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Do Not Bash Muslims

JosephZ

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Nothing you wrote contradicts what I have been showing. I have already quoted that fact that if a women says she is raped then this is to be accepted as truth. However, if she is accusing a particular person or persons of raping her then she must have solid evidence. That is what I stated and quoted.
You were clearly saying that Islamic law required a woman to provide four witnesses if she made a claim that she was raped.
RAPE

If a Muslim woman is raped, she must have four male witnesses to testify in her favor at court. If she lacks enough evidence, she is automatically accused of fornication or adultery and is either whipped (for the former) or stoned to death (for the latter).
When I said this is not true and provided evidence of this you responded with the following:
Yes it is true. That is not a Sahih narration, and we do not know if that was something Muhammad said before the command came down from Allah that four male witnesses must be present to confirm an accusation of adultery or fornication.Quran (24:4) - "And those who accuse free women then do not bring four witnesses, flog them..."Islamic Law across the board states that a woman accused of rape is required by law to have four male witnesses that will testify on her behalf, or she could be accused by the court of false accusations against someone else.
When I tried explaining why this is not true again you responded with:
Islamic Law across the board refers to Qur’an 24:4 as the bases for having four witnesses for adultery or fornication whether it was caused by rape or not.
None of your statements above are true about what Islam teaches about Rape. You were even using a verse that protects a woman against false allegations as support.

Qur'an 24:4

This Ayah states the prescribed punishment for making false accusations against chaste women, i.e., those who are free, adult and chaste. If the person who is falsely accused is a man, the same punishment of flogging also applies. If the accuser produces evidence that what he is saying is true, then the punishment does not apply. Allah said:

(and produce not four witnesses, flog them with eighty stripes, and reject their testimony forever. They indeed are the rebellious.)

If the accuser cannot prove that what he is saying is true, then three rulings apply to him: (firstly) that he should be flogged with eighty stripes, (secondly) that his testimony should be rejected forever, and (thirdly) that he should be labelled as a rebellious who is not of good character, whether in the sight of Allah or of mankind.
-- Ibn Al Kathir

And again from your source:

“The adulterer and the adulteress — flog each one of them with a hundred stripes” - (An-Nur 24:3).

“…And those who calumniate chaste woman but brings not four witnesses — flog them eighty stripes and do not admit their evidence ever after” – (An-Nur 24:5).


In above-mentioned verses, it has been made very clear that the requirement of four witnesses arises to prove adultery and not rape, and not when the husband is being accused of unfaithfulness, but when the wife is being accused.

Now if the charge or accusation is right and true then they [The accuser of the woman] have to produce four witnesses to support their claim. If they fail then accusers shall be punished for falsely accusing a chaste woman. Moreover, their testimony shall not be accepted in any other case ever.

This is all I have been saying, and is Islamic Law. You disagreed, which was the reason I had to show you what Islamic Law actually taught. So if you disagree with Islamic Law are disagreeing with Islam, not me.
Yes, I strongly disagreed when you claim that Islamic law requires four witnesses from the victim of rape because it's not true. You are confusing the statutory laws of countries like Saudi Arabia with Islamic law. While Saudi Arabia's laws are based on Islamic law, they are only a localized interpretation of Islamic law. Saudi Arabia follows a strict form of Islam that is rejected by the vast majority of Muslims in the world including many who live in that country.

From your own source:

The question I am going to highlight today is: does a woman need 4 witnesses to prove rape?

The answer is very short and it is NO. Islam or Sharia does not require any woman to produce eye-witnesses in order to corroborate her statement that she was raped.
 
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Joyousperson

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You gave no reply to this:

Aside from what you have learned from notorious anti-Islamic websites and shared here, what is your background in Islamic studies and your relationship with Muslims?
Why are you so obsessed with this pursuit?
Btw, you have bypassed many of many relevant questions raised to counter your views.

As long as it is not bashing Muslims as human beings - as this OP proposed, there is no issue with anti-Islamic individual(s) or groups [sites, book, media, etc.] as long as the views expressed by these sources are supported by verses from the original authoritative texts of Islam.

The only reservation is for groups that are known for extreme violence, e.g. like the KKK, and the likes.
Bill Warners, David Wood, Robert Spencer, and other critiques of Islam are merely arguing with words and not violence.
On the other hand, Islam are exhorting its followers to war against and commit violent acts upon non-Muslims based on the slightest inkling of threats [fasad] to the religion.

As far as Setst777 has posted, I noted his views are always supported by texts from the authoritative texts of Islam and references. Point is all his views are open to discussion by others.
You can counter check on verses quoted from the Quran and Ahadith which are easily available in the internet.

All you need to do is to agree or disagree with what is posted with reference to the sources quoted.

Btw, what is so great with the sources you have provided? Most of them have their limitations and I have countered them.

I will take that as meaning that you have no background in Islam or Islamic studies aside from what you have learned from notorious anti-Islamic websites since you have refused to answer the question after being asked multiple times.

My background in Islam

He has absolutely no background in Islamic Studies or Islamic history, he's a medical doctor. Just because someone writes a book about Islam, it doesn't mean they know what they are talking about. Bill Warner would be another good example.
Note Zakir Naik is also a qualified medical doctor [not practicing].

Having some background in Islamic Studies is useful but I'll say again, what counts is the relevance of the supporting evidences and arguments that are quoted by these authors and speakers.

With so much claims to having studied Islam, your major premise is, "Islam is what the majority of Muslim practice" which is a sham and intellectually bankrupt with the ad populum fallacy.

I have already stated many times, what is Islam must be traceable to the various Schools of Islam, Ahadith and ultimately the Quran of Allah as the final authority.

You argued verses like 9:5 and other related verses are confined to the specific period and thus purely historical.
Then you admit Jihad is for defensive purposes in which the principles related to 9:5 and others apply in similar situations. [I contend 9:5 and related verses are offensive and defensive].

You are ignorant of the essential and fundamental of the Shafi'i school [as practiced by your Muslims neighbors] which promote the Sharia Laws that disbelieving [KFR: Kafara, karfir, kuffar, non-Muslim] itself is justification to be war against offensively. nb: the reference you provided.

You keep harping on Wahabbism as the only sect that promotes violence, but note I highlighted above, Shafi'i School is condoning the same.

My view is, it is Islam per se that condones violence on non-Muslims. Those schools, sects, and individuals are merely striving to be truer-Muslims and complying with the commands of Allah to war against and commit violence upon non-Muslims as a religious duty.
 
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JosephZ

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you have bypassed many of many relevant questions raised to counter your views... As far as Setst777 has posted, I noted his views are always supported by texts from the authoritative texts of Islam and references. Point is all his views are open to discussion by others.You can counter check on verses quoted from the Quran and Ahadith which are easily available in the internet. All you need to do is to agree or disagree with what is posted with reference to the sources quoted.
I have been doing this (See setst777 false claims about the burka being a requirement for women in Islam and how four witnesses are needed for a victim to prove rape on the past couple of pages). I have done this on other issues as well, but I'm not going to keep addressing the same exact arguments over and over again. This discussion has been ongoing for well over a month now already.

Note Zakir Naik is also a qualified medical doctor [not practicing].
In addition to being a medical doctor, he's also a Sunni Salafi'i Muslim who in 1991 started working in the field of Dawah, and founded the Islamic Research Foundation (IRF) which is a non profit organization, making charitable trust and as its Chairman, he actively promotes Islamic understanding through television channels, radio programs, and the internet and through the written word. He is also the chairman of the IRF Educational Trust, and the president of Islamic Dimensions.

Naik says he was inspired by Ahmed Deedat, an Islamic preacher, having met him in 1987. Anthropologist Thomas Blom Hansen has written that Naik’s style of memorising the Quran and Hadith literature in various languages, and his related missionary activity, has made him extremely popular in Muslim and non-Muslim circles. He is a popular figure on various satellite and international TV channels all around the world and he answers the questions raised by his audience about Islam using the Quran and authentic Hadith. He has learnt these by heart and each of his answers is validated by the exact number of the Surah as it appears in the Quran. His knowledge extends not only to the Bible and the Torah (the Jewish scriptures) but also includes the Indian holy books like the Mahabharata and the Bhagwat Gita.

In the special list in 2009 of the “Top 10 Spiritual Gurus of India” Dr Zakir Naik was ranked No. 3. He has been placed in the top 62 in the list of “The 500 Most Influential Muslims in the World” published by the George Washington University, USA.Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President & Prime Minister of UAE and Ruler of Dubai, presented the prestigious Dubai International Holy Qur’an Award’s ‘Islamic Personality of 2013’ Award and Citation to Dr Zakir Naik on 29th July 2013, for providing outstanding service to Islam and Muslims at a global level in Media, Education and Philanthropy. The Agong, Tuanku Abdul Halim Mu’adzam Shah, the King of Malaysia, presented to Dr Zakir Naik the highest award of Malaysia the ‘Tokoh Ma’al Hijrah Distinguished International Personality Award for the Year 2013’ for his significant service and contribution to the development of Islam on 5th November 2013. Shaikh Dr. Sultan bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, Ruler of Sharjah, conferred on Dr Zakir Naik the ‘Sharjah Award for Voluntary Work’ for the year 2013, for his voluntary service for Islam on an international scale, on 16th January 2014. The Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdul Aziz Al-Saud presented the prestigious ‘King Faisal International Prize’ – 2015 for ‘Service to Islam’ to Dr Zakir Naik on 1st March 2015 in Riyadh.

Now compare that to the two men below who have been used as references in this thread:

Andrew G. Bostom, M.D., M.S. (Providence, RI), is associate professor of medicine in the Division of Renal Diseases of Rhode Island Hospital. He has published articles and commentary on Islam in the Washington Times, National Review, Revue Politique, FrontPage Magazine.com, and other print and online publications.

Bill Warner is the pen name of Bill French a writer, critic of Islam, and the founder of the Center for the Study of Political Islam. He is a former Tennessee State University physics professor. Warner graduated from North Carolina State University where he got his PhD in Physics and Mathematics in 1968. He has said that he gained a knowledge of Islam by studying all the Islamic texts he considered relevant from the time he was 30 years old.

Having some background in Islamic Studies is useful but I'll say again, what counts is the relevance of the supporting evidences and arguments that are quoted by these authors and speakers.

If I have a question about Islam and I had to choose from one of the three men above to give me an answer, I'm going to go with Zakir Naik first and foremost because he is a Muslim, and secondly because his credentials far outweigh that of either Bill Warner or Andrew Bostom. It really doesn't matter what the subject, if there is a choice to be made, I'm always going to turn to the individual who has the highest level of education and personal experience in a particular subject or field if I have any questions or concerns related to them.

If you were charged with a crime that could potentially cost you your freedom if you are found guilty, would you choose someone who has only read a lot of books on law and can cite a lot of legal terms and case law, but has never taken any courses on law or ever been inside a courtroom; or would you choose someone who has not only read a lot of books on law and can cite them, but has also formerly studied law and has many years of courtroom experience?

Education and personal experience far outweigh the simple act of quoting text out of some books and using them to support an argument, especially in today's world where technology allows anyone with a computer to search the internet for the information they need for support and give the appearance of being an expert.

You keep harping on Wahabbism as the only sect that promotes violence, but note I highlighted above, Shafi'i School is condoning the same.
I haven't said that Wahhabism is the only sect that promotes violence, I have used the term Fundamentalist sects in this thread multible times which would include those who follow the Hanibali and Shafi'i schools of thoughts and I have used the term Islamic extremists in general.

The reason I have focused on Wahhabism so much in this thread is because you and Setst777 have been describing the tenets of this sect to the letter.

If you read the information below, it would be impossible not to draw a parallel between what you and Setst777 are talking about in this thread and Wahhabism.

The Wahhabism that the Saudi monarchy enforces, and on which it bases its legitimacy, is shown in these documents as a fanatically bigoted, xenophobic and sometimes violent ideology. These publications articulate its wrathful dogma, rejecting the coexistence of different religions and explicitly condemning Christians, Jews, all other non-Muslims, as well as non-Wahhabi Muslims. The various Saudi publications gathered for this study state that it is a religious obligation for Muslims to hate Christians and Jews and warn against imitating, befriending, or helping such “infidels” in any way, or taking part in their festivities and celebrations. They instill contempt for America because the United States is ruled by legislated civil law rather than by totalitarian
Wahhabi-style Islamic law.


Wahhabism began only 250 years ago with the movement created by fanatical preacher Muhammad Ibn Abd alWahhab. Once a fringe sect in a remote part of the Arabian peninsula, Wahhabi extremism has been given global reach through Saudi government sponsorship and money, particularly over the past quarter century as it has competed with Iran in spreading its version of the faith. With its vast oil wealth and its position as guardian of Islam’s two holiest sites, Saudi Arabia now claims to be the leading power within Islam and the protector of the faith, a belief stated in the Saudi Basic Law. Saudi Foreign Policy Adviser Adel al-Jubeir publicly states that “the role of Saudi Arabia in the Muslim world is similar to the role of the Vatican.” Even as the Saudi state asserts that it strives to keep the faith “pure” and free of innovation, it invents a new role for itself as the only legitimate authority on Islam.

Within worldwide Sunni Islam, followers of Wahhabism and other hardline or salafist (literally translated as venerable predecessors) movements are a distinct minority.

