Introduction
Muhammad Marmaduke Pickthall was an Englishman, an orientalist, and a Muslim
who translated the meaning of the Holy Qur’an. His translation was first
published in 1930 and he was supported in this effort by His Highness, the Nizam
of Hyderabad (the ruler of Deccan, in the South), India. Pickthall traveled
extensively to several Muslim countries, including Syria, Palestine, Turkey,
Egypt, Arabia and India. He spent several years in India and had interacted with
the Muslims of India.
In 1927 Pickthall gave eight lectures on several aspects of Islamic
civilization at the invitation of The Committee of “Madras Lectures on
Islam” in Madras, India. Parts of Pickthall’s lectures were made available
in India at various times. All of his lectures were published under the title
“The Cultural Side of Islam” in 1961 by Sh. Muhammad Ashraf Publishers, Lahore
from a manuscript provided by M.I. Jamal Moinuddin. The book has gone through
several reprints since then.
An abridged version of his fifth lecture on the “Tolerance in Islam” is
presented below. His long lecture frequently used quotations from the Holy
Qur’an to emphasize many points and to support his analysis and conclusions. The
major theme of his lecture is retained here. All of Pickthall’s eight lectures
draw upon his vast knowledge of Islamic history, the Western religious,
political and intellectual history through the ages, and their reasons for rise
and fall. His lectures are very enlightening, analytically useful, and of great
value even today.

An Abridged
Version of Pickthall's Lecture
In the eyes of history, religious
toleration is the highest evidence of culture in a people. It was not until
the Western nations broke away from their religious law that they became more
tolerant, and it was only when the Muslims fell away from their religious law
that they declined in tolerance and other evidences of the highest culture.
Before the coming of Islam, tolerance had never been preached as an essential
part of religion.
If Europe had known as much of Islam, as Muslims knew of Christendom, in
those days, those mad, adventurous, occasionally chivalrous and heroic, but
utterly fanatical outbreak known as the Crusades could not have taken place,
for they were based on a complete misapprehension.
Innumerable monasteries, with a wealth of treasure of which the worth has
been calculated at not less than a hundred millions sterling, enjoyed the
benefit of the Holy Prophet's (Muhammad’s) Charter to the monks of Sinai and
were religiously respected by the Muslims. The various sects of Christians
were represented in the Council of the Empire by their patriarchs, on the
provincial and district council by their bishops, in the village council by
their priests, whose word was always taken without question on things which
were the sole concern of their community.
The tolerance within the body of Islam was, and is, something without
parallel in history; class and race and color ceasing altogether to be
barriers.

One of the commonest charges brought against Islam historically, and as a
religion, by Western writers is that it is intolerant. This is turning the
tables with a vengeance when one remembers various facts: One remembers that not
a Muslim is left alive in Spain or Sicily or Apulia. One remembers that not a
Muslim was left alive and not a mosque left standing in Greece after the great
rebellion in l821. One remembers how the Muslims of the Balkan peninsula, once
the majority, have been systematically reduced with the approval of the whole of
Europe, how the Christian under Muslim rule have in recent times been urged on
to rebel and massacre the Muslims, and how reprisals by the latter have been
condemned as quite uncalled for.
In Spain under the Umayyads and in Baghdad under the Abbasid Khalifas,
Christians and Jews, equally with Muslims, were admitted to the Schools and
universities - not only that, but were boarded and lodged in hostels at the cost
of the state. When the Moors were driven out of Spain, the Christian conquerors
held a terrific persecution of the Jews. Those who were fortunate enough to
escape fled, some of them to Morocco and many hundreds to the Turkish empire,
where their descendants still live in separate communities, and still speak
among themselves an antiquated form of Spanish. The Muslim empire was a refuge
for all those who fled from persecution by the Inquisition.
The Western Christians, till the arrival of the Encyclopaedists in the
eighteenth century, did not know and did not care to know, what the Muslim
believed, nor did the Western Christian seek to know the views of Eastern
Christians with regard to them. The Christian Church was already split in two,
and in the end, it came to such a pass that the Eastern Christians, as Gibbon
shows, preferred Muslim rule, which allowed them to practice their own form of
religion and adhere to their peculiar dogmas, to the rule of fellow Christians
who would have made them Roman Catholics or wiped them out.
