Notice: This is the official website of the All Empires History Community (Reg. 10 Feb 2002)

  FAQ FAQ  Forum Search   Register Register  Login Login

New book I bought

 Post Reply Post Reply
Author
eaglecap View Drop Down
Tsar
Tsar
Avatar
Retired AE Moderator

Joined: 15-Feb-2005
Location: ArizonaUSA
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 3959
  Quote eaglecap Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: New book I bought
    Posted: 13-Jan-2006 at 16:17

I purchased ths via Hastings in Spokane but it will have to wait till I am done on my reseach about Alexius Comnena. I found this comment on Front Line for anyone who wants to know more about it.


y Alyssa A. Lappen
FrontPageMagazine.com | September 9, 2005
Review: The Legacy of Jihad: Islamic Holy War and the Fate of Non-Muslims, edited by Dr. Andrew G. Bostom, Prometheus, 759 pp.
It is only fitting that Andrew G. Bostom's massive collection, The Legacy of Jihad: Islamic Holy War and the Fate of Non-Muslims, appears in time for the fourth anniversary September 11, 2001, for no other collection since then has so well explained the theology and philosophy behind those Islamic attacks on America.
The leaders of the free world have taken pains since late 2001 to explain that Islam is a religion of peace. But in this far-ranging, 759-page collection of Muslim and non-Muslim eyewitness accounts, scholarly Muslim theological treatises and superb historical surveys, it appears that Islam has actually practiced a grisly jihad campaign against non-Muslims from its earliest days, in the hope of satisfying the Prophet Mohammed's end goal: forcing the one true faith upon the entire world.

The somber tone of this monumental work -- graced in its midsection by a chronological summary of the first 500 years of Muslim conquests, including color-coded maps and Islamic art -- is set by the cover, a 19th century-Islamic painting entitled The Prophet, Ali and the Companions at the massacre of the prisoners of the Jewish tribe of Beni Kuraizah. As its name suggests, the art depicts the slaughter of 600 to 900 Jewish men, who were led on Mohammed's orders to the market of Medina, where they were beheaded and their corpses buried in trenches dug for that purpose. Their wives and children were then enslaved.

After viewing these accounts, histories and art works, it is hard to continue to believe that radical Islamists are in fact all that radical. Rather, in the most logical way, this collection shows that September 11 was not an aberration, but that Islam at its core seems a faith bent upon the conquest and subjugation of non-Muslims.

Indeed, as many commentators here suggest, when one group of Muslims assumes responsibility for jihad warfare -- the only righteous kind of war, in the Islamic view -- the rest of the umma (Muslim community) is relieved of this fard, or religious duty. Thus, if radical Muslims believe they act on behalf of all Islamdom, Islamic traditions also confirm that they do.

Bostom opens with a 124-page survey of jihad conquests and the imposition of dhimmitude -- the sociopolitical subjugation of indigenous non-Muslim peoples vanquished by jihad campaigns. The essay is the book's longest section and serves as an excellent guidepost for readers to determine which parts might most interest them.

Beginning in the time of Mohammed himself, Bostom refers readers to the early 20th century work of the late Columbia University professor Arthur Jeffrey, who belittled as the sheerest sophistry attempts in some modern circles to explain away all the Prophet's warlike expeditions as defensive wars or to interpret the doctrine of Jihad as merely a bloodless striving in missionary zeal for the spread of Islam.... The early Arabic sources quite plainly and frankly describe the expeditions as military expeditions, and it would never have occurred to anyone at that day to interpret them as anything else....

But it is not just on the say-so of Western scholars that Bostom concludes, in the words of Mordechai Nisan, that the praxis of Islam was by the 1990s to extend the Muslim presence and role into the heart of Western civilization, after having constituted within the Muslim lands themselves a formidable strategic world position.

His arguments rest on the words, works and deeds of Muslims themselves. America would benefit if our leaders would pay close attention to Bostom's conclusions and the works on which they are based.

According to Maliki jurist Ibn Abi Zayd al Qayrawani (d. 996), Jihad is a Divine institution. Its performance by certain individuals may dispense others from it. We Malikis maintain that it is preferable not to begin hostilities with the enemy before having invited the latter to embrace the religion of Allah except where the enemy attacks first. They have either the alternative of converting to Islam or paying the poll tax (jizya), short of which war is declared against them.

