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The Right to Freedom of Belief II   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #2976 of 3331 |




The Rights of Non-Muslims in Islam (part 6 of 13): The Right to Freedom of
Belief II
Muslims protected Christian churches in the lands they occupied from being
harmed.  In a letter to Simeon, the Archbishop of Rifardashir and leader of all
the bishops of Persia, the Nestorian Patriarch Geoff III wrote:
¡The Arabs, to whom God has given power over the whole world, know how wealthy
you are, for they live among you.  In spite of this, they do not assail the
Christian creed.  To the contrary, they have sympathy with our religion, and
venerate our priests and saints of our Lord, and they graciously donate to our
churches and monasteries.¢[1]
 
One of the Muslims caliphs, Abdul-Malik, took the Church of John from the
Christians and made it part of a mosque.  When Umar bin Abdulaziz succeeded him
as the new Caliph, the Christians complained to him about what his predecessor
had done to their church.  Umar wrote to the governor that the portion of the
mosque that was rightfully theirs be returned to them if they were unable to
agree with the governor on a monetary settlement that would satisfy them.[2]
 
The Wailing Wall in Jerusalem is known to historians to be the one of the
holiest places of worship in Judaism.  Some time ago, it was completely buried
under rubble and heaps of debris.  When the Ottoman caliph Sultan Sulayman came
to know of this, he ordered his governor in Jerusalem to remove all the rubble
and debris, clean the area, restore the Wailing Wall, and make it accessible for
Jews to visit.[3]
 
Unbiased Western historians acknowledge these facts.  LeBon writes:
¡The tolerance of Muhammad towards the Jews and Christians was truly grand; the
founders of other religions that appeared before him, Judaism and Christianity
in particular, did not prescribe such goodwill.  His caliphs followed the same
policy, and his tolerance has been acknowledged by skeptics and believers alike
when they study the history of the Arabs in depth.¢[4]
 
Robertson wrote:
¡The Muslims alone were able to integrate their zeal for their own religion with
tolerance for followers of other religions.  Even when they bore swords into
battle for freedom for their religion to spread, they left those who did not
desire it free to adhere to their own religious teachings.¢[5]
 
Sir Thomas Arnold, an English Orientalist, wrote:
¡We never heard of a report of any planned attempt to compel non-Muslim
minorities to accept Islam, or any organized persecution aimed at uprooting the
Christian religion.  If any of the caliphs had chosen any of these policies,
they would have overwhelmed Christianity with the same ease with which Ferdinand
and Isabella exiled Islam from Spain, or with which Louis XIV made following
Protestantism a punishable crime in France, or with which the Jews were exiled
from England for 350 years.  A that time Eastern churches were completely
isolated from the rest of the Christian world.  They had no supporters in the
world as they were considered heretical sects of Christianity.  Their very
existence to this day is the strongest evidence of the policy of Islamic
government¢s tolerance towards them.¢[6]
 
The American author, Lothrop Stoddard wrote, ¡The caliph Umar took the utmost
care to tend to the sanctity of the Christian holy places, and those who became
caliph after him followed his footsteps.  They did not harass the many
denominations of pilgrims who came annually from every corner of the Christian
world to visit Jerusalem.¢[7]
The reality is that non-Muslims were treated with more tolerance among the
Muslims than anything they experienced with other sects of their own religion. 
Richard Stebbins spoke of the Christian experience under the rule of the Turks:
¡They (the Turks) allowed all of them, Roman Catholics and Greek Orthodox, to
preserve their religion and follow their consciences as they chose: they allowed
them their churches to perform their sacred rituals in Constantinople and many
other places.  This is in contrast to what I can testify to from living in Spain
for twelve years; not only were we forced to attend their Papist celebrations,
but our lives and the lives of our grandchildren were in danger also.¢[8]
 
Thomas Arnold mentions in his ¡Invitation to Islam¢ that there were many people
in Italy at that time who longed for Ottoman rule.  They wished they could be
granted the same freedom and tolerance that the Ottomans gave to their Christian
subjects, for they had despaired of achieving it under any Christian
government.  He also mentions that a great many Jews fled persecution in Spain
at the end of the 15th century and took refuge in Ottoman Turkey.[9]
 
It is worthwhile to reemphasize the following point.  The existence of
non-Muslims for centuries across the Muslim world, from Moorish Spain and
Sub-Saharan Africa to Egypt, Syria, India, and Indonesia are clear evidence of
the religious tolerance extended by Islam to people of other faiths.  This
tolerance even led to the elimination of Muslims, such as in Spain, where the
remaining Christians took advantage of Muslim weakness, attacked them, and wiped
them out from Spain by either killing them, forcing them to convert, or
expulsion.  Etienne Denier wrote, ¡The Muslims are the opposite of what many
people believe.  They never used force outside of the Hejaz.[10]  The presence
of Christians was evidence of this fact.  They retained their religion in
complete security during the eight centuries that the Muslims ruled their
lands.  Some of them held high posts in the palace in Cordoba, but when the same
Christians obtained power over the country,
suddenly their first concern was to exterminate Muslims.¢[11]




Footnotes:

[1] Arnold, Thomas, ¡Invitation To Islam,¢ p. 102

[2] Qaradawi, Yusuf, ¡Ghayr al-Muslimeen fil-Mujtama¢ al-Islami,¢ p. 32

[3] Hussayn, Abdul-Latif, ¡Tasamuh al-Gharb Ma¢l-Muslimeen,¢ p. 67

[4] LeBon, Gustav, ¡Arab Civilization,¢ p. 128

[5] Quoted in Aayed, Saleh Hussain, ¡Huquq Ghayr al-Muslimeen fi Bilad
il-Islam,¢ p. 26

[6] Arnold, Thomas, ¡Invitation To Islam,¢ p. 98-99

[7] Stoddard, L.W., ¡The Islamic World At Present,¢ vol 1, p. 13-14

[8] Quoted in Qaradawi, Yusuf, ¡al-Aqaliyyat ad-Diniyya wa-Hal al-Islami,¢ p.
56-57

[9] Arnold, Thomas, ¡Invitation To Islam,¢ p. 183

[10] Hejaz: the Western part of Arabia that includes the cities of Mecca and
Medina.

[11] Denier, Etienne, ¡Muhammad The Messenger Of God,¢ p. 332





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Sat Nov 1, 2008 8:37 pm

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