Symposium: A New Koran?
20 Apr, 2008
From FrontPage Magazine on April 18, 2008.
The organization Muslims Against Sharia is creating a new Koran with
the violent verses removed. How legitimate
and wise is this action? There is an effort in Turkey, for instance,
to also revise Islamic texts. What real hope can these acts offer to
bring Islam into the modern and democratic world? To discuss this
issue with us today, Frontpage Symposium has assembled a
distinguished panel. Our guests are:
Khalim Massoud, the president of Muslims Against Sharia,
an Islamic reform movement.
Edip Yuksel, a Kurdish-Turkish-American author and
progressive activist who spent four years in Turkish prisons in the
1980's for his political writings and activities promoting an
Islamic revolution in Turkey. He experienced a paradigm change in
1986 transforming him from a Sunni Muslim leader to a reformed
Muslim or rational monotheist.
Thomas Haidon, a Muslim commentator on human rights,
counter-terrorism and Islamic affairs. He is active in the Qur'anist
movement and works with a number of Islamic reform organisations as
an advisor. He has provided guidance to several governments on
counter-terrorism issues and his works have been published in legal
periodicals, and other media. Mr. Haidon has also provided advice to
and worked for United Nations agencies in Sudan and Indonesia.
Abul Kasem, an ex-Muslim who is the author of hundreds of
articles and several books on Islam including, Women in Islam. He
was a contributor to the book Leaving Islam – Apostates Speak Out as
well as to Beyond Jihad: Critical Views From Inside Islam.
Robert Spencer, a scholar of Islamic history, theology,
and law and the director of Jihad Watch. He is the author of seven
books, eight monographs, and hundreds of articles about jihad and
Islamic terrorism, including the New York Times Bestsellers The
Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam (and the Crusades) and The
Truth About Muhammad. His latest book is Religion of Peace?
and
Bill Warner, the director of the Center for the Study of
Political Islam (CSPI) and spokesman for politicalislam.com. CSPI's
goal is to teach the doctrine of political Islam through its books
and it has produced an eleven book series on political Islam. Mr.
Warner did not write the CSPI series, but he acts as the agent for a
group of scholars who are the authors. The Center's latest book is
The Submission of Women and Slaves, Islamic Duality.
FP: Khalim Massoud, Abul Kasem, Edip Yuksel, Thomas Haidon,
Bill Warner and Robert Spencer, welcome to Frontpage Symposium.
Khalim Massoud, let’s begin with you.
Your group Muslims Against Sharia is creating a new Koran with
the violent verses removed. Tell us about this effort and what you
hope to achieve and how realistic you think it is.
Massoud: Thank you Jamie.
We don't look at it as a new Koran, but rather a reversion to the
original. We base it on three premises:
* God is infallible
* God is the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate
* The Koran contains contradictory verses
We believe that unless you are a fundamentalist Muslim, a pagan or an atheist (and there is nothing wrong with being a pagan or an atheist), you would agree with all three premises.
If two verses in the Koran contradict each other, then at least one of them could not have possibly come from God because it would contradict the doctrine of God's infallibility. And because God is the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate, the peaceful verse could come from God and the violent could not.
If you are a Muslim and you follow our logic, you would agree with us. So what we are trying to achieve is to educate Muslims that the doctrine of Islamic supremacy is not divine, but rather a perversion put in the Koran by nefarious people to fit their agendas. Once we get rid of Islamic superiority doctrine, which is the cornerstone of all evil in Islam, Islam once again could become peaceful, loving, enlightened religion as we believe God has intended.
As to how realistic it is, it really depends on how many Muslims
we can reach and on the position, which will be taken by
non-Muslims. Unfortunately Western governments and media chose to
embrace Western Muslim establishment, which overwhelmingly comprised
of Islamists masquerading as moderates, thereby ignoring true
moderates by default. It is beyond me why most of the Westerners
ignore Islamists' terrorist ties and believe their words that
clearly contradict their actions. The latest example of this madness
is URJ-ISNA alliance. If this is the direction the West is heading,
no matter what we do will fail.
FP: Sorry, with all due respect, I am a bit confused about
the business of humans moulding God into their own image. Who says
that contradictory messages can’t come from God? Who says that
peaceful verses have to come form God and not the violent ones? What
human is the arbiter of these things? What’s the process here? You
leaf through the Koran and on your own whim say: “No God could have
possibly said that, so I’ll just strike that out.” etc.?
And if God is only peaceful in your view, and therefore incapable
of making violent commands, then how do you explain the life of
Muhammad? Are you going to strike the proven facts of Muhammad’s
life out of the historical record like you are doing with the verses
of the Koran?
I ask the panel, and our readers, to look at the historical
records outlined by Bill Warner and Abul Kasem about Muhammad’s
life. I would like you, Mr. Massoud, and then the rest of the panel,
to explain how this fits with reversing the Koran to its “original”
-- or to the reality of a peaceful Allah. If the Koran was intended
to be peaceful from the very beginning, then how do we explain these
aspects of Muhammad’s life?
Massoud: Contradictory messages cannot come from God (the God, not a God), because God is infallible. If we assume that God is fallible, then he ceases to be a Supreme Being.
We believe that God is a loving God, that's why we believe that only peaceful verses can come from him. Jihadis believe that violent verses come from him. That's the difference between us and Jihadis. We love our God and they are terrified of theirs.
In regards to proven historical facts about Prophet Muhammad's
life, let's consider this. We all know, or at least we think we do,
that Muhammad was illiterate, therefore he did not write anything
himself. The Koran, the Sira, and the Ahadith were written by
people, most of whom weren't even Muhammad's contemporaries. So we
are talking about oral tradition that went from one person to
another for dozens, and in some cases hundreds of years before it
was actually put in writing. Then, there was more than a millennium
for those writings to be changed.
Now, let's consider the events of September 11, the most documented event in the history of humanity. Just several years after the events, it is quite easy to find many different "historical" versions of what "really" happened, including some versions that are diametrically opposed to each other. So the statement like "proven historical facts" is at the very least a stretch. Having said that, I would like to emphasize that we believe that Muhammad was God's messenger, which does not make him a perfect human being. It is quite possible that he did all the things that he is accused of. We also need to consider that norms of today's society are very different from the norms of many centuries ago. Slavery, polygamy, pedophilia, gender discrimination, etc., are not unique to the Seventh century Arabia. We can find all of that in the religious texts preceding the Koran.
FP: I don’t know, perhaps maybe I am missing something
here, but I don’t understand how people can arrogate the authority
to themselves to explain who God is, what he is and how he behaves
and how he thinks. Contradictory messages cannot come from God?
Really? Who decides this exactly? What happens if they can and they
do? What happens if our minds are so tiny that we interpret
something to be a contradiction which in God’s grand design is not a
contradiction at all?
In terms of Muhammad, I don’t get it either: so now Islam’s
prophet may have very well engaged in slavery, polygamy, pedophilia,
gender discrimination, murder, rape etc., as the historical record
suggests he did (click here and click here), but it’s ok because
such acts were not in conflict with the norms back then? So there’s
not a timeless and universal morality? I thought the idea was that
God disapproves of that kind of behavior because he is peaceful and
just and incapable of contradiction? Therefore his prophet wouldn’t
engage in those acts right? Or is there some kind of thinking that
since the prophet is a messenger and not a perfect human being, it
is ok that he engaged in all of those acts? Or, as it appears to be
also implied by you Mr. Massoud, since it all happened so long ago,
and we can’t really trust any accounts about anything, we can just
attribute to Muhammad any and every quality we simply wish him to
have?
In any case, Thomas Haidon go ahead.
Haidon: Thank you for inviting me to partake in this
discussion Jamie.
At the outset, I will categorically state that I find Mr.
Massoud's approach to "Islamic reform" to be ludicrous. While I
accept that he may be a progressive/or moderate Muslim, I find his
thesis, which lacks any clear rationale or methodology, to be
disingenuous. If Mr. Massoud were basing his arguments in a similar
fashion to the late reformer Mohammed Taha, who argued from a
historical and theological perspective that the Meccan verses of the
Qur'an should effectively be removed, I would be more attentive. Not
only has Mr. Massoud failed to provide any intellectually persuasive
arguments (so far) in this symposium, he has failed miserably to do
so on his own website, which sets out his organisation's ideas and
mission statement. Ideas that are bereft of any substance are
meaningless, and potentially harmful. We must support our arguments
with ideas, and not merely emotions.
Mr. Massoud correctly points out the dangers of Islamists
masquerading as moderates. I would further state that Muslims who
make incomplete and incompetent arguments for reform also do harm,
particularly when non-Muslims are lulled into a false sense of
security and hope. "True moderates" (the term that Mr. Massoud uses)
must not only talk about Islam's problems, but must develop
responses that are rooted in Islam, and have some probability of
success.
While I am supportive of attempts to modernise and contextualise
the hermeneutics of the Qur'an, I am opposed to the removal of parts
of the Qur'an. In other words, I am supportive of a new
understanding of the Qur'an, not a new Qur'an itself. There is no
debate among Muslims that the Qur'an is the "Criterion", and
represents the culmination of Allah's revelations to Muhammad. The
Qur'an, on a number of occasions, affirms its primacy and
completeness (Qur'an, 6:114-116, 16:89 39:23, et al.). To argue
therefore, that parts of the Qur'an should simply be removed is
fatally flawed. Mr. Massoud offers no insight into how he would
address this core issue. This is the primary doctrinal obstacle, and
there are others as well. From a practical perspective, I think it
is relatively clear that Muslims will never accept, on any level,
removal of parts of the Qur'an. There is virtually no internal
debate or discourse on the whether the Qur'an is complete or
"perfect".
I am conscious that this symposium, given the topic, could shift
to a discussion on the fundamental question of Islamic reform, or
whether there is any capacity for this to happen within Islam. I
suspect we will find little consensus between the Muslims and
non-Muslim panelists. However, in response to Mr. Massoud's
ill-conceived approach I will say that the key to reforming Islam is
not abandoning the Qur'an, but returning to a modern, contextual
understanding of it, and rejecting man made traditions that are a
primary source for what Islam has become.
Mr. Massoud apparently assumes that the Qur'an is only capable of
being interpreted as ulaema have traditionally interpreted it. Mr.
