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13. Facing the truth the only solution
13.1 Facing the past
The chronic disease of communal riots is not going to end
by all the talk of secularism and national integration.
Some people in Indian politics and in the press seem to
think that by repeating the mantra secularism often
enough, you will get secularism. But by saying food,
food, food your hunger will not be satisfied. Rather,
you will starve to death, or get bored to death by this
insupportable repetitiveness.
Superficial Sadbhavana bla-bla is not capable of stopping
communal hatred. A minimum requirement for communal
harmony is that
- the historical and ideological roots of communal hatred are faced squarely, and
- the general and theoretical insight into the roots of the
problem are actualized by a formal acceptance of
historical responsibilities.
After 1945, the Germans have apologized to the Jews for
what they had done to them. They also have payed huge
reparations to the Polish, Russian and Jewish peoples,
for them it was more than just a gesture ; but it is the
gesture which we want to consider here. The Japanese
needed till 1989 before they apologized to the Koreans.
The fact that the Japanese occupation of Korea had ended
since 44 years was not invoked as an excuse for just
disregarding that unfortunate chapter in history. Also
in 1989, the Soviet authorities have recognized their
guilt in the Katyn massacre of Polish officers, and held
a ceremony on the site with Polish leaders. In 1990, the
Soviets have apologized to the Koreans for starting the
Korean war in 1950, as well as for shooting down the
Korean airliner in 1983.217 In 1990, the
American
government has apologized to the Japanese who had pre-
emptively been arrested and put in concentration camps
during World War II, and payed a compensation in cash to
the affected people still alive. On December 29, 1990,
the Centenary of the Native Americans' last battle in
Wounded Knee was marked with a ceremony in which the
South Dakota governor offered words of sorrow and
apology. It was the culmination of a Year of
Reconciliation.218 And the Dutch
Reformed Church of
South Africa publicly apologized to the blacks, and asked
them for forgiveness, for the ideological support it had
given to Apartheid. The way to make a new beginning goes
via recognizing and formally terminating the faults of
the past.
The application of this principle to the Indian
situation is crystal-clear; the Muslim community should
come out and recognize the atrocities which its earlier
generations have inflicted on the Hindus, and make a
gesture of goodwill to formally terminate that chapter in
history.
Leaving the Ram Janmabhoomi spot to the Hindus, to do
with it as they please, would have been just such a
gesture. A very easy one, for it cost nothing. The
Muslim community was not even in control of the place,
all they would have to do was not to interfere in what
already was an internal Hindu affair. The fact that even
this easy goodwill gesture was not made, at least by the
externally recognized leadership of the Muslim community,
is a very sad thing. On a world-wide scale, the time is
ripe for such a recognition of past mistakes.
The Christians are facing their past. Even in religion
class in Catholic schools in Belgium, we gave attention
to the gruesome part in Church history. In Latin
America, the 500th anniversary of Columbus' arrival has
sparked some serious reconsideration both within and
outside the Church, about the role of Christianity in the
wholesale destruction of all the cultures without
exception in the entire New World. In Delhi, I have
asked a Roman Catholic Father, head of an important
institute, what he had to say about the acts of
fanaticism perpetrated by many of his predecessors in the
Mission. He said: "We are not uptight about it."
While this past is by no means forgotten, the Christians
have, by and large, accepted that in the name of
Christianity very large-scale crimes against humanity
have been committed. They now reorient themselves,
making a distinction between the original spirit of
Christianity, and the later aberrations. It is possible
to live with the realization that the community to which
one belongs, is or has been responsible for less than
uplifting practices (Dante, the greatest of Christian
poets, described how utterly depraved the Church had
become in his time, and then added that to him it still
remained the Church of Christ).
So, it is time to face the truth. Judging by the
glasnost in the Soviet block and in the Catholic Church
regarding past crimes, the time is ripe to finish the
glossing-over which the secularists have been practicing
and propagating. The rosy presentation of Islam which
the secularist press is feeding the public, should be
debunked.
In Europe there are also people, very few, who insist on
denying the Nazi crimes, the genocide on the Jews and the
Gypsies.219 These people are called revisionists
or
negationists, and their stand is considered highly
objectionable (France has even gone a little too far, in
my opinion, by making it a punishable offence to deny the
Nazi extermination camps). In India, by contrast, the
negationists who deny the existence of the centuries-long
jihad, in which a systematic oppression and slaughter of
Kafirs was pursued, are calling the shots.
Even if the Muslims themselves don't feel ready yet for
coming to terms with their communal past (which may be
humanly difficult, and should in no way be forced on
them), that is no reason for secular intellectuals to
stick to this negationist glossing-over.
In 1987 the Japanese ministry of education decided to
tone down the report of the Rape of Nanching (a
massacre in China by the Japanese occupation forces in
World War II) in Japanese history books. They wanted to
put in a new version : this massacre was nothing
special, it just happens in any war, it had nothing to
do with Japanese national supremacism, and therefore it
doesn't deserve any special highlighting. They did not
intend much more than changing the proportions of this
episode vis-a-vis the totality of the war. They were not
going to deny that it had happened. Yet, China reacted
angrily. The Chinese government filed a strong official
protest against this rewriting of history, and Chinese
communities in different countries held demonstrations in
front of the Japanese embassies.
