November 27, 2005
The Truth about Islamic Crusades and Imperialism
By James Arlandson
Historical facts say that Islam has been
imperialistic—and would still like to be, if only for religious reasons. Many
Muslim clerics, scholars, and activists, for example, would like to impose Islamic law around the world.
Historical facts say that Islam, including Muhammad, launched their own Crusades
against Christianity long before the European Crusades.
Today, Muslim polemicists and
missionaries, who believe that Islam is the best religion in the world, claim
that the West has stolen Islamic lands and that the West (alone) is
imperialistic.One hardline Muslim emailer to me said about the developed West
and the undeveloped Islamic countries: 'You stole our lands' and then he held
his finger on the exclamation key to produce a long string of them.
Thus imperialism, a word that has reached
metaphysical levels and that is supposed to stop all debates and answer all
questions, explains why Islamic countries have not kept up with the West. The
emailer did not look inwardly, as if his own culture and religion may play a
role. Instead, it is always the West's fault.
Westerners—even academics—accept the
notion that the West alone was aggressive. It seems that Islam is always
innocent and passive. It is difficult to uncover the source of this Western
self—loathing. It is, however, a pathology that seems to strike Westerners more
than other people around the globe. This anti—West pathology shows up in
Westerners' hatred for the European Crusades in the Medieval Age.
It must be admitted that there is much to
dislike about the European Crusades. If they are contrasted with the mission and
ministry of Jesus and the first generations of Christians, then the Crusades do
not look so good. But did the Europeans launch the first Crusade in a mindless,
bloodthirsty and irrational way, or were there more pressing reasons? Were they
the only ones to be militant?
The purpose of this article is not to
justify or defend European Crusades, but to explain them, in part—though
scholarship can go a long way to defend and justify them
In this article, the word 'crusade'
(derived from the Latin word for 'cross') in an Islamic context means a holy war
or jihad. It is used as a counterweight to the Muslim accusation that only the
Europeans launched crusades. Muslims seem to forget that they had their own, for
several centuries before the Europeans launched theirs as a defense against the
Islamic expansion.
We will employ a partial timeline spanning
up to the first European response to Islamic imperialism, when Pope Urban II
launched his own Crusade in 1095. The timeline mostly stays within the
parameters of the Greater Middle East. The data in bold print are of special
interest for revealing early Islamic atrocities, their belief in heroism in
warfare, or politics today.
The Islamic Crusades were very successful.
The Byzantines and Persian Empires had worn themselves out with fighting, so a
power vacuum existed. Into this vacuum stormed Islam.
After the timeline, two questions are
posed, which are answered at length
The Timeline
630 Two years before Muhammad's death of a fever, he
launches the Tabuk Crusades, in which he led 30,000 jihadists against the
Byzantine Christians. He had heard a report that a huge army had amassed to
attack Arabia, but the report turned out to be a false rumor. The Byzantine army
never materialized. He turned around and went home, but not before extracting
'agreements' from northern tribes. They could enjoy the 'privilege' of living
under Islamic 'protection' (read: not be attacked by Islam), if they paid a tax
(jizya).
This tax sets the stage for Muhammad's and
the later Caliphs' policies. If the attacked city or region did not want to
convert to Islam, then they paid a
jizya tax. If they converted, then they paid a zakat tax. Either way, money flowed back to the Islamic
treasury in Arabia or to the local Muslim governor.
632—634 Under the Caliphate of Abu Bakr the Muslim
Crusaders reconquer and sometimes conquer for the first time the polytheists of
Arabia. These Arab polytheists had to convert to Islam or die. They did not have
the choice of remaining in their faith and paying a tax. Islam does not allow
for religious freedom.
633 The Muslim Crusaders, led by Khalid al—Walid, a
superior but bloodthirsty military commander, whom Muhammad nicknamed the Sword
of Allah for his ferocity in battle (Tabari, 8:158 / 1616—17), conquer the city
of Ullays along the Euphrates River (in today's Iraq). Khalid captures and
beheads so many that a nearby canal, into which the blood flowed, was called
Blood Canal (Tabari 11:24 /
2034—35).