Massoud uncritically accepts the concept of abrogation in the
Qur'an, and the historical record of Muhammad. I find this
perplexing. My colleague on this panel, Edip Yuksel, has authored
(along with other scholars) a modern, contextual interpretation and
translation of the Qur'an which seeks to confront the very verses
that Mr. Massoud wishes to toss out. I will leave it to Mr. Yuksel
to further address the fallacy of Mr. Massoud's approach from this
perspective.
In summary, Mr. Massoud's "Islamic reform movement" is not a
movement at all. Mr. Massoud's thesis is intellectually bankrupt and
lacks any methodology or substance, and has no prospects of being
accepted on any scale among Muslims. I suspect that Mr. Spencer and
Abul Kasem will agree with me, albeit for contrasting reasons.
The public debate on Islam and its role in terrorism, human
rights abuses and oppression, suffers significantly from political
correctness, disinformation and obfuscation. We need to strip down
this discourse to its bare bones and ugliness, in order to move
forward. Genuine reformers have an obligation to contribute to this
through open discussion, and practical solutions. We cannot distil
and whitewash the Islamic record, we must confront it, especially
the unattractive elements. Genuine reformers also need to contribute
to this debate by not raising expectations. Wide-scale reform
unfortunately aspirational, and while yes, there is some good work
being done, we have not scratched the surface.
FP: Bill Warner?
Warner: Thank you Jamie for this opportunity to discuss the
reform of Islam.
First, let me establish the basis for my logic with regards to
Islam. To Mr. Massoud, I say: I have no interest in whether there is
no god, one god or a million gods. I also have no interest in
whether the texts of Islam—Koran, Sira and Hadith (the Islamic
Trilogy)—are accurate or false. For over a billion Muslims, the
Trilogy is the basis of the doctrine of their life, politics and
civilization. They believe the Trilogy to be true and live their
lives by it.
The Koran, the Sira and the Hadith are of one cloth. They form an
integrated and complete ideology. The logical perfection of the
Trilogy is the reason that it has lasted so long.
The other basis for my logic is that the reform be comprehensive
and logical. We must have principles, not beautiful opinions.
One of those opinions was stated by Mr. Massoud, "God is a loving
God." I don't know anything about Allah, but I do know what the
Koran says. While there are over 300 references in the Koran to
Allah and fear, there are 49 references to love. Of these love
references, 39 are negative such as the 14 negative references to
love of money, power, other gods and status.
Three verses command humanity to love Allah and 2 verses are
about how Allah loves a believer. There are 25 verses about how
Allah does not love kafirs.
This leaves 5 verses about love. Of these 5, 3 are about loving
kin or a Muslim brother. One verse commands a Muslim to give for the
love of Allah. This leaves only one quasi-universal verse about
love: give what you love to charity and even this is contaminated by
dualism since Muslim charity only goes to other Muslims.
So much for love. Fear is what Allah demands.
Mr. Haidon says, "…we need to strip this discourse down to its
bare bones and ugliness." I agree and the ugliest parts of Islam are
the concepts of the kafir, political submission and duality.
My only concern is how Islam treats me and my people, the kafirs.
How Islam views and deals with the kafir is political Islam. The
Trilogy determines the political doctrine and practice of relating
to the kafir. The Koran says that the kafir may be murdered,
tortured, plotted against, enslaved, robbed, insulted, beheaded,
demeaned, mocked and so forth. The Hadith and Sira agree. That's
ugly.
The Trilogy establishes the fundamental principles of
Islam—political submission and duality--the basis of dualistic
ethics. The Trilogy advances one set of ethics for the Muslims and
another for the kafirs. A Muslim is not to lie to another Muslim; a
Muslim may lie to a kafir, or not. A Muslim is not to kill another
Muslim; a Muslim may kill a kafir, or not. And so forth.
The word "kafir" is pure dualism.
The Trilogy also establishes a dualistic logic. The early
(Meccan) Koran and the later (Medinan) Koran frequently contradict
each other, but since they are both the words of Allah, both sides
of the contradiction are true. It is just that the later Koran is
better and can "abrogate" the earlier Koran. Western logic says that
if two things contradict, then one of them is false—a unitary logic.
Dualism is the heart of the Trilogy's logic.
Dualism explains the two types of Muslims and which one is the
"real" Muslim. The "nice" Muslim and the Taliban-type Muslim both
follow a dualistic Koran and are both "real" Muslims. Dualism gives
the "nice" Muslim plausible deniability. They can say that those
jihadists are not "real" Muslims.
There can be an infinite number of reforms, but the only reform
that matters to the kafir is ethical reform. That removes the
principles of political submission and duality. There is a very easy
way to see the problem and its solution. Go back to how the Koran
defines the kafir and what can be done to them. No one wants to be
insulted, raped, robbed, killed, threatened or tortured. No one
wants to be treated badly. No one wants to be rejected as the
"other", the kafir.
I propose a rational reform based upon how to treat the
"other"--the Golden Rule: treat others as you wish to be treated.
The Golden Rule is centered on ethics, not god, and is universal
to all cultures, except Islam. Indeed, the whole Islamic Trilogy
denies the truth of the Golden Rule. Therefore, the Golden Rule
reform has to be applied to the Koran, Sira and Hadith. Only then
will the reform be comprehensive. Mr. Haidon says, "Muslims will
never accept, on any level, removal of parts of the Koran." To just
reform the Sira and the Hadith is petty change. I want ALL of the
ugliness towards the kafir removed. That means that the Koran must
also be subject to analysis.
The Golden Rule removes the brutality, insults and prejudice
directed at the kafir. The constant attacks would disappear. The
Rule is very simple and logical to apply to the texts.
What is amazing is how much the Golden Rule removes from the
Trilogy. About 61% of the Koran vanishes, 75% of the Sira and 20% of
the Hadith also go away. As I said, I only care about Islam treats
the kafir, but the Golden Rule also removes all of the dualistic
rules about women. So the reductions will be even greater when the
material about the treatment of women is removed.
The Golden Rule even changes Hell. Islamic Hell is primarily
political. Hell is mentioned 146 times in the Koran. Only 9
references are for moral failings—greed, lack of charity, love of
worldly success. The other 137 references to Hell involve eternal
torture for not agreeing that Mohammed is right. That is a political
charge, not a morals failure. Thus 94% of the references to Hell are
as a political prison for dissenters. The Golden Rule would empty
Islam's political prison.
The Golden Rule annihilates the cruelty of dualistic ethics.
Golden Rule Islam would be a reformed Islam that the kafirs would
not fear and dread. We are tired of living in fear of political
Islam. We have suffered enough and would welcome an Islam that did
not argue, demand, pressure, dhimmize, threaten, deceive and destroy
kafirs and their civilization.
However, all of Islam's success has been based upon political
submission and dualism. Mohammed preached the religion of Islam for
13 years in Mecca and converted 150 Arabs to Islam. When he went to
Medina he became a politician and a warrior. In the last 9 years of
his life he conquered all of Arabia. In those 9 years Mohammed was
involved with a violent event on the average of every 7 weeks. The
violence destroyed the native Arab culture of tolerance. Political
submission and duality triumphed.
But even if this symposium group could change the ideology of
political Islam by integrating the Golden Rule, who would follow
Golden Rule Islam? Islam is like the Internet; it has no central
ruling body. Islam is a distributed network with the Trilogy as the
operating system. An upgrade is not possible. But if Muslims want to
show me to be wrong, the only reform worth anything to a kafir is an
ethical reform based upon the Golden Rule.
[A technical note: I use Ishaq for the Sira and Bukhari for the
Hadith. Ibn Sa'd, al Tabari, Muslim and Dawud add little additional
information. The percentages stated above are not based upon verses.
Analyzing the Koran only by verses amounts to analysis by sentences.
Who would analyze Plato or Kant by sentences? We want to measure
ideas, topics and concepts; not just sentences. See the Epilogue in
A Simple Koran for details.]
FP: Mr. Yuksel?
Yuksel: This is an exciting symposium. Thank you for having me and get ready for a good fight. Mr. Warner is summarizing well the problem with the Trilogy of traditional Islam and yet at the same time he is indulging in intellectual acrobatics with jaw-opening contortions and distortions against the Quran. Meanwhile, the FP moderator is introducing the Sunni hearsay stories like the CNN news about current events, and he is promoting assumptions and false accusations like the Laws of Thermodynamics. A careful reader will notice that the entire symposium is designed to promote the "click-here and click-there" propaganda activities of a cabal. Let me first start with Mr. Massoud's claims and then respond to the claims of Mr. Walter and his tennis partner, Mr. Glazov, FP moderator.
I nominate Khalim Massoud, whoever he is and wherever he is, for the Ignoble Prize for his theologically inconsistent, logically Swiss-cheese, practically useless, objectively insincere, substantially oldie-moldy, academically elementary, mathematically innumerate, Quranically unacceptable, and politically neo-conning project. I also acknowledge that it has some merits as Thomas Haidon indicated: it is entertaining and ludicrous.
Now let me support each of my characterizations:
It is THEOLOGICALLY INCONSISTENT, since it does not address many important theological and philosophical problems, such as Socrates' question, "Is it good because God says so, or God says so therefore it is good?" Sure, it could be both. But Mr. Massoud is even unaware of the existence of such an important question. If the Quran is the word of God, then whom am I to "correct" or "censor" his words? Massoud thinks he has an answer for that. Whichever he dislikes, or whichever does not agree with his current culture, or whichever does not please the FrontPage, or whichever he cannot comprehend, it cannot be from God. That is so simple. Just give him a pair of scissors and he will reform the Muslim world. Archimedes needed a fulcrum to move the world; our friend just needs a pair of scissors. A sharp scissoring reform. In other words, he devolves God to his level or evolves himself to become a god. He has nothing to learn from God; to the contrary, he wishes to teach to God.
If Massoud lived in medieval times, and had a scissors in his hand, he would end up with a very different Quran that he envisions now. He would cut off verse 21:30 and 51:47 since it did not make any sense: how could the space and earth be one single body and then explode and expand? He would perhaps have problem with a round earth since he would never feel upside down wherever he traveled; so to bestow some reason and common sense to his Wise God he would cut off verses 10:24; 39:5; and 55:33. He would find the idea of egg-shaped earth ridiculous, so, he either would toss out the egg in the verse 79:30 (indeed, his contemporaries with no scissors would try to interpret the egg as a metaphor for a flat nest). He would find verses suggesting an evolutionary method of creation to be unfit to the wisdom of his Omnipotent God and would save his Quran from 7:69; 15:28-29; 24:45; 32:7-9; and 71:14-17. He would find equality of man and women bizarre and unfit to a Just God, so he would slash 3:195; 4:124; 9:71; 16:97; 33:34; 49:13; 60:12, and many other verses. He would have problem with too much freedom of expression of "evil ideas" and would like to save his Almighty God from allowing the expression of blasphemous ideas, so he would discard 2:226; 18:29; 10:99; and 88:21-22. He would find the verses promoting peace unrealistic and would chop 60:8-9; 8:60 and many others. Verses abolishing slavery (3:79; 4:3,25,92; 5:89; 8:67; 24:32-33; 58:3-4; 90:13; 2:286; 12:39-42; 79:24), verses promoting public elections and consultations (42:38; 5:12; 4:58; 58:11), verses condemning profiteering from religion and rejecting clergymen and religious intermediaries (2:48; 9:31; 9:34; 2:41,79,174; 5:44; 9:9) and hundreds of other verses promoting progressive ideas would get eliminated by Mr. Massoud.
It is LOGICALLY SWISS-CHEESE. I do not mean offence to Swiss cheese since I enjoy, but this Quran-with-a-Scissors package has too many holes in it. Mr. Massoud appears to be engaging in a logical activity. Since I teach logic and philosophy classes at college, I cannot ignore it. He asserts three premises to reach his conclusion:
(1) God is infallible
(2) God is the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate
(3) The Koran contains contradictory verses
Thus, WE need to conduct a surgery on the Koran!
What about questioning the third premise? What about modifying it
this way?:
(3) It appears to me that the Koran contains contradictory verses.
Thus, I need to improve my knowledge and comprehension skills in
studying the Quran, OR I need to ask those real reformists who do
not distort the message of the Quran through hearsay stories. AND,
IF I still see contradictions in the Quran, then I need to conduct a
surgery on my Koran.
It is PRACTICALLY USELESS, since if we can subject our holy book
to such a personal cut-and-discard operation, we would not need to
have a leader like Massoud. In fact, any person can grab a marker
and cross out the verses they do not like. Even if I lost my mind
for a moment and followed the suggestion of Massoud, I would never
purchase his version of the Quran, since I am not his clone. So, all
what Massoud is telling people is this: "cross out the verses you
think that are contradictory!" So, why anyone should follow a
version published by Massoud or any other person? If I were going to
write a blurb for the book, it would be the following: "This is an
infidel-friendly, neoconized lite-version of the holy book with zero
cholesterol. Yet, it contains plenty of
turn-your-left-cheek-and-behind attitudes against imperialistic
invasions and aggression. Three thumbs up Massoud & Co!"
It is OBJECTIVELY INSINCERE, since Massoud should know that no
teacher would ask students to tear the pages of a text book if they
thought it contains wrong or contradictory ideas. No text book would
survive such a collective task of weight-reduction! And no author
would like to see a reader like Massoud mobilizing others to cut the
statements, paragraphs and pages off his book and republish it in
his or her name! If Massoud really believes that there is an
original Quran hidden inside the circulated Quran, he cannot be
sincerely hoping to discover it by the votes of a particular group
of unidentified people in a particular time. So, either he does not
really believe the divinity of the Quran, or he has no clue about
what he is saying.
It is SUBSTANTIALLY oldie-moldy, since already skeptics have done
a great job in annotating the Quran, and indicating the "perceived"
contradictions. Though I disagree with their (mis)understanding, but
I find their work thought-provoking and very useful. Skeptics
provide their critical arguments. All what Massoud suggests is to
delete those arguments together with the verses they address! And
for this ingenious idea he is now participating in a symposium
organized by FP!
It is ACADEMICALLY ELEMENTARY, since it does not provide a
methodology to accomplish the task. Since the Quran is an
interconnected book, where each verse is etymologically and
semantically connected to many other verses, any modification will
cause the need for another series of modification. The number of
combinations is enormous and so is the potential chain reaction and
unintended consequences. I could give dozens of examples but I have
limited room here.
It is MATHEMATICALLY INNUMERATE, since the Quran is not only a
literary prose, but it is also a numerically structured book
(83:7-21), it is the most interesting book in the world. For
instance, 29 chapters of the Quran start with combination of numbers
and letters, such as A1L30M40, or K20H5Y10A70S90, or Q50. For
instance, the frequency of the word ShaHR (Month) in singular form
is exactly 12, the frequency of the word YaWM (Day) is exactly 365,
and there are many more interesting nu-semantic examples. For
instance, the numerical structure of the Quran based on the number
19 is so extensive that it involves every element of the Quran, the
count and order of letters, words, sentences, verses, and chapters.
They fill volumes of books. (You may find a good summary of the Code
19 in the Appendix of the Quran: a Reformist Translation). Thus, Mr.
Massoud's project is aimed to destroy such an incredible structure
that bears witness to the divine nature of the Quran.
It is QURANICALLY UNACCEPTABLE, since numerous Quranic verses
reject the very same attempt. Here is a sample:
15:90 As We have sent down on the dividers.
15:91 The ones who have taken the Quran apart.
15:92 By your Lord, We will ask them all.
15:93 Regarding what they used to do.
15:94 So proclaim what you have been commanded and turn away from those who set up partners.
15:95 We will relieve you from the mockers.
15:96 Those who sat up with God another god; they will come to know.
15:97 We know that your chest is strained by what they say.
15:98 So glorify with the praise of your Lord, and be of those who prostrate.
15:99 Serve your Lord until certainty comes to you.
Most likely Massoud would chop these verses too, by an additional
maxim: "Delete all the verses that rejects our deleting activities!"
Ironically, Massoud is not suggesting something new. Sunnis and
Shiites already disregard many verses of the Quran: they do not hear
nor understand them. Furthermore, their sectarian teachings contain
a rule called "abrogation" thereby they reject the decree of the
many verses of the Quran, while at the same time they declare their
belief in every letter of the Quran. I have discussed this issue in
detail in the endnotes of the QRT.
And it is POLITICALLY NEO-CONNING, since it serves the policy of
Neocon-led coalition of warmongers. I do not know whether Massoud is
a hired petty officer for this agenda or just a naive person, but,
it is clear that his project will only irritate and provoke Muslims
who are frustrated and traumatized under cruel military invasions
and occupations (such as Palestine, Iraq, Afghanistan, and
Chechnya), or suffering under USA-supported oppressive regimes (such
as Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan). When a few angry and pathetic
Muslims engage in some stupid and violent action, the Western media
will salivate and rush to focus their cameras on the ugly faces of
"barbarians", while the American capitalists will continue their
racket by transferring billions and billions of our tax money to the
accounts of war industry and its sub contractors.
IN SUMMARY, I am astounded that FP is taking this ridiculous idea
serious. If we are going to take any idea published on the web
seriously, then we will be volunteering for an alien abduction
adventure. I feel like I am talking in a symposium organized by the
flat-earth society. Sir, do you also discuss cubic meteorites with
avocados in their center?
Since I do not have space for more words, I would like to say a
few words about the claims of FP moderator. His depiction of
Muhammad is based on unreliable hearsay stories, yet he craftily
sandwiches the "proven historical facts" into his complex question.
If he introduced those accusations as "according to Sunni or Shiite
story books written centuries after Muhammad" then it would be an
accurate depiction. I challenge the integrity of each of the story
books he is peddling as "historical fact." Where did he find those
"proven historical facts"? As for brother Massoud's response, well,
there is no surprise: he is receiving a "proven" false accusation
from the moderator and after putting a petty spin on it he passes it
back to him: intact!
As for brother Warner, he is perhaps doing statistics on Thalmud
or Old Testament. His claim is far from truth. The most repeated and
most highlighted Quranic verse that opens every chapter, except one,
is Bismi Allah al-Rahmani al-Rahim, which means "In the name of God,
Gracious, Compassionate." Let me give you the attributes of God most
frequently mentioned in the Quran (The following list does not
include the frequencies of the attributes in unnumbered 112 opening
statements mentioned above). The Quran contains about 114 attributes
for God. The most frequently used attributes of The God (Allah
repeated 2698 times) are:
Lord/Sustainer/Nourisher (Rabb): 970
All-Knowing (Alim): 153
Loving/Caring (Rahim): 114
God (Elah): 93
Wise (Hakim): 91
Forgiving (Ghafur): 91
Honorable (Aziz): 88
Gracious (Rahman): 57
Hearer (Sami): 45
Planner (Qadir): 45
Knower (Khabir): 44
Seer (Basir): 42
These most frequent attributes of God, which are used in
semantically relevant contexts, depict a very different Quran than
Warner wishes us to believe. Perhaps, the Quran, like beauty, is in
the eye of the beholder.
As for Warner's assertion about the Golden Rule removing 61% of
the Quran, I am glad to hear that. This shows that the Quran is a
book of reality, not a book of fairy tales. First, the so-called
Golden Rule is not a realistic rule and it is very rarely used,
usually among family members and close friends. In fact, experiments
show that the Golden Rule promotes immorality and crimes in real
life. In my ethic classes, I have repeated the experiments and
reached the same conclusion. I recommend Carl Sagan's article,
titled "The Rules of the Game," where Sagan quotes the verse of the
Quran, "If the enemy inclines toward peace, do you also incline
toward peace," concluding that the best rule is not the golden rule
but the golden-plated brazen rule, that is, retaliation with
occasional forgiveness, which is exactly what the Quran promotes
(See Quran 42:20; 17:33).
The irony is not in Warner's lack of knowledge; the irony is in the iron. Warner is aligning with those who promote and practice the Iron Rule (pre-emptive strike), and yet he bashes Muslims for not abiding by the Golden Rule. Perhaps this is the rule of double standard in generosity: iron for us, gold for you. No my dear: I cannot enjoy gold while you have the iron.
FP: Well Mr. Yuksel, you are astounded that I am taking a
"ridiculous idea serious" but nowhere did I say I am taking it
seriously. As a matter of fact, all my comments so far reveal that I
don't know how it could be taken seriously. But the idea needs to be
put on the table because it is one of the efforts being made right
now by a Muslim reformer and his organization to try to bring Islam
into the modern and democratic world – if that is at all possible.