So, that is how particular the Chinese are about setting
the historical record straight.220 Now, even if
Japan
ever whitewashes its entire role in World War II (which
it does not consider doing at all), even if Chinese
protests could not prevent such a development, then that
still would not make any neutral historian, much less the
Chinese themselves, rewrite their own history-books to
absolve the erstwhile Japanese aggressors. But in India,
we find the unbelievable situation, that not only Muslim
historians and public figures refuse to face the truth
about Muslim history : neutral secular historians are
also covering up and denying the crimes which Islam has
systematically committed, and even many Hindus are
denying the crimes committed against their own society.
It is a matter of self-respect as much as a matter of
respect for the historical truth, that Hindus face their
own history and tell their children about the crimes of
the closed creeds like Islam.
13.2. Islam and Nazism
It may sound shocking to some people that I have compared
the Hindu-Muslim relations with the Jewish-German
relations of the Nazi period. While in Israel you get
to hear more comparisons of Muslims with Nazis, in India
it may still be unfashionable. I would like to point out
that comparing people to the Nazis is not so uncommon.
In fact, the communists call non-communists fascists all
the time. In the communalism debate, the Hindu side has
been bracketed with Nazism by all sorts of people, even
by a smug bourgeois like Mani Shankar Aiyar (in several
episodes of his Sunday column, where he considerably
distorts German history to make it fit, see ch.14.10) or
a preacherous do-gooder like Rajmohan Gandhi, as much as
by rank fanatics like Syed Shahabuddin.
Now, I don't have to distort history in order to make my
comparison of Islam with Nazism. In very essential
characteristics, the role of Islam in Indian history is
the same as the role of Nazism in German-Jewish history.
Firstly, both uphold an absolute division of humanity in
a superior and glory-bound community, and an evil and
hell-bound community. The Quran says dozens of times
that the Kafirs are condemned in an absolute and eternal
sense, whereas the Momins or believers are promised
eternal lust in heaven. Nazism didn't have those
otherworldly pretensions, but in this world the Jew was
identified with everything evil, and made to suffer for
it. This is just like Islam, which from its absolute and
eternal division of humanity logically deduced their
radically different status in the other world, and
imposed a radically inferior status on the Kafirs in
worldly matters also.
Secondly, on the conscience-quietening bedrock of this
divisionist ideology, they both set up a program for the
total extermination of the inferior species. Here there
was one difference : since Nazism postulated biological
determination, and erroneously thought Judaism as a
racial unit, there was no way out for anyone born from
Jewish parents. Facing the sword of Islam, Kafirs had
one escape : conversion. If they had been taken captive
when fighting or fleeing the Muslim armies, even
conversion could not save them from slavery, but at least
it saved their lives in most cases.
I estimate that the Muslim conquerors killed more than
six million Hindus, the number of Jews killed by the
Nazis.221 Of course, they had a bigger number of
victims
to pick from, and they had centuries while the Nazis had
a few years. But then, they didn't have the technology,
nor the total control of the country. They didn't have
the means to be as thorough. Among the systematic
killers, like Ghaznavi, Ghori, Teimur, Babar, there was a
clear drive to physically finish the Kafirs. Fortunately
they didn't have gas chambers, but they had no inhibition
in using all the killing apparatus at their disposal. The
Bahmani sultans made it a point to kill one lakh Hindus
every year.
On top of outright massacres, there were several other
ways in which the Muslim conquerors and rulers caused the
death of many lakhs of Hindus. Many died a nameless
death under the hardships of slavery. Many were made to
fight in special infantry cohorts in the Muslim armies,
and systematically used for the risky and suicidal
tasks.222
This absolute disrespect for the lives of the Kafirs was
founded in Islamic doctrine. It was not an isolated
incident, but part of a pattern that was also in evidence
in other parts of the Muslim empire. The Egyptian-born
scholar Mrs. Bat Ye'or has presented a collection of
documents about the Jewish and Christian communities
living under Muslim rule, and of whom Muslim apologetics
always boasts that they were treated better than
minorities in Christian countries.223 In reality,
they
were often subjected to all kinds of harassment and
humiliation, large-scale abduction of women and children,
and occasional mass slaughter. As late as 1915, the
Turks slaughtered about 15 lakh Christian Armenians, more
than one-fourth of the Armenian population, or a
percentage close to that of the Jews killed by the Nazis.
They never expressed regret or payed reparations.
Hitler, when criticized by his aides about the
extermination camps, explicitly invoked the Armenian
genocide as a precedent.
There are also smaller points of similarity. Before the
extermination of the Jews began, the Jews were tolerated
but they had to suffer a number of restrictions and
humiliations, which correspond closely to the
restrictions imposed on the Zimmis by the Muslims. A
telling example is that they had to make themselves
physically recognizable by wearing a David's star on the
chest, just like the Muslims imposed the wearing of
specific dress on the Jews in Morocco, the Christians in
Egypt, the Hindus in Gujarat.
Like the Muslims, the Nazis acknowledged an intermediate
status between the Jews/Kafirs who have to be
exterminated, and the Herrenvolk/Muslims who should rule
the world. The Nazis did not want to exterminate
inferior races like the Slavs, but they wanted them to
remain as third-class citizens, with no say in power,
wholly subordinate to the superior race. And the
Muslims did not declare total war on the People of the
Book (Jews and Christians), who could remain as third-
class citizens, with no say in power, wholly subordinate
to the Muslims.
