May 15, 2003
The Wisdom Fund
Has Islam Failed?
Not by Western Standards
by Michael Neumann
We hear over and
over again that Islam has failed, that it is in crisis. The claims
always involve comparing Islam to something else, though to what is often
unclear. If 'failed' just means 'hasn't kept up with the West', Islam
has indeed failed. So has every other culture, except to the extent
it has Westernized. And if a culture fails whenever it falls behind
the economic or technological front runners, Italian culture has failed in
relation to Japanese or American culture.
But if 'failed' means
something else, what is that? Bernard
Lewis says: "In the course of
the twentieth century it became abundantly clear that things had gone badly
wrong in the Middle East - and, indeed, in all the lands of Islam. Compared
with Christendom, its rival for more than a millennium, the world of Islam
had become poor, weak, and ignorant." (1) He
also tells us that "Arab" nations rank poorly on a scale of "economic freedom".
Even if we knew whether
we were comparing the West or Christendom with The Middle East or the Arab
World or the Muslim World, the terms of the comparison would be uncertain.
It is almost as if any parameter will do, as long as Islam comes
out on the bottom: should my heart really swell with pride if I hear that
my country has lots of 'economic freedom'? Sometimes Islam seems to
have failed primarily in areas where there is no consensus that it is good
to succeed. Should Egyptians envy the Americans their fine electoral
system and the impressive leaders it produces? Ought Tunisians
to learn criminal justice from US courts and prisons? Should impoverished
Iranians yearn for the medical care they would get in America? We
needn't be relativists when we compare civilizations. But it is one
thing to insist on applying 'Western values' to practices such as slavery
or female genital mutilation. It is quite another to suppose that Western
values are whatever today’s ideologues declare them to be - economic
freedom, for instance, as opposed to equally Western values like asceticism,
environmentalism, socialism and communism. And it is something else
again to compare Islamic realities, not with Western ones, but with America
as it looks to patriotic bar-stool warmers after six beers.
Suppose, then, that
we retain 'Western values', but spare ourselves the ideological claptrap about
democracy and economic freedom. One Western value, I think, is that
one should attempt some degree of objectivity when comparing cultures: if
one cannot entirely avoid applying one's own values, one can at least rely
only on their most nearly uncontroversial, universal elements. This
means avoiding even such apparently undoctrinaire measures as 'average annual
income' (also a Lewis yardstick). What's more important, after all,
the average or the minimum? What if the average rises only because
the rich get richer, despite immense suffering at the bottom of the scale?
Western values oblige us to measure the success of society in genuinely
moral rather than ideological terms.
If we insist on judging
a whole civilization, three constraints might curb our arrogance. First,
we should be looking at the basics - poverty, health, exposure to violence.
For all the critics of Islam praise freedom and democracy, they offer
as proof of their ideological pudding the allegedly superior capacity of non-Islamic
societies to deliver these basics. Second, we should measure the success
of society by how things are at the bottom of the social scale. Delivering
the basics doesn’t mean much if you don’t deliver them to everyone, and even
a dazzling civilization can’t be counted successful if it’s built on misery.
Third, any judgements delivered must be strictly comparative.
The issue isn't whether Islam has failed to meet certain standards,
but whether its failures are worse than those of Christianity.
The comparison, in
this form, defines two civilizations by their adherence to two religions.
Islam is being compared, not with the West - not with a region - but
with Bernard Lewis' 'Christendom'. We could, it is true, compare the
Islamic Middle East with Western Europe and the US. That would lead
only to the unsurprising truth that the West, which actively colonized or
occupied the Middle East for many years, did better. We would draw exactly
the same conclusions if we compared the West with Latin America, or sub-Saharan
Africa, or the Indian subcontinent. To compare regions is not to compare
civilizations, and to single out a lagging Islamic region when there are
many lagging non-Islamic regions is just plain dishonest. So a comparison
of Lewis’ “all the lands of Islam” with ‘all the lands of Christendom’, which
focuses on civilizations rather than regions, seems more likely to transcend
particular regional problems and advantages. We will say something
about the Middle East versus the West later.
To make the comparison,
let's look at some numerical indicators of well-being, as well as some recent
history: you can't very well assess well-being within a culture or society
without looking at the wars they have experienced. The idea is to see
whether Islam is worse than Christianity at protecting people from the worst
things in life. I'll base the initial comparison on UN statistics.
These seem to be the best available, though they have one drawback:
for each parameter, the UN figures offer information on a slightly different
batch of countries.
