. They are a brave and gifted people indeed. They
have suffered so much in the past and are still suffering, both at the
hands of non-Iranian and Iranians - and, ironically, they have also
acquired a bad name into the bargain. May Allah show mercy upon
them and deliver them from their great predicament.. Now we turn to another aspect of the Khomeinian revolution in Iran.. Soon after coming to power, Ayatollah Khomeini planned not only to
change the life-style of Iranian Muslims from overt or covert foreign
domination, but he also committed himself to bring about similar
revolutions in the neighbouring Muslim states. He also made it known to
the Muslim world that he would play a stronger role in helping the. Palestinians and defeating the Zionist forces. Obviously, neither the
other Muslim states nor the state of Israel were willing to receive couriers
of the Iranian revolution with open arms; so the export could not be
effected through legal and peaceful means. Iran has failed to deliver the
revolutionary goods to neighbouring Muslim countries. It has achieved
a measure of success, without doubt, in the Palestinian - Israeli sector. As. I have already explained, the terrorist activities carried out in this area,
whether directed against Israel or against representatives of Western
powers, take their licence not from Islam but from the philosophy of the. Iranian revolution alone.. The growing talk of militancy and the use of force which we hear
needs to be carefully analysed before we can understand the importance
of this bizarre phenomenon. The narrow, non-tolerant attitude is certainly becoming more popular with the Muslim ‘clergy' in almost all. Muslim countries. The responsibility for this mainly lies on the shoulders
of Saudi Arabia, which is attempting to capture the imagination of the
whole Muslim world and seems resolved to spread its political influence
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under a religious guise. As it enjoys the unique advantage of being the
custodian of the two holiest cities in Islam, Mecca and Medina, it is
certainly in a position to exploit this situation to its best advantage.. The religious philosophy of the Saudis emanates from Wahabism,
which draws its inspiration from the non-tolerant world of medieval. Islam rather than from the more understanding and benign Islam of the
time of the Holy Prophets. The spread of Saudi influence is aided by. Saudi petro-dollars and the colossal size of Saudi bank balances in
major banks throughout the world. It is to the credit of Saudi Arabia
that part of the interest accruing from these colossal investments is
being used to form channels of aid from Saudi Arabian coffers to the
poorer Muslim nations with sizeable Muslim populations. More often
than not, this aid is provided not to boost their ailing economies, but
to build mosques, training schools and institutes producing scholars
of a Saudi brand.. Hence, wherever you follow the flow of Saudi aid, you will also
observe a rapid increase in the narrow, non-tolerant attitudes of Muslim
'clergy'. No doubt, when the Christian world hears these voices roundly
condemning all non-Islamic values and preaching jihad (that is, holy
war), against non-Islamic governments, they are led to believe that the
talk of this holy war will readily be translated into actual belligerency.. What is happening is in fact completely different.. The Muslim 'clergy' talk loudly about holy wars and the utter
destruction of non-Islamic forces. What they actually mean by nonIslamic forces is not Christian, Jewish, Buddhist, or atheist forces.. According to their view, all Muslim sects other than their own are
either non-Muslim in their character or hold to doctrines that render
them liable to earn the wrath of Allah and His true servants. The real
enemies of Islam, as they discern them, are not non-Muslims but some
sects of Islam within the world of Islam. The awakening militant
tendencies are much more directed by Muslims of one sect against. Muslims of another sect than against non-Muslims. This is why so
much stress is laid by them on capital punishment for apostasy. That
is their weapon against Muslims who differ on some doctrinal issues
from the majority sect of a country. These sects are, in fact, dealt the
death blow in two steps - first, their doctrines are declared to be nonIslamic, which earns them the title of apostates; and second, the
doctrine of death being the penalty for apostasy, they are considered
liable to be executed.
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Islamic Terrorism. A neutral observer will agree that this growing militant tendency
is creating disorder among the Muslims themselves and that it is reponsible for generating extreme hatred in the hearts of adherents of
one sect against the adherents of another.. As far as the non-Muslim powers are concerned, they can feel
completely safe and should rest assured that there is no danger whatsoever to them from the so-called militant tendencies of the Muslim
world. To demonstrate this, one has only to consider the relationship
of Saudi Arabia with the West, particularly the USA. It is inconceivable that Saudi Arabia or countries under her influence could even
dream of raising the sword against the USA or her allies. The Saudi
regime is 100 per cent dependent for survival on the USA. Almost the
entire wealth of the ruling family is deposited with American and. Western banks. On top of this, the dependence upon the West for
internal and external security is so obvious that it need not be dwelt
upon here. These two factors alone guarantee that neither Saudi. Arabia nor any Muslim country under her influence can ever pose a
threat to the non-Muslim West. Moreover, the very fact that none of
the Muslim states is today self-reliant in its production of war
materials, and has to depend either upon the West or East for all of its
defensive or offensive requirements, provides more than enough of a
guarantee for the safe and peaceful conduct of their relations with
non-Muslim powers. The same principle is applicable to countries
like Libya and Syria, which enjoy more cordial relationships with. Eastern powers than with Western ones.. No one who has even a remote understanding of modern warfare can
imagine a real threat from so-called 'Islamic' militancy. Of course, there
is danger in these growing tendencies and one is bound to be perturbed
by them. The danger from 'Islamic' militancy is a threat to the world of. Islam itself; it is an inward-looking threat which is destroying the peace
of Muslims everywhere. All the intolerance, narrow-mindedness and
bigotry which we observe in the Muslim world today is playing havoc
with the peace of the Muslim world. Alas!. I am conscious of the fact that, strictly speaking, the word 'terrorism'
applies to acts of terror, attempts to cause bomb explosions, and so on.. But I do not believe that this is the only type of terrorism the world is
suffering from. I believe that whenever repressive measures are taken
by governments against their own countrymen to still the voice of
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disagreement, those measures too should be included within the term
'terrorism' and be as strongly and roundly condemned as any other
form of terrorism. I consider all oppressive measures taken by
governments against the left or right within their own countries as
terrorism of the worst type. When acts of terrorism are directed
against foreign governments and take the form of the use of explosives here and there, or the hijacking of planes, such events gain a
great deal of attention. World opionion sympathises with the victims
of such callous terrorist acts, as indeed it should. Such sympathies are
not merely voiced, but are generally followed by constructive means
to prevent and pre-empt such attempts in the future. However, what
about those hundreds of thousands of people suffering under the stern
and merciless hands of their own governments? Their cries of anguish
are seldom heard outside. Their cries of protest are very often muffled
by the application of strict measures of censorship. Even if philanthropic agencies like Amnesty International draw the attention of the
world to such cruel acts of persecution, torture, and denial of human
rights, such events are only mildly condemned, if at all, by world
governments. More often than not, these are considered to be internal
matters for the countries concerned. Instead of being described as acts
of terrorism, they are widely mentioned as government efforts to
suppress terrorism in these countries, and to establish peace, law and
order.. I am quite convinced that in essence all restrictive and punitive
measures taken by a government against its own people to suppress a
popular movement or suspected opposition, more often than not, go
beyond the limits of genuine legal measures and end up as brutal acts of
violence designed to strike terror in the hearts of a dissatisfied section of
their own people. Humanity has suffered far more through such acts of. State terrorism than through all acts of sabotage or hijacking put together.. As far as Islam is concerned, it categorically rejects and condemns every
form of terrorism. It does not provide any cover or justificiation for any
act of violence, be it committed by an individual, a group or a government.. There are, of course, regions of restlessness in the Muslim world
where groups, organisations, and sometimes even governments, seem to
be committed to acts of terrorism, violence and sabotage. Palestine,. Lebanon, Libya and Syria are often in the news. In a majority of cases,
those concerned happen to be Muslim by faith, but there are exceptions.