And a discussion of an issue like this can bring a very important
dialogue to the table. I find it a bit strange that you affirm that
you are "astounded" that I am taking this "ridiculous idea"
seriously and yet you yourself have agreed to join a panel to
discuss it. Perhaps you see no point to your own contribution to
this symposium, even though you have spent quite a bit of energy and
time to offer it.
I also remain a bit confused as to how American "warmongers" are
behind taking violent verses out of the Quran. And I am yet still to
hear what you yourself think of the violent verses and the problem
that jihadists point to them as their inspiration.
Also, calling me and other people names is, unfortunately, no way
to delegitimize the aspects of Mohammad's life that people like
Warner, Kasem and Spencer have pointed to.
Abul Kasem, go ahead.
Kasem: I appreciate that Khalim Massoud understands there
are problems with the Koran.
Khalim Massoud writes that Allah is infallible. Then he writes
that the Koran contains contradictory verses. How is it possible for
an infallible God (Allah) to contradict Himself? Here Massoud is
playing the role of another God to correct Allah. Isn't this quite
bizarre that a human being, such as Massoud, has to correct Allah?
Massoud confounds us further when he says:
'If two verses in the Koran contradict each other, then at least
one of them could not have possibly come from God because it would
contradict the doctrine of God's infallibility. And because God is
the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate, the peaceful verse could
come from God and the violent could not.'
Who says Allah is always compassionate and merciful? He is
certainly not, as can be demonstrated from many other verses in the
Koran. Allah has peculiar temperament, to say the least. Under this
circumstance why must we accept that Allah only sends the merciful
verses? Who inserted those unkind, hateful, belligerent and barbaric
verses? Without identifying these people, Massoud calls them
nefarious. Why does he not identify these people? Could it that they
were Muhammad and his coterie of power hungry people who surrounded
him for a share of Islamic loot and plunder?
If we were to accept that the Koran is the absolute words of
Allah, then how could Allah allow such calumny as tampering with the
Koran?
Massoud says: If we assume that God is fallible, then he ceases
to be a Supreme Being.
I simply do not get it. The Koran says clearly that Allah is the
Supreme Being. Massoud further contradicts himself.
It appears that Massoud has accepted the truth that the Koran
contains the words of humans, such as Muhammad, and possibly others.
This completely breaks down Massoud's logic that the infallible
Koran is the authorship of Allah.
In this context, Thomas Haidon is correct when he says: From a
practical perspective, I think it is relatively clear that Muslims
will never accept, on any level, removal of parts of the Qur'an.
There is virtually no internal debate or discourse on whether the
Qur'an is complete or "perfect".
I agree that the vast majority of Muslims hold the Koran as the
incorruptible, unchangeable words of Allah, valid for eternity.
It is important to comprehend that Islam derives its mighty power
not only from the Koran but also from ahadith and sirah. How about
these important sources of Islam? Will Massoud edit these sources,
especially those blood-thirsty, barbaric, inane ahadith? Will
Massoud go ahead with the task of purgation of Muhammad's sirah to
remove the unsavory, cruel, and inhuman disposition of Muhammad?
One important point: if Massoud agrees that parts of the Koran
are human-created, why does he not abandon the Koran itself? Why he
wants to mess with the task of editing the Koran with his own hand
which, will cast him as an apostate and render him liable to severe
Islamic punitive measures?
It appears that Massoud has forgotten that the Koran says that
none can change the words of it (6:34, 6:115, 10:64, 18:27, 27:6).
Verse 10:15 clearly says even Muhammad could not change a single
word in the Koran. Thus, according to the Koran, Massoud's act will
be the greatest of all Islamic crimes. Massoud should not forget the
fate of Rashad Khalifa who attempted to do similar acts of revising
the Koran, but paid a heavy price. Zealot Islamists murdered him
while he prayed in his mosque. To day, Rashad Khalifa's minions are
known as 'Submitters' or the Qur'an-only Muslims. Needless to say,
most of them live in the western countries, for had they expressed
their views in an Islamic paradise they would be certainly killed
for tampering with the Koran.
Nevertheless, I appreciate the efforts of Massoud and Thomas
Haidon who sincerely want to reform Islam and bring it to conform to
the current civilized world. They are genuinely appalled at the
barbaric, cruel and inhuman aspects of Islam, largely emanating from
the application Koran and ahadith. Unfortunately, history of Islam
demonstrates that many such attempts in the past had been dismal
failures, and there is very little prospect that such current
attempts or future attempts will succeed. I might sound pessimistic,
but Islamic history uncannily confirms that playing with Koran and
ahadith is a dangerous game that is destined to failure.
I agree with Bill Warner when he says: The Koran, the Sira and
the Hadith are of one cloth. They form an integrated and complete
ideology.
This means if one edits the Koran he must also edit the other two
sources of Islam. Is Khalim Massoud willing to do this job? Will the
Muslims, by and large, will agree with Khalim Massoud's versions of
Sira and Hadith? I doubt they will.
What I disagree with Bill Warner is that, while he accepts that
the Koran is reformable, I do not. I have already stated my reason/s
why this is just not possible—the Koran completely forbids its
reformation, and whoever attempts to do so will be murdered,
Islamically.
There is only one choice left, to abandon the Koran, totally.
I find quite hilarious Edip Yuksel's discovery of numerical
miracles in the Koran. This is akin to Rashad Khalifa's discovery of
miracle of the number 19 in the Koran. I doubt if any mathematician
will agree with Edip Yuksel's discovery.
Yuksel chastises Bill Warner for exposing the Korans' inanities
and its stipulations to extirpate un-Islam by killing infidels, if
need be. Unfortunately, Yuksel cannot refute Warner's allegation
that the Koran commands Muslims to kill the Kafirs. Yuksel simply
avoids this important topic by alleging that Warner is resorting to
word gymnastics. It is interesting that Yuksel himself indulges in
the intellectual gymnastic just to avoid the truth: the Koran has
barbaric provisions for those who do not accept Islam.
It is sad to note that Yuksel has hurled vitriolic attack on both
Khalim Massoud and Bill Warner. Instead of refuting/and/or arguing
their cases in a dignified manner, Yuksel simply resorts to personal
attack and logical fallacies. He indulges in irrelevant topics,
America's foreign policies, Palestine issues and so on. This
demonstrates his attempt to 'flight' from the burning issues of
Islam and whether it is reformable.
We must appreciate that Massoud and Thomas Haidon have, at least,
have plans to reform Islam—no matter how much we might disagree with
their methods.
I find it very unbecoming of an Islamist scholar like Yuksel to
reprimand the FP editor for opening a dialogue session with people
of contrasting views.
Finally, here are a few suggestions, which, to my mind, will be
of help not only to Massoud and Haidon, but to the entire world.
We need to expose Islam, the truth about it, and nothing but the
truth. The world must pay heed to the fundamental messages of the
Koran which is to conquer (by sword) the entire world and enforce
sharia laws.
The infidel world must digest the fact that Islam wants to
obliterate un-Islam, replace the western/un-Islamic civilization
with Islamic/ Arabic civilization.
It is important that all infidel leaders must have a working
knowledge of the Koran and Islam, and understand the language of the
Islamists, which is anything but peaceful.
Spencer: Khalim Massoud is correct that the "Islamic superiority
doctrine" is "the cornerstone of all evil in Islam," or at least of
the evil that some Muslims perpetrate in the name of Allah against
unbelievers. Bill Warner is right: reform should eradicate Islamic
supremacism and the institutionalized mistreatment of women and
non-Muslims sanctioned by Islamic law. The rest is just window
dressing. But how that doctrine can be removed or reformed, and
whether or not it can be accomplished by a drastic re-editing of the
Qur'an, as proposed by Mr. Massoud, is another question.
Thomas Haidon is clearly right when he says that "from a
practical perspective, I think it is relatively clear that Muslims
will never accept, on any level, removal of parts of the Qur'an."
This is true regardless of whatever logical or theological merits
the plan may or may not have. Abul Kasem also raises an important
conceptual question for Mr. Massoud: "If we were to accept that the
Koran is the absolute words of Allah, then how could Allah allow
such calumny as tampering with the Koran?"
So how, then, can it be done, if it can be done at all? It is
noteworthy that Mr. Haidon says that he would be "more attentive" to
Mr. Massoud's arguments if they more closely resembled those of
Mahmoud Mohammed Taha, "who argued," says Mr. Haidon, "from a
historical and theological perspective that the Meccan verses of the
Qur'an should effectively be removed." Mr. Haidon clearly has in
mind the Medinan verses, which Taha actually targeted, not the
Meccan ones, but the main problem here is that for his views Taha
himself was executed by the Sudanese government in 1985. Abul Kasem
is correct that most of the Qur'an-only Submitters "live in the
western countries, for had they expressed their views in an Islamic
paradise they would be certainly killed for tampering with the
Koran." Nothing is more certain than that those who attempt reform
of Islamic doctrine in Muslim regions take their lives into their
hands. One notorious example is that of Suliman Bashear, who "argued
that Islam developed as a religion gradually rather than emerging
fully formed from the mouth of the Prophet." For this his Muslim
students in the University of Nablus in the West Bank threw him out
of a second-story window.
Western non-Muslim analysts need to have a steady and sober
awareness of these realities. Mr. Haidon is absolutely right that
"Muslims who make incomplete and incompetent arguments for reform
also do harm, particularly when non-Muslims are lulled into a false
sense of security and hope." But those suffering from that false
sense of security are legion. Numerous Western analysts,
policymakers, and even law enforcement officials are so anxious not
to appear "anti-Muslim" that they embrace any self-professed
reformer, and have been gulled many times. They should bear in mind
that Mr. Haidon is also correct when he says that "we cannot distil
and whitewash the Islamic record, we must confront it, especially
the unattractive elements," and that "genuine reformers have an
obligation to contribute to this through open discussion, and
practical solutions." But so far this has not been done, despite
many loud proclamations to the contrary from many quarters.
And as an example of a Muslim who, in Mr. Haidon's words, makes
"incomplete and incompetent arguments for reform," we have here with
us Mr. Yuksel, whose bluster and abuse of other Symposium
participants may be entertaining, but only exposes the bankruptcy of
his arguments. He accuses Jamie Glazov of relying on "unreliable
hearsay stories" for information about Muhammad, but fails to inform
us that the great majority of Muslims around the world rely on those
same "unreliable hearsay stories," and offers no program for
convincing those hundreds of millions of Muslims of the historical
weakness of these stories.
Mr. Yuksel's presentation likewise suffers from inaccuracies that
will it extremely unlikely that it will ever be accepted by large
numbers of Muslims. To take just one of many possible examples, he
asserts that in the Qur'an "the frequency of the word YaWM (Day) is
exactly 365." But another Muslim writer has noted that Yuksel only
arrived at this total by not counting many forms of the word,
including every time it appears as "that day" rather than "the day"
or "a day." When Mr. Yuksel's fellow Muslims so readily notice such
inaccuracies in his presentation, it's unlikely that many will
accept his program for reform.
Massoud: Mr. Glazov states, "the idea was that God disapproves of that kind of behavior because he is peaceful and just ... [t]herefore his prophet wouldn't engage in those acts."
Not necessarily. God gave people, including Prophet Muhammad, Free Will. I do not claim that evil deeds attributed to the Prophet are false. I am not justifying rape and murder as acceptable practices of medieval times. What I'm trying to do is to raise the possibility of the historical record being incorrect. We also need to consider things like polygamy in historical perspective. When the female/male ratio is roughly 1/1, polygamy is a clear form of gender discrimination. But when half of the men are killed in a war and the ratio becomes 2/1, polygamy becomes a practical solution. When life expectancy is 75, marrying a young teenager is clearly inappropriate, but what if the life expectancy is 20? All I'm saying is that the Prophet Muhammad should not be looked at from black-and-white perspectives. He was not the perfect human, but he was not pure evil either.
Mr. Haidon finds our approach disingenuous, ludicrous, and lacking any clear rationale or methodology. I believe that Mr. Haidon refuses to see what is right in front of him, i.e., the contradictions in the Koran. The question is: does Mr. Haidon believe that the Koran contains contradictions? If so, our rationale should be pretty clear, if not, how can you explain something to a person who refuses to accept reality?
Mr. Haidon is proposing a new understanding of the Koran. I find that approach disingenuous and ludicrous. Attempts to reinterpret verses like 2.191 or 9.5 are simply pathetic. It is nothing more than whitewashing of genocide.
"The Qur'an, on a number of occasions, affirms its primacy and completeness (Qur'an, 6:114-116, 16:89 39:23, et al.)."
Should I remind Mr. Haidon that the Koran also affirms Islamic supremacy on a number of occasions? If he thinks that "kill them [infidels] wherever you find them" (2.191) means something other than what it says, why "there is none who can change His words" (6.115) cannot mean something else? Or what if someone already disregarded 6.115 and added 2.191?
Mr. Haidon keeps referring to "modern, contextual understanding" of the Koran. How can one possibly interpret "slay the idolaters wherever you find them" (9.5) other than "you must kill the infidels whenever you can"? Or does Mr. Haidon's "modern, contextual understanding" refer to simply ignoring the violent verses? If so, I believe removing the verses rather than ignoring them is a more practical approach.
"Mr. Massoud apparently assumes that the Qur'an is only capable of being interpreted as ulaema have traditionally interpreted it."
Apparently. Every single non-Muslim layman that we discussed the Koran with interpreted the Koran exactly the same way, which leads us to believe that the problem is not with interpretation, but with the source.
Mr. Haidon states that our "thesis is intellectually bankrupt and lacks any methodology or substance, and has no prospects of being accepted on any scale among Muslims." Neither I, nor any other member of Muslims Against Sharia (which is a movement, even if Mr. Haidon does not consider it such) claim that our proposal to reform Islam is perfect. As a matter of fact, we believe that there are no good solutions to reform Islam; there are bad and worse. We believe that our solution is most practical, and therefore, the best. Or the least bad, if you want to call it that. There are three points of view: Islam is perfect, Islam needs to be eradicated, and Islam needs to be reformed. If you believe that Islam needs to be reformed and could offer a more effective solution than ours, we'll support you all the way.
Mr. Warner's argument is based on his belief that "The Koran, the Sira and the Hadith ... form an integrated and complete ideology." We believe that anything except for the Koran is pure hearsay. Some of the ahadith are so vile that if there is an argument for book burning they should be prime examples together with Mein Kampf. As many Westerners, Mr. Warner fails to separate Islam, the religion, from Islamism, the political ideology. In regards to the concept of dualism, it stems from the concept of Islamic supremacy. We believe that our proposal, however ludicrous Mr. Haidon might find it, is the only one on the table that completely eliminates the doctrine of Islamic supremacy, and with it, concepts of dualism, infidel, and every other concept that Westerners and moderate Muslims find objectionable.
Mr. Warner states, "I propose a rational reform based upon how to treat the "other"--the Golden Rule: treat others as you wish to be treated." This idea is practically identical to the paragraph in our manifesto (www.reformislam.org) titled "Equality."
I see no reason to address Mr. Yuksel's diatribe. Any Muslim who considers liberations of 50+ million Afghanis and Iraqis "cruel military invasions and occupations" by "Neocon-led coalition of warmongers" or believes that the Prophet or the Koran is above criticism is a radical. And I have zero interest in arguing with Islamic extremists. I wanted to address Mr. Yuksel's hypocrisy of participating in a "ridiculous" forum, but Mr. Glazov already did that.
Next, I will address Mr. Kasem's analysis. He writes: "Khalim Massoud writes that Allah is infallible. Then he writes that the Koran contains contradictory verses. How is it possible for an infallible God (Allah) to contradict Himself?"
It is impossible. That's why we believe that the contradictory parts of the Koran did not come from God.
"Who says Allah is always compassionate and merciful? He is certainly not, as can be demonstrated from many other verses in the Koran. Allah has peculiar temperament, to say the least."
Again, we believe the verses Mr. Kasem is referring to did not come from Allah.
"Who inserted those unkind, hateful, belligerent and barbaric verses? Without identifying these people, Massoud calls them nefarious. Why does he not identify these people?"
Anyone who was involved in a chain of custody of the Koran could have changed it. People who write new copies, people who kept the Koran in oral form, and maybe the Prophet himself. I wish I could give a more specific answer, but I cannot.
"How could Allah allow such calumny as tampering with the Koran?"
People have Free Will.
"Massoud says: If we assume that God is fallible, then he ceases to be a Supreme Being. I simply do not get it. The Koran says clearly that Allah is the Supreme Being. Massoud further contradicts himself."
Let me clarify it. God is infallible. If he were fallible, he wouldn't be God.
"It appears that Massoud has accepted the truth that the Koran contains the words of humans, such as Muhammad, and possibly others. This completely breaks down Massoud's logic that the infallible Koran is the authorship of Allah."
I never claimed that the Koran is infallible and that Allah is the sole author of the modern Koran.
"From a practical perspective, I think it is relatively clear that Muslims will never accept, on any level, removal of parts of the Qur'an."
Our poll contradicts that "practical perspective." Almost a quarter of Muslim responders either agrees with our plan or thinks that our reforms do not go far enough.
"There is virtually no internal debate or discourse on the whether the Qur'an is complete or "perfect"."
Isn't that the more reason to start one?
"I agree that the vast majority of Muslims hold the Koran as the incorruptible, unchangeable words of Allah valid for eternity."
And what of those Muslims who disagree with that? Should we just kill them off?
"Will Massoud edit these sources, especially those blood-thirsty, barbarous, inane ahadith?"
I believe I addressed this earlier.
"One important point: if Massoud agrees that parts of the Koran are human created, why does he not abandon the Koran itself?"
Because if we remove the human-created parts, we'll give the Koran back its divine nature.
"Verse 10:15 clearly says even Muhammad could not change a single word in the Koran."
We are not trying to change the Koran, we are trying to un-change it.
There is no reason to bring up fates of some Muslim reformers. We are quite aware of the dangers.
I agree that "history of Islam demonstrates that many such [reformist] attempts in the past had been dismal failures", but it does not mean that "there is very little prospect that such current attempts or future attempts will succeed." Past attempts to reform Islam were made inside Islamic world when reformers were greatly outnumbered. Now we have many non-Muslims on our side.
Mr. Haidon says (and Mr. Spencer agrees) that "from a practical perspective, I think it is relatively clear that Muslims will never accept, on any level, removal of parts of the Qur'an." I would have to disagree. Our experience shows that an average open-minded Muslims is likely to be receptive to the idea that the Koran has been corrupted and that the corrupted parts must be removed. We firmly believe that while the concept of Islamic supremacy is enshrined in the Koran, Islam cannot be reformed. Interpreting violent verses as non-violent is the same as calling terrorist acts 'freedom fighting' or 'God's will'.
Haidon: There are a number of divergent views emerging
from this symposium. I think what we need to reinvigorate this
discussion with a little bit of good old fashioned reality. As
Muslims on this panel, I think we have an obligation to be
forthright and honest about the Qur'an and potential solutions for
addressing its core problems. Mr. Massoud has been forthright about
identifying the problems of the traditional, literalist
understanding of the Qur'an, but has provided an illogical and
incoherent solution to address it. While I agree on some points with
Mr. Yuksel makes about the primacy and inviolability of the Qur'an,
and his identification of problems with the Muslim tradition. I
strongly disagree with his characterisation of Mr. Glazov, Mr.
Spencer and Mr. Warner. Mr. Glazov, Mr. Warner and Mr. Spencer are
merely stating the positions of traditional Islam. Given that
millions upon millions of Muslims rely on the traditions of Muhammad
and associated commentaries, it is only right that our panellists
point this out. I also am perplexed about his characterisation of
the United States, which is locked in a battle with traditional
Islamic extremists.
I stand by my strong criticism of Mr. Massoud, and his
ill-conceived approach to reforming Islam. Mr. Massoud has once
again missed a golden opportunity to explain the methodology of his
approach to unilaterally remove parts of the Qur'an. In response to
Mr. Massoud's initial question, I do believe that there are, at face
value, contrary verses in the Qur'an. I do believe however that
these verses can be rationalised, when read in a contextual manner.
Recent translations of the Qur'an published by Mr. Yuksel, Amina
Wadud, and the Progressive Muslims provide a new framework of
thinking about these verses. Mr. Massoud's assertion that if I
recognise that there are contradictions in the Qur'an, I should
automatically subscribe to his approach is pure absurdity.
Mr. Massoud is welcome to consider my argument that the Qur'an
must be re-interpreted, as equally ludicrous and disingenuous. Fair
enough. The reality is, however, there is a body of literature, and
scholarly material which supports my arguments. There is an emerging
body of literature from Muslim scholars, including Ahmed Subhy
Mansour, Abdulahi Na'im, Kasem Ahmed, Amina Wadud, and others who
have sought to challenge classical translation and interpretation of
the Qur'an. These scholars have not attempted to "whitewash
genocide", but to end genocidal understandings of the Qur'an.
Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for Mr. Massoud. Mr.
Massoud's has expressly rejected the work of Mahmoud Mohammed Taha,
leaving him with no support from Islamic literature or scholars. In
other words, Mr. Massoud's approach lacks any theological support.
Further, it is over-inclusive and ignores the entire body of
Qur'anist literature. This is another reason why I consider Mr.
Massoud's approach to lack any intellectual rigour. My question to
Mr. Massoud is, why have you ignored this body of literature and
what is your response to their arguments for re-interpreting the
Qur'an differently?
Despite Mr. Massoud's continued insistence that his approach is
both logical and practical, he has failed to demonstrate the case
for either. Muslims are unlikely to accept an approach that lacks no
methodology, or theological basis. If Mahmoud Mohammed Taha's well
crafted and hermeneutical approach can be rejected, I suspect that
Mr. Massoud's approach will garner no support among traditional
Muslims. I have to admit, I am sceptical about Mr. Massoud's claims
of support among Muslims. I would hardly consider Mr. Massoud's
"online poll" to be empirical evidence of a paradigm shift among
Muslims towards acceptance of his views. For him to attempt to use
the results of this poll to demonstrate his point is misguiding, and
dangerous. This relates to my earlier point that pseudo-reformers
can be dangerous because they tend to build false expectations, and
lull non-Muslims into a false sense of security.
I do not consider Mr. Massoud's organisation to constitute a
movement. For Mr. Massoud to say so is disingenuous. I would suspect
that Mr. Massoud's organisation contains not more than a handful of
actual and committed members. This is hardly enough to be considered
a movement at the cusp of challenging the traditional Islamic
establishment. To conclude, my apparent hostility towards Mr.
Massoud's approach does not stem from my contempt of the notion of
removing parts of the Qur'an, it stems from Mr. Massoud's ineptness
in being able to articulate an adequate rationale.
Warner: I would like to thank Mr. Yuksel for restating my
thesis. The "beauty of the Koran is in the eye of the beholder".
There are three kinds of eyes that look at the Koran—the kafir, the
dhimmi and the believer. Restated, all scholarship in Islam is
either from the viewpoint of the kafir (kafir-centric), the dhimmi
(dhimmi-centric) or believer (believer-centric).
For the believer, Allah is wise, forgiving, knowing, and so
forth. But for the kafir, Allah is a hater, a torturer, a plotter, a
sadist, and an enemy. Allah makes us kafirs. Then he goes ahead to
tell the Muslims what filthy scum we are. The word "kafir" is the
worst word in the human language. No other pejorative is so cruel,
demeaning, bigoted, insulting, and hateful as kafir. Why? It is not
just the Muslim who believes this, but Allah, himself.
From the kafir-centric point of view, the Koran is not remotely a
holy book. For the scholar, who sees the Koran as simply another old
text, the Koran is a derivative work, taken from the Torah,
heretical Christianity, Zoroastrianism and the aboriginal Arabic
religions. The only new ideas in the Koran are jihad and that
Mohammed is the "messenger" of Allah.
Mr. Yuksel calls me, "brother Warner". But, according to some 14
verses in the Koran a Muslim is not the friend of a kafir.
Therefore, I cannot be your brother. And since you agree with my
thesis that Islam does not use the Golden Rule, but instead uses
"retaliation" (pure submission and duality), you cannot be my
friend.
This is the saddest part of Islam. Islam rejects the bond of love
between humans and substitutes submission, retaliation and other
forms of dominance by the "best of people". The Koran, Sira and
Hadith say that you are better than me in every way, and that I am
an enemy of all Muslims. It also says that Islam must destroy my
civilization over time. The Trilogy says that that if you want to be
my brother and friend then you are an apostate.
I also appreciate Mr. Yuksel giving us a perfect example of
Islamic logic with his insults. This is pure Islam since the Koran
is filled with insults. Mohammed insulted the kafirs as well. But
Mr. Yuksel goes further and gives us an example of dualism. He says
that he teaches logic and philosophy, so he knows insults are an
example of the "ad hominem" fallacy, attacking the person, instead
of the idea. Mr. Yuksel is a Western logician who uses Islamic
insults as ad hominem attacks. This is contradictory. He holds two
opposite "truths" in his mind at the same time. He does not see the
compartmentalization and dualism of his own mind.
The divided Koran, the Koran of Mecca and the Koran of Medina, is
the foundation of dualism. The two Korans are in contradiction, but
Islam considers them both to be true. Dualism creates a mental
barrier that compartmentalizes the mind and allows the Muslim to
never be bothered by the contradictions, such as those stated here.
Dualism affects all Muslims. It creates a lack of empathy with
the suffering of the kafir and an inability to see how the Koran is
filled with hate for them. Kafirs are not really humans in the eyes
of Islam. This is supported by the dualistic ethics of Islam. In
Islam all Muslims are brothers and sisters, but the kafir may be
treated well or murdered, robbed, raped…. When these things happen
to us, Muslims never really take responsibility. The closest Islam
gets to acknowledges our suffering, is to say, "Well, that … is not
really Islam." This is a total lack of empathy.
The gentlemen address the contradictions in the Koran and the
nature of god. But they overlook the obvious. Allah is dualistic—he
contradicts himself, but he is a perfect god. Therefore, the Koran
is filled with contradictions and both sides of the contradiction
are true.
Here we see the foundation of the Islamic doctrine of dualistic
logic. Kafir logic is based upon eliminating contradictions. A
contradiction in an argument shows that the argument is false.
Islamic logic is based upon accepting contradictions as truth. It is
a dualistic logic.
The genius of Islam is that it defines a dualistic morality and a
dualistic logic that creates a civilization that is completely
outside of kafir civilization. To try to apply kafir logic to
eliminate contradictions about the Koran and Mohammed is to miss the
point. Islam is inherently contradictory, that is its nature. There
is no compromise or resolution between the two civilizations. We
live in parallel universes.
Let's take the concept of integrity. In kafir ethics integrity is
a high measure of character. It means that our words and actions are
consistent at all times. Integrity is a measure of unity and lack of
contradictions. You can trust a man with integrity.
But, Islamic ethics allow the Muslim to lie or tell the truth to
the kafir. [Mohammed consistently told his jihadists they could lie
and deceive the kafirs to advance Islam.] Islam's ethical values do
not even allow a definition of integrity, since it permits deceit.
The most common Islamic deceit is to only speak of the Koran of
Mecca and equivocate about the Koran of Medina. Speaking half-truths
is a lack of integrity, but it is not a fault in Islam. Mohammed had
no integrity with respect to the kafirs, only with Muslims.
Kafirs see a contradiction in Mohammed being such a violent man
and yet being called a prophet of a loving god. Muslims see this as
a bountiful generosity of ethical choices Allah sets forth. They can
be violent and peaceful. Muslims can have their cake and eat it too.
They can choose peace and war and both are sacred choices. Islam
offers a bounty of moral choices in its dualistic ethics.
I sense a need in our Muslim scholars to try to create an Islamic
integrity that would be the same as the kafir is. But there is no
bridge between unitary kafir ethics and dualistic Islamic ethics.
When Mr. Kasem says that I believe that the Koran can be
reformed, I think that I did not pose my argument well enough. I
argue that if the Koran is to be reformed, the only reform that
matters to the kafir is to remove the kafir hatred. If you reform
the text this way, 61% is eliminated. Of course that destroys the
Koran. My argument is to assume it can be reformed and when we see
the result, it is absurd. Reform leads to absurdity. Mr. Kasem and I
agree, the Koran cannot be reformed; or if it is reformed, it is no
longer the Koran.
Islam is a political and religious doctrine found in three
books--Koran, Sira and Hadith. Those books are posited to be
complete, eternal and perfect. They are all based on the principles
of submission and duality. They form a unified whole. To reform one
is to reform the others. So how is the reform of Islam possible? The
Mohammed of Medina cannot be thrown out. The Koran of Medina cannot
be deleted. The texts cannot be altered.
And there is no mechanism for reform. Our results--good, bad or
indifferent—do not make any difference. There is no body or group
that could vote or agree on any change. Islam is like wild yeast.
There is no way to control it. It has no center.
The only reform that matters is the reform of the dhimmis into
kafirs. Only as kafirs can we survive. We are a civilization that
has been dhimmified. We refuse to acknowledge the 270 million killed
and the enslavement of all races of humanity for 1400 years, the
Tears of Jihad. We won't teach about the dreadful spread of Islam
that annihilated kafir culture in Egypt, North Africa, Anatolia
(Turkey) Iraq and the Middle East. We won't acknowledge that Islam
has always annihilated all kafir civilizations.
The very idea of needing to take the time to argue about of the
reform of Islam shows how we are a dhimmi civilization. A kafir
civilization would have taught the doctrine and history of political
Islam to us as children. We would know with whom we were dealing and
why Islam does what it does. All of the knowledge of the Tears of
Jihad, the suffering of the dhimmi and the doctrine of political
Islam would have come in our mother's milk.
Since we did not get this wisdom from our ancestors, we must
teach ourselves the political nature of the Koran, Sira and Hadith.
We must honor our dead by learning the stories of their suffering.
Our reform efforts must not be directed towards Muslims. We must
reform ourselves, stop being dhimmis and become kafirs.
Instead of reasoning with believers, we should reason with our
dhimmi leaders, our near enemies. We should aggressively call them
out and challenge politicians, ministers, rabbis, and media types
who apologize for Islam. We should use our time more productively.
