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Taking on the hard questions about what the Islamic religion actually
teaches, Robert Spencer sets forth the potentially ominous implications
of those teaching for the future of both the Muslim world and the West.
To proclamations that Islam is a religion of peace, Spencer responds (in
chapters entitled with questions such as "Is Islam Compatible with
Liberal Democracy?" and "Is Islam Tolerant of Non-Muslims?") with
evidence, historical and recent, of harsh treatment of women, other
religionists, and social minorities in Islamic societies. Besides the
facts Spencer presents, his citations of the Qur'an; the
hadiths, or sayings and deeds of Muhammad; and Islamic
authorities across the liberal-to-fundamentalist spectrum verify
attitudes and practices that secular Westerners and present-day Jews and
Christians don't think of as peaceable, just, or decent. For instance,
slavery and polygamy may be waning in Islamic societies, but they aren't
disapproved of or banned because the Qur'an and
hadiths endorse them. Islam hasn't adapted to change nearly as
much as Judaism and Christianity have, and that accounts for its savage
relations with the West. Spencer doesn't see either Islam moderating or
the West regarding Islam realistically any time soon. Barring "some
wondrous intervention from the Merciful One," he concludes, the
immediate future "will be difficult." Alarmingly cogent.
Ray Olson