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* [http://podcast.shirenetworknews.net/:entry:tuatara-2006-10-15-0000/ Robert Spencer discusses "The Truth about Muhammad" on Shire Network News (Part 1)]
* [http://podcast.shirenetworknews.net/:entry:tuatara-2006-10-15-0000/ Robert Spencer discusses "The Truth about Muhammad" on Shire Network News (Part 1)]
* [http://podcast.shirenetworknews.net/:entry:tuatara-2006-10-22-0003/ Robert Spencer discusses "The Truth about Muhammad" on Shire Network News (Part 2)]
* [http://podcast.shirenetworknews.net/:entry:tuatara-2006-10-22-0003/ Robert Spencer discusses "The Truth about Muhammad" on Shire Network News (Part 2)]

{{Criticism of religion}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Truth About Muhammad, The}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Truth About Muhammad, The}}

Revision as of 05:57, 22 February 2011

The Truth About Muhammad
AuthorRobert Spencer
LanguageEnglish
PublisherRegnery Publishing
Publication date
September 15, 2006
Publication place United States
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
Pages256
ISBN978-1596980280

The Truth About Muhammad: Founder of the World's Most Intolerant Religion (2006) is a controversial book by Robert Spencer, the director of Jihad Watch and Dhimmi Watch.

In the book the author proposes to present a "scrupulously accurate account of what Muhammad said and did" from the writings of the early biographers of Muhammad such as Ibn Ishaq, Ibn Sa'd al-Baghdadi, Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari as well as the Qur'an and the hadith collections of Bukhari and Muslim. In the examination of the early sources, Spencer gives his view on the events of Muhammad's life which are invoked by contemporary Islamic clerics, governments, advocates and Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi today as a standard for their behaviour.

The book aims to draw a connection between Muhammad's legacy and modern day practices like child marriages and divorce laws, punishments such as stoning for adultery and amputation for theft, execution for apostasy as well as the jihad and dhimmi doctrines adopted towards non-Muslims, as found in some parts of the Muslim world.

The book was on the New York Times Best Seller list for the week ending October 14, 2006.[1]

Response

Karen Armstrong criticizes the book as follows:

Like any book written in hatred, his new work is a depressing read. Spencer makes no attempt to explain the historical, political, economic and spiritual circumstances of 7th-century Arabia, without which it is impossible to understand the complexities of Muhammad’s life. Consequently he makes basic and bad mistakes of fact. Even more damaging, he deliberately manipulates the evidence. When discussing Muhammad’s war with Mecca, Spencer never cites the Koran’s condemnation of all warfare as an ”awesome evil”, its prohibition of aggression or its insistence that only self-defence justifies armed conflict. He ignores the Koranic emphasis on the primacy of forgiveness and peaceful negotiation: the second the enemy asks for peace, Muslims must lay down their arms and accept any terms offered, however disadvantageous. There is no mention of Muhammad’s non-violent campaign that ended the conflict. People would be offended by an account of Judaism that dwelled exclusively on Joshua’s massacres and never mentioned Rabbi Hillel’s Golden Rule, or a description of Christianity based on the bellicose Book of Revelation that failed to cite the Sermon on the Mount. But the widespread ignorance about Islam in the West makes many vulnerable to Spencer’s polemic; he is telling them what they are predisposed to hear. His book is a gift to extremists who can use it to ”prove” to those Muslims who have been alienated by events in Palestine, Lebanon and Iraq that the west is incurably hostile to their faith.[2]

To this Spencer replied:

This is, of course, a familiar tactic of Leftists, jihadists, and those who sympathize with them: characterize any accurate report of their activities as "hatred." Never mind that my book works strictly from the earliest extant Islamic sources, and only reports what they say. If there is any "hatred" in it, it comes from those sources, not from me. [...] Reading this, I doubt Armstrong actually read the book. Or maybe she just wants to make sure no one else reads it. In fact, anyway, the beginning of chapter three, and many other passages throughout the book, are devoted to explaining "the historical, political, economic and spiritual circumstances of 7th-century Arabia. [3]

The government of Pakistan confiscated all copies of the book and banned it on 20 December 2006 citing "objectionable material" as the cause.[4] Spencer responded that the book does not assert anything that is not readily verifiable in the sources he provides.[5]

See also

References and notes

Videos

Audio