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Psychology of Mohammed PDF

333 Pages·2008·2.23 MB·English
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Psychology of Mohammad By: Dr. Massoud Ansari 1 Preface This book should be read almost as though it were a work of fiction. It deals with a religion and events in the life of a man who pretended to be a prophet, elements of both subjects being far from truth and reality. In other words, the contents of this book explain realities about unrealities. Mohammed through his book, the Koran, both tried very hard to make realities out of unrealities. He fabricated a preposterous metaphysical faith that, by its appeal to the baser instincts of pagan Bedouins, began on the Arabian Peninsula and then, by bloody conquest, spread throughout the Mid-East, northern Africa and even into Spain. If anyone should ask why more than one billion of the world’s population follows this absurd creed and accepts Mohammed as a prophet, I would refer them inter alia to the works of two distin- guished scientists; Richard Dawkins, The Selfish Gene1 and Susan Blackmore, The Meme Machine.2 It is not the intention of the author to delve into the definition of religion because it would be impossible to find one that would be acceptable worldwide. I am writing this book to analyze and expose the psychology of the creator (Mohammed) of the religion called Islam; the despicably crafty methods he used to achieve his ambitions; the spirit and principles of Islam; and the drastic and destructive impact of that religion on Muslims’ minds in particular and the world in general. Religion should transcend human ethics, generate a sense of spiri- tuality, and establish principles to guide human behavior along paths of peaceful, caring coexistence with one’s fellow man. But no phe- nomenon in human history has caused as much bloodshed and fratri- cide as religion. One of many examples: at the beginning of the sixth century a Jewish king, Dhu Nowas, after having defeated the Chris- tians of Najran and having conquered their land, dug an enormous trench which he filled faggots and burned twenty thousand Christians alive. During the Crusades, Christians and Muslims butchered each other for 300 years; each side called it a Holy War. Crusaders commit- ted themselves with solemn vows and in the thirteenth-century were granted full Indulgence, i. e. remissions of all punishment for sins committed in their quests and an assurance of direct entry into heaven. The battle cry of Christians, Pope Urban II urged, should be Deus volt 2 [God wills it]. In a like manner, Muslim theocrats called fighting against Christians, Holy War (Jihad) against infidels and promised Muslim fighters a paradise with houris (virgin girls) among other delights in return for their deaths in battle. The Thirty Years War (1618-48) eventually involved almost all of the European powers and they were all convinced that they were fighting for a Holy Cause. The actual cause of these wars was the attempt of the Habsburg controlled Holy Roman Empire to impose Catholicism on Protestant principalities such as Sweden and the Netherlands. The war affected the lives of the 500 million or so people who were then living on the earth, and that of their descendents.3 Historians have written that in Brandenburg, Mecklenburg, Pomerania, the Palatinate, Wurttemberg, and parts of Bavaria, civilian population losses may have been 50 percent or more. Art, science, trade, and industry declined.4 Whole cities, villages, farms, and much property were destroyed. It took almost 200 years for the German territories to recover from the effects of the war. For 1400 years Jews and Muslims have been killing each other, the Muslims believing that they are following a sacred edict. Many of the tragic conflicts in the world today are rooted in long-standing religious differences and animosities. Even within a certain religions such as Islam, intramural differences have caused Sunnis and Shi’as to massacre each other for hundreds of years and Irish Catholics and Protestants have been at each other’s throats for over a century. Homo sapiens, is a Latin term meaning a wise or knowlegable man. But in actuality many times we simply ignore our innate wisdom, believe in superstitions and easily become the victim of impostors. Where religious ideas are concerned, we often become narrow-minded and ethnocentric because we naturally tend to identify religion with our heritage or with those conventional forms of religious behavior that we observe in our own communities. We simply believe the religious faith that our parents have chosen for us is the best and even thinking about the authenticity of that faith is profane. The new-born mind is a blank slate upon which all the environmental and cultural elements that are prevalent in our milieu, including our religious