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Islamic Terrorism. Amongst Palestinians, for instance, there are many who have pledged
themselves to terrorism against Israel, but happen to be Christian by faith.. For convenience or through lack of knowledge they are all dubbed by the. Western media as Islamic terrorists. In Lebanon, there have been Muslim
terrorists and Christian terrorists, and also Israeli agents and soldiers
involved at one time or another in terrorist activities which appal human
sensitivities. But you will not hear of Jewish or Christian terrorism in
relation to what is happening in Lebanon. All acts of violence are put
together and wrapped up in the package of 'Islamic terrorism'.. As far as Salman Rushdie is concerned, no sane person with any
real knowledge of the Holy Quran can agree with Imam Khomeini
that his death sentence is based on any Islamic injunction. There is no
such punishment for blasphemy in the Holy Quran or in the Traditions
of the Holy Prophet of Islam. Blasphemy against God is mentioned in
the Holy Quran in the following words:. And abuse not those whom they call upon besides Allah, lest they,
out of spite abuse Allah in their ignorance. (Ch. 6:109). No authorisation has been granted to any man to inflict any punishment for blasphemy against God.. Blasphemy was committed by Jews against Mary, the mother of. Christas. It has been mentioned in the Holy Quran, where it says:. And for their disbelief and for their uttering against Mary a grievous
calumny. (Ch. 4:151). Again no punishment other than by God Himself is prescribed. It
is both tragic and deplorable that Imam Khomeini has thus inadvertently maligned Islam rather than defending it, and has caused
immense damage to the image of Islam in the free world.. The Imam of the Grand Mosque of Azhar, in Cairo, has already
discredited Imam Khomeini's edict, and I am certain that there are
also many Shia Muslims who would disagree with Imam Khomeini in
this instance.. Despite all this, it would be unjust if one were to ignore the real
issue. I feel it is unfair, as some politicians and scholars have done, to
condemn Khomeini only rather than Salman Rushdie, who has
produced a book whose extreme language is deliberately offensive to
the many millions of Muslims throughout the world. Nor is this all.. The book has helped to undermine peace between Muslims and. Christians and, if one can judge from the comments in some letters
to national newspapers, to have unleashed the forces of racial
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intolerance.. Let it be very clear that I do not justify terrorism of any kind
whatsoever, whatever the colour, religion, sentiment or objective the
terrorist may claim to represent. Islam is my faith and religion; and. Islam does not approve of disorder in any form. Islam is far from
teaching terrorism. What is the religion of the terrorism organised and
supported by Col. Qaddafi's oil-dollars, one may ask? What again is
the religion of terrorist activities that Syria has been indulging in in the
past? Is it Islam? If so, what is the difference between this Islam and
scientific socialism? Is it not a fact that the Green Book of Col. Qaddafi
is only green in colour of its binding? The contents of the book are red
through and through.. If the terrorist activities of the Muslim 'fundamentalists' of Iran or. Libya are to be dubbed as 'Islamic terrorism', the colour of their Islam
would appear to be dark green. How could the concept of Islam be
diametrically opposed to itself and how could Islam be 'green' and
'red' at the same time, one wonders? If anything, Libya's terrorism can
only be seen as nationalist terrorism in disguise. Incidentally, it
reminds one of Fidel Castro of Cuba. He marches far ahead of Col.. Qaddafi in his taste for violence and terrorism. Yet one never hears his
deeds described as Christian terrorism.. One thing leads to another: the discussion of terrorism conjures up
before one's vision various phases of history. Christianity has been
purportedly involved in ugly acts of persecution and torture, and some. Christian monarchs have indulged in brutal acts of violence and persecution under the misguided notion that they were serving the
religion of Christas. During the years of the Black Death, 1348-9,
were not many Jews burnt alive in their homes? In the age of the. Spanish Inquisition, a long reign of terror prevailed under the guidance and direction of some Christian priests. Numerous helpless
women at various times, were put to death because they were said to
be witches and there was a distorted notion that this was the Christian
way of dealing with witchcraft.. However much these acts were related directly to Christianity, the
crimes against humanity were a product of a very dark age when
ignorance ruled supreme. When will man begin to understand the
difference between the conduct of a person and the teachings of his
religion? If one confuses the two and tries to understand religion by
studying the conduct of its adherents, many questions arise. The
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conduct of adherents of every religion varies from country to country,
from sect to sect, from age to age, and from person to person.. How very different is the conduct of Jesus's disciples from those
in Pinochet's Chile, or in South Africa, who claim to uphold Christian
values. Which is to represent Christianity? Are we entitled to describe the First and Second World Wars, in which millions of people
lost their lives,' as Christian wars against humanity? In the Second. World War, Russian losses alone are estimated to have exceeded 6.1
million. Three-quarters of the entire population of Bosnia was wiped
out. The loss of property and material are of such magnitude as to be
almost impossible to assess.² Will this enormity be described as. Christianity in action or shall we take our understanding of Christianity from those early Christians who, having been struck on one
cheek, turned the other cheek towards the striker, and those who were
fed to beasts and burned alive in their homes rather than answer
violence with violence? I would much rather choose the latter.. Any act of war in a Muslim country is perceived in the West as the
extension of 'Islamic terrorism' but in any other country such an act is
seen as a political dispute. Why must such dual standards of justice
prevail in this day and age? One really begins to wonder if there is an
undercurrent of hatred for Islam beneath the apparently calm surface of. Christian civilisation. Is it perhaps a hangover from centuries of Crusades
against Muslim powers or is it the old wine of the orientalists' venom
against Islam served in new goblets? The idea that Islam was spread by
the sword is highly questionable. The wars of Muslim governments
should be judged according to the prevailing principles of politics and
international relations and not on the basis of religion.. The expression of violence is symptomatic of the many diseases in
society. The Muslim world today does not know which way to turn.. People find themselves dissatisfied about many things over which they
have no control whatsoever. They are dead meat for exploitation by their
own corrupt leaders or agents and by stooges of foreign powers. Unfortunately, many leaders in Muslim countries themselves seek sanction
from Islam for their acts of violence and oppression, as happened in the
time of the late General Zia-ul-Haq of Pakistan. Bloody revolutions are
totally alien to the philosopy of Islam and have no place in Islamic
countries.. As a man of religion, and head of a spiritual community of followers
who have faced a century of persecution, terror and cruelty, I most
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strongly condemn all acts and forms of terrorism because it is my
deeply rooted belief that not only Islam but also no true religion,
whatever its name, can sanction violence and the bloodshed of
innocent men, women and children in the name of God.. God is love, God is peace!. Love can never beget hatred,
and peace can never lead to war.
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APPENDIX. QUOTATIONS FROM THE. HOLY QURAN. Chapter 2. Then We raised you up after your death, that you might be grateful. (2:57). And surely We have sent down to thee manifest Signs, and none
disbelieves in them but the disobedient. (2:100). Would you question the Messenger sent to you as Moses was questioned
before this? And whoever takes disbelief in exchange for belief has
undoubtedly gone astray from the right path. (2:109). They ask thee about fighting in the Sacred Month. Say, 'Fighting therein
is a heinous thing, but to hinder men from the way of Allah, and to be
ungrateful to Him, and to hinder men from the Sacred Mosque, and to
turn out its people therefrom, is more heinous in the sight of Allah; and
persecution is worse than killing.' And they will not cease fighting you
until they turn you back from your Faith, if they can. And whoso from
among you turns back from his Faith and dies while he is a disbeliever,
it is they whose works shall be vain in this world and the next. They are
the inmates of the Fire and therein shall they abide. (2:218). There is no compulsion in religion. Surely, the right way has become
distinct from error; so whosoever refuses to be led by those who
transgress, and believes in Allah, has surely grasped a strong handle
which knows no breaking. And Allah is All-Hearing, All-Knowing.
(2:257). It is not thy responsibility to make them follow the right path; but Allah
guides whomsoever He pleases. And whatever of wealth you spend, the
benefit of it will be for yourselves, for, you spend not but to seek the
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favour of Allah. And whatever of wealth you spend, it shall be paid back
to you in full and you shall not be wronged. (2:273). Chapter 3. But if they dispute with thee, say, 'I have surrendered myself completely
to Allah, and also those who follow me.' And say to those, who have been
given the Book and to the Unlearned, 'Have you also surrendered?' If
they surrender, then they will surely be rightly guided, but if they turn
back, then thy duty is only to convey the Message. And Allah is Watchful
of His servants. (3:21). Surely, those who disbelieve after they have believed and then increase
in disbelief, their repentance shall not be accepted, and these are they
who have gone astray. (3:91). As for those who have disbelieved, and die while they are disbelievers,
there shall not be accepted from any one of them even an earthful of gold
though he offer it as ransom. It is these for whom shall be a grievous
punishment, and they shall have no helpers. (3:92). And Muhammad is but a Messenger. Verily, all Messengers have passed
away before him. If then he dies or is slain, will you turn back on your
heels? And he who turns back on his heels shall not harm Allah at all. And. Allah will certainly reward the grateful. (3:145). Chapter 4. Will they not, then, meditate upon the Qur'an? Had it been from anyone
other than Allah, they would surely have found therein much discrepancy. (4:83). Those who believe, then disbelieve, then again believe, then disbelieve
and then increase in disbelief, Allah will never forgive them nor will He
guide them to the right way. (4:138). Give to the hypocrites the tidings that for them is a grievous punishment.
(4:139). The hypocrites shall surely be in the lowest depths of the Fire; and thou
shalt find no helper for them, (4:146). Chapter 5. O ye who believe! Whoso among you turns back from his religion, then
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let him know that Allah will soon bring in his stead a people whom He
will love and who will love him and who will be kind and humble towards
believers, and hard and firm against disbelievers. They will strive in the
cause of Allah and will not fear the reproach of a fault-finder. That is. Allah's grace; He bestows it upon whomsoever He pleases and Allah is. Bountiful, All-Knowing. (5:55). And when they come to you, they say, 'We believe,' while they enter with
disbelief and go out therewith; and Allah knows best what they hide.
