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Is Islam Secure in its
Own Faith? (1)
Rudolf
Ogoo Okonkwo
rudolfokonkwo@aol.com
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Even crazy Benito Mussolini reacted
like a normal human being when a group of Arab ambassadors informed him of their
desire to build a mosque in Rome. “There will be a mosque in Rome,” the Fascist
ruler said, “only when a Roman Catholic Church is permitted in Mecca.”
In
the city of St Peter, off the foot of Monte Antenne, now stood an edifice that
has been called the largest mosque in Europe. Its main hall can take two
thousand worshipers. Its significance did not escape Abdul Qayuum Khan, the
Pakistani Director of the Islamic Cultural Center in Rome given the right to
build the mosque. He told the New York Times that, “Even if it is not the
largest … it is the most important mosque in Europe. The simple fact that it is
the only one located in the heart of
Christianity, in the Mecca of Catholicism,
you might say.”

The
Catholic Church initial objection to building a mosque in Rome
was dropped after the Second Vatican Council in
1965. Thereafter, permission to build was granted by the Italian government to
the Islamic Center and a 7-5 acre undeveloped lot was donated. The $40 million
building was financed by Islamic countries like Saudi Arabia.
“For
centuries, Islam and Christianity were in conflict,” said Paolo Portoghesi, the
Chief Architect of the project to the Times.
“This
is an expression of the opening of dialogue among the different religions.”
This
dialogue recently reached its zenith when King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia visited
Pope Benedict XV1 at the Vatican. It was the first of such visits ever.
I feel
it is a perfect time to discuss Islam and the rest of us. I am psyched that
maybe this time, the discussion will be fruitful. As against the discussion we
usually have after some Muslims massacre Christians on their streets, burn up
churches, hotels and stone foreign embassies because either the moon woke up on
the wrong side of the sky or a cartoonist in a frozen room in Sweden drew
Prophet Mohammed without putting in parenthesis, sallallaahu 'alaihi wa
sallam, Peace Be Upon Him.
Interestingly, King Abdullah can wake up, hop into his private jet and visit the
Pope in Vatican but the Pope cannot visit King Abdullah in Mecca. In fact,
non-Muslims are not allowed to visit Mecca. King Abdullah can worship in a
mosque in Rome but the Pope cannot worship in a church in all of Saudi Arabia.
In fact, there is no church in all of Saudi Arabia.
In an
article published in the October 18, 2003 edition of La Civilta Cattolica, a
journal edited by a group of Jesuits in Rome, the situation of Christians in
Muslim countries were described as one burdened by discrimination and often
bloody persecution. The article described Islam in all of its history as being
in perpetual warlike poise pushing to conquer all it ever came in contact with.
If
history can be our guide, the journal tells us that Libya, Tunisia, Algeria,
Morocco and Egypt once had vibrant Christian communities from which emerged
several important personalities of the early church. These North African
countries produced church heavy weights theologians and philosophers like Saint
Cyprian, Saint Augustine, Saint Fulgentius, Bishops of Carthage, Hippo and Ruspe
respectively. With the conquest of Islam came the total annihilation of
Christians in these North African countries, except for Egypt where a tiny
Coptic Orthodox Christian community still exist.
The
same happened in the Middle Eastern countries of Lebanon, Syria, Jordan,
Palestine and Mesopotamia, modern day Iran and Iraq. Aside from Lebanon where
there is still a significant population of Christians constantly under threat,
the rest of the countries successfully vanquished the once thriving Christian
communities.
This
disappearance of Christians is achieved by religious persecution. It may be
violent or non-violent. In each instance, Muslims invoked the Islamic law that
divides the world into three distinguished camps – dar al-harb, dar al-islam
and dar al-‘ahd, the house of war, the house of Islam and the house of
accord respectively. Those countries in the house of war category, like infidels
in non-Muslim countries, must be subjected to the offensive and external Jihad,
holy war.
Those
in the house of accord category, like Christians and Jews (often called people
of the Book) Hindus, non-Muslims in Muslim countries, for over 1000 years were
subjected to dhimma, an inferior social order that forbid display or
expression of their religion. Under dhimma, for instance, ringing of
church bell was prohibited, so were solemn funerals, procession of the cross,
selling of church objects like the Bible. Building of places of worship was
banned because the lands acquired through Muslim conquest were all considered
sacred to Allah. Even at that, one could lose his dhimma status by
refusing to pay taxes, offending the prophet Mohammed and the Islamic religion,
converting a Muslims to another religion, taking up arms against Muslims etc.
Such acts received punishments as severe as death penalty.
The
Koran stated in Sura 9:29 that the people of the Book must be made to pay double
taxes. Under dhimma, non-Muslims were subjected to other restrictions:
they were not allowed to bear arms, bear witness in trials of Muslims, ride a
horse, take as wife daughters of Muslims, inherit from Muslims or act as a
government official etc. They must also dress in a special way. The only way for
those consigned to this low social status to escape these restrictions was to
emigrate or to convert to Islam in order to partake in a meaningful life. It was
therefore no surprise that after 1000 years of dhimma, Muslim landscapes
successfully eradicated its Christian population.
… to be continued
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Rudolf Ogoo Okonkwo will be signing copies of his book, Children of
a Retired God at the 100 Cummings Center, suite 221 E, Beverley,
Massachusetts on Sat. June 14th at 5pm; at Igwebuke Hall in Hapeville, near
Atlanta International Airport, Georgia on Sat. June 28th at 8.pm and at the
People’s Club Hall in Boston on Saturday, August 23rd, 2008 at 8.00pm. For more
information, contact Ehimen Edokpa at Integrity Business Group, 129 Union
Street, Lynn, Phone: 978-335-4451. More dates and venues will be announced as
soon as they become available. His latest books, How I Helped to Elect
Obama President & Africa: The Shit that Happened
will be out soon.
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