Quranic Foundations And Structure Of Muslim Society
2. WITH REFERENCE TO POST-CONQUEST TREATMENT OF THE SUBJECTED COMMUNITIES
A. CHRISTIAN TESTIMONY ON CHRISTIAN CONQUESTS
Arnold J. Toynbee says in his Study of History (London, New York, Toronto 1962), vol. I, pp. 211, 212, 225:
“The race-feeling which is thus aroused in our Western Society by the present situation and temper of our settlers overseas also springs naturally from the religious background … This has been a misfortune for Mankind; for the Protestant temper and attitude and conduct in regard to Race, as in many other vital issues, is inspired largely by the Old Testament … Under this inspiration, the English-speaking Protestant settlers in the New World exterminated the North American Indian, as well as the bison, from coast to coast of the Continent, whereas the Spanish Catholics only exterminated the Indian in the Caribbean Islands and were content, on the Continent, to step into the shoes of the Aztecs and the Incas—sparing the conquered in order to rule them as subject populations, converting their subjects to their own religion, and inter-breeding with their converts … The sense of religious solidarity and fraternity did not, however, restrain the Spaniards and the Portuguese in South America, a century and a half ago, from cold-bloodedly and brutally destroying—out of sheer greed for (non-existent) gold and for (to them, unutilizable) land—the wonderful society which had been conjured into existence, by the genius of the Jesuit missionaries, among the primitive peoples of Paraguay.”
The Spaniards might not have employed bullets for wiping out the conquered ‘natives’ on the American mainland, as Toynbee says. But the decimation of the indigenous population occurred nevertheless as a blessing of the Spanish conquest. The New Cambridge Modern History, vol. 2, p. 583, (1958), gives the following figures for Central Mexico:
“A recent and well documented study gives the following approximate figures of the indigenous (Indian) population on different dates in Central Mexico (then known as New Spain):
1519………………………………………. 11 Million.
1540………………………………………. 6,427,466.
1565………………………………………. 4,409,180.
1597………………………………………. 2,500,000.
(vide S.F. Cook and L.B. Simpson: The Population of Central Mexico in the Sixteenth Century, Berkeley, California, 1948).”
That the intolerance practised by Christendom has always gone to the highest level of barbarism in the form of mass murder of human populations, wherever they could carry it out, is fully borne out by history. For instance, in the Sudan, the extensive blood-bath undertaken by the crusading Lord Kitchener against the Muslims reduced the population, estimated by the British authorities in 1880 at ten million souls, to less than two million—actually 1,853,000. (Ref: Encyclopaedia Britannica, X, XI, and XII editions; 1902, 1911, 1923).
As to those conquests wherein mass murder did not take place, Toynbee, the ardent lover of Christianity attributes to expediency and not to any Christian moral idealism. Citing the example of India, he says:
“Finally, in Continental India, where the English could not think of supplanting the conquered ‘Natives’ as they had supplanted them in North America, but could only impose their rule on them as the Spaniards had imposed theirs on the ‘Natives’ of Mexico and Peru, the sequel was not the same as it had been in the Spanish Indies … The reasons are almost too obvious to need mentioning. In the first place, Europeans could not hope to make themselves at home in the Indian climate, even if they had found, or made, the soil of India free from other human occupants. In the second place, the existing ‘Native’ population of India was too numerous and too far advanced in civilisation to be exterminated, even if our British Israelites had ever contemplated treating the Canaanite in India as they treated him in America.” (op. cit., p. 212).
Indeed, Toynbee, with all his subjective devotion to Christianity, is so deeply convinced of the Bible being responsible for all the most amazing and the most callous barbarism and ferocity demonstrated by Christendom in history that he finds himself forced to advocate the subjection of the Christian sacred scripture, which Christendom has adored as the Word of God, to the amputator’s knife. He says:
“When the first translation of the Bible into a Teutonic language was made by Ulfilas, the Apostle of the Goths, in the fourth century of our era, the translator wisely omitted the Books of Samuel and Kings, on the ground that war and bloodshed were too much in the minds of the Goths as it was, without their proclivity in this direction being consecrated and confirmed by the authority of the sacred book of their new religion. It is a pity that Luther and the English translators did not follow Ulfilas’ example—or, indeed, improve on it by omitting Joshua and Judges as well! King James I’s English Authorized Version of the Bible, which presents the Old Testament complete and unexpurgated, was published in A.D. 1611. A book called The New English Canaan, by Thomas Morton, was published in 1637!” (op. cit., p. 212).
That sheer barbarism was employed as an instrument for converting the heathen [1] is also borne out by Christian history. And it was employed from the very beginning of the acquisition of political power by Christianity; as, among others, Will Durant testifies:
“Christians divided on almost every point but one—that the pagan temples should be closed, their property confiscated … Constantine had discouraged, but not forbidden pagan sacrifices and ceremonies; Constans forbade them on pain of death; Constantius ordered all pagan temples in the Empire closed, and all pagan rituals to cease. Those who disobeyed were to forefeit their property and their lives; and these penalties were extended to provincial governors neglecting to enforce the decree.” (The Age of Faith, p. 8).
We may also notice in this connection that the unparalleled barbarisrn which Christendom inflicted on the black races of Africa, to which we shall refer shortly, was also conceived by the Christian proselytisers as the instrument for their Christianisation. A brief remark by an eminent Christian scholar may suffice here:
“The Church also supported the slave trade. The Spaniards saw in it an opportunity of converting the heathen, and the Jesuits, Dominicans and Franciscans were heavily involved in sugar cultivation which meant slave-holding, The story is told of an old elder of the Church in Newport who would invariably, the Sunday following the arrival of a slaver from the coast, thank God that ‘another cargo of benighted beings had been brought to a land where they could have the benefit of a gospel dispensation’.” (Dr. Eric Williams: Capitalism and Slavery, London 1964, p.42).
Christian testimony in this behalf has been provided in Thomas Arnold’s Preaching of Islam (latest edition: Sh. Muhammad Ashraf; Lahore, Pakistan).
[1] In respect of conversion. the law of Islam stands radically opposed to the use of force, because of the Qur’an’s categorical prohibition (2:256). Hence, Muslim history presents a radical contrast to Christian history in this respect.
to be continued . . . . .
Quranic Foundation & Structure Of Muslim Society In The End Times