Saturday, April 25, 2020
Religions Spread Through Conquest Essays (2402 words) - Culture
  Religions Spread Through Conquest        When studying history, both in a professional and academic   sense, we try to make connections between civilizations and time   periods. Historians have attempted to discover universal constants of   human nature, a bond that forms from continent to continent, human   being to human being. Is there a constant quality that all peoples   posses, and is reflected in all civilizations? Indeed, it is   extremely difficult to make generalizations about centuries of modern   history. To say that something is true of all of history is virtually   impossible, as a counter-example exists for just about anything that   can be said of any group of civilizations. To say that all religions   are spread by violence is equally unfair and untrue - because   contrasted religions has been spread in exceedingly diverse regions of   the world, by vastly different cultures. Islam, as a prime example,   has been characterized inequitably by historians and the media as a   religion of violence. To put it bluntly, as this article does, "Islam   was mainly spread through Arab territorial conquests (Sudo, 4)."   However, upon examination, it is not fair to make the generalization   that Islam is a religion of violence, and one notices when looking at   world religion on a whole, one finds that Islam was no more violent   than any other religion. In fact, not only is Islam not a   fundamentally violent philosophy, but we can also see that many other   religions normally considered "non-violent," such as Christianity or   Hinduism, have been spread through bloody conquest. Thus, in   searching for a universal constant of history, we ought not fall into   the "fallacy of abstractions," as Sydney J. Harris keenly puts it, and   assume that because of isolated incidents and conflicts of territorial   ambitions, that all religions have violent tendencies.      Islam has, throughout the centuries, been somewhat a victim of   circumstance - indeed it has been perceived by many as oppressive and   cruel. This belief originated over a thousand years ago, when Islamic   peoples first threatened the western world. As they slowly undermined   Byzantine authority, Christians became terrified of their presence,   resulting in widespread animosity and aversion. Hindus and Buddhists   of the South Asian subcontinent lived under Islamic law for hundreds   of years (Ahmad, et. al., 186), and eventually, in the twentieth   century, split the region into angry factions (Ahmad, et. al., 207).   Mohammed, the prophet of Islam, was a great warrior. This invariably   lead defeated peoples to believe that he begot a cult of war and   violence. Over the centuries, it also has developed the ability to   instill a sense of holy purpose onto its believers and soldiers, where   they go into a battle of certain death for their faith in the jihad,   or holy war. Even today, the jihad is still a potent source of   conflict and aversion, as the many of the problems in the Middle East   center around the issue of Islamic Fundamentalism and the jihads.   Originally, Islam was perceived by western historians as a religion of   violence and conquest; "by preying on the caravans of the Quraish,   [Mohammed] weakened them to the point of submission (Mohammed and   Islam, 1)." In fact, Mohammed was a warrior, aristocrat, and   brilliant strategist - a stark contrast to many other holy men of   history. He was forced to both defend his cities and force   submission, as the passage had shown, because of the strong military   powers of his religious predecessors and oppressors, the pagans of the   Middle East. Islam means "submission" according to the Islam   discussion in class - and one might assume that the submission was   attained through military and forceful means. In fact, while Mohammed   preached peace from 610 to 622 AD, he attracted few converts and was   persecuted by the current ruling paganistic regime. After the visions   of 622 AD, he realized that his cause was even more urgent than   before, and only at that point did he begin to utilize his military   skills (Class Discussion). However, despite the more violent nature   that his quest took, even after the revelations by Gabriel in 622 AD,   "by reciting his revelations aloud, Mohammed made many converts,   (Mohammed and Islam,1)." Mohammed was not a purely violent man, but   also a great speaker and demagogue (Mueller, 2). He did    
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)