This is the heritage which the Muslim community has to
face. It can be done. In fact it is only hard to the
extent that you keep identifying yourself with those
rulers who conducted such policies, and with the
doctrines that inspired them. It can be taken as a
glorious opportunity, to free one's community from those
awful heroes and doctrines.
13.3. Seeing the bright side
While some secularists are outright liars and conscious
history-distorters, this falsified history has become so
widespread that there is now a generation of
intellectuals who genuinely believe that Aurangzeb was
the unifier of India, rather than a cruel fanatic, or
that Mahmud Ghaznavi plundered for wealth rather than to
terrorize the Kafirs. In the case of non-historians, I
will give the benefit of the doubt and assume that their
whitewashing of Muslim history is in good faith.
For instance, Mani Shankar Aiyar has said :"All [Uma
Bharati] sees, knows or cares to know are Mahmud
Ghaznavi, Aurangzeb and others. It is not germane to her
world view that Islam brought brotherhood to the world
and initiated the greatest self-improvement movement, a
part of which were Sant Tukaram, Namdev, Mirabai, Guru
Nanak and Kabir."224
As for this brotherhood, the facts are that Islam
practiced slavery on an unprecedented scale, and that its
treatment of Kafirs was anything but brotherly (unless
you think Aurangzeb's treatment of his broad-minded
brother Dara Shikoh is normative). If the saints
mentioned by Mani were that great, then the credit goes
to Hindu culture, of which each of them was a part. Even
Kabir, the only one among them with an unmistakable
Islamic connection (an Arabic name), has never said that
"there is no contact with the divine except through the
Quran", which is essential in Islam ; he has said on the
contrary that liberation is not to be found in Scripture
(a stand always held up against Brahmins, but in fact
more shattering for Islam with its total belief in one
definitive Scripture). I have it on good authority that
Kabir's thought is Hindu through and through.225
The
simplest proof that his contribution to Indian culture
was un-Islamic, is that he was persecuted for his Kafir
ideas by the Muslim ruler Sikandar Lodi.
One well-known Indian journalist told me that "this Ram
Janmabhoomi movement is finishing the tolerance which was
brought into Hinduism by the Sufis like Kabir and Nanak".
My God, what a distortion. First, the statements of
tolerance in Hinduism can be found in pre-Sufi books like
the Rig-Veda and the Bhagavad Gita :"Let good thoughts
come to us from all sides", or "The truth is one but the
wise call it by many names", or Krishna saying that
"Whoever invokes a deity by whatever name, it is Me he
invokes". Second, it is a myth that the Bhakti movement
owes a lot to the Sufi movement.
If anything, it was the reverse. But by that, I do not
mean, as secularists would hope, that Sufis took over a
lot from these Bhakti saints : they didn't, in fact they
scrupulously avoided Kafir influences. But Bhakti was a
late-medieval re-statement of doctrines that had always
been present in Hindu tradition. And its universalism
and stress on direct experience had been expressed in the
teachings of many sects, some of which had a following
outside Hindusthan proper. It was there that they left
traces which have reappeared in Muslim religious thought
as Sufism.
When Islam had overrun Iran and Turkestan, the local
religions were exterminated, but they started a second
life as the Sufi movement, which brought distinctly un-
Islamic elements back into the official culture, but in
Islamic garb. The original Sufis, like Jalal ud-Din
Rumi, brought a lot of the open-mindedness and
universalism of pre-Islamic culture back into the
Islamized world. However, the later Sufis who came to
India, were largely just missionaries, who may have
practiced mysticism which was un-Islamic enough, and yet
joined in the fanatical drive to exterminate Paganism, by
conversion or otherwise. (For some authentic testimony,
I could advise you to read Eaton's book Sufis of Bijapur,
but with the secularists active or passive support, it
has been banned).
It should be stressed that what is worthwhile in Sufism,
is the un-Islamic part. The consciousness exploration,
the universalism, the commonality (or should I say: the
communalism) with all creature, this is very nice but
very un-Islamic, nowhere to be found in the Quran or the
Hadis. The orthodox doctors of Islam knew it well enough
that this was heresy.226 But increasingly, Sufism
was
integrated into Islam, not to make it more humane, but to
become less humane itself. And when Sufism reached
India, it was not the stuff that could attract genuine
saints like Guru Nanak or Tulsidas (who, perhaps because
of his devotion to Ram, is absent from Mani Shankar
Aiyar's list), or Kabir. It was these Hindus who gave
some attention to the fact that Muslims too had devotion
and a universal spiritual urge, and even in the face of
Islam's fanatic challenge, these Hindu saints held high
the banner of universalism.
If I try to understand where these people get the wholly
erroneous notion that it is Sufism that brought tolerance
into Hinduism, I surmise they might be meaning the
attacks on the social intolerance of the caste
system, which are attributed to these Bhakti saints (mis-
termed Sufis). Well, that has to be looked into. To my
knowledge, Kabir has only said that social differences
disappear during the Bhakti experience. And the same
thing counts for Guru Nanak, and, for that matter, for
Gautama Buddha. They were not social reformers.227 At
most, they had to make certain social choices in the
practical organization of their sect.
