|
The Pacifism of Islam
HARUN YAHYA
|
According to the Koran, war represents an "unwanted obligation"
which has to be absolutely carried out with strict observance of
particular humane and moral values and resorted only when it is
inevitable.
In a verse, it is explained that those who start wars are the
disbelievers and that God does not approve wars:
…Each time they kindle the fire of war, Allah
extinguishes it. They rush about the earth corrupting it. Allah does
not love corrupters. (Surat al-Ma'ida: 64)
A closer examination of Prophet Muhammad's life reveals that war
is a method resorted for defensive purposes only in unavoidable
situations.
The revelation of the Koran to Prophet Muhammad lasted for 23
years. During the first 13 years of this period, Muslims lived as a
minority under a pagan rule in Mecca and faced much oppression. Many
Muslims were harassed, abused, tortured, and even murdered, their
houses and possessions were plundered. Despite this however, Muslims
led their lives without resorting to any violence and always called
pagans to peace.
When the oppression of pagans escalated unbearably, Muslims
emigrated to the town of Yathrib, which was later to be renamed
Medina, where they could establish their own order in a more
friendly and free environment. Even establishing their own political
system did not prompt them to take up weapons against aggressive
pagans of Mecca. Only after the following revelation, the Prophet
commanded his people to get prepared for war:
Permission to fight is given to those who are fought
against because they have been wronged - truly God has the power to
come to their support - those who were expelled from their homes
without any right, merely for saying, 'Our Lord is God'… (Surat
al-Hajj: 39-40)
In brief, Muslims were allowed to wage war only because they were
oppressed and subjected to violence. To put it in another way, God
granted permission for war only for defensive purposes. In other
verses, Muslims are warned against use of unnecessary provocation or
unnecessary violence:
Fight in the Way of God against those who fight you,
but do not go beyond the limits. God does not love those who go
beyond the limits. (Surat al-Baqara: 190)
After the revelations of these verses, wars occurred between
Muslims and pagan Arabs. In none of these wars, however, were the
Muslims the inciting party. Furthermore, Prophet Muhammad
established a secure and peaceful social environment for Muslims and
pagans alike by signing a peace agreement (Hudaybiya) which conceded
to the pagans most of their requests. The party who violated the
terms of the agreement and started a new war was again the pagans.
However, with rapid conversions into Islam, the Islamic armies
attained great power against the pagan Arabs and Prophet Muhammad
conquered Mecca without bloodshed and in a spirit of tolerance. If
he willed, he could have taken revenge on pagan leaders in the city.
Yet, he did not do harm to any one of them, forgave them and treated
them with the utmost tolerance. Pagans, who would later convert to
Islam by their own will, could not help admiring such noble
character of the Prophet.
The Islamic principles God proclaims in the Koran account for
this peaceful and temperate policy of Prophet Muhammad. In the
Koran, God commands believers to treat even the non-Muslims kindly
and justly:
...God does not forbid you from being good to those
who have not fought you over religion or driven you from your homes,
or from being just towards them. God loves those who are just. God
merely forbids you from taking as friends those who have fought you
over religion and driven you from your homes and who supported your
expulsion... (Surat al-Mumtahana: 8-9)
The verses above specify the outlook of a Muslim on non-Muslims:
A Muslim should treat all non-Muslims kindly and avoid making
friends only with those who show enmity to Islam. In case this
enmity causes violent attacks against the existence of Muslims, that
is, in case they wage a war against them, then Muslims should
respond them justly by considering the humane dimensions of the
situation. All forms of barbarism, unnecessary acts of violence and
unjust aggression are forbidden by Islam. In another verse, God
warns Muslims against this and explains that rage felt for enemies
should not cause them to drift them into injustice:
You who believe! Show integrity for the sake of God,
bearing witness with justice. Do not let hatred for a people incite
you into not being just. Be just. That is closer to heedfulness.
Heed God (alone). God is aware of what you do. (Surat al-Ma'ida:
8)
The Meaning of the Concept of "Jihad"
Another concept that deserves clarification due to the content of
this article is the concept of "jihad".
The exact meaning of "Jihad" is "effort". That is, in Islam, "to
carry out jihad" is "to show efforts, to struggle". Prophet Muhammad
explained that "the greatest jihad is the one a person carries out
against his lower soul". What is meant by "lower soul" here is the
selfish desires and ambitions. A struggle given on intellectual
grounds against anti-religious, atheist views is also a form of
jihad in its complete sense.