beliefs, are copied. The ubiquitous characteristic of religion is “sacred power.” What is the nature of this “sacred entity” that we unconsciously inherit from our forefathers? If all the multitude differences of worship are elimi- 3 nated, then the only remainder will be the common denominator of an unseen power, sanctity. If we remove sanctity from religion, then what remains will be superstition. In other words, sanctity plus superstition makes religion; religion minus sanctity makes superstition or myth. Therefore, sanctity is an attribute peculiar to religion. Sanctity is a man-made invisible power that man must live in contact with it or be condemned to chaotic experience where there is no foundation for reality.5 In the Elementary Forms of the Religious Life (1912), Emile Durkheim (1858-1917) writes, “The division of the world into two domains, which include everything that is sacred in one and everything that is profane in the other, is the characteristic feature of religious thought.” For Durkheim, sanctity is not an intrinsic status. Sacred is an appellation conferred by human beings on other persons, places, or things. This has been expressed as the vague and undefined Mana of the Melanesians; the Kami of primitive Shintoism; the fetish of the Africans; spirits possessing some human characteristics, that pervade natural places and animate natural forces; the Sutras and impersonal principle of Buddhism; Tao Te Ching and the Analects of Confucius, the Vedas and Upanishads of Hinduism, the gods and goddesses of the Greek and Roman Pantheons, the essence of Judeo-Christian faiths, the preposterous content of the Muslim’s Koran echoing the power- hungry, lascivious thoughts of Mohammed who presented himself as a prophet of God. It is this invisible sacred power which generates obedience and reverence, awe, and fear in the mind of whomever becomes the follower of a particular religion. The difference between a sacred power and that which is almost powerless is, according to the Dutch scholar Gerardus Van der Leeuw, what distinguishes the sacred from the profane. When elaborating on sacred power, der Leeuw points out that a unique characteristic of sacred power is the fact that it evokes an ambivalent response. He believes that sacred power awakens a profound feeling of awe which manifests itself both as fear and as being attracted. There is no religion whatever without terror, but equally none without love.6 The author of this book rejects Van der Leeuw’s characterization of religion insofar as its application to Islam. Throughout passages of the Koran, one can rarely find a verse indicating Allah’s “love” of his followers. Rather, the bloodthirsty Allah of Islam, among other threatening verses, clearly states: “Many of the jinns and human beings I have made for 4 Hell,” (Koran, VII: 179); “I have only created jinn and human beings that they may worship me” (Koran, LI: 56) and “I shall assuredly fill hell with all of you” (Koran, VII: 17, XXXII: 13). A truly ‘sacred power’ condemns evil and cruelty and embraces good and truth. In other words, in all religions sacred power, God, and truth are virtually synonymous. Plato said goodness, knowledge and truth are interrelated and since the goal of knowledge and truth is goodness, therefore, the goal of knowledge is also goodness. Gandhi believed that the truth is higher than God.7 Every religion teaches that rejecting the faith means turning away from truth. The sacred power turns evil and cruelty into good and truth. Plato, in Euthyphro also proposes the same idea, that what makes an action right is simply the fact that it is commanded by God. But, Socrates asks him’ “Is some- thing right because God commands it or does he command it because it is right?” Euthyphro replies that, of course, God commands it because it is right and it is against the nature of God to command cruelty. Most theologians would tend to agree with this norm. However, some writers including Soren Kierkegaard do not agree. As an ex- ample, Kierkegaard believes that the God’s command to Abraham to sacrifice his son Isaac (Genesis 22) is not just. In the Koran, Allah orders Muslims to kill the cursed people mercilessly (Koran, XXXIII: 61). The interesting point in this verse is that Allah not only com- mands Muslims to kill the cursed people, but they have to do it mercilessly and because it is the command of God it should be taken to be the “truth.” Women may not resist sexual abuse and the Koran commands that the men who abuse them get off free.8 Believing in such cruelty makes a person good Muslim; rejecting it arouses the wrath of Allah and condemnation to Hell. To be religious and have faith is to believe without asking questions such as an explanation of Mohammed’s trip to seven heavens on an animal similar to a donkey. This fantasy cannot be tested because God is invisible and