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Why Islam didn't conquer the world...
The Free Lance-Star ^ | Date published: 10/30/2005 | PAUL AKERS

Posted on 10/31/2005 9:08:06 PM PST by Eurotwit

N A SUSTAINED, century-long rampage that would have wowed Rommel, the Prophet Mohammed and his successors beginning in A.D. 629 conquered not only Arabia, Persia, Syria, Egypt, and North Africa, but also branded the crescent of Islam on lands formerly within the fold of a Christian Roman Empire then in ruins. In 709, Arab horsemen and their allies crossed the Strait of Gibraltar. Four short years later, Spain belonged to the Empire of the Prophet.

In the summer of 732, the centennial of Mohammed's death, this veteran Islamic juggernaut, at least 80,000 strong with the skilled and popular general Abd er Rahman at its head, passed over the Pyrenees Mountains into what is now France to begin the conquest of "the Great Land"--Christian Europe. After that would come the subjugation of whatever new worlds lay across the oceans.

Probably, Mr. Reader, you did not yesterday wash five times, face Mecca, sink to your knees, and pray to Allah. Most likely, Ms. Reader, you did not cover yourself with a burka before venturing out to shop. Probably neither of you is giving up all food between sunup and sundown during the ongoing monthlong Ramadan.

For freedom from all of these obligations, you might spare a minute sometime today, and every October, to say a silent "thank you" to a gang of half-savage Germans and especially to their leader, Charles "The Hammer" Martel.

When the Muslim horde thundered out of the Pyrenees, hardly breaking stride to slaughter one small army of river-crossing defenders, it was Martel and his wild Frankish troops who stood waiting for them just outside the shrine-city of Tours.

Abd er Rahman must have smirked. With irresistible fury, he and his predecessors for a century had rolled up one opposition force after another on three continents, suffering no serious setbacks. His cavalry, the very size and splendor of which robbed brave men of their hearts before the order to charge ever sounded, was battle-tested and motivated by god and gold: Riches filled the Abbey of St. Martin of Tours, then the holiest site in Christendom.

'Dreadful brotherhood' The poet Robert Southey in "Roderick" described the intruders as "a dreadful brotherhood

of long success Elate, and proud of that o'er-whelming strength Which surely, they believed, as it had rolled Thus far uncheck'd, would roll victorious on Till, like the Orient, the subjected West Should bow in reverence to Mahommed's name; And pilgrims from remotest Arctic shores Tread with religious feet the burning sands Of Araby and Mecca's stony soil.

And to prevent this, what? A square of shaggy quasi-barbarians armed with swords, spears, and clubs. Perhaps Abd er Rahman's chief regret was that there were too few of the outnumbered foe to go around.

But Martel was not the typical infidel jackleg general. A king's bastard son who had to fight to hold his own after the death of his father, Martel had honed his martial skills both against other Frankish princes and pagan invaders from the right bank of the Rhine--in the words of British historian Sir Edward Creasy, "fierce tribes of the unconverted Frisians, Bavarians, Saxons, and Thuringians."

In these berserkers, Martel saw a later version of his own kith and kin. Only a few generations earlier, it was his Germanic ancestors who had forded the river, torn off chunks of a dying Roman Empire, but, paradoxically and wholly unlike the conquering Arabs to the south, accepted the faith of those they slew and dispossessed.

Few details about the Battle of Tours survive. From what historians can glean from Christian and Arab sources, it appears that for six days in October 732 the two armies shifted and feinted. The weather grew colder. The Franks were dressed for it, the Muslims were not. Martel could afford to hold his ground. On a Saturday--the day after the Muslim holy day, when prayers were offered up to Mohammed on the 100th anniversary of his death and religious fervor reached its zenith--the Arab-led cavalry attacked.

Macabre polo On occasion, brave, disciplined infantry in tight formation could turn back a cavalry charge. It was when defensive phalanxes cracked and foot soldiers fled in pell-mell panic that the fun for the mounted warrior began. In Abd er Rahman's case, his men soon expected to be playing polo not with mallets and balls but with scimitars and heads.

But a funny thing happened on the way to the massacre. The Frankish square, though possibly penetrated, did not shatter. Martel's men stood fast, the spirit of Christ and Thor--a potent mix--fastening their feet to French sod.