The UN offers some
'millennium indicators' of material well-being, including health. (There
are 48 indicators in all, including HIV incidence, condom use, malaria incidence,
educational indicators, market access, internet use, and so on. I have
selected some of the ones most directly related to material well-being. The
reader can readily verify that my selection is not slanted to favor Islam.)
The figures will be integrated with information about the religions
of the countries listed, compiled from the Information Please Almanac and
the CIA World Factbook. To start, take infant mortality rates
for the latest year available, 2000. (2) Do these
figures make Islam look worse than Christendom?
Here are figures
for the 27 countries whose infant mortality rate is a horrific 10% or more,
i.e., at least 100. (This cutoff doesn't skew anything; the next
three countries are not Islamic.)
Infant
mortality rate (0-1 year) per 1,000 live births (UNICEF estimates), 2000
Sierra Leone |
180
|
Islam 40%, Christian 35%, Other 20% |
Angola |
172
|
Roman Catholic 47%, Protestant 38%,
Other 15% |
Afghanistan |
165
|
Islam (167 in 1990 under secular
ruler Najibullah) |
Niger |
159
|
Islam 80%, Animist and Christian 20% |
Liberia |
157
|
other 40%, Christian 40%, Islam 20% |
Mali |
142
|
Islam |
Somalia |
133
|
Islam |
Guinea-Bissau |
132
|
other 65%, Islam 30%, Christian 5% |
Congo-Kinshasa |
128
|
Roman Catholic 50%, Protestant 20%,
Kimbanguist 10%, Islam 10% |
Mozambique |
126
|
other 60%, Christian 30%, Islam 10% |
Mauritania |
120
|
Islam |
Chad |
118
|
Islam 44%, Christian 33%, other 23% |
Ethiopia [from 1993] |
117
|
Christian |
Malawi |
117
|
Christian 75%, Islam 20% |
Central African Republic |
115
|
Christian (other influence)
50%, Islam 15%, other 35% |
Guinea |
112
|
Islam 85%, other 7%, Christian 8% |
Zambia |
112
|
Christian 50%-75%, Islam and Hindu
24%-49%, other 1% |
Nigeria |
110
|
Islam 50%, Christian 40%, other 10% |
Burkina Faso |
105
|
Islam 50%, Christian (mainly Roman
Catholic) 10%, other 40% |
Iraq |
105
|
Islam |
Tanzania |
104
|
Christian 40%, Islam 33% |
Equatorial Guinea |
103
|
predominantly Christian with pagan
practices |
Cote d'Ivoire |
102
|
other 60%, Islam 23%, Christian 17% |
Djibouti |
102
|
Islam |
Swaziland |
101
|
Christian 60%, other 40% |
Rwanda |
100
|
Roman Catholic 56%, Protestant 18%,
Islam 1%, Other 25% |
Certainly the Islamic
religion figures prominently among those states with high infant mortality,
but Islamic civilization does not. Sierra Leone, for instance, was not
only a British colony from 1808 to 1961, but also a seat of British administrative
and education institutions for the region. Its current misery is due
largely to the “reign of terror” (Infoplease) of Catholic-educated Johnny
Paul Koroma, now a born-again Christian. Afghanistan’s infant morality
rate was even worse under the secular, Western rule of Russian-backed Najibullah;
Iraq’s is a result of Western sanctions policies and Saddam Hussein’s secular,
Westernized rule. Otherwise, every single state on the list with
a substantial Islamic population has been a Christian colony or protectorate
for much of its history. More purely Islamic states, like Iran, Saudi
Arabia, and Lybia, are nowhere to be found. Nothing here suggests that
the worst infant mortality rates are found in the Islamic rather than in the
Christian world.
Suppose then we look
at something perhaps even more basic: nutrition, specifically those
undernourished as percentage of total population. For simplicity’s sake
we’ll consider only the worst ten cases. Again, readers can easily consult
the original source to verify that this abbreviated view doesn’t distort
the comparison.
Nutrition,
undernourished as percentage of total population (FAO estimates 1998-2000
average)
Congo-Kinshasa |
73
|
Christian |
Somalia |
71
|
Islamic |
Afghanistan |
70
|
Islamic |
Burundi |
69
|
Christian |
Tajikistan |
64
|
80% Islamic population,
anti-Islamic government |
Eritrea |
58
|
not predominantly Islamic;
long Christian rule |
Mozambique |
55
|
not predominantly Islamic;
long Christian rule |
Angola |
50
|
Christian |
Haiti |
50
|
Christian |
Zambia |
50
|
mainly Christian |
Nothing here suggests
that Islam is particularly bad at nourishing its people.
