A reviewer
I have read several of Thomas' books so far and have been overall very impressed. His writing style is engaging and lively and this book has many lovely points. I could not put this book down for the first several chapters however, I became extremely disappointed when it came to the chapter about Islam. As a scholar of Near Eastern studies, I was amazed as his characterizing Islam as a 'warrior' religion 'bent on worldly conquest'. He erroneously points out that Muhammad 'the prophet Muhammad' gained prominence through raiding caravans when, in fact, his prominence came from those who followed him for his honesty 'he is called by both followers and enemies, 'Al-Amin', or the Trustworthy' and the beauty of the Quran which he recited to others. Besides that, his raid on the Meccan caravans which I am assuming he is referring to was done only after the Meccans delcared outright war on the Muslims and had been literally torturing them. He uses the word 'simple' over and over again to not only characterize Muhammad but also the Arab culture which was extremely diverse at the time and flourished in a variety of arts such as poetry. He also erroneously states how oppressive Islam was to women at the time compared to how liberating Christianity was, when Islam gave women the right to inherit property centuries before the Western women, just to give one example. Islam's attitude towards 'People of the Book' at the time was far more just than the attitude of Christians towards other religions-consider that Islam did not destroy churches or synagoges in most instances and allowed both Jews and Christians to continue to worship their religion under Islamic and this is explicitly stated in the Quran. Thomas erroneously states that this privilege was given to the 'People of the Book' only after 'Muhammad, in his simplicity,' was not accepted by Jews and Christians. In fact, both Christians and Jews accepted and appalauded Muhammad in the Arabian peninsula. The Jews of Yathrib or Medina welcomed him to emigrate to their city and they lived in peace. The Ehtiopian Christians provided Muhammad protection from the Meccans when he read to them one of the verses in the Quran about the Virign Mary and they wept at its beauty. I was surprised that such a highly praised historian gave in to such biases that exist in our society today 'he even akwardly mentions 9/11'. Even though he states we should not 'demonize all of Islam without exception', his erroneous facts make it hard not to. It is fine that he does not agree with the Islamic teachings, but as a historian he should not give in to generalizations. This short chapter of only 10 pages 'by far the shortest in the book' leaves the reader who has a least some knowledge of Islam and Middle Eastern history with a very sour taste in the mouth that taints the whole book. I would suggest that more time should have been spent on unbiased research especially in todays climate when so little is known about the Middle East in general in the Western world and so much hatred exists. With over a billion Muslims in the world we owe it to say the truth.
3 out of 5 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback.
Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.