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  • Bernard Lewis, The Pied Piper of Western Confusion on Islam

    ANDREW BOSTOM: BERNARD LEWIS, THE PIED PIPER OF WESTERN CONFUSION ON ISLAM

    http://www.ruthfullyyours.com/2011/08/09/andrew-bostom-bernard-lewis-the-pied-piper-of-western-confusion-on-islam/
    By Ruth King on August 9th, 2011

    http://www.andrewbostom.org/blog/2011/08/09/bernard-lewis-pied-piper-of-islamic-confusion/

    Bernard Lewis: Pied Piper of Islamic Confusion

    This summer's Claremont Review of Books contains a featured review
    essay by Robert R. Reillyi which discusses Bernard Lewis's essay
    collection `Faith and Power,' ii and the nonagenarian historian's
    reflections upon the so-called Arab Spring unrest in the Middle East,
    particularly North Africa.iii As distilled by Reilly, Lewis's views
    reiterate what the historian described to the Wall Street Journal's
    Bari Weiss during an April 2nd interview. iv

    The failure of a young journalist v such as Ms. Weiss to appreciate
    important glaring and irreconcilable inconsistencies in Lewis's
    narrative is concerning, but understandable. It is remarkable, and
    unacceptable, when a writer of some stature vi (reviewed, here [2]
    vii) such as Reilly, Chairman of the Committee for Western
    Civilization, and senior fellow at the American Foreign Policy
    Council, blithely ignores Lewis's extensive record of
    self-contradiction. viii Reilly, in his essay, `Bernard Lewis and the
    Arab Spring', ix never discusses either Lewis's contemporary
    evangelical, even hectoring appeals to `bring them freedom' (i.e.,
    Muslims under the authoritarian rule their systems have always
    engendered), lest `they' destroy us, x or Lewis's earlier sobering,
    180-degree contradictory analyses of Islam as a totalitarian system
    devoid of a conceptual basis for Western individual political freedom.
    xi Without a mention of this intractably confused and confusing record
    of pronouncements from the early 1950s, through the present, Reilly
    invokes Lewis as the ultimate clarifying sage on such developments,
    for whom all owe `thanks.' xii

    Lewis's legacy of intellectual and moral confusion has greatly
    hindered the ability of sincere American policymakers to think clearly
    about Islam's living imperial legacy, driven by unreformed and
    unrepentant mainstream Islamic doctrine. Reilly's highly selective and
    celebratory presentation of Lewis's understandings'the man Reilly dubs
    the `foremost historian of the Middle East'' is pathognomonic of the
    dangerous influence Lewis continues to wield over his uncritical
    acolytes and supporters. xiii

    >From Dogmatic Islamophilia to Intellectual and Moral Confusion

    During several notable speeches, starting in 2003, 1 including both
    inaugural and State of the Union addresses, 2 President George W.
    Bush repeatedly stressed the paramount importance of promoting freedom
    in the Middle East. Speaking in an almost messianic idiom, he termed
    such a quest 3

    ¦the calling of our time ¦the calling of our country.

    He reiterated this theme while speaking to The American Legion on
    February 24, 2006, and offered the following sanguine assessment of
    progress: 4

    Freedom is on the march in the broader Middle East. The hope of
    liberty now reaches from Kabul to Baghdad, to Beirut, and beyond.
    Slowly but surely, we're helping to transform the broader Middle East
    from an arc of instability into an arc of freedom. And as freedom
    reaches more people in this vital region, we'll have new allies in the
    war on terror, and new partners in the cause of moderation in the
    Muslim world and in the cause of peace.

    Despite President Bush's uplifting rhetoric and ebullient appraisal of
    these events'which epitomized American hopes and values at their
    quintessential best'there was a profound, deeply troubling flaw in
    his'and his advisers'analysis which simply ignored the vast gulf
    between Western and Islamic conceptions of freedom itself. 5 How did
    that happen?

    Journalist David Warren, writing in March, 2006, questioned the
    advice given President Bush `on the nature of Islam' at that crucial
    time by not only ` the paid operatives of Washington's Council on
    American-Islamic Relations, and the happyface pseudo-scholar Karen
    Armstrong,' but most significantly, one eminence grise, in particular:
    `the profoundly learned' Bernard

    Lewis. 6 All these advisers, despite their otherwise divergent
    viewpoints, as Warren noted, 7 `assured him (President Bush) that
    Islam and modernity were potentially compatible.' None more
    vehemently'or with such authority'than the so-called `Last
    Orientalist,' 8 nonagenarian Professor Bernard Lewis. Arguably the
    most striking example of Lewis' fervor was a lecture he delivered July
    16, 2006 (on board the ship Crystal Serenity during a Hillsdale
    College cruise in the British Isles) about the transferability of
    Western democracy to despotic Muslim societies, such as Iraq. 9 He
    concluded with the statement, `Either we bring them freedom, or they
    destroy us.' This stunning claim was published with that concluding
    remark as the title, `Bring Them Freedom Or They Destroy Us,' and
    disseminated widely. 10

    While Lewis put forth rather non-sequitur, apologetic examples in
    support of his concluding formulation, 11 he never elucidated the
    yawning gap between Western and Islamic conceptions of
    freedom'`hurriyya' in Arabic. 12 This latter omission was particularly
    striking given Professor Lewis' contribution to the official (Brill)
    Encyclopedia of Islam entry on hurriyya. 13 The materials Lewis
    omits'including his own earlier writings'on hurriyya and what he has
    also termed the `authoritarian or even totalitarian' essence of
    Islamic societies 14'serve as an appropriate starting point for our
    discussion.

    Hurriyya `freedom' is ' as Ibn Arabi (d. 1240) the lionized `Greatest
    Sufi Master,' 15 expressed it ' `perfect slavery.' 16 And this
    conception is not merely confined to the Sufis' perhaps metaphorical
    understanding of the relationship between Allah the `master' and his
    human `slaves.' Following Islamic law slavishly throughout one's life
    was paramount to hurriyya `freedom.' This earlier more concrete
    characterization of hurriyya's metaphysical meaning, whose essence Ibn
    Arabi reiterated, was pronounced by the Sufi scholar al-Qushayri (d.
    1072/74). 17

    Let it be known to you that the real meaning of freedom lies in the
    perfection of slavery. If the slavery of a human being in relation to
    God is a true one, his freedom is relieved from the yoke of changes.
    Anyone who imagines that it may be granted to a human being to give up
    his slavery for a moment and disregard the commands and prohibitions
    of the religious law while possessing discretion and responsibility,
    has divested himself of Islam. God said to his Prophet: `Worship until
    certainty comes to you.' (Koran 15:99). As agreed upon by the
    [Koranic] commentators, `certainty' here means the end (of life).

    Bernard Lewis, in his Encyclopedia of Islam analysis of hurriyya,
    discusses this concept in the latter phases of the Ottoman Empire,
    through the contemporary era. 18After highlighting a few `cautious' or
    `conservative' (Lewis' characterization) reformers and their writings,
    Lewis maintains, 19

    ¦there is still no idea that the subjects have any right to share in
    the formation or conduct of government'to political freedom, or
    citizenship, in the sense which underlies the development of political
    thought in the West. While conservative reformers talked of freedom
    under law, and some Muslim rulers even experimented with councils and
    assemblies government was in fact becoming more and not less
    arbitrary¦.

    Lewis also makes the important point that Western colonialism
    ameliorated this chronic situation: 20

    During the period of British and French domination, individual freedom
    was never much of an issue. Though often limited and sometimes
    suspended, it was on the whole more extensive and better protected
    than either before or after. [emphasis added]

    And Lewis concludes his entry by observing that Islamic societies
    forsook even their inchoate democratic experiments, 21

    In the final revulsion against the West, Western democracy too was
    rejected as a fraud and a delusion, of no value to Muslims.

    Elsewhere, writing contemporaneously on democratic institutions in the
    Islamic Middle East, Lewis conceded that at least `equality and
    fraternity' between Muslims were accepted. 22 But even here Lewis
    included a major caveat with regard to `liberty,' whose Islamic
    formulation might never resemble John Stuart Mill's conception in
    `Liberty,' 23 featuring a reference to `Alice in Wonderland' 24 making
    plain Lewis' assessment of the likely superficial (at best) outcome of
    Muslim democratization efforts: 25

    ¦perhaps it may be possible to extend them beyond it [the Muslim
    community] adding a redefined liberty [emphasis added], to make a new
    kind of democracy. Only `the question is' as Alice remarked, `whether
    you can [emphasis in original] make words mean so many different
    things.'

    Western constitutional and governmental models, specifically, were
    ignored, 26 and ultimately, Lewis viewed this immediate post-World War
    II era of democratic experimentation by Muslim societies as an
    objective failure, with the possible exception of developments, at
    that time, in Turkey. 27

    The machinery which works well in the West may not work in other
    countries. Except perhaps in Turkey, our kind of democracy appears to
    have failed in the Muslim Middle East.

    This harsh, if apposite 1958 assessment is all the more remarkable, in
    retrospect, over a half century later, because Lewis was critiquing
    what turned out to have been the Muslim world's high water mark
    towards creating indigenous, democratic institutions, and societies.
    28 Bernard Lewis then was both unapologetic and pellucid in
    identifying the intractable obstacle to such efforts at
    democratization'Islam itself. 29

    I turn now from the accidental to the essential factors, to those
    deriving from the very nature of Islamic society, tradition, and
    thought. The first of these is the authoritarianism, perhaps we may
    even say the totalitarianism, of the Islamic political tradition¦.
    Many attempts have been made to show that Islam and democracy are
    identical-attempts usually based on a misunderstanding of Islam or
    democracy or both. This sort of argument expresses a need of the up-
    rooted Muslim intellectual who is no longer satisfied with or capable
    of understanding traditional Islamic values, and who tries to justify,
    or rather, re-state, his inherited faith in terms of the fashionable
    ideology of the day. It is an example of the romantic and apologetic
    presentation of Islam that is a recognized phase in the reaction of
    Muslim thought to the impact of the West¦. In point of fact, except
    for the early caliphate, when the anarchic individualism of tribal
    Arabia was still effective, the political history of Islam is one of
    almost unrelieved autocracy¦[I]t was authoritarian, often arbitrary,
    sometimes tyrannical. There are no parliaments or representative
    assemblies of any kind, no councils or communes, no chambers of
    nobility or estates, no municipalities in the history of Islam;
    nothing but the sovereign power, to which the subject owed complete
    and unwavering obedience as a religious duty imposed by the Holy Law.
    In the great days of classical Islam this duty was only owed to the
    lawfully appointed caliph, as God's vicegerent on earth and head of
    the theocratic community, and then only for as long as he upheld the
    law; but with the decline of the caliphate and the growth of military
    dictatorship, Muslim jurists and theologians accommodated their
    teachings to the changed situation and extended the religious duty of
    obedience to any effective authority, however impious, however
    barbarous. For the last thousand years, the political thinking of
    Islam has been dominated by such maxims as `tyranny is better than
    anarchy' and `whose power is established, obedience to him is
    incumbent'

    Lewis provides a classical formulation of `Islamic political
    quietism,' i.e., authoritarianism, by quoting a frequently cited
    passage from the Syrian jurist Ibn Jama'a (d. 1333), who became Chief
    Qadi [Islamic religious judge] of Cairo: 29a

    Forced homage. This happens when a chief seizes power by force, in a
    time of civil disorders, and it becomes necessary to recognize him in
    order to avoid further troubles. That he may have none of the
    qualifications of sovereignty, that he be illiterate, unjust or
    vicious, that he be even a slave or a woman, is of no consequence. He
    is a sovereign in fact, until such time as another, stronger than he,
    drives him from the throne and seizes power. He will then be sovereign
    by the same title, and should be recognized in order not to increase
    strife. Who- ever has effective power has the right to obedience, for
    a government, even the worst one, is better than anarchy, and of two
    evils one should choose the lesser.

    Ibn Jama'a, Lewis reminds us, was `a pious and devout believer,
    putting bluntly and sadly an unpalatable truth as he sees it.' 29b And
    Lewis emphasizes 29c

    ¦that the writer is a doctor of the Holy Law and speaking in terms of
    the Holy Law. When he prescribes recognition and obedience, he is
    laying down the duty of the believer under the Holy Law'that is to
    say, he is formulating a rule the violation of which is, in our
    terminology, a sin as well as a crime, involving hell-fire as well as
    such anticipatory chastisement as the sovereign might see fit to
    impose in this world.