What of poverty?
There are UN figures on the percentage of population who consume less
than $1 a day.
'Poverty,
percentage of population below $1 (PPP) per day consumption (WB)' (1998 figures
when available, otherwise 1999, indicated with *)
Zambia |
63.7 |
Mainly Christian |
Gambia |
59.3 |
Islam |
Madagascar |
49.1* |
Christian 41%, Islam 7%,
other 52% |
Ghana |
44.8* |
Islam 30%, Christian 24%,
other 38% |
Honduras |
24.3 |
Christian |
Venezuela |
23 |
Christian |
El Salvador |
21 |
Christian |
Colombia |
19.7 |
Christian |
Paraguay |
19.5 |
Christian |
China |
18.8* |
Other |
Again the figures
give no support whatever to the 'failure of Islam' hypothesis. (Admittedly
the list is very incomplete - where are the poverty-stricken Christian states
of Haiti and Ethiopia? - but not, I believe, unrepresentative.)
Sanitation is another
relatively uncontroversial indicator of how well a society is doing. This
time I’ll list the twelve worst, because the last three on the list are tied.
Sanitation,
percentage of population with access to improved sanitation, total (WHO-UNICEF
2000)
Rwanda |
8
|
Christian |
Afghanistan |
12
|
Islamic |
Ethiopia [from
1993] |
12
|
Christian |
Eritrea |
13
|
not predominantly Islamic;
long Christian rule |
Cambodia |
17
|
Buddhist |
Niger |
20
|
Islamic |
Congo-Kinshasa |
21
|
Christian |
Benin |
23
|
Christian 15%, Islam 15%,
other 70% |
Central African
Republic |
25
|
Christian (animist influence)
50%, Islam 15%, other 35% |
Haiti |
28
|
Christian |
India |
28
|
predominantly Hindu |
Nepal |
28
|
predominantly Hindu |
Islam is certainly
no standout in this hall of shame.
Note that for individual
countries, these indicators work very well. Haiti, Burundi,
Afghanistan, Somalia, and Ethiopia would, as expected, score much lower on
all of them than Britain, France, Switzerland, and the US. Pretty
much anyone, regardless of religion or culture, would agree that the low scorers
are doing worse than the high scorers. If we were comparing democracy,
or freedom, or ignorance, we couldn’t get anything like the same consensus:
Cuba or Saudi Arabia are doubtless less democratic than Mexico or Argentina,
but not everyone would be sure which are the failed societies.
So on these non-ideological
measures of well-being, Islam is no failure in comparison with 'Christendom'.
Indeed Christendom, with its economic dominance and technological superiority,
might well be considered more reprehensible in its failures to provide for
its poor. Another relatively unbiased but somewhat less materialistic
measure would be the degree of violence in a society. One indicator
is the murder rates, and the countries with high ones are overwhelmingly Christian.
But since murder statistics are debatable, we might also want
to survey the propensity of these two civilizations to generate wars. In
recent times, if there any failure, it is Christianity. It is
not just(!) that 'Christendom' has produced two world wars, and Hitler. The
postwar period is hardly more encouraging. There is the Korean
war, in which Christians but not Muslims played a central role, the Vietnam
War which accounts for the deaths of as many as four million people, and
terrible civil or colonial wars in Mozambique and Angola. Nor
are the death tolls simply a function of Western technology: the horrendous
low-tech killing in Rwanda and now in the Congo are thoroughly Christian.
On the Islamic side, not much is in the same league. There
is the Iran-Iraq war, instigated by secular, Westernized, Iraq. The
Lebanese civil war involved both cultures, as does Algeria's colonial past
and, to a lesser extent, its present. So Islam, compared either to the
West or to Christianity, has far less killing on its conscience.