(5:62). O ye who believe! Wine and the game of chance and idols and divining
arrows are only an abomination of Satan's handiwork. So shun each one
of them that you may prosper. (5:91). Satan seeks only to create enmity and hatred among you by means of
wine and the game of chance, and to keep you back from the remembrance of Allah and from Prayer. Then will you keep back? (5:92). And obey Allah and obey the Messenger, and be on your guard. But if you
turn away, then know that on Our Messenger lies only the clear conveyance of the Message. (5:93). Know that Allah is severe in punishment and that Allah is also Most. Forgiving and Ever Merciful. (5:99). On the Messenger lies only the conveying of the Message. And Allah
know what you disclose and what you hide. (5:100). Chapter 6. And thy people have rejected it, though it is the truth. Say 'I am not a
guardian over you.' (6:67). And thus do We explain the Signs in various ways that the truth may
become established and that they may say "Thou has read out what thou
hast learnt; and that We may explain it to a people who have knowledge.'
(6:106). Follow that which has been revealed to thee from thy Lord; there is no. God but He; and turn aside from the idolaters. (6:107). And if Allah had enforced His Will, they would not have set up gods with. Him. And We have not made thee a keeper over them, nor art thou over
them a guardian. (6:108)
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Murder in the Name of Allah. So, whomsoever Allah intends to guide, He expands his bosom for the
acceptance of Islam; and as to him whom He wishes to let go astray, He
makes his bosom narrow and close, as though he were mounting up into
the skies. Thus does Allah inflict punishment on those who do not
believe. (6:126). Chapter 7. Pharoah said, 'You have believed in him before I gave you leave. Surely,
this is a plot which you have plotted in the city, that you may turn out
therefrom its inhabitants, but you shall soon know the consequences.
(7:124)
'Most surely will I cut off your hands and your feet on account of your
disobedience. Then will I surely crucify you all together.' (7:125). They answered, 'To our Lord then shall we return.' (7:126)
‘And thou dost not wreak vengeance on us but because we have believed
in the Signs of our Lord, when they came to us. Our Lord, pour forth upon
us steadfastness and cause us to die resigned unto Thee.' (7:127). And the chiefs of Pharoah's people said, 'Wilt thou leave Moses and
his people to create disorder in the land and forsake thee and thy gods?. He answered, 'We will ruthlessly slay their sons and let their women
live. And surely we are dominant over them.' (7:128). Moses said to his people, 'Seek help from Allah and be steadfast. Verily
the earth is Allah's; He gives it as a heritage to whomsoever He pleases
of His servants and the good end is for the God-fearing.' (7:129). Chapter 9. But if they repent, and observe Prayer and pay the Zakat, then they are
your brethren in Faith. And We explain the Signs for a people who have
knowledge. (9:11). And if they break their oaths after their covenant, and attack your
religion, then fight these leaders of disbelief - surely, they have no regard
for their oaths that they may desist. (9:12). Will you not fight a people who have broken their oaths, and who plotted
to turn out the Messenger, and they were the first to commence hostilities
against you? Do you fear them? Nay, Allah is most worthy that you
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should fear Him, if you are believers. (9:13). Fight them, that Allah may punish them at your hands, and humiliate
them, and help you to victory over them, and relieve the minds of a people
who believe. (9:14). Chapter
10. And if thy Lord had enforced His Will, surely all who are in the earth
would have believed together. Wilt thou, then force men to become
believers. (10:100). And no soul can believe except by the permission of Allah. And He
causes His wrath to descend on those who would not use their judgement.
(10:101). Say, 'Ponder over what is happening in the heavens and the earth.' But. Signs and warnings avail not a people who will not believe. (10:102). What, then, do they wait for, save the like of the days of punishment
suffered by those who passed away before them? Say 'Wait, then, and I
am with you among those who wait.' (10:103). Then shall We save Our Messengers and those who believe. Thus have. We made it incumbent on Us to save believers. (10:104). Say, 'O ye men, if you are in doubt concerning my religion, then know
that I worship not those whom you worship beside Allah, but I worship. Allah alone Who causes you to die and I have been commanded to be of
the believers.' (10:105)
'And I have also been commanded to convey to you God's command;
"Set thy face toward religion as one ever inclined to Allah, and be not
thou of those who ascribe partners to Him." (10:106)
‘And call not, besides Allah, on any other that can neither profit thee nor
harm thee. And if thou didst so, thou wouldst then certainly be of the
wrongdoers.' (10:107). And if Allah afflicts thee with harm, there is no one who can remove it
but He; and if He intends good for thee, there is none who can repel His
grace. He causes it to reach whomsoever of His servants He wills. And. He is the Most Forgiving, Merciful. (10:108). Say, ‘O men, now has the Truth come to you from your Lord. So
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whosoever follows the guidance, follows it only for the good of his
own soul, and whosoever errs, errs only against it. And I am not a
keeper over you.' (10:109). Chapter 13. And whether We show thee in thy life-time the fulfilment of some of the
things with which We threaten them or whether We cause thee to die, it
makes little difference, for on thee lies only the delivery of the Message,
and on Us the reckoning. (13:41). Chapter 15. Verily, it is We Who have sent down this Exhortation, and most surely. We are its Guardian. (15:10). Chapter 16. But if they turn away, then thou art responsible only for the plain delivery
of the Message. (16:83). As for those who do not believe in the Signs of Allah, surely, Allah will
not guide them, and they shall have a grievous punishment. (16:105). It is only those who believe not in the Signs of Allah, who forge
falsehood, and they it is who are the liars. (16:106). Whoso disbelieves in Allah after he has believed - save him who is forced
to make a declaration of disbelief while his heart finds peace in faith - but
such as open their breasts to disbelief, on them is Allah's wrath; and
for them is decreed a severe punishment. (16:107). Call unto the way of thy Lord with wisdom and goodly exhortaion and
argue with them in a way that is best. Surely, thy Lord knows best who
has strayed from His way; and He also knows those who are rightly
guided. (16:126). Chapter 17. Your Lord knows you best. If He please, He will have mercy on you; or
if He please, He will punish you. And We have not sent thee to be a keeper
over them. (17:55). Chapter 18. And say, 'It is the truth from the Lord; wherefore let him who will,
believe, and let him who will, disbelieve.' Verily, We have prepared for
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the wrongdoers a fire whose flaming canopy shall enclose them. And if
they cry for help, they will be helped with water like molten lead which
would scald their faces. How dreadful the drink, and how evil the resting
place! (18:30). Chapter 22. Permission to take up arms is given to those against whom war is made,
because they have been wronged and Allah, indeed, has power to help
them. (22:40). Chapter 24. Say, 'Obey Allah, and obey the Messenger.' But if you turn away, He is
responsible for what he is charged with and you are responsible for what
you are charged with. And if you obey Him, you will be rightly guided.. And the Messenger is only responsible for the plain delivery of the. Message. (24:55). Chapter 25. And when they see thee, they only make a jest of thee, and say, 'What!. Is this he whom Allah has sent as a messenger?' (25:42)
'He indeed had well-nigh led us astray from our gods, had we not steadily
adhered to them.' And they shall know, when they see the punishment,
who is most astray from the right path. (25:43). Hast thou seen him who takes his own evil desire for his god? Canst thou
be a guardian over him? (25:44). Chapter 26. They said, 'If thou desist not, O Noah, thou shalt surely be stoned to
death.' (26:117). Chapter 28. Surely, thou canst not guide whomsoever thou lovest; but Allah guides
whomsoever He pleases; and He knows best those who would accept
guidance. (28:57). Chapter 29. And if you reject the truth, then generations before you also rejected it.. And the Messenger is only responsible for the clear delivery of the. Message. (29:19)
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Murder in the Name of Allah. Chapter 39. Allah sets forth a parable - a man belonging to several partners, who
disagree with one another, and a man belonging wholly to one man. Are
the two equal in condition? All praise belongs to Allah. But most of them
know not. (39:30). Surely, thou wilt die, and surely they, too, will die. (39:31). Then, surely, on the Day of Resurrection you will dispute with one
another before your Lord. (39:32). Who,then, is more unjust than he who lies against Allah or he who rejects
the truth when it comes to him? Is there not in Hell an abode for the
disbelievers? (39:33). But he who has brought the truth and he who testifies to it as truth - these
it is who are the righteous. (39:34). They will have with their Lord whatever they desire; that is the reward of
those who do good. (39:35). So that Allah will remove from them the evil consequences of what they
did, and will give them their reward according to the best of their actions.
(39:36). Is not Allah sufficient for His servant? And yet they would frighten thee
with those beside Him. And he whom Allah leaves in error - for him there
is no guide. (39:37). And he whom Allah guides - there is none to lead him astray. Is not Allah
the Mighty, the Lord of retribution? (39:38). And if thou ask them, 'Who created the heavens and the earth?' they will,
surely, say, 'Allah. Say, 'What think ye, if Allah intends to do me harm,
will those whom you call upon beside Allah be able to remove the harm. He may intend? Or, if He wills to show me mercy, could they withhold. His mercy?' Say, 'Allah is sufficient for me. In Him trust those who
would know.' (39:39). Say, 'O my people, act as best you can; I, too, am acting; soon you shall
know, (39:40)
'Who it is unto whom comes a punishment that will disgrace him, and on
whom there descends an abiding punishment?' (39:41)
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Quotations from the Quran. Verily, We have revealed to thee the Book comprising all truth for the
good of mankind. So, whoever follows guidance, follows it for the
benefit of his own soul; and whoever goes astray, goes astray only to its
detriment. And thou art not a guardian over them. (39:42). Chapter 40. And when he came to them with truth from Us, they said, 'Slay the sons
of those who have believed with him, and let their women live.' But the
design of the disbelievers is ever bound to fail. (40:26). Pharaoh said, 'Leave me alone that I may slay Moses, and let him call on
his Lord. I fear lest he should change your religion or cause disorder to
appear in the land.' (40:27). Chapter 42. And as for those who take for themselves protectors beside Him - Allah
watches over them; and thou art not a guardian over them. (42:7). Thus have we revealed to thee the Qur'an in Arabic, that thou mayest
warn the Mother of towns, and all those around it; and that thou mayest
warn them of the Day of Gathering, whereof there is no doubt; when a
party will be in the garden and a party in the blazing Fire. (42:8). Hearken
ye to your Lord before there comes a day for which there will
be no averting contrary to the decree of Allah. There will be no refuge for
you on that day, nor will there be for you any chance of denial. (42:48). Chapter 47. Surely, those who turn their backs after guidance has become manifest to
them, Satan has seduced them and holds out false hopes to them. (47:26). Chapter 50. We know best what they say; and thou art not to compel them in any way.. So admonish, by means of the Qur'an, him who fears My warning.
(50:46). Chapter 51. And I have not created the Jinn and the men but that they may worship. Me. (51:57)
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Murder in the Name of Allah. Chapter 64. Believe, therefore, in Allah and His messenger, and in the Light which. We have sent down. And Allah is well aware of all that you do. (64:9). The Day when He shall gather you for the Day of Gathering; that will be
the day of the determination of losses and gains. And whoso believes in. Allah and acts righteously - He will remove from them the evil consequences of their deeds, and He will admit them into gardens through
which streams flow, to abide therein for ever. That is the supreme
achievement. (64:10). But those who disbelive and reject Our Signs, these shall be the inmates
of the Fire, wherein they shall abide; and an evil destination it is! (64:11). There befalls not any affliction but by the leave of Allah and whosoever
believes in Allah - He guides his heart aright. And Allah knows all things
well. (64:12). And obey Allah and obey the Messenger. But if you turn away, then Our. Messenger is responsible only for conveying the Message clearly.
(64:13)
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GLOSSARY
ahad gharib
ahadith. Ahli Hadith. Ahli Quran. Ahmadi. Ahrari Islam
ajm. Al-Azhar. Alim. Al-Jihad fil Islam. Al Nabiyyu bis Saif. Ansar. Arya Samaj. Ashabi Kahf
a tradition in which there is only one chain of
narrators traced to the same single source.. Corpus of traditions (statements) attributed
to the Prophetsa, pl. of hadith.
'people of traditions', Indian Muslim sect
holding hadith in preference to other sources
of jurisprudence.
'people of the Quran', followers of Ghulam. Ahmad Parvez; rejecting Sunnah and hadith
as sources of law.
member of Jamat Ahmadiyya founded by. Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad of Qadian;
also Qadiyani or Qadiani.. A pedantic and militant form of Wahabism.
non-Arab; alien.
orthodox Muslim university (Cairo).
a Muslim religious scholar; pl. Ulema.
the Jihad in Islam.
the sword-wielding Prophet.
helpers; Muslim residents of Medina.
19th century Hindu movement established
by Swami Dayanand.. Quranic name for 'people of the cave' - the. Christians in catacombs.
'With no cause'; impartial.
alternative for Ahli Sunnat wal Jamaat (Community and followers of Sunnah).. Begharaz. Brelvi
bugloos
buckle.
dastar
deen. Deobandi
turban.
religion; faith
'of Deoband' in United Provinces (India) renowned for issuing codified religious edicts.
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Dhimmat. Dhimmi
diwan
fana fir rasul
faman sha'a
faqih
faraid and wajibat. Fatiha
fatwa
ghazwa
hadd
hadith
haj
hakam. Hezbullah
hijra (also hegira)
hulul
ijtihad. Imam
irtadda. Ismaili. Jamat. Jamati Islami. Jami Masjid. Jami. Jannatul Baqi. Murder in the Name of Allah
responsibility; obligation; - al Rasul, responsibility of the Prophet "a.
a non-Muslim in an Islamic state who pays. Jizya.
a royal court; chamber.
to die or be annihilated in the love of the. Prophetsa.
for whomsoever wishes.
a theologian versed in jurisprudence.
religious obligations and duties.
the first chapter of the Holy Quran.
a binding opinion, decision or sentence; an
edict on a point of Islamic law.
an expedition in which the Prophetsa himself
participated.
a limitation; an offence for which a specific. Quranic punishment has been prescribed; pl.. Hodud.
a narrative report of a statement or an act of
the Prophetsa.
pilgrimage to sacred sites in and around. Mecca.
a mediatior; arbitrator
'party of God'.
the migration of the Prophets from Mecca to. Medina; commencement of Muslim calendar
penetrating into the secrets of God; claiming
substantial union with God.
independent reasoning in jurisprudence.
a leader, one who leads in prayer
retract; a fundamental that no Muslim has the
right to declare any other a murtadd
‘of Ishmael'; a Shiite sect. Community; a political party
an Indian Muslim party founded in 1941 by. Maulana Abul Ala Maududi
central or principal mosque
collective; comprehensive
a graveyard in Medina, final abode of many
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jihad
jizya. Ka'ba
kafir. Kafirana. Khalifa. Glossary
famous companions of the Prophetsa
striving in the defence of Islam, including
preaching; the greater jihad often misconstrued as war
or jazia, a levy imposed on non-Muslims for
their defence
a cuboid building in Mecca, the first house
devoted to the worship of Allah
an infidel; disbelief; plural kafiroon
like a disbeliever
a caliph, successor, to a Prophet; a vicegerent; plural khulafa; the office is called
khilafat. Khatam al-Nabiyyin the seal of the Prophets; a title of Muham. Khatm-i-nubuwwat. Khawarij. Kuffar. Kufr. Maharaja. Mahdi. Maulana
maulvi
mazar
madsa
finality or culmination of law-giving prophethood which ceased with Muhammadsa
schismatic; a sect that rejects the succession
of 'Ali'
infidels; disbelievers
disbelief. Indian provincial ruler; monarch; female
maharani
'Rightly Guided One' whose advent at the
turn of the 14th century had been prophesied
by the Prophetsa
‘our master'; honorary title given to those
respected for their learning. Muslim theocrat; doctor of Islamic law;
sl. mullah: a narrow-minded semi-literate
'priest'.
tomb.
mazhab ke nam per khun bloodshed in the name of religion.
visionary journey of the Prophets.
miraj. Mizaj-Shanasi-Rasul
honorary title bestowed by Saudi Arabia; 'the
one who found himself in complete harmony
with the heart and mind of the Prophets so
much so that he acquired a measure of
authority.
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Murder in the Name of Allah
mufti
muhajir. Mujaddid. Munafiqq
murtadd. Musalman. Nabuwwat. Najdi
namus
naudhu billah. Qadhi. Qazif. Qiblah. Raja. Rasul
ridda. Sabb
shabiyyat
sahih. Salat. Sariyah
shahada. Sharia
shia
shirk
one who issues fatwas.
emigrant; pl. muhajirun who fled from Mecca
to settle amongst Ansars in Medina.
a Reformer expected at the turn of each
century of Islam.
hypocrite; pl. munafiqqun.
one who renounces his previous faith.. Muslim.
prophethood; from nabi: prophet.
from Nejd, central Saudi Arabia.
honour.. God forbid; I seek refuge from God for
uttering this.
magistrate; chief judge.
false accusations.
the Holy K'aba towards which Muslims turn
in Prayer; object of reverence and veneration.. Indian royal ruler.. Prophet.
(intransitive verb) giving up one's faith;
a rebellion against the nascent Muslim state
after the death of the Prophetsa.
defaming the honour of the Prophets; sabi,
one who gives up one's ancestral religion for
a new one.. Companionship.
trustworthy hadith usually of Bukhari and. Muslim.. Prayer(s).
an expedition in which the Prophets did not
participate.
the Muslim declaration of faith: 'I bear witness that there is none worthy of worship save. Allah, the One, without any associate, and I
bear witness that Muhammadsa is His servant
and Messenger.'
(Islamic) law.
one of two principal branches of Muslims; fol
lowers of Ali, the Prophet'ssa cousin and sonin-law, who maintain that ‘Ali was the first. Imam and true successor to the Prophet (peace
and blessings of Allah be upon him).
belief in the plurality of God; paganism;
idolatry; considered to be the gravest sin.
!
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shuddi
sira/sirat
sufi. Sunnah. Sunni. Surah
tafsir
tahkeem
takfir
tehrif
umma
ummati Muhamadiyya. Wahabism. Yathrib. Zakat. Zandaquah. Glossary. Hindu movement aimed at reconverting and
purifying Muslims from their errant religion.
biography esp. that of the Prophetsa.
follower of sufism - philosophical and
devotional mysticism, especially popular in
medieval Persia.
the second source of Islamic law after the. Holy Quran based on observance of the
custom and conduct of the Prophetsa.
major branch of Muslims adhering to the. Quran and Sunnah and acknowledging the
first four Khalifas as rightful successors to the. Prophetsa.
chapter of the Holy Quran.
exegetical commentary on the Holy Quran.
arbitration.
declaring Muslims to be disbelievers.
transposing words or letters or interpolating,
so as to change the meaning.
religious community; followers of a prophet.
followers of Muhammadsa.
movement named after Muhammad ibn. Abdul Wahab (1703-87) rejecting the perfection of the Prophetsa; in its puritanical
form manifest in Saudi Arabia.
former name of Medina-tul-Nabi, ‘City of
the Prophetsa'.
obligatory alms mainly on capital held
beyond one year and imposed mainly at 2.5
percent.
heresy; atheism.
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NOTES. Editor's Foreword
1 Report of the Court of Inquiry Constituted Under Punjab Act II of 1954 to. Inquire into the Punjab Disturbances of 1953 (Lahore: Government Printing. House, Punjab, 1954), 184. Justice Mr Muhammad Munir (president) and. Justice Mr M. R. Kayani (member) constituted the committee. Further
references to the report will be shown as Munir Commission Report.. Chapter 1
1 See P. Schaff, Select Library of Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, 1st series,
vol. IV (Buffalo, 1887).
2 The proclamation of the Unity of God and the propagation of Islam and the. Holy Prophet Muhammadsa.. Chapter 2
1 Maulana Abul Ala Maududi, the amir (head) of Jamaati Islami until his death,
spent his early life in the former princely Indian state of Hyderabad. The
young Maududi left school before completing his secondary education
because of his father's death. For some time he worked as editor of the AlJamiyat of Delhi, the newspaper of the Jamiyat Ulamai Hind. In 1927 he
resigned his editorship and, having worked so long with the Deoband ulema,
he decided to devote himself to the study of theology. He was self-taught in
theology, Arabic and English. Despite his great learning, immense knowledge and forceful style of Urdu, which has all the ingredients of scholarship,
his critics - especially ulema of the Deoband and Lucknow schools - say that
his lack of training in theological discipline was his great weakness. In 1941
the Maulana founded the Jamaati Islami and assumed its leadership. He
criticised the Jamiyat Ulamai Hind for its composite nationalist theory which
exposed Muslim India to the grave dangers of religio-cultural absorption into. Hinduism, and at the same time he assailed Qaid-i-Azam's Muslim nationalism as no less dangerous than Congress nationalism. To him, it
made no difference whether the irreligious Muslims of India survived in
the form of Pakistan or not (Musalman aur Maujudah Siyasi Kashmakash,. Pathankot, 1946, 6-7).
136
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Notes
2 Al-Jihad fil Islam, 137-8.
3 Revd Dr C. G. Pfander, Mizanul Haq, 648, 499.
4 Revd Dr C. G. Pfander, Tatimma Mizanul Haq.
5 Washington Irving, Mahomet and His Successors, 2 vols. (New York: G.P.. Putman's Sons, 1868).
6 Haqiqat-i Jihad (Lahore: Taj Company Ltd, 1964), 64; emphasis added.
7 For details of Dr Pfander's campaign against Islam, see 'The Mohommedan
controversy', The Calcutta Review (Calcutta, July-December 1845), vol.. IV, 420.
8 Sir William Muir, The Life of Mahomet (London: Smith Elder & Co., 1859),
vol. I, 111.
9 Translated from an Urdu speech by Pandit Shastri at a Gorakhpur (India)
meeting, 1928, to comme thorate the Prophet's sa birth, see Dunya ka Hadi. Ghairon ki Nazar Main, 57, 61.
10 Sat Updaish, Lahore, 7 July 1915; see Barguzida Rasul Ghairon Main. Maqbul, 12, 13.
11 Prof. Ram Dev, The Prakash, see Burguzida Rasul Ghairon Main Maqbul, 24.
12 Dr D.W. Leitz, Asiatic Quarterly Review, October 1886. Dr Leitz has referred
to verses 40 and 41 of chapter 22 of the Quran, Al-Hajj. The verses say:
*Permission to fight is granted to those against whom war has been made
because they have been wronged. Allah indeed has the power to help them.. They are those who have been driven out of their homes because they
affirmed that our Lord is Allah. If Allah did not repel the aggression of some
by the means of others, then surely cloisters, churches, synagogues and
mosques - where His name is honoured - would be destroyed?'
13 Haqiqat-i-Jihad, op.cit., 65.
14 Masala'-i-Qaumiyat (Pathankot: Maktaba Jamaati Islami, 1947), 105.
15 We seek the protection of Allah from this blasphemous use of language, which
only Maulana Maududi could use.
16 W. Thomas Arnold, The Preaching of Islam: a History of the Propagation of
the Muslim Faith, 2nd ed. (London: Constable and Co. Ltd, 1913), 279-80.
17 Nawan Hindustan, Delhi, 17 November 1947.
18 Literally, 'The knower of the psyche of the Prophet', or 'The observer of the. Prophet's mind'.. Chapter 3
1 William Hailey, to the government of India, 25 July and 12 August 1927,. Government of India Home Political Proceedings 1927, 132.
2 Al-Jihad fi'l Islam, 93. In the second of the subsequent quotations on page
21, the words in square brackets have been added. The Arabic words are:
'an yadin wahum saghirun'.
3 Ibid., 138.
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Murder in the Name of Allah
4 Ibid.
5 W. Montgomery Watt, Muhammad at Medina (Karachi: Oxford University. Press, 1981), 15.
6 Will Durant, The Story of Civilisation, 11 vols. (New York: Simon & Schuster,
1950); vol. IV, The Age of Faith, 168.
7 Ibid., 157.
8 Ibid.
9 'They shall beat their swords into ploughshares and their spears into pruning
hooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn
war any more.” The Book of the Prophet Isaiah, 2:4.
10 Maulana Maududi's original Urdu word is qalbarani, literally, 'ploughing'.
11 Maharaja Kishen Perhad Shad was a Persian and Urdu poet and was known
for his Nati-i-Rasul (Hymns honouring the Holy Prophet).
12 Harriet Rouken Lynton and Mohini Rajan, The Days of the Beloved (Berkeley:. University of California Press, 1974), ix. The book describes the life and
times of Muhbub Pasha (1869-1911), the sixth Nizam of Hyderabad.)
13 He was born on 25 September 1903 in Aurangabad; Arif Batalwi, Aik. Maududi Das Islam (Lahore).
14 Mu Inuddin Aqil, Tahrik-i-Pakistan aur Maulana Maududi, (Karachi:. Khayal-Nau, 1971), 27. Most of the biographical details in this book are
taken from Muhammad Yusuf's Maulana Maududi Apni aur Dusron ki. Nazar Main (Lahore: Maktaba Al-Habib, n.d.).
15 Muhammad Yusuf, op. cit., 363-4; and Mu Inuddin Aqil, op. cit., 27.
16 Maulana Maududi had earlier written a book on Gandhiji's biography but it
was banned before its publication. Arif Batalvi, Aik Maududi Das Islam,
op.cit., 10; see Mumtaz Ali Asi, Maulana Maududi aur Jamaati Islam, Aik. Jaizah.
17 Mu Inuddin Aqil, op. cit., 26; see Muhammad Yusuf, op. cit., 362-3.
18 Deccan ki Siyasi Tarikh and Daulat-i-Asifiyah aur Hukumat-i-Bartaniya.
19 Fazlur Rahman, Islam and Modernity - Transformation of an Intellectual. Tradition (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982), 116; emphasis
added.
20 Maktube-i-Hidayat (Deoband: Kutub Khana Izaziyah), 21; see Maulana. Muhammad Akhtar, Maududi Sahib Akabir-i-Ummat-ki Nazar Main
(Bombay).
21 Maulana Muhammad Akhtar, Maududi Sahib Akabir-i-Ummat-ki Nazar. Main, op.cit., 9.
22 ibid., 15.
23 ibid.,
.48.
24 Will Durant, The Age of Faith, op.cit., 159.
25 Joel Carmichael, The Shaping of the Arabs, a Study In Ethnic Identity (New. York, 1967), 38.
26 Maxime Rodinson, Mohammed, trans. Anne Carter (New York, 1971), 194.
138
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Notes
27 The word used by Asma is much more abusive.
28 Two Yemenite tribes.
29 Ibn Hisham, Kitab Sirat Rasul Allah, ed. F. Wüstenfeld, 2 vols. (Göttingen,
1856-60), 995-6.