Saudi state curriculum for many years has taught children to hate “the other” and support jihad, a malleable term that is used by terrorists to describe and justify their atrocities... Recent converts with limited experience of Islam can be particularly susceptible to the Saudi publications’ toxic message... The spread of Islamic extremism, such as Wahhabism, is the most serious ideological challenge of our times. Wahhabi extremism is more than hate speech; it is a totalitarian ideology of
hatred that can incite to violence.


Religion is the foundation of the Saudi state’s political ideology, and religion is an important part of Saudi education. Saudi Arabia defines itself as an Islamic state, and has established Wahhabism as the official state doctrine. Saudi Wahhabism is an extreme interpretation of Islam based on a dualistic worldview in which the true “monotheists” are obliged until judgment day to “fight” “polytheists,” and “idolators,” including Christians, Jews, Shiites and insufficiently devout Sunni Muslims.

Adherents of Wahhabism constitute a small minority within world Islam [Fewer than 5%],yet, Saudi Arabia is trying to assert itself as the world’s authoritative voice on Islam. Its conquest of the Hejaz in 1924 gave it control of Islam’s two holiest sites and the Hajj, the annual pilgrimage to Mecca that is one of the five pillars of Islam. This role, along with its vast oil wealth, has been used by Saudi Arabia to lay claim to being the leading power within all of Islam and the protector of the faith, a claim emphasized in the Saudi Basic Law.

Saudi state textbooks propound a belief that Christians and Jews and other unbelievers have united in a war against Islam that will ultimately end in the complete destruction of such infidels. Like the statements of Osama bin Laden, they advance the belief that the Crusades never ended and continue today in various forms.

Some of the most disturbing examples include the following (See Appendix A for text excerpts.) Regarding Sunni, Shiite, Sufi and other non-Wahhabi or non-Salafi Muslims, the textbooks:

• Denounce Muslims who do not interpret the Qur’an literally.
• Muslims to hate Christians, Jews, polytheists and other unbelievers.
Christians are considered infidels who must be fought unless they have a protection contract with Muslims
• Jews and the Christian are enemies of the Muslim believers and the clash between the two realms continues until the Day of Resurrection.
• The spread of Islam through jihad is a religious obligation.
• The struggle between Muslims and Jews will continue until the hour of judgment and that Muslims will triumph because they are right and he who is right is always victorious.
• Whoever obeys the Prophet and accepts the oneness of God cannot be loyal to those who oppose God and His Prophet, even if they are his closest relatives.
• It is forbidden for a Muslim to be a loyal friend to someone who does not believe in God and His Prophet, or someone who fights the religion of Islam.
• A Muslim, even if he lives far away, is your brother in religion. Someone who opposes God, even if he is your brother by family tie, is your enemy.

https://freedomhouse.org/sites/default/files/inline_images/Saudi Publications on Hate Ideology Invade American Mosques.pdf
https://www.uscirf.gov/sites/default/files/Tier1_SAUDI ARABIA.pdf

The Islamic sect of Wahhabism and it's teachings are what you and Setst777 are describing rather than the religion of Islam that the vast majority of the world's Muslims follow and anyone with even an ounce of background in Islam or that has taken courses in Islamic studies can see this.
 
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Joyousperson

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I have been doing this (See setst777 false claims about the burka being a requirement for women in Islam and how four witnesses are needed for a victim to prove rape on the past couple of pages). I have done this on other issues as well, but I'm not going to keep addressing the same exact arguments over and over again. This discussion has been ongoing for well over a month now already.


In addition to being a medical doctor, he's also a Sunni Salafi'i Muslim who in 1991 started working in the field of Dawah, and founded the Islamic Research Foundation (IRF) which is a non profit organization, making charitable trust and as its Chairman, he actively promotes Islamic understanding through television channels, radio programs, and the internet and through the written word. He is also the chairman of the IRF Educational Trust, and the president of Islamic Dimensions.

Naik says he was inspired by Ahmed Deedat, an Islamic preacher, having met him in 1987. Anthropologist Thomas Blom Hansen has written that Naik’s style of memorising the Quran and Hadith literature in various languages, and his related missionary activity, has made him extremely popular in Muslim and non-Muslim circles. He is a popular figure on various satellite and international TV channels all around the world and he answers the questions raised by his audience about Islam using the Quran and authentic Hadith. He has learnt these by heart and each of his answers is validated by the exact number of the Surah as it appears in the Quran. His knowledge extends not only to the Bible and the Torah (the Jewish scriptures) but also includes the Indian holy books like the Mahabharata and the Bhagwat Gita.

In the special list in 2009 of the “Top 10 Spiritual Gurus of India” Dr Zakir Naik was ranked No. 3. He has been placed in the top 62 in the list of “The 500 Most Influential Muslims in the World” published by the George Washington University, USA.Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President & Prime Minister of UAE and Ruler of Dubai, presented the prestigious Dubai International Holy Qur’an Award’s ‘Islamic Personality of 2013’ Award and Citation to Dr Zakir Naik on 29th July 2013, for providing outstanding service to Islam and Muslims at a global level in Media, Education and Philanthropy. The Agong, Tuanku Abdul Halim Mu’adzam Shah, the King of Malaysia, presented to Dr Zakir Naik the highest award of Malaysia the ‘Tokoh Ma’al Hijrah Distinguished International Personality Award for the Year 2013’ for his significant service and contribution to the development of Islam on 5th November 2013. Shaikh Dr. Sultan bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, Ruler of Sharjah, conferred on Dr Zakir Naik the ‘Sharjah Award for Voluntary Work’ for the year 2013, for his voluntary service for Islam on an international scale, on 16th January 2014. The Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdul Aziz Al-Saud presented the prestigious ‘King Faisal International Prize’ – 2015 for ‘Service to Islam’ to Dr Zakir Naik on 1st March 2015 in Riyadh.

Now compare that to the two men below who have been used as references in this thread:

Andrew G. Bostom, M.D., M.S. (Providence, RI), is associate professor of medicine in the Division of Renal Diseases of Rhode Island Hospital. He has published articles and commentary on Islam in the Washington Times, National Review, Revue Politique, FrontPage Magazine.com, and other print and online publications.

Bill Warner is the pen name of Bill French a writer, critic of Islam, and the founder of the Center for the Study of Political Islam. He is a former Tennessee State University physics professor. Warner graduated from North Carolina State University where he got his PhD in Physics and Mathematics in 1968. He has said that he gained a knowledge of Islam by studying all the Islamic texts he considered relevant from the time he was 30 years old.



If I have a question about Islam and I had to choose from one of the three men above to give me an answer, I'm going to go with Zakir Naik first and foremost because he is a Muslim, and secondly because his credentials far outweigh that of either Bill Warner or Andrew Bostom. It really doesn't matter what the subject, if there is a choice to be made, I'm always going to turn to the individual who has the highest level of education and personal experience in a particular subject or field if I have any questions or concerns.

If you were charged with a crime that could potentially cost you your freedom if you are found guilty, would you choose someone who has only read a lot of books on law and can cite a lot of legal terms and case law, but has never taken any courses on law or ever been inside a courtroom; or would you choose someone who has not only read a lot of books on law and can cite them, but has also formerly studied law and has many years of courtroom experience?

Education and personal experience far outweighs the simple act of quoting text out of some religious books and using them to support an argument, especially in today's world where technology allows anyone with a computer to search the internet for the information they need for support and give the appearance of being an expert.
Your intellectual standards are VERY low to simply rely on a list of academic titles and experiences as a priority.

Note in the case of the court, a lawyer has to be qualified with academic and practical experiences. Thus any lawyer chosen would have the minimal books and real practices.
In the case of experts called as witnesses, the other party will have their own witness to counter or agree with statements made.

As for Zakir Naik [not an Arabic Islamic Scholar], other than good memory recall, he is limited in his Islamic knowledge.
One point is very natural for any Muslim [with salvation at stake] to be very emotional and subjective with his own Islamic knowledge and bias.
From the speeches of Zakir Naik, one will note he is very anti-disbeliever in line with the fundamentals of Salafism\Wahabbism. His messages has subliminal propaganda that influenced the vulnerable to jihad and non-Muslims as evident with the Bangladesh jihadists.
There is no way any believer [with salvation at stake] will ever note any evil and violence elements where there are real evil and violent elements in their religion as in Islam.

On the other hand those who critique Islam has more room to be objective to analyze the roots causes of the terrible evil and violence from the Quran [supported by Ahadith].
This is what Andrew Boston, Bill Warner, and the others are doing.
I have asked you to show evidence where they are wrong in any major and significant way from their quotations of the Quran, Ahadith and Sira. You have not done so, except for some frivolous points.

Note this from Andrew Boston in his referencing to the Quran to support his points;

Alan Johnson: Which are the most important antisemitic motifs in the foundational texts, as you see it?

Andrew Bostom: I think 5:82 is an important motif but it is hardly the most important.
The central anti-Jewish motif in the Koran is found in verse 2:61, repeated at verse 3:112.
This is where the Jews are accused of slaying the Prophets and transgressing against the will of Allah, and so they are condemned and cursed eternally.
Verse 2.61 says ‘shame and misery’ are ‘stamped upon them.’
And this verse is coupled to verses like 5:60, and other verses about the Jews being transformed into apes and pigs, which is part of their curse.
Verse 5:78 describes the curse upon the Jews by David and Jesus, Mary’s son.
There is a related verse, 5:64, which accuses the Jews of being spreaders of war and corruption, a sort of ancient antecedent of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. (Palestinian Authority President Mahmud Abbas cited this verse during a diatribe against the Jews of Israel, in 2007.) More generally, the Koran’s overall discussion of the Jews is marked by a litany of their sins and punishments, as if part of a divine indictment, conviction, and punishment process.
https://www.dissentmagazine.org/wp-content/files_mf/1390433537d15Bostom.pdf

Show me where he is wrong in justifying his point in claiming the Quran is very anti-semitic.
I have a long list of verses supporting why Islam is anti-Jew.
Btw, Andrew Boston's books are heavily supported by a long list of references. The same is done by the other critiques of Islam. They are not preaching propaganda and rhetoric from some pulpit without any references.


I haven't said that Wahhabism is the only sect that promotes violence, I have used the term Fundamentalist sects in this thread multible times which would include those who follow the Hanibali and Shafi'i schools of thoughts and I have used the term Islamic extremists in general.

The reason I have focused on Wahhabism so much in this thread is because you and Setst777 have been describing the tenets of this sect to the letter.

If you read the information below, it would be impossible not to draw a parallel between what you and Setst777 are talking about in this thread and Wahhabism.

The Wahhabism that the Saudi monarchy enforces, and on which it bases its legitimacy, is shown in these documents as a fanatically bigoted, xenophobic and sometimes violent ideology. These publications articulate its wrathful dogma, rejecting the coexistence of different religions and explicitly condemning Christians, Jews, all other non-Muslims, as well as non-Wahhabi Muslims. The various Saudi publications gathered for this study state that it is a religious obligation for Muslims to hate Christians and Jews and warn against imitating, befriending, or helping such “infidels” in any way, or taking part in their festivities and celebrations. They instill contempt for America because the United States is ruled by legislated civil law rather than by totalitarian
Wahhabi-style Islamic law.


Wahhabism began only 250 years ago with the movement created by fanatical preacher Muhammad Ibn Abd alWahhab. Once a fringe sect in a remote part of the Arabian peninsula, Wahhabi extremism has been given global reach through Saudi government sponsorship and money, particularly over the past quarter century as it has competed with Iran in spreading its version of the faith. With its vast oil wealth and its position as guardian of Islam’s two holiest sites, Saudi Arabia now claims to be the leading power within Islam and the protector of the faith, a belief stated in the Saudi Basic Law. Saudi Foreign Policy Adviser Adel al-Jubeir publicly states that “the role of Saudi Arabia in the Muslim world is similar to the role of the Vatican.” Even as the Saudi state asserts that it strives to keep the faith “pure” and free of innovation, it invents a new role for itself as the only legitimate authority on Islam.

Within worldwide Sunni Islam, followers of Wahhabism and other hardline or salafist (literally translated as venerable predecessors) movements are a distinct minority.

Saudi state curriculum for many years has taught children to hate “the other” and support jihad, a malleable term that is used by terrorists to describe and justify their atrocities... Recent converts with limited experience of Islam can be particularly susceptible to the Saudi publications’ toxic message... The spread of Islamic extremism, such as Wahhabism, is the most serious ideological challenge of our times. Wahhabi extremism is more than hate speech; it is a totalitarian ideology of
hatred that can incite to violence.


Religion is the foundation of the Saudi state’s political ideology, and religion is an important part of Saudi education. Saudi Arabia defines itself as an Islamic state, and has established Wahhabism as the official state doctrine. Saudi Wahhabism is an extreme interpretation of Islam based on a dualistic worldview in which the true “monotheists” are obliged until judgment day to “fight” “polytheists,” and “idolators,” including Christians, Jews, Shiites and insufficiently devout Sunni Muslims.

Adherents of Wahhabism constitute a small minority within world Islam [Fewer than 5%],yet, Saudi Arabia is trying to assert itself as the world’s authoritative voice on Islam. Its conquest of the Hejaz in 1924 gave it control of Islam’s two holiest sites and the Hajj, the annual pilgrimage to Mecca that is one of the five pillars of Islam. This role, along with its vast oil wealth, has been used by Saudi Arabia to lay claim to being the leading power within all of Islam and the protector of the faith, a claim emphasized in the Saudi Basic Law.