invisibility is the sacred characteristic of Him. Thus blind faith protects a religion from rejection. Contrary to science, which will not validate any theory until it is tested, religious injunctions are considered to be “sacred” and de- manding proof will be “profane,” liable to punishment and hell-fire. In Islam, questioning the ascendance of Mohammed to seven heavens is considered “apostasy” and the punishment of an apostate in Islam is 5 death.9 Whatever has been discussed above boils down to the fact that in order to be a true believer all of the ludicrous and illogical precepts found in “sacred” books should be considered absolute truth and any doubt leads to hell. Thomas Moore brilliantly explains that, “Spiritual intelligence requires a particular kind of emptiness, a sophisticated ignorance, an increasing ability to forget what you know and to give up the need to understand.”10 Just as DNA is passed from generation to generation, so religion passes from parent to offspring. In his book, The Selfish Gene,11 Richard Dawkins for the first time proposed the theory of transmission of ideas through culture. Many authors after Dawkins followed his lead by devoting entire chapters to the subject. In countless lectures for the past two decades, Dawkins has strongly suggested that God is a meme and religion is akin to a viral transmitter. The recurrent pattern of social behavior defines a culture. John Teske quotes a number of scholars that as a result of their scientific studies they have come to the conclusion that both our cognitive and emotional lives may be locatable socially rather than individually; between rather than inside persons. Vygotsky and Luria also believe that even our thoughts and memories are dependent of our social life.12 The ideas of “belief in life after death” and “hell-fire” are self- perpetuating unconsciously because of their physical impact.13 The reason that religions with all of their weak points became successful was that their litany and doctrines were passed down from one person to another throughout the long history of humanity; at first orally, then in hand-copied manuscripts and, finally, in printed books and via the perorations of TV evangelists. That is why they have been with us for thousands of years, and why millions of people’s lives are controlled by ideas that are preposterous as well as historically inaccu- rate. Having analyzed the psychosocial mechanism of religiosity and how religious faith transfers like a cultural virus from generation to generation, now we have to understand that though all religions sprang from the same psychological compulsion, none of them is more inane than Islam. It is not too much to say that if Islam had not developed as one of the major world religions, civilization would have evolved with less bloodshed and to a higher level than it is today. Finally, one author writes: “The five oldest and most trusted Is- lamic sources don’t portray Mohammed as a great and Godly man. 6 They reveal that he was a thief, a liar, an assassin, a pedophile, a womanizer, a rapist, a mass murderer, a pirate, a warmonger, and a scheming and ruthless politician. It’s hardly the character profile of a religious leader.”14 I am writing this book with the sincere aim of helping the Mus- lims of the world understand the base origin of the god they worship and, hopefully, persuade them to stop throwing away their lives on such horribly misanthropic precepts such as jihad. It is also my hope that this book will help the non-Muslims understand the the nature of Islam and alert them to the implacable, vicious and endless menace of Jihad. 7 Chapter One A Short Account of the Life of Mohammed, Founder of Islam “Paradise is under the shade of swords.” Mohammed Sahis al-Bukhari, Vol. IV, N. 7. Prophets are more evil doers than professional liars, be- cause the former commit crimes on the pretext of divine au- thority, but the latter only fabricate falsehoods of their own making. Masud Ansari It is not the intention of this book to go fully into the details of the life of Mohammed, but in order to understand how an ambitious Arab camel driver was able to establish one of the most successful organized world-wide religions, by means of the sword, terror and guile, we must take a brief look into his origins and at those individuals who influ- enced his early thinking. To understand Islam and the Koran, we first have to shed light on the life of its author. Over the centuries, thou- sands of biographies of Mohammed have been written. This short biography is based on information gleaned from the works of the most reliable authors who have written about Mohammed, both Muslim and non-Muslim. The author will try to show how the mores of the clans and tribes that lived in and around Mecca, the birthplace of Islam in the early years of the seventh century, influenced Mohammed’s character. Analysis of the works of Islamic historians shows that the chief philosophy governing the creation of the Islamic empire, which at its apogee stretched from India and China in the East through Southeast Asia and the Mediterranean to Spain in the West, was “the ends justify the means,” and the chief tactical instrument was terrorism. 