    Lewis's analogy between Islamic and Communist totalitarianism also
    includes this candid observation: 29d

    A community brought up on such doctrines will not be shocked by
    (Communist) disregard of political liberty or human rights; it may
    even be attracted by a regime which offers ruthless strength and
    efficiency in the service of a cause'anyway in appearance'in place of
    the ineptitude, corruption, and cynicism which in their mind, one may
    even say in their experience, are inseparable from parliamentary
    government

    Even Lewis's still hopeful assessments from this period, such as his
    1952 analysis `Islamic Revival in Turkey,' 30 or broader 1955 `The
    Concept of an Islamic Republic,' 31 inspired by the November 2, 1953
    decision of the Constituent Assembly in Karachi, Pakistan, that the
    country henceforth be known as The Islamic Republic of Pakistan, are
    punctuated with caveats based upon his expressed understanding of
    Islam. For example, Lewis's most optimistic bromides regarding
    Turkey's fate (in 1952) included frank language about Islam, noting
    how the Turkish populace would `hopefully' achieve `a synthesis of the
    best elements of the West and the East,' or `may yet' discover `a
    workable compromise between Islam and modernism.' 32 And his tenuous
    conclusion, contingent, ultimately, on the successful penetration of
    Western ideals, was reached only after acknowledging obvious Islamic
    threats to this roseate scenario: 33

    The peasantry are still as religious as they have always been. From
    them there is no question of revival'the only difference is that they
    can now express their religious sentiments more openly. Perhaps one of
    the strongest elements supporting their revival is the class known in
    Turkey as esnaf'the artisans and small shopkeepers in the towns. These
    are generally very fanatical, and, like the peasants, many of them are
    connected with one or another of the tarikas [Sufi dervish orders].

    ¦After a century of Westernization, Turkey has undergone immense
    changes'greater than any outside observer had thought possible. But
    the deepest Islamic roots of Turkish life and culture are still alive,
    and the ultimate identity of Turk and Muslim in Turkey is still
    unchallenged. The resurgence of Islam after a long interval responds
    to a profound national need. The occasional outbursts of the tarikas,
    far more than the limited restoration of official Islam, show how
    powerful are the forces stirring beneath the surface. The path that
    the revival will take is still not clear. If simple reaction has its
    way, much of the work of the last century will be undone, and Turkey
    will slip back into the darkness from which she so painfully emerged.

    Lewis opens his subsequent 1955 essay about the Pakistani experiment
    with a self-proclaimed `Islamic Republic' by asking whether or not
    such a title is indeed `a contradiction in terms,' given 34

    ¦the political experience and political traditions of Islam are after
    all almost exclusively monarchical and authoritarian'expressed in
    regimes of the kind associated in the minds of most people with the
    familiar terms Caliph and Sultan.

    Once again, the body of Lewis's essay does not shy away from
    acknowledging the doctrinal and historical obstacles to the modernist
    Islamic state envisioned by Pakistan's Muslim reformers. 35

    ¦Pakistan cannot pretend to be wholly secular, since its very
    statehood is based on Islam, the origin and reason of its separate
    existence. But how far is an Islamic state, of the type which
    Pakistanis clearly wish to create, compatible with an ideal of
    government that is so palpably an importation from the Western world?

    He notes, candidly, for example the basic `difficulty' such an
    authentic Islamic state would encounter 36

    ¦in securing acceptance for the unbeliever as a brother or even as an
    equal fellow-citizen.

    Lewis contrasts the Pakistani ideal'an avowedly Islamic republic'with
    other contemporary (circa 1955) Muslim nations, who, to the extent
    they adopted Western models, completely or significantly abandoned
    traditional Sharia (Islamic law)-based systems. 37

    ¦[T]he Turkish Republic is secular, deliberately following European
    patterns and rejecting traditional Islamic principles of state and
    law. Syria and Lebanon were formed as constitutional republics on the
    French model, but with Muslim citizens. As recently as 1950, when a
    new draft constitution of Syria was in preparation, a clause declaring
    Islam the religion of the state was abandoned after bitter disputes,
    and replaced by another simply stating that the President must be a
    Muslim and that the Holy Law of Islam would be the main basis of state
    legislation.

    Along the way, Lewis dismisses hagiographic notions about the
    principle of `elected' Muslim sovereigns, ostensibly dating from
    Islam's initial four `Rightly Guided' Caliphs, who ruled between
    632-661, beginning in the immediate aftermath of Muhammad's death. 38

    If we look at the history of Islam, we find that the elective
    principle remained purely theoretical. The first Caliph after the
    death of Muhammad, Abu Bakr, was chosen by a process which we may call
    acclamation or coup d'etat, according to our point of view. The
    second, Omar, simply assumed power de facto, probably after having
    been designated by his predecessor. The third, Othman, was nominated
    by a committee of six, appointed by Omar on his deathbed to choose one
    from among themselves as Caliph. The fourth, Ali, succeeded after a
    process of revolt, murder, and civil war, which thereafter became the
    all too frequent methods of determining the succession. Of the first
    four Caliphs, all but one died by violence. Thereafter a dubious
    solution to the problem of preserving continuity and stability was
    found when the Caliphate became in effect hereditary in two successive
    dynasties'though the fiction of an election was maintained on each
    accession¦

    Moreover, with the possible exception of Turkey, Lewis concedes that,
    following the era of the French Revolution, 150 years of prior
    experimentation with Western secular sovereignty and laws in many
    Islamic countries, notably Egypt, had not fared well. 39

    ¦[T]he imported political machinery failed to work, and in its
    breakdown led to the violent death or sudden displacement by other
    means of ministers and monarchs, all of whom had failed to replace
    even the vanished Sultanate in the respect and loyalties of the
    people. In Egypt a republic was proclaimed which in some respects
    seems to be a return to one of the older political traditions of
    Islam'paternal, authoritarian Government, resting on military force,
    with the support of some of the religious leaders and teachers, and
    apparently, general acceptance. Perhaps that is an Islamic Republic of
    a sort.

    Although Lewis concludes on an optimistic note, even his most wishful,
    self-contradictory flights of fancy are tempered by a realistic
    acknowledgment of the profound challenges ahead. 40

    An elected head of state and rule of law are familiar. It is true that
    the first is rely theoretical, and has never been applied in any
    Islamic state of high material civilization'but if the medieval
    jurists were able to reduce the electorate to one, there is no reason
    why their modern heirs should not extend it to universal suffrage. The
    Islamic rule of law is theocratic rather than democratic, deriving
    from the immutable revelation of God and not from the changing will of
    the people'but the principle is admitted, and the range of
    interpretation is vast. Equality and fraternity within the faith group
    are accepted'it may not be impossible to extend them beyond it, and to
    add a redefined liberty. But much development and much adaptation of
    both Islamic and democratic notions will be needed to produce a
    working synthesis of the two, and if such a synthesis is in fact
    produced it will not be a return to a mythical past but a new
    creation.

    Lewis's final observation from 1955 is also appropriately staid: 41

    All Islam is now seeking new paths in politics and government'they
    will watch with sympathy and interest the outcome of the Pakistan
    experiment.

    Six decades after Lewis made his then cautiously hopeful observations
    about Turkey and Pakistan, there is an historical record to judge'a
    clear, irrefragable legacy of failed secularization efforts,
    accompanied by steady grassroots and institutional re-Islamization in
    both countries. 42 The late P.J. Vatikiotis (d. 1997), Emeritus
    Professor of Politics at the School of Oriental and African Studies
    (SOAS), was a respected scholar of the Middle East, who,
    contemporaneous with Lewis (a SOAS colleague), wrote extensively about
    Islamic reformism throughout the 20th century, particularly in Egypt.
    Focusing outside Turkey and Pakistan on the Arab Middle East (i.e.,
    Egypt, The Sudan, Syria, and Iraq), Vatikiotis wrote candidly in 1981
    of how authoritarian Islam doomed inchoate efforts at creating
    political systems which upheld individual freedom in the region: 43

    What is significant is that after a tolerably less
    autocratic/authoritarian political experience during their
    apprenticeship for independent statehood under foreign power tutelage,
    during the inter-war period, most of these states once completely free
    or independent of foreign control, very quickly moved towards highly
    autocratic-authoritarian patterns of rule¦One could suggest a hiatus
    of roughly three years between the departure or removal of European
    influence and power and overthrow of the rickety plural political
    systems they left behind in Syria, Egypt, Iraq, and the Sudan by
    military coups d'etat.

    Authoritarianism and autocracy in the Middle East may be unstable in
    the sense that autocracies follow one another in frequent succession.
    Yet the ethos of authoritarianism may be lasting, even permanent¦One
    could venture into a more ambitious philosophical etiology by pointing
    out the absence of a concept of `natural law' or `law of reason' in
    the intellectual-cultural heritage of Middle Eastern societies. After
    all, everything before Islam, before God revealed his message to
    Muhammad, constitutes jahiliyya, or the dark age of ignorance.
    Similarly, anything that deviates from the eternal truth or verities
    of Islamic teaching is equally degenerative, and therefore
    unacceptable. That is why, by definition, any Islamic movement which
    seeks to make Islam the basic principle of the polity does not aim at
    innovation but at the restoration of the ideal that has been abandoned
    or lost. The missing of an experience similar, or parallel, to the
    Renaissance, freeing the Muslim individual from external constraints
    of, say, religious authority in order to engage in a creative course
    measured and judged by rational and existential human standards, may
    also be a relevant consideration. The individual in the Middle East
    has yet to attain his independence from the wider collectivity, or to
    accept the proposition that he can create a political order.

    Unlike Vatikiotis, Bernard Lewis, has ignored these obvious
    setbacks'and any self-critical re-appraisal of his earlier guarded
    optimism. Remarkably, Lewis has become a far more dogmatic evangelist
    for so-called `Islamic democratization,' 44 despite such failures!

    Lewis's volte-face on the merits of experiments in `Islamic
    democracy,' has been accompanied by his equally troubling intellectual
    legacy regarding three other critical subject areas: the institution
    of jihad, the chronic impact of the Sharia (Islamic law) on
    non-Muslims vanquished by jihad, and sacralized Islamic Jew-hatred.

    When discussing key doctrinal aspects of jihad, for example, the
    concepts of `harbi,' from Dar al Harb, 45 or jihad martyrdom, 46
    Lewis's analyses are incomplete, or frankly apologetic.

    Classical Islamic jurists such as Abu Hanifa (d. 767; founder of the
    Hanafi school of Islamic jurisprudence) 47 formulated the concepts Dar
    al Islam and Dar al Harb (Arabic for, `The House of Islam and the
    House of War'). 48 The great Muslim polymath Al-Tabari's 49 early 10th
    century `Book of Jihad' 50 includes extracts from Abu Hanifa (and his
    acolytes) affirming the impunity with which non-combatant
    `harbis''women, children, the elderly, the mentally or physically
    disabled'may be killed. 51

    Abu Hanifa and his companions said: `There is no harm in [having]
    night raids and incursions.' They said: `There is no harm if Muslims
    enter the Territory of War (ard al-harb) to assemble the mangonel
    [catapults] towards the polytheists' fortresses and to shoot them
    musing mangonels, even if there are among them a woman, child, elder,
    idiot (matuh), blind, crippled, or someone with a permanent disability
    (zamin). There is no harm in shooting polytheists in their fortresses
    using mangonels even if there are among those whom we have named.

    This discussion debunks Lewis's (repeated) fatuous contention that
    Islamic Law proscribed the slaying of such persons during jihad. 52

    Armand Abel, the leading 20th expert on the Muslim conception of Dar
    al Harb, highlights its salient features: 53

    Together with the duty of the `war in the way of God' (or jihad),this
    universalistic aspiration would lead the Muslims to see the world as
    being divided fundamentally into two parts. On the one hand there was
    that part of the world where Islam prevailed, where salvation had been
    announced, where the religion that ought to reign was practiced; this
    was the Dar al Islam. On the other hand, there was the part which
    still awaited the establishment of the saving religion and which
    constituted, by definition, the object of the holy war. This was the
    Dar al Harb. The latter, in the view of the Muslim jurists, was not
    populated by people who had a natural right not to practice Islam, but
    rather by people destined to become Muslims who, through impiousness
    and rebellion, refused to accept this great benefit. Since they were
    destined sooner or later to be converted at the approach of the
    victorious armies of the Prophet's successor, or else killed for their
    rebelliousness, they were the rebel subjects of the Caliph. Their
    kings were nothing but odious tyrants who, by opposing the progress of
    the saving religion together with their armies, were following a
    Satanic inspiration and rising up against the designs of Providence.
    And so no respite should be granted them, no truce: perpetual war
    should be their lot, waged in the course of the winter and summer
    ghazu. [razzias] If the sovereign of the country thus attacked desired
    peace, it was possible for him, just like for any other tributary or
    community, to pay the tribute for himself and for his subjects. Thus
    the [Byzantine] Empress Irene [d. 803] `purchased peace at the price
    of her humiliation', according to the formula stated in the dhimma
    contract itself, by paying 70,000 pounds in gold annually to the
    Caliph of Baghdad. Many other princes agreed in this way to become
    tributaries ` often after long struggles ` and to see their dominions
    pass from the status of dar al Harb to that of dar al Sulh. In this
    way, those of their subjects who lived within the boundaries of the
    territory ruled by the Caliphate were spared the uncertainty of being
    exposed arbitrarily, without any guarantee, to the military operations
    of the summer ghazu and the winter ghazu: indeed, anything within the
    reach of the Muslim armies as they advanced, being property of impious
    men and rebels, was legitimately considered their booty; their men,
    seized by armed soldiers, were mercilessly consigned to the lot
    specified in the Koranic verse about the sword,and their women and
    children were treated like things. [emphasis added]

    Abel's lucid, detailed, and evocative description of Dar al Harb
    contrasts starkly with Lewis's truncated presentation. The latter,
    which follows, is woefully inadequate to convey proper understanding
    of the doctrinally sanctioned threat posed to infidel
    non-belligerents: 54

    The unsubjugated unbeliever is by definition an enemy. He is part of
    the Dar al Harb, the House of War,' and is designated as a `harbi,' an
    attributive form of the word for war.