Hanbali jurist Ibn Tamiyyah (d. 1328) also supports the jihad: Since lawful warfare is essentially jihad and since its aim is that the religion is God's entirely and God's word is uppermost, therefore according to all Muslims, those who stand in the way of this aim must be fought.

The Hidayah of Hanafi Shaikh Burdanuddin Ali of Marghinan (d. 1196) intones,
It is not lawful to make war upon any people who have never before been called to the faith, without previously requiring them to embrace it, because the Prophet so instructed his commanders, directing them to call infidels to the faith, and also because the people will hence perceive that they are attacked for the sake of religion, and not for the sake of taking their property, or making slaves of their children, and on this consideration it is possible that they may be induced to agree to the call, in order to save themselves from the trouble of war....
The Shaafi jurist al-Mawardi (d. 1058) writes in the Laws of Islamic Governance,
The mushrikun [infidels] of Dar al-Harb (the arena of battle) are of two types: First, those whom the call of Islam has reached, but they have refused it and taken up arms. The amir of the army has the option of fighting them... in accordance with what he judges to be in the best interest of the Muslims and the most harmful to the mushrikun.... Second, those whom the invitation to Islam has not reached, although such persons are few nowadays since Allah has made manifest the call of his Messenger...it is forbidden to begin an attack before explaining the invitation to Islam to them, informing them of the miracles of the Prophet and making plain the proofs so as to encourage acceptance on their part; if they still refuse to accept after this, war is waged against them and they are treated as those whom the call has reached.
And Maliki jurist and philosopher Ibn Khaldun (d. 1406), so often quoted as a peaceful, likewise adopts a warlike tone: In the Muslim community, the holy war is a religious duty, because of the universalism of the [Muslim] mission and [the obligation to] convert everybody to Islam by persuasion or by force.... The other religious groups did not have a universal mission, and the holy war was not a religious duty for them, save only for purposes of defense....Islam is under obligation to gain power over other nations.

In addition to this far-reaching opening summary, the book provides the juridicial texts, historical accounts, scholarly analyses and eyewitness excerpts elucidating the jihad rationale as formulated by Muslim sources and highlighting the global consequences of that philosophy for more than 13 centuries.

In part two, for example, Bostom collects many jihadist teachings in the Qur'an, such as Qur'an chapter 9, verse 29: Fight those who believe not in Allah nor the last day, nor hold that forbidden which hath been forbidden by Allah and his apostle, nor acknowledge the religion of truth even if they are the people of the book, until they pay the Jizya with willing submission, and fell themselves subdued. These Qur'anic teachings fill two pages of text.

But Bostom does not stop there. He devotes his third chapter to the classical and modern teachings of Qur'anic commentators on Chapter 9, verse 29, some such as Al-Suyuti (d. 1505 CE), appearing in English here for the first time. Al-Suyuti writes:
Fight those who don't believe in God nor in the Last Day [Unless they believe in the Prophet God bless him and grant him peace] nor hold what is forbidden that which God and His emissary have forbidden [e.g. Wine] nor embrace the true faith [which is firm and abrogates other faiths, i.e., the Islamic religion] from among [for distinguishing] those who were given the Book [i.e., the Jews and Christians] until they give the head-tax [i.e., the annual taxes imposed on them] (l'an yadinl) humbly submissive, and obedient to Islam's rule.
Also commenting on the Qur'anic chapter 9, verse 29 are al-Zamakshari (d. 1144), al Tabari (d. 923), al-Beidawi (d. 1286), Ibn Kathir (d. 1373), Sayyid Qutb (d. 1966) and al-Azhar, al-Muntakhab Fii Tafsir al-Qur'aan al-Kariim, 1985. Let no one say that Bostom has taken these teachings out of context, for the classical and contemporary commentators interpret this passage of the Qur'an in precisely the same way as it appears.

In chapter four, the last in section two, Bostom focuses on jihad in the Hadith, with commentary from Sahih Bukhari and Sahih Muslim, as translated by the Muslim Students' Association of the University of Southern California.