It is the deep influence of Marxism, together with a
total ignorance concerning religion, that makes it hard
for people to see these religious teachers for what they
were : teachers of a spiritual path. In Ambedkar I see
no religious enthusiasm for the Buddha's teachings. All
he does with the teaching of Compassion, is using it as a
stick to beat Brahminism with: a complete subordination
of the Buddha's spiritual message to Ambedkar's own
political compulsions.228 Another example of
this
essentially Marxist exaggeration of social concerns is
the Sanskritization theory (which holds that lower
castes adopted Brahmin ways to raise their status), where
it says that some castes adopted vegetarianism for
prestige reasons, off-hand denying the possibility that
spiritual teachers convinced people of the intrinsic
spiritual, ethical or health value of vegetarianism.
So, While here I don't want to give my final opinion on
the matter, it seems to me that the Bhakti saints were
religious teachers rather than social reformers. I think
the compulsion to see social reformers everywhere in
Indian history, follows from a Marxist prejudice, from an
ignorance of religion as a field of experience in its
own right, and from a far too grim image of the structure
and living conditions in traditional Hindu society.
The journalist I just quoted, also praised these Sufis
for being iconoclasts. Again, what he meant was
probably that they went against obsolete or harmful
practices, both at the social and the religious level.
Well, very good of them. But what does it say about my
secularist spokesman, that he praises people for being
iconoclasts? This : he is totally alienated from
pluralist Hindu culture, and has imbibed the monotheist
contempt for idols to this extent that he uses idol-
breaker as a synonym for free-thinker. What he
doesn't realize, is that an idol-breaker is by
definition intolerant. Breaking something that is sacred
to someone, is not a proof of free-thinking and open-
mindedness at all. Breaking your own false gods of self-
righteousness and sweet illusions, and giving up your own
claims to dictate to others what to believe and what not,
that is more convincing proof of a free and positive
mind.229
13.4. Tolerance in Islam
In spite of all the untruth in pro-Islamic myths that
have recently been floated, it is all right that people try
to see the bright side of Islam, be it in brotherhood
or in Sufism. However, they should make sure it is the
real Islam they are talking about, not some syrupy
misrepresentation by latter-day apologists or by self-
deceiving Hindus like Vinoba Bhave (whose Essence of the
Quran is nothing but a suppressio veri, and thus a
suggestion falsi : it nicely keeps out of the reader's
view all the most repulsive verses). Nobody has any
quarrel with the private version of Islam that some
people entertain, but general statements about the
"tolerance (or otherwise) of Islam", should be checked
against the real, official Islam. And even in
presentations of Islam as tolerant, we may be facing not
the heartfelt belief of an open-minded Muslim, but a
shameless attempt at deception.
For instance, I have heard Hindutva people sing the
praise of Maulana Azad, for being a model of a tolerant
Muslim. And they quoted him as saying that Hindu-Muslim
unity was for him more important than independence, and
that this was in keeping with the example of the Prophet,
who had also made a covenant with the Jews in Medina.
Well, the truth about this covenant of Mohammed with the
Jews is that within a few years, two of the three Jewish
clans had been driven out of Medina, and the third one
was slaughtered to the last man. This statement by the
Maulana only proves how dishonest he was, and that he
counted on Hindus not knowing anything about Mohammed's
career. The fact that Hindus quoted this statement with
enthusiasm, proves that the Maulana's estimation of the
absolute Hindu ignorance was correct.
Two more recent varieties of the same tolerant Islam
rhetoric, are the following. Asghar Ali Engineer writes
:"It is too simplistic to put [Hindus] in the category
of kafirs. It is neither doing justice to the teachings
of Islam nor to those of Hinduism."230
It does complete justice to both traditions to put Hindus
in the category of kafirs. They don't recognize the
prophethood of Mohammed nor the exclusive pretense of his
chosen deity, Allah. That makes them non-Muslims. They
also do not believe in any prophetic tradition, i.e. in
people who are exclusive beneficiaries of divine
revelation, from whom others have no choice but to borrow
knowledge about the divine. On the contrary, they
believe that everybody can attain the Awakened state
which gurus have been teaching. They also reject the
notion that the final truth is contained in one book :
any book is merely an attempt to approximate in the terms
of discursive or poetic reason the unspeakable truth, and
it cannot be more than one viewpoint among others.
Disregarding the essential difference between the role of
Sutras and Shastras among the Hindus, and that of
Scripture among the Jewish and Christian people of the
Book, we might say that all of them at least use books
in their religious practice. But what about tribals for
whom writings and a fortiori Scriptures are simply
unknown ? By no manipulation can Asghar Ali Engineer
recognize them as people of the Book. So they are
unmitigated Kafirs, and have to be given a choice between
Islam and death. That is the true tradition of Islam.
And if Mr. Engineer wants to bring communal amity, he
should not try to bring people in the people of the
Book denomination, but repudiate the notion of Kafir
(with its attached doctrine of killing or forcibly
converting them) altogether. Considering Hindus or
tribals as Kafirs is not just simplistic, it is anti-
human and criminal.