    Yusuf Al-Qaradawi, the widely revered contemporary Muslim cleric,
    `spiritual' leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, head of the `European
    Council for Fatwa and Research', and popular Al-Jazeera television
    personality, reiterated Abel's formulation of Dar al Harb almost
    exactly in July, 2003, both in conceptual terms, and with regard to
    Israel, specifically: 55

    It has been determined by Islamic law that the blood and property of
    people of Dar Al-Harb [the Domain of Disbelief where the battle for
    the domination of Islam should be waged] is not protected¦in modern
    war, all of society, with all its classes and ethnic groups, is
    mobilized to participate in the war, to aid its continuation, and to
    provide it with the material and human fuel required for it to assure
    the victory of the state fighting its enemies. Every citizen in
    society must take upon himself a role in the effort to provide for the
    battle. The entire domestic front, including professionals, laborers,
    and industrialists, stands behind the fighting army, even if it does
    not bear arms.

    In fact the consensus view of orthodox Islamic jurisprudence regarding
    jihad, since its formulation during the 8th and 9th centuries, through
    the current era, is that non-Muslims peacefully going about their
    lives'from the Khaybar farmers whom Muhammad ordered attacked in 628,
    56 to those sitting in the World Trade Center on 9/11/01'are `muba'a',
    licit, in the Dar al Harb. As described by the great 20th century
    scholar of Islamic Law, Joseph Schacht, 57

    A non-Muslim who is not protected by a treaty is called harbi, `in a
    state of war', `enemy alien'; his life and property are completely
    unprotected by law¦

    And these innocent non-combatants can be killed, and have always been
    killed, with impunity simply by virtue of being `harbis' during
    endless razzias and or full scale jihad campaigns that have occurred
    continuously since the time of Muhammad, through the present. This is
    the crux of the specific institutionalized religio-political ideology,
    i.e., jihad, which makes Islamdom's borders (and the further reaches
    of todays jihadists) bloody, to paraphrase Samuel Huntington, across
    the globe. 58 To validate his contention that, `Wherever one looks
    along the perimeter of Islam, Muslims have problems living peaceably
    with their neighbors,' 59 Huntington adduced these hard data: 60

    The overwhelming majority of fault line conflicts ¦ have taken place
    along the boundary looping across Eurasia and Africa that separates
    Muslims from non-Muslims¦Intense antagonisms and violent conflicts are
    pervasive between local Muslim and non-Muslim peoples¦Muslims make up
    about one-fifth of the world's population, but in the 1990s they have
    been far more involved in inter-group violence than the people of any
    other civilization. The evidence is overwhelming. There were, in
    short, three times as many inter-civilizational conflicts involving
    Muslims as there were between non-Muslim civilizations¦Muslim states
    also have had a high propensity to resort to violence in international
    crises, employing it to resolve 76 crises out of a total of 142 in
    which they were involved between 1928 and 1979. ¦ When they did use
    violence, Muslim states used high-intensity violence, resorting to
    full-scale war in 41 percent of the cases where violence was used and
    engaging in major clashes in another 39 percent of the cases. While
    Muslim states resorted to violence in 53.5 percent, violence was used
    the United Kingdom in only 1.5 percent, by the United States in 17.9
    percent, and by the Soviet Union in 28.5 percent of the crises in
    which they were involved¦Muslim bellicosity and violence are
    late-twentieth-century facts which neither Muslims nor non-Muslims can
    deny.

    Ibn Hudayl a 14th century Granadan author of an important treatise on
    jihad, elucidated the allowable tactics which facilitated the violent,
    chaotic jihad conquest of the Iberian peninsula, and other parts of
    Europe: 61

    It is permissible to set fire to the lands of the enemy, his stores of
    grain, his beasts of burden ` if it is not possible for the Muslims to
    take possession of them ` as well as to cut down his trees, to raze
    his cities, in a word, to do everything that might ruin and discourage
    him¦[being] suited to hastening the Islamization of that enemy or to
    weakening him. Indeed, all this contributes to a military triumph
    over him or to forcing him to capitulate.

    Bernard Lewis, however, fails to contextualize statements attributed
    to the caliph Abu Bakr (in 632), ostensibly prohibiting such
    destructive actions. 62 Again, as recorded in Tabari's early 10th
    century treatise on jihad, classical jurisprudence supports the views
    of Ibn Hudayl: 63

    Abu Hanifa and his companions said: `Abu Bakr's saying, `Do not ruin
    what has been built, do not burn palm trees, and do not cut down
    fruit-bearing trees' [is applied] when their [enemy people] territory
    has been conquered and controlled [by Muslims] and it has fallen into
    their hands. They [the Muslims] should not do any such actions because
    it has become a spoil of war for the Muslims (emphasis added). But if
    the [Muslim] army combatants do not have the power to reside in that
    territory and they are not able to appoint a leader over it, and they
    cannot acquire it so that it becomes theirs, then they should burn
    their fortresses, cities, and churches, and destroy their palm trees
    and [other] trees and burn them down. And whatever of their animals
    and cattle they acquaire and cannot take out [to the Territory of
    Islam], they should slaughter and burn them.'

    These repeated attacks, indistinguishable in motivation from modern
    acts of jihad terrorism, like the horrific 9/11/01 attacks in New York
    and Washington, DC, and the Madrid bombings on 3/11/04, or those in
    London on 7/7/05, were in fact designed to sow terror. 64 The 17th
    century Muslim historian al-Maqqari explained that the panic created
    by the Arab horsemen and sailors, at the time of the Muslim expansion
    in the regions subjected to those raids and landings, facilitated
    their later conquest, 65

    Allah thus instilled such fear among the infidels that they did not
    dare to go and fight the conquerors; they only approached them as
    suppliants, to beg for peace.

    Muhammad himself was the ultimate prototype sanctioning jihad terror,
    as recorded in this canonical hadith: 66

    Narrated Abu Huraira: Allah's Apostle said, `I have been sent with the
    shortest expressions bearing the widest meanings, and I have been made
    victorious with terror (cast in the hearts of the enemy)¦'

    In a February, 2010 moderated presentation, Bernard Lewis improperly
    conflated Islam's prohibition against suicide for melancholia, with
    interdiction against jihad martyrdom operations.67According to Islam's
    seminal early historian, Al-Tabari (d. 923), during Abu Bakr's reign
    as Caliph, his commander Khalid b. al-Walid's wrote a letter in 634 to
    a Persian leader in Iraq identified as `Hurmuz,' warning of a
    prototypical expansionist jihad campaign, spearheaded by Muslim
    warriors enamored of death. 68

    Now then. Embrace Islam so that you may be safe, or else make a treaty
    of protection for yourself and your people, for I have brought you a
    people who love death as you love life. (Emphasis added)

    `Martyrdom operations' have always been intimately associated with the
    institution of jihad. Professor Franz Rosenthal, in a magisterial 1946
    essay (entitled, `On Suicide in Islam'), observed that Islam's
    foundational texts sanctioned such acts of jihad martyrdom, and held
    them in the highest esteem: 69

    ..death as the result of `suicidal' missions and of the desire of
    martyrdom occurs not infrequently, since[such] death is considered
    highly commendable according to Muslim religious concepts.

    Koran 9:111 provides an unequivocal, celebratory invocation of
    martyrdom during jihad: 70

    Lo! Allah hath bought from the believers their lives and their wealth
    because the Garden will be theirs: they shall fight in the way of
    Allah and shall slay and be slain.

    Finally, the Muslim prophet Muhammad is idealized as the eternal model
    for behaviors that all Muslims should emulate. 71 Nearly six decades
    ago (in 1956), Arthur Jeffery, a great modern scholar of Islam,
    reviewed Guillaume's magisterial English translation of Ibn Ishaq's
    Sirat Rasul Allah, 72 the oldest and most important Muslim biography
    of Muhammad. Jeffery's review included this trenchant observation: 73

    Years ago the late Canon Gairdner in Cairo said that the best answer
    to the numerous apologetic Lives of Muhammad published in the
    interests of Muslim propaganda in the West would be an unvarnished
    translation of the earliest Arabic biography of the prophet.

    W. H. T. (Canon) Gairdner, in 1915, highlighted the dilemma posed by
    Islam's sacralization of Muhammad's timeless behavioral role model,
    revealed in such pious Muslim biographical works: 74

    As incidents in the life of an Arab conqueror, the tales of raiding,
    private assassinations and public executions, perpetual enlargements
    of the harem, and so forth, might be historically explicable and
    therefore pardonable but it is another matter that they should be
    taken as a setting forth of the moral ideal for all time.

    For example, Muhammad celebrated jihad martyrdom as the supreme act of
    Islamic devotion in the most important canonical hadith collection: 75

    Narrated Anas bin Malik: The Prophet said, `Nobody who dies and finds
    good from Allah (in the Hereafter) would wish to come back to this
    world even if he were given the whole world and whatever is in it,
    except the martyr who, on seeing the superiority of martyrdom, would
    like to come back to the world and get killed again (in Allah's
    Cause).'

    Narrated Abu Huraira: `The Prophet said, `By Him in Whose Hands my
    life is! Were it not for some men amongst the believers who dislike to
    be left behind me and whom I cannot provide with means of conveyance,
    I would certainly never remain behind any Sariya' (army-unit) setting
    out in Allah's Cause. By Him in Whose Hands my life is! I would love
    to be martyred in Allah's Cause and then get resurrected and then get
    martyred, and then get resurrected again and then get martyred and
    then get resurrected again and then get martyred.'

    Not surprisingly then, unlike scholars who specialized in the history
    of the jihad conquests across Asia, Africa, and Europe'such as Moshe
    Gil, 76 Speros Vryonis, 77 Dimitar Angelov, 78 Charles Emmanuel
    Dufourcq, 79 and K.S. Lal 80'Lewis's rather superficial surveys 81
    avoid any details of the devastation these brutal campaigns wrought.
    As copiously documented by both triumphal Muslim historians, and the
    laments of non-Muslim chroniclers representing the victims
    perspective, jihad depredations resulted in: vast numbers of infidels
    mercilessly slaughtered'including non-combatant women and children'or
    enslaved, and deported; countless cities, villages, and infidel
    religious and cultural sites that were sacked and pillaged, often
    accompanied by the burning of harvest crops and massive uprooting of
    agricultural production systems, causing famine; enormous quantities
    of treasure and movable goods seized as `booty.' 82

    Having effectively ignored the destructive, sanguinary legacy of
    jihad, Bernard Lewis has never recommended Muslim acknowledgement of
    this history, combined with mea culpa-based rejection of its doctrinal
    basis in Islam. Contra Lewis, historian Bat Ye'or explained in 1990
    how such frank recognition by the Muslim intelligentsia is a requisite
    for the emergence of truly modern Islamic societies, capable of
    co-existing peacefully with non-Muslims: 83

    ¦[T]his effort cannot succeed without a complete recasting of
    mentalities, the desacralization of the historic jihad and an unbiased
    examination of Islamic imperialism. Without such a process, the past
    will continue to poison the present and inhibit the establishment of
    harmonious relationships. When all is said and done, such
    self-criticism is hardly exceptional. Every scourge, such as religious
    fanaticism, the crusades, the inquisition, slavery, apartheid,
    colonialism, Nazism and, today, communism, are analyzed, examined, and
    exorcized in the West. Even Judaism- harmless in comparison with the
    power of the Church and the Christian empires- caught, in its turn, in
    the great modernization movement, has been forced to break away from
    some traditions. It is inconceivable that Islam, which began in Mecca
    and swept through three continents, should alone avoid a critical
    reflection on the mechanisms of its power and expansion. The task of
    assessing their history must be undertaken by the Muslims themselves¦

    The late Orientalist Maxime Rodinson (d. 2004), a contemporary of
    Bernard Lewis, warned forty years ago of misguided modern scholarship
    effectively `sanctifying' Islam: 84

    Understanding has given away to apologetics pure and simple

    Lewis's bowdlerized 1974 summary portrayal of the system of governance
    imposed upon those indigenous non-Muslims conquered by jihad is a
    distressing, ahistorical example of this apologetic genre. 85