Saudi state textbooks propound a belief that Christians and Jews and other unbelievers have united in a war against Islam that will ultimately end in the complete destruction of such infidels. Like the statements of Osama bin Laden, they advance the belief that the Crusades never ended and continue today in various forms.

Some of the most disturbing examples include the following (See Appendix A for text excerpts.) Regarding Sunni, Shiite, Sufi and other non-Wahhabi or non-Salafi Muslims, the textbooks:

• Denounce Muslims who do not interpret the Qur’an literally.
• Muslims to hate Christians, Jews, polytheists and other unbelievers.
Christians are considered infidels who must be fought unless they have a protection contract with Muslims
• Jews and the Christian are enemies of the Muslim believers and the clash between the two realms continues until the Day of Resurrection.
• The spread of Islam through jihad is a religious obligation.
• The struggle between Muslims and Jews will continue until the hour of judgment and that Muslims will triumph because they are right and he who is right is always victorious.
• Whoever obeys the Prophet and accepts the oneness of God cannot be loyal to those who oppose God and His Prophet, even if they are his closest relatives.
• It is forbidden for a Muslim to be a loyal friend to someone who does not believe in God and His Prophet, or someone who fights the religion of Islam.
• A Muslim, even if he lives far away, is your brother in religion. Someone who opposes God, even if he is your brother by family tie, is your enemy.

https://freedomhouse.org/sites/default/files/inline_images/Saudi Publications on Hate Ideology Invade American Mosques.pdf
https://www.uscirf.gov/sites/default/files/Tier1_SAUDI ARABIA.pdf

The Islamic sect of Wahhabism and it's teachings are what you and Setst777 are describing rather than the religion of Islam that the vast majority of the world's Muslims follow and anyone with even an ounce of background in Islam or that has taken courses in Islamic studies can see this.
Again you are intellectually dishonest.
How can you blatantly judge what we are doing based on your own personal opinions?

I have already explained to your my approach to the critique of Islam. My focus at present is mainly on the 6236 verses of the Quran for which I have read [the whole] more than 100 times and have done extensive analysis on it to justify why Islam is inherently evil and violence.
All the critical points I made of Islam as inherently evil and violent are supported by verses from the Quran [supported by the Ahadith and Sira].
Btw, I have provided so many quotes from the Quran but you have not countered the critical ones convincingly.

One of my main principles and concept is the STALEMATE DILEMMA. How can you counter this real fact when your are not Allah or a God?

Sets777 is also quoting references which is at least open for you to counter and thus not giving his personal subjective opinions like your ad populum fallacy.

The Quran do exhorts Muslims to do "good" [SLH: salaha - righteous, AynRF: ma'ruf, khyr, brr, tyb, yhr & other ethical acts] and avoid evil [NKR: munkar] but that is within the definition and confine within Islam itself and Muslims, not extended to non-Muslims. As such warring against disbelievers and committing violence on non-Muslims are considered 'good' in the eyes of Allah and will be heavily rewarded.

Note your own ignorance of the evil and violent fundamental of the Shafi'i schools. The majority of your neighbors Shafi'i Muslims who do not practice evil and violence is because they have not be exposed to the true teachings of the Shafi'i school. If they have and did not commit evil on non-Muslims is because they are ignoring such dictates as good human beings and not being good Muslims.

I suggest you read this interview quoted above with Andrew Bostom;

https://www.dissentmagazine.org/wp-content/files_mf/1390433537d15Bostom.pdf

Bostom's counter to Wahhabism your favorite point;

Schwartz further argues there was no problem until the Wahhabi movement arose. Well, this is ridiculous.
The Wahhabis don’t come into existence until the mid to late 18th century! How do you account for a thousand years of Jihad and Dhimmitude prior to the rise of the Wahhabi movement?
How do you account for Jihad and Dhimmitude among the Shia, who are the Wahhabis arch-enemies, to this day? The degradations that non-Muslims experienced under the Shia were often worse than what they experienced under the Sunni because the Shia found Jews and other infidels physically impure (They take verse 9:28 literally. So literally that once Iran became a Shiite theocracy at the beginning of the sixteenth century, Jews could be beaten, sometimes to death, for going out in the rain. Why? Because their impurity could wash off on to Muslims!) page 22​
 
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JosephZ,

Here is one reason why people like you [as with the Jews and others] who are in DENIAL of the truth of the inherent evil and violent elements plus threat to humanity and themselves;

Alan Johnson: Let’s talk about denial. You have argued denial of Islamic antisemitism runs wide and deep in both Muslim and non-Muslim communities. Why is denial so prevalent?

Andrew Bostom: The worst audiences to address about Islamic antisemitism, quite frankly, are Jewish audiences! One of the reasons for this, I believe is almost primal.
As physicians we deal with denial as a strategy all the time.
Denial is one of the most profound psychological mechanisms by which patients try to ignore their own disease status, because potentially fatal illnesses are terrifying. And who does not get a chill when they sit down and watch the sermons at the MEMRI website, whether they come from the Palestinian Authority, or from Saudi Arabia, or are recorded surreptitiously in a mosque in the UK? These are terrifying things, Alan, for a Jewish audience to hear. People are openly calling for their annihilation in a religious context. Who wouldn’t want to pretend that ‘they can’t really mean that?’ Fear is a major factor.

It’s also human to perseverate upon things we have already understood, and for which we have developed strategies of response. I am referring particularly to the deicide allegation, the Protocols, and the standard racist Nazi propaganda. We have agencies that are constantly vigilant for these familiar antisemitic themes, and rush to the fore whenever any real or imagined example of these hatreds emerges. But there are precious few groups, other than MEMRI, who are highlighting hatemongering antisemitic sermons based on Islamic motifs. It’s more comfortable dealing with familiar and, at this point, better tamed, enemies. - page 30
https://www.dissentmagazine.org/wp-content/files_mf/1390433537d15Bostom.pdf
I presume it is very uncomfortable for you to accept the fact that Islam is inherently evil and violent despite the very obvious supporting evidences from the Quran [supported by Ahadith, Sira] and the real cases of terrible evil and violent acts committed by SOME Muslims who justify their acts with Quranic verses.
 
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JosephZ,

Here is one reason why people like you [as with the Jews and others] who are in DENIAL of the truth of the inherent evil and violent elements plus threat to humanity and themselves;

Alan Johnson: Let’s talk about denial. You have argued denial of Islamic antisemitism runs wide and deep in both Muslim and non-Muslim communities. Why is denial so prevalent?

Andrew Bostom: The worst audiences to address about Islamic antisemitism, quite frankly, are Jewish audiences! One of the reasons for this, I believe is almost primal.
As physicians we deal with denial as a strategy all the time.
Denial is one of the most profound psychological mechanisms by which patients try to ignore their own disease status, because potentially fatal illnesses are terrifying. And who does not get a chill when they sit down and watch the sermons at the MEMRI website, whether they come from the Palestinian Authority, or from Saudi Arabia, or are recorded surreptitiously in a mosque in the UK? These are terrifying things, Alan, for a Jewish audience to hear. People are openly calling for their annihilation in a religious context. Who wouldn’t want to pretend that ‘they can’t really mean that?’ Fear is a major factor.

It’s also human to perseverate upon things we have already understood, and for which we have developed strategies of response. I am referring particularly to the deicide allegation, the Protocols, and the standard racist Nazi propaganda. We have agencies that are constantly vigilant for these familiar antisemitic themes, and rush to the fore whenever any real or imagined example of these hatreds emerges. But there are precious few groups, other than MEMRI, who are highlighting hatemongering antisemitic sermons based on Islamic motifs. It’s more comfortable dealing with familiar and, at this point, better tamed, enemies. - page 30
https://www.dissentmagazine.org/wp-content/files_mf/1390433537d15Bostom.pdf
I presume it is very uncomfortable for you to accept the fact that Islam is inherently evil and violent despite the very obvious supporting evidences from the Quran [supported by Ahadith, Sira] and the real cases of terrible evil and violent acts committed by SOME Muslims who justify their acts with Quranic verses.

Hi Joyousperson,

Wow! Impressive posts. I think anyone viewing this discussion can see that Joseph is not being honest, is driven by subjective bias to debunk any sources that disagree with him.

He claims to have 30 years study of Islam but does not even know the basics of Islam, for instance:
  • not knowing why Muslims dress the way they do,
  • that the burka is a command in Islam's Core Scriptures.
  • Joseph claims that the burka is only commanded by extremists and extremist regimes,
  • that Sunni Sharia is contextually interpreted by a Sufi book for Sunni Muslims
to name a few.

Yet, Joseph is going to attack the credibility of Dr. Bostom because he doesn't have a label in the front or back of his name - as if he needs one in order to have knowledge of Islam. So totally biased.

I read much about Dr. Bostom online, and am in awe of his vast knowledge of Islam and its history, and the fact that he is the first of anyone in the world to provide so many translations of original historical Islamic and other secondary sources to actually walk us through the real history of Islamic Jihad since inception.

I only have one book by Dr. Bostom so far, "The Legacy of Jihad." I plan to purchase and study his other books as well, as this would be worthy time spent studying the actual history of Islam from its own historical sources instead of studying the biased politically correct opinions of others.
 
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setst777

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You were clearly saying

setst777 said:

How many differing opinions are there among the four Islamic Jurists (Mufti)? Answer: Either female circumcision is recommended (noble) or it is mandatory. That is it.

This is not true. The Hanifi school of thought, the most followed school of thought in Islam, says female circumcision has no religious value.

There are five primary schools of thought in Islam by the way. 4 Sunni and 1 Shia

Setst RE:
Don’t say it isn’t true.

You quote from one website, a fatwa from a London Mufti with no available autobiography or credentials, and think that is God’s truth. Although you did not provide the source, I found it…

does female circumcision have its place in Islaam :: Muftisays Islamic Question & Answers

Sunni view
The Maliki, Hanafi and Hanbali schools of Islamic jurisprudence view it as makruma for women ("noble", as opposed to obligatory).[2] For the Shafi'i school it is obligatory (wājib).[1][2][3]
Religious views on female genital mutilation - Wikipedia

Shia view
Shiite religious texts, such as the hadith transmitted by Al-Sadiq, state that "circumcision is makruma ("noble") for women.[77] FGM is performed within the Dawoodi Bohra community in India, Pakistan, Yemen and East Africa.[78]
Religious views on female genital mutilation - Wikipedia

I quote another source <<<
In the Hanafî school of law there are two different opinions. Some Hanafî scholars consider it to be a Sunnah for women. Others consider it to be merely an honorable thing. [refer to: al-Fatâwâ al-Hindiyyah and al-Ikhtiyâr li-Tahlîl al-Mukhtâr]

It is considered a preferred act (mandûb) for women in the Mâlikî school of law. They rely upon the hadîth of Umm `Atiyyah for this ruling. [
refer to: Bulghah al-Sâlik li-Aqrab al-Masâlik and Ashal al-Madârik Sharh Irshâd al-Sâlik]

In the Shâfi`î school of law, circumcision is considered an obligation for both men and women. This is the official ruling of that school of thought. Some Shâfi`î scholars express the view that circumcision is obligatory for men and merely Sunnah for women. [
refer to: al-Majmû`]

In the Hanbalî school of law, circumcision is obligatory for men and merely an honorable thing for women. It is not obligatory for them. The Hanbalî jurist Ibn Qudâmah observes: “This is the view of many people of knowledge. Imam Ahmad said that it is more emphatic for men.” [
al-Mughnî (1/115)]

1 – That it is obligatory for both males and females. This is the view of the Shaafa’is and Hanbalis, and is the view favoured by al-Qaadi Abu Bakr ibn al-‘Arabi among the Maalikis (may Allaah have mercy on them all).

Al-Nawawi (may Allaah have mercy on him) said in al-Majmoo’ (1/367): Circumcision is obligatory for both men and women in our view. This is the view of many of the salaf, as was narrated by al-Khattaabi. Among those who regarded it as obligatory is Ahmad… it is the correct view that is well known and was stated by al-Shaafa’i (may Allaah have mercy on him), and the majority stated definitively that it is obligatory for both men and women. end quote.

See Fath al-Baari, 10/340; Kishshaaf al-Qinaa’, 1/80

2 – That circumcision is Sunnah for both males and females. This is the view of the Hanafis and Maalikis, and was narrated in one report from Ahmad. Ibn ‘Aabideen al-Hanafi (may Allaah have mercy on him) said in his Haashiyah (6/751): In Kitaab al-Tahaarah of al-Siraaj al-Wahhaaj it says: Know that circumcision is Sunnah in our view – i.e., according to the Hanafis – for men and for women. end quote.

See: Mawaahib al-Jaleel, 3/259

3 – That circumcision is obligatory for men and is good and mustahabb for women. This is the third view of Imam Ahmad, and it is the view of some Maalikis such as Sahnoon. This view was also favoured by al-Muwaffaq ibn Qudaamah in al-Mughni.

See: al-Tamheed, 21/60; al-Mughni, 1/63

It says in Fataawa al-Lajnah al-Daa’imah (5/223):

Circumcision is one of the Sunnahs of the fitrah, and it is for both males and females, except that is it obligatory for males and Sunnah and good in the case of women.

Thus it is clear that the fuqaha’ of Islam are agreed that circumcision is prescribed for both males and females, and in fact the majority of them are of the view that it is obligatory for both. No one said that it is not prescribed or that it is makrooh or haraam.