In Bostom's third, 110-page section, classical Muslim theologians and jurists opine on jihad. These writings span the entire history of Islam, beginning with 8th century commentators and continuing to 20th century contemporaries. Bostom has gleaned writings of Malik B. Anas (d. 795) from the Muwata, for example, Averroes (d. 1198) from the Bidayat al-Mudjtahid, Ibn Khaldun (d. 1406) from The Muqaddimah, as well as a 1915 Ottoman Fatwa.

Here, too, Bostom includes several works translated into English for the first time. For example, the renowned Sufi master al-Ghazali (d. 1111) writes, One must go on jihad (i.e. Warlike razzias or raids) at least once a year... one may use a catapult against them [non-Muslims] when they are in a fortress, even if among them are women and children. One may set fire to them and drown them. The marriages of slaves, al-Ghazali continues, are automatically revoked. One may cut down their trees.... One must destroy their useless books. This belies the all-too-common notion that Sufism is peaceful.

Similarly, Ibn Qudama (d. 1223), writes, Legal war (jihad) is an obligatory social duty (fard-kifaya); when one group of Muslims guarantees that it is being carried out in a satisfactory manner, the others are exempted. Almost everywhere, the author is belligerent. It is permitted to surprise the infidels under cover of night, to bombard them with mangonels [an engine that hurls missiles] and to attack them without declaring battle (du'a).

Al-Hilli (d. 1277), likewise, writes on the traditions concerning the tax on certain infidels, who have not been enslaved or murdered. The Persian scholar Muhammad al-Amili (d. 1621) has been translated from Farsi concerning Jihad holy war: Islamic holy war against followers of other religions, such as Jews, is required unless they convert to Islam or pay the poll tax.

Concerning the jihad warfare in India, Ziauddin Barani (d. 1357) writes in the Fatawa-i Janandari,
The Muslim king will not be able to establish the honour of theism (tauhid) and the supremacy of the Islam unless he strives with all his courage to overthrown infidelity and to slaughter its leaders (imams), who in India are the Brahmans. He should make a firm resolve to overpower, capture, enslave and degrade the infidels. All the strength and power of the king and holy warriors of Islam should be concentrated in holy campaigns and holy wars; and they should risk themselves in the enterprise so that the true Faith may uproot false creeds and then it will look as if these false creeds had never existed because they have been deprived of their glamour.
Bostom turns next, in his 117-page Part 4, to ten Jihad overviews by important 20th century scholars. Clement Huart writes on the law of war, Nicolas P. Agnides on the classification of persons under Islamic law (which appeared in Mohammeden Theories of Finance from Columbia University Press in 1916) and John Ralph Willis on the jihad ideology of enslavement. Several of these works appear for the first time in English.

These writings are no easier to dismiss than the classical Islamic works themselves, for the modern historians also rely heavily on classical jurists and commentators, as indicated in a bevy of footnotes gracing the final pages of each essay. Fagnan's Jihad or Holy War According to the Malikite School, published in Algiers in 1908, rests for example on the work of Sidi Khalil (d. 1365-1366), as elucidated by several Muslim commentaries. Edmond Fagnan writes,
The holy war conducted each year on the most dangerous front, even if there is risk of an attack by bandits, constitutes, just like the visit of the Ka'ba..., a duty of showing solidarity, which is incumbent upon every free male who has attained the age of puberty and is of sound mind and body....
             
In the case of a sudden invasion, holy war becomes a personal duty, even for a woman or for the neighbors [of the believers who are being attacked] if they (i.e. The latter) are too weak, as well as for those who hold the title of imam.
According to Roger Arnaldez, whose essay Holy War According to Ibn Hazm of Cordova was published in a French collection in 1962, what interests this Andalusian classicist about the past is a privileged moment of history at which the law eternally intended by God was revealed in universal and definitive formulations. Despite the most obvious evidence, the commandments given to the Prophet are not, in his view, relative to the Prophet's time.... These commandments, rather, are valid as such for all times.