The Western Christians called the Muslims pagans, paynims, even
idolaters - there are plenty of books in which they are described as
worshiping an idol called Mahomet or Mahound, and in the accounts of the
conquest of Granada there are even descriptions of the monstrous idols which
they were alleged to worship - whereas the Muslims knew what Christianity was,
and in what respects it differed from Islam. If Europe had known as much of
Islam, as Muslims knew of Christendom, in those days, those mad, adventurous,
occasionally chivalrous and heroic, but utterly fanatical outbreak known as the
Crusades could not have taken place, for they were based on a complete
misapprehension. I quote a learned French author:
“Every poet in Christendom considered a Mohammedan to be an
infidel, and an idolater, and his gods to be three; mentioned in order, they
were: Mahomet or Mahound or Mohammad, Opolane and the third Termogond. It was
said that when in Spain the Christians overpowered the Mohammadans and drove
them as far as the gates of the city of Saragossa, the Mohammadans went back
and broke their idols.
“A Christian poet of the period says that Opolane the “god” of the
Mohammadans, which was kept there in a den was awfully belabored and abused by
the Mohammadans, who, binding it hand and foot, crucified it on a pillar,
trampled it under their feet and broke it to pieces by beating it with sticks;
that their second god Mahound they threw in a pit and caused to be torn to
pieces by pigs and dogs, and that never were gods so ignominiously treated;
but that afterwards the Mohammadans repented of their sins, and once more
reinstated their gods for the accustomed worship, and that when the Emperor
Charles entered the city of Saragossa he had every mosque in the city searched
and had "Muhammad" and all their Gods broken with iron
hammers.”
That was the kind of "history" on which the populace in Western Europe
used to be fed. Those were the ideas which inspired the rank and file of the
crusader in their attacks on the most civilized peoples of those days.
Christendom regarded the outside world as damned eternally, and Islam did not.
There were good and tender-hearted men in Christendom who thought it sad that
any people should be damned eternally, and wished to save them by the only way
they knew - conversion to the Christian faith.
It was not until the Western nations broke away from their religious law that
they became more tolerant; and it was only when the Muslims fell away from their
religious law that they declined in tolerance and other evidences of the highest
culture. Therefore the difference evident in that anecdote is not of manners
only but of religion. Of old, tolerance had existed here and there in the world,
among enlightened individuals; but those individuals had always been against the
prevalent religion. Tolerance was regarded of un-religious, if not irreligious.
Before the coming of Islam it had never been preached as an essential part of
religion.
For the Muslims, Judaism, Christianity and Islam are but three forms of one
religion, which, in its original purity, was the religion of Abraham: Al-Islam,
that perfect Self-Surrender to the Will of God, which is the basis of
Theocracy. The Jews, in their religion, after Moses, limited God's mercy to
their chosen nation and thought of His kingdom as the dominion of their race.
Even Christ himself, as several of his sayings show, declared that he was
sent only to the lost sheep of the House of Israel and seemed to regard his
mission as to the Hebrews only; and it was only after a special vision
vouchsafed to St. Peter that his followers in after days considered themselves
authorized to preach the Gospel to the Gentiles. The Christians limited God’s
mercy to those who believed certain dogmas. Every one who failed to hold the
dogmas was an outcast or a miscreant, to be persecuted for his or her soul’s
good. In Islam only is manifest the real nature of the Kingdom of God.
The two verses (2:255-256) of the
Qur’an are supplementary. Where there is that realization of the majesty
and dominion of Allah
(SWT), there is no compulsion in religion. Men choose their
path - allegiance or opposition - and it is sufficient punishment for those who
oppose that they draw further and further away from the light of truth.
What Muslims do not generally consider is that this law applies to our own
community just as much as to the folk outside, the laws of Allah being
universal; and that intolerance of Muslims for other men's opinions and beliefs
is evidence that they themselves have, at the moment, forgotten the vision of
the majesty and mercy of Allah (SWT) which the Qur’an
presents to them.