    In his seminal The Laws of Islamic Governance al-Mawardi (d. 1058), a
    renowned jurist of Baghdad, examined the regulations pertaining to the
    lands and infidel populations subjugated by jihad. 86 This is the
    origin of the system of dhimmitude. The native infidel `dhimmi' (which
    derives from both the word for `pact', and also `guilt''guilty of
    religious errors) population had to recognize Islamic ownership of
    their land, submit to Islamic law, and accept payment of the Koranic
    poll tax (jizya), based on Koran 9:29. Al- Mawardi notes that `The
    enemy makes a payment in return for peace and reconciliation.' He then
    distinguishes two cases: (I) Payment is made immediately and is
    treated like booty, `it does, not however, prevent a jihad being
    carried out against them in the future.' (II). Payment is made yearly
    and will `constitute an ongoing tribute by which their security is
    established.' Reconciliation and security last as long as the payment
    is made. If the payment ceases, then the jihad resumes. A treaty of
    reconciliation may be renewable, but must not exceed 10 years. 87 This
    same basic formulation was reiterated during a January 8, 1998
    interview by Yusuf al-Qaradawi confirming how jihad continues to
    regulate the relations between Muslims and non-Muslims to this day. 88

    The `contract of the jizya', or `dhimma' encompassed other obligatory
    and recommended obligations for the conquered non-Muslim `dhimmi'
    peoples. Ibn Kathir's 89 important 14th century Koranic commentary
    describes the essence of the Koran's mandate in verse 9:29 for
    submissive tribute, or `jizya,' under the heading, `Paying Jizya is a
    Sign of Kufr [unbelief] and Disgrace.' He elaborates, as follows: 90

    Allah said, `until they pay the Jizya', if they do not choose to
    embrace Islam, `with willing submission', in defeat and subservience,
    `and feel themselves subdued', disgraced, humiliated and belittled.
    Therefore, Muslims are not allowed to honor the people of Dhimma or
    elevate them above Muslims, for they are miserable, disgraced, and
    humiliated. Muslim recorded from Abu Hurayrah that the Prophet said,
    `Do not initiate the Salam to the Jews and the Christians, and if you
    meet them in a road, force them to its narrowest alley'. This is why
    the Leader of the faithful `Umar b. Al-Khattab [d. 644; the second
    `Rightly Guided' Caliph], may Allah be pleased with him, demanded his
    well-known conditions be met by the Christians, these conditions that
    ensured their continued humiliation, degradation, and disgrace.

    Collectively, these `obligations' formed the discriminatory system of
    dhimmitude imposed upon non-Muslims'Jews, Christians, as well as
    Zoroastrians, Hindus, and Buddhists'subjugated by jihad. Some of the
    more salient features of dhimmitude include: the prohibition of arms
    for the vanquished dhimmis, and of church bells; restrictions
    concerning the building and restoration of churches, synagogues, and
    temples; inequality between Muslims and non-Muslims with regard to
    taxes and penal law; the refusal of dhimmi testimony by Muslim courts;
    a requirement that Jews, Christians, and other non-Muslims, including
    Zoroastrians and Hindus, wear special clothes; and the overall
    humiliation and abasement of non-Muslims. It is important to note that
    these regulations and attitudes were institutionalized as permanent
    features of the sacred Islamic law, or Sharia. 91 The writings of the
    much lionized Sufi theologian and jurist al-Ghazali (d. 1111)
    highlight how the institution of dhimmitude was simply a normative,
    and prominent feature of the Sharia: 92

    ¦the dhimmi is obliged not to mention Allah or His Apostle.. .Jews,
    Christians, and Majians [Zoroastrians] must pay the jizya [poll tax on
    non-Muslims]¦on offering up the jizya, the dhimmi must hang his head
    while the official takes hold of his beard and hits [the dhimmi] on
    the protruberant bone beneath his ear [i.e., the mandible]¦ They are
    not permitted to ostentatiously display their wine or church
    bells¦their houses may not be higher than the Muslim's, no matter how
    low that is. The dhimmi may not ride an elegant horse or mule; he may
    ride a donkey only if the saddler-work] is of wood. He may not walk on
    the good part of the road. They [the dhimmis] have to wear [an
    identifying] patch [on their clothing], even women, and even in the
    [public] baths¦[dhimmis] must hold their tongue.

    The practical consequences of such a discriminatory system were
    summarized in A.S. Tritton's 1930 The Caliphs and their Non-Muslim
    Subjects, a pioneering treatise on the status of the dhimmis: 93

    ¦[C]aliphs destroyed churches to obtain materials for their buildings,
    and the mob was always ready to pillage churches and
    monasteries¦dhimmis¦always lived on sufferance, exposed to the
    caprices of the ruler and the passions of the mob¦in later
    times..[t]hey were much more liable to suffer from the violence of the
    crowd, and the popular fanaticism was accompanied by an increasing
    strictness among the educated. The spiritual isolation of Islam was
    accomplished. The world was divided into two classes, Muslims and
    others, and only Islam counted¦Indeed the general feeling was that the
    leavings of the Muslims were good enough for the dhimmis.

    Yet over four decades after Tritton published this apt
    characterization, here is what Lewis opined on the subject (in 1974):
    94

    The dhimma on the whole worked well. [emphasis added] The non-Muslims
    managed to thrive under Muslim rule, and even to make significant
    contributions to Islamic civilization. The restrictions were not
    onerous, and were usually less severe in practice than in theory. As
    long as the non-Muslim communities accepted and conformed to the
    status of tolerated subordination assigned to them, they were not
    troubled.

    The assessments of two other highly esteemed Western
    scholars'Professors Ann Lambton and S.D. Goitein'who were Lewis's
    contemporaries (and colleagues), make plain that his flimsy apologetic
    on `the dhimma' does not represent a consensus viewpoint.

    >From 1972-78, the late Ann Lambton headed the Near and Middle East
    department, while contributing articles and analyses for The Cambridge
    History of Islam, which she co-edited with Bernard Lewis. Professor
    Lambton and Bernard Lewis were also both protégés of the famous School
    of Oriental and Asiatic Studies Islamologist, Sir Hamilton Gibb.
    Lambton's obituarist, Burzine K. Waghmar, noted (on August 1, 2008),
    95

    Lambton was unrivalled in the breadth of her scholarship, covering
    Persian grammar and dialectology; medieval and early modern Islamic
    political thought; Seljuq, Mongol, Safavid, Qajar and Pahlavi
    administration; tribal and local history; and land tenure and
    agriculture. Her association with SOAS (School of Oriental and Asiatic
    Studies) in London, which lasted from her time as an undergraduate in
    1930 until her death as Professor Emerita, aged 96, was one of the
    longest and most illustrious, and Lambton became acknowledged as the
    dean of Persian studies in the West. Without hyperbole, an era has
    passed in Middle Eastern studies.

    Ann Lambton, wrote the following on the dhimmis, published in 1981: 96

    As individuals, the dhimmis possessed no rights. Citizenship was
    limited to Muslims; and because of the superior status of the Muslim,
    certain juristic restrictions were imposed on the dhimmi. The evidence
    of a dhimmi was not accepted in a law court; a Muslim could not
    inherit from a dhimmi nor a dhimmi from a Muslim; a Muslim could marry
    a dhimmi woman, but a dhimmi could not marry a Muslim woman; at the
    frontier a dhimmi merchant paid double the rate of duty on merchandise
    paid by a Muslim, but only half the rate paid by a harbi; and the
    blood-wit paid for a dhimmi was, except according to the Hanafis, only
    half or two-thirds that paid for a Muslims. No dhimmi was permitted to
    change his faith except for Islam¦

    Various social restrictions were imposed upon the dhimmis such as
    restrictions of dress¦Dhimmis were also forbidden to ride horses¦and,
    according to Abu Hanifa valuable mules. The reason for this
    prohibition was connected with the fact that dhimmis were forbidden to
    bear arms: the horse was regarded as a `fighter for the faith,' and
    received two shares in the booty if it were of Arab stock whereas its
    rider received one. Dhimmis were to yield the way to Muslims. They
    were also forbidden to mark their houses by distinctive signs or to
    build them higher than those of Muslims. They were not to build new
    churches, synagogues, or hermitages and not to scandalize Muslims by
    openly performing their worship or following their distinctive customs
    such as drinking wine¦

    The humiliating regulations to which [dhimmis] were subject as regards
    their dress and conduct in public were not, however, nearly so serious
    as their moral subjection, the imposition of the poll tax, and their
    legal disabilities. They were, in general, made to feel that they were
    beyond the pale. Partly as a result of this, the Christian communities
    dwindled in number, vitality, and morality¦The degradation and
    demoralization of the [dhimmis] had dire consequences for the Islamic
    community and reacted unfavorably on Islamic political and social
    life. [emphasis added]

    Shlomo Dov [S.D.] Goitein (d. 1985), was a historian of Muslim-Jewish
    relations, whose seminal research findings were widely published, most
    notably in the monumental five-volume work, A Mediterranean Society:
    The Jewish Communities of the Arab World as Portrayed in the Documents
    of the Cairo Geniza (1967-1993). 97 Goitein was Professor Emeritus of
    the Hebrew University, scholar at The Institute for Advanced Study in
    Princeton, and a colleague of Lewis. The New York Times obituary for
    Professor Goitein (published on February 10, 1985) noted, appositely,
    that his renowned (and prolific) writings on Islamic culture, and
    Muslim-Jewish relations, were `¦standard works for scholars in both
    fields.' 98 Here is what Goitein wrote on the subject of non-Muslim
    dhimmis under Muslim rule, i.e., dhimmitude, circa 1970: 99

    ¦a great humanist and contemporary of the French Revolution, Wilhelm
    von Humboldt, defined as the best state one which is least felt and
    restricts itself to one task only: protection, protection against
    attack from outside and oppression from within¦in general, taxation
    [by the Muslim government] was merciless, and a very large section of
    the population must have lived permanently at the starvation level.
    >From many Geniza letters one gets the impression that the poor were
    concerned more with getting money for the payment of their taxes than
    for food and clothing, for failure of payment usually induced cruel
    punishment¦ the Muslim state was quite the opposite of the ideals
    propagated by Wilhelm von Humboldt or the principles embedded in the
    constitution of the United States. An Islamic state was part of or
    coincided with dar al-Islam, the House of Islam. Its treasury was mal
    al-muslumin, the money of the Muslims. Christians and Jews were not
    citizens of the state, not even second class citizens. They were
    outsiders under the protection of the Muslim state, a status
    characterized by the term dhimma, for which protection they had to pay
    a poll tax specific to them. They were also exposed to a great number
    of discriminatory and humiliating laws¦As it lies in the very nature
    of such restrictions, soon additional humiliations were added, and
    before the second century of Islam was out, a complete body of
    legislation in this matter was in existence¦In times and places in
    which they became too oppressive they lead to the dwindling or even
    complete extinction of the minorities. [emphasis added]

    Lewis's conception of Islam's doctrinal Antisemitism, and its
    resultant historical treatment of Jews, is a sham castle which rests
    on two false pillars. These glib affirmations, which amount to nothing
    less than sheer denial, are illustrated below: 100

    In Islamic society hostility to the Jew is non-theological. It is not
    related to any specific Islamic doctrine, nor to any specific
    circumstance in Islamic history. For Muslims it is not part of the
    birth-pangs of their religion, as it is for Christians.

    `dhimmi'-tude [derisively hyphenated] subservience and persecution and
    ill treatment of Jews¦ [is a] myth.

    There is voluminous evidence from Islam's foundational texts of
    theological Jew hatred: virulently Antisemitic Koranic verses whose
    virulence is only amplified by the greatest classical and modern
    Muslim Koranic commentaries (by Tabari [d. 923], Zamakshari [d. 1143],
    Baydawi [d. ~1316], Ibn Kathir [d.1373], and Suyuti [d. 1505], to Qutb
    [d. 1966] and Mawdudi [d.1979]), the six canonical hadith collections,
    and the most respected sira (pious Muslim biographies of Muhammad, by
    Ibn Ishaq [d. 761 ]/Ibn Hisham [d. 813], Ibn Sa`d [d. 835 ], Waqidi
    [d. 822], and Tabari). The Antisemitic motifs in these texts have been
    carefully elucidated by scholarship that dates back to Hartwig
    Hirschfeld's mid-1880s analysis of the sira and Georges Vajda's 1937
    study of the hadith, complemented in the past two decades by Haggai
    Ben Shammai's 1988 examination of the major Antisemitic verses and
    themes in the Koran and Koran exegesis, and Saul S. Friedman's broad,
    straightforward enumeration of Koranic Antisemitism in 1989. 101 Moshe
    Perlmann, a pre-eminent scholar of Islam's ancient anti-Jewish
    polemical literature, made this summary observation in 1964: 102

    The Koran, of course became a mine of anti-Jewish passages. The hadith
    did not lag behind. Popular preachers used and embellished such
    material.

    Notwithstanding Bernard Lewis's hollow claims, salient examples of
    Jew-hatred illustrating Perlmann's remarkably compendious assessment
    of these foundational Islamic sources, and their tragic application
    across space and time, through the present, are summarized in the
    discussion that follows.