What about internal
repression? The great killing of Communists in predominantly Muslim
Indonesia took place, not as part of some fundamentalist upsurge, but within
the context of ongoing American cold-war interference. As for Syria
and Iraq, Bernard Lewis himself says that
|
If you look, for example, at the regimes of Saddam
Hussein in Iraq, of the late Hafez el-Asad in Syria, these are not part of
the Islamic or Arab tradition; they are the results of European influence
and the Europeanization of the Middle East, sometimes also called modernization
or Westernization. (Truman News, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
Volume V, Issue 1 March 1, 2003) |
Iran is certainly
Islamic, but it inherited its brutal secret police from its very Westernized
and US-sponsored Shah. Though undeniably horrible cruelties are
perpetrated throughout the Muslim world, Christianity - even forgetting that
Hitler business - easily matches these in the recent past of Haiti,
Greece, Chile, Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, El Salvador, Guatemala, South
Africa, Peru, Ethiopia, and many only slightly less vicious Christian dictatorships.
And though none of these ‘Christian’ régimes deserve to be called Christian,
their crimes are entirely the product of Christian civilization. The
crimes of ‘Islamic’ régimes,
by contrast, have in most cases important links to non-Islamic, indeed to
‘Christian’ influences.
So compared to Christendom,
Islam doesn't seem to have failed. What if it is instead compared to
the West? Certainly on most measures of material well-being (but not
of violence), the West triumphs. Yet virtually no one claims Christianity
enabled the West to come out ahead, because the rise of the West coincides
with the often violent fragmentation of Christianity and the spread of secularism.
‘Experts’ and pundits
prefer to attribute Western dominance to democracy. But the West did
not exactly elect itself into the lead: it triumphed largely because of its
progress in science and technology. And it is a bit odd to see
Western success as a failure of Islam, as if Muslims had contracted
some strange mental disease: every other civilization fell equally far
behind. In any case, can the West’s progress be attributed to
democracy? Not likely, because its scientific and technological
dominance came first.
The first major advances
that put the West ahead included the astronomy of Copernicus, Tycho Brahe,
Galileo, and Kepler, the explorations of Columbus and Magellan, and the mathematics
of Pascal and Fermat. All these occurred before there was the
slightest hint of democracy. The English provided the impetus for a
second wave of discovery and invention. It developed when the power
of the monarchy had been reduced, but certainly before England could be called
democratic: the vote excluded women, a large segment of the lower classes,
and was in any case so corrupt and manipulated that no one considered it even
remotely representative. This only began to be corrected with the First
Reform Bill of 1832. Even by 1867, less than 10% of the adult
population could vote, and real democracy came only in the early 20th century.
Yet before 1832 we get Napier's logarithms, Snell's law
of refraction, Harvey's work on the circulation of the blood, the calculus
of Newton, the economics of Adam Smith, Herschel's discovery of Uranus, Hutton's
uniformitarianism, Priestly's discovery of oxygen, Jenner's smallpox vaccinations,
and Dalton's laws. In technology, we have Hargreaves' spinning
jenny, James Watt's steam engine, Cartwright's power loom, Whitney's cotton
gin, Fulton's steamboat, Stephenson's locomotive engine, and the first railroad.
This activity is complemented on the not even nominally democratic continent
by Bernouilli's work on probability and fluid mechanics, Michel and Montgolfier's
hot air balloon, Berthollet's chemical nomenclature, Volta's battery, AmpPre's work on electricity, Gauss’
and Lobachevsky’s mathematics, Avogadro's chemistry, and Ampere's force
law.
All the subsequent
progress of the 19th century and beyond, up to and including the theory of
relativity, occurred before the institution of women's suffrage (1919) and
truly universal suffrage (1928), and therefore before the existence of any
'democracy' in the modern sense of the term. (This fact weakens another
claim, namely that Islam’s treatment of women was a contributor to its relative
underdevelopment.) It is also worth noting that when England eliminated
famine in the 1620's and France around 1709, both countries were securely
in the grip of absolutism. (As for literary and cultural achievement, no one
claims that the West first flowered in its democratic phase.) So if
the comparison is between the Middle East and the West, it is far more plausible
to attribute the West's lead to the formation of cohesive, undemocratic nation
states than to the progress of democratic societies. This certainly
fits the story of Germany, a scientific and technological giant throughout
the 19th and early 20th centuries, known otherwise for the conspicuous failure
of its democracy.
So if Islam has fallen
behind the West, it is not because of either Christianity or democracy, and
in this respect Islam is no different from any non-Western culture. Whatever
caused the West’s incredible technological surge in the 17th
and 18th centuries, the reasons are bound to be big,
complex, and, well, un-American. This is not at all the sort of ‘going
wrong’ Lewis and others are after. But suppose we make the comparison
Lewis may really want us to make: the Islamic Middle East with the West.
Suppose too that we look, not at whether democracy accounts for 'Western
success', but simply at whether Islam has done as well as the West. Can
we then say that Islam has failed?