634 At the Battle of Yarmuk in Syria the Muslim Crusaders
defeat the Byzantines. Today Osama bin Laden draws inspiration from the defeat,
and especially from an anecdote about Khalid al—Walid. An unnamed Muslim
remarks: 'The Romans are so numerous and the Muslims so few.' To this Khalid
retorts: 'How few are the Romans, and how many the Muslims! Armies become
numerous only with victory and few only with defeat, not by the number of men.
By God, I would love it . . . if the enemy were twice as many' (Tabari, 11:94 /
2095). Osama bin Ladin quotes
Khalid and says that his fighters love death more than we in the West love
life. This philosophy of death probably comes from a verse like Sura
2:96. Muhammad assesses the Jews: '[Prophet], you are sure to find them [the
Jews] clinging to life more eagerly than any other people, even polytheists'
(MAS Abdel Haleem, The Qur'an,
Oxford UP, 2004; first insertion in brackets is Haleem's; the second mine).
634—644 The Caliphate of Umar ibn al—Khattab, who is
regarded as particularly brutal.
635 Muslim Crusaders besiege and conquer of Damascus
636 Muslim Crusaders defeat Byzantines decisively at
Battle of Yarmuk.
637 Muslim Crusaders conquer Iraq at the Battle of
al—Qadisiyyah (some date it in 635 or 636)
638 Muslim
Crusaders conquer and annex Jerusalem, taking it from the
Byzantines.
638—650 Muslim
Crusaders conquer Iran, except along Caspian Sea.
639—642 Muslim
Crusaders conquer Egypt.
641 Muslim
Crusaders control Syria and Palestine.
643—707 Muslim
Crusaders conquer North Africa.
644 Caliph Umar is assassinated by a Persian prisoner of
war; Uthman ibn Affan is elected third Caliph, who is regarded by many Muslims
as gentler than Umar.
644—650 Muslim Crusaders conquer Cyprus, Tripoli in North
Africa, and establish Islamic rule in Iran, Afghanistan, and Sind.
656 Caliph Uthman is assassinated by disgruntled Muslim
soldiers; Ali ibn Abi Talib, son—in—law and cousin to Muhammad, who married the
prophet's daughter Fatima through his first wife Khadija, is set up as Caliph.
656 Battle of the Camel, in which Aisha, Muhammad's wife,
leads a rebellion against Ali for not avenging Uthman's assassination. Ali's
partisans win.
657 Battle of Siffin between Ali and Muslim governor of
Jerusalem, arbitration goes against Ali
661 Murder of Ali by an extremist; Ali's supporters
acclaim his son Hasan as next Caliph, but he comes to an agreement with
Muawiyyah I and retires to Medina.
661—680 the Caliphate of Muawiyyah I. He founds Umayyid
dynasty and moves capital from Medina to Damascus
673—678 Arabs
besiege Constantinople, capital of Byzantine Empire
680 Massacre of Hussein (Muhammad's grandson), his family,
and his supporters in Karbala, Iraq.
691 Dome of the
Rock is completed in Jerusalem, only six decades after Muhammad's
death.
705 Abd al—Malik restores Umayyad rule.
710—713 Muslim
Crusaders conquer the lower Indus Valley.
711—713 Muslim
Crusaders conquer Spain and impose the kingdom of Andalus. This article recounts how Muslims today still
grieve over their expulsion 700 years later. They seem to believe that the land
belonged to them in the first place.
719 Cordova, Spain, becomes seat of Arab governor
732 The Muslim Crusaders stopped at the Battle of
Poitiers; that is, Franks (France) halt Arab advance
749 The Abbasids conquer Kufah and overthrow Umayyids
756 Foundation of Umayyid amirate in Cordova, Spain,
setting up an independent kingdom from Abbasids
762 Foundation of Baghdad
785 Foundation of the Great Mosque of Cordova
789 Rise of Idrisid amirs (Muslim Crusaders) in Morocco;
foundation of Fez; Christoforos, a Muslim who converted to Christianity, is
executed.