In the Qur’an I find two meanings (of a Kafir), which become one the moment
that we try to realize the divine standpoint. The Kafir in the first place, is
not the follower of any religion. He is the opponent of Allah’s benevolent will
and purpose for mankind - therefore the disbeliever in the truth of all
religions, the disbeliever in all Scriptures as of divine revelation, the
disbeliever to the point of active opposition in all the Prophets (pbut) whom
the Muslims are bidden to regard, without distinction, as messengers of
Allah.
The Qur’an repeatedly claims to be the confirmation of the truth of all
religions. The former Scriptures had become obscure, the former Prophets
appeared mythical, so extravagant were the legends which were told concerning
them, so that people doubted whether there was any truth in the old Scriptures,
whether such people as the Prophets had ever really existed. Here - says the
Qur’an - is a Scripture whereof there is no doubt: here is a Prophet actually
living among you and preaching to you. If it were not for this book and this
Prophet, men might be excused for saying that Allah’s guidance to mankind was
all a fable. This book and this Prophet, therefore, confirm the truth of all
that was revealed before them, and those who disbelieve in them to the point of
opposing the existence of a Prophet and a revelation are really opposed to the
idea of Allah's guidance - which is the truth of all revealed religions. Our
Holy Prophet (pbuh) himself said that the term Kafir was not to be applied to
anyone who said “Salam” (peace) to the Muslims. The Kafirs, in the terms of the
Qur’an, are the conscious evil-doers of any race of creed or community.
I have made a long digression but it seemed to me necessary, for I find much
confusion of ideas even among Muslims on this subject, owing to defective study
of the Qur’an and the Prophet's life. Many Muslims seem to forget that our
Prophet had allies among the idolaters even after Islam had triumphed in Arabia,
and that he “fulfilled his treaty with them perfectly until the term thereof.”
The righteous conduct of the Muslims, not the sword, must be held responsible
for the conversion of those idolaters, since they embraced Islam before the
expiration of their treaty.
So much for the idolaters of Arabia, who had no real beliefs to oppose the
teaching of Islam, but only superstition. They invoked their local deities
for help in war and put their faith only in brute force. In this they were, to
begin with, enormously superior to the Muslims. When the Muslims nevertheless
won, they were dismayed; and all their arguments based on the superior power of
their deities were for ever silenced. Their conversion followed naturally. It
was only a question of time with the most obstinate of them.
It was otherwise with the people who had a respectable religion of their own
- the People of the Scripture - as the Qur’an calls them - i.e, the
people who had received the revelation of some former Prophet: the Jews, the
Christians and the Zoroastrians were those with whom the Muslims came at once in
contact. To these our Prophet's attitude was all of kindness. The Charter which he
granted to the Christian monks of Sinai is extant. If you read it you
will see that it breathes not only goodwill but actual love. He gave to the Jews
of Medina, so long as they were faithful to him, precisely the same treatment as
to the Muslims. He never was aggressive against any man or class of men; he
never penalized any man, or made war on any people, on the ground of belief but
only on the ground of conduct.
The story of his reception of Christian and Zoroastrian visitors is on
record. There is not a trace of religious intolerance in all this. And it should
be remembered - Muslims are rather apt to forget it, and it is of great
importance to our outlook - that our Prophet did not ask the people of the
Scripture to become his followers. He asked them only to accept the Kingdom of
Allah, to abolish priesthood and restore their own religions to their original
purity. The question which, in effect, he put to everyone was this: “Are you
for the Kingdom of God which includes all of us, or are you for your own
community against the rest of mankind?” The one is obviously the way of
peace and human progress, the other the way of strife, oppression and calamity.
But the rulers of the world, to whom he sent his message, most of them treated
it as the message of either an insolent upstart or a mad fanatic. His envoys
were insulted cruelly, and even slain. One cannot help wondering what reception
that same embassy would meet with from the rulers of mankind today, when all
the thinking portion of mankind accept the Prophet's premises, have thrown off
the trammels of priestcraft, and harbor some idea of human brotherhood.