The Muslim horsemen who fell in battle envisioned awakening in the heavenly arms of beautiful virgins. Not bad as long-term R&R goes. But the Franks, Viking blood coursing in their veins, likely foresaw a Christo-barbaric afterlife equally appealing: crystal streams rippling across new battlefields where they could eternally ply their gory art, and streets of gold fronting mead halls where the beer was cold and wenches willing. (While this may be an unorthodox view of life beyond Checkpoint Peter, be honest. It beats a 10-million-year harp concert, doesn't it?)

Matters went from bad to worse for the attackers when the rumor spread that some of the Franks were raiding the attackers' camp, looting the Muslim loot. As some of the cavalrymen sped back to their tents, others interpreted their movement as a frightened retreat--precisely what then ensued. In this chaos, Abd er Rahman was surrounded by the enemy, who cut him down.

Leaderless, the Arab throng broke off the fight. "All the host fled before the enemy," candidly wrote one Arab source, "and many died in the flight." A monk claimed that the ratio of Muslim to Christian dead was about 370:1. Even if he was exaggerating--a virtual certainty--the Islamic world took the loss hard. Muslim historians for centuries referred to Tours, notes Creasy, as "the deadly battle" and "the disgraceful overthrow."

Never again did Islamic armies seriously threaten the Great Land of Gaul and beyond. Martel spent the rest of his life crushing smaller bands of Arab interlopers. Eventually, the heroes of the reconquista threw the Moors out of Spain.

But if the Hammer had lost?

Over the Rhine In that case, the great historian Edward Gibbon foresaw this in store for a weak and divided Europe:

"A victorious line of [Muslim] march had been prolonged above a thousand miles from the rock of Gibraltar to the banks of the Loire; the repetition of an equal space would have carried the Saracens [Arabs] to the confines of Poland and the Highlands of Scotland; the Rhine is not more impassable than the Nile or Euphrates, and the Arabian fleet might have sailed without a naval combat into the mouth of the Thames."

Gibbon called those eight days in 732 "the events that rescued our ancestors of Britain, and our neighbors of Gaul [France], from the civil and religious yoke of the Koran."

Thus, Christianity might now exist in a few miserable oppressed enclaves--or not at all. In Persia, militant Islam overran a kingdom with a firmly established, 2,000-year-old religion. Bumped into any Zoroastrians lately?

In the book "What If?: The World's Foremost Military Historians Imagine What Might Have Been," Barry Strauss of Cornell points out that an Islamicized Europe would have meant that during the Age of Exploration, European sailing captains would have planted not the Cross, but the Crescent, in the soil of the New World.

Even without overrunning Europe, Islam spread its faith and doctrine to parts of India, the Philippines, Thailand, and central Africa. Had Charles Martel faltered at Tours, all of the largely Christian populations of Asia and Africa and South America would now, most likely, be solidly Muslim. "Today," writes Strauss, "there would only be one world religion: Islam."

And what sort of world would that be? Without the Christian quickening of conscience that helped abolish slavery in England, the United States, and elsewhere, the Quran-sanctioned institution might be the global norm. An Emir Ibrahim al-Lincoln would not have issued the Emancipation Proclamation.

Ever wonder at the hatred of Orthodox Christian Serbs for Muslim Bosnians? One reason is that the ancestors of the former had to flee Constantinople when the Muslims overwhelmed the Christian East, killing or taking into bondage many who remained. The seething anti-Islamic passions in the Balkans make sense when you consider that the very name "Slav" comes from "slave."

Women the world over also would be permanent second-class citizens. Many if not most--observe Saudi Arabia--would be forbidden to drive a car, own property, or vote. Battered females might well lack legal or other recourse.

Way of the world Creasy argues also that the Martel victory "preserved the relics of ancient and the germs of modern civilizations ." That is, in a Moslem Dominion, the ferment of the Middle Ages, which sparked the Enlightenment with all of its scientific, economic, and political fruits, would never have occurred. Look at the modern Islamic world: backward, unfree, poor--in sad fact, scarcely modern at all. This could be the state of all humankind if not for a Europe where, as Strauss notes, "church and state were [often] at loggerheads," helping form a culture that was, "compared to Islam, decentralized, secularized, individualistic, profit-driven."