800 Autonomous Aghlabid dynasty (Muslim Crusaders) in
Tunisia
807 Caliph Harun al—Rashid orders the destruction of non—Muslim prayer houses and
of the church of Mary Magdalene in Jerusalem
809 Aghlabids (Muslim Crusaders) conquer Sardinia,
Italy
813 Christians
in Palestine are attacked; many flee the country
831 Muslim Crusaders capture Palermo, Italy; raids in
Southern Italy
850 Caliph al—Matawakkil orders the destruction of non—Muslim houses of
prayer
855 Revolt of
the Christians of Hims (Syria)
837—901 Aghlabids (Muslim Crusaders) conquer Sicily, raid
Corsica, Italy, France
869—883 Revolt
of black slaves in Iraq
909 Rise of the Fatimid Caliphate in Tunisia; these
Muslim Crusaders occupy Sicily,
Sardinia
928—969 Byzantine military revival, they retake old
territories, such as Cyprus (964) and Tarsus (969)
937 The
Ikhshid, a particularly harsh Muslim ruler, writes to Emperor Romanus, boasting
of his control over the holy places
937 The Church
of the Resurrection (known as Church of Holy Sepulcher in Latin West) is burned
down by Muslims; more churches in Jerusalem are attacked
960 Conversion of Qarakhanid Turks to Islam
966 Anti—Christian riots in Jerusalem
969 Fatimids (Muslim Crusaders) conquer Egypt and found
Cairo
c.
970 Seljuks enter conquered Islamic territories from the East
973 Israel and
southern Syria are again conquered by the Fatimids
1003 First persecutions by al—Hakim; the Church of St. Mark in Fustat, Egypt, is
destroyed
1009 Destruction of the Church of the Resurrection by al—Hakim (see
937)
1012 Beginning of al—Hakim's oppressive decrees against Jews and Christians
1015 Earthquake in Palestine; the dome of the Dome of the
Rock collapses
1031 Collapse of Umayyid Caliphate and
establishment of 15 minor independent dynasties throughout Muslim Andalus
1048 Reconstruction of the Church of the Resurrection
completed
1050 Creation of Almoravid (Muslim Crusaders) movement in
Mauretania; Almoravids (aka Murabitun) are coalition of western Saharan Berbers;
followers of Islam, focusing on the Quran, the hadith, and Maliki law.
1055 Seljuk Prince Tughrul enters Baghdad, consolidation
of the Seljuk Sultanate
1055 Confiscation of property of Church of the
Resurrection
1071 Battle of Manzikert, Seljuk Turks (Muslim Crusaders)
defeat Byzantines and occupy much of Anatolia
1071 Turks
(Muslim Crusaders) invade Palestine
1073 Conquest
of Jerusalem by Turks (Muslim Crusaders)
1075 Seljuks
(Muslim Crusaders) capture Nicea (Iznik) and make it their capital in
Anatolia
1076 Almoravids
(Muslim Crusaders) (see 1050) conquer western Ghana
1085 Toledo is taken back by Christian armies
1086 Almoravids (Muslim Crusaders) (see 1050) send help to
Andalus, Battle of Zallaca
1090—1091 Almoravids (Muslim Crusaders) occupy all of
Andalus except Saragossa and Balearic Islands
1094 Byzantine emperor Alexius Comnenus I asks western
Christendom for help against Seljuk invasions of his territory; Seljuks are
Muslim Turkish family of eastern origins; see 970
1095 Pope Urban
II preaches first Crusade; they capture Jerusalem in 1099
So it is only after all of the Islamic aggressive invasions that
Western Christendom launches its first Crusades.
It could be argued that sometimes the
Byzantine and Western European leaders did not behave exemplarily, so a timeline
on that subject could be developed. And sometimes the Muslims behaved
exemplarily. Both are true. However, the goal of this timeline is to balance out
the picture more clearly. Many people regard Islam as an innocent victim, and
the Byzantines and Europeans as bullies. This was not always the case.
Moreover, we should take a step back and
look at the big picture. If Islam had stayed in Arabia and had not waged wars of
conquest, then no troubles would have erupted. But the truth is this: Islam
moved aggressively during the Caliphates of Abu Bakr and Umar in the seventh
century, with other Caliphs continuing well beyond that; only then did the
Western Europeans react (see 1094).
It must be noted that Islamic expansion
continues until well into the seventeenth century. For example, the Muslims
Crusaders conquer Constantinople in 1453 and unsuccessfully besiege Vienna for
the second time in 1683 (earlier in 1529). By the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries, the Islamic Crusades receded, due to Western resistance. Since that
time until the present, Islamic civilization has not advanced very far.
