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Alexis de Tocqueville
examins the Koran
Shortly after his return from America,
Alexis de Tocqueville studied North African Islamic culture and
history — which included an analysis of the Koran (“Notes on the Koran,”
March, 1838) — and made two visits to Algeria (in 1841, and 1846),
becoming one of the foremost experts on these matters, while serving as
a French parliamentarian.
Before visiting Algeria, Tocqueville studied the
Koran, writing an analysis of the first 18 suras (chapters) in careful,
if succinct notes, and elaborating his summary conclusions during
additional private observations and correspondence recorded through his
voyage to North Africa in 1841. Tocqueville opens his March 1838 “Notes
on the Koran” with these two observations:
Encouragement, commandments for holy war.
Necessity of obeying the Prophet, of obeying him as one does God.
He accurately documents
the Koran’s repeated references to jihad warfare, noting,
Sanctity of holy war encouraged with both energy and violence. …
Permission and commandment to kill infidels. Prohibition against
killing believers. … Cut off the hands and feet of those who fight
God and his prophet.
This discussion culminates, appropriately, in
Tocqueville’s more extended assessment of suras 8 and 9, which are
redolent with eternal proclamations justifying and describing the
conduct of jihad war against the non-Muslim infidel:
Spoils taken from the
enemy belong to God and to his envoy. Fear the Lord. Whoever turns
his back on the day of combat shall remain in hell. Fight infidels
until the point when there is no more schism and when holy
religion is universally triumphant. O believers! when you
march on the enemy, be resolute, obey God and the prophet, fear the
discord that extinguishes the fire of courage. Be firm. The
incredulous who refuses to believe in Islam is more abject than a
brute in the eyes of the Eternal. If the fortune of battle causes
those who violate the pact they have made with you to fall into your
hands, use torture to terrify their followers. God will ease your
task: 20 brave believers will crush 200 infidels, 100 will put
1,000 to flight. No prophet has taken prisoners without spilling the
blood of a great number of enemies. Feed on what you have taken from
the enemy. You shall have no society with believers who have
remained at home, until they have marched into combat. Believers who
have left their country to fight under the standard of faith and
those who have given aid to the prophet are the truly faithful ones.
Paradise is their portion.
Believers who tear
themselves from the bosom of their family to follow [God's] standard,
sacrificing their property and their lives, shall have the first
places in the realm of the heavens. They shall be the object of
God’s kindness; they shall live in gardens of delights and taste
eternal pleasures. Cease loving your fathers, your brothers, if they
prefer incredulity to faith. … Young and old, enter combat,
sacrifice your wealth and your lives for the defense of the faith, [for]
there is no more glorious advantage for you. Some believers have let
the prophet go, they have said, “Let us not fight during the heat!”
The fire of hell shall be much more terrible than that heat. …
O Believers! Fight your unfaithful neighbors. May they find
implacable enemies.
Tocqueville concludes his Koranic analysis in
the March 1838 “Notes” with these additional observations:
Everything that relates to war is precise; everything that
relates to morals … is general and confused. … As in practically all
of the Alcoran [Koran], Muhammad concerns himself far more
with making himself believed than with giving rules of morality. And
he employs terror much more than any other motive.
Prior to visiting Algeria, Tocqueville
supplemented his initial reflections on the Koran with further
meditations on both this defining Muslim text and Islam:
Reading the latter [Koran] is one of the
most … instructive things imaginable because the eye easily
discovers there, by very closely observing, all the threads by which
the prophet held and still holds the members of his sect. … [T]hat
the first of all religious duties is to blindly obey the prophet,
that holy war is the first of all good deeds … all these doctrines
of which the practical outcome is obvious are found on every page
and in almost every word of the Koran are so striking that I cannot
understand how any man with good sense could miss them.
Jihad: Holy war, is an obligation for all
believers. … The state of war is the natural state with regard to
infidels. Only truces can be made [meaning...can only be interrupted
by a truce, not ended]. … After the victory, 4/5 of the booty
— land, buildings, and other property — of the defeated I shared
out. Two motives: fanaticism, cupidity.
Muhammadanism is the religion that most
thoroughly conflated and intermixed the powers in such a way
that the high priest is necessarily the prince, and the prince the
high priest, and all acts of civil and political life are more or
less governed by religious law. … [T]his concentration and this
conflation of power established by Muhammad
between the two powers … was the primary cause of despotism and
particularly of social immobility that has almost always
characterized Muslim nations.
And following his first sojourn in Algeria,
Tocqueville compared Islam’s lasting impact with that of Christianity
(and the latter’s possible disappearance), in an October 1843 letter to
Arthur de Gobineau:
If Christianity should in fact disappear, as so many hasten
to predict, it would befall us, as already happened to the ancients
before its advent, a long moral decrepitude, a poisoned old age,
that will end up bringing I know not where nor how a new renovation.
… I closely studied the Koran especially because of our position
with regard to the Muslim populations in Algeria and throughout the
Orient. I admit that I came out of that study with the
conviction that, all things considered, there had been few religions
in the world so dreadful for men as that of Muhammad. It is, I
believe, the major cause of the decadence today so visible in
the Muslim world and though it is less absurd than ancient
polytheism, it’s social and political tendencies, in my opinion much
more to be feared. I see it relative to paganism itself as a
decadence rather than an advance.
mirrored from Andrew Bostom in
pajamasmedia.
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