Wa Alaikum
So are you saying that non-Muslims have the right to launch armed rebellions against Muslim rulers for their religious rights?
We do not take away the right for others to fight (but those who fight should also expect that they might not live).
If they want to fight, they can go ahead, though I'd hope they would fail in seizing the Muslim land.
But you don't seem to have a problem with non-Muslim nations being controlled by Muslims.
What non-Muslim nations are being controlled by Muslims? Muslim nations have a hard time being controlled by religious Muslims as it is since "progressive" or secularist Muslims (especially their armies) and non-Muslims are generally both against it. Non-Muslim nations generally don't care about who is a "progressive" Muslim and who is a traditional Muslim - Muslims will not be allowed to become the leader of the Western non-Muslim nations. If you recall, Obama was falsely granted the honor of being a Muslim even though it is clear that he identifies himself as a Christian and is definitely not considered our brother in faith. But they were using that as an accusation to deter people from voting for him.
Do you feel that non-Muslims have the same right to pressure Muslim nations to respect religious freedoms of non-Muslims as Muslims have the right to pressure non-Muslim nations to respect the religious freedoms of Muslims?
I feel that non-Muslims have the right to ask the authorities to abide by their own laws just as Muslims have the same right, and this includes abiding by the treaty that the Islaamic state and the non-Muslims would have agreed upon.
I thank you for your honesty. By commanding Muslims to fight and kill those who oppress Muslims but not holding the same standard for Muslims who oppress non-Muslims is I think Islam is quite hypocritical. To me, it is no different from how the US sentenced Major Hassan to death but has given merely prison sentences to US soldiers who have killed Iraqis.
1.) Well, again, I'm not sure about the oppression of non-Muslims. What I mentioned is just the general ruling (at least, the majority opinion of scholars) of an individual killing another individual. It was not regarding oppression & mass murder. And I certainly don't know about how the ruling would be different for the leader of an Islaamic state that has a treaty (based on Islaam) with its non-Muslim population. 'Umar (may Allaah be pleased with him) asked a non-Muslim Egyptian to beat him because the Egyptian suffered an act of injustice under the rule of 'Umar (the Egyptian declined, but he did whip the one who directly harmed him).
2.) You skipped the verse I pasted (of the one making mischief in the land). Specifically, I was referring to the Muslims who make mischief in Muslim land. I don't know how that factors into this, though.
3.) While the punishment might not be the same, the sin is still grave:
The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said, "Whoever killed a person having a treaty with the Muslims, shall not smell the scent of Paradise though its scent is perceived from a distance of forty years." [Saheeh al-Bukhaari]
It is one of many reasons I would not join your religion, and I would hope that people come out of it.
Feeling's mutual about your religion.
For what reason do you stay? Sorry, I don't follow.
That the laws guarantee me the right to practice my religion.
What did you mean by saying if the population of a Muslim nation does not like the leadership, they can fight back? How is this about France?
Because you're trying to compare the Muslim demand in non-Muslim countries to the non-Muslim demand in Muslim countries.
Why should the Sikhs have been given a choice to accept Muslim rule over them or leave? Why could not the Muslims have left Pakistan?
The Muslims did, indeed, leave India to go to Pakistan (and many were killed). And the Hindus (and Sikhs) who didn't want to stay in Pakistan went to India to go to the Hindu-majority country. That's just how it was.
I wonder who suffered more bloodshed, Muslims at the hands of Sikhs, or Sikhs at the hands of Muslims.
God knows best.
So you would be supportive of Muslims fighting the government of a non-Muslim country in which they reside? I thought that was only allowed in Islaamic lands. Now are you saying that Muslims can fight for their religious rights even in a non-Muslim country, while Muslim countries can deny these rights to non-Muslims in theirs? I mean no offense to you personally, but I see that as a huge double standard.
1.) I did say that non-Muslims can fight against the Muslim government if they don't want to live under their leadership. Perhaps you did not read that before.
2.) I said they have two options, I did not say I would rather they do one over the other.
It would have been if the Israelites, as they were killing Amalekite babies, were telling the Amalekites not to kill theirs.
But the reason given in the Bible shows that the way the Israelites were oppressed was looked upon unfavorably. And yet the commandment to do the same (actually....to do worse, since the Amalekites didn't wipe out all of the Israelites) was supposedly given. This is hypocritical of your religion, if not the Israelites.
And again, killing of babies, or anyone for that matter, was allowed at a specific time in history by God. It is not allowed anymore.
And again, the principle is still the same. If it is hypocritical now, then it is hypocritical then. WHy should we agree to your concept of what was ok back then and what is ok now?
See above. As they were waging war against the Amalekites, the Israelites were not demanding that they show their people mercy. As Muslims restrict religious freedoms of non-Muslims in their lands, they demand that non-Muslims respect the religious freedoms of Muslims in theirs.
At no time in the OT, did the Israelites demand mercy from the Amalekites.
See above also.
I would not have condemned them, but I also would not have been demanding that my enemies respect the rights of my people while I do not respect the rights of theirs.
You seem to be missing my point. We demand that the countries rule by their own laws, regardless of the government being Muslim/non-Muslim. Who says that non-Muslims of Islaamic nations cannot demand that these Islaamic nations abide by their own laws? Certainly not me; I've said just the opposite repeatedly.
However, laws can change. After Pakistan was formed, the laws in that region towards religious freedoms of non-Muslims changed. Non-Muslim countries have the same right.
Yes, because it was under a new leadership. If the population doesn't like it, they can either stay & resist or leave.
If He ordered them to demand that the Amalekites show them mercy, the answer would have been yes.
You seem to give your religion excuses even though it is clearly a hypocritical act.
Isn't that a case of supporting one case of oppression and yet not the another?
To answer your question, probably.