Until Mr. Engineer rejects the Islamic division of
mankind into Muslims and Kafirs, with or without the
intermediate category of people of the Book, he is
exactly as guilty of communal strife as the worst
fundamentalist. Defeat him.
Why does Mr. Engineer want to declare the Hindus people
of the Book? The practical impact is, that they can
become Zimmis, protected ones. That means, third-class
citizens in an Islamic state. When he and the
secularists want to shout abuse at Hindu Rashtra, they
say it will be a theocratic state in which the Muslims
will be second-class citizens, and they call that
fascism. That same thing which they call fascism when
they wrongly attribute it to Hindu Rashtra, is
effectively accepted in the case of a Muslim Rashtra,
such as Pakistan. I at least have never heard any of
them refer to Pakistan as fascist. Muslim Rashtra is
not only not called fascism: Mr. Engineer even seems to
take it for granted as a political framework, and
therefore he tries to secure a place for the Hindus in
it by declaring them people of the Book, rather than
just Kafirs who could not be tolerated alive. Well how
generous of him.
The category people of the Book is an arch-communalist
notion, an integral part of a doctrine which divides
humanity into Muslims or Momins (rulers and freemen, the
first-and second-class citizens), Zimmi Kafirs (inferior
third-class citizens), and non-Zimmi Kafirs (to be
exterminated). I agree with the secularists that no
compromise whatsoever should be made with communalism.
Therefore I advocate an all-out intellectual attack on
this distinction between Momins, Kafirs and Zimmis, the
communalist doctrine par excellence.
Asghar Ali Engineer continues his theological discourse
as follows :"The holy Prophet, in his treaty with the
Zoroastrians of Bahrain, recognized them as ahl-al-kitab
(people of the book) though they are not mentioned in the
Quran as such. No wonder that some Sufi saints like Jan-
i-Jahan considered the Hindus too as people of the book."
One more good reason to show no interest whatsoever in
Mr. Engineer's little favour of including Hindus in the
people of the Book, is the effective record of the
treatment of the Zimmis. All right, in a generous (or
maybe just tactical) gesture of the Prophet, the
Zoroastrians of Bahrain were recognized as people of the
Book; but where are they now ? Apart from a few thousand
Zoroastrians living in abject poverty in a few villages
in Iran, the Zoroastrians have been wiped out by Islam
(only those who fled to Hindusthan have survived and
prospered). If Sufis and moderate Muslims want to
recognize Hindus as people of the Book, they may have
the same future in mind for them as for the Zoroastrians
of Bahrain.
The second recent example of a moderate Muslim trying
to fool Hindus, is Maulana Wahiduddin Khan. He quotes
from an Arabic book, so maybe the fault lies with its
writer, though from a Maulana I would expect some
familiarity with early Islamic history. He tells the
following story :"Jama Masjid in Damascus built during
the early period of Islam under Ummayad rule...saw its
completion in 715 and is in existence till today. But in
its early days, the Christians objected to a strip of
land belonging to an old abandoned church having been
annexed during its construction".231
So, in the centre of the metropolis Damascus, there was
an old abandoned church? The truth of the matter is
that this church was a famous and celebrated cathedral.
The Christians were people of the Book, so they became
Zimmis and could, after the surrender of Damascus to the
Muslims, keep their places of worship (though not build
new ones). But, as already mentioned in ch.8.6, the
Muslims badly wanted to take over this big building, so
the Christians had to bribe the Caliph in order to
prevent the Muslims from taking it over, After decades
of taking ever bigger bribes, the Caliph gave in to
Muslim pressure, and had the cathedral transformed into a
Jama Masjid. So, if moderate Maulanas tell you stories,
don't believe them.
But he continues :"A delegation of Christian Syrians,
therefore, came to Umar the second...with the complaint
that his predecessor had annexed a part of the church,
having incorporated it into the building of the mosque."
So, they risked trouble with the Muslim ruler for nothing
but an old abandoned church, and that in an age when
there was no need of creating communal friction in order
to built vote-banks.
Now we seek justice from you, they said. Umar ibn
Abdal-Aziz promptly appointed Muhammad ibn Suwayd an-
Nahri as the arbiter....The latter...arrived at the
conclusion that the Christians were justified in their
complaint. Then Umar issued orders for the part of the
mosque which belonged to the church to be returned in its
entirety to the Christians. However, this order was
never executed, for the Christians had only intended to
put Islamic justice to the test. When they found that it
came up to the mark, they gladly announced that they were
happy to donate this part of the church to the mosque.
Conclusions: even in the story, the Christians don't get
redress. This is explained as a voluntary gesture, but
it must have been just as voluntary as Rushdie's
embracing Islam. And in reality, the Christians were not
even protected against the take-over of their cathedral
by their Zimmi status.
So, Pagans are not interested in recognition as people
of the Book. They want moderate Muslims to stop denying
the intolerance inherent in Islamic theology. They want
them to give up the anti-human division of humanity in
Muslims, Zimmi Kafirs, and Kafirs for whom there is no
mercy.