Female Circumcision: A Sunnah? - Multaqa Ahl al-Hadeeth
>>> End of Quote

And while the female genital circumcision is practiced in parts of the world that are not Islam, the vast majority of women who are circumcised are within Islam.

They are circumcised per the law of their School of Islam.

And since the increase in immigration of Muslims to the US and European countries the practice of female circumcision is growing rapidly.

The only reason we do not see much more of this is because of many countries passing laws against female circumcision.

setst777 said:
Therefore, good Muslims who seek Allah’s approval will be circumcised. This has nothing to do with tradition or culture outside of Islam and has everything to do with Allah and His Messenger, and is Sharia.

The reason female circumcision is seen as permissible and even honorable in all but two of the schools of thought is because it was already customary prior to the arrival of Islam.

Setst RE: You could say that for most of the religious practices of Islam, and also Christianity.

For instance,
  • marriage,
  • the marriage ring,
  • the Virgin Birth of Jesus,
  • Christmas trees,
  • Easter eggs,
  • Church buildings,
  • and much more,
are all found in pagan religious customs.

The point is
that any custom or practice had its origins else ware is not the reason why the members of any religion follow these customs or practices. The reason they follow their religious practices is because their religion establishes such customs and practices as inclusive within their respective religions. If you can’t see this, that is not anyone’s fault but your own.

This is really quite elementary. Do you practice Christianity because many of its practices and teachings are found before Christianity?

setst777 said:
Remember the answer I provided from Islam’s own sources? Very clear that circumcision is the norm within Islam per Muhammad’s own words and actions and from Sunni Islam all four Schools – recommended (noble) or obligatory.

What Islam teaches is the issue, not what civilizations may have practiced before Islam.


setst777 said:
All four schools of Sunni and also Shia agree that female circumcision is either recommended (noble) or obligatory. Any Muslim who desires to please Allah will, therefore, be circumcised.

If this were true, then more than 10% of the world's Muslim women would undergo female circumcision.

Setst RE: It is true because Islam teaches it, and is based on their core Scriptures – Sahih Bukhari. There is nothing you can say or do to change Islam. You must change your thinking for Islam. Islam does not change for you.

Female circumcision would be far more popular if not for laws in many countries prohibiting this practice, and because of pressure from the West.

setst777 said:
In Islamic countries female circumcision is extremely high, with some major Islamic countries showing over 90% females having been circumcised, over 200 million women in 30 countries – most are Islamic.

Not in all Islamic countries, in most Muslim majority countries the practice of female circumcision is not widespread and confined only to small regions or within certain tribes, and in some Islamic countries it's practically non-existent. And of those 200 million women, a large percentage of those are Christians.

Setst RE:

Firstly,
The Christian Scriptures – from Jesus or Apostolic Writings – we see absolutely no practice or hint of Female Genital Circumcision. IN FACT: Not even Christian men were to be circumcised. The Apostle Paul warned that men are not to be circumcised.

Galatians 5:2-3 (NIV)
2 Mark my words! I, Paul, tell you that if you let yourselves be circumcised, Christ will be of no value to you at all. 3 Again I declare to every man who lets himself be circumcised that he is obligated to obey the whole law.

Secondly,
Islam does reveal the practice of Female Genital Circumcision was the norm within Islam, and was practiced within Islam in Sahih Bukhari.

Thirdly,
“FGM is practiced predominantly within certain Muslim societies,[11] but it also exists within some adjacent Christian and animist groups.”
Religious views on female genital mutilation - Wikipedia
 
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setst777

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You were clearly saying that Islamic law

setst777 said: ↑
he had seen me before the order of compulsory veiling (was prescribed). So I woke up when he recited Istirja' (i.e. "Inna lillahi wa inna llaihi raji'un") as soon as he recognized me. I veiled my face with my head cover at once, and by Allah …
Reference: Sahih al-Bukhari 4141
In-book reference: Book 64, Hadith 185
USC-MSA web (English) reference: Vol. 5, Book 59, Hadith 462


Question: Is this verse Extremist?



Setst RE: Why not, when it fits your definition of extremist? I quote you…

JosephZ said: ↑
There is no command for women to cover their faces, that is optional. Islamic extremists and some extremists regimes may require women to be completely covered, but it's not what Islam commands.


setst777 said: ↑
Narrated Safiya bint Shaiba: 'Aisha used to say: "When (the Verse): "They should draw their veils over their necks and bosoms," was revealed, (the ladies) cut their waist sheets at the edges and covered their faceswith the cut pieces."
Sahih Bukhari 6:60:282

Question: Is this verse Extremist?



Setst RE: Why not, when it fits your definition of extremist? I quote you…

JosephZ said: ↑
There is no command for women to cover their faces, that is optional. Islamic extremists and some extremists regimes may require women to be completely covered, but it's not what Islam commands.

setst777 said: ↑
'Umar addressed her and said, "I have recognized you, O Sauda." He said so, as he desired eagerly that the verses of Al-Hijab (the observing of veils by the Muslim women) may be revealed.
So Allah revealed the verses of "Al-Hijab" (A complete body cover excluding the eyes).
Sahih Bukhari 1:4:148

Question: Is this verse Extremist?



Setst RE: Why not, when it fits your definition of extremist? I quote you…

JosephZ said: ↑
There is no command for women to cover their faces, that is optional. Islamic extremists and some extremists regimes may require women to be completely covered, but it's not what Islam commands.

setst777 said:
He ('Umar) said so as he was anxious for some Divine orders regarding the veil (the veiling of women.) So Allah revealed the Verse of Veiling. (Al-Hijab; a complete body cover excluding the eyes). (See Hadith No. 148, Vol. 1)
Sahih Bukhari 8:74:257

Question: Is this verse Extremist?



Setst RE: Why not, when it fits your definition of extremist? I quote you…

JosephZ said: ↑
There is no command for women to cover their faces, that is optional. Islamic extremists and some extremists regimes may require women to be completely covered, but it's not what Islam commands.

setst777 said: ↑
The Qur’an and Hadith make is very plain to understand that veiling the face, except for the eyes, is what is meant.

Why?
The reason is because this is what the Qur’an and Hadith actually states in context.
LOOK at the verses I provided from the Qur’an and Sahih Hadeth. No need to re-interpret it.


Click to expand...

I'm going to go with the interpretation of the majority of the Islamic schools of jurisprudence and the vast majority of the world's Muslims on this and agree with them that the face doesn't have to be covered.

Setst RE: Your answer means you now disagree with your previous position as follows:

JosephZ said:
That's not taught in Islam. Dressing modestly yes, covering their entire bodies from head to toe? No.

setst RE: Not taught in Islam?

What about the Qur’an quotes commanding it?

What about the Sahih Bukhari quotes commanding it?

What about the fact that:
…most medieval Hanbali and Shafi'i jurists counted a woman's face among the awra, concluding that it should be veiled, except for the eyes.”[25]”
Burqa - Wikipedia

Are Hanbali and Shafii extremists?

What about the fact that:
According to the Salafi point of view, it is obligatory (fard) for a woman to cover her entire body when in public or in presence of non-mahram men.[27][28]
Burqa - Wikipedia

Anyone with 30 years study of Islam should have known this in his first year of study… You mean to say you never saw Muslims wear a Burka before? Yet you say it’s

“not taught in Islam”
"Not what Islam commands"


How could anyone with even a rudimentary knowledge of Islam make such a statement? Answer: It is not possible.

That is why I don’t believe you ever studied Islam. You couldn’t have. You didn’t even know why Muslims dress the way they do.

Be honest, you never studied Islam. There is no other way to explain your lack of basic knowledge about Islam.
 
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You were clearly saying

setst777 said:
I gave a link to his website, and his autobiography is also online.

He has absolutely no background in Islamic Studies or Islamic history, he's a medical doctor. Just because someone writes a book about Islam, it doesn't mean they know what they are talking about. Bill Warner would be another good example.

Setst RE: Absolutely no background in Islamic Studies or Islamic history? Where did you get your information?

What you mean to say is that Dr. Bostom doesn’t have labels in the front or back of his name.

What about you with what you say is 30 years of Islam studies; yet you don’t even know the basics of Islam?

So, do labels actually prove one's actual knowledge of Islam? Answer: No.

That is why you must learn to review the source material provided.

Joyousperson did an excellent job of refuting your bigotry, so no need to reply further to such willful ignorance.

You love to slap labels on people but refuse to see the evidence. As well, having a bunch of titles behind your name does not prove anything about what you actually know on a subject as we see by the many differing views among scholars on a wide variety of Islam topics. That is why you should stop looking at labels and look at the ingredients.

I also recommend that you listen to the interview that Joyousperson gave you the link to:

https://www.dissentmagazine.org/wp-content/files_mf/1390433537d15Bostom.pdf

I also recommend that you heed Joyousperson’s summary statement as follows:

I presume it is very uncomfortable for you to accept the fact that Islam is inherently evil and violent despite the very obvious supporting evidences from the Quran [supported by Ahadith, Sira] and the real cases of terrible evil and violent acts committed by SOME Muslims who justify their acts with Quranic verses.

I would add that we have a whole history of Islamic Jihad – 1400 years of it to learn from, long before Wahhabi. Are you willing to look actually look at history and study their own core Scriptures?

setst777 said:
Nothing you wrote contradicts what I have been showing. I have already quoted that fact that if a women says she is raped then this is to be accepted as truth. However, if she is accusing a particular person or persons of raping her then she must have solid evidence. That is what I stated and quoted.

You were clearly saying that Islamic law required a woman to provide four witnesses if she made a claim that she was raped.

setst777 said:

RAPE

If a Muslim woman is raped,
she must have four male witnesses to testify in her favor at court. If she lacks enough evidence, she is automatically accused of fornication or adultery and is either whipped (for the former) or stoned to death (for the latter).

Setst RE:in her favor” is the key. If you look at the context of my messages, and the source I quoted, what I mean by this refers to those she is accusing of raping her. Obviously if a women just says she is raped without accusing anyone, then since no one else is being accused, then no need to prove or disprove with witnesses against anyone.

If you had any doubts as to what I meant, all you had to do is review my source quote as follows:

setst777 said: ↑
Rape and produce 4 witnesses - Islamhelpline

When I said this is not true and provided evidence of this you responded with the following:

setst777 said:
Yes it is true. That is not a Sahih narration, and we do not know if that was something Muhammad said before the command came down from Allah that four male witnesses must be present to confirm an accusation of adultery or fornication. Quran (24:4) - "And those who accuse free women then do not bring four witnesses, flog them..."Islamic Law across the board states that a woman accused of rape is required by law to have four male witnesses that will testify on her behalf, or she could be accused by the court of false accusations against someone else.

Click to expand...

Setst RE: “a woman accused of rape” That doesn’t make sense, as if the woman is raping someone. That is an obvious wording error on my part, but the context should have been obvious with the source I quoted from.

What I meant, in the context of my responses, was if the woman is accusing a person or persons of raping her then she is required by Law of have four male witnesses to “testify on her behalf” prove her case against those she accused. I quoted the source for my information in case you had any doubts about what I was stating.

setst RE: Nothing you wrote contradicts what I have been showing. I have already quoted the fact that if a women says she is raped then fine. However, if she is accusing a particular person or persons of raping her then she must have solid evidence, and four male witnesses is the widely accepted sure testimony against the accused in Islam. That is what I stated and quoted in context.

The best evidence in Islam is that which is most widely accepted, which is four male witnesses...

I quote from the very same source you quoted from that I previously provided you...

<<<
Some noteworthy Islamic states, such as Saudi Arabia, still do have the same law applicable. It has been pointed out that the loose trial rules, as well as physical evidence, are not presented or declined due to the 4 witnesses rule of Sharia law.

Women who cannot produce these many witnesses often end up in jail themselves for adultery – a crime against the state mostly punishable by stoning to death. Under such a caricature system, rape victims have less reason to accuse anyone as a rapist.

So in states where this vague law of requiring 4 witnesses is still applicable, the issue pertaining to the production of four witnesses arises when a woman who is the victim of rape accuses some specific person or men raping her. In that case, there are only two ways an Islamic court of that relevant country can convict the rapist(s):

1. The accused rapist confesses to his heinous crime; or

2. She produces four witnesses to justify her claim that so and so person raped her.

If the accused(s) deny the accusation, then like any other suit the burden of proof shifts to the party that accuses or levies the charges.

If she is unable to prove her claim then the court may press against her the charges of false accusationthat is called as kazaf in Islam.

From this we can get a general concept that under no circumstances a woman, who is the victim of rape and claiming of being so, can be accused, convicted or punished for fornication or adultery (zina). All she needs to do is just make a statement that ‘I have been raped’ and her words will be taken as the truth.

The issue of production of 4 witnesses – in case a rape victim has seen the rapists and she wants them to be punished – is of utmost importance.

>>> End of Quote
Does A Woman Need Four Witnesses To Prove Rape?

This is all I have been saying, and is Islamic Law.

You said it’s not true. Yet, there it is in print.
 
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JosephZ,

The majority of the Sunni and Shia Schools insist their definition of Islam and its ideology is leveraged upon the Quran, Ahadith and Sira.

IF and when they subscribe to the above, then they have to conform to what is enacted by Allah as in the Quran, Ahadith, and Sira. Some of the followers may disagree with others, but the ultimate is they must fall back to the Quran, Ahadith and Sira as supposedly authorized by Allah.

