So I used to have this unwavering respect for Islam, always loudly claiming that the opressive and terrorist acts carried out by Muslims were those of a minority fundamentalist/extremist sect and not representing the values of moderate Muslims.
But recently, I have begun to rethink my thoughts on Islam, terrorism, and violations of human rights. For some reason, the historical experience of Christianity in Europe took a different path from that of the historical experience of Islam.
European Christianity had its periods of oppression and blood-thirst: Inquisition, Crusades, and so forth. And yet, by the time of the Enlightenment, European Christians were beginning to relax somewhat in the presence of non-conforming Christians, agnostics, and atheists.
What happened in the historical experience of Islam? Because today, we still have entire Islamic countries that base their laws on theocracy and rigid interpretation of the Koran whereas we have no examples of Christian nations that do the same (only with the Bible). What led Muslims to reject their own people's great cultural, intellectual, and scientific achievements they had made during the Middle Ages? There was a possibility that Islam could have flowered and grown by reconciling the coexistence of secular knowledge with religion just as it has happened with European Christianity. What happened? What are people's thoughts on this?
And one more thing; why do I not hear enough so-called moderate Muslims loudly denouncing terrorism, and violations of human rights done by fanatical Muslims? I'm talking about moderate Muslims who could do so in relative safety, if they live in Westernized countries.
But recently, I have begun to rethink my thoughts on Islam, terrorism, and violations of human rights. For some reason, the historical experience of Christianity in Europe took a different path from that of the historical experience of Islam.
European Christianity had its periods of oppression and blood-thirst: Inquisition, Crusades, and so forth. And yet, by the time of the Enlightenment, European Christians were beginning to relax somewhat in the presence of non-conforming Christians, agnostics, and atheists.
What happened in the historical experience of Islam? Because today, we still have entire Islamic countries that base their laws on theocracy and rigid interpretation of the Koran whereas we have no examples of Christian nations that do the same (only with the Bible). What led Muslims to reject their own people's great cultural, intellectual, and scientific achievements they had made during the Middle Ages? There was a possibility that Islam could have flowered and grown by reconciling the coexistence of secular knowledge with religion just as it has happened with European Christianity. What happened? What are people's thoughts on this?
And one more thing; why do I not hear enough so-called moderate Muslims loudly denouncing terrorism, and violations of human rights done by fanatical Muslims? I'm talking about moderate Muslims who could do so in relative safety, if they live in Westernized countries.
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