The fundamental intolerance and fanaticism of Islam are
an undeniable fact. They can readily be proven from a
large number of Quranic verses. Since quoting the Quaran
may get this book banned, I will merely give the verse
numbers, so you can check it for yourself. Islam
promises hell to the Kafirs in Quran 3:85, 4:56, 5:37,
5:72, 8:55, 9:28, 15:2, 21:98-100, 22:19-22, 22:56-57,
25:17-19, 25:55, 29:53-55, 31:13, 66:9, 68:10-13, 72:14-
15, 98-51. Islam warms against mixing with Kafirs in
Quran 2:21, 3:28, 3:118, 5:51, 5:144, 9:7, 9:28, 58:23,
60:4. Islam calls on Muslims to wage war against the
Kafirs in Quran 2:191, 2:193, 4:66, 4:84,5:33, 8:12,
8:15-18, 8:39, 8:59-60, 8:65, 9:2-3, 9:5, 9:14, 9:29,
9:39, 9:73,9:111, 9:123, 25:52, 37:22-23, 47:4-5, 48:29,
69:30-37. Islam encourages the war against the Kafirs by
glorifying it in Quran 2:216, 9:41, 49:15, or by
promising lust in paradise to the Shaheeds who die in
such a war, in Quran 3:142, 3:157-158, 9:20--21. The
Hadis is also explicit enough, and proves that Prophet
put the Quranic injunctions into practice.
However, defenders of the Faith have been trying to prove
that Islam to tolerant. They have some very few
arguments, and these seem convincing as long as they are
not closely scrutinized (like the Maulana's reference to
the Medina covenant with the Jews)232. One
classic
is:"There is no compulsion in religion" (2:256). Isn't
that tolerant? Well, when people quote from the Quran to
prove that Islam is inhuman and fanatical, the standard
reply is :But you are quoting our of context. So, let
us not make that mistake here, for the context is the key
to the meaning of the text. If we read the whole
passage, we find that it ends if by stating :But those
who don't listen,... they are the people of the Fire, and
will live forever in it. So, while not mentioning the
duty of war against the unbelievers, the passage at least
confirms that they will go to hell forever.
The thrust of this passage is that Allah himself chooses
who becomes Muslim and who doesn't. Not that the two
options are equal: the Muslim will enjoy paradise, the
Kafir will suffer forever in hell. But Allah says that
the Prophet need not worry, since it is Allah who makes
people convert. The larger context of this passage is
that Mohammed is getting discouraged because the Arabs,
like the Jews, ridicule his claim of Prophethood, so
Allah gives him some confidence by assuring him that
these care of by Himself. At any rate, this Quranic
verse does not at all say that it is all right to stick to
another religion than Islam. Only by carefully keeping
the context out of view, can it be presented as a
statement of tolerance.
The same situation explains Quran 10:99:"If the Lord had
wanted, all people would have entered the Faith together."
Will you then force people to accept Islam. But when he
is weak, he gets revelations that Allah will take care of
everything, even of conversations (an application of the
Islamic notion of Taqdeer, fate or divine pre-
ordination).
The same thing counts for this other verse presented as
proof of Islamic tolerance:"Unto you your religion, unto
me my religion". (Quran 109:6) This appears in one of
the earliest Suras, when Mohammed is still weak and
unimportant. The Sura says repetitively that :"I do not
serve what you serve, I will not worship what you will
worship,...To you your religion, to me my religion". All
it says is that Mohammed breaks with the Meccan religion,
and that he doesn't want to have anything to do with it.
He rejects all composite culture and proclaims the
incompatibility of the prevalent religion and his own
Islam. This sura is not yet a declaration of war on the
Pagan religions of Arabia and of the entire world, but it
is certainly a preamble to such a declaration of war. At
that time, Mohammed could not yet afford more than such a
formal distancing from the prevalent religion, because he
was not yet strong enough for an all-our confrontation.
Only by concealing the proper context, can one create the
impression that Islam contains even one single positive
injunction to tolerant co-existence and pluralism.
So, let us not be fooled by two or three seemingly
tolerant statements in the Quran. Once Mohammed was
powerful, and had a free choice between tolerance and
intolerance, he shed all tactical semblance of live and
let live, and opted for persecution and mass-slaughter
of Kafirs. In the Medina Suras, there is ample testimony
of Allah's desire that Muslim make war on the Kafirs, and
that they do not anyhow integrate and make friendship
with them. We can safely say that the Quran does teach
intolerance. Those moderate Muslims who deny this,
thereby prove that they are apologists who put the
interests of Islam higher than the truth. Expose them.
However, it is equally a historical fact that people have
outgrown the fanaticism present in the earlier layers of
their tradition. When you read how Moses and Joshua
exterminated the tribes that stood in the way of the
chosen people, all at Yahweh's explicit command, you
would except the Jews, the followers of Moses, to be
ruthless persecutors of non-Jews. But in fact, for the
last fourteen centuries, the Jews have not persecuted
anyone.233 Even today, now that they have a state,
they
are the ones who have guaranteed freedom of worship as
well as free access to the sacred places of Judaism,
Christianity and Islam (as well as Baha'ism) for the
respective believers, in contrast to the earlier Islamic
regime. If there is tension with the non-Jews of the
area, it is not due to any persecution in the name of
Yahweh of Moses. Even the Biblical justification for the
Israeli hold over Palestine, is only put forward by a
minority of religious fundamentalists: for most
Israelis and for their secular government, it is merely a
matter if living in a sustainable state with defensible
borders, which is a legitimate secular concern.234
So, if the Jews could grow out of the stage of bloody
persecution, and develop a stable attitude of live and
let live long ago, can the Muslims not do the same?