Two questions are posed and then answered
at length.
Besides following Muhammad, why else did
the Muslims launch their Crusades out of Arabia in the first place?
It is only natural to ask why Islam
launched its own Crusades long before Christendom did.
In the complicated Muslim Crusades that
lasted several centuries before the European Crusades, it is difficult to come
up with a grand single theory as to what launched these Crusades. Because of
this difficulty, we let three scholars and two eyewitness participants analyze
the motives of the early Islamic Crusades.
1. World religious conquest
Muslim polemicists like Sayyid Qutb assert
that Islam's mission is to correct the injustices of the world. What he has in
mind is that if Islam does not control a society, then injustice dominates it,
ipso facto. But if Islam dominates
it, then justice rules it (In the Shade
of the Qur'an, vol. 7, pp. 8—15). Islam is expansionist and must conquer
the whole world to express Allah's perfect will on this planet, so Qutb and
other Muslims believe.
2. 'Unruly' energies in Arabia?
Karen Armstrong, a former nun and
well—spoken, prolific author and apologist for Islam, comes up short of a
satisfactory justification for the Muslim Crusades:
Once [Abu Bakr] crushed the rebellion [against Islamic rule within Arabia], Abu Bakr may well have decided to alleviate internal tensions by employing the unruly energies within the ummah [Muslim community] against external foes. Whatever the case, in 633 Muslim armies began a new series of campaigns in Persia, Syria and Iraq. (Jerusalem: One City, Three Faiths, New York: Ballantine, 1997, p. 226).
Armstrong also notes that the 'external
foes' to Islam in Arabia in 633 are the Persians and the Byzantines, but they
are too exhausted after years of fighting each other to pose a serious threat to
Islam. Therefore, it moved into a 'power vacuum,' unprovoked (Armstrong p. 227).
She simply does not know with certainty why Muslims marched northward out of
Arabia.
3. Religion, economy, and political control
Fred M. Donner, the dean of historians
specializing in the early Islamic conquests, cites three large factors for the
Islamic Crusades. First, the ideological message of Islam itself triggered the
Muslim ruling elite simply to follow Muhammad and his conquests; Islam had a
divinely ordained mission to conquer in the name of Allah. (The Early Islamic Conquests, Princeton UP, 1981, p. 270).
The second factor is economic. The ruling elite 'wanted to expand the political
boundaries of the new state in order to secure even more fully than before the
trans—Arab commerce they had plied for a century or more' (p. 270). The final
factor is political control. The rulers wanted to maintain their top place in
the new political hierarchy by having aggressive Arab tribes migrate into newly
conquered territories (p. 271).
Thus, these reasons they have nothing to
do with just wars of self—defense. Early Islam was merely being aggressive
without sufficient provocation from the surrounding Byzantine and Persian
Empires.
4. Sheer thrill of conquest and martyrdom
Khalid al—Walid (d. 642), a bloodthirsty
but superior commander of the Muslim armies at the time, also answers the
question as to why the Muslims stormed out of Arabia, in his terms of surrender
set down to the governor of al—Hirah, a city along the Euphrates River in Iraq.
He is sent to call people to Islam or pay a 'protection' tax for the 'privilege'
of living under Islamic rule (read: not to be attacked again) as dhimmis or
second—class citizens. Says Khalid:
'I call you to God and to Islam. If you respond to the call, you are Muslims: You obtain the benefits they enjoy and take up the responsibilities they bear. If you refuse, then [you must pay] the jizyah. If you refuse the jizyah, I will bring against you tribes of people who are more eager for death than you are for life. We will fight you until God decides between us and you.' (Tabari, The Challenge to the Empires, trans. Khalid Yahya Blankinship, NY: SUNYP, 1993, vol. 11, p. 4; Arabic page 2017)
Thus, according to Khalid, religion is
early Islam's primary motive (though not the only one) of conquering people.
In a short sermon, Abu Bakr says:
. . . Indeed, the reward in God's book for jihad in God's path is something for which a Muslim should love to be singled out, by which God saved [people] from humiliation, and through which He has bestowed nobility in this world and the next. (Tabari 11:80 / 2083—84)
Thus, the Caliph repeats the Quran's trade
of this life for the next, in an economic bargain and in the context of
jihad (cf. Suras 4:74; 9:111 and 61:10—13). This offer of martyrdom, agreeing
with Donner's first factor, religious motivation, is enough to get young Muslims
to sign up for and to launch their Crusades out of Arabia in the seventh
century.