30 The two Ansar tribes, the Aws and Khazraj.
31 Ibn Hisham, op. cit., 995. The translation is by Anne Carter, in Maxime. Rodinson, Mohammed, op.cit., 157. Like ‘Pharaoh' (Egypt) and ‘Caesar'
(Rome), ‘Tubba' was the name given to the ancient kings of south Arabia.
32 Kab's mother belonged to the Jewish tribe an-Nadir. Though his father was
an Arab, he was accepted as a member of Banu an-Nadir.
33 Ibn Hisham, op. cit., 548-9; trans. A. Guillaume, The Life of Muhammad
(London: Oxford University Press, 1970).
34 As the result of a dream, the Holy Prophet decided to go on umrah (smaller
pilgrimage) to Mecca with 1400 to 1600 men. He camped at the edge of
the sacred territory of Mecca, at Al-Hudaybiyah, where envoys between. Muslims and Meccans came and went. Finally, a truce was signed, forcing
the Muslims to retreat that year on condition that they would be allowed
to return to Mecca for hajj the following year.
35 The battle of Ahzab or the Trench on 30 March 627.
36 W. Montgomery Watt, Muhammad at Medina, op.cit., 69.
37 ibid., 51-2.
38 See p. 22 above.
39 W. Montgomery Watt, Muhammad at Medina, op.cit., 4.
40 ibid.
41 Martin Lings, Muhammad, his Life Based on the Earliest Sources (London:. George Allen & Unwin, 1983), 297.
42 Washington Irving, Mahomet and His Successors, 2 vols. (New York: G.P.. Putman's Sons, 1868), vol. 1,253.
43 W. Montgomery Watt, Muhammad at Medina, op.cit., 68. The valley of. Jiranah is about ten miles from Mecca and the spoils of the battle of Hunayn
were sent there to be stored.
44 Maxime Rodinson, Mohammed, op.cit., 262.
45 Stanley Lane-Poole, Selections from the Quran and Hadith, (Lahore: Sind. Sagar Academy, n.d.), 28.
46 Maxime Rodinson, Mohammed, op. cit., 312.. Chapter 4
1 Maulana Maududi, Haqiqat-i-Jihad (Lahore: Taj Company Ltd, 1964), 58.
2 Edward Gibbon, Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, vol. 5, ed. J.B. Buey
(London: 1909-14), 332.
3 Bernard Lewis, The Jews of Islam (Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1983), 3.
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Murder in the Name of Allah
4 James Drever, A Dictionary of Psychology, revised by Harvey Wallerstein
(1964), 191.
5 Pierre Janet, Les Observations et la psychasthenie (Paris: Alcan, 1903); see. Robert S. Woodsworth and Mary Sheehan, Contemporary School of Psychology (New York: The Ronald Press Company, 3rd ed., 1964), 253.
6 Elton Mayo, Some Notes on the Psychology of Pierre Janet (Cambridge,. Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1948); see Robert S. Woodsworth
and Mary Sheehan, op.cit., 253.
7 Kurt Lewin, 'The Conceptual representation and the measurement of psychological forces', Contributions to Psychological Theory, 1, (4), 2.
8 Robert S. Woodsworth and Mary Sheehan, op. cit., 241.
9 The conversion of religion is called irtidad and treated as apostasy by Maulana. Maududi.
10 Hugh Nissenden, 'Scripture and Survival', The New York Times Book Review,
17 March 1985, 12.
11 The Maulana's original Urdu word for 'political power' is iqtidar.
12 Haqiqat-i-Jihad, op.cit., 10.
13 ibid., 11.
14 ibid., 58.
15 ibid.
16 ibid., 16-17.
17 ibid. The original Urdu sentence is involved and the Maulana has used the. Urdu word hukumat twice in the sentence in two different meanings.
18 ibid., 15.. Chapter 5
1 Maulana Abul Ala Maududi, Murtadd ki saza Islami qanun main, (Lahore:. Islamic Publications Ltd, 1981 8th ed.), 32.
2 Dr Israr Ahmad, Islam aur Pakistan, Tarikhi siyasi ilmi aur thaqafati pas
manzar (Lahore: Anjuman Khuddam-ul-Quran, 1983), 72. Dr Ahmad is the
former chief (Nazim-i-Ala) of the Jamaati Islami student organisation and,
later, the Amir of Jamaati Islami Montgomery. He is also the author of. Tahrik-i Jamaati Islami - a Research Paper. Dr Ahmad resigned from the
membership of Jamaati Islami after ten years of involvement in various
capacities.
3 The Deoband seminary (Dar-al-ulum) was founded in 1867. Deoband is a
small town near Delhi.
4 S.G.F. Brandon, Dictionary of the History of Ideas (New York, 1973), vol.
11,342.
5 C. J. Hefele, History of the Christian Councils (Edinburgh, (1894), vol. III,
12; see also Durant, Will, The History of Civilisation (New York, 1950), vol.. IV, 48.
140
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Notes
6 Will Durant, The Story of Civilisation, 48.
7 P. Schaff, Select Library of Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, 1st series
(Buffalo, 1887), vol. IV, 640.
8 J.E.E. Dalberg-Acton (1st Baron Acton), The History of Freedom and Other. Essays (London: Macmillan, 1907), 163.
9 ibid., 178-9.
10 Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan, or Matter, Form and Power of a Commonwealth. Ecclesiastical and Civil (Chicago: Great Books of the Western World,. Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc., 1952).
11 ibid., 210.
12 Dr Israr Ahmad, Islam aur Pakistan, op.cit., 72.
13 I. Goldziher, Vorlesungen uber den Islam, 2nd ed. (Heidelberg, 1925), 1834; see Bernard Lewis, Islam in History: Ideas, Men and Events in the. Middle East (London, 1973), 231.
14 Bernard Lewis, The Jews of Islam (Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1983), 53.
15 The Daily Tasnim, 15 August 1952, 12; see also Mizaj Shanasi Rasul, 372.
16 Maulana Maududi, Musalman aur maujuda siyasi kashmaksh, (Pathankot:. Maktaba Jamaati Islami, 1941-2), vol. III, 130.
17 ibid., 132.
18 ibid., 166.
19 Musalman aur maujuda siyasi kashmakash, op.cit., vol. III, 95.
20 Ruidad-i Jamaati Islami (Ichhra, Lahore: Shu'ba Nashr wa Ishaat, Jamaati. Islami, 1970), part 1, 16.
21 Murtadd ki saza Islami qanun main (1950), 80-1.
22 Murtadd ki saza Islami qanun main (8th ed.), op.cit., 72-3.
23 Al-Bukhari, Kitab al-Jana'iz.
24 Dictionary of the History of Ideas (New York), vol. IV, 116.
25 Murtadd ki saza Islami qanun main, 51.
26 ibid., 32.
27 Murtadd ki saza Islami qanun main, 35.
28 Quran, 87.14.
29 Murtadd ki saza Islami qanun main, 51.
30 Maududi, Haqiqat-i Jihad (Lahore: Taj Company Ltd, 1964), 64; emphasis
added.
31 ibid.; emphasis added.. Chapter 6
1 Sahih al-Bukhari, Bab Kitabat al-Iman al-Nas.
2 ibid., Kitab al-Salat, Bab Fadl Istaqbal al-Qiblah.
3 Al-Ghazali, Faysal al-Tafriqah bayn al-Islam wa'l Zandaqah (Cairo, 1901),
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Murder in the Name of Allah
68; see Bernard Lewis, Islam in History: Ideas, Men and Events in the Middle. East (London, 1973), 232.
4 Munir Commission Report (Lahore, 1954), 28.
5 Abdul Malik Ibn Hisham, Sirat Rasul Allah ed. F. Wustenfeld, 2 vols.
(Göttingen, 1856-60), 984; trans. A. Guillaume, The Life of Muhammad
(London: Oxford University Press, 1970), p. 667.
6 Musnand Imam Ahmad Hanbal, vol. V, 260.
7 Mufradat al-Quran.
8 Quran, 6.67. See also 6.108, 10.109,17.55,39.42 and 42.7. The word wakil
has been explained by Imam Fakhr ud-Din Razi in Tafsir Kabir (Cairo, 1308. AH), vol. IV, 62-3 and also Muhammad Abduh in Tafsir al-Quran al-Shahir
bi Tafsir al-Manar, ed. Muhammad Rashid Rida (Beirut, 1337 AH), vol. VII,
501-3,662-3.
9 Emphasis added.
10 Abdul Malik Ibn Hisham, Kitab Sirat Rasul Allah, op.cit., 927.
11 ibid., 381.
12 ibid., 384.
13 Sahih al-Bukhari (Cairo, n.d.), vol. 1, book 3,28.
14 Ibn Hisham, op. cit., 818.
15 ibid., 819.
16 ibid., 818-19.
17 ibid., 819.
18 ibid.
19 ibid., 820.
20 ibid., 468-9.