Half-educated Christophobes who think the faith contributed nothing but superstition and inventive torture to the human story should ponder Strauss' words. So should modern zealots who would happily marry church and state.

Without the victory at Tours, there would be no suds-swinging Oktoberfest, no Halloween (because no All Hallows Eve), indeed little fun now or at any other time of the year under a Shari'a, or religious law, not noted for winking at petty vices.

And probably no comic books, the medium where I first learned of Charles Martel. He was summoned up by a character called Kid Eternity, who could invoke the spirits of dead heroes to help battle modern-day evil. Alas, in the school books in which I hid my comics, I don't believe I ever read about Martel or Tours, the battle that preserved the Christian flavor of Europe.

That flavor now wanes: Regular church attendance is very low in most European countries. When cathedral bells ring in Amsterdam on Sunday morning, notes Penn State's Philip Jenkins, the only citizens one sees walking to worship are black African Christian immigrants, "clearly not terribly well-off, but each in his or her Sunday best, and everyone clutch[ing] a well-thumbed Bible."

Meanwhile, the continent's growing Muslim communities are united in faith if not fervor. Soon one in 10 Frenchmen may be Muslim, writes Jenkins, while Frankfurt alone contains 27 mosques.

Pray for Europe. But save a few prayers, too, for a band of bearded, coarse, but faithful men who stood shoulder-to-shoulder in a cold dawn and faced proven death galloping full-speed toward them--only to unhorse that grim rider and break his bones to bits.

Which is to say that if in the next life you can't find the Pearly Gates, just follow the sound of the loud German drinking songs. You'll get to the right place.

PAUL AKERS is editor of the opinion pages of The Free Lance-Star.

Date published: 10/30/2005


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 732; arabaggression; battle; caliphate; charlesmartel; christendom; christian; churchhistory; clashofcivilizatio; crusade; defense; france; franks; gaul; history; islam; islamism; martel; moslem; tours; waronterror
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To: Eurotwit

Excellent read. Thanks.


41 posted on 11/01/2005 1:06:03 AM PST by Falconspeed (Keep your fears to yourself, but share your courage with others. Robert Louis Stevenson)
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To: Eurotwit

Excellent post, thanks


42 posted on 11/01/2005 1:21:40 AM PST by Cruz
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To: Eurotwit

Islam did not conquer the world because they refused to view anything that was not created by Islam as legitimate. While Europe was busily trying to assimilate everything they found anywhere they traveled, books were being furiously translated and inventions being copied and improved upon, Islam closed its eyes. Much of the Islamic world still has its eyes closed today.


43 posted on 11/01/2005 2:16:28 AM PST by rlmorel ("Innocence seldom utters outraged shrieks. Guilt does." Whittaker Chambers)
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To: Eurotwit

Thanks God they won. Hope they are willing to go to war again.


44 posted on 11/01/2005 3:30:21 AM PST by paudio (Four More Years..... Let's Use Them Wisely...)
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To: Eurotwit
Pray for Europe..

Why? They, and the US, and Canada and all the rest invited these people in. They did not invade. Those of us that saw it coming in the 80s were called racists for saying anything - for resisting the deliberate skewing of immigration policy (in Canada in my case) to favor Arabs and Muslims. So now the chickens are coming come to roost, as the old expression goes.

Anyway, God helps those that help themselves. Europe and every other area is perfectly capable of dealing with the problem if they really want to. I'll save my prayers for people that are trying their best, but need a bit of help, not those that foolishly court disaster and then refuse to look it in the face as it descends.

45 posted on 11/01/2005 3:37:42 AM PST by Northern Alliance
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To: Eurotwit

Bump!


46 posted on 11/01/2005 4:26:16 AM PST by F-117A
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To: Eurotwit

Arabs are notorious for starting wars they cannot finish. All hat and no cattle, historically speaking.


47 posted on 11/01/2005 4:27:44 AM PST by corlorde (New Hampshire)
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To: Eurotwit
BE WARNED!


48 posted on 11/01/2005 4:49:33 AM PST by jslade
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To: Eurotwit

Very interesting, thank you for a great posting.