Khalid also says that if some do not
convert or pay the tax, then they must fight an army that loves death as other people love life (see 634).
5. Improvement of life over that in Arabia
But improvement of life materially must be
included in this not—so—holy call. When Khalid perceived that his Muslim
Crusaders desired to return to Arabia, he pointed out how luscious the land of
the Persians was:
'Do you not regard [your] food like a dusty gulch? By God, if struggle for God's sake and calling [people] to God were not required of us, and there were no consideration except our livelihood, the wise opinion would [still] have been to strike this countryside until we possess it'. . . . (Tabari 11:20 / 2031)
Khalid was from Mecca. At the time of this
'motivational' speech, the Empire of Persia included Iraq, and this is where
Khalid is warring. Besides his religious goal of Islamizing its inhabitants by
warfare, Khalid's goal is to 'possess' the land.
Like Pope Urban II in 1095 exhorting the
Medieval Crusaders to war against the Muslim 'infidels' for the first time, in
response to Muslim aggression that had been going on for centuries, Abu Bakr
gives his own speech in 634, exhorting Muslims to war against the 'infidels,'
though he is not as long—winded as the Pope.
Muslim polemicists believe that Islam
spread militarily by a miracle from Allah. However, these five earth—bound
reasons explain things more clearly.
Did the Islamic Crusades force conversions by the
sword?
Historical facts demonstrate that most of
the conquered cities and regions accepted the last of three options that were
enforced by the later Muslim Crusaders: (1) fight and die, (2) convert and pay
the zakat tax; (3) keep their Biblical faith and pay the jizya tax. Most
preferred to remain in their own religion.
However, people eventually converted.
After all, Islamic lands are called such for a reason—or many reasons. Why? Four
Muslim polemicists whitewash the reasons people converted, so their scholarship
is suspect.
1. The polemical answer
First, Malise Ruthven and Azim Nanji use
the Quran to explain later historical facts:
'Islam expanded by conquest and conversion. Although it was sometimes said that the faith of Islam was spread by the sword, the two are not the same. The Koran states unequivocally, 'There is no compulsion in religion' (Sura 2:256).' (Historical Atlas of Islam, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard, 2004, 30).
According to them, the Quran says there
should be no compulsion, so the historical facts conform to a sacred text. This
shaky reasoning is analyzed, below.
Next, David Dakake also references Sura
2:256, and defines compulsion very narrowly. Jihad has been misrepresented as
forcing Jews, Christians, and other peoples of the Middle East, Asia and Africa
to convert to Islam 'on pain of death.' ('The Myth of Militant Islam,' Islam, Fundamentalism, and the Betrayal of
Tradition, ed. J.E.B. Lumbard, Bloomington: World Wisdom, 2004, p. 13).
This is too narrow a definition of compulsion, as we shall see, below.
Finally, Qutb, also citing Sura 2:256, is
even more categorical:
'Never in its history did Islam compel a single human being to change his faith' (In the Shade of the Qur'an, vol. 8, p. 307).
This is absurd on its face, and it only
demonstrates the tendentiousness of Islamic scholarship, which must be
challenged at every turn here in the West. For more information and thorough
logic, see this article.
2. The historical facts
History does not always follow Scriptures
because people do not. Did the vast majority of conquered peoples make such fine
distinctions, even if a general amnesty were granted to People of the Book?
Maybe a few diehards did, but the majority? Most people at this time did not
know how to read or could barely read, so when they saw a Muslim army outside
their gates, why would they not convert, even if they waited? To Ruthven's and
Nanji's credit, they come up with other reasons to convert besides the sword,
such as people's fatigue with church squabbles, a few doctrinal similarities,
simplicity of the conversion process, a desire to enter the ranks of the new
ruling elite, and so on. But using the Quran to interpret later facts paints the
history of Islam into a corner of an unrealistically high standard.
This misguided connection between
Scripture and later historical facts does not hold together. Revelations or
ideals should not run roughshod over later historical facts, as if all followers
obey their Scriptures perfectly.