As a political goal, kafirs must demand that the history of the
dhimmi and the Tears of Jihad—the 270,000,000 dead and the
enslavement of the European, African and Hindu—must be taught in all
levels of our public schools. The survival of our civilization
depends upon it.
Yuksel: I would like to thank FP moderator for reminding the contradiction in my joining a panel that I accused of taking a ridiculous project seriously. I confess my guilt for becoming an accomplice with FP in discussing a silly agenda. However, a silly agenda can become a seriously silly agenda if it receives the attention of a serious media, like Frontpage. Regardless of the degree of my fault in this, I am going to let Masoud alone with his project. So, I will focus on other issues.
Kasem's argument has some problems. He asks, "Who inserted those
unkind, hateful, belligerent and barbaric verses?" I challenge him
to quote verses fitting those descriptions from the Reformist
Translation of the Quran without taking them out of their context.
As for removing hadith and syra, we have already a powerful
theological and historical argument for that. I invite Kasem to read
the Manifesto for Islamic Reform.
As for Kasem's invitation to "reform Islam and bring it to
conform to the current civilized world," I have to defer. What does
"current civilized world" refer to? If it is referring to the
practices of super duper powers that are major parties of the two
world wars and responsible of numerous invasions, massacres,
genocides, and atrocities that have caused the death and suffering
of tens of millions, then such a "civilized world" is not worth
conforming. However, if he is referring to the expressed ideals and
the democratic practice of the civilized world, then it is a
different story. Sure, I would also correct the "reforming Islam" to
"reforming Muslims" or "Islamic reform".
Kasem continues: "Unfortunately, Yuksel cannot refute Warner's
allegation that the Koran commands Muslims to kill the Kafirs."
Well, this symposium has limitations and I cannot properly answer
all the laundry lists of accusations and distortions hurled by Kasem
and Warner. If he is honest in his belief in Warner's accusations, I
recommend him to see my translation of those verses and my arguments
in the endnotes, especially in the endnote for verse 9:29. He will
learn that the Quran justifies fighting against aggressor and
violent Kafirs, that is warmongering ingrates, not peaceful ingrates
like Kasem and Warner.
Let me briefly deal with Warner's complaint about the horrible
descriptions of hell, which are clearly metaphors. A dash of logic,
I believe will save Warner from his nightmare. If the Quran is not
word of God, then he does not need to worry, since all those
consequences will never happen. However, if the Quran is the word of
God, then he should either save his complaint for the Day of
Judgment to God and ask for forgiveness for his wrongdoing, or he
should just accept the truth and set himself free from incubating
false ideas. Thus, Warner has no good reason to fear ending up in
hell. Perhaps, Warner's complaint is less philosophical: "You see me
deserving hell and you masochistically enjoy it." No sir, just to
the contrary. Otherwise, I would not have invited you to study the
Quran without distorting it with false ideas borrowed from
fabricated Sunni liturgy.
As for the America's militaristic foreign policies and the Jewo-fascist
aggression against Palestinians being "irrelevant topics," no sir.
We cannot discuss today's reactionary Islamist movements and their
fascist and violent organizations without considering their causes,
effects, ecology and their opponents.
It is simply dishonest and foolish to focus on violence committed
by Muslims but ignoring the much greater violence they have been
subjected to by the so-called "civilized world" that does not
terrorize but "shocks and awes", does not torture but does
"water-boarding", does not kill civilians and children but turns
millions of them into "collateral damage," does not support
dictators, but supports the oppressive and corrupt Leaders, Kings
and Generals. There were no suicide bombers among Muslims until the
Second Intifada, which started at a time when for every 1 Israeli
soldier, 25 Palestinians, mostly teenagers, were being killed before
year 2000. There was no al-Qaida until Afghanistan became the battle
ground of the clashing "civilized world" in 1980s. There were little
prospects of the so-called Islamic Republic in Iran, until the CIA
planted back its dictator, Shah Reza Pahlawi, by toppling Iran's
elected prime minister in 1950s. There was no Hamas, until the
Zionist regime destroyed Palestinian cities, massacred them in their
tents and towns, and treated them like animals. Sure, there are
Sunni and Shiite teachings justifying violence, but there are
similar and even more violent teachings (and their historic
practices) in Christian and Jewish teachings. So, you cannot ask us
to close our eyes to the super barbarism and violence of the
"civilized world", and give all our attention to the Muslim
barbarians.
No sir; only those who sold their sense of justice will buy your
double standard. If we are for a peaceful world, we should show the
wisdom, the honesty and bravery to denounce all parties promoting
violence and atrocities. I have yet to hear a word from you
condemning the atrocities committed against Muslims by Christian and
Jewish soldiers. That is telling.
And Kasem manages to sneak in the "Islamist scholar" title while
describing me. I think that it is not an innocent slip of tongue; it
is a calculated and pathetic threat. Why? Because I do not use a
double standard in condemning all sorts of terrorism and barbarism?
Because I stand for justice and peace for all humanity? The
adjective Islamist is used by the media for a group of reactionary
forces that is intolerant of diversity, freedom and peaceful
co-existence. Kasem intends to make me the target of his "civilized
world" with its invasions, destructions, carpet bombing, "harsh
interrogation techniques," Gitmos, Abu Gharibs, millions of orphans,
widows, and displaced people in just last few years.
I do not believe that Kasem is using that adjective by accident,
since by now, he knows that I am one of the organizers of the
Celebration of Heresy Conference, I am the author of Quran: a
Reformist Translation, and he knows that I have brave standing
against the Islamists, and my mentor and colleague was the first
victim of Islamist terrorists in the USA. Despite all these facts,
he attributes to me an adjective that describes my enemies. I
understand his message very well: "Edip, if you continue exposing
the violence and hypocrisy of my allies, then I will brand you with
a title so that our civilized world will take care of you." My only
response to Kasem is this: a monotheist is the ultimate free person
and cannot be hushed by implicit or explicit threats. We will see
each other in the Day of Judgment, where God will be the only judge.
Kasem continues: "He accuses Jamie Glazov of relying on
'unreliable hearsay stories' for information about Muhammad, but
fails to inform us that the great majority of Muslims around the
world rely on those same 'unreliable hearsay stories,' and offers no
program for convincing those hundreds of millions of Muslims of the
historical weakness of these stories." Wrong, again. If you had read
the Reformist Translation or Manifesto for Islamic Reform you would
learn that we offer a theologically consistent and very powerful
argument to trash all those hearsay stories. No wonder, with little
effort our message is welcomed by many around the world.
Kasem also finds the mathematical structure of the Quran hilarious, yet he does not provide a single substantial argument for his position, except claiming that some people reject it: "To take just one of many possible examples, he asserts that in the Qur'an 'the frequency of the word YaWM (Day) is exactly 365.' But another Muslim writer has noted that Yuksel only arrived at this total by not counting many forms of the word, including every time it appears as 'that day' rather than 'the day' or 'a day.' When Mr. Yuksel's fellow Muslims so readily notice such inaccuracies in his presentation, it's unlikely that many will accept his program for reform."
I am glad that he brought that up. Well, he you looked at the
entire argument, which is posted at my website, he would learn that
my opponents finally accepted their error. See:
http://www.yuksel.org/e/religion/365days.htm
As for Massoud, I will briefly mention his distortion of the
Quranic verse 2:191. To serve his agenda, he plucks and chops the
verse from its context. It is a primitive and yet a very common ploy
used by intellectually bankrupt warmongers who push for another
holocaust, this time against Muslims. Let's read the verse together
with its context from QRT:
2:190 Fight in the cause of God against those who fight you, but do not transgress, God does not like the aggressors.*
2:191 Kill them wherever you find them, and expel them from where they expelled you, and know that persecution is worse than being killed. Do not fight them at the Restricted Temple unless they fight you in it; if they fight you then kill them. Thus is the reward of those who do not appreciate.
2:192 If they cease, then God is Forgiving, Compassionate.
2:193 Fight them so there is no more persecution, and so that the system is God's. If they cease, then there will be no aggression except against the wicked.*
ENDNOTES:
002:190 War is permitted only in self-defense. See 9:5; 5:32; 8:19; 60:7-9.
002:193 God's system is based on freedom of
faith and expression. God's system recommends an egalitarian
republic, and a federally secular system that allows multiple
jurisdictions for different religious or non-religious groups. See
58:12 and 60:8-9.
Now let's look at Massoud's quotation of the verse. He shows the audacity to expunge the verse which he just distorted by plucking and chopping it!:
"kill them [infidels] wherever you find them".
Massoud reminds me of the anecdotal would-be businessman whose
brilliant plan for a glass repair company is no more than breaking
the glasses of windows in the neighborhood by giving slingshots to
some brats. Distort the verses of the Quran through mistranslating,
chopping and slicing, and then promote your crusade to save the
world from those verses. And the success is guaranteed.
Massoud does his chopping and distortion in this very symposium
on my own words. Let's see how he distorts my position. "I see no
reason to address Mr. Yuksel's diatribe. Any Muslim who considers
liberations of 50+ million Afghanis and Iraqis 'cruel military
invasions and occupations' by 'Neocon-led coalition of warmongers'
or believes that the Prophet or the Koran is above criticism is a
radical."
I have not opposed the invasion of Afghanistan, since I believe
the USA was justified to attack there. Though, its conduct of war
has been harshly criticized by human rights agencies, the USA had a
legitimate reason for invading Afghanistan: al-Qaida. But, the same
cannot be said about Iraq, and today the majority of American public
has finally came to agree with my position, that war against Iraq
had nothing to do with liberating Iraqis or fighting against
terrorists, but a lot to do with oil, imperialistic agenda, and
profit for war industry.
Massoud, deliberately distorts my position by mixing Afghanistan
with Iraq, so that his audience will have a knee-jerk reaction to
whatever I may say. Massoud must be one of the few gullible people
out there still buying the "liberating Iraq" mantra. That is his
choice, but he has no right to distort my position about
Afghanistan. Bill Moyer, in his recent film exposed the series of
lies and scams played by the Bush's neocon administration to lead
the nation to an unnecessary war. The cost of this unjust war is
enormous: 4,000 dead Americans, tens of thousands injured, one
million dead Iraqis, millions more injured... About 600 billion
dollars have been wasted for this atrocious destruction and
annihilation.