Only, I think, if
we resort to a subterfuge in defining "The West". Certainly if
the expression is restricted to Western Europe and the United States, Islam
will fare poorly by many standards of well-being, though not, once again,
by measures of violence. And Eastern Europe might be excluded
because it was so long under 'non-Western' Soviet rule. But there is
certainly another part of the world that should be counted as belonging to
the West, and that is Latin America. It was under Western (mainly Spanish
and Portuguese) rule for centuries. It has been a declared sphere of
US influence since 1823, a major focus of 19th century British investment,
a thoroughly Christian region, and the beneficiary of Kennedy's Alliance for
Progress. Almost all its countries, at some points in their histories,
have been democracies. Its cultural outlook is overwhelmingly
Western, as are its languages. But once it’s included, things don't
look so good for the West. Minimal levels of well-being in Middle Eastern
countries are on the whole higher than in, say, Colombia, Haiti, Venezuela,
Nicaragua, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, Guatemala, and now Argentina. In
the recent annals of violence and repression, Colombia, Chile, Argentina,
Haiti, Paraguay, Brazil, El Salvador, and Guatemala figure as prominently
as Algeria, Iraq, or Iran, and much more prominently than that perennial favorite
of liberal head-shakers, Egypt. (3) And, since
we’re considering the Islamic Middle East, note that the most repressive
Middle Eastern countries have all experienced long and pervasive Western
influence: Saddam Hussein's Iraq, the former French colony of Algeria, Westernized
Turkey, and the erstwhile US client, Iran. The same may be said of
Afghanistan, perhaps the worst-off Middle Eastern country in material terms.
The much 'purer' and often fundamentalist Gulf states come out much
better than the West (including Latin America), even if we look at averages
rather than minima. So once again, the failure of Islam has slipped
away.
Perhaps Islamic
civilization, like Christian civilization, has failed according to some more
or less objective standards. But in relative terms, it has not.
It does no worse than Christendom in providing for its own. In
its most degraded impulses, it has no cruelties to teach the civilization
responsible for Auschwitz and Hiroshima. And if the comparison
is between Western technological success and the relative backwardness of
Islam, nothing suggests that democratic or Christian values are involved.
More likely, the civilization that almost took Vienna in 1683 simply
rested on its wealth and laurels until it was too late. That Islam
'has failed' in some morally significant and comparative sense is an illusion
induced by looking at the world in the fun-house mirrors of free-market demagogues.
Notes:
1. Bernard Lewis, "What Went Wrong", The Atlantic Monthly, January 2002, Volume 289, No. 1; 43 45.
2. See UN Statistics Division - Millennium Indicators
3. The disparity of attention devoted to Middle Eastern as opposed to Latin American violence is astounding. The BBC News reported that the Honduran Government had created a special commission to investigate the street killings of 1,569 street children in the past five years. The report added that, according to Amnesty International, the killers may well be "police or army personnel", and that there had been virtually no prosecutions. This passed unnoticed.
Michael Neumann is a professor of philosophy at Trent University in Ontario,
Canada. Professor Neumann's views are not to be taken as those of his
university. His book What's Left: Radical Politics and the Radical Psyche has just
been republished by Broadview Press.
Mark Glenn, "Islamic Extremism
May Save Western Civilization," Media Monitors Network, April 18, 2003
["Today the main interest of the US is to preserve its hegemony.
With the re-colonisation of Iraq it has established an important
beachead in the Eurasian land mass. This is both a military and an
economic advance for the Empire. And we have already witnessed the
blowback in Riyadh. In other words US imperial fundamentalism
defines its interests according to its own special needs. And this
creates a resistance. . . .
"Religious fundamentalism in the United states is very strong, but
is different from imperial fundamentalism. It happens to be the case
that the current regime in the United states is led by born-again
Protestant fundamentalists (Bush himself and Ashcroft are the prime
examples of this) and they are in a coalition with the Likudist
current represented by Wolfowitz, Perle and the American Enterprise
gang."--Tariq Ali, "The Empire
Advances," CounterPunch, May 19, 2003, 2003]
[Edward Said gets to the nub of Lewis's Orientalist project when he
writes that his "work purports to be liberal objective scholarship
but is in reality very close to being propaganda against his subject
material." Lewis's work is "aggressively ideological." He has
dedicated his entire career, spanning more than five decades, to a
"project to debunk, to whittle down, and to discredit the Arabs and
Islam."