    A front page New York Times story published Saturday January 10, 2009,
    103 included extracts from the Friday sermon (of the day before) at Al
    Azhar mosque pronounced by Egyptian-government appointed cleric Sheik
    Eid Abdel Hamid Youssef. Referencing well-established Antisemitic
    motifs from the Koran (citations provided, below), Sheikh Youssef
    intoned, 104

    Muslim brothers, God has inflicted the Muslim nation with a people
    whom God has become angry at [Koran 1:7] and whom he cursed [Koran
    5:78] so he made monkeys and pigs [Koran 5:60] out of them. They
    killed prophets and messengers [Koran 2:61 / 3:112] and sowed
    corruption on Earth. [Koran 5:33 / 5:64] They are the most evil on
    Earth. [5:62 /63]

    The crux of all these allegations is a central antisemitic motif in
    the Koran which decrees an eternal curse upon the Jews (Koran 2:61/
    reiterated at 3:112) for slaying the prophets and transgressing
    against the will of Allah. 105 It should be noted that Koran 3:112 is
    featured before the pre-amble to Hamas' foundational Covenant. 106This
    central motif is coupled to Koranic verses 5:60, and 5:78, which
    describe the Jews transformation into apes and swine (5:60), or simply
    apes, (i.e. verses 2:65 and 7:166), having been `¦cursed by the tongue
    of David, and Jesus, Mary's son' (5:78). 107 Muhammad himself repeats
    this Koranic curse in a canonical hadith, `He [Muhammad] then recited
    the verse [5:78]: `¦curses were pronounced on those among the children
    of Israel who rejected Faith, by the tongue of David and of Jesus the
    son of Mary' '. 108 The related verse, 5:64, accuses the Jews of
    being `spreaders of war and corruption,''a sort of ancient Koranic
    antecedent of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion'invoked not only by
    Hamas and Hezbollah leaders, but `moderate' Palestinian Authority
    President Mahmoud Abbas who cited Koran 5:64 during a January 2007
    speech which urged Palestinian Muslims to end their internecine
    strife, and `aim their rifles at Israel.' 109

    Indeed 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. The Jews' ultimate sin
    and punishment are made clear: they are the devil's minions (4:60)
    cursed by Allah, their faces will be obliterated (4:47), and if they
    do not accept the true faith of Islam'the Jews who understand their
    faith become Muslims (3:113)'they will be made into apes (2:65/
    7:166), or apes and swine (5:60), and burn in the Hellfires (4:55,
    5:29, 98:6, and 58:14-19). 110

    The centrality of the Jews' permanent `abasement and humiliation,' and
    being `laden with God's anger' in the corpus of Muslim exegetic
    literature on Koran 2:61/3:112, is clear. By nature deceitful and
    treacherous, the Jews rejected Allah's signs and prophets, including
    Isa, the Muslim Jesus. 111

    Classical Koranic commentators such as Tabari (d. 923), Zamakshari (d.
    1143), Baydawi (d. 1316), and Ibn Kathir (d. 1373), when discussing
    Koran 5:82, which includes the statement (`Thou wilt surely find the
    most hostile of men to the believers are the Jews..' , concur on the
    unique animus of the Jews towards the Muslims, which is repeatedly
    linked to the curse of Koran 2:61/3:112. For example, in his
    commentary on 5:82, Tabari writes, 112

    In my opinion, [the Christians] are not like the Jews who always
    scheme in order to murder the emissaries and the prophets, and who
    oppose God in his positive and negative commandments, and who corrupt
    His scripture which He revealed in His books.

    Tabari's classical interpretations of Koran 5:82 and 2:61, as well as
    his discussion of the related verse 9:29 mandating the Jews payment of
    the jizya (Koranic poll-tax), represent both Antisemitic and more
    general anti-dhimmi views that became, and remain, intrinsic to Islam
    to this day. Here is Tabari's discussion of 2:61 and its relationship
    to verse 9:29, which emphasizes the purposely debasing nature of the
    Koranic poll tax: 113

    ¦`abasement and poverty were imposed and laid down upon them', as when
    someone says `the imam imposed the poll tax (jizya)on free non-Muslim
    subjects', or `The man imposed land tax on his slave', meaning thereby
    that he obliged him [to pay ] it, or, `The commander imposed a sortie
    on his troops', meaning he made it their duty.¦God commanded His
    believing servants not to give them [i.e., the non-Muslim people of
    the scripture] security'as long as they continued to disbelieve in Him
    and his Messenger'unless they paid the poll tax to them; God said:
    `Fight those who believe not in God and the Last Day and do not forbid
    what God and His Messenger have forbidden'such men as practice not the
    religion of truth [Islam], being of those who have been given the Book
    [Bible]'until they pay the poll tax, being humble' (Koran 9:29)..

    The dhimmis [non-Muslim tributary's] posture during the collection of
    the jizya- `[should be lowering themselves] by walking on their hands,
    ¦reluctantly

    ¦ His words `and abasement and poverty were imposed upon them', `These
    are the Jews of the Children of Israel'. ..`Are they the Copts of
    Egypt?'¦`What have the Copts of Egypt to do with this? No, by God,
    they are not; but they are the Jews, the Children of Israel.¦By `and
    slain the prophets unrightfully' He means that they used to kill the
    Messengers of God without God's leave, denying their messages and
    rejecting their prophethood.

    The Koranic curse (verses 2:61/3:112) upon the Jews for (primarily)
    rejecting, even slaying Allah's prophets, including Isa/Jesus (or at
    least his `body double' 4:157-4:158), is updated with perfect
    archetypal logic in the canonical hadith: following the Muslims'
    initial conquest of the Jewish farming oasis of Khaybar, one of the
    vanquished Jewesses reportedly served Muhammad poisoned mutton (or
    goat), which resulted, ultimately, in his protracted, agonizing death.
    And Ibn Saad's sira account (i.e., one of the important early pious
    Muslim biographies of Muhammad) maintains that Muhammad's poisoning
    resulted from a well-coordinated Jewish conspiracy. 114

    The contemporary Iranian theocracy's state-sanctioned Jew hatred
    employs this motif as part of its malevolent indoctrination of young
    adult candidates for national teacher training programs. Affirming as
    objective, factual history the hadith account (for eg., Sahih Bukhari,
    Volume 3, Book 47, Number 786) of Muhammad's supposed poisoning by a
    Jewish woman from ancient Khaybar, Professor Eliz Sanasarian notes,
    115

    ¦ the subject became one of the questions in the ideological test for
    the Teachers' Training College where students were given a
    multiple-choice question in order to identify the instigator of the
    martyrdom of the Prophet Muhammad, the `correct' answer being `a
    Jewess. '

    It is worth recounting'as depicted in the Muslim sources'the events
    that antedated Muhammad's reputed poisoning at Khaybar.

    Muhammad's failures or incomplete successes were consistently
    recompensed by murderous attacks on the Jews. The Muslim
    prophet-warrior developed a penchant for assassinating individual
    Jews, and destroying Jewish communities'by expropriation and expulsion
    (Banu Quaynuqa and B. Nadir), or massacring their men, and enslaving
    their women and children (Banu Qurayza). 116 Just before subduing the
    Medinan Jewish tribe Banu Qurayza and orchestrating the mass execution
    of their adult males, Muhammad invoked perhaps the most striking
    Koranic motif for the Jews debasement'he addressed these Jews, with
    hateful disparagement, as `You brothers of apes.' 117 Subsequently, in
    the case of the Khaybar Jews, Muhammad had the male leadership killed,
    and plundered their riches. The terrorized Khaybar
    survivors'industrious Jewish farmers'became prototype subjugated
    dhimmis whose productivity was extracted by the Muslims as a form of
    permanent booty. (And according to the Muslim sources, even this
    tenuous vassalage was arbitrarily terminated within a decade of
    Muhammad's death when Caliph Umar expelled the Jews of Khaybar.) 118

    Thus Maimonides (d. 1203), the renowned Talmudist, philosopher,
    astronomer, and physician, as noted by historian Salo Baron,
    emphasizes the bellicose `madness' of Muhammad'Maimonides refers to
    Muhammad as `Meshugga''and his quest for political control. Muhammad's
    mindset, and the actions it engendered, had immediate, and long term
    tragic consequences for Jews'from his massacring up to 24,000 Jews, to
    their chronic oppression'as described in the Islamic sources, by
    Muslims themselves. 119

    Muhammad's brutal conquest and subjugation of the Medinan and Khaybar
    Jews, and their subsequent expulsion by one of his companions, the
    (second) `Rightly Guided' Caliph Umar, epitomize permanent, archetypal
    behavior patterns Islamic Law deemed appropriate to Muslim
    interactions with Jews. 120 George Vajda's seminal analysis of the
    anti-Jewish motifs in the hadith remains the definitive work on this
    subject. 121 Vajda concluded that according to the hadith stubborn
    malevolence is the Jews defining worldly characteristic: rejecting
    Muhammad and refusing to convert to Islam out of jealousy, envy and
    even selfish personal interest, lead them to acts of treachery, in
    keeping with their inveterate nature: `¦sorcery, poisoning,
    assassination held no scruples for them.' 122 These archetypes
    sanction Muslim hatred towards the Jews, and the admonition to at
    best, `subject [the Jews] to Muslim domination,' as dhimmis, treated
    `with contempt,' under certain `humiliating arrangements.' 123

    Lastly, a profound anti-Jewish motif occurring after the events
    recorded in the hadith and sira, put forth in early Muslim
    historiography (for example, by Tabari), is most assuredly a part of
    `the birth pangs' of Islam: the story of Abd Allah b. Saba, an alleged
    renegade Yemenite Jew, and founder of the heterodox Shi'ite sect. He
    is held responsible'identified as a Jew'for promoting the Shi'ite
    heresy and fomenting the rebellion and internal strife associated with
    this primary breach in Islam's `political innocence', culminating in
    the assassination of the third Rightly Guided Caliph Uthman, and the
    bitter, lasting legacy of Sunni-Shi'ite sectarian strife. 124

    Two particularly humiliating `vocations' that were imposed upon Jews
    by their Muslim overlords in Yemen, and Morocco'where Jews formed the
    only substantive non-Muslim dhimmi populations'merit elaboration.

    Moroccan Jews were confined to ghettos in the major cities, such as
    Fez (since the 13th century) called mellah(s) (salty earth) which
    derives from the fact it was here that they were forced to salt the
    decapitated heads of executed rebels for public exposition. This
    brutally imposed humiliating practice'which could be enforced even on
    the Jewish Sabbath'persisted through the late 19th century, as
    described by Eliezer Bashan: 125

    In the 1870˛s, Jews were forced to salt the decapitated heads of
    rebels on the Sabbath. For example, Berber tribes frequently revolted
    against Sultan Muhammad XVIII. In order to force them to accept his
    authority, he would engage in punitive military campaigns. Among the
    tribes were the Musa, located south of Marrakesh. In 1872, the Sultan
    succeeded in quelling their revolt and forty-eight of their captives
    were condemned to death. In October 1872, on the order of the Sultan,
    they were dispatched to Rabat for beheading. Their decapitated heads
    were to be exposed on the gates of the town for three days. Since the
    heads were to be sent to Fez, Jewish ritual slaughterers [of
    livestock] were forced to salt them and hang them for exposure on the
    Sabbath. Despite threats by the governor of Rabat, the Jews refused to
    do so. He then ordered soldiers to enter the homes of those who
    refused and drag them outside. After they were flogged, the Jews
    complied and performed the task and the heads of the rebels were
    exposed in public.

    Yemenite Jews had to remove human feces and other waste matter (urine
    which failed to evaporate, etc.) from Muslim areas, initially in
    Sanaa, and later in other communities such as Shibam, Yarim, and
    Dhamar. Decrees requiring this obligation were issued in the late 18th
    or early 19th century, and re-introduced in 1913. Yehuda Nini
    reproduces an 1874 letter written by a Yemenite Jew to the Alliance
    Israelite in Paris, lamenting the practice: 126

    ¦it is 86 years since our forefathers suffered the cruel decree and
    great shame to the nation of Israel from the east to sundown¦for in
    the days of our fathers, 86 years ago, there arose a judge known as
    Qadi, and said unto the king and his ministers who lived in that time
    that the Lord, Blessed be He, had only created the Jews out of love of
    the other nations, to do their work and be enslaved by them at their
    will, and to do the most contemptible and lowly of tasks. And of them
    all¦the greatest contamination of all, to clear their privies and
    streets and pathways of the filthy dung and the great filth in that
    place and to collect all that is left of the dung, may your Honor
    pardon the expression.