21 ibid., 819.
22 ibid. Al-Zurqani, Sharah al-Mawahib al-Laduniyah (Cairo 1325 AH), vol. II,
315; see Shair Ali, Qatli-Murtadd aur Islam (Amritsar, 1925), 119.
23 Ibn Hisham, op. cit., 728.
24 ibid., 819.
25 ibid.
26 Muhammad Idris al Shafii, Kitab al-Umm, ed. Muhammad Zahri al Nadjjar
(Cairo, n.d.), vol. VIII, 256.
27 Abu Jafar Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari, Tarikh al-Rasul wa al-Muluk, ed.. M.J. de Goeje (Leiden, 1964), vol. IV, 1874.
28 C.H. Becker, 'The expansion of the Saracens', The Cambridge Medieval. History (New York: Macmillan, 1913), vol. II, 335.
29 Muhammad Idris al-Shafii, op.cit., 255-6.
30 Abd al-Hamid Hibet-u-Allah ibn al-Hadid, Sharah Nahj al-Balaghah, ed.. Muhammad Abu al-Fadl Ibrahim (Cairo, 1956 - 64), vol. XIII, 187.
31 C.H. Becker, op.cit., 335.
32 Bernard Lewis, The Arabs in History (London, 1958), 51-2.
33 Ashari, Maqalat, vol 1, 191.
142
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Notes
34 Ibn Hisham, op. cit., 688-9.
35 Sahih Muslim with Sharah al-Nawawi (Lahore: 1958, 62), vol. II, 112-13.
36 For various reports with slightly different wording see Sahih al-Bukhari and. Sahih Muslim, 'Kitab al-Iman'.
37 Bernard Lewis, Islam in History, op. cit., 233.
38 See Bernard Lewis's detailed analysis of the genesis and evolution of this
institution in Islamic history in Islam in History, op.cit., 217-36 and also The. Jews of Islam (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984), 53-4.
39 Bernard Lewis, The Jews of Islam, op.cit, 100.
40 Ignaz Goldziher, Mohammed and Islam, trans. Kate Chambers Seelye (New. Haven: Yale University Press, 1917), 74, note 3.
41 Bernard Lewis, The Jews of Islam, op. cit., 101.
42 Sir Judanath Sarkar, Short History of Aurangzib (Calcutta, 1954), 105-6.
43 But Bab (Door of the Spirit) Mirza Ali Muhammad, who proclaimed his
prophethood, was executed at Tabriz on 9 July 1850.
44 Munir Commission Report, 218, 219.
45 ibid., 219.. Chapter 7
1 The term used for the first four caliphs (successors) after the death of the Holy. Prophets, namely Hazrat Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman and Ali.(Their rule
lasted from AD632 to 661).
2 Commentary: Bahral Muheet, vol. II, 493.
3 Tabari, vol. IV, 1873; Ibn Khaldun, vol. II, 65; Khamees, vol. II, 237, etc.
4 Tabari, vol. IV, 1849.
5 Khamees, vol. II, 64 1.
6 Ibn Hijr Al-Asqalani, Al-Isaba fi Tamyiz-is-Suhaba (Beirut: Darul Kitab AlArabi), vol. 2, 448; Al Imam-Allama Ibn ul-Athir, Usudul Ghaba fi Marifatui Sahaba (Beirut: Dar Ahyaultarath Al-Arabi), vol. 4, 3.
7 Ibn Al-Athir Al-Jazri, Alkamil fil Tarikh (Beirut: Darul Kutb Al-Almiya),
vol.2,201-5.
8 Tabari, vol. IV, 1977.
9 Masboot, vol. x, 110.
10 Fateh Al-Bari, vol. XII, 267; Imam Razi, Tafsir Kabir, vol. III, 614; Sheikh. Ibn Taimiyyah, Minhajus Sunnah, vol. II, 61-2; Tarikh-al Kamil, vol. III,
148.
11 Bukhari, Kitab al-Mustadeen wal Muanadeen wa Qitalihin, Bab Hukumul. Murtad wal Murtadda.
12 Abu Daud.
13 The Holy Quran urges: 'When you heard of it, why did not the believing men
and the believing women think well of their own people, and say: This is a
manifest lie . . ' (24.13)
143
Page 153
Murder in the Name of Allah. The Holy Prophetsa said: 'It is evidence enough of the untruthfulness of a
person that he should relate, without examining, whatever he hears.'
(Muslim, vol. 1, chapter headed 'Don'ts about Tradition')
14 Bukhari (Arabic-English edition), Vol.ix, Book 84, Chapt. 2, Hadith No.
57 - page 45. (Dar-Al-Arabia, Beirut, 1985).
15 Abdul Hayy, Al-Raf a wal Takmeel.
16 Not to be confused with Ikramah b. Abu Jahl.
17 Ibn Saad, Al Tabqa Al-Kabir, vol. 2, 386.
18 Mizan Al-Aitadal, vol. 2, 208.
19 Abu Daud, vol. II, 35.
20 Abu Jafar Muhammed b. Amr b. Musa b. Hamad Al-Aqbli Al-Mulki, Kitab
al-Soafa Al-Kabir (Lebanon: Darul Kutb Al-Almiyya). Al Safr III, 1983,
373.
21 Abu Jafar Muhammad b. Amr b. Musa b. Hamad Al-Aqbli Al-Mulki, op.cit.
22 Mizan Al-Aitadal, vol. 2, 209.
23 Fateh Al-Bari.
24 The son of Abbas, an uncle of the Holy Prophets. Ibn Abbas was no more than
a child during the Holy Prophet's a time.
25 Bukhari, Kitab al-Janaiz, chapter headed 'Wailing Over the Dead'.
26 Hedayah.
27 Fateh al-Kadeer, vol IV, 389; vol II, 580.
28 Chalpi, Commentary on Fateh al-Kadeer, 388; Inayah, 390.. Chapter 8
1 Munir Commission Report, 258.
2 Maxime Rodinson, Mohammad, trans. Anne Carter (New York, 1971), 194.
'A tribal poet among the Bedouin,' as Joel Carmichael puts it, was 'no mere
versifier, but a kindler of battle', his poems were 'thought of as the serious
beginning of real warfare' (The Shaping of the Arabs, a Study in Ethnic. Identity, New York, 1967,38).
3 Ibn Hisham, Kitab Sirat Rasul Allah, 995. The English translation is by Anne. Carter, given in Rodinson's Mohammed, op.cit., 157.
4 Ali b. Burhan ud Din ud-Halabi, Insan al-Uyun, vol. II, 116; cited by Kister,. The Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, vol. VIII, 267.
5 Ibn Hisham, op.cit., 459.
6 Ibn Hisham, op.cit., 550, this translation by A. Guillaume.
7 ibid., 386.
8 ibid.
9 ibid., 387.
10 ibid., 726.
11 ibid.
144
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Notes
12 ibid.
13 Will Durant, The Story of Civilisation, 11 vols. (New York: Simon &. Shuster, 1950), vol. IV, The Age of Faith, 301.
14 Munir Commission Report, 259.
15 In the subcontinent they are generally known as Brelvis.
16 Deobandi Maulwiyon ka Iman (Lyallpur: Shahi Masjid, n.d.).
17 Razakhani Fitna Pardazon ka siyah jhoot.
18 Shah Muhammad Asi and Syed Muhammad Tanha, Shourish 'urf Bhare ka. Tattoo, 7-8.
19 Wilfred Cantwell Smith, Modern Islam in India (Lahore, 2nd ed., 1947).
20 Munir Commission Report, 257.
21 Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, Izala-i Awham (Amritsar, 1891), part 1, 176.
22 Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, A'ina-i-Kamalat Islam(Qadian, 1893), last page.
23 ibid.
24 Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, op. cit., Izala-i-Awham, 138.
25 Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, Tawdih-i-Maram (Amritsar, 1308 AH), 23.
26 According to the Quran, Abraham's as father's name was Azar, (Adhar) the
name given by the Church historian, Eusebius, and not Terah as given in. Genesis 11:26; Quran, 6.75.
27 Sir Muhammad Iqbal, Bang-i-Dara, Jawab-i-Shikwah, stanzas VII, IX, X and. XVII, trans. A. J. Arberry.
28 Aziz Ahmad and G.E. Grunebaum (eds.) Muslim Self-Statement in India and. Pakistan, 1857-1968(Wiesbaden, 1970), 13.. Chapter 9
1 In the First World War, the mobilised forces of the Allies totalled 42.6 million
and the Central Powers had 22.85 million. Total casualties on both sides were
57.6 per cent. In the Second World War, the peak armed strength was
72,581,566, out of which 16,829,758 were killed or missing (presumed
killed) and 26,698,339 were wounded. (Source: Arthur Guy Enock, This. War Business, London: Bodley Head, 1951, and US Department of Defence.) The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace has estimated that
the First World War cost $400,000,000,000, excluding civilian property
damage and the cost of loss of life. According to one estimate, the direct costs
of the Second World War for the participating nations were a staggering
grand total of $1,098,938,000,000.
