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		The Curse of the Infidel  
		By Karen ArmstrongGuardian (2002-06-24)
 A century ago Muslim intellectuals admired the west. Why did we lose 
		their goodwill? Karen Armstrong (The Guardian) Thursday June 20, 2002 On 
		July 15 1099, the crusaders from Western Europe conquered Jerusalem, 
		falling upon its Jewish and Muslim inhabitants like the avenging angels 
		from the Apocalypse. In a massacre that makes September 11 look puny in 
		comparison, some 40,000 people were slaughtered in two days. A thriving, 
		populous city had been transformed into a stinking charnel house. Yet in 
		Europe scholar monks hailed this crime against humanity as the greatest 
		event in world history since the crucifixion of Christ.
 The crusades destabilized the Near East, but made little impression on 
		the Islamic world as a whole. In the west, however, they were crucial 
		and formative. This was the period when western Christendom was 
		beginning to recover from the long period of barbarism known as the Dark 
		Ages, and the crusades were the first cooperative act of the new Europe 
		as she struggled back on to the international scene. We continue to talk 
		about "crusades" for justice and peace, and praise a "crusading 
		journalist" who is bravely uncovering some salutary truth, showing that 
		at some unexamined level, crusading is still acceptable to the western 
		soul. One of its most enduring legacies is a profound hatred of Islam.
 
 Before the crusades, Europeans knew very little about Muslims. But after 
		the conquest of Jerusalem, scholars began to cultivate a highly 
		distorted portrait of Islam, and this Islamophobia, entwined with a 
		chronic anti-Semitism, would become one of the received ideas of Europe. 
		Christians must have been aware that their crusades violated the spirit 
		of the gospels: Jesus had told his followers to love their enemies, not 
		to exterminate them. This may be the reason why Christian scholars 
		projected their anxiety on to the very people they had damaged.
 
 Thus it was, at a time when Christians were fighting brutal holy wars 
		against Muslims in the Near East, that Islam became known in Europe as 
		an inherently violent and intolerant faith, a religion of the sword. At 
		a time when the popes were trying to impose celibacy on the reluctant 
		clergy, western biographies of the prophet Mohammed, written by priests 
		and monks, depict him, with ill-concealed envy, as a sexual pervert and 
		lecher, who encouraged Muslims to indulge their basest instincts.
 
 At a time when feudal Europe was riddled with hierarchy, Islam was 
		presented as an anarchic religion that gave too much respect and freedom 
		to menials, such as slaves and women. Christians could not see Islam as 
		separate from themselves; it had become, as it were, their shadow-self, 
		the opposite of everything that they thought they were or hoped they 
		were not.
 
 In fact, the reality was very different. Islam, for example, is not the 
		intolerant or violent religion of western fantasy. Mohammed was forced 
		to fight against the city of Mecca, which had vowed to exterminate the 
		new Muslim community, but the Koran, the inspired scripture that he 
		brought to the Arabs, condemns aggressive warfare and permits only a war 
		of self-defence. After five years of warfare, Mohammed turned to more 
		peaceful methods and finally conquered Mecca by an ingenious campaign of 
		non-violence. After the prophet's death, the Muslims established a vast 
		empire that stretched from the Pyrenees to the Himalayas, but these wars 
		of conquest were secular, and were only given a religious interpretation 
		after the event.
 
 In the Islamic empire, Jews, Christians and Zoroastrians enjoyed 
		religious freedom. This reflected the teaching of the Koran, which is a 
		pluralistic scripture, affirmative of other traditions. Muslims are 
		commanded by God to respect the "people of the book", and reminded that 
		they share the same beliefs and the same God. Mohammed had not intended 
		to found a new religion; he was simply bringing the old religion of the 
		Jews and the Christians to the Arabs, who had never had a prophet 
		before. Constantly the Koran explains that Mohammed has not come to 
		cancel out the revelations brought by Adam, Abraham, Moses or Jesus. 
		Today, Muslim scholars have argued that had Mohammed known about the 
		Buddhists and Hindus, the Native Americans or the Australian Aborigines, 
		the Koran would have endorsed their sages and shamans too, because all 
		rightly guided religion comes from God.
 
 But so entrenched are the old medieval ideas that western people find it 
		difficult to believe this. We continue to view Islam through the filter 
		of our own needs and confusions. The question of women is a case in 
		point. None of the major world faiths has been good to women but, like 
		Christianity, Islam began with a fairly positive message, and it was 
		only later that the religion was hijacked by old patriarchal attitudes. 
		The Koran gives women legal rights of inheritance and divorce, which 
		western women would not receive until the 19th century. The Koran does 
		permit men to take four wives, but this was not intended to pander to 
		male lust, it was a matter of social welfare: it enabled widows and 
		orphans to find a protector, without whom it was impossible for them to 
		survive in the harsh conditions of 7th-century Arabia.
 
 There is nothing in the Koran about obligatory veiling for all women or 
		their seclusion in harems. This only came into Islam about three 
		generations after the prophet's death, under the influence of the Greeks 
		of Christian Byzantium, who had long veiled and secluded their women in 
		this way. Veiling was neither a central nor a universal practice; it was 
		usually only upper-class women who wore the veil. But this changed 
		during the colonial period.
 
 Colonialists such as Lord Cromer, the consul general of Egypt from 1883 
		to 1907, like the Christian missionaries who came in their wake, 
		professed a horror of veiling. Until Muslims abandoned this barbarous 
		practice, Cromer argued in his monumental Modern Egypt, they could never 
		advance in the modern world and needed the supervision of the west. But 
		Lord Cromer was a founder member in London of the Men's League for 
		Opposing Women's Suffrage. Yet again, westerners were viewing Islam 
		through their own muddled preconceptions, but this cynicism damaged the 
		cause of feminism in the Muslim world and gave the veil new importance 
		as a symbol of Islamic and cultural integrity.
 
 We can no longer afford this unbalanced view of Islam, which is damaging 
		to ourselves as well as to Muslims. We should recall that during the 
		12th century, Muslim scholars and scientists of Spain restored to the 
		west the classical learning it had lost during the Dark Ages. We should 
		also remember that until 1492, Jews and Christians lived peaceably and 
		productively together in Muslim Spain - coexistence that was impossible 
		elsewhere in Europe.
 
 At the beginning of the 20th century, nearly every single Muslim 
		intellectual was in love with the west, admired its modern society, and 
		campaigned for democracy and constitutional government in their own 
		countries. Instead of seeing the west as their enemy, they recognised it 
		as compatible with their own traditions. We should ask ourselves why we 
		have lost this goodwill.
 
 Karen Armstrong is the author of 
		Muhammad: A Biography of the Prophet (Weidenfeld); The Battle for God: 
		Fundamentalism in Judaism, Christianity and Islam (HarperCollins), and 
		Islam: A Short History (Weidenfeld).
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