W.R. W. Gardner's essay, Jihad appeared in the 1912 edition of the acclaimed scholarly journal, Moslem World. He observes,
The question of what jihad is cannot be settled by reference alone to the etymology of the word jihad....The Koran plainly teaches in many passages,..the duty of fighting for the Faith or 'in the way of God,' by using the world qatala, and El Zamakhshary, commenting on 2.186,7, says, 'Fighting in the way of God is jihad for the glorifying of his word and the strengthening of the Religion.' And whatever may be the etymological meaning of the word jihad, there can be no gainsaying the fact that it is sometimes used in the Koran in the sense of warlike actions, a warfare for the sake of the Faith. And when one asks what the teaching of Mohammedanism is concerning jihad, the word is employed in this latter sense.
After presenting a 500-year chronology and maps, Bostom moves on to his final three sections -- on jihad campaigns in the Near East, Europe, Asia Minor and on the Indian subcontinent; jihad slavery and Muslim and non-Muslim chronicles and eyewitness accounts of jihad campaigns. These in many ways outshine everything that the editor presented earlier, for here, he clearly elucidates the ravages of jihad campaigns as experienced by their victims.

The sixth section, on Jihad campaigns, begins with an essay by Demetrios Constantelos, which collects eyewitness accounts of Greek Christian and other early observers of jihad. Damascus fell in 635, Jerusalem in 638, the same year as Antioch, and in 646 Alexandria became an Arab possession. The coastal areas of Palestine, Cyprus, Egypt and Syria swiftly followed. Sophronios of Jerusalem describes the sword of the Saracens as beastly and barbarous...filled with every diabolic savagery.

Clearly, the Arab conquest was very violent as well as decisive. Constantelos reports on Sophronios: advancing Saracens left behind them a train of destruction and havoc, with bloodshed everywhere and abandoned human bodies devoured by the wild beasts of Palestine's deserts. He writes of the 'villainous and God-hating Saracens,' who run through places and capture cities, who reap or destroy the crops of the fields, who burn down towns and set churches on fire, who attack monasteries and defeat Byzantine armies, winning one victory after another. John of Nikiu in about 700 C.E., likewise described the terrors of the Arabic Muslims. The Islamic conquest put to the sword all that surrendered, and they spared none, whether old men, babes or women.

But that was only in the beginning. Bloodletting continued on every continent the Muslims touched. Aram Ter-Ghevondian describes the Armenian rebellion of 703, as related by such sources as Ibn-al-Athir and a 10th century Arab author named Muhammad ibn-Abdullah-ibn-Aasam-al-Kufi as well as Byzantine historian Theophanes. In one instance in about 705, the Muslim leader Muhammad massacred, enslaved and wrote a letter to the nobility (Ashraf) who are called freemen (ahrar), gave guarantees and promised to give honors. Hence they gathered in their churches...and he ordered to encircle the churches with fire-wood, closed the doors on them and burnt all of them.

C.E. Dufourcq describes The Days of Razzia and invasion in a 1978 chapter that first appeared in a French collection on daily life in medieval Europe under Arab domination (another, now in English for the first time). After dominating Iberia, the Arabs transversed the Pyrenees and ravaged lands north of the foothills. In Aragon's Segre Valley, squadrons explored the Ariege River. Before 720 they attacked Narbonne, from which they carried off church riches and many slaves. They were driven back from Toulouse in 721 but in 725 attacked Carcassone. Other targets included the Rhone Valley, Nimes, and Viviers (a place still called Les Sarasins), Macon and Chalon, and Autun (which has never been able to return to its former state since that destruction), Dijon and Langres. By 731, the Arabs were 100 kilometers from Paris. They burned all the Bordeaux churches in 732. Fortunately, Charles Martel stopped them not far from Poitiers.

But in 734 or 735 in the Mediterranean, Dufourcq continues, they attacked Arles and Avignon. From Provence and Italy, sailors attacked Ostia on the Tiber, and pillaged the basilicas of Saint Peter and Saint Paul. Marseilles was devastated in 838 and again in 848 and 920. From 857 on, the Roman seaboard was attacked annually. In Syracuse in 878, the Church of the Holy Savior was filled with women, children, the elderly, the sick, the clerics -- all of them massacred. In 934 or 935, Arabs slaughtered all the men in Genoa and loaded the city's treasures onto their ships.

Terrorizing inhabitants was a tool of their trade: As the 17th century Algerian historian al-Maqqari noted, Allah thus instilled such fear among the infidels that they did not dare to go and fight the conquerors; they only approached them as suppliants to beg for peace.