49 posted on 11/01/2005 4:56:34 AM PST by marty60
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To: Eurotwit

I have been interested in Damascus steel for some time. Not the stuff that is made today. The original Damascus steel. It just predated Islam, but was invented in the same area.

I believe that the Damascus steel swords the Muslims had made a big difference in their conquests. When Europe learned to make steel that was equal (or better) than Damascus steel, the conquests by Islam came to an end. Without Damascus steel, Islam might now be found in a few scatterd backwashes (if at all).


50 posted on 11/01/2005 5:53:59 AM PST by jim_trent
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To: Eurotwit
Great article, but Gibbon was fascinated with islam. Reading the last book of his Decline and Fall he often praises the muslim chiefs while slamming the Greeks in Constantinople.
51 posted on 11/01/2005 6:03:58 AM PST by redgolum ("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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To: Eurotwit

Apart from defeating the crapweasels at Tours, Charles Martel was the father of Pipen the Short who was the father of Charlemagne. His legacy was carried down to one of the key figures in the beginnings of the movement of Europe out of the dark ages.


52 posted on 11/01/2005 6:45:12 AM PST by RJS1950 (The rats are the "enemies foreign and domestic" cited in the federal oath)
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To: Eurotwit

Great piece. I had heard of him but never really knew the history. Thanks!


53 posted on 11/01/2005 9:04:14 AM PST by RichardW
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To: Eurotwit

Great post!


54 posted on 11/01/2005 9:11:20 AM PST by Travis McGee (--- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com ---)
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To: Eurotwit

Thank you, Charles, and thanks to you, too, eurotwit, for posting. Bookmarking. Excellent article and very apropos.


55 posted on 11/01/2005 9:25:59 AM PST by fortunecookie
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To: ArmyTeach

When Christian (Serbs) took a stand they got bombed. That is good way to promote Islamic conquest – not to stop it.


56 posted on 11/01/2005 6:40:22 PM PST by zagor-te-nej (USS - United States of Serbia)
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To: Eurotwit

Moslems remind me of the Aztecs and Mayans. Hated by all those around them because of their butchery.


57 posted on 11/01/2005 6:45:27 PM PST by Chickensoup (Turk...turk...turk....turk....turk...turkey!!!!!!)
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To: Eurotwit
"Why I islam didn't conquer the world...

Because it is stupid and it sucks much

58 posted on 11/01/2005 6:47:48 PM PST by muir_redwoods (Free Sirhan Sirhan, after all, the bastard who killed Mary Jo Kopechne is walking around free)
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To: Eurotwit

{quote}"In the book "What If?: The World's Foremost Military Historians Imagine What Might Have Been," Barry Strauss of Cornell points out that an Islamicized Europe would have meant that during the Age of Exploration, European sailing captains would have planted not the Cross, but the Crescent, in the soil of the New World." {quote}

An interesting little fact which many might not be familiar with is the Crescent was in fact originally a symbol of Western/Christianity which the Islamojerks stole from us when they conquered Constantinopoli.

Originally Byzantine was founded by Greek colonists from Megara in 667 BC and named after their king, Byzas. The city's patron was Artemis/Diana Goddess of the Hunt, who's symbol was the crescent moon. In 670BC they OFFICIALLY crowned their city's flag with the crescent moon in honor of Artemis/Diane. In 330 AD after Constantine became Christian and moved Nova Roma to the East, he also added the Virgin Mary's star on the flag. When the city fell to the Ottomans in 1453 the Ottoman rulers saw this flag with the Cresent all over Constantinopoli and took it as their own.

They can try to explain it away by saying that ancient cultures have always worshipped the sky, moon and stars but the fact still remains that it was the Greek city of Bynzantium to be the first state to ever use it as their national flag and as an official governing symbol in 670 BC. Muslims didn't use this flag until Byzantine[modern day Instabul] fell to them. So basically they are flying under a flag that originally not only has its roots in Western civilization BUT was also the flag of a Western civilization AND a Christian symbol to boot. What irony.


59 posted on 11/02/2005 6:40:51 AM PST by apro
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To: apro
So basically they are flying under a flag that originally not only has its roots in Western civilization BUT was also the flag of a Western civilization AND a Christian symbol to boot. What irony.

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60 posted on 11/05/2005 1:37:26 PM PST by Antioch (Benedikt Gott Geschickt)
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