8 The Birth of Mohammed There is no agreement on Mohammed’s precise date of birth. It has been estimated as sometime between 567 and 573 CE. The most commonly accepted time is the autumn of the year 570 CE, the Year of the Elephant.15 The infant was born in Mecca, the Holy City of Islam on the western side of Arabian Peninsula. At the time of Moham- med’s birth, Mecca was inhabited by followers of the traditional Arabic idolatrous religion as well as adherents to the religion of Abraham (Koran, II: 130). Mohammed’s father, Abdullah, belonged to the clan Hashim, a sept of the Quraysh tribe. He married a woman named Amina, the daughter of Wahb, who belonged to the Bani Zuhra tribe. They named their only child Mohammed, a name derived from the root hamada, meaning ‘the praised.’ The Quraysh tribe during the previous two centuries had risen to undisputed pre-eminence in Mecca. They controlled, in so far as the nomadic nature of Arab life permitted, all civil, military, and religious matters. Mohammed’s Childhood It is a historic certainty that Mohammed was the first and only child in his family. Mohammed’s father, Abdullah, died while on a business trip to Medina either during his wife’s pregnancy or shortly after her delivery. At that time, the city of Mecca was considered unhealthy for infant children and it was customary for the Mecca nobles to employ a wet-nurse chosen from one of the neighboring nomadic tribes to nourish their infant progeny. The men reasoned that their wives, without the distraction of suckling infants, would dedicate themselves more assiduously to their pleasure and bear more children. Their infant children would benefit from the pure desert air and, away from the filth of the city, thrive in the black tents of the Bedouin. Thus the infant Mohammed, shortly after his birth, was placed with a Bedouin wet-nurse named Halima. She was a slave belonging to his uncle Abu Lahab and came from the clan Bani Saad, a branch of the great tribe 9 known as the Hawazin. Halima was encamped near Mecca and had been brought, along with other lactating women, to take care of Meccan infants. Mohammed’s infancy and part of his childhood was spent with Halima among the Bani Saad clan. When Mohammed was two years old, his foster-mother, Halima, weaned him and took him back to his mother. Amina was delighted with the healthy and robust appearance of her child but, because Mecca was still deemed insalubrious, she ordered Halima to take him back to the desert hoping that he would continue to thrive there. Even though the epileptic seizures that were to plague him later in life were not yet manifest and he appeared healthy, Amina’s insistence on takimg the child back to the desert beyond the usual term of suckling indicates that she believed he suffered from some constitutional delicacy.16 At the end of his fourth year, however, a strange event occurred that greatly concerned his foster-mother. This event is palpable proof that Mohammed was from childhood subject to emotional distur- bances.17 Koelle quotes Ibn Ishaq as follows: One day a friend of Mo- hammed asked him for an account of an event that occurred during his [Mohammed’s] childhood. Mohammed explained it thusly: “Once, while my foster-brother and I were tending the cattle in the desert, two men clothed in white and bearing a golden wash basin filled with snow came toward me. They split open my body, took out my heart, cut it open, and removed from it a black clot, which they threw away. Then they washed my heart and body quite clean with the snow and one said to the other, ‘Weigh him against ten of his people’ and, when he did so, I outweighed them. Then he said, ‘Weigh him against a hundred of his people’ and again I outweighed them. He continued, ‘Weigh him against a thousand of his people;’ and when I outweighed them, too, he said, ‘leave him now: for if thou wert to put his entire people onto the scale, he would outweigh them all.’”18 Tabari refers to the same story as told by Mohammed on another occasion. He quotes Abu Dharr al-Ghaffari who asked him, “How did you first know with absolute certainty that you were a prophet?” Mohammed answered this question as above with some minor differ- ences.19 Some historians have written that when Mohammed was 10

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the psychology of the creator (Mohammed) of the religion called. Islam; the despicably crafty methods he used to achieve his ambitions; the spirit and
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.