. . . he seeks to explain a generic phenomenon - the overthrow of
agrarian societies before the rise of a new historical system, based
on capital, markets, and technological change - as one that is
specific to Islam and is due to specifically Islamic "wrongs." --M. Shahid Alam, "Bernard Lewis
and the New Orientalism: Scholarship or Sophistry?,"
CounterPunch, June 28, 2003]
[First, a look at Islam as a world supposedly so incapable of solving its
crises that only western intervention can help. We should be honest.
Islamdom doesn't have a good reputation these days, and it brings a lot of
the trouble on itself. But any religion in the wrong hands, beginning with
Americans' own Christian creeds, can be violent, backward and evil. It so
happens that few religions can lay claim to as much beauty of spirit, art,
enlightenment and advancement of the human race as Islam did for the
entirety of the Middle Ages, when nothing in Europe could hold a candle to
Islamic civilization, when Islam was enlightenment before enlightenment was
cool.
What was unique about Islam's early and middle period was its great
tolerance for people of other faiths, its love and wealth of learning, its
antipathy for dogma, its realization of pluralism -- in the great Abassid
caliphates of Baghdad from the 9th to the 12th centuries, in Spain during
the same period, in India during the 16th and early part of the 17th
centuries. It's possible to see the Muslim Enlightenment literally as
bookends, in time and geography, with Baghdad in the early period and the
reign of Akbar the Great in the 16th and 17th centuries in India, who lived
up to a famous verse in the Koran that speaks for all the potential
pluralism in Islam: "There can be no compulsion in religion: Truth stands
out clear from error" (which is actually a retelling of what Jesus said to
his followers: "The truth will make you free.")
Akbar's enlightened reign in India coincided with Europe's bloodiest age of
religious bigotry and warfare, when the Inquisition was murdering Jews in
Spain and Catholics and Protestants were murdering each other everywhere
else, when beheadings were the preferred method of Calvinists in sleepy
Geneva for adulterous men, when Europe was to know nine wars of religion in
three decades in a warm-up to the massacres and holocausts of the 17th
century. The roads of religious intolerance are paved with the bones of that
occasional oxymoron we know of as western civilization. And those same roads
are conveniently forgotten by those who would point to a place like the
Middle East and say things like, "Those people have been at each other's
throats for ever." Not quite true. Any notion that the Enlightenment was a
western invention, or that barbarism is an eastern specialty, is a bit
misguided.
But it is also true that everything is not relative. The Middle East today
and much of the Islamic world is not a comfortable place to be. It is often
not a defensible place. A United Nations report on Arab development noted
that the 22 countries that form the Arab world translate about 330 books
annually, one-fifth of the number that Greece alone translates. The
cumulative total of translated books since 9th century Baghdad is about
100,000, almost the average that Spain translates in a single year. What
that world needs is a dose of its own past enlightenment. So it's a fair
question: If Islam showed not only the potential but the reality of
enlightenment over its history, why not now, and why shouldn't the West be
showing the way back to enlightenment?--Pierre Tristam, "The Challenge and the Fear of Becoming
Enlightened," Daytona Beach News Journal, November 28, 2005]
[Islamic culture has also been less fertile for the vice-potential of
Nazism, Fascism and Communism than either Christian culture (Germany, Italy
and Russia), Buddhist culture (Japan before World War II, Pol Pot's
Cambodia) or Confucian culture (Mao's China).
Muslims are often criticized for not producing the best. However, they are
seldom congratulated for having standards of behavior which have averted the
worst. There are really no Muslim equivalents of systematic Nazi
extermination camps, nor Muslim conquest by genocide on the scale
perpetrated by European (in Europe, Bosnia) in the Americas and Australia,
nor Muslim versions of rigid apartheid once approved by the South African
Dutch Reformed version, nor Muslim equivalents of the brutal racism of Japan
before the end of World War II, nor Muslim equivalents of Pol Pot's killing
fields m Cambodia; nor Muslim versions of Stalinist terror in the name of
Five Year Plans.--AIi A. Mazrui , "'Islamo-Fascism,' Western Hegemony and Cross-Cultural Violence
," marocpost.net, March 23, 2008]
Owen Bowcott, "Afghanistan
worst place in the world for women, but India in top five," Guardian,
June 15, 2011
Ismael Hossein-Zadeh, "Why
Islamic Reform is Delayed: A Response to Western Interventionism,"
counterpunch.org, February 9, 2015
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