Therefore Setst777 is right on point [re Burga, FGM] when he quotes from the Quran, Ahadith, Sira and various relevant tafsirs to support his argument as what is Islam relative to the accepted core scriptures. Setst777 is not expressing his personal subjective opinion where the references are provided.

Btw, at present the leaning toward specific schools of Madhab around the world is on a waning trend since they are finalized by the clergy who are humans and not by Allah.
As such all these Sunni and Shia Muslims will fall back and must conform to the Quran [by Allah], Ahadith and Sira [to obey and follow the messenger] unconditionally.

The only exception is when Muslims reject the Ahadith and Sira totally like the Quranist - Quran-Only Muslims who are very few at present but rising.
Quranism - Wikipedia

Quranism (Arabic: القرآنية‎; al-Qur'āniyya) comprises views that Islamic law and guidance should only be based on the Qur'an, thus opposing the religious authority, reliability, and/or authenticity of hadith literature.[1]
Quranists believe that God's message in the Quran is clear and complete as it is, and that it can therefore be fully understood without referencing the Hadith.
Quranists affirm that the Hadith literature which exists today is apocryphal, as it had been written three centuries after the death of the Islamic prophet Muhammad; thus, it cannot have the same status as the Quran.
Quranism - Wikipedia

These Quranist Muslims are considered heretics by the majority of Sunni and Shia and are persecuted.
Quranism - Wikipedia

Thus whatever books believers accept at authoritative, they must be ruled by those books without exception.
 
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'Umar addressed her and said, "I have recognized you, O Sauda." He said so, as he desired eagerly that the verses of Al-Hijab (the observing of veils by the Muslim women) may be revealed. So Allah revealed the verses of "Al-Hijab" (A complete body cover excluding the eyes).
Sahih Bukhari 1:4:148

He ('Umar) said so as he was anxious for some Divine orders regarding the veil (the veiling of women.) So Allah revealed the Verse of Veiling. (Al-Hijab; a complete body cover excluding the eyes).
Sahih Bukhari 8:74:257
An important thing to remember when you are reading English translations of the Qur'an and hadiths, or pretty much anything from a foreign language being translated to English, the portions in brackets are the opinion of the translator, not the original author.

In the case of the hadiths you quoted above, it wasn't Bukhari who said that al hijab is "a complete body cover excluding the eyes," it was Muhammad Muhsin Khan, the translator.

Al-Hajab in Islam applies to both men and women and is a code of dress and behavior. The term hajib in reference to what women wear is speaking of modest loose fitting clothing which covers everything except the hands, face and feet. Also, when you see the term "veil" in Islamic texts, it's not talking about a face covering as I mentioned earlier.

What about the fact that:
…most medieval Hanbali and Shafi'i jurists counted a woman's face among the awra, concluding that it should be veiled, except for the eyes.”[25]”
Burqa - Wikipedia Are Hanbali and Shafii extremists?
Most, but not all Shafis today are conservative and take a fundamentalist approach to Islam. Hanbali's are the most conservative and follow a strict and literal interpretation of the Quran and hadiths. The extremist sect of Wahhabism that you have been describing in this thread came out of the Hanbali school of thought.

I gave a link to his website, and his autobiography is also online.
Absolutely no background in Islamic Studies or Islamic history? Where did you get your information?
From his bio. He even states that his interest in Islam didn't come until after the events of 9/11. Furthermore, in the link you provided to his interview, his mentor was Ibn Warraq another notorious anti-Islamic propagandist.

Here is what has been said about him:

  • In reviewing Ibn Warraq's compilation The Origins of the Koran, religious studies professor Herbert Berg has labelled him as "polemical and inconsistent" in his writing. Berg lauded the inclusion of the essay by Theodor Nöldeke, but panned the inclusion of William St. Clair Tisdall's as "not a particularly scholarly essay". He concluded "t seems that Ibn Warraq has included some of the essays not on the basis of their scholarly value or their status as 'classics', but rather on the basis of their hostility to Islam. This does not necessarily diminish the value of the collection, but the reader should be aware that this collection does not fully represent classic scholarship on the Quran."

    • In reviewing Ibn Warraq's essay in his Quest for the Historical Muhammad (2001) Fred Donner, a professor in Near Eastern studies, notes his lack of specialist training in Arabic studies, citing "inconsistent handling of Arabic materials," and unoriginal arguments, and "heavy-handed favoritism" towards revisionist theories and "the compiler’s [i.e. Ibn Warraq's] agenda, which is not scholarship, but anti-Islamic polemic." Donner writes "this lopsided character makes The Quest for the Historical Muhammad a book that is likely to mislead many an unwary general reader."
    • Anthropologist and historian Daniel Martin Varisco has criticized Ibn Warraq's book Defending the West: A Critique of Edward Said's Orientalism, writing that "This modern son of a bookseller imprints a polemical farce not worth the 500-plus pages of paper it wastes."
    • His work, "The Origins of the Koran", is itself based on a polemic by St. Clair Tisdall "The original sources of the Qur'an" which was described by François de Blois as a "decidedly shoddy piece of missionary propaganda".
    • Alfons Teipen, a professor of religion at Furman University, criticized the editing: "The two introductory articles ... are one-sided, rather polemical overview of ... scholarship on the life of Muhammad.
    • François de Blois in reviewing The origins of the Koran, states that "it is surprising that the editor, who in his Why I am not a Muslim took a very high posture as a critical rationalist and opponent of all forms of obscurantism, now relies so heavily on writings by Christian polemicists from the nineteenth century".
    • Asma Afsaruddin described the book "The Quest for the Historical Muhammad" as a "partisan work" and added that Warraq "clearly has an ideological axe to grind".
    • Asma Afsaruddin states that "Ibn Warraq is not interested in debate; he wants nothing less than wholesale conversion to his point of view within the community of scholars of Islam" and added that his work, The Origins of The Koran, "needlessly poisons the atmosphere and stymies efforts to engage in honest scholarly discussion".
Ibn Warraq - Wikipedia
The Quest for the Historical Muhammad (Ibn Warraq) - Wikipedia

If you look on wikipedia you will find that Dr. Bostom associates himself with the most notorious of the anti-Islamic propagandists like Pam Geller, Robert Spencer, David Horowitz, and others. These are the people he "learned" about Islam from.

I read much about Dr. Bostom online, and am in awe of his vast knowledge of Islam and its history, and the fact that he is the first of anyone in the world to provide so many translations of original historical Islamic and other secondary sources to actually walk us through the real history of Islamic Jihad since inception.

I only have one book by Dr. Bostom so far, "The Legacy of Jihad." I plan to purchase and study his other books as well, as this would be worthy time spent studying the actual history of Islam from its own historical sources instead of studying the biased politically correct opinions of others.
The above statement proves without a doubt that you have no understanding of Islam. Dr. Bostom doesn't have a vast knowledge of Islam and it's history, he is just parroting the same anti-islamic propaganda as others like him. What he is doing is exploiting people like yourself who have little to no knowledge of what Islam teaches for his own personal gain. If you take the time and google his name you will find there have been several historians and real experts in Islam that have discredited his work. One being Fred Donner who said his books were works of fiction.

Here is an excerpt from a study that was done on people like Dr. Bostom:

The findings in our research demonstrate that the overwhelming majority of these “authorities on Islam” lack any formal credential that would qualify them as an expert on Islamic beliefs. Most of these individuals have a college degree in a field that is completely unrelated to Islamic studies. Others, such as Pamela Geller and Brigitte Gabriel, both “activists," do not even hold a college degree.

The individuals in our study appear to be a group of pundits who use the attacks of September 11, 2001 as an opportunity to make money and fame by promoting and exploiting anti-Muslim sentiment.

In addition, several of the “validators” in our study have made unsubstantiated odd and inaccurate statements that raise serious questions about their subject matter expertise, and at times, personal authenticity.

We specifically focus on highly visible personalities who engage in anti-Islam rhetoric and who frequently and inaccurately speak not only about extremist Muslims, or even Muslims at-large, but who also claim to be knowledgeable about the fundamental beliefs and tenets of the Islamic faith

https://www.mpac.org/assets/docs/publications/MPAC-25-Pseudo-Experts-On-Islam.pdf

Here's the list of 25 Individuals covered in the MPAC report:

1. ANDREW G. BOSTOM
2. WILLIAM BOYKIN
3. STEPHEN COUGHLIN
4. NONIE DARWISH
5. STEVEN EMERSON
6. BRIGITTE GABRIEL
7. FRANK GAFFNEY
8. DAVID GAUBATZ
9. WILLIAM GAWTHROP
10. PAMELA GELLER
11. JOHN GIDUCK
12. SEBESTEYEN (SEBASTIAN) GORKA
13. JOHN GUANDOLO
14. TAWFIK HAMID
15. DAVID HOROWITZ
16. RAYMOND IBRAHIM
17. ZUHDI JASSER
18. ANDREW MCCARTHY
19. WALID PHARES
20. DANIEL PIPES
21. PATRICK POOLE
22. WALID SHOEBAT
23. ROBERT SPENCER
24. ERICK STAKELBACK
25. DAVID YERUSHALMI

Here's some further reading for you:

In this review, we critique the assertions embedded in this type of discourse using the books of David Bukay and Andrew Bostom as our point of departure. We also discuss the specific Islamophobic frame through which most of these writings that are failing short of intellectual rigor proceed from. In the final analysis, we show that, owing to this failure to adhere to the basic principles of scientific research, these writings are intended to misinform rather than enrich the current discourse on Islam.

https://www.researchgate.net/public...al_Revisionism_A_Critique_of_Bukay_and_Bostom

Now can you see why I ask you what your background in Islam is and your relationship with Muslims. The sources that you believe are experts are just people exploiting the horrific events of 9/11 and the west's ignorance of Islam to make a profit and a name for themselves. If you ever had studied or taken courses from a legitimate school on Islam, you would be able to recognize these self proclaimed "experts" as soon a you read a few paragraphs of their material.
 
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JosephZ

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Let's put the two variations of the Hanafi view on circumcision to the test.

Your source:

The Maliki, Hanafi and Hanbali schools of Islamic jurisprudence view it as makruma for women ("noble", as opposed to obligatory).[2] For the Shafi'i school it is obligatory (wājib).[1][2][3]
Religious views on female genital mutilation - Wikipedia

My Source:

1.In the Hanafî school of law (31% of the Muslims), female circumcision is permissible within itself but not considered to be a Sunnah. (i.e. no religious virtue). (Shami Fatawaa Rahimiyyah, Page 261, Vol. 6)

If "All four schools of Sunni and Shia agree that female circumcision is either recommended (noble) or obligatory." and that "Any Muslim who desires to please Allah will, therefore, be circumcised" as you believe, then why don't Hanafi Muslims (Hanafi is the largest and oldest school of thought an Islam) practice Female circumcision? This has never been a practice within that branch of Islam historically.

If "Any Muslim who desires to please Allah will, therefore, be circumcised" as you believe, then why hasn't it been practiced in the school of thought that has the closest ties to Muhammad and the largest following? Why isn't it more widespread in other schools of Islamic thought than it is?

And while the female genital circumcision is practiced in parts of the world that are not Islam, the vast majority of women who are circumcised are within Islam.
This varies from country to country and culture to culture. For example, there are some countries like Egypt where the practice is equally as common among Christians and Muslims. Nigeria has some of the highest number of cases of FGM in the world and it's more widespread in the Christian communities than Muslim communities in that country. It's obviously a cultural practice rather than religious.

They are circumcised per the law of their School of Islam.
If you ask the average Muslim what ancient school of thought they follow, what do you think their answer would be?
 
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The Qur’an and Hadith make is very plain to understand that veiling the face, except for the eyes, is what is meant. Why? The reason is because this is what the Qur’an and Hadith actually states in context.
LOOK at the verses I provided from the Qur’an and Sahih Hadeth. No need to re-interpret it.
Not taught in Islam? What about the Qur’an quotes commanding it? What about the Sahih Bukhari quotes commanding it? Anyone with 30 years study of Islam should have known this in his first year of study… You mean to say you never saw Muslims wear a Burka before? Yet you say it’s “not taught in Islam” "Not what Islam commands" How could anyone with even a rudimentary knowledge of Islam make such a statement?
Of course I have seen Muslim women wear a burka before, I see them everyday. Here in Mindanao where the vast majority of women are Sunni Shafis, I would estimate that fewer than 5% do this on a regular basis and I know several Muslim women that wear a burka on some days, but most of the time only wear a hajib.

Here are some pictures just for you that I have taken in Mindanao:

Islam Burka3.jpg


The women in the above pictures are Maranao who are Sunni Shafi'i. As can be seen, only one woman is covering her face out of these groups. If covering the face is such a clear command found in the Qur'an and the hadiths as you believe, then shouldn't more than one woman out of those in the above pictures have their face covered?

Covering the face and/or wearing a burka is not what Islam commands, it's what a small minority of sects within Islam teach. The fact that you say covering the face is commanded in Islam and how you go on to mock my education and experience with Muslims by saying that anyone would know in their first year of study that a face covering is required of Muslim women; and then go on to ask the question how could anyone with even a rudimentary knowledge of Islam make such a statement that covering the face is not what Islam commands, shows once again that your knowledge of Islam is extremely limited.

