Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

The Myth of Islamic Tolerance

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Subject
  
Islamic Studies

Media type
  
Hardcover

ISBN
  
978-1-59102-249-7

Author
  
Robert Spencer

Publisher
  
Prometheus Books

OCLC
  
55982393

3.9/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Publication date
  
January 31, 2005

Pages
  
594

Originally published
  
31 January 2005

Page count
  
594

Editor
  
Robert Spencer

The Myth of Islamic Tolerance t1gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQpS9HVkSoUC7M2Mk

Similar
  
Robert Spencer books, Other books

The Myth of Islamic Tolerance: How Islamic Law Treats Non-Muslims is a collection of 63 essays edited by Robert Spencer. It deals with the history of non-Muslim populations during and after the conquest of their lands by Muslims.

Contents

Overview

The book contains 17 chapters by Bat Ye'or, as well as essays by Ibn Warraq, Walid Phares, David Littman, Patrick Sookhdeo, and Mark Durie. The writers opine that attