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Heraclius -- The Roman Emperor Was About To Approve Islam In Rome

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  • Heraclius -- The Roman Emperor Was About To Approve Islam In Rome

    HERACLIUS -- THE ROMAN EMPEROR WAS ABOUT TO APPROVE ISLAM IN ROME
    by Mesbah Uddin

    Media Monitors Network
    http://usa.mediamonitors.net/content/view/ full/50588
    March 18 2008
    CA

    "In 628 CE, the Emperor Heraclius was in Jerusalem to celebrating his
    victory over the Persians. In this well-timed moment, Prophet Muhammad
    sent him an emissary with a letter that contained an invitation to the
    Emperor to embrace Islam. After ensuring that Prophet Muhammad was
    not trying to establish an ancestral kingdom in Arabia, he consoled
    the emissary with encouraging words and valuable gifts. While this
    incident of emissary is not seriously upheld by the Western writers,
    the Catholic Encyclopaedia fairly corroborates some events that echo
    its effects."

    ---------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------

    Th e scenarios that help us uncover the mysteries of the antiquities
    surrounding Roman Emperor Heraclius and Islam in Rome, need some
    tracking of the Christendom. History tells us that the tormenting
    tentacles of the papacy were in Nicea in 325 CE. In fact it was the
    Egyptian bishop Athanasius of Alexandria in the Nicene conference
    visualized Jesus as God and not as a Prophet that the Jewish people
    were looking forward to having for several centuries. The Bishops
    under the popes, since then, kept on getting imperial treasury and
    influence at the courts. The members of the Catholic clergy manipulated
    political authority. Rampant corruption and immorality swept those
    lands. Soliciting sexual favours from female penitents allured the
    clergies for religious power and authority.

    Throughout European history, the empowerment of Christendom appears
    to have exceed over most political entity - democracy or kingdom
    alike. Even King Henry VIII was refused permission by the pope
    to divorce his wife. This eventually caused a severe rift in the
    Catholicism and helped the emergence of the Anglican Church of England,
    with Roman Catholic in splendour but Protestant in name.

    By the end of the 15th century, the papal monasteries and convents
    turned into the largest landholders of Europe. The splendor of Rome
    grew immeasurably during the late 1400's, and 1500's. In fact, about
    half or more of France, Germany, Sweden and England had become a part
    of the Papal splendor and ruling arena.

    As recent as the pursuance for reforming Catholicism into the
    existing Protestant faith, Martin Luther was at the edge of being
    executed. Frederick, the ruler of Saxony in Germany, was hiding
    Martin Luther in his palace and protected him from the summon of
    the pope, known as the Bull. Incidentally, some historical analysts
    of the present-day's Islam trace the source of "Fatwa" to the papal
    'Bull'. A papal bull often carried public execution order for heresy.

    In 1520 the pope issued a Bull that forbade Martin Luther to preach.

    His books, containing the Christian reform movement, were burned. The
    'Bull' of Pope Innocent III caused the massacre of 20,000 men, women
    and children (Albigenses) in France.

    Right from the birth of Papacy to until the formation of the Protestant
    segment of Christianity, the popes were, in reality, more powerful
    than the emperors themselves. The popes' jurisdiction, known as
    Christendom, extended over almost all the empires and kingdoms of
    Europe. In essence, the delusion of Christendom was a government
    dedicated to enforcement of the Christianity that was reshaped after
    the conference of Nicea in 325 CE.

    The Jews, with much close perception of God with the Muslims, were
    viewed by the Medieval Christians as the allies of the Muslims. In
    fact, during the Arab conquest of Spain, they helped Muslim troops
    against the Christians. Most often the Jews rejoiced when Christian
    territory fell into Islamic rulers. While the Jews had difficult
    socio-economic status in Europe, many Jews held prominent positions
    in the Ottoman Empire.

    Even until the First World War, the Jews had a safe-haven in the
    Ottoman Empire and not in other parts of Europe. Sultan Bayazid II
    offered shelters to Jewish refugees. The persecuted Jews of Spain got
    assurance and hope for their equal well-being along with the Muslims.

    In 1492 the Sultan ordered the governors of the Ottoman Empire to
    make easy entrance for the Jews in their provinces and to receive
    them graciously. Bernard Lewis, a British-American historian and
    a scholar of Middle Eastern studies, once said: "the Jews were not
    just permitted to settle in the Ottoman lands, but were encouraged,
    assisted and sometimes even compelled." For them, the lands of Islam
    became the lands of safety.

    Having all these events and scenarios in perspective, some analytical
    historians believe that Emperor Heraclius was fascinated by the idea of
    one mighty unseen God. In fact it was not Emperor Heraclius alone who
    had uneasiness in recognising Jesus as God. A few centuries before his
    time, Porphyry, a third-century philosopher from Tyre proved on the
    basis of the New Testament, that Jesus did not call himself God and
    that he preached, not about himself, but about the one God, the God
    of all. In his book, Adversus Christianos (Against the Christians) he
    is effectively quoted as having said, "The Gods have proclaimed Christ
    to have been most pious, but the Christians are a confused and vicious
    sect." It was his followers who abandoned his teaching and introduced
    a new way of their own in which Jesus became the object of worship.

    During the days of Prophet Muhammad in Medina, Honorius was selected
    as the pope of the Vatican, ruling the Christendom in 625 CE. He
    was informed by Patriarch Sergius of Constantinople that Emperor
    Heraclius, while visiting Armenia in 622 CE, used an expression to
    a group of Monophysites of the Severian sect. The Monophysites were
    then regarded as heretics by all the popes during their times.

    The expression meant "One Mighty" of the Incarnate Word. Pope
    Honorius was aware of the emergence of Islam - believing in "One
    God". Consequently, the pope felt that the wisdom of "One God" may
    soon be strolling into the belief-guidelines of the Emperor Heraclius
    himself. As the faith of Catholicism was then dwindling and faced
    chilling questions within itself, Islam appeared as an oversized
    threat to Christianity.

    In 628 CE, the Emperor Heraclius was in Jerusalem to celebrating his
    victory over the Persians. In this well-timed moment, Prophet Muhammad
    sent him an emissary with a letter that contained an invitation to the
    Emperor to embrace Islam. After ensuring that Prophet Muhammad was
    not trying to establish an ancestral kingdom in Arabia, he consoled
    the emissary with encouraging words and valuable gifts. While this
    incident of emissary is not seriously upheld by the Western writers,
    the Catholic Encyclopaedia fairly corroborates some events that echo
    its effects.

    By about 628 C.E. the followers of Prophet Muhammad had grown much
    stronger than before. As a result, pope Honorius was not confident
    of orchestrating a warfare against the Prophet. After all it was not
    Jerusalem where the pope could have exercised his power of the Bull.

    The essence of Islamic faith, though not new, had some fundamental
    concurrence with the leanings of the Emperor Heraclius. Analysing
    rationally, the Pope rather counted on inducing distrust between
    Prophet Muhammad and his Jewish clans in Medina who took him as
    their Messiah.

    Jewish traditions, enshrined by the Jewish exegetes tell us: "A
    Prophet is about to arise; his time draws near. We shall follow him;
    and then we shall slay our enemies with divine slaughter..." As the
    non-Jewish people of Yathrib became aware of the Prophet, "They spoke
    one to another - surely we know that is the same Prophet whom the
    Jews told us about."

    By about 630, Prophet Muhammad's defenders had grown even stronger,
    and in his march towards Mecca he earned the victory. Mecca's wealthy
    rulers were then obliged to donate to the well being of its poor for
    which the Prophet was once banished from Mecca. People in Mecca saw
    Prophet Muhammad's strength as the power of his God. They, obviously,
    saw the other gods as powerless. Intuitively there became a mass
    euphoria in accepting Islam - the religion with an unseen God.

    Towards the end of 638 CE, the Emperor Heraclius had issued an
    "Ecthesis", or exposition, counselling all his subjects to submit to
    "One Mighty" of the Incarnate Word. Undoubtedly this "Ecthesis" to
    submit to "One Mighty" intimately corroborated the essence that Prophet
    Muhammad once conveyed to him earlier. Perhaps Emperor Heraclius was
    about to approve Islamic perception of God in Rome but the time was
    too short for him to do so as he died in 641 CE - just 9 years after
    the death of Prophet Muhammad. Besides, the papal powers-tentacles
    were enormous for the Emperor Heraclius to handle alone.

    Howard Zinn, an American writer with expertise in political science,
    sharply criticised the prevailing obstinacy of the readers in their
    approach to accepting new views in the age-old events. He wrote:
    "It is the guardians of the old stories, the orthodox histories,
    who refuse to widen the spectrum of ideas, to take in new books,
    new approaches, new information new views of history."

    The flame of rational reasoning brings many myths to their melt-down
    point. Modern research indicates that the papal connivance undoubtedly
    tarnished the Judaeo-Islamic relations in Medina. The role of pope
    Honorius, though evident, was amazingly bypassed in Ibn Ishaq's
    history of Islam.

    Viewing through Howard Zinn's approach, Western historians seem to
    have failed to read the message in between the lines surrounding the
    consolation that the Emperor Heraclius had offered to the emissary
    of Prophet Muhammad about Islam. More to the point, why an emperor
    would give valuable presents to a foreign emissary with conflicting
    faith unless the message itself concurred with his thought-pattern
    and was valuable to him?
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