Covering the face - per the Quran - is compulsory...
the Qur’an and Sahih Bukhari show that Allah commanded women to wear the burka – including veiling the face. As I said, the whole practice of covering women up so they are faceless and unseen is what Islam actually commands

Here is what one of the most widely used Encyclopedias of Islam says on the subject:

Islam Burka.jpg

And from a couple more sources with a better than rudimentary knowledge of Islam:

"It is eminently and undeniably well-known among the people of knowledge. It is that the view that wearing the niqāb [Face covering] is not an obligation, and that it is permissible for a Muslim woman to uncover her face in front of unrelated men, is the view of the majority of the legal scholars, since the time of the Companions." -- Yusuf al-Qaradawi, a Sunni Salafi, is an Egyptian Islamic theologian based in Doha, Qatar, and chairman of the International Union of Muslim Scholars.

In the video below, Dr Philips is talking about Hajib, but makes it clear that there is no command for the woman's face to be covered.

Niqab [Covering of the face] Is Not Required In The Islamic Law

Allah says in the most Holy Quran "And Say to the believing women to lower their gaze (from looking at forbidden things), and protect their private parts (from illegal sexual acts) and not to show off their adornment except only that which is apparent (see the explanation below), and to draw their veils all over Juyubihinna" (Surah An-Nur, Verses #30 and #31)

We will see how the Salaf understood this matter:

1) The Opinion Of The Sahaba [The companions of Muhammad]:

Ibn Abbas (ra) is one of the most learned men of the Sahaba (Companions). Prophet Muhammad ((may Peace Be Upon Him)) even prayed for him saying "O Allah, make him acquire a deep understanding of the religion of Islam and instruct him in the meaning and interpretation of things." He with reference to Surah An-Nur “except only that which is apparent” as Ibn Kathir narrated with a Sahih (authentic) chain of narrators, said it’s "The hand, the ring, and the face." Abdullah Ibn Omar Ibn Al-Khattab (ra) said “the face and the two hands”. Anas Ibn Malik (ra) said “the hand and the ring”. Ibn Hazm said: “all of this (statements) are in the highest of accuracy. And so are statements by Ali (ra), Aisha (ra), and other Tabi’een”.

Now you have to think who would understand these verses better than Aisha (ra) the MOST knowledgeable woman in the matters of Islam and the wife of Prophet Muhammad ((may Peace Be Upon Him))?

2) Scholars Among The Tabi’een [The generation of Muslims who followed the companions Muhammad] Had Many Opinions On This Matter:

Some said a woman should cover all of her body except the face and the hands. This is the saying of Imam Malik, Al-Hadi, Al-Qasim (in one of his narrations), and Imam Abu Hanifa (in one of his two narrations).

Some said she should cover all her body except the face, the hands, and the foot. This is the saying of Imam Abu Hanifa (in another narration), Al-Qasim, and Ath-thouri. Some said she should cover all her body except the face. This is the saying of Ibn Hanbal and Dawood.

No one said the face of a woman is loins (‘Aura) except a weak narration from Ibn Hanbal and some Shafi’i scholars!

Sa'id ibn Jubayr, 'Ata and al-Awzai have stated explicitly that the showing of the face and hands is permissible. 'Aishah (ra), Qatadah, and others have added bracelets to what may be shown of the adornments; this interpretation implies that a part of the arm may also be shown. Various scholars (such as Abu Yusuf) have allowed the exposure of the lower part of the arm up to a length varying between about four inches to one-half of the arm.

Ibn Hazm is the Imam of the Dhahiri schools (Literal schools) mentioned many accidents prove that it is not required for a woman to cover her face.

3) The Opinion Of Late Scholars:

Assuredly a woman is permitted to show her face and hands because covering them would be a hardship on her, especially if she must go out on some lawful business. For example, a widow may have to work to support her children, or a woman who is not well-off may have to help her husband in his work; had covering the face and hands been made obligatory, it would have occasioned such women hardship and distress. Al-Qurtabi says, it seems probable that, since the face and hands are customarily uncovered, and it is, moreover, required that they be uncovered during acts of worship such as Salat and Hajj, the exemption (referred to in the verses of Surah al-Nur) pertains to them.

In addition to this, we may infer from Allah's words, "Tell the believing men that they should lower their gazes", that the faces of the women of the Prophet's time were not veiled. Had the entire body including the face been covered, it would have made no sense to command them to lower their gaze, since there would have been nothing to be seen.

Narrated Aisha, Ummul Mu'minin: Asma, daughter of AbuBakr, entered upon the Apostle of Allah ((may Peace Be Upon Him)) wearing thin clothes. The Apostle of Allah ((may Peace Be Upon Him)) turned his attention from her. He said: O Asma', when a woman reaches the age of menstruation, it does not suit her that she displays her parts of body except this and this, and he pointed to her face and hands. (Narrated by Abu Dawood # 4092).

This Hadith has three authentic narrations and was correct by all Major Hadith scholars such as Albani.

Narrated 'Abdullah bin Abbas: Al-Fadl (his brother) was riding behind Allah's Apostle and a woman from the tribe of Khath'am came and Al-Fadl started looking at her and she started looking at him. The Prophet turned Al-Fadl's face to the other side. The woman said, "O Allah's Apostle! The obligation of Hajj enjoined by Allah on His devotees has become due on my father and he is old and weak, and he cannot sit firm on the Mount; may I perform Hajj on his behalf?" The Prophet replied, "Yes, you may." That happened during the Hajj-al-Wida (of the Prophet). (Narrated by Bukhari # 589, Muslim, and others).

This Hadith is very authentic since it was narrated by Bukhari and Muslim. If she was covering her face then Ibn Abbas would know that she is beautiful! Also prophet ((may Peace Be Upon Him)) did not order the girl to cover her face. This hadith was not abrogated since it happened during Hajj-al-Wida (10 AH) while the Aya of Hijab was revealed in the 5th year after the Hijra.
 
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An important thing to remember when you are reading English translations of the Qur'an and hadiths, or pretty much anything from a foreign language being translated to English, the portions in brackets are the opinion of the translator, not the original author.

In the case of the hadiths you quoted above, it wasn't Bukhari who said that al hijab is "a complete body cover excluding the eyes," it was Muhammad Muhsin Khan, the translator.

Al-Hajab in Islam applies to both men and women and is a code of dress and behavior. The term hajib in reference to what women wear is speaking of modest loose fitting clothing which covers everything except the hands, face and feet. Also, when you see the term "veil" in Islamic texts, it's not talking about a face covering as I mentioned earlier.


Most, but not all Shafis today are conservative and take a fundamentalist approach to Islam. Hanbali's are the most conservative and follow a strict and literal interpretation of the Quran and hadiths. The extremist sect of Wahhabism that you have been describing in this thread came out of the Hanbali school of thought.


From his bio. He even states that his interest in Islam didn't come until after the events of 9/11. Furthermore, in the link you provided to his interview, his mentor was Ibn Warraq another notorious anti-Islamic propagandist.

Here is what has been said about him:

  • In reviewing Ibn Warraq's compilation The Origins of the Koran, religious studies professor Herbert Berg has labelled him as "polemical and inconsistent" in his writing. Berg lauded the inclusion of the essay by Theodor Nöldeke, but panned the inclusion of William St. Clair Tisdall's as "not a particularly scholarly essay". He concluded "t seems that Ibn Warraq has included some of the essays not on the basis of their scholarly value or their status as 'classics', but rather on the basis of their hostility to Islam. This does not necessarily diminish the value of the collection, but the reader should be aware that this collection does not fully represent classic scholarship on the Quran."

    • In reviewing Ibn Warraq's essay in his Quest for the Historical Muhammad (2001) Fred Donner, a professor in Near Eastern studies, notes his lack of specialist training in Arabic studies, citing "inconsistent handling of Arabic materials," and unoriginal arguments, and "heavy-handed favoritism" towards revisionist theories and "the compiler’s [i.e. Ibn Warraq's] agenda, which is not scholarship, but anti-Islamic polemic." Donner writes "this lopsided character makes The Quest for the Historical Muhammad a book that is likely to mislead many an unwary general reader."
    • Anthropologist and historian Daniel Martin Varisco has criticized Ibn Warraq's book Defending the West: A Critique of Edward Said's Orientalism, writing that "This modern son of a bookseller imprints a polemical farce not worth the 500-plus pages of paper it wastes."
    • His work, "The Origins of the Koran", is itself based on a polemic by St. Clair Tisdall "The original sources of the Qur'an" which was described by François de Blois as a "decidedly shoddy piece of missionary propaganda".
    • Alfons Teipen, a professor of religion at Furman University, criticized the editing: "The two introductory articles ... are one-sided, rather polemical overview of ... scholarship on the life of Muhammad.
    • François de Blois in reviewing The origins of the Koran, states that "it is surprising that the editor, who in his Why I am not a Muslim took a very high posture as a critical rationalist and opponent of all forms of obscurantism, now relies so heavily on writings by Christian polemicists from the nineteenth century".
    • Asma Afsaruddin described the book "The Quest for the Historical Muhammad" as a "partisan work" and added that Warraq "clearly has an ideological axe to grind".
    • Asma Afsaruddin states that "Ibn Warraq is not interested in debate; he wants nothing less than wholesale conversion to his point of view within the community of scholars of Islam" and added that his work, The Origins of The Koran, "needlessly poisons the atmosphere and stymies efforts to engage in honest scholarly discussion".
Ibn Warraq - Wikipedia
The Quest for the Historical Muhammad (Ibn Warraq) - Wikipedia

If you look on wikipedia you will find that Dr. Bostom associates himself with the most notorious of the anti-Islamic propagandists like Pam Geller, Robert Spencer, David Horowitz, and others. These are the people he "learned" about Islam from.


The above statement proves without a doubt that you have no understanding of Islam. Dr. Bostom doesn't have a vast knowledge of Islam and it's history, he is just parroting the same anti-islamic propaganda as others like him. What he is doing is exploiting people like yourself who have little to no knowledge of what Islam teaches for his own personal gain. If you take the time and google his name you will find there have been several historians and real experts in Islam that have discredited his work. One being Fred Donner who said his books were works of fiction.

Here is an excerpt from a study that was done on people like Dr. Bostom:

The findings in our research demonstrate that the overwhelming majority of these “authorities on Islam” lack any formal credential that would qualify them as an expert on Islamic beliefs. Most of these individuals have a college degree in a field that is completely unrelated to Islamic studies. Others, such as Pamela Geller and Brigitte Gabriel, both “activists," do not even hold a college degree.

The individuals in our study appear to be a group of pundits who use the attacks of September 11, 2001 as an opportunity to make money and fame by promoting and exploiting anti-Muslim sentiment.

In addition, several of the “validators” in our study have made unsubstantiated odd and inaccurate statements that raise serious questions about their subject matter expertise, and at times, personal authenticity.

We specifically focus on highly visible personalities who engage in anti-Islam rhetoric and who frequently and inaccurately speak not only about extremist Muslims, or even Muslims at-large, but who also claim to be knowledgeable about the fundamental beliefs and tenets of the Islamic faith

https://www.mpac.org/assets/docs/publications/MPAC-25-Pseudo-Experts-On-Islam.pdf

Here's the list of 25 Individuals covered in the MPAC report:

1. ANDREW G. BOSTOM
2. WILLIAM BOYKIN
3. STEPHEN COUGHLIN
4. NONIE DARWISH
5. STEVEN EMERSON
6. BRIGITTE GABRIEL
7. FRANK GAFFNEY
8. DAVID GAUBATZ
9. WILLIAM GAWTHROP
10. PAMELA GELLER
11. JOHN GIDUCK
12. SEBESTEYEN (SEBASTIAN) GORKA
13. JOHN GUANDOLO
14. TAWFIK HAMID
15. DAVID HOROWITZ
16. RAYMOND IBRAHIM
17. ZUHDI JASSER
18. ANDREW MCCARTHY
19. WALID PHARES
20. DANIEL PIPES
21. PATRICK POOLE
22. WALID SHOEBAT
23. ROBERT SPENCER
24. ERICK STAKELBACK
25. DAVID YERUSHALMI

Here's some further reading for you:

In this review, we critique the assertions embedded in this type of discourse using the books of David Bukay and Andrew Bostom as our point of departure. We also discuss the specific Islamophobic frame through which most of these writings that are failing short of intellectual rigor proceed from. In the final analysis, we show that, owing to this failure to adhere to the basic principles of scientific research, these writings are intended to misinform rather than enrich the current discourse on Islam.

https://www.researchgate.net/public...al_Revisionism_A_Critique_of_Bukay_and_Bostom

Now can you see why I ask you what your background in Islam is and your relationship with Muslims. The sources that you believe are experts are just people exploiting the horrific events of 9/11 and the west's ignorance of Islam to make a profit and a name for themselves. If you ever had studied or taken courses from a legitimate school on Islam, you would be able to recognize these self proclaimed "experts" as soon a you read a few paragraphs of their material.
Actually you are the one who is spreading propaganda in lying about the real truths of the ideology of Islam based on ignorance and being brainwashed by apologists and those practicing Taqiyyah.

The critique of Ibn Warraq is on very superficial matters of Islam and not on how he argued with Quranic verses and from the Ahadith.

By 19 he [Ibn Warraq] had moved to Scotland to pursue his education at the University of Edinburgh, where he studied philosophy and Arabic with Islamic studies scholar W. Montgomery Watt.​

In the list above provided by MPAC it is only Robert Spencer who claimed to be an expert on Islam and I agree with him.
Andrew Bostom and Daniels Pipes are reasonable experts.
Their views [where critical] are supported with references from the authorized texts of Islam.