The Muslim invasion of India was similarly cruel, according to K.S. Lal. Throughout more than 500 years in the Indian subcontinent, Muslim invaders killed an estimated 70 million, slaughtering as many as 500,000 to 600,000 at a time. They also took countless millions of slaves, who were transported to Iran, Afghanistan and later to Europe.

In the Balkans, the people suffered equal savagery, according to a 1956 essay by Dimitar Angelov, also in English for the first time. The campaigns of Mourad II (1421-1451) and his successor Mahomet II (1451-1481) in Serbia, Bosnia, Albania, and the Byzantine princedom of the Peloponnisos, were particularly devastating. In 1459, invaders destroyed the entire harvest and leveled the fortified towns. In 1466, the Albanians were forced to retreat and fight from inaccessible regions; whole cities were again ruined. Plundering, arson and repeated attacks reduced the rich agricultural region to wilderness. Famines and epidemics ensued.

All this is to say nothing of the incessant slave-taking and the brutal devshirme tribute; Balkan families were forced to pay a tax in the form of their eldest or most able sons. Bostom devotes 60 pages to slavery alone.

Then we come to the eyewitness accounts, which fill five chapters and nearly eighty pages. According to an 1148 account by Solomon Cohen, for example, the Almohads swept through Tlemcen in the Maghren, killing all those in it. All the cities in North Africa were taken: One hundred thousand persons were killed in Fez on that occasion and 120,000 in Marakesh.....Large areas between Seville and Tortosa [in Spain] had likewise fallen into Almohad hands.

Likewise, a 13th century Hindu account called the Kahandade Prabandha tells of the invasion of extensive regions, including Malwa, Gujarat, Ranthamnhor, Siwana, Jalor, Devagiri, Warangal, Ma'bar and Ramesvaram. In Bhinmal,
Orders were issued clear and terrible: 'The soldiers shall march into the town spreading terror everywhere! Cut down the Brahmanas, wherever they may be--performing homa or milking cows! Kill the cowseven those which are pregnant or with newly born calves!' The Turks ransacked Bhinmal and captured everybody in the sleepy town. Thereafter, Fori Malik gleefully set fire to the town in a wanton display of force and meanness.
As Ibn Warraq notes in the forward, Dr. Bostom is the first scholar to have had translated from Arabic into English the works of al-Bayadawi, al-Suyuti, al-Zamakhshari and al-Tabari, as well as works by Sufi master al-Ghazali, Shiites al-Hilli and al-Amili. He also includes representatives from the four schools of Sunni jurisprudence: Averroes and Ibn Khaldun (Maliki), Ibn Taymiya and Ibn Qudama (Hanbali), Shaybani (Hanafi), and al-Mawardi (Shaafi).

Warraq wonders, Why did it take a non-specialist such as Dr. Bostom, a scholar from another discipline -- clinical epidemiology and randomized clinical trials in medicine -- to discover and have translated for the first time this primary and secondary source material?

Ibn Warraq continues: As Bernard Lewis points out in his important essay, Pro-Islamic Jews, The golden age of equal rights [in Spain] was a myth.... The myth was invented by Jews in nineteenth century Europe as a reproach to Christians. There are those, he says, who contend that while Dr. Bostom may be right to expose history hitherto simply denied, this was not the right historical moment to express it. But, as Isaiah Berlin once wrote, an ideologue is someone prepared to suppress what he suspects to be true. This disposition to suppress the truth has engendered much evil.

Bostom's work attempts to set straight the historical record. Let us hope that Bostom's monumental survey is read in every corner of U.S. and European government, as well as by the masses who wish to learn the truth on Islamic doctrines.

Λοιπόν, αδελφοί και οι συμπολίτες και οι στρατιώτες, να θυμάστε αυτό ώστε μνημόσυνο σας, φήμη και ελευθερία σας θα ε
Back to Top
Cywr View Drop Down
King
King
Avatar
Retired AE Moderator

Joined: 03-Aug-2004
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 6003
  Quote Cywr Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 15-Jan-2006 at 11:11
Well, it looks like its right up your alley..
Arrrgh!!"
Back to Top
eaglecap View Drop Down
Tsar
Tsar
Avatar
Retired AE Moderator

Joined: 15-Feb-2005
Location: ArizonaUSA
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 3959
  Quote eaglecap Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 17-Jan-2006 at 20:15
I prefer Byzantine studies and I have put that on the bookshelf till I am done with three books about Alexius and his daughter Anna Comnena, includes the Alexiad. Like I mentioned in another post the book is titled "Anna Comnena by Rae Dalvan and it is very interesting.
Λοιπόν, αδελφοί και οι συμπολίτες και οι στρατιώτες, να θυμάστε αυτό ώστε μνημόσυνο σας, φήμη και ελευθερία σας θα ε
Back to Top
ill_teknique View Drop Down
Colonel
Colonel
Avatar

Joined: 28-Jun-2005
Location: United States
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 636
  Quote ill_teknique Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18-Jan-2006 at 00:07
interesting book lets get our pitchforks and killl all those evils muslims
rabble rabble rabble
Back to Top
ill_teknique View Drop Down
Colonel
Colonel
Avatar

Joined: 28-Jun-2005
Location: United States
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 636
  Quote ill_teknique Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18-Jan-2006 at 00:14
let me add a little to this


from the sunnah of the Prophet

"the greatest jihad any one can commit to is the fight against a tyrannical ruler"


Back to Top
eaglecap View Drop Down
Tsar
Tsar
Avatar
Retired AE Moderator

Joined: 15-Feb-2005
Location: ArizonaUSA
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 3959
  Quote eaglecap Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18-Jan-2006 at 13:50
Originally posted by ill_teknique

let me add a little to this


from the sunnah of the Prophet

"the greatest jihad any one can commit to is the fight against a tyrannical ruler"





Then why are Islamic nations so often dominated by despots? I have never read the Sunnah but only the Koran.
The book only reveals the historical past of dimmitude but it never has caused me to hate Muslims, just their ideaology I don't agree with.

Remember our Democracy was influenced by Christianity and not Islam. My ancestors were Christians and not Hindus, buddist or Muslims.
Λοιπόν, αδελφοί και οι συμπολίτες και οι στρατιώτες, να θυμάστε αυτό ώστε μνημόσυνο σας, φήμη και ελευθερία σας θα ε
Back to Top
Reginmund View Drop Down
Arch Duke
Arch Duke


Joined: 08-May-2005
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 1943
  Quote Reginmund Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18-Jan-2006 at 16:09
Appears to be a marvelous book, indeed, a splendid concoction of anti-islamic propaganda based on exactly the kind of selective and uncritical use of primary sources that always adds such spice to this sort of literature. Enjoy.
Back to Top
eaglecap View Drop Down
Tsar
Tsar
Avatar
Retired AE Moderator

Joined: 15-Feb-2005
Location: ArizonaUSA
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 3959
  Quote eaglecap Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18-Jan-2006 at 16:18
Originally posted by Reginmund

Appears to be a marvelous book, indeed, a splendid concoction of anti-islamic propaganda based on exactly the kind of selective and uncritical use of primary sources that always adds such spice to this sort of literature. Enjoy.


Have you read the book or even looked at the sources?
I think your are making assumptions based upon your own bias. I have see too many primary and secondary sources that support this book and others you call propaganda.
But I respect your opinion and if you want to believe this go ahead. The thread is mainly for Greeks, people of the Balkans, and non-Muslims around the world who want to know the truth about extreme Islam, not moderate Islam.
Question: just so I know where you are coming from. Are you a PC liberal or a Muslim?
Λοιπόν, αδελφοί και οι συμπολίτες και οι στρατιώτες, να θυμάστε αυτό ώστε μνημόσυνο σας, φήμη και ελευθερία σας θα ε
Back to Top
Reginmund View Drop Down
Arch Duke
Arch Duke


Joined: 08-May-2005
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 1943
  Quote Reginmund Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18-Jan-2006 at 16:55
Originally posted by eaglecap

Have you read the book or even looked at the sources?
I think your are making assumptions based upon your own bias. I have see too many primary and secondary sources that support this book and others you call propaganda.


I didn't say the source material doesn't exist, I said it is often being used selectively by authors such as this one in favour of a political agenda, meaning he intentionally ignores the material that speaks against his thesis. A very common method of work in some "historical" milieus.

Originally posted by eaglecap

But I respect your opinion and if you want to believe this go ahead. The thread is mainly for Greeks, people of the Balkans, and non-Muslims around the world who want to know the truth about extreme Islam, not moderate Islam.
Question: just so I know where you are coming from. Are you a PC liberal or a Muslim?


The thread is intended for people who are from the outset biased and susceptible to the information, you mean? As for me, I'm certainly no Muslim, nor do I encourage religious beliefs of any sort. I replied to your post not because I was provoked on a religious basis, but on a historical one, guys like this author stain the historian's profession with the ambitions of contemporary politicians.

You could label me a liberal, in some aspects, but almost certainly not in some others.
Back to Top
Zagros View Drop Down
Emperor
Emperor

Suspended

Joined: 11-Aug-2004
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 8792
  Quote Zagros Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18-Jan-2006 at 18:05
Points well made, Reginmund. One could paint a picture of jews as murderous, greedy thieves using selective quotes from the Talmud, but oh wait... that's already been done...
Back to Top
ill_teknique View Drop Down
Colonel
Colonel
Avatar

Joined: 28-Jun-2005
Location: United States
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 636
  Quote ill_teknique Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18-Jan-2006 at 19:38
Originally posted by eaglecap

Originally posted by Reginmund

Appears to be a marvelous book, indeed, a splendid concoction of anti-islamic propaganda based on exactly the kind of selective and uncritical use of primary sources that always adds such spice to this sort of literature. Enjoy.


Have you read the book or even looked at the sources?
I think your are making assumptions based upon your own bias. I have see too many primary and secondary sources that support this book and others you call propaganda.
But I respect your opinion and if you want to believe this go ahead. The thread is mainly for Greeks, people of the Balkans, and non-Muslims around the world who want to know the truth about extreme Islam, not moderate Islam.
Question: just so I know where you are coming from. Are you a PC liberal or a Muslim?


Because the books you've qouted so far and said you've read have been along the same lines and tried to get the same biased anti islamic sentiment out.
Back to Top
eaglecap View Drop Down
Tsar
Tsar
Avatar
Retired AE Moderator

Joined: 15-Feb-2005
Location: ArizonaUSA
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 3959
  Quote eaglecap Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19-Jan-2006 at 21:19
Maybe but your reaction could also be base upon bias. I am not anti-Islam or any religion as long as they are peaceful and are not out to dominate me like they did to my ancestors. I have some issues with Christians and their religon but currently I do not see them as a threat to my freedoms or well being but some Muslims are a global threat to that. I believe that most Muslims in America are westernized and they are not a threat at all unless they are convinced by the extreme persausion that moderate Muslims are not true Muslims but many are too educated and hopefully will remain loyal to our government. I have concerns and I have not forgotten 9/11 and Americans should not but I will never assume that someone is an evil terrorist based upon their religion. I also have concerns about the extreme communist, which I have run into, and the extreme gays. ( keep this on the topic though please- I won't respond to anything else)
Λοιπόν, αδελφοί και οι συμπολίτες και οι στρατιώτες, να θυμάστε αυτό ώστε μνημόσυνο σας, φήμη και ελευθερία σας θα ε
Back to Top
eaglecap View Drop Down
Tsar
Tsar
Avatar
Retired AE Moderator

Joined: 15-Feb-2005
Location: ArizonaUSA
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 3959
  Quote eaglecap Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19-Jan-2006 at 21:24
Originally posted by Zagros

Points well made, Reginmund. One could paint a picture of jews as murderous, greedy thieves using selective quotes from the Talmud, but oh wait... that's already been done...


document this and post it please!!
Λοιπόν, αδελφοί και οι συμπολίτες και οι στρατιώτες, να θυμάστε αυτό ώστε μνημόσυνο σας, φήμη και ελευθερία σας θα ε
Back to Top
ill_teknique View Drop Down
Colonel
Colonel
Avatar

Joined: 28-Jun-2005
Location: United States
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 636
  Quote ill_teknique Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 20-Jan-2006 at 00:12
Originally posted by eaglecap

