Posted on 02/18/2020 2:00:52 PM PST by robowombat
Wall Street Journal praises book about Islams glorious past, whitewashes its brutality and inhumanity FEB 18, 2020 2:00 PM BY ROBERT SPENCER
In this enthusiastic, adulatory review of Justin Marozzis book Islamic Empires, Tunku Varadarajan, executive editor at Stanford Universitys Hoover Institution and thus someone who should know better if our academic environment were not so corrupt and compromised, retails present-day academic fictions about Islamic history that outrage the historical record, and that no one who was remotely honest and even glancingly familiar with that record could repeat with a straight face.
His previous books include biographies of Herodotus and Tamerlane, the 14th-century Turco-Mongol conqueror whom Mr. Marozzi lauds as one of historys greatest self-made men.'
That he may have been, but Tamerlane was much more as well, yet Tunku Varadarajan and apparently Justin Marozzi dont see fit to inform us of that fact. In The History of Jihad we learn, among much more about Tamerlane, that Sharaf ad-Din Ali Yazdi, a fifteenth-century Persian who wrote a biography of Tamerlane, observed that the Quran says the highest dignity man can attain is that of making war in person against the enemies of his religion. Muhammad advises the same thing, according to the tradition of the Muslim doctors: wherefore the great Temur always strove to exterminate the infidels, as much to acquire that glory, as to signalise himself by the greatness of his conquests. One of historys greatest self-made men indeed.
One of the defining features of Abbasid Baghdad, he writes of the city in its ninth-century heyday, was its cosmopolitanism. Arabs lived alongside Persians, Indians, Turks, Armenians and Kurds in a capital of Jews, Christians and Muslims. Tolerance was less something to boast about than a generally accepted way of life.'
From The History of Jihad: In the late 770s, the Abbasid caliph al-Mahdi traveled to Aleppo, where twelve thousand Christians greeted him with great honor. Al-Mahdi, however, was not disposed to respond in kind, and told them: You have two options. Either die or convert to our religion. Most of the Christians chose to die rather than embrace Islam. In and around Baghdad, he noticed that the Assyrian Christians had built new churches since the Muslim conquest, in violation of dhimmi laws; he ordered them destroyed; five thousand Christians in Syria were given the choice of conversion to Islam or death. Many stayed true to their ancestral faith and chose death.
Theres your tolerance.
S0 why does ahistorical twaddle and fantasy such as Islamic Empires get published and praised to the skies in the Wall Street Journal? Because it tells people what they want to hear.
Islamic Empires Review: Revisiting a Glorious Past, by Tunku Varadarajan, Wall Street Journal, January 31, 2020 (thanks to David):
A history graduate from the University of Cambridge, Mr. Marozzi is an accomplished and ambitious writer: His previous books include biographies of Herodotus and Tamerlane, the 14th-century Turco-Mongol conqueror whom Mr. Marozzi lauds as one of historys greatest self-made men. He has also written an elegant history of Baghdad. His latest work is Islamic Empires, a sweeping, vibrant and often irrepressible account of the cities most emblematic of Islam since that religion was promulgated by the Prophet Muhammed in the early seventh century ..
In making this last comparative point, Mr. Marozzi directs us to the most striking feature of most of the cities in his book: their onetime ethnic and religious diversity. One of the defining features of Abbasid Baghdad, he writes of the city in its ninth-century heyday, was its cosmopolitanism. Arabs lived alongside Persians, Indians, Turks, Armenians and Kurds in a capital of Jews, Christians and Muslims. Tolerance was less something to boast about than a generally accepted way of life. Elsewhere he writes that the Samarkand of Tamerlanea man feared in the West as the scourge and wrath of God (to use the poet Marlowes famous phrase)was one of the most cosmopolitan cities in the world, though this owed as much to the forced movement of people and prisoners as it did to the magnetic attraction of the place.
Even Kabul, which struggles daily to keep the Taliban at bay, was in the 16th century a polyglot place that beguiled a young Babur. When in 1504 he captured the city as a 21-year-old warrior from Fergana (in modern Uzbekistan), he was fascinated by the human population . . . of which he had made himself master. He found himself ruling over many tribes, including Turks, Mughals, Arabs, Persians, and Sarts, who spoke up to twelve languages.
No Islamists.
Mohammed was the Hitler of the time.
Muhammad on the other hand got his start by fighting wars. (See Battle of Badr and the Meccan Wars.) That is the example for Islam.
There is a clear difference between Christians and Muslims. I am confident I know which is a religion of peace and a death cult.
Anyone who submits themselves to Islam is automatically damaged in the head.
Yes, I love my Muslim brothers, and I will love them more when they find Christ.
Per this book. No amount of fiction changes these facts.
What is really hurting is the refusal of my Pope to confront their credo (articles of faith) as expressed in their Koran then equate it with Judeo/Christian mono theology. If his policy was designed to prevent conflict it has perpetuated it.
TWANLOC.... round them up, move them out.
swamp propaganda or islamic taqqiya
The upper ranks of WSJ, as with most businesses today, are infested with leftist-indoctrinated university grads.
This unAmerican chit is to be expected now. WSJ is lost to real Americans.
Don’t get excited and lose your head criticizing Islam....oh, wait a minute.
whitewash the koran if desired, it remains with 68 passages in the koran to lie, cheat, steal and even kill the infidel. Little muslims begin at age 4 to age ten to being brainwashed and that remains with them throughtout their lives.
Mohammed makes Charles Manson look like Mother Theresa.
Islam is on a collision course with the Constitution
Thanks robowombat.
If I remember correctly, the WSJ had a journalist/column writer named Jonathan Kwitny, a really strange man and as pro-Marxism as they come (esp. supporting Hanoi’s wars of aggression throughout SE Asia.
Finally there were so many complains about him, including by Accuracy in Media, that he was let go and disappeared into oblivion, which was good for America.
The New York Times had another pro-Hanoi propagandist, Anthony Lewis. He did a lot of damage to the US effort to resist communist aggression.
Then there was Sy Hersh, another red-loving, yellow journalism writer if there ever was one.
It is OK with me, I am just expressing myself.
The reason Mr Kwitny is not heard much anymore is he died on November 26, 1998
For those who don’t know the history behind overthrowing the tables in the Temple by Jesus.
Good Jews were required to sacrifice “clean” animals and birds to the Lord (lambs, pigeons, etc.). They were required to buy these sacrifices using Jewish coinage. Coins of many peoples including Rome were in circulation so in order to get Jewish coins people had to exchange other money at the Temple for “clean” Jewish coins. Naturally, these money changers charged a fee for this service. I don’t know how big it was, but it was enough to make Jesus (and I am sure others) angry. Profiteering in the name of God.
Thanks for that. I always assumed the problems with the money changers had to do with something along the line of usury. I didn’t know about the clean Jewish coins. Gotta learn something everyday. Thanks
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