But though the Christians and Jews and Zoroastrians refused his message, and
their rulers heaped most cruel insults on his envoys, our Prophet never lost his
benevolent attitudes towards them as religious communities; as witness the
Charter to the monks of Sinai already mentioned. And though the Muslims
of later days have fallen far short of the Holy Prophet's tolerance, and have
sometimes shown arrogance towards men of other faiths, they have always
given special treatment to the Jews and Christians. Indeed the Laws for their
special treatment form part of the Shari'ah.
In Egypt the Copts were on terms of closest friendship with the Muslims in
the first centuries of the Muslim conquest, and they are on terms at closest
friendship with the Muslims at the present day. In Syria the various Christian
communities lived on terms of closest friendship with the Muslims in the first
centuries of the Muslim conquest, and they are on terms of closest friendship
with the Muslims at the present day, openly preferring Muslim domination to a
foreign yoke....
From the expulsion of the Moriscos dates the degradation and decline of
Spain. San Fernando was really wiser and more patriotic in his tolerance to
conquered Seville, Murcia and Toledo than was the later king who, under the
guise of Holy warfare, captured Grenada and let the Inquisition work its will
upon the Muslims and the Jews. And the modern Balkan States and Greece are born
under a curse. It may even prove that the degradation and decline of European
civilization will be dated from the day when so-called civilized statesmen
agreed to the inhuman policy of Czarist Russia and gave their sanction to the
crude fanaticism of the Russian Church.
There is no doubt but that, in the eyes of history, religious toleration is
the highest evidence of culture in a people. Let no Muslim, when looking on the
ruin of the Muslim realm which was compassed through the agency of those very
peoples whom the Muslims had tolerated and protected through the centuries when
Western Europe thought it a religious duty to exterminate or forcibly convert
all peoples of another faith than theirs - let no Muslim, seeing this,
imagine that toleration is a weakness in Islam. It is the greatest strength of
Islam because it is the attitude of truth.
Allah (SWT) is not the God of the Jews or the Christians
or the Muslims only, any more than the sun shines or the rain falls for Jews or
Christians or Muslims only.
Allah: Allah is the proper name in
Arabic for The One and Only God, The Creator and Sustainer of the universe. It
is used by the Arab Christians and Jews for the God (Eloh-im in Hebrew;
'Allaha' in Aramaic, the mother tongue of Jesus, pbuh). The word Allah
does not have a plural or gender. Allah does not have any associate or
partner, and He does not beget nor was He begotten. SWT is an abbreviation of
Arabic words that mean 'Glory Be To Him.'
s or pbuh: Peace Be Upon Him. This
expression is used for all Prophets of
Allah.
ra: Radiallahu Anhu (May Allah be
pleased with him).
"The Meaning of the Glorious Koran," An Explanatory Translation by
Mohammed Marmaduke Pickthall, a Mentor Book Publication. (Also available as:
"The Meaning of the Glorious Koran," by Marmaduke Pickthall, Dorset
Press, N.Y.; Published by several publishers since 1930).
Pickthall writes in his foreward of 1930: "...The Qur'an cannot
be translated....The book is here rendered almost literally and every effort has
been made to choose befitting language. But the result is not the Glorious
Qur'an, that inimitable symphony, the very sounds of which move men to tears and
ecstasy. It is only an attempt to present the meaning of the Qur'an-and
peradventure something of the charm in English. It can never take the place of
the Qur'an in Arabic, nor is it meant to do so...."
For the serious readers of the meaning of the Qur'an in
English, it is recommended that it should be read along with a good
commentary to comprehend the essential meaning and scope of verses.
Either Yusuf Ali's or Mawdudi's commentaries are a good starting point. The
former presents the meaning Ayah (verse) by Ayah with footnotes and includes a
detailed index of the topics mentioned in the Qur'an, while the latter presents
commentaries for each Surah (chapter) of the Qur'an.

E-Books on Islam and
Muslims
This Abridged Version: Copyright
© 1990 by Dr. Z. Haq
Introduction to this Article: Copyright © 1997 by Dr. A.
Zahoor
All Rights
Reserved
http://cyberistan.org/islamic/toleran1.html