Islamic Imperialism

by Lev Tsitrin

Imperialism got a very bad rap nowadays. A mere century ago it was trumpeted as a “white man’s burden,” a duty to be proudly borne, a noble enterprise of spreading civilization to the “half-devil and half-child” of the non-Western world, as Rudyard Kipling memorably put it. Nowadays, it is a cause for ancestral shame and descendants’ penance. All cultures are equal, none are “backward.” In the West, multiculturalism replaced imperialism as the dominant mindset.

But not everyone is ashamed of their imperialist past. It must have been fifteen or so years ago that I attended a talk with the Syrian representative to the UN, and asked him during Q&A whether Arab conquests that followed the death of Mohammed and gave the Arabs half of the then-known world, from Spain in the West to India in the East, were just another instance of imperialism, to be condemned and ashamed of. No, he replied — because they spread Islam!

To his mind, Islam was a civilizing force — which I think fully explains a phenomenon that comes up in conversations time and again: the seemingly inexplicable insolence with which Moslems who came to the West, loudly — and occasionally, violently — protest their adopted countries’ Middle East policies, and decry the free speech which allows, among other things, for criticism and mockery of Islam, seeking to shut it down with “anti-blasphemy” laws — while one would have naturally expected them to be grateful to hospitality extended to them, getting assimilated into a new homeland that must be a far better place than the (I forgot the exact word Trump used, but never mind) countries they ran away from — ran away for a reason that those countries were exactly what Trump called them — though, again, I regret forgetting his term.

Yet the Syrian ambassador’s answer raises the question of, why should we be surprised? If, as we read in history books, in 19th century a colonial power like France or Belgium could suppress local laws replacing them with European ones in the Kiplingian spirit of civilizing the locals, why wouldn’t today’s Moslems do the same — impose their will on Europeans among whom they live, since Moslems know the right and proper way of life, while the natives don’t? If it is Islam that is the real “light of civilization,” than it would be natural for Moslems to feel that it is they who are the rightful masters of Sweden, Denmark, France, Germany, the UK, the locals being but mere un-Moslemed savages devoid of any sense of what’s true and right — Kipling’s “half-devil and half-child”!

It should not be hard for any multiculturalist — necessarily well-read in the history of their ancestors’ imperialism that is part of the penitent history curriculum, and therefore well-aware of its tenets, to project that imperialist mindset to others. Isn’t this called “empathy”? Try to empathize with someone for whom Islam is the epitome of God’s will, and who is stepping on the shores of the land where natives are unaware of Islam’s obvious truth — and hence, are of necessity savages?

Put yourself in those Moslems’ shoes. Ask yourself the question they must be asking themselves: shouldn’t the ignorant natives get civilized? Shouldn’t they be taught the right, Islamic way to live? Isn’t it unnatural (let alone annoying) that they should stick to their error? Shouldn’t they be made to abandon it?

Well, the answers to all suchlike questions are an obvious “yes.” Hence, the in-your-face behavior — behavior of the conquerors, of the natural, rightful masters who demand what is their (and more importantly, God’s) due.

Most natives look the other way, writing off this this behavior, even when it becomes a little too disturbing, to “culture” of the newcomers — which should just be added to a country’s priceless multicultural treasury. Those who see danger in the newcomers and treat them as imperialists bent on takeover are nothing but racists and bigots, to be shunned, their voices ignored.

Is it possible to break through the thick wall of political correctness that protects this goody-goody attitude?

Let’s try. This terminology is that of moral outrage: racism and bigotry are morally-charged terms. So what if we look at the problem from a non-moral, but purely intellectual standpoint? What if, instead of treating Islamism as an anthropological phenomenon (and therefore, subject to “multiculturalism”) we treat it as an intellectual one — and use this approach, examine the Moslem newcomers’ intellectual pretensions?

After all, their staked position is intellectual: they claim to know the truth — which is why they try to thrust it on others (much like what Galileo did, arguing against the geocentric system and getting into trouble with the Inquisition).