The rest [they never claim they are experts] are merely general critiques of Islam based on their own observations and readings of the Islamic texts and I believe they never dug deep into those texts and the ideology of Islam.
However they are right [not wrong]* in relating the terrible evil and violence acts committed by [a critical] SOME Muslims to the ideology of Islam. Note Dr. Bale and others asserted Islamism is part and parcel of the ideology of Islam.

MPAC defined 'expert' in Islam as;

For the purposes of our study’s research focus, an expert on Islam is defined as an individual who has formal academic qualifications in Islamic Studies8 from an accredited institute of higher education in the West or those institutes of higher education in Muslim-majority countries that rank among the world’s top 500 universities.9 In order to be classified as “expert”, as defined above, one’s credentials must also be publicly verifiable.
The irony is I read through the bio of all the staff listed
Staff & Boards
do not have what it takes to qualify as expert in Islam as per their own definition above. Two had a minor in Islamic studies which I presume is merely brushing the surface.

Worst still, only one of MPAC's adviser is claimed to be an Islamic Scholar, but he is a Sufi.

Dr. Omid Safi specializes in Islamic mysticism (Sufism), contemporary Islamic thought and medieval Islamic history.
Omid Safi - Wikipedia

At present, the majority of Muslims views Sufis as heretics.

Btw, your tutor Dr. David Schenk do not qualify as an expert on Islam as per MPAC definition.
Dr. Bilal Philips would qualify as an expert but he is definitely practicing Taqiyah by not teaching total truths of Wahhabism/Salafism in his sites and courses.

Btw have you ever heard of Autodidacticism

Autodidacticism (also autodidactism) or self-education (also self-learning and self-teaching) is education without the guidance of masters (such as teachers and professors) or institutions (such as schools). Generally, an autodidact is an individual who chooses the subject they will study, their studying material, and the studying rhythm and time. An autodidact may or may not have formal education, and their study may be either a complement or an alternative to it. Many notable contributions have been made by autodidacts.
-wiki​

The point is whether one is an academic expert on Islam or an autodidact, what counts regarding the essence of Islam is whether what the person expresses about Islam conforms with the Quran, the final authority of Islam from Allah [supported by Ahadith].

This is why my focus on any discussion of Islam is on the contents supported by the Quran [supported by Ahadith] and not on the person academic credential alone like yourself.

Another point is, we cannot accept the expressed views of Muslims condemning critiques of Islam like those from MPAC who are inherently bias due to their being Muslim.
Whatever is valid for discussion from Muslims is only when they quote from the Quran [Allah's words] or Ahadith.

I have been following the debates by Christian Prince who I believe is a Coptic Christian of Arab descent and he had studied to the extent of being qualified to be a Sharia Judge. I find most of my critiques of Islam are the same as his, except for minor variations.
Christian Prince Debates

Btw, your opposition to the critiques of Islam is very intellectually sickening.
Your obscene approach is to rely on the 'anti-Islam-propaganda' pigeon hole and strive to squeeze them into your intellectual hell. That is very intellectually dishonest.

I'll say again, the truth must prevail and for the truths of Islam the source has to be SOLELY from the 6236 verses of the Quran [supported by the Ahadith where applicable].
 
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JosephZ

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we cannot accept the expressed views of Muslims condemning critiques of Islam like those from MPAC who are inherently bias due to their being Muslim.
It's not just Muslims who criticize and condemn these critics of Islam that you and Setst777 consider to be experts or authoritative voices on Islam, they are also criticized by non-Muslims who are real historians and experts on Islam and Islamic History.

I have been following the debates by Christian Prince who I believe is a Coptic Christian of Arab descent and he had studied to the extent of being qualified to be a Sharia Judge. I find most of my critiques of Islam are the same as his, except for minor variations. Christian Prince Debates
Christian prince is just an anonymous individual on the internet using a fictitious name selling books and raising money through their Patreon account. He could be anybody and you have no way of verifying his claims or credentials.

However they are right [not wrong]* in relating the terrible evil and violence acts committed by [a critical] SOME Muslims to the ideology of Islam. Note Dr. Bale and others asserted Islamism is part and parcel of the ideology of Islam.
Dr. Bale makes a clear distinction between Islamic Extremism and the religion of Islam that the vast majority of the world's Muslims follow which those you claim are knowledgeable about Islam fail to do. He also considers your "expert" Robert Spencer to be "a right-wing Islam basher who generally and foolishly fails to distinguish between Islam and Islamism." He also says the same about Bill Warner, David Wood, Brigitte Gabriel, William Boykin, Mark Gabriel, Sam Solomon, Walid Shoebat, Geert Wilders, and several others.
 
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Joyousperson

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It's not just Muslims who criticize and condemn these critics of Islam that you and Setst777 consider to be experts or authoritative voices on Islam, they are also criticized by non-Muslims who are real historians and experts on Islam and Islamic History.
The history of Islam is not supported by sufficiently convincing evidence to justify its existence in the period concern.
I had mentioned, the questioned is raised whether there was a real Muhammad or not. The other contention is Mecca is not the origin of Islam but rather it could be Petra in Jordan.

What is valid is the claim of what is Islam and who is a Muslim based on the following;

1. Quran-only Islam or
2. Quran-Ahadith-Sira Islam - Sunni and Shia
3. Other claims of Islam, e.g. Sufism, Ahamadiyyahs, etc.​

The historic is not critical to determine what is Islam.
What is Islam is represented by the words of Allah in the 6236 verses of the Quran or for the majority to include the Sunnah of Muhammad as in the Ahadiths and biography in Sira.

Christian prince is just an anonymous individual on the internet using a fictitious name selling books and raising money through their Patreon account. He could be anybody and you have no way of verifying his claims or credentials.
Your above criticism is toothless.
Again what counts is how Christian Prince support his arguments from the Quran and Ahadith where in all his debates he refer to the Quran and Ahadith on screen for all to see, read and verify. How can that be wrong?

Dr. Bale makes a clear distinction between Islamic Extremism and the religion of Islam that the vast majority of the world's Muslims follow which those you claim are knowledgeable about Islam fail to do. He also considers your "expert" Robert Spencer to be "a right-wing Islam basher who generally and foolishly fails to distinguish between Islam and Islamism." He also says the same about Bill Warner, David Wood, Brigitte Gabriel, William Boykin, Mark Gabriel, Sam Solomon, Walid Shoebat, Geert Wilders, and several others.
Who is Dr. Bale to judge when those critiques [like David Wood, Robert Spencer, Bill Warner] support their arguments with verses in context from the Quran and Ahadith?

It is very intellectually dishonest to blanketly condemn a critique of Islam without reference to the supported and justified arguments they presented.
 
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Joyousperson

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JosephZ,

Since you condemned [to the degree of intellectually obscenity] Robert Spencer so much without reading what he wrote , I suggest you read this book of his and tell me where he is wrong [in a significant way] about Muhammad as in the Quran and Ahadith.

The Truth About Muhammad
Truth About Muhammad - Robert Spencer : Robert Spencer : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

Here is a critic of the book:
Inspiring Intolerance: The Truth about Robert Spencer - A Review of the Truth about Muhammad: Founder of the World's Most Intolerant Religion
https://scholarship.law.berkeley.ed...e.com/&httpsredir=1&article=1139&context=aalj
You will note the authors are lying and making false accusation of Robert Spencer. They accused him of insisting ALL Muslims are violent when he never stated that.

They stated in their critic,

In direct contradiction to his assertion that all Muslims are violent, Spencer also makes references to peaceful Muslims.​

It is not a contradiction in the context of his whole book.
Robert Spencer may at times mentioned 'Muslims' without qualifying 'SOME' like I do most of the time, but the point is Robert Spencer never claimed and insist in his book ALL Muslims are violent. In his book he implied the majority are peaceful and moderate Muslims [as noted by the critics above] while the extremist Islamists are the significant minority.

Note Robert Spencer stated the following;

In writing this book I have relied exclusively upon Islamic sources for the life of Muhammad: the earliest biographical material in the Islamic tradition, which I will detail in chapter three, as well as the English translations of the Qur'an made by the Muslims Abdullah Yusuf Ali and Mohammed Marmaduke Pickthall.

Thus if Robert Spencer is quoting exclusively from Islamic sources [Quran and Ahadith] is condemned as wrong, then the sources [Quran and Ahadith] must be wrong in the first place.
Note the loads of references Spencer included for each chapter at the end of the book.

Robert Spencer is definitely anti-Islam [even a basher] and there is nothing in wrong with that which is mere critique of Islam supported by authorized sources of the ideology of Islam.

Now it is your opportunity to prove Dr. Bale and you are right in condemning Robert Spencer by whatever the label.
Show me the proofs Robert Spencer is intellectually unreliable? Don't just pick a few frivolous contentious points but they have to be the related critical issues.
 
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setst777

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setst777 said:
…'Umar addressed her and said, "I have recognized you, O Sauda." He said so, as he desired eagerly that the verses of Al-Hijab (the observing of veils by the Muslim women) may be revealed. So Allah revealed the verses of "Al-Hijab" (A complete body cover excluding the eyes).
Sahih Bukhari 1:4:148

… He ('Umar) said so as he was anxious for some Divine orders regarding the veil (the veiling of women.) So Allah revealed the Verse of Veiling.
(Al-Hijab; a complete body cover excluding the eyes).
Sahih Bukhari 8:74:257


An important thing to remember when you are reading English translations of the Qur'an and hadiths, or pretty much anything from a foreign language being translated to English, the portions in brackets are the opinion of the translator, not the original author.

Setst RE: I am well aware of that. In the context of the other two Sahih Bukhari Hadith that you omitted, a face covering for women is what is meant by the Burka verses in the Qur’an.

Narrated 'Aisha: While I was sitting in my resting place, I was overwhelmed by sleep and slept. Safwan bin Al-Muattal As-Sulami Adh-Dhakwani was behind the army. When he reached my place in the morning, he saw the figure of a sleeping person and he recognized me on seeing me as he had seen me before the order of compulsory veiling (was prescribed). So I woke up when he recited Istirja' (i.e. "Inna lillahi wa inna llaihi raji'un") as soon as he recognized me. I veiled my face with my head cover at once, and by Allah, we did not speak a single word, and I did not hear him saying any word besides his Istirja'. He dismounted from his camel and made it kneel down, putting his leg on its front legs and then I got up and rode on it. [...]
Sahih Bukhari 5:59:462

Narrated Safiya bint Shaiba: 'Aisha used to say: "When (the Verse): "They should draw their veils over their necks and bosoms," was revealed, (the ladies) cut their waist sheets at the edges and covered their faces with the cut pieces."
Sahih Bukhari 6:60:282

That is the context of the Burka or Al-Hijab verses in the Qur’an. The context is obtained by comparing the quotes, and if some quotes do not explain in detail, then the other quotes that do explain the details are to be used to understand the meaning.

That is how we gain understanding of Qur’an verses as well. The hadith were meant to compliment and explain the context of the Qur’anic verses.

The ahadith scholar who wrote what is in the parenthesis in the other Bukhari quotes did so because that is the context of what is meant. That is why the Islamic scholar is a scholar and you are not.

I quoted the Hadith for you several times but you still can’t see it, and you will never see it because you are blinded.

setst777 said:
What about the fact that:
“…most medieval Hanbali and Shafi'ijurists counted a woman's face among the awra, concluding that it should be veiled, except for the eyes.”[25]”

Burqa - Wikipedia Are Hanbali and Shafii extremists?

Most, but not all Shafis today are conservative and take a fundamentalist approach to Islam. Hanbali's are the most conservative and follow a strict and literal interpretation of the Quran and hadiths. The extremist sect of Wahhabism that you have been describing in this thread came out of the Hanbali school of thought.

Setst RE: Yet you are saying the Allah, Muhammad, Sahih Hadith on the Burka and Sunni Hanbali and Shafii are extremist, because that is where the command came from.

I quote you…

JosephZ said:
Hajib is a requirement in Islam, not wearing of the burka. There is no command for women to cover their faces, that is optional. Islamic extremists and some extremists regimes may require women to be completely covered, but it's not what Islam commands.

setst777 said:
I gave a link to his website, and his autobiography is also online.

setst777 said:
Absolutely no background in Islamic Studies or Islamic history? Where did you get your information?

From his bio.

Setst RE: Joyousperson already responded to your sick bigoted attacks on the credibility of others, and dismissing all documentation.

I will just add that Dr. Bostom is well known and praised for making publicly available, for the first time in the world, the collection and interpretation of a plethora of historical Islamic texts from their originals, and also secondary historical sources, on the actual history of Jihad. Dr. Bostom, therefore, is unique in his expertise in the history of Islamic Jihad from its inception to the present day, in that no other so called scholar is privy to that kind of knowledge.

What I provided from Bostom was the historical Jurists fiqh position on Jihad in all four schools of Sunni, and also of Shia – from Islam’s highest authorities.