    And when the Jews were perceived as having exceeded the rightful
    bounds of this subjected relationship, as in mythically `tolerant'
    Muslim Spain, the results were predictably tragic. The Granadan Jewish
    viziers Samuel Ibn Naghrela, and his son Joseph, who protected the
    Jewish community, were both assassinated between 1056 to 1066, and in
    the aftermath, the Jewish population was annihilated by the local
    Muslims. It is estimated that up to four thousand Jews perished in the
    pogrom by Muslims that accompanied the 1066 assassination. This figure
    equals or exceeds the number of Jews reportedly killed by the
    Crusaders during their pillage of the Rhineland, some thirty years
    later, at the outset of the First Crusade. 127 The inciting
    `rationale' for this Granadan pogrom is made clear in the bitter
    anti-Jewish ode of Abu Ishaq, a well-known Muslim jurist and poet of
    the times, who wrote: 128

    Bring them down to their place and return them to the most abject
    station. They used to roam around us in tatters covered with contempt,
    humiliation, and scorn. They used to rummage amongst the dung heaps
    for a bit of a filthy rag to serve as a shroud for a man to be buried
    in¦Do not consider that killing them is treachery. Nay, it would be
    treachery to leave them scoffing.

    Abu Ishaq's rhetorical incitement to violence also included the line, 129

    Many a pious Muslim is in awe of the vilest infidel ape

    Moshe Perlmann, in his analysis of the Muslim anti-Jewish polemic of
    11th century Granada, notes, 130

    [Abu Ishaq] Elbīrī used the epithet `ape' (qird) profusely when
    referring to Jews. Such indeed was the parlance.

    The Moroccan cleric al-Maghili (d. 1505), referring to the Jews as
    `brothers of apes' (just as Muhammad, the sacralized prototype, had
    addressed the Banu Qurayza), who repeatedly blasphemed the Muslim
    prophet, and whose overall conduct reflected their hatred of Muslims,
    fomented, and then personally lead, a Muslim pogrom (in ~ 1490)
    against the Jews of the southern Moroccan oasis of Touat, plundering
    and killing them en masse, and destroying their synagogue in
    neighboring Tamantit. An important Muslim theologian whose writings
    influenced Moroccan religious attitudes towards Jews into the 20th
    century, al-Maghili also declared in verse, `Love of the Prophet,
    requires hatred of the Jews.' 131

    Mordechai Hakohen (1856-1929) was a Libyan Talmudic scholar and
    auto-didact anthropologist who composed an ethnographic study of North
    African Jewry in the early 20th century. Hakohen describes the overall
    impact on the Jews of the Muslim jihad conquest and rule of North
    Africa, as follows: 132

    They [also] pressed the Jews to enter the covenant of the Muslim
    religion. Many Jews bravely chose death. Some of them accepted under
    the threat of force, but only outwardly¦Others left the region,
    abandoning their wealth and property and scattering to the ends of the
    earth. Many stood by their faith, but bore an iron yoke on their
    necks. They lowered themselves to the dust before the Muslims, lords
    of the land, and accepted a life of woe'carrying no weapons, never
    mounting an animal in the presence of a Muslim, not wearing a red
    headdress, and following other laws that signaled their degradation.

    Here is but a very incomplete sampling of pogroms and mass murderous
    violence against Jews living under Islamic rule, across space and
    time, all resulting from the combined effects of jihadism, general
    anti-dhimmi, and/or specifically Antisemitic motifs in Islam: 6,000
    Jews massacred in Fez in 1033; hundreds of Jews slaughtered in Muslim
    Cordoba between 1010 and 1015; 4,000 Jews killed in Muslim riots in
    Grenada in 1066, wiping out the entire community; the Berber Muslim
    Almohad depredations of Jews (and Christians) in Spain and North
    Africa between 1130 and 1232, which killed tens of thousands, while
    forcibly converting thousands more, and subjecting the forced Jewish
    converts to Islam to a Muslim Inquisition; the 1291 pogroms in Baghdad
    and its environs, which killed (at least) hundreds of Jews; the 1465
    pogrom against the Jews of Fez; the late 15th century pogrom against
    the Jews of the Southern Moroccan oasis town of Touat; the 1679
    pogroms against, and then expulsion of 10,000 Jews from Sanaa, Yemen
    to the unlivable, hot and dry Plain of Tihama, from which only 1,000
    returned alive, in 1680, 90% having died from exposure; recurring
    Muslim anti-Jewish violence'including pogroms and forced
    conversions'throughout the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, which
    rendered areas of Iran (for example, Tabriz) Judenrein; the 1834
    pogrom in Safed where raging Muslim mobs killed and grievously wounded
    hundreds of Jews; the 1888 massacres of Jews in Isfahan and Shiraz,
    Iran; the 1910 pogrom in Shiraz; the pillage and destruction of the
    Casablanca, Morocco ghetto in 1907; the pillage of the ghetto of Fez
    Morocco in 1912; the government sanctioned anti-Jewish pogroms by
    Muslims in Turkish Eastern Thrace during June-July, 1934 which
    ethnically cleansed at least 3000 Jews; and the series of pogroms,
    expropriations, and finally mass expulsions of some 900,000 Jews from
    Arab Muslim nations, beginning in 1941 in Baghdad (the murderous
    `Farhud,' during which 600 Jews were murdered, and at least 12,000
    pillaged)'eventually involving cities and towns in Egypt, Morocco,
    Libya, Syria, Aden, Bahrain, and culminating in 1967 in Tunisia'that
    accompanied the planning and creation of a Jewish state, Israel, on a
    portion of the Jews' ancestral homeland. 133

    At present, the continual, monotonous invocation by Al Azhar clerics
    of Antisemitic motifs from the Koran (and other foundational Muslim
    texts) is entirely consistent with the published writings, and
    statements of Sheikh Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi'Grand Imam of this
    pre-eminent Islamic religious institution since 1996, until his death
    in mid-March of 2010. 134Tantawi's case illustrates the prevalence and
    depth of sacralized, `normative' Jew hatred in the contemporary Muslim
    world. Arguably Islam's leading mainstream cleric, Grand Imam Sheikh
    Tantawi, embodies how the living legacy of Muslim anti-Jewish hatred,
    and violence remains firmly rooted in mainstream, orthodox Islamic
    teachings, not some aberrant vision of `radical Islam.' 135

    Tantawi's Ph.D. thesis [Banu Israil fi al-Quran wa-al-Sunnah] Jews in
    the Koran and the Traditionswas published in 1968-69, and re-published
    in 1986. Two years after earning his Ph.D., Sheikh Tantawi began
    teaching at Al-Azhar. In 1980 he became the head of the Tafsir
    [Koranic Commentary] Department of the University of Medina, Saudi
    Arabia'a position he held until 1984. Sheikh Tantawi became Grand
    Mufti of Egypt in 1986, a position he was to hold for a decade, before
    serving as the Grand Imam of Al Azhar beginning in 1996, for the last
    14 years of his life. 136

    The Legacy of Islamic Antisemitism includes extensive first time
    English translations of Tantawi's academic magnum opus. Tantawi wrote
    these words in his 700 page treatise, rationalizing Muslim Jew hatred:
    137

    [The] Koran describes the Jews with their own particular degenerate
    characteristics, i.e. killing the prophets of Allah [Koran 2:61/
    3:112],corrupting His words by putting them in the wrong places,
    consuming the people's wealth frivolously, refusal to distance
    themselves from the evil they do, and other ugly characteristics
    caused by their deep-rooted lasciviousness¦only a minority of the Jews
    keep their word¦[A]ll Jews are not the same. The good ones become
    Muslims [Koran 3:113], the bad ones do not.

    Tantawi was apparently rewarded for this scholarly effort by
    subsequently being named Grand Imam of Al-Azhar University. These were
    the expressed, `carefully researched' views on Jews held by the
    nearest Muslim equivalent to a Pope'a man who for 14 years headed the
    most prestigious center of Muslim learning in Sunni Islam, which
    represents some 85 to 90% of the world's Muslims. 138 And Sheikh
    Tantawi never mollified such hatemongering beliefs after becoming the
    Grand Imam of Al-Azhar as his statements on `dialogue' (January 1998)
    139 with Jews, the Jews as `enemies of Allah, descendants of apes and
    pigs' (April 2002), 140 and the legitimacy of homicide bombing of Jews
    (April 2002), 141 made clear.

    Tantawi's statements on dialogue, 142 which were issued shortly after
    he met with the Israel's Chief Rabbi, Israel Meir Lau, in Cairo, on
    December 15, 1997, provided him another opportunity to re-affirm his
    ongoing commitment to the views expressed about Jews in his Ph.D.
    thesis:

    ¦anyone who avoids meeting with the enemies in order to counter their
    dubious claims and stick fingers into their eyes, is a coward. My
    stance stems from Allah's book [the Koran], more than one-third of
    which deals with the Jews¦[I] wrote a dissertation dealing with them
    [the Jews], all their false claims and their punishment by Allah. I
    still believe in everything written in that dissertation. [i.e., Jews
    in the Koran and the Traditions, cited above]

    Unfortunately, Tantawi's antisemitic formulations are well-grounded in
    classical, mainstream Islamic theology. 143 However, understanding and
    acknowledging the Koranic origins of Islamic antisemitism is not a
    justification for the unreformed, unrepentant modern endorsement of
    these hateful motifs by Tantawi'with predictably murderous
    consequences. Within days of the Netanya homicide bombing massacre on
    a Passover seder night, March 27, 2002, for example, Sheikh Tantawi
    issued an abhorrent sanction (April 4, 2002) 144 of so-called
    `martyrdom operations,' even when directed at Israeli civilians.

    And during November, 2002 (`Tantawi: No Antisemitism' Associated Press
    11/19/2002), consistent with his triumphant denial, Sheikh Tantawi
    made the following statement in response to criticism over the
    virulently antisemitic Egyptian television series (`Horseman Without a
    Horse'), based on the Czarist Russia forgery, `The Protocols of the
    Elders of Zion': 145

    Suppose that the series has some criticism or shows some of the Jews'
    traits, this doesn't necessitate an uproar¦The accusation of
    antisemitism was invented by the Jews as a means to pressure Arabs and
    Muslims to implement their schemes in the Arab and Muslim countries,
    so don't pay attention to them

    January 22, 2008, it was reported that Tantawi cancelled what would
    have been an historic visit to the Rome synagogue by the imam of
    Rome's mosque (Ala Eldin Mohammed Ismail al-Ghobash). The putative
    excuse for this cancellation was Israel's self-defensive stance'a
    blockade'in response to acts of jihad terrorism (rocket barrages;
    attempted armed incursions) emanating from Gaza. The Italian newspaper
    Corriere della Sera, commenting aptly about these events, observed
    that the cancellation proved, `¦even so called Muslim moderates share
    the ideology of hate, violence and death towards the Jewish state.'
    146 Al Azhar, Corriere della Sera, further argued, which constituted
    a `Vatican of Sunni Islam,' had in effect issued `a kind of fatwah.'
    The paper concluded by noting that `What the Cairo statement really
    means is that Muslim dialogue with Jews in Italy is only possible once
    Israel has been eliminated.' 147

    Annihilationist sentiments regarding Jews, as expressed by Hezbollah,
    the Iranian regime, and incorporated permanently into the foundational
    1988 Hamas Charter, are also rooted in Islamic eschatology, or end of
    times theology. As characterized in the hadith, Muslim eschatology
    highlights the Jews' supreme hostility to Islam. Jews are described as
    adherents of the Dajjâl'the Muslim equivalent of the Anti-Christ'or
    according to another tradition, the Dajjâl is himself Jewish. At his
    appearance, other traditions maintain that the Dajjâl will be
    accompanied by 70,000 Jews from Isfahan wrapped in their robes, and
    armed with polished sabers, their heads covered with a sort of veil.
    When the Dajjâl is defeated, his Jewish companions will be
    slaughtered' everything will deliver them up except for the so-called
    gharkad tree, as per the canonical hadith included in the 1988 Hamas
    Charter (in article 7). Another hadith variant, which takes place in
    Jerusalem, has Isa (the Muslim Jesus) leading the Arabs in a rout of
    the Dajjâl and his company of 70,000 armed Jews. And the notion of
    jihad `ransom' extends even into Islamic eschatology'on the day of
    resurrection the vanquished Jews will be consigned to Hellfire, and
    this will expiate Muslims who have sinned, sparing them from this
    fate. 148 Moshe Sharon recently provided a very lucid summary of the
    unique features of Shi'ite eschatology, its key point of consistency
    with Sunni understandings of this doctrine, and Iranian President
    Ahmadinejad's deep personal attachment to `mahdism': 149

    Since the late ninth century, the Shi'ites have been expecting the
    emergence of the hidden imam-mahdi, armed with divine power and
    followed by thousands of martyrdom-seeking warriors. He is expected to
    conquer the world and establish Shi'ism as its supreme religion and
    system of rule. His appearance would involve terrible war and unusual
    bloodshed.

    Ahmadinejad, as mayor of Teheran, built a spectacular boulevard
    through which the mahdi would enter into the capital. There is no
    question that Ahmadinejad believes he has been chosen to be the herald
    of the mahdi.

    Shi'ite Islam differs from Sunni Islam regarding the identity of the
    mahdi. The Sunni mahdi is essentially an anonymous figure; the Shi'ite
    mahdi is a divinely inspired person with a real identity.

