The Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam (2 page)

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Authors: Robert Spencer

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BOOK: The Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam
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Part II:THE CRUSADES

Chapter 10:

 

Why the Crusades Were Called

 
 

PC Myth: The Crusades were an unprovoked attack by Europe against the Islamic world

 
 

PC Myth: The Crusades were an early example of the West’s predatory imperialism

 
 

PC Myth: The Crusades were fought by Westerners greedy for gain

 
 

PC Myth: The Crusades were fought to convert Muslims to Christianity by force

Chapter 11:

 

The Crusades: Myth and Reality

 
 

PC Myth: The Crusaders established European colonies in the Middle East

 
 

PC Myth: The capture of Jerusalem was unique in medieval history and caused Muslim mistrust of the West

 
 

PC Myth: The Muslim leader Saladin was more merciful and magnanimous than the Crusaders

 
 

PC Myth: Crusades were called against Jews in addition to Muslims

 
 

PC Myth: The Crusades were bloodier than the Islamic jihads

 
 

Did the pope apologize for the Crusades?

Chapter 12:

 

What the Crusades Accomplished—And What They Didn’t

 
 

Making deals with the Mongols

 
 

Making deals with the Muslims

 
 

The jihad in Eastern Europe

 
 

Help from an unlikely quarter

Chapter 13:

 

What If the Crusades Had Never Happened?

 
 

PC Myth: The Crusades accomplished nothing

 
 

Case study: The Zoroastrians

 
 

Case study: The Assyrians

Chapter 14:

 

Islam and Christianity: Equivalent Traditions?

 
 

The whitewash of
Kingdom of Heaven

 
 

PC Myth: The problem the world faces today is religious fundamentalism

 
 

But surely you’re not saying that Islam is the problem?

 
 

That makes sense. Why is it so hard for people to accept?

 
 

Recovering pride in Western civilization

 
 

Why the truth must be told

 

 

Part III:TODAY’S JIHAD

Chapter 15:

 

The Jihad Continues

 
 

What are they fighting for?

 
 

That was when our heartaches began

 
 

Only one thing will fix this problem

 
 

Caliphate dreams in Britain—and the United States

 
 

Khomeini in Dearborn and Dallas

 
 

A tiny minority of extremists?

 
 

Restoration of Muslim unity

Chapter 16:

 

“Islamophobia” and Today’s Ideological Jihad

 
 

At the UN: A new word for a new tool of political manipulation

 
 

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights: Islamic responses

 
 

What is Islamophobia, anyway?

 
 

“Islamophobia” as a weapon of jihad

 
 

Reform or denial?

 
 

News flash: Islam as Muslims live it is false Islam!

 
 

Misrepresenting Islam

 
 

Dhimmitude from media and officials

Chapter 17:

 

Criticizing Islam May Be Hazardous to Your Health

 
 

The chilling of free speech in America: FOX’s
24
and CAIR

 
 

Dealing with the devil

 
 

Death knell for the West?

 
 

A predetermined outcome

 
 

To criticize is not to incite

 
 

The murder of Theo van Gogh

 
 

Van Gogh was not the first

 
 

The costs of maintaining the PC myths

 
 

Living in fear of being a Christian—in Falls Church, Virginia

 
 

If you leave Islam, you must die

 
 

What happens when the law looks the other way

Chapter 18:

 

The Crusade We Must Fight Today

 
 

The Islamization of Europe

 
 

What is to be done?

 
 

Defeating the jihad internationally

 
 

Defeating the jihad domestically

 

 

Acknowledgments

 

Notes

 

Index

Introduction

 

ISLAM AND THE CRUSADES

 

T
he Crusades may be causing more devastation today than they ever did in the three centuries when most of them were fought. Not in terms of lives lost and property destroyed—today’s is a more subtle destruction. The Crusades have become a cardinal sin not only of the Catholic Church but also of the Western world in general. They are Exhibit A for the case that the current strife between the Muslim world and Western, post-Christian civilization is ultimately the responsibility of the West, which has provoked, exploited, and brutalized Muslims ever since the first Frankish warriors entered Jerusalem and—well, let Bill Clinton tell it:

 

Indeed, in the first Crusade, when the Christian soldiers took Jerusalem, they first burned a synagogue with three hundred Jews in it, and proceeded to kill every woman and child who was Muslim on the Temple mound. The contemporaneous descriptions of the event describe soldiers walking on the Temple mound, a holy place to Christians, with blood running up to their knees.
I can tell you that that story is still being told today in the Middle East and we are still paying for it
.
1
(Emphasis added)

 

In this analysis Clinton curiously echoed Osama bin Laden himself, some of whose own communiqués spoke of his organization not as “al Qaeda” but of a “World Islamic Front for Jihad Against Jews and Crusaders,” and called in a fatwa for “jihad against Jews and Crusaders.”
2

Such usage is quite widespread. Shortly before the beginning of the Iraqi war that toppled Saddam Hussein, on November 8, 2002, Sheikh Bakr Abed Al-Razzaq Al-Samaraai preached in Baghdad’s Mother of All Battles mosque about “this difficult hour in which the Islamic nation [is] experiencing, an hour in which it faces the challenge of [forces] of disbelief of infidels, Jews, crusaders, Americans and Britons.”
3

Similarly, when Islamic jihadists bombed the U.S. consulate in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, in December 2004, they explained that the attack was part of a larger plan to strike back at “Crusaders:” “This operation comes as part of several operations that are organized and planned by al Qaeda as part of the battle against the crusaders and the Jews, as well as part of the plan to force the unbelievers to leave the Arabian Peninsula.” They said that jihad warriors “managed to enter one of the crusaders’ big castles in the Arabian Peninsula and managed to enter the American consulate in Jeddah, in which they control and run the country.”
4

“One of the crusaders’ big castles in the Arabian Peninsula?” Why would Islamic jihad terrorists have such a fixation with thousand-year-old castles? Could Clinton be right that they see the Crusades as the time that their troubles with the West began, and present-day conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan as a revival of the Crusader ethos?

In a sense, yes. The more one understands the Crusades—why they were fought, and from what forces within Christianity and Islam they sprang—the more one will understand the present conflict. The Crusades, in ways that Bill Clinton and those who bombed the consulate in Jiddah only dimly fathom, hold the keys to understanding the present world situation in numerous ways.

This book explains why, with its first half devoted to Islam and second half to the Crusades. It will, in the process, clear away some of the fog of misinformation that surrounds Islam and the Crusades today. That fog is thicker than ever. One of the people most responsible for it, Western apologist for Islam Karen Armstrong, even blames Westerners’ misperceptions of Islam on the Crusades:

 

Ever since the Crusades, the people of Western Christendom developed a stereotypical and distorted vision of Islam, which they regarded as the enemy of decent civilization…. It was, for example, during the Crusades, when it was Christians who had instigated a series of brutal holy wars against the Muslim world, that Islam was described by the learned scholar-monks of Europe as an inherently violent and intolerant faith, which had only been able to establish itself by the sword. The myth of the supposed fanatical intolerance of Islam has become one of the received ideas of the West.
5

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