The fact that so many Muslim apologists are saying that
Islam is really very tolerant, raises hopes that,
regardless of what the Quran says, they at least accept
that tolerance is a positive value. Of the simple
Muslims who think Islam consists of drinking alcohol or
eating pork, this tolerance is not a problem. But for
Muslims who know Islamic doctrine and Islam's exclusivist
claims, it is a lot more difficult. And many seeming
champions of tolerance and communal amity are at second
sight only more sophisticated than their separatist
brethren.
Take the case of those Muslims who opposed Jinnah and his
communalist demand for partition. While Aligarh was a
hotbed of Pakistani agitation, the Deoband school
advocated the gradual Islamization of the entire united
India. The godfather of modern Islamic fundamentalism,
Maulana Maudoodi, was one of the staunchest opponents of
Partition. He claimed that the Muslims had a right to
rule all of India. In fact, many Hindus are glad that
India was partitioned. They argue that a Muslim
population of 24% (now more than 30%) in united India
would never allowed Hindu society to function, and would
have created trouble until it was safely and totally in
power.
So if today moderate Muslims criticize Pakistan and the
policies that led to Partition, I wonder if there is not
some pan-Islamist design behind it.235 At any
rate,
Maulana Azad, that moderate that would have given 50% of
all power positions to the Muslims, with the rest to be
divided between Hindus, Christians, Ambedkarites, and
others. Short, Azad was in favour of a Muslim India.
So, before the Muslim moderates can become credible, they
will have to do better than their predecessors of the
Azad generation, who, on closer inspection, turn out to
be just as Muslim-imperialist as the communalists. A
very little gesture, by far not sufficient but a minimum
proof of good intention, would be that they come out in
support of Salman Rushdie. Now that the man has become a
Muslim, this doesn't even require any deals Kafirs
anymore. On December 28, 1990, Rushdie made an appeal to
the Indian Muslims to come out and convince the Iranian
leadership to cancel the death sentence.236 So, far,
I
have not seen this little gesture from any influence to
stop the oppression of the non-Muslims in Pakistan,
Bangla Desh and Kashmir.
The gentle scenario for the future is that Muslim leaders
accept the value of tolerance and pluralism, and that
they continue for some time to swear by the Quran even
while effectively repudiating its intrinsic intolerance.
Since crores of people have a sentimental attachment to
the forms and names of Islam, the body of Islam will be
kept alive for some more time, even while its spirit is
giving way to the rational humanist spirit. The Hindu
solution for Islam is not a dramatic mass-conversion, but
a change in the spirit even while leaving the outer from
intact. Allow the Muslims a stage of upholding the Quran
rhetoric but claiming that it means something else that
what it says. After that stage, the empty husk of Islam,
with its Jihad phraseology and prophetic pretense, will
be dropped easily.
This is the approach which Mahatma Gandhi tried:
respecting the Scriptural and organizational body of
Islam, and trying to influence and charge its spirit.
The Mahatma's failure should be studied, together with
the success of the humanists in Europe who managed to
create an intellectual climate in which Christians
started outgrowing their exclusivism and self-
righteousness (and mostly also Christianity itself). One
conspicuous difference is that the Mahatma never
criticized Islam, while the European humanists did
criticize the evils of Christianity. In order to
encourage the monotheists to discover the value of
pluralism and tolerance, it is necessary to make a clear
diagnosis of their exclusivism an intolerance, and to be
frank about it.
13.5 How to say it
Since we cannot be fooled by the humanist pretenses of
Muslim propagandists, we will henceforth be
straightforward about the following established facts
concerning Islam. Islam is an ideology based on an
unreasonable claim to the possession of a unquiet and
final revelation from the Creator of this universe.
Islam makes a dangerous division in humanity between
believers and unbelievers, and builds an absurd theology
around it: for the superficial act of declaring or not
declaring belief in Mohammed's presence at prophethood,
the one half will enjoy eternal lust in heaven, while the
other will suffer eternal damnation in hell. Islam
preaches and practices the systematic oppression and
persecution of the non-Muslims. Because of its belief
that the Quran, the historically contingent product of
Mohammed's own limited mind, is God's eternal and final
revelation, Islam prevents itself from adapting to new
developments. It is bound to become backward, and it
loses itself in outward details that do not have an
authentic stamp of eternity at all.
All right, we reject Islam. And we can say to the Hindus
that there is no reason at all to feel that Islam is
somehow superior to Hinduism. On the contrary, Islam is
a very defective ideology, very crude and superficial.
It is also anti-humanist, since it makes the absolute
distinction in mankind between Muslims and non-Muslims,
who have a totally different status both in this world
and in the next. Now, in this age, you cannot say those
things to one group without another group also knowing
about it, if at all you would want to proceed that
secretively. How to say these things, knowing that
Muslims are listening too?
For all his tactical mistakes, Mahatma Gandhi essentially
had a powerful vision, centered on two concepts: satya
(truth) and ahimsa (non-violence). We have to say the
truth about Islam, but in a non-violent way. We have to
combine truthfulness about Islam with non-violence and
even non-hurtfulness towards the Muslims.