    However both Shi'ites and Sunnis share one particular detail about
    `the coming of the hour' and the dawning of messianic times: The Jews
    must all suffer a violent death, to the last one. Both Shi'ites and
    Sunnis quote the famous hadith [Sahih Muslim, Book 40, Number 6985]
    attributed to Muhammad: The last hour will not come unless the Muslims
    fight against the Jews, and the Muslims would kill them until the Jews
    hide themselves behind a stone or a tree and the stone or the tree
    would say: `Muslim! Servant of Allah! Here is a Jew behind me; come
    and kill him!' Not one Friday passes without this hadith being quoted
    in sermons from one side of the Islamic world to the other.

    The rise of Jewish nationalism'Zionism'has posed a predictable, if
    completely unacceptable challenge to the Islamic order'jihad-imposed
    chronic dhimmitude for Jews'of apocalyptic magnitude. As historian Bat
    Ye'or has explained, 150

    ¦because divine will dooms Jews to wandering and misery, the Jewish
    state appears to Muslims as an unbearable affront and a sin against
    Allah. Therefore it must be destroyed by Jihad.

    This is exactly the Islamic context in which the widespread,
    `resurgent' use of Jew annihilationist apocalyptic motifs'Sunni and
    Shi'ite alike'would be an anticipated, even commonplace occurrence.

    Such is the state of ferment we find in the Muslim world of today. It
    was epitomized by the openly expressed annihilationist sentiments of
    Muslim Brotherhood `Spiritual Guide' Yusuf al-Qaradawi which marked
    his triumphal return to Cairo Friday February 18, 2011. 151 After
    years of exile, his public re-emergence in Egypt was sanctioned by the
    nation's provisional military rulers. Qaradawi, a vocal advocate of
    Islam's Jew-hating mainstream canon (like the late Al-Azhar Grand Imam
    Tantawi), used the occasion to issue a clarion call for the jihad
    re-conquest of Al-Aqsa mosque, i.e., Jerusalem. 152

    A message to our brothers in Palestine: I have hope that Almighty
    Allah, as I have been pleased with the victory in Egypt, that He will
    also please me with the conquest of the al-Aqsa Mosque, to prepare the
    way for me to preach in the al-Aqsa Mosque. May Allah prepare the way
    for us to (preach) in the al-Aqsa Mosque in safety'not in fear, not in
    haste. May Allah achieve this clear conquest for us. O sons of
    Palestine, I am confident that you will be victorious.

    This pronouncement was met with thunderous applause by the millions
    assembled in Tahrir Square celebrating the so-called Arab Spring.

    Sadly, if predictably, Bernard Lewis in an April 2, 2011 Wall Street
    Journal interview, although wary of Qaradawi, ignored the immensely
    popular cleric's mainstream, canonical jihadism and Jew-hatred. 153
    But Lewis did manage to reject his own repeated 1950s characterization
    of Islam as authoritarian, even totalitarian, while burbling his now
    oft repeated pieties about the putative tolerant, anti-authoritarian
    `tradition' of Islam, to cast a hopeful light on the Arab Spring: 154

    The whole Islamic tradition is very clearly against autocratic and
    irresponsible rule.. We have a much better chance of establishing¦some
    sort of open, tolerant society, if it's done within their systems,
    according to their traditions.

    Historian Robert Kaplan has dispassionately analyzed the views of
    Bernard Lewis on Islamic Jew hatred. Kaplan's discussion provides
    broader insights which help elucidate how Lewis may have developed the
    other self-contradictory, or apologetic positions he has taken on
    Islamic authoritarianism, jihadism, and dhimmitude. As Kaplan
    explains, central to Lewis's method are the invalid generalizations he
    proffers, absent any hard data, i.e., supportive facts. 155

    Lewis puts Islam's record regarding Jews in a favorable light mainly
    with the generalizations he makes rather than the particular facts he
    marshals. These generalizations, which crumble under the slightest
    scrutiny, are of four general types. One holds that the least onerous
    version of Muslim oppression is typical of Muslim practice¦.A second
    type of generalization claims that the worst of the behavior of
    Christians towards Jews was the norm¦ A third variety of
    generalization employed by Lewis claims that Muslim abuses are far
    less bad than the worst imaginable abuses by non-Muslims¦ A fourth
    type of generalization ascribes to `human nature' rather than Islam,
    with no basis of evidence, the unattractive characteristics exhibited
    by Muslims.

    Kaplan describes perhaps the most egregious example of the first type
    of generalization, as follows: 156

    Lewis writes `dhimmitude was a minor inconvenience Jews learned to
    live with ¦under Muslim rule the status of dhimmi was long accepted
    with gratitude by Jews.' In making this improbable claim he gives no
    evidence or explanation. Could he mean that the Jews were grateful for
    not being killed?

    Kaplan also demonstrates how Lewis employs a cynical manipulation of
    semantics to negate the concept of Antisemitism in Islam. 157

    How does Lewis reach the conclusion that Antisemitism is unknown to
    classical Islam? He defines Antisemitism as hatred of Jews according
    to Christian doctrine, not simply hatred of Jews. In doing so he
    distorts the ordinary meaning of `antisemitism' which in contemporary
    English means hatred of Jews.

    Once again, it is illuminating to juxtapose Lewis's attempt to deny
    the existence of Antisemitism in Medieval Islam, with the conclusions
    of S.D. Goitein, based upon the latter's thorough philological and
    historical analyses of the primary source Geniza documents. Thus, in
    the specific context of the Arab Muslim world during the high Middle
    Ages (circa 950-1250 C.E.), Goitein' s seminal analyses revealed that
    the Geniza documentary record employed the term antisemitism, 158

    ¦in order to differentiate animosity against Jews from the
    discrimination practiced by Islam against non-Muslims in general. Our
    scrutiny of the Geniza material has proved the existence of
    `antisemitism' in the time and the area considered here¦

    Goitein cites as concrete proof of his assertion that a unique strain
    of Islamic Jew hatred was extant at this time (i.e., up to a
    millennium ago)'exploding Lewis's spurious claim of its absence'the
    fact that letters from the Cairo Geniza material, 159

    ¦have a special word for it and, most significantly, one not found in
    the Bible or in Talmudic literature (nor registered in any Hebrew
    dictionary), but one much used and obviously coined in the Geniza
    period. It is sinuth, `hatred', a Jew-baiter being called sone, `a
    hater.'

    Incidents of such Muslim Jew hatred documented by Goitein in the
    Geniza record come from northern Syria (Salamiyya and al-Mar`arra),
    Morocco (Fez), and Egypt (Alexandria), with references to the latter
    being particularly frequent. 160

    Three additional examples illustrate how Lewis's Islamic
    apologetics'primarily via the same spurious methods of
    `generalization' Kaplan identifies'morph into frank moral confusion.

    In 1937 Walter Fischel wrote a thoughtful analysis of the Mongol
    period and its impact on Jews and Christians in the conquered Abbasid
    Caliphate. The Mongol conquest of Baghdad (seat of the Abbasid
    Caliphate) in 1258 ended the domination of Islam as a state religion,
    and with it the system of dhimmitude'a point Fischel makes explicitly:
    161

    ¦the principle of tolerance for all faiths, maintained by the Il Khans
    [Mongol rulers], (depriving) the [Islamic] concept of the `Protected
    People', the ahl adh-Dhimma [dhimmi system]¦of its former importance;
    with it fell the extremely varied professional restrictions into which
    it had expanded, [emphasis added]¦primarily those regarding the
    admission of Jews and Christians to government posts.

    The 13th century Christian chronicler Bar Hebraeus and the Iraqi
    Muslim Ghazi b. al-Wasiti (fl. 1292), author of a Muslim treatise on
    the dhimmis, made these concordant observations from diametrically
    opposed perspectives'Bar Hebraeus as a dhimmi celebrating the changes
    wrought by Mongol conquest, and al-Wasiti as a Muslim lamenting them:
    162

    [Bar Hebraeus] With the Mongols there is neither slave nor free man,
    neither believer nor pagan, neither Christian nor Jew; but they regard
    all men as belonging to one and the same stock.

    [al-Wasiti] A firman of the Il Khan [Hulagu] had appeared to the
    effect that everyone should have the right to profane his faith openly
    and his religious connection; and that the members of one religious
    body should not oppose those of another

    Fischel notes that because the Mongols abolished a system Lewis
    contends never really existed (or a system Lewis ignores), the plight
    of the dhimmi Jews and Christians improved substantially: 163

    For Christians and Jews, the two groups chiefly affected by the ahl
    adh-Dhimma policy, current until then, this change in constitutional
    and religious principles implied a considerable amelioration of their
    position; whereas for the Muslims it meant they had sunk to a depth
    hitherto unknown in their history.

    Moreover, when the Mongols subsequently converted to Islam, a
    transition that took place under Mongol rulers Ghazan (1295-1304) and
    Uljaytu (1305-1316), Fischel maintains, 164

    The concept of the ahl adh-Dhimma once again became a basic fact in
    the administration of the state, and it is characteristic that under
    Ghazan and his successor Uljaytu (1305-1316) we hear of renewed
    enactments against the ahl ad-Dhimma and of sumptuary laws [dress
    regulations, especially], as well as of the destruction of synagogues
    and churches, and of the persecution of Christians and Jews.

    Bernard Lewis's brief characterization of these events is selective to
    the point of absurdity. He entirely ignores the imposition of
    dhimmitude upon the non-Muslim minorities under the Abbasid Caliphate
    before the pagan Mongol conquests, its amelioration under pagan Mongol
    rule (when the system of dhimmitude was transiently abolished), or its
    re-imposition when the Mongols eventually converted to Islam.
    Neglecting all these facts, Lewis instead, perseverates on his charge
    of `collaboration' by the Christians and Jews with the Mongols, before
    the latter converted to Islam: 165

    The Mongol rulers found Christians and Jews'local people knowing the
    languages, and the countries but not themselves Muslims'very useful
    instruments, and appointed some of them to high office. Afterwards,
    when the Mongols were converted to Islam, became part of the Islamic
    world, and adopted Islamic attitudes, the Christians and Jews had to
    pay for past collaboration with the pagan conquerors.

    Lewis has also characterized, reductio ad absurdum, the quite brutal
    Ottoman devshirme-janissary system, which, from the mid to late 14th,
    through early 18th centuries, enslaved and forcibly converted to Islam
    an estimated 500,000 to one million non-Muslim (primarily Balkan
    Christian) adolescent males, as a benign form of social advancement,
    jealously pined for by `ineligible' Ottoman Muslim families. 166

    The role played by the Balkan Christian boys recruited into the
    Ottoman service through the devshirme is well known. Great numbers of
    them entered the Ottoman military and bureaucratic apparatus, which
    for a while came to be dominated by these new recruits to the Ottoman
    state and the Muslim faith. This ascendancy of Balkan Europeans into
    the Ottoman power structure did not pass unnoticed, and there are many
    complaints from other elements, sometimes from the Caucasian slaves
    who were their main competitors, and more vocally from the old and
    free Muslims, who felt slighted by the preference given to the newly
    converted slaves.

    Scholars who have conducted serious, detailed studies of the
    devshirme-janissary system, do not share such hagiographic views of
    this Ottoman institution. Speros Vryonis, Jr. for example, makes
    these deliberately understated, but cogent observations, 167

    ¦in discussing the devshirme we are dealing with the large numbers of
    Christians who, in spite of the material advantages offered by
    conversion to Islam, chose to remain members of a religious society
    which was denied first class citizenship. Therefore the proposition
    advanced by some historians, that the Christians welcomed the
    devshirme as it opened up wonderful opportunities for their children,
    is inconsistent with the fact that these Christians had not chosen to
    become Muslims in the first instance but had remained Christians¦there
    is abundant testimony to the very active dislike with which they
    viewed the taking of their children. One would expect such sentiments
    given the strong nature of the family bond and given also the strong
    attachment to Christianity of those who had not apostacized to
    Islam¦First of all the Ottomans capitalized on the general Christian
    fear of losing their children and used offers of devshirme exemption
    in negotiations for surrender of Christian lands. Such exemptions were
    included in the surrender terms granted to Jannina, Galata, the Morea,
    Chios, etc¦Christians who engaged in specialized activities which were
    important to the Ottoman state were likewise exempt from the tax on
    their children by way of recognition of the importance of their labors
    for the empire¦Exemption from this tribute was considered a privilege
    and not a penalty¦

    ¦there are other documents wherein their [i.e., the Christians]
    dislike is much more explicitly apparent. These include a series of
    Ottoman documents dealing with the specific situations wherein the
    devshirmes themselves have escaped from the officials responsible for
    collecting them¦A firman¦in 1601 [regarding the devshirme] provided
    the [Ottoman] officials with stern measures of enforcement, a fact
    which would seem to suggest that parents were not always disposed to
    part with their sons.

    `..to enforce the command of the known and holy fetva [fatwa] of
    Seyhul [Shaikh]- Islam. In accordance with this whenever some one of
    the infidel parents or some other should oppose the giving up of his
    son for the Janissaries, he is immediately hanged from his door-sill,
    his blood being deemed unworthy.'