Maybe but your reaction could also be base upon bias. I am not anti-Islam or any religion as long as they are peaceful and are not out to dominate me like they did to my ancestors. I have some issues with Christians and their religon but currently I do not see them as a threat to my freedoms or well being but some Muslims are a global threat to that. I believe that most Muslims in America are westernized and they are not a threat at all unless they are convinced by the extreme persausion that moderate Muslims are not true Muslims but many are too educated and hopefully will remain loyal to our government. I have concerns and I have not forgotten 9/11 and Americans should not but I will never assume that someone is an evil terrorist based upon their religion. I also have concerns about the extreme communist, which I have run into, and the extreme gays. ( keep this on the topic though please- I won't respond to anything else)

exactly like i said you have a warped view of the world - people have to be "westernized" to be considered normal to you. 
Back to Top
Justinian View Drop Down
Chieftain
Chieftain
Avatar
King of Númenor

Joined: 11-Nov-2005
Location: United States
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 1399
  Quote Justinian Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 20-Jan-2006 at 01:49

Hmm...From what I have read on Islam (and it is limited) it was a violent religion early on, the incredible conquests after Muhammads' death is a good example.  However, I would be skeptical of any book concerning religion.  Generally when a new religion comes along there is great enthusiasm for it and people will want to show others the "true religion" often by violent means.  From what I remember christians often preached the same thing as these Islamic commentators and later on certainly practiced it.  The campaign against pagans in the Western and Eastern Roman Empires, the crusades in the holy land and in France against "christian heretics", centuries of anti-semitism etc.  While Islam certainly developed differently than christianity (again using christianity to compare and contrast) they both have shared common ground when it comes to extremists who would kill any who disagreed with their faith.  Or regarding christianity in the middle ages and Islam in its infancy most of the population.  Islam may seem more militant at its core than christianity, but looking at history I would say after the initial conquests of Islam, christianity has taken the lead in religious persecution; the inquisition, the european colonial attitude toward natives in the new world, africa and the far east.  Upon further review I am of the opinion that while some followers of Islam have done some ugly things, so have followers of christianity and other religions.

Regarding the book, if Bostom has translated primary sources from Arabic to English then regardless of any bias I think this book would be worth reading for its historical insight and if nothing else a look at the negative side of Islam.  Once you finish it you should let us know yours thoughts on it.  By the way the Alexiad is great, you'll definitely enjoy it!

"War is a cowardly escape from the problems of peace."--Thomas Mann

Back to Top
Constantine XI View Drop Down
Suspended
Suspended

Suspended

Joined: 01-May-2005
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 5711
  Quote Constantine XI Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 20-Jan-2006 at 02:11
The violence of this era can more likely be attributed to the fact that the Islamic religion had to cater for the welfare of people in an especially violent age of history.

I consider this work flawed because (based on the information provided in this post) it does not take account of the cultural and martial norms of the time. It simply mentions each Islamic attack as some sort of isolated incident that came out of no where. He does not include any context whatsoever. He does not consider that warlike activities were due to the warlike nature of the Dark Ages, psychotic individuals in positions of power, that particular ethnic groups had an especially martial tradition, or that non-Muslims engaged in similar atrocities at this time.

I have not read the whole book, I am just judging from the excerpt provided in this post. As a student undertaking a history honours I cannot regard this as a proper scholarly work. It lacks context, explanation of wider geo-political trends in the world at the time, a critical approach in explaning violent behaviour (attributing it simply religion) or examining the behaviour of contemporaries of the Islamic world.
Back to Top
eaglecap View Drop Down
Tsar
Tsar
Avatar
Retired AE Moderator

Joined: 15-Feb-2005
Location: ArizonaUSA
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 3959
  Quote eaglecap Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21-Jan-2006 at 17:28
I have not read the whole book

I respect your points but first read the whole thing and then make that judgement. I have read many sources about this topic both primary and secondary so I disagree but I have only read a couple of chapters in it so far. I have put off reading the book till I am done with some research about Anna Comnena, Emperor Alexius and the First Crusade. I already have a history degree but I am still learning.
Λοιπόν, αδελφοί και οι συμπολίτες και οι στρατιώτες, να θυμάστε αυτό ώστε μνημόσυνο σας, φήμη και ελευθερία σας θα ε
Back to Top
 Post Reply Post Reply

Forum Jump Forum Permissions View Drop Down

Bulletin Board Software by Web Wiz Forums® version 9.56a [Free Express Edition]
Copyright ©2001-2009 Web Wiz

This page was generated in 0.079 seconds.