Being sensitive means: taking into account the way the
other person will perceive things. So, let us imagine
the situation of the Muslim regarding this discussion.
Suppose you have believed that Mohammed was God's unique
and final spokesman, and that his life is to be emulated
in every way. And then you get to here people say, with
an air of competence, that these revelations were only in
Mohammed's head, that no sane person hears voices the way
Mohammed did, that these revelations were very much
centered around Mohammed's life situation and there is
nothing universal and eternal (i.e. worthy of the eternal
Creator) about them. In other words: all you have
believed in, is a big mistake. Does that not cause a big
crisis?
It depends on whether you believe the skeptics or not.
If you don't believe them, you may get angry with them.
You may even issue a fatwa condemning them to death. But
this anger will partly be determined by the presentation
of the skeptical viewpoint. If someone express his
viewpoint in a personal conversation, and also patiently
listens to your objections, if will be easier to tolerate
than if someone speaks scornfully about your beliefs or
mocks them in public.
If you are inclined to believe the skeptical viewpoint,
you get into an inner rethinking of all the things that
are somehow linked with the belief system. But once you
get through that, it is a liberating experience. I have
seen so many people of my generation, as well as some
older people, go through this process of outgrowing
Christianity. It is a very interesting experience. You
just wouldn't want to have missed it.
This large-scale process of people outgrowing the
Christian belief system has seldom been the result of
anti-Christian campaign. It has gone gradually, with
people developing doubts and sharing these with friends,
or with coming across books that opened up a different
view on the life of the life of the soul. Where anti-
religion campaigns in the Soviet block have failed, this
gradually spreading of the spirit of free inquiry has
severely undermined the hold of Christianity on the
European mind.
This is the way the hold of unwholesome Islamic doctrines
over people's minds will have to be tackled. It is
useless to propagandistically beat it out of them, it is
even counterproductive. Look where Islam really lost it
grip. Earlier in this century, people in countries like
Iran and Egypt came under the influence of modernity, and
gradually dropped Islamic ways and beliefs. They also
rediscovered their glorious pre-Islamic past. This
effect was stronger in proportion to the degree of
education. There was no pressure on them to leave Islam,
they themselves discovered that there are other things to
life. Of course, we know that the process has been
reversed in the seventies and eighties. But that is only
temporary, because the relevant cultural factors at work
in the earlier part of the century, are still there, and
growing stronger.
As people are mentally or formally leaving a religion,
you see the religion also opening up and listening to its
critics. As people criticized Roman Catholicism, the
Church itself changed : it dropped the Inquisition, the
Index, the forced conversions, the intolerance of non-
Church-members in Catholic institutions. It recognized
the values of humanism, and corrected its social
philosophy accordingly. In other words: the Church had
ideologically been put on the defensive, and therefore it
gave up its self-righteousness.
Similarly, Islam has to be put ideologically on the
defensive. One should not go from door to door telling
an unwilling Muslim audience what you think of their
Prophet. Let the Muslims discover for themselves what
the rational and scholarly views on the Prophet and the
Islamic doctrines are. Those who are interested, will
certainly find out what is being said in the public
arena, and within non-Muslim communities, there Islam
should definitely be put on the defensive.
Imagine the day when the fanatic leaders in the Muslim
community notice:"On, people have found out that the
Prophet taught something else than brotherhood. They
know that the wars on the infidels have not been waged
'in spite of the Prophet's teaching of tolerance' but
rather in fulfillment of the Prophet's injunctions. They
have realized that the infidel society was not that much
worse than Islamic society, and in many respects actually
better." That day they are bound to lose some of their
self-righteousness. When a thief realizes people are
aware of his thieving designs, he will think twice before
starting again. Today these Muslim fanatics bask in all
the praises heaped on Islam, and enjoy all the self-
criticism among the Hindus: all this merely vindicates
their sense of divine mission.
The day when Muslims join the humanist culture and freely
express their uninterestedness in the claims of the
prophet, and get supported by society at large, the
fanatics will start doubting their case.
At the human level, I am aware that at first it may be
very painful for those people who have really devoted
their lives to Islam, to find out about its not so divine
and not so superior nature. I really feel for them.
Giving up one's beliefs is harder in proportion to the
part of one's life that one has invested in them.
A Jesuit who, later in life, during his Bible research,
started seeing that the Bible is really just a human
creation, and that there is little God-given and eternal
about the Christian teachings, morals and institutions,
wrote in the epilogue to one of his scholarly books
:"This has been a very painful process for me. Finding
out that one has wasted one's life on absurd
beliefs..."237 Not that he regretted having
come to this
insight : the painful thing was that it had happened so
late in life, that he had already missed so much because
of the narrow Christian theological window through which
he had experienced life so far. So, I can imagine that
realizing the unfoundedness of one's fond belief in
belonging to a superior part of humanity, chosen for rule
in this world and eternal lust in the next, may create a
bitter feeling. Not bitterness against those who helped
you to wake up from your fond illusions (if anything,
jealousy because they were free from this particular
illusion before you), but a kind of bitterness against
your own earlier gullibility.
We may conclude that in exposing the falsehood and the
inglorious record of Islam, we have to proceed in a
dispassionate way, free of triumphalism, as gently as
humanly possible.
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