    Vasiliki Papoulia highlights the continuous desperate, often violent
    struggle of the Christian populations against this forcefully imposed
    Ottoman levy: 168

    It is obvious that the population strongly resented¦this measure [and
    the levy] could be carried out only by force. Those who refused to
    surrender their sons- the healthiest, the handsomest and the most
    intelligent- were on the spot put to death by hanging. Nevertheless we
    have examples of armed resistance. In 1565 a revolt took place in
    Epirus and Albania. The inhabitants killed the recruiting officers and
    the revolt was put down only after the sultan sent five hundred
    janissaries in support of the local sanjak-bey. We are better
    informed, thanks to the historic archives of Yerroia, about the
    uprising in Naousa in 1705 where the inhabitants killed the Silahdar
    Ahmed Celebi and his assistants and fled to the mountains as rebels.
    Some of them were later arrested and put to death..

    Since there was no possibility of escaping [the levy] the population
    resorted to several subterfuges. Some left their villages and fled to
    certain cities which enjoyed exemption from the child levy or migrated
    to Venetian-held territories. The result was a depopulation of the
    countryside. Others had their children marry at an early
    age¦Nicephorus Angelus¦states that at times the children ran away on
    their own initiative, but when they heard that the authorities had
    arrested their parents and were torturing them to death, returned and
    gave themselves up. La Giulletiere cites the case of a young Athenian
    who returned from hiding in order to save his father's life and then
    chose to die himself rather than abjure his faith. According to the
    evidence in Turkish sources, some parents even succeeded in abducting
    their children after they had been recruited. The most successful way
    of escaping recruitment was through bribery. That the latter was very
    widespread is evident from the large amounts of money confiscated by
    the sultan from corrupt¦officials. Finally, in their desperation the
    parents even appealed to the Pope and the Western powers for help.

    Papoulia concludes: 169

    ¦there is no doubt that this heavy burden was one of the hardest
    tribulations of the Christian population.

    Perhaps the cause of greatest disquietude'and certainly most
    infamous'have been Lewis's inexplicably evolved views on the jihad
    genocide of the Armenians. His renowned The Emergence of Modern
    Turkey, originally published in 1962 (reissued in 1968, and 2002),
    includes these characterizations of the mass killings of the Armenians
    by the Turks in 1894-96, 1909, and 1915: 170

    (1894-96, p. 202) The Armenian participants mindful of the massacres
    of 1894-96, were anxious to seek the intervention of the European
    powers as a guarantee of effective reforms in the Ottoman Empire [in
    the 20th century].

    (1909, p. 216) With suspicious simultaneity a wave of outbreaks spread
    across Anatolia. Particularly bad were the events of the Adana
    district, which culminated in the massacre of thousands of
    Armenians¦While Europe was appalled by Turkish brutality, Muslim
    opinion was shocked by what seemed to them the insolence of the
    Armenians and the hypocrisy of Christian Europe. The Turks were,
    however, well aware of the painful effects produced by these massacres
    in Europe, which had not yet forgotten the horrors of the Hamidian
    repression [i.e, the 1894-96 massacres]

    (1915, p. 356) Now a desperate struggle between them [i.e., the Turks
    and Armenians] began, a struggle between two nations for the
    possession of a single homeland, that ended with the terrible
    holocaust [emphasis added]of 1915, when a million and a half Armenians
    perished.

    Thus when Lewis first wrote his authoritative history of modern
    Turkey, he understood, and made explicit, that the Armenians had been
    massacred under successive Ottoman governments in 1894-96, and 1909.
    Moreover, he maintains that the Armenians were subjected in 1915 to a
    `holocaust,' during which 1.5 million `perished.'

    By 1985, however, Lewis was the most prominent signatory on a petition
    to the US Congress protesting the effort to make April 24 ' the date
    the Armenians commemorate the victims of the genocide ' a nationwide
    Armenian-American memorial day, which would include the mention of
    man's inhumanity to man. Both this petition drive and a simultaneous
    high profile media advertisement campaign were financed by the
    Committee of the Turkish Association. 171 Speros Vryonis has raised,
    unabashedly, the appropriate historical questions and accompanying
    moral concerns regarding Lewis's actions: 172

    When was Professor Lewis expressing an objective opinion: when he
    wrote the book [i.e., The Emergence of Modern Turkey, 1962/68
    versions], or when he signed the political ad? To phrase it more
    bluntly, what shall we believe? Certainly, the data available to him
    in the writing of the book were sufficiently clear and convincing for
    him to proceed to these three clear and unequivocal statements [i.e.,
    describing the 1894-96, and 1909 events as massacres of the Armenians
    by the Turks, and the 1915 slaughter of 1.5 million Armenians by the
    Turks as a holocaust]. What had changed? The subject had entered the
    sphere of politics, and Prof. Lewis, along with so many other signers
    of the ad, had decided to take sides where their economic,
    professional, personal, and emotional interests lay: with the Turkish
    government, and not with history.

    In Lewis's revised text of The Emergence of Modern Turkey, circa 2002,
    `slaughter' replaces `holocaust,' the estimate of the Armenians who
    `perished' is changed from 1.5 million to `according to estimates,
    more than a million,' and a concluding remark is added referring to
    the `unknown number of Turks' who also died in the putative struggle
    for possession of a single homeland. 173 Peter Balakian makes these
    germane observations: 174

    ¦without any substantiation, Lewis dispenses of the Armenian Genocide
    in a couple of sentences, calling it a `a struggle between two nations
    for the possession of a single homeland.' Lewis never explains how an
    unarmed, Christian ethnic minority in the Ottoman Empire could be
    fairly called a `nation,' that could engage in a `struggle' with a
    world power (the Ottoman Empire) for a single homeland. In a recent
    interview, `There Was No Genocide: Interview with Prof. Bernard
    Lewis,' by Dalia Karpel, Ha'aretz (Jerusalem, January 23, 1998), Lewis
    asserts that the massacres of the Armenians were not the result `of a
    deliberate preconceived decision of the Turkish government.' These
    evasions are aimed at trivializing the Armenian Genocide.

    Furthermore, during the past decade, as Yair Auron has observed, when
    Lewis was requested, 175

    ¦to make available the academic research published in recent years,
    which, in his professional opinion, constitute the basis for the
    change from his original position to his new position that there was
    no state-planned or administered genocide/mass murder of the
    Armenians¦Lewis did not respond to this demand, even though he noted
    that letters to him and his reply would be published.

    Auron's final assessment is apt: 176

    Lewis's stature [has] provided a lofty cover for the Turkish national
    agenda of obfuscating academic research on the Armenian Genocide.

    Lewis's wildly fluctuating opinions aside, a consensus among bona fide
    genocide scholars has emerged which is consistent with Professor
    Richard Rubenstein's conclusion from 1975, that the 1915 Turkish
    massacre of the Armenians was, 177

    ¦the first full-fledged attempt by a modern state to practice
    disciplined, methodically organized genocide

    And also contra Lewis, who never placed the mass killings of the
    Armenians in their Islamic religious context, Bat Ye'or reminds us why
    the Armenian genocide was a jihad genocide 178 committed against a
    non-Muslim people `violating' the ancient dhimma, a `¦breach¦[which]
    restored to the umma [the Muslim community] its initial right to kill
    the subjugated minority [the dhimmis], [and] seize their property¦'.
    Moreover, the ultimately genocidal massacres of the World War I era,
    were, she notes 179

    ¦the natural outcome of a policy inherent in the politico-religious
    structure of dhimmitude. This process of physically eliminating a
    rebel nation had already been used against the rebel Slav and Greek
    Christians, rescued [i.e., during the 19th century] from collective
    extermination by European intervention, although sometimes
    reluctantly. The genocide of the Armenians was a jihad. No rayas
    [non-Muslim dhimmis] took part in it. Despite the disapproval of many
    Muslim Turks and Arabs, and their refusal to collaborate in the crime,
    these massacres were perpetrated solely by Muslims and they alone
    profited from the booty: the victims' property, houses, and lands
    granted to the muhajirun, and the allocation to them of women, and
    child slaves. The elimination of male children over the age of twelve
    was in accordance with the commandments of the jihad and conformed to
    the age fixed for the payment of the jizya. The four stages of the
    liquidation ' deportation, enslavement, forced conversion, and
    massacre ' reproduced the historic conditions of the jihad carried out
    in the dar-al-harb from the seventh century on. Chronicles from a
    variety of sources, by Muslim authors in particular, give detailed
    descriptions of the organized massacres or deportation of captives,
    whose sufferings in forced marches behind the armies paralleled the
    Armenian experience in the twentieth century.

    The German scholar Karl Binswanger concluded his brilliant 1977
    analysis of 16th century Ottoman dhimmitude with a valid moral
    critique of the `dogmatic Islamophilia' epitomized by Bernard Lewis,
    and Orientalists of Lewis's persuasion. 180

    It is absolutely scientifically justifiable to call cynicism and
    `evil' by their names.

    ¦We were able to confirm these rational errors because they were in a
    domain which was susceptible to rational argument. This rational
    access is not given for another domain. We would like to call this
    domain `religious,' but prefer `dogmatic,' because it is not just a
    question of expressing the irrational but of stubbornly clinging.
    That this domain is Islamophilic follows from the fact that there is
    an attempt to present the moral aspect of an Islamic fact as ethically
    valuable (not value-neutral!), even if historic (and any other) sense
    does not support such an interpretation.

    It is understandable that the Orientalist has a predilection for those
    peoples with whose history and culture he is concerned and wishes to
    present them in a good light. All the same, such a process has
    nothing to do with science.

    ¦[W]homever'consciously or not'downplays or misrepresents the morally
    negative aspects of the Dhimma or even distorts it into its (moral)
    opposite, because he would otherwise have to partially revise his
    pre-conceived evaluation of Islamic culture, he is behaving like the
    Marxist `researcher' who simply demonizes every manifestation of
    `evil' feudalism, instead of, or without (even therefore)
    investigating the functional accomplishments of feudalism. The
    Marxist `researcher' acts this way, because there is no place for
    critical examination of his own position in his pre-conceived
    conception of the world and science. For him `scientific socialism'
    is a dogma. Orientalist studies must defend itself from degenerating
    into an obstinate `scientific Islamophilia.' Or it will deserve the
    teasing name of `orchid specialty' (obscure and unimportant specialty)
    and not that of a science.

    Ibn Warraq, underscoring the crucial need for a consistent application
    of intellectual honesty in historical scholarship, sought to `remind
    Bernard Lewis, his students, and his admirers' of the following words
    Lewis had written about the `moral and professional obligation' of
    Western historians, and other intellectuals: 181

    There was a time when scholars and other writers in communist eastern
    Europe relied on writers and publishers in the free West to speak the
    truth about their history, their culture, and their predicament. Today
    it is those who told the truth, not those who concealed or denied it,
    who are respected and welcomed in these countries. Historians in free
    countries have a moral and professional obligation not to shirk the
    difficult issues and subjects that some people would place under a
    sort of taboo; not to submit to voluntary censorship , but to deal
    with these matters fairly, honestly , without apologetics, without
    polemic, and, of course, competently. Those who enjoy freedom have a
    moral obligation to use that freedom for those who do not possess it.
    We live in a time when great efforts have been made, and continue to
    be made, to falsify the record of the past and to make history a tool
    of propaganda ; when governments , religious movements, political
    parties, and sectional groups of every kind are busy rewriting history
    as they would wish it to have been, as they would like their followers
    to believe that it was. All this is very dangerous indeed, to
    ourselves and to others, however we may define otherness'dangerous to
    our common humanity. Because, make no mistake, those who are unwilling
    to confront the past will be unable to understand the present and
    unfit to face the future

    The ironies abound'consider only Lewis's former uncompromising
    descriptions of both Communism and Islam as totalitarian ideologies,
    182 or the World War I era Armenian massacres as a `terrible
    holocaust,' i.e., a genocide 183'now summarily redacted. It is
    apparent Lewis has fallen quite short of the standard set by his own
    rhetoric.

    This discussion began with Bernard Lewis's July, 2006 admonition,
    `Either we bring them freedom, or they destroy us.' 184 Consistent
    with his admonition, the US military, at an enormous cost of blood and
    treasure, 185 liberated Afghanistan and Iraq from despotic regimes.
    However, as facilitated by the Sharia-based Afghan and Iraqi
    constitutions the US military occupation helped midwife'which have
    negated freedom of conscience, and promoted the persecution of
    non-Muslim religious minorities'`they,' i.e., the Muslim denizens of
    Afghanistan and Iraq have chosen to reject the opportunity for Western
    freedom `we' provided them, and transmogrified it into `hurriyya.' 186
    Far more important than mere hypocrisy'a ubiquitous human trait'is the
    deleterious legacy of his own Islamic confusion Bernard Lewis has
    bequeathed to Western policymaking elites, both academic and
    non-academic.

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