The Historical Reality of the Muslim  Conquests 
by Raymond Ibrahim 
March 1, 2012 
     Because it is now almost axiomatic for American school  textbooks to whitewash all things Islamic (see here for example), it  may be instructive to examine one of those aspects that are regularly distorted:  the Muslim conquests. 
     Few events of history are so well documented and  attested to as are these conquests, which commenced soon after the death of the  Muslim prophet Muhammad (632) and tapered off circa 750. Large swathes of the  Old World—from the India in the east, to Spain in the west—were conquered and  consolidated by the sword of Islam during this time, with more after (e.g., the  Ottoman conquests). 
     By the standards of  history, the reality of these conquests is unassailable, for history proper  concerns itself with primary sources; and the Islamic conquests are thoroughly  documented. More importantly, the overwhelming majority of primary source  materials we rely on do not come from non-Muslims, who might be accused of bias.  Rather, the foremost historians bequeathing to posterity thousands of pages of  source materials documenting the Islamic conquests were not only Muslims  themselves; they were—and still are—regarded by today's Muslims as pious and  trustworthy scholars (generically, the ulema).
     Among the  most authoritative books devoted to recounting the conquests are: Ibn Ishaq's  (d. 767) Sira ("Life of Muhammad"), the oldest biography of Muhammad;  Waqidi's (d. circa. 820) Maghazi ("Military Campaigns [of the Prophet]");  Baladhuri's (d. 892) Futuh al-Buldan ("Conquests of the Nations"); and  Tabari's (d.923) multi-volume Tarikh al-Rusul wa al-Muluk, ("History of  Prophets and Kings"), which is 40 volumes in the English translation. 
     Taken together, these accounts (which are primarily based on older  accounts—oral and written—tracing back to Muhammad and his successors) provide  what was once, and in the Muslim world still is, a famous story: that Allah had  perfected religion (Islam) for all humanity; that he commanded his final prophet  (Muhammad) and community (Muslims) to spread Islam to the world; and that the  latter was/is to accept it either willingly or unwillingly (jihad). 
     It  should be noted that contemporary non-Muslim accounts further validate the facts  of the conquests. The writings of the Christian bishop of Jerusalem Sophronius  (d.638), for instance, or the chronicles of the Byzantine historian Theophanes  (d.758), to name a couple, make clear that Muslims conquered much of what is  today called the "Muslim world." 
     According to the Muslim historical tradition, the  majority of non-Muslim peoples of the Old World, not desiring to submit to Islam  or its laws (Sharia), fought back, though most were eventually defeated and  subsumed.
     The first major conquest, renowned for its brutality,  occurred in Arabia itself, immediately after Muhammad's death in 632. Many  tribes which had only nominally accepted Islam's authority, upon Muhammad's  death, figured they could break away; however, Muhammad's successor and first  caliph, or successor, Abu Bakr, would have none of that, and proclaimed a jihad  against these apostates, known in Arabic as the "Ridda Wars" (or Apostasy Wars).  According to the aforementioned historians, tens of thousands of Arabs were put  to the sword until their tribes re-submitted to Islam. 
     The Ridda Wars  ended around 634. To keep the Arab Muslims from quarrelling, the next caliph,  Omar, launched the Muslim conquests: Syria was conquered around 636, Egypt 641,  Mesopotamia and the Persian Empire, 650. By the early 8th century, all of north  Africa and Spain to the west, and the lands of central Asia and India to the  east, were also brought under Islamic suzerainty. 
     The colourful accounts contained in the Muslim  tradition are typified by constant warfare, which normally goes as follows:  Muslims go to a new region and offer the inhabitants three choices: 1) submit  (i.e., convert) to Islam; 2) live as second-class citizens, or "dhimmis," paying  special taxes and accepting several social debilitations; 3) fight to the  death.
     Centuries later, and partially due to trade, Islam came to  be accepted by a few periphery peoples, mostly polytheists and animists, who  followed no major religion (e.g., in Indonesia, Somalia), and who currently form  the outer fringes of the Islamic world. 
     Ironically, these exceptions are now portrayed as the  rule in America's classrooms: many textbooks suggest or at least imply that most  people who converted to Islam did so under no duress, but rather through  peaceful contacts with merchants and traders; that they eagerly opted to convert  to Islam for the religion's intrinsic appeal, without noting the many  debilitations conquered non-Muslims avoided—extra taxes, second-rate social  status, enforced humiliation, etc.—by converting to Islam. In fact, in  the first century, and due to these debilitations, many conquered peoples sought  to convert to Islam only to be rebuffed by the caliphate, which preferred to  keep them as subdued—and heavily taxed—subjects, not as Muslim equals. 
     Meanwhile, as U.S. textbooks equivocate about the Muslim conquests, in  the schoolrooms of the Muslim world, the conquests are not only taught as a  matter of course, but are glorified: their rapidity and decisiveness are  regularly portrayed as evidence that Allah was in fact on the side of the  Muslims (and will be again, so long as Muslims uphold their communal duty of  waging jihad). 
     The dissimulation of how Islam was spread in the early  centuries contained in Western textbook's mirrors the way the word jihad, once  inextricable to the conquests, has also been recast. Whereas the word jihad has throughout the centuries  simply meant armed warfare on behalf of Islam, in recent years, American  students have been taught the Sufi interpretation of jihad—Sufis make up perhaps  one percent of the Islamic world and are often seen as heretics with aberrant  interpretations—which portrays jihad as a "spiritual-struggle" against one's  vices.
     Contrast this definition of jihad with that of an early  edition of the venerable Encyclopaedia of Islam. Its opening sentence  simply states, "The spread of Islam by arms is a religious duty upon Muslims in  general.… Jihad must continue to be done until the whole world is under the rule  of Islam.… Islam must completely be made over before the doctrine of jihad  [warfare to spread Islam] can be eliminated." Muslim legal manuals written in  Arabic are even more explicit. 
     Likewise, the Islamic conquests narrated  in the Muslim histories often mirror the doctrinal obligations laid out in  Islam's theological texts—the Koran and Hadith. Muslim historians often justify  the actions of the early Islamic invaders by juxtaposing the jihad injunctions  found in Islamic scriptures. 
     It should  also be noted that, to Muslims, the Islamic conquests are seen as acts of  altruism: they are referred to as futuh, which literally means  "openings"—that is, the countries conquered were "opened" for the light of Islam  to enter and guide its infidel inhabitants. Thus to Muslims, there is nothing to  regret or apologize for concerning the conquests; they are seen as for the good  of those who were conquered (i.e., the ancestors of today's Muslims).
     In closing, the fact of the Muslim conquests, by all standards of  history, is indisputable. Accordingly, just as less than impressive aspects of  Western and Christian history, such as the Inquisition or conquest of the  Americas, are regularly taught in U.S. textbooks, so too should the Muslim  conquests be taught, without apology or fear of being politically incorrect.  This is especially so because it concerns history—which has a way of repeating  itself when ignored, or worse, whitewashed. 
     Raymond  Ibrahim is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and  Associate Fellow at the Middle East Forum 
 
 
 
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