“Truth” is of course a completely different frame of reference than “culture,” and the West is extremely well-equipped to deal with it. And a look at the claims to truth offered by the Islamists show that Islamism has a fatal logical flaw: it simply does not follow from Mohammed’s claim that God talked to him, that God indeed talked to him. It is simply impossible for anyone to know whether He did. Galileo invited other astronomers to verify his observations — but there is no telescope with which one can verify the origin of Mohammed’s “observations” that are recorded in the Koran. The term “truth” simply does not apply to it, toppling the entire edifice of Islamism — and this renders Islamists’ unsubstantiated (and unsubstantiateable) claim to knowing the truth idolatrous, to use religious terminology.

But if the Islamists are wrong, so are we in the West, too. We treat as “culture” that what claims to be a science — but is really a pseudo-science, gone badly awry right at the onset as a result of a simple error embedded in its chain of reasoning, its claims to truth being utterly worthless.

Once the West’s error (a “category error,” to use the exact term used by logicians) is corrected, it turns out that it is not the Westerners who are benighted, and in need of instruction and correction by the newly-arrived and still-arriving Islamists. It is in fact just the other way around — it is the Islamists who have it wrong and should stand corrected — both in the West, and in their (darn it, I still can’t recall Trump’s term!) native lands which they fled.

The West with its freedoms — including the freedom of criticizing, and even poking fun at Islam — is based on an intellectual system that is vastly superior to that practiced by Islamists. We should not allow the new arrivals to replace what is good with imported Islamism that is definitely wrong.

Moreover, the Islamic countries that still treat Islam as final truth, need to abandon their stance, even if it leads to Western-style “multiculturalism.”  Call it “Western imperialism” if you will — but free reason is indeed a civilizing force, and the reason — and very basic reasoning — tell us that Islamist imperialism is rooted in error and must end for good.

Lev Tsitrin is the author of “The Pitfall Of Truth: Holy War, Its Rationale And Folly

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4 Responses

  1. If the Muslim’s belief that Allah’s message was given to Mohammad via an angel is not confirmed by evidence, how about the beliefs that God spoke/instructed Adam, Eve, Abraham, Moses, …?
    Islam’s logic accepts paradox, call it ante-logic, pre-‘Western’ logic.
    Simply put, if its been tradition in Islam for 1000+ years it’s true for Al-Lah no matter what infidels say.
    Live with it or resist it peacefully or violently!

  2. OK, but large bodies of people who practice other belief systems also ultimately rely on the existence of things not in evidence, at least if by “evidence” we mean verifiable facts about the material world.

    Nothing of that sort backs up the claims of the Jewish or Christian, Hindu or Buddhist religions. Vast tracts of more or less secular philosophy relies on tortured argumentation from arbitrary first principles, or just restatement of those principles as though obvious.

    Nor would I be any different. Nothing in the material world proves the existence of human rights, in general or in the specific interpretation we call “natural rights” or natural law. These too once relied on the arbitrary belief in a Deity who spoke to humans and gifted us a way to live, and for a couple of centuries philosophers have followed the path of Kant and others to try to assert that they exist in nature or float freely absent said Deity.

    We still assert their truth.

    It’s not that I don’t agree with the thrust here, it’s just that this specific line of argument bears no weight.

    1. Good points. My reply would be, that religiosity comes in two completely different (and in fact, opposite) varieties: faith and idol-worship. Faith is hope that the doctrine that is appealing (or into which one is born) is right. A person who has faith will be the first to admit that their views are not necessarily true, but strongly appealing.
      Idolatry is something altogether different: a human making a god for himself to worship, assuring himself that this is “true god”. Dedication to such a god can be extreme (child sacrifices are a historical fact).
      And than, there are consequences to consider. Years ago, I spoke to a bunch of Evangelical Christians making to them the exact same point as here. Their reply was, you are right, but what’s the harm?
      With Islamism, we know what the harm is: death and destruction. So pointing out to the fact that Islamism is idolatry is — given that idolatry is to them a worst sin possible — necessary if we hope to put a stop to terrorism. The distinction between truth and religion, faith and idolatry needs to be made, loud and clear.

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