Apart from these ideological and spiritual meanings, struggle in
the physical sense is also considered as "jihad". However, as
explained above, this has to be a struggle carried out solely for
defensive purposes. The use of the concept of "jihad" for acts of
aggression against innocent people, that is for terror, would be
unjust and a great distortion.
Compassion, Tolerance and Pacifism in Islam
To state briefly, the Islamic political doctrine is extremely
peaceful and moderate. This fact is also confirmed by many
non-Muslim historians and theologians. One of these is the British
historian, Karen Armstrong, a former nun and a renowned expert on
Middle East history. In her book, Holy War, in which she
examines the history of the three great divine religions, she
comments:
... The word Islam comes from the
same Arabic root as the word peace and the Koran condemns war as
an abnormal state of affairs opposed to God's will: "When the
enemies of the Muslims kindle a fire for war, Allah extinguishes it.
They strive to create disorder in earth, and Allah loves not those
who create disorder." (Koran 28:78). Islam does not justify a total
aggressive war or extermination, as the Torah does in the first five
books of the Bible. A more realistic religion than Christianity,
Islam recognizes that war is inevitable and sometimes a positive
duty in order to and oppressions and suffering. The Koran teaches
that war must be limited and be conducted in as humane a way of
possible. Mohammed had to fight not only the Meccans but also
the Jewish tribes in the area and Christian tribes in Syria who
planned on offensive against him in alliance with the Jews. Yet this
did not make Mohammed denounce the People of the Book. His Muslims
were forced to defend themselves but they were not fighting a holy
war against the religion of their enemies. When Mohammed sent his
freedman Zaid against the Christians at the head of a Muslim army,
he told them to fight in the cause of God bravely but
humanely. They must not molest priests, monks and nuns nor the
weak and helpless people who were unable to fight. There must be
no massacre of civilians nor should they cut down a single tree nor
pull down any building. This was very different from the wars of
Joshua. [1]
Following the death of Prophet Muhammad, Muslims continued to
treat the members of other religions with tolerance and respect.
Islamic states became the secure and free home of both Jews and
Christians. After the conquest of Jerusalem, Caliph Omar calmed the
Christians who were in fear of a massacre and explained to them that
they were secure. Furthermore, he visited their churches and
declared that they could continue to practise their worship freely.
In 1099, 4 centuries after the conquest of Jerusalem by Muslims,
Crusaders invaded Jerusalem and put all Muslims inhabitants to the
sword. Again, contrary to the fears of Christians, Saladin, the
Muslim general who captured Jerusalem and saved the city from
invasion in 1187, did not touch even a single civilian and did not
allow a single soldier to plunder. Moreover, he allowed the invading
Christians to take all their possessions and leave the city in
security.
 A portrait of the
tolerance against Christians in the Islamic lands.
|
The periods of Seljuk Turks and the Ottoman Empire were also
marked by the tolerance and justice of Islam. As is known, Jews who
were expelled from Catholic Spain found the peace they sought on the
lands of Ottoman Empire, where they took refuge in 1492. Sultan
Mehmed, the conqueror of Istanbul, also allowed Jews and Christians
religious freedom. Regarding the tolerant and just practises of
Muslims, historian A. Miquel states the following:
The Christians were ruled by a
very well administered state which was something that did not exist
in the Byzantium or Latin sovereignty. They were never subjected to
a systematized oppression. On the contrary, the Empire, and foremost
Istanbul, became a refuge for the much tortured Spanish Jews. They
were never forced to accept Islam. [2]
John L. Esposito, a professor of Religion and International
Politics at the Georgetown University, makes a similar comment:
For many non-Muslim populations in
Byzantine and Persian territories already subjugated to foreign
rulers, Islamic rule meant an exchange of rulers, the new ones often
more flexible and tolerant, rather than a loss of independence. Many
of these populations now enjoyed greater local autonomy and often
paid lower taxes... Religiously, Islam proved a more tolerant
religion, providing greater religious freedom for Jews and
indigenous Christians. [3]
As is clarified in these words, history never witnessed Muslims
as "makers of mischief". On the contrary, they brought security and
peace to the people from all nations and beliefs inhabiting the
large territory over which they reigned. (For further reference, see
Justice and Tolerance in the Koran, by Harun Yahya, 2000)
In brief, compassion, peace and tolerance constitute the very
basis of the values of the Koran and Islam aims to wipe mischief out
of the earth. The commands of the Koran and the ways Muslims
practised them throughout history are so clear as to leave no room
for dispute.
|