I quote Wikipeida on Jihad regarding this fact…

Middle East historian Bernard Lewis argues that in the Quran "jihad ... has usually been understood as meaning 'to wage war'",[191] that for most of the recorded history of Islam, "from the lifetime of the Prophet Muhammad onward", jihad was used in a primarily military sense,[192] and that "the overwhelming majority of classical theologians, jurists, and traditionalists" (i.e. specialists in hadith) also "understood the obligation of jihad in a military sense."[191]

Historian Douglas Streusand writes that "in hadith collections, jihad means armed action". In what is probably the most standard collection of hadith, Sahih al-Bukhari, "the 199 references to jihad all assume that jihad means warfare."[193][194]

According to David Cook, author of Understanding Jihad


In reading Muslim literature — both contemporary and classical — one can see that the evidence for the primacy of spiritual jihad is negligible. Today it is certain that no Muslim, writing in a non-Western language (such as Arabic, Persian, Urdu), would ever make claims that jihad is primarily nonviolent or has been superseded by the spiritual jihad. Such claims are made solely by Western scholars, primarily those who study Sufism and/or work in interfaith dialogue, and by Muslim apologists who are trying to present Islam in the most innocuous manner possible.[195]

Cook argued that "Presentations along these lines [
the Western presentation of Islam in the most innocuous manner possible] are ideological in tone and should be discounted for their bias and deliberate ignorance of the subject" and that it "is no longer acceptable for Western scholars or Muslim apologists writing in non-Muslim languages to make flat, unsupported statements concerning the prevalence — either from a historical point of view or within contemporary Islam — of the spiritual jihad."[195]
Jihad - Wikipedia

The Sunni and Shia positions are identical in that Jihad is defensive and offensive until the whole world is one religion, Islam. That is the position of traditional Islam from their most respected jurists and scholars. This Jihad is to occur in stages as Islam gains dominance in foreign lands, just as Sharia directs – this can be done through tempoarary truces, acting friendly, using taqyah in order to deceive the enemy into complacency as Islam takes over a foreign country in stages.

Islam is the only religion which demands violence against unbelievers in order to make Islam the only religion on earth – this is according to all the foremost Muslim Jurists of Sunni and Shia Islam, and demonstrated by the history of Islam Jihad since inception.

I quoted the Jurists from Bostom, but you can also view many more quotes from Islam’s Jurists in every sect, even Sufii. They all agree on Jihad.

IslamicSupremacism.org - A Short Course For Open Minded Skeptics Islamic Supremacism & Jihad (IS&J) Table of Contents Introduction Background Core Islamic Texts More Useful Facts & Definitions 4 Examples of Islamic Supremacism & Jihad Ideology Articulated in the Core Texts A Classic Jurist Opinion on Islamic Supremacism & Jihad From All 5 Schools of Islam (pre 1900) - 3 are Sufi 28 More Classic Jurist Opinions on Islamic Supremacism & Jihad (pre 1900) - 3 are Sufi Consequences of Rejecting Reason in Islam Islamic Human Rights™ + One 20th Century Sharia Scholar’s Opinion on Islamic Supremacism - A Sufi 47 Modern Jurist and Sharia Scholar Opinions on Islamic Supremacism & Jihad (1900 to present) Tiny Minority of Extremist™ Jurist Opinions on Islamic Supremacism & Jihad 5 Modern Terrorists™ on Islamic Supremacism & Jihad - 1 is Sufi 30 Modern Muslim Politicians on Islamic Supremacism & Jihad 3 Key 20th Century Ideologue Opinions on Islamic Supremacism & Jihad - 1 is Sufi The Muslim Brotherhood on Islamic Supremacism & Jihad 1 Key 21st Century Reformer™ & Master Of Deception on Islamic Supremacism & Jihad Efforts To Reform Islam University Dogma on Islamic Supremacism & Jihad Government & Media on Islamic Supremacism & Jihad Interesting News Stories You May Have Missed Free Islamic Texts Online in English Email: Info@IslamicSupremacism.org We welcome corrections. Last updated Jul 2, 2015

http://www.saneworks.us/uploads/application/52.pdf

Topical study on: Islam and jihad

Amillennialist Contra Mundum | Verbum Domini Manet in aeternum: Exposing Islam's Big Lies

Moderate or liberal Muslims are a fringe development - just as the revivalists are a fringe development - that began in the late 19th century after the West overpowered Islam in Islam’s quest to conquer the world.

The majority of Muslims are from the traditional Sunni or Shia schools. The traditional Muslims today who are attending Mosque in the West, and throughout Europe, are being indoctrinated in fundamental Islam through these Mosques (you also provided the evidence for that), Islamic schools and universities, and by terror supporting Islamic organization in the USA and Europe, and by social media propaganda. That is likely why the Salafist movement is arguably the fastest growing in Islam.

All mainstream sects of Islam teach the same doctrine on Jihad to make Islam the only religion on earth with no exceptions, and Islamic Sharia fiqh for each school of Sunni, and of Shia, reinforce it. The history of Islam since inception to the present day demonstrate this as reality.

Obviously not all Muslims are actively engaged in violence and violent Jihad against unbelievers, nor does Islam Jurisprudence demand such from every Muslim. However, to deny, as you have, that violent jihad (in stages) against unbelievers is to continue until Islam is the only religion, is to deny the real Islam.

The Islam you learned about is founded on Taqyah and Westernized politically correct laws and governance.

Many Muslims are silent supporters awaiting the next caliphate to command them, invoking an enemy army within our walls.

To deny that such Jihad is part of mainstream traditional Islam (Sharia) since inception, is to suggest that Allah, Muhammad, Muslims, Muslim Jurists, and the most respected of Islam’s mufassirūn throughout Islam's history have drastically misunderstood the religion of Islam. . .

. . . You have repeatedly shown that you believe that is the case, which is the reason any further discussion with you is really pointless.

Continued...
 
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continued...

setst777 said:
I read such about Dr. Bostom online, and am in awe of his vast knowledge of Islam and its history, and the fact that he is the first of anyone in the world to provide so many translations of original historical Islamic and other secondary sources to actually walk us through the real history of Islamic Jihad since inception.

I only have one book by Dr. Bostom so far, "The Legacy of Jihad." I plan to purchase and study his other books as well, as this would be worthy time spent studying the actual history of Islam from its own historical sources instead of studying the biased politically correct opinions of others.


The above statement proves without a doubt that you have no understanding of Islam. Dr. Bostom doesn't have a vast knowledge of Islam and it's history, he is just parroting the same anti-islamic propaganda as others like him.

Setst RE: Actually it proves your lack of understanding of Islam.

How so? Dr. Boston is not parroting anyone; rather, he is unique in the world in that he has provided Islam’s own historical documentation in our language – letting the documents themselves tell us about the history of Islam since inception, and its Jihad in every land it has conquered.

That is why his book, “The Legacy of Jihad” is edited by Dr. Bostom in that he is letting the evidence teach us about Islam since inception from its own historical documents. Bostom didn't write those documents. This is the first time this has ever been done on this scale.

Dr. Bostom is an expert in his field of research in that he is the first to have collected, interpreted, researched and studied these historical documents to understand the true history of Islam – not a white washed or politically correct westernized or taqyah version.

If you could actually take the blinders off and then took the time to listen to his lectures, interviews, or read any of his books, you would understand this.

No other so called scholar has taken the time to translate and study the historical documents of Islam on this scale.

No school teaches this.

That makes Bostom an expert in historical traditional Islam. That is what Dr. Bostom is recognized for. That is why his books are so very important – they are golden. You don’t see this because you are blinded by your own bias against Islam. So instead of looking at the evidence, you instead attack the messenger as usual.

Personally attacking the credibility of all those who disagree with your taqyah version of Islam is a cheap and sick way to attempt to legitimize your opinionated subjective views onto Islam.

setst777 said:
The Qur’an and Hadith make is very plain to understand that veiling the face, except for the eyes, is what is meant. Why? The reason is because this is what the Qur’an and Hadith actually states in context.
LOOK at the verses I provided from the Qur’an and Sahih Hadeth. No need to re-interpret it.


setst777 said:
Not taught in Islam? What about the Qur’an quotes commanding it? What about the Sahih Bukhari quotes commanding it? Anyone with 30 years study of Islam should have known this in his first year of study… You mean to say you never saw Muslims wear a Burka before? Yet you say it’s “not taught in Islam” "Not what Islam commands" How could anyone with even a rudimentary knowledge of Islam make such a statement?

Of course I have seen Muslim women wear a burka before, I see them everyday. Here in Mindanao where the vast majority of women are Sunni Shafis, I would estimate that fewer than 5% do this on a regular basis and I know several Muslim women that wear a burka on some days, but most of the time only wear a hajib.

Setst RE: So you have seen the extremists?

setst777 said:
Covering the face - per the Quran - is compulsory...

setst777 said:
the Qur’an and Sahih Bukhari show that Allah commanded women to wear the burka – including veiling the face. As I said, the whole practice of covering women up so they are faceless and unseen is what Islam actually commands

Here is what one of the most widely used Encyclopedias of Islam says on the subject:

Setst RE: No go. I gave you the actual quotes from the Quran and Sahih Hadith. No politically correct westernized description of Islam’s sources can change that.

In the video below, Dr Philips is talking about Hajib, but makes it clear that there is no command for the woman's face to be covered.

Setst RE: You have been duped by your hero - a Salafist terror supporting teacher using taqyah on you to whitewash the true Islam while the terror groups infiltrate the USA and Europe.

Keep in mind that the Burka (including the face covering) for women was not always part of Islam. Rather, the Burka verses came down from Allah at a specific later time when Muhammad was still alive just as all the Sahih Bukhari quotes state. So this is not a tradition that was carried on from a bygone era; rather, this was a new development within Islam at a specific point in time.
 
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In the context of the other two Sahih Bukhari Hadith that you omitted, a face covering for women is what is meant by the Burka verses in the Qur’an.

Narrated 'Aisha: While I was sitting in my resting place, I was overwhelmed by sleep and slept. Safwan bin Al-Muattal As-Sulami Adh-Dhakwani was behind the army. When he reached my place in the morning, he saw the figure of a sleeping person and he recognized me on seeing me as he had seen me before the order of compulsory veiling (was prescribed). So I woke up when he recited Istirja' (i.e. "Inna lillahi wa inna llaihi raji'un") as soon as he recognized me. I veiled my face with my head cover at once, and by Allah, we did not speak a single word, and I did not hear him saying any word besides his Istirja'. He dismounted from his camel and made it kneel down, putting his leg on its front legs and then I got up and rode on it. [...]
Sahih Bukhari 5:59:462

Narrated Safiya bint Shaiba: 'Aisha used to say: "When (the Verse): "They should draw their veils over their necks and bosoms," was revealed, (the ladies) cut their waist sheets at the edges and covered their faces with the cut pieces."
Sahih Bukhari 6:60:282
Neither of those hadiths command Muslim women to cover their faces or wear a burka and if you read the sources I provided earlier, you would understand why they don't.

Joyousperson already responded to your sick bigoted attacks on the credibility of others, and dismissing all documentation.
It's not just me, its scholars of Islam and Islamic history, historians, and real experts doing this as well.

I will just add that Dr. Bostom is well known and praised for making publicly available, for the first time in the world, the collection and interpretation of a plethora of historical Islamic texts from their originals, and also secondary historical sources, on the actual history of Jihad.
Yes, he is well known and praised within the Anti-Muslim/Islam Fringe which is not surprising. Outside of this group, his work for the most part is considered to be unscholarly.

What I provided from Bostom was the historical Jurists fiqh position on Jihad in all four schools of Sunni, and also of Shia – from Islam’s highest authorities.
The Sunni and Shia positions are identical in that Jihad is defensive and offensive until the whole world is one religion, Islam. That is the position of traditional Islam from their most respected jurists and scholars.
Islam is the only religion which demands violence against unbelievers in order to make Islam the only religion on earth – this is according to all the foremost Muslim Jurists of Sunni and Shia Islam, and demonstrated by the history of Islam Jihad since inception.
As long as you are using sources like the ones below, that's what you are going to believe.
None of those sources should be used to learn about Islam and what it teaches.

Below are some more qualified sources.

The Use of Force under Islamic Law -- Niaz A. Shah

The concept of Jihad in Islamic Jurisprudence: its meaning and evolution throughout history -- Federico Borsari

The Concept and Practice of Jihad in Islam -- Michael G. Knapp

Jihād as Defense: Just-war theory in the Quran and Sunnah -- Justin Parrott


You will find that, despite being from differing backgrounds, these sources all use the exact same verses from the Qur'an and hadiths as Robert Spencer and the other sources you have provided, yet they come to a more logical conclusion. The reason they do, is because they know how to read these texts and put them into their proper textual and historical context.

This really all comes down to common sense. How would it be possible for a religion that teaches the way you describe Islam in this thread to thrive and prosper in the world for more than 1,400 years? It would be impossible for a religion like the one you have been describing in this thread to grow to more than 1.6 billion followers if what you believe about Islam were true. Why would so many people be converting to Islam if it taught the way you believe?

Look at this survey that asked why people covert to Islam:

convert to islam.jpg


The main reasons for converting: "prefer Muslim teachings'" and "reading religious texts."

These people are reading the same verses in the Qur'an that you have been quoting in this thread. Do you really believe people (Most of whom are women by the way), would decide to follow a religion that is anything like what you describe in this thread? A religion that is oppressive to women, demands participation in a war against all non-Muslims to spread Islam until it conquers the world, commands female circumcision, commands women cover from head to toe including their faces, demands four witnesses from a victim to prove rape, etc...? Common sense should tell you that no one would want to follow such a religion. Since thousands who are reading the same Islamic texts as you are deciding to convert to Islam every day because they like what they are reading and what Islam teaches, that should tell you that you are misinterpreting them. It's not surprising that this is the case based on the sources you have been providing in this thread.
 
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