To his credit, Ibn Khaldun (1332—1406),
late Medieval statesman, jurist, historian, and scholar, has enough integrity
and candor to balance out these four Muslim apologists, writing a history that
is still admired by historians today. He states the obvious:
In the Muslim community, the holy war is a religious duty, because of the universalism of the Muslim mission and (the obligation to) convert everybody to Islam either by persuasion or by force. (The Muqaddimah: an Introduction to History (abridged), trans. Franz Rosenthal, Princeton UP, 1967, p.183)
When the Islamic Crusaders go out to
conquer, carrying an Islamic banner inscribed in Arabic of the glory and the
truth of their prophet, Ibn Khaldun would not deny that the army's mission,
besides the material reasons of conquest, is to convert the inhabitants. Islam
is a 'universalizing' religion, and if its converts enter its fold either by
persuasion or force, then that is the nature of Islam.
Moreover, Ibn Khaldun explains why a
dynasty rarely establishes itself firmly in lands of many different tribes and
groups. But it can be done after a long time and employing the following
tactics, as seen in the Maghrib (N and NW Africa) from the beginning of Islam to
Ibn Khaldun's own time:
The first (Muslim) victory over them and the European Christians (in the Maghrib) was of no avail. They continued to rebel and apostatized time after time. The Muslims massacred many of them. After the Muslim religion had been established among them, they went on revolting and seceding, and they adopted dissident religious opinions many times. They remained disobedient and unmanageable . . . . Therefore, it has taken the Arabs a long time to establish their dynasty in the . . . Maghrib. (p. 131)
Conclusion
Though European Crusaders may have been
sincere, they wandered off from the origins of Christianity when they slashed
and burned and forced conversions. Jesus never used violence; neither did he
call his disciples to use it. Given this historical fact, it is only natural
that the New Testament would never endorse violence to spread the word of the
true God. Textual reality matches historical reality in the time of Jesus.
In contrast, Muslims who slashed and
burned and forced conversions did not wander off from the origins of Islam, but
followed it closely. It is a plain and unpleasant historical fact that in the
ten years that Muhammad lived in Medina (622—632), he either sent out or went
out on seventy—four raids, expeditions, or full—scale wars, which range from
small assassination hit squads to the Tabuk Crusade, described above (see 630).
Sometimes the expeditions did not result in violence, but a Muslim army always
lurked in the background. Muhammad could exact a terrible vengeance on an
individual or tribe that double—crossed him. These ten years did not know long
stretches of peace.
It is only natural that the Quran would be
filled with references to jihad and qital, the latter word meaning only fighting, killing,
warring, and slaughtering. Textual reality matches historical reality in the
time of Muhammad. And after.
But this means that the Church had to
fight back or be swallowed up by an aggressive religion over the centuries.
Thus, the Church did not go out and conquer in a mindless, bloodthirsty, and
irrational way—though the Christian Crusades were far from perfect.
Islam was the aggressor in its own
Crusades, long before the Europeans responded with their own.
James Arlandson can be reached at jamesmarlandson@hotmail.com
Supplemental Material
Please see this two—part article (here and here) for the rules of Islamic warfare.
Too often they do not follow simple justice, but were barbaric and cruel, such
as permitting sex with newly captured female prisoners of
war.
This article goes into more detail on the
motives for Islamic expansion and a comparison with Christianity. The second
major section discusses the weak Islamic claim on Jerusalem.
This book
by Andrew Bostom is the antidote to the false belief that life under Islam was
always a bed of roses. Bostom provides many source documents, sometimes
translated for the first time. Here are some online samples. This two—part
article (here and here) recounts Muslim atrocities in Palestine. This
two—part article (here and here) demonstrates that jihad produced
the European Crusades.
References
Gil, Moshe. A History of Palestine: 634—1099. Cambridge UP, 1983,
1997.
Nicolle, David. The Armies of Islam. Men—at—Arms. Osprey, 1982.
———. Saladin and the Saracens. Men—at Arms. Osprey, 1986.
———. Armies of the Muslim Conquests. Men—at—Arms. Osprey,
1993.
———. The Moors, the Islamic West. Men—at—Arms. Osprey,
2001.
on "The Truth about Islamic Crusades and
Imperialism"
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