I have also, since 1986, never claimed that the Prophet of the
Quran to be above criticism. To the contrary, in my books and
articles, I emphasized his human side and vulnerability to commit
errors. Only God can be immune of errors and sins. Thus, in one
sentence, Massoud manages to fabricate and attribute two false ideas
to me, and I am still alive. If he lived centuries ago, perhaps he
would be among those narrators who fabricated numerous hadiths in
the name of the Prophet Muhammed. I will leave the rest of his
arguments, since it will take too much space to correct so many
factual and logical errors he is committing. Interestingly, he
managed not to address any of my criticism to his project.
Now let me finish this round with Warner. . "Then he goes ahead to tell the Muslims what filthy scum we are. The word 'kafir' is the worst word in the human language. No other pejorative is so cruel, demeaning, bigoted, insulting, and hateful as kafir. Why? It is not just the Muslim who believes this, but Allah, himself."
Here is the allegory for Warner: A hiker is attacked by a dozen
hungry and angry javelinas and he starts throwing rocks at them
while cursing at javelinas. After javelinas escape, he hears another
hiker behind him complaining: "you are a bigoted, insulting, and
hateful man. I am a javelina and you hurt my feelings." Warner is
proudly volunteering for the title kafir (ingrate, unappreciative,
aggressor) as it is described in the Quran, and at the same time he
is complaining about its meaning! Kafirs are described by the Quran
to be active opponents of monotheists who are unappreciative and
aggressive, oppressive, misogynistic, racist, or hypocritical.
Furthermore, there is variety of kafirs (ingrates) and each treated
according to the severity of their hostility, aggression and crimes.
For instance, the Quran condemns the ingrates (kafirs) for attacking
weak men, women and children (4:75-76), and Warner's feelings are
hurt because we are asked to stand against those Kafirs.
No wonder Warner has blinded himself to the progressive message
of the Quran and sees nothing novel in it but "Jihad and Muhammad."
I would invite him to see the list of verses in the beginning of the
Reformist Translation describing Muslims, Islam and the Quran, but
with this attitude he might have handicapped himself to appreciate
the wisdom in the Quran.
As for me calling him "Brother Warner." The Quran calls all
humanity as the "children of Adam," in other words, sisters and
brothers. "O children of Adam enter the peace all together."
However, now learning that Warner is a hostile opponent, an ingrate
activist against the message of the Quran which promotes peace,
freedom and justice, I cannot call him "brother" in this context.
So, his system is to him, mine is to me.
Warner complains about me insulting him through ad hominem attacks. I will leave it to the reader to compare my statements critical of Warner's position with the definition of ad hominem. What Warner does is called projection, and I confess he is very good at it. If anyone is defaming and attacking a historical character based on selective hearsay sources, my pointing at the contradiction and dishonesty in such a tactic cannot be considered ad hominem, since it is perfectly relevant.
Warner accuses the Quran for condemning the Kafir (the
unappreciative, the aggressor opponent): "Dualism affects all
Muslims. It creates a lack of empathy with the suffering of the
kafir and an inability to see how the Koran is filled with hate for
them." Well, I invite the readers to read all the verses that
describe and define Kafirs and then ask themselves whether anyone
who acts as such is worthy of empathy. According to the Quran Kafirs
kill and evict people because of their beliefs, Kafirs violate the
treaties, Kafirs kill children and women, Kafirs engages in slavery,
Kafirs do not appreciate God's blessings, Kafirs considers women
lower than man, Kafirs do not help the poor, etc.
Warner continues his diatribes and vitriolic attacks: "But,
Islamic ethics allow the Muslim to lie or tell the truth to the
kafir. [Mohammed consistently told his jihadists they could lie and
deceive the kafirs to advance Islam.] Islam's ethical values do not
even allow a definition of integrity, since it permits deceit." The
real deceit is committed by Warner, since he knows that I do not
subscribe to hearsay stories about Muhammad, to the contrary that I
reject all. He is implicitly attacking my integrity by referring to
the sources that ironically neither of us trusts. I challenge him to
find a single verse in the Quran permitting Muslims to lie. The
Quran, however, is a realistic book and do not promote the Kantian
principle of categorical imperative. For instance, if one fears of
injury or death because of his opinion and conviction, that person
might choose to hide his opinion to avoid harm to his or her person.
If Warner is imprisoned by Taliban, perhaps he would act the same
way to avoid harm to his person. Warner is so biased and hostile; he
has blinded himself to hundreds of verses advising people to be
honest, truthful even if it is against their interest and family
members. Furthermore, the Quran advises Muslims not to defend a
group of Muslims who violated the treaty between Muslims and
non-Muslims, thereby putting the rule of law above religious
affiliation.
Warner might defend his position by pointing at Shiite and Sunni
liturgy. Then, he should also declare Christians and Jews too with
lack of integrity and honesty, since the Bible and Talmud contain
numerous verses encouraging deceit and double standard. If I had no
integrity and honesty, as Warner suggest, I would be acting as a
stooge of the powerful. But, anyone familiar with my struggle since
my youth will know that Warner's attack to my integrity and honesty
is a pathetic lie. Ironically, he is the one who is attacking my
person rather my position, and he is using falsehood. He is the one
who is making a diabolic accusation, since his accusation is not
falsifiable. Whatever I do, whatever I say, Warner's accusation
regarding my intention will remain unchallenged.
Warner is rightly critical of Muslim invasions and occupations in
the past. I condemn all aggression regardless of the religion or
tribe of the culprits. In my articles and books I have promoted the
Quranic position clearly. However, Warner, unable to face me and my
reformist theology, is resorting to punching the straw man in his
pocket. Well, he does not only punch the straw man, he attempts to
eat it. For instance, he puts the following words in my mouth in an
accusatory tone: "We won't acknowledge that Islam has always
annihilated all kafir civilizations." ALWAYS? Well, surprise: Though
I question the Islamic identity of the empires he is alluding to,
yet I accept that statement in general, since history contradicts
what Warner wants us to believe.
Muslims had invaded Spain and ruled there for about five hundred
years. But, for the most part, Jewish and Christian population found
justice and peace in Muslim Spain. Furthermore, when Muslims were
forced out from Spain, we know what they left behind: a Christian
population, libraries, universities, civilization, seeds of reform
and renaissance in Europe. The same with the Ottoman Empire. They
invaded south eastern part of Europe for a long period of time, and
we know what they left behind. Compare those two great empires,
which I am fond of neither, and their evil deeds during the course
of 1000 years to the destruction and atrocities of the USA-Inc led
by a born-again Christian president overwhelmingly supported by
evangelical Christians just in Iraq alone during the course of just
5 years. Warner has never condemned the atrocities of the USA-Inc,
but I have in my writings condemned the atrocities committed by
Muslim kings, caliphs, and empires numerous times. Who has honesty
and integrity? I will not ask Warner from which hat has he pulled
out the 270,000,000 dead, since I know if he can get the ALWAYS
despite several hundreds years of exception, I am surprised that he
did not get 27 billions dead.
FP: There is so much rhetoric here that I wouldn’t even
know whereto start. Suffice it to say that when America liberated
Iraq it freed 25 million Muslims from a Fascist dictator. The
destruction and atrocities there are not the result of what the U.S
is doing; they are the result of Islamist violence and Islamic
sectarian violence. If the jihadists never waged war in Iraq, if
they didn’t intend to build a caliphate, and the Sunnis and Shiites
never massacred each other, there would have been no destruction and
atrocities; there would be a building of a civil, democratic and
modern society, which is what the U.S. objective is.
There were no suicide bombers among Muslims until the Second
Intifada because the Palestinians had not reached the zenith of
their genocidal program against Israel. The death cult had not
completely manifested itself until then. And what triggered the
Second Intifada? Israeli Prime Minister Barak offered the
Palestinians their own state and the possibility of peace at Camp
David in July 2000. It was an extraordinarily generous offer. But
because the Palestinians lust to kill Jews more than to have their
own state, they punished the Israelis severely for this offer and
began to kill not only Jews but also themselves and their own
children -- by strapping them up with bombs and sending them into
Israeli restaurants and cafes.
Mr. Yuksel, I am shocked at the equivalency you apply to Islamic
and Judaic and Christian teachings. Surely you know that when
Christians have behaved in aggressive ways, their acts were not
based on Christian teachings; their acts were un-Christian. The same
cannot be said for Muslims when they engage in aggression and
intolerance, since such behavior is a fulfillment of their
theological mandates. All the schools of Islamic jurisprudence teach
that it is part of the responsibility of the umma to subjugate the
non-Muslim world through jihad. There is nothing in the New or Old
Testament that teaches any such thing.
Kasem: I thank Robert Spencer for pointing out the gross
inanities in the arguments of Mr. Khalim Massoud and for admonishing
the very angry and belligerent tone of Mr. Yuksel’s red herring
fallacies. Robert Spencer has correctly identified the true problem
with the Koran. Like him, I agree that the efforts of either Mr.
Massoud or Mr. Yuksel to tamper with the Koran with their own
version of interpretations and/or contextual relevance will be of
little importance to the vast majority of the Muslims.
Mr. Massoud relapses to contradictory statements, again and
again. It is difficult to proceed with dialogue with such absurd
arguments and statements. For example: when I posed the question:
How is it possible for an infallible God (Allah) to contradict
Himself? Mr. Massoud’s answer was:
“It is impossible. That's why we believe that the contradictory parts of the Koran did not come from God.”
Then in other parts Mr. Massoud writes:
Let me clarify it. God is infallible. If he were fallible, he wouldn't be God.
I never claimed that the Koran is infallible and that Allah is the sole author of the modern Koran.
There is virtually no internal debate or discourse on the whether the Qur'an is complete or "perfect".
We are not trying to change the Koran, we are trying to un-change it.
Past attempts to reform Islam were made inside Islamic world when
reformers were greatly outnumbered. Now we have many non-Muslims on
our side.
Honestly, Mr. Massoud, I do not get what is the true message you
want to convey to your readers. Do you want to reform the Koran with
such convoluted and hard-to-understand statements?
Just like Mr. Thomas Haidon, I do not at all trust your poll.
Firstly, the sample size is too small to have any statistical
significance, secondly, when I added up the figures you quoted for
the Muslim response it was merely 10 percent and not 25 percent that
you claimed. Correct me if I am wrong in interpreting your
statistics.
Mr Warner grasped the es