Responding to Islamic Violence – Which Interpretation of the Quran is the right one?

images-3Adam Walker, Spokesperson of the London based Ahmadiyya Muslim Youth Association, has written an article in the Independent entitled “Are peaceful Muslims in denial about their religion?“, and there he makes a case for the Quran being fundamentally a non-violent text. Such a stance is of course to be applauded … oh but wait, there is a bit of a problem here, the issue we face is that the approach he takes is one that adds to the underlying problem that Islam faces and does not actually address the root cause at all.

OK, so when faced with a text that contains verses such as the following, then how does one take a non-violence stance?

Sura (8:55) – Surely the vilest of animals in Allah’s sight are those who disbelieve

Sura (48:29) – Muhammad is the messenger of Allah. And those with him are hard (ruthless) against the disbelievers and merciful among themselves

Sura (9:30) – And the Jews say: Ezra is the son of Allah, and the Christians say: The Messiah is the son of Allah… Allah (Himself) fights against them. How perverse are they!

Sura (8:12) – I will cast terror into the hearts of those who disbelieve. Therefore strike off their heads and strike off every fingertip of them

Sura (9:123) – O you who believe! Fight those of the unbelievers who are near to you and let them find in you hardness

etc…

There is sadly rather a lot more like the above, so when faced with the above quotes, Mr Walker takes the following line …

The Koran clearly states that it contains two types of verses: context-independent verses, and context-dependent verses. Context-independent verses are unambiguous and timeless principles which can be applied in every situation. Context-dependent verses are those that are specific to particular situations, and can’t be read in isolation. 

For the curious the actual Quran reference there is 3:7 and reads as follows …

He it is Who has revealed the Book to you; some of its verses are decisive, they are the basis of the Book, and others are allegorical; then as for those in whose hearts there is perversity they follow the part of it which is allegorical, seeking to mislead and seeking to give it (their own) interpretation. but none knows its interpretation except Allah, and those who are firmly rooted in knowledge say: We believe in it, it is all from our Lord; and none do mind except those having understanding.

… and he then in essence proceeds to use this verse to assert that the violent nasty bits can be discarded and only the nice surgery bits are to be read as literal truth?

Sound familiar?

It should do, because that is what most religious people do what faced with some of the numerous rather embarrassing quotes within whatever holy book they embrace. For example, the bible is very much a pro-slavery book from cover to cover and even contains explicit instructions on how to correctly beat your slave (yes really, apparently it is fine as long as your slave does not die after the beating). Oh but wait, apparently that no longer applies because that was the Old Testament. The New Testament, the bit in which we find “Slaves Obey your Masters”, is now the bit to follow. Oh but wait, that last quote really means … well you get the idea, and so that is how it all plays out, everybody picks the bits they like and will rationalise the rest away.

This is exactly what Mr Walker is doing here. He points out that the Quran says some bits are literal and some bit are not and then happily declares the violent bits to not be literal.

On what basis does anybody decide which bits are literal and which bits are not?

Welcome to “Belief 101” because this is were we discover that each and every single variation of all beliefs will of course assert that their specific interpretation is the right one, and that every other alternative is wrong, hence “they” (which means basically anybody who is not them) is wrong and is a false believer and deserves whatever punishment that the deity of choice has lined up (according to their specific selection).

Non-Violence

Mr Walker is a member of a specific variation of Islam, the Ahmadiyya community, and they are wholly and completely committed to the idea of complete non-violence.

That stance is to be applauded.

Sadly, this community is tiny and does not even represent 1% of all the Muslims on the planet today. As for all the other Muslims, well they consider the Ahmadiyya to be heretics, infidels, and not real Muslims at all, so much so that they have been subjected to various forms of religious persecution and discrimination since the movement’s inception in 1889, so any stance they take on any topic will be instantly dismissed by the vast bulk of the Muslim community because it is coming from those they perceive to be non-Muslim.

There is an ever deeper problem here

The key issue is this – The mechanics of the thinking being following here is exactly the same steps being following by most other variations of Islam including ISIS, and so advocating this approach is to in effect endorse the mechanics following by ISIS and others to justify what they do.

Basically …

  • The Quran is perfect and divine, and was not just authored by a human
  • The Quran says some bits are relevant to now and some bits are allegorical

… and then the dividing line between the literal and the allegorical mysteriously turns out to be a precise echo of whatever agenda is currently on the table, and so you can happily take this approach and justify almost anything at all.

There needs to be a recognition that the book is just that … a book …  and that it not only contains some guidance, but also contains stuff that is complete and utter bullshit.

Would any Muslim ever find such a thought palatable, surely they would be hostile to such an approach?

Well it turns out that most already do take this exact stance, they simply don’t realise that they do. The cosmology contained within the Quran from cover to cover is a primitive 7th century flat-earth cosmology. When faced with the rather stark reality that the earth is not flat, the vast majority of Muslims quite rightly reject that 7th century flat-earth cosmology as bullshit, and happily ignore it because it is clearly wrong.

In exactly the same manner, they also need to reject the violent verses, not simply because they are allegorical but because they are morally and ethically wrong.

Does everybody reject the flat-earth cosmology?

Nope, and so the idea that the book is divine and hence always right is the core idea that needs to face robust criticism, especially when the alternative leads not just to violence, intolerance, misogyney, homophobia and murder, but to a complete denial of reality like this … (“Evidence that the Earth is Standing Still”, Islamic University of Medina, Saudi Arabia. First edition, p. 23.) …

Shaykh_Abdul-Aziz_Ibn_Baaz_flat_earth_-_Google_Search

2 thoughts on “Responding to Islamic Violence – Which Interpretation of the Quran is the right one?”

  1. Thanks for pointing out verse 3:7 of the Koran. I had come across it before but hadn’t realised its significance. I notice that Adam Walker uses rather obvious sleight of hand to to get it to appear to back up his claim. Your translation uses the term “allegorical” and his own Ahmadi translation (by Sher Ali) uses the phrase “susceptible of different interpretations”. Neither of these has anything to do with being “context-dependent”. Mohammed’s commands to slay the infidel are neither allegorical nor susceptible of different interpretations. They mean just what they say, slay the infidel, but the great issue is whether they refer only to the infidels Mohammed happened to be fighting at the time or all infidels forever. I happen to think it is the latter and my conviction is only strengthened by the fact that the only counter arguments I can find are deceptive ones like Mr Walker’s.

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