2 William J. Roehrenbeck, Collins Encyclopaedia, vol. 23, article headed 'War. Costs and Casualties'.
145
Page 155
INDEX. Abbas, 35. Abbaside, 74, 89. Abdullah b Khattal, 66,79. Abdullah b Sad, 66, 80. Abdulah b Ubbayy, 98. Abdul Rashid, 20. Abdul Wahhab, 98. Abel, I. Abraham as
§,3,19,41,
87. Abu Bakr, 23,53,59,67-69,74,8182. Abu Jahl, 22. Abu Musa Ashari, 83. Abu Ubaydah, 23. Abu Sufyan, 35. Adamas, 2, 6. Afghanistan, 71. Ahli Hadith, 98. Ahli Quran, 45,53,56,73. Ahli Sunnat Wal Jamaat, see Brelvi. Ahmadi (yya), vii, xi, 45-46, 53,712,99-100, 103. Ahrari-Islam, vii. Ahzab, 34. Al Ghazali, 60. Alexander the Great, 1, 19. Ali, 23, 67,69,71,83,89. American Support, 105, 106, 110, 115. Amnesty International, 116. Ansar, 23,25,29,33-34,61,94,96. Apartheid, 112. Apostasy, xii, 49, 60;
cannot be capital offence, 51,
53,55,60,65,72,79,114;
definition, 75;
146
execution of so-called apostates,
66-72,95
has no equivalent term in Arabic,
60;. Holy Quran on, 64, 75-9, 85-7. Ikramah's tradition, 85-92. Maududian view, 49-92
other traditions on, 65-87
recantation, 61
requires external authority, 61
stance of past Prophets, 87-8
women cannot be executed for,
60
temporary disbelief, 65, 78-9. Arabs:
as poets, 28-9,37,93
before Islam, 23-4. Iranian dissatisfaction at
dominance, 107. Armament supplies, 110-12. Arya Samajists, 1,5, 16, 19,57. Augustine, St, 8,51-52,58. Ayatollah Khomeini, xii, 106, 108,
110,117. Badr,22,25,29-30,34,63-65,94. Baghdad, 1. Bahaullah, 72. Bengal, 18. Blasphemy, 20, 94-5, 117. Brelvi, viii, 45,55,72,98-100. British, 20, 45, 46, 107. Buddha, 20, 75,104. Caesar, 1,34,50
Page 156
Index. Christianiity, 4-5, 8-10, 25, 46-53,57,
59-60, 103, 112, 114, 116, 117. Crusades, 119. Deobandi, viii, 45, 49, 55, 72,98-100,
103. Ebbusudx Effendi, 97. Eliasas, 87. Fatima, 25, 65. Fidel Castro, 117. Freedom:
of concience, 2, 12, 61-2,
87-8
of conversion, 49,56,57,64. Gandhi, Mahatma, 15, 26, 37. Gengiz Khan, 1. Ghulam A Parvez, 56. Gyandra Dev Sharma Shastri, 12,
15-16. Halima, 36. Harith, 37. Hatim Tayy, 37. Hawazin, 37. Heresy, 50,52,53. Hezbullah, vii. Hijrah, 32, 34, 64,93. Hindu, 15, 20, 27, 49, 54, 57, 75, 103,
104,112. Hudas, 42. Hudaibiya, 30-32, 34. Hulaqu, 1. Hunayn, 28,31,36. Hypocrites, 55,57,63-4,70,93,9697. Ibn Abbas, 85, 89-91. Idolatry, 24. Ijtihad, 52, 55. Ikramah, 74, 85, 88-91. India, 55. Indian National Congress, 49, 103. Indonesia, 18. Iqbal, Sir Muhammad, 101-103. Iran, vii
dissatisfaction of, 105-107
and America, 105-106, 110115. Shah of, 105-106
war with Iraq, 108-113. Iraq, war with Iran, 108-113. Iraqi traditions, 89. Islamic Jihad, vii, 20, 25, 27, 44,
62,70,87,92, 109. Islamic Militancy, 113-115. Islamic Nuclear Bomb, 112. Israel, 108, 110-111, 113, 116. Jamaat-i-Islami, vii, 44-47, 56-57,
72, 100. Jerusalem, 64. Jesusas, 4, 5, 8, 14, 37, 41, 43, 50,
87. Jews, 28-34,57,65,72,78-79,
83, 93-97, 103, 112, 114,
117-119. Jihad, see Islamic Jihad. Jizya, 21. Joan of Arc, 9
ย. Ka'ba, 24, 64, 102. Khairi Brothers, 49,52. Khalid b. Walid, 23, 31, 82. Khazraj,29,32,93. Khomeini, see Ayatollah Khomeini. Khomeinism, 105-106, 112. Krishnaas, 16, 20. Kuaravas, 1. Kufr, 53. Lebanon, 116-117. Libya, 115-117
147
Page 157
Murder in the Name of Allah. Lotas, 3,41,87. Luther, Martin, 51-52. Madame Tussaud's, 9. Mafia, 105. Mahdi and Messiah, 46. Malaysia, 18. Malaviya, Pandit Madan Mahan, 19. Maqees b. Subabah, 67, 80. Marie Antoinette, 9. Martyrs, 57,97,109. Marxism and Communism, 41, 44,
47,49,58-59, 105-108. Maryas, 50, 117. Maulana Abul 'Ala Maududi, vii,
12-20, 26-28, 38-120,
on apostasy, 49-92,56,64,87
obsession with power,
39-45
reforms, 48
rejection of counsel, 41
relies on weak traditions, 8082
views akin to Marxism, 41, 45,
49,59-60
view of fellow Muslims, 53
view about Muslim leaders, 54. Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, 49, 52. Maulana Amin Ahsan Ilahi, 53. Maulana Ashraf Ali Thanwi, 98, 99. Maulana Muhammad Ali Johar,
26. Maulana Muhammad Qasim. Nanautwi, 98, 99. Mirza Ghulam Ahmadas of Qadian,
71,100-101. Mosesas, 4, 41, 43,87,92. Mossadeq, 108. Muawiyya, 69. Muaz b. Jabal, 82-83. Muhajirs, 32-33, 94, 96. Muhammadsa, the Holy Prophet
admonisher, 38, 43
belief in the Message of the Quran,
31
demise,23,26,67-68,79,82
did not convert by force, 13,
18,21,87
faces persecution, 6,62
invitation to neighbouring nations,
17. Mercy for the Universe, 7,43. Prince of Peace, 10, 18
reprimand on killing, 61
recommended compromise, 62
return to Mecca,6,30,3
,34-36. Seal of Prophets, 2, 5, 41, 101
spiritual revolution of, 41
three stages of life, 32-37
and prisoners of war, 35-37. Excellent Exemplar, 95
mocked at, 93
not appointed a guardian, 62
unjust acts in the name of, 10. Mullahs, 5, 8. Munir Commission Report, vii,
viii, 60, 72, 93. Musailma, the imposter, 81. Muslim Brotherhood, vii. Nadir Shah, 26. Nehru, Pandit Jawarlal, 103. Nicaragua, 108. Niyaz Fatehpuri, 49. Nizam of Hyderabad, 25-26. Non-tolerance, 112-115, 117. Orientalists, 12-14, 18, 22, 28, 3032,37,52,74,119. Ottoman rule, 72. Pakistan, 47, 55, 112, 119. Palestinians, 113, 116. Pandavas, 1. Poland, 108
148
Page 158
Index. Pontius Pilate, 9. Prisoners of war, 33-34. Propagation of Faith, 49,57,92. Qaddafi, xii, 48. Qiblah, 60, 64,65. Quraish, 35-36, 93-94, 96. Rajpal, 19. Religion by birth, 54-57. Rushdie, Salman, 117. Sad b. Ali Waqqas, 23. Salehas, 41-42. Saudi Arabia, 27, 109-110, 113115. Sharma, Pandit Kalicharan, 19. Shiite (Shiism), 45, 55, 69, 72,
100, 106, 110, 117. Shinto, 112. Shuaibas, 3,41. Shuddi, 19,49. Sikh, 18, 104. South Africa, 108, 118. Spanish Inquisition, 9, 118. State terrorism, 116. Swami Dayanand, 16, 19. Syria, 115-117. Taif, 6, 11,37. Terrorism, religion exploited, vii, xixii, 104
in Mecca, 109. Trinity, 46,50,52. Tulaiha, 82. Uhud, 34. Ulemas, 8-10, 60-61, 69, 98-100. Umar, 23,25,30,59,64,68,9091,96. Umm Hakim, 67. Umma, 27, 45, 47-48, 62. Ummayads, 69, 74. Usama b. Zayd, 61, 65, 67, 81, 112. Uthman, 23, 70. Violence, 119. Wahabism, 49, 72, 98, 114. Zakat, 44,65,67-72,74,77,81. Zia-ul-Haq, 119. Zindeeqs, 85. Zionists, 113. Zoroastrianism, 57, 59
149