by Raymond Ibrahim
The bankrupt nature of the taqiyya-whitewash-industry.
Attempts to whitewash the Islamic doctrine of taqiyya are becoming redundantly desperate.
Consider BuzzFeed’s recent, “‘Taqiyya’: How An Obscure Islamic Concept Became An Obsession Of Anti-Muslim Activists.” It offers the same claims and defenses that have been repeatedly discredited.
After quoting Ezra Levant, founder of The Rebel Media, saying that taqiyya “means deliberate deception of infidels, to promote an Islamic goal,” BuzzFeed proceeds: “Levant was referencing a false interpretation of an obscure Islamic doctrine that has become a bedrock belief among anti-Muslim writers and activists, alt-right trolls, and even by current Trump cabinet member and former presidential candidate Ben Carson.”
Next comes the ad nauseam defense:
Mohammad Fadel, an expert on Islamic law at the University of Toronto,
described taqiyya (and its many alternative spellings) as “a doctrine
of prudential dissimulation” that arose from a time when Muslims were
minorities in hostile societies. … “The Qur’an permitted Muslims in that
situation, who were fleeing death or torture or other bad treatment, to
dissemble about their true beliefs. And as long as they were faithful
in their hearts, they would not be considered sinful,” Fadel told
BuzzFeed News. But this idea has mushroomed, Fadel said, into a false
claim that Muslims are permitted, or even commanded, to lie to
non-Muslims as part of a larger project to take over Western countries
and impose Sharia, or Islamic law. He said taqiyya does not allow for
broad deceptions and has no connection to Sharia.
During the court case, Mohammad Fadel, BuzzFeed’s go-to expert, had provided an expert report on behalf of Awan on the nature of taqiyya, making every conceivable apologia for the Muslim doctrine. He concluded his report as follows:
In no case, as far as I know, have Muslim
theologians taken the position that it is generally permissible, much
less obligatory, for Muslims to lie to non-Muslims, whether in matters
regarding religious belief or secular practices… Although it has become a
staple of right-wing Islamophobia in North America, there is no
doctrinal basis in authentic Islamic teachings to support the claim,
made by Ezra Levant and others … that taqiyya is anything other
than an exceptional doctrine justified under circumstances of extreme
duress that are simply inapplicable to Muslims living in Canada and the
United States.
Deception—known under the broad term taqiyya—is
permissible in Islam, above and beyond the limited issue of
self-preservation. This assertion is not “Islamophobic”; it is true.
From a legalistic point of view, and as seen especially via the concept
of tawriya, as long as deceptions are technically true (“I
don’t have a penny in my pocket,” only dollars), they are not even
considered lies. The prophet of Islam, Muhammad—the example that Sunni
Muslims especially pattern their lives after—regularly made use of
deceit. In order to assassinate a poet (Ka‘b ibn Ashraf) who offended
him, Muhammad permitted a Muslim to lie to the poet. Muhammad is
further on record giving license to breaking oaths (“if something
better” comes along) and openly lying (without even employing tawriya)
to one’s wife and in war. As for the latter, which assumes a perpetual
nature in the guise of the jihad against the non-Muslim in order to
make Islam (and Muslims) supreme (e.g., Qur’an 8:39), deception and lies
are certainly permissible.
And yet here again is Fadel making and BuzzFeed citing the same indefensible claims about taqiyya.
Which leads to the ultimate point of this post: to expose all the claims taqiyya’s apologists make—Fadel left no stone unturned in his attempt to whitewash the term—and how to respond them: Click on my April 12, 2014 article, “Taqiyya about Taqiyya,” where I methodically address, including by citing sources, every one of Fadel’s apologias.
Raymond Ibrahim is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center, a Judith Friedman Rosen Writing Fellow at the Middle East Forum and a CBN News contributor. He is the author of Crucified Again: Exposing Islam’s New War on Christians (2013) and The Al Qaeda Reader (2007). Source: https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/269979/tired-lies-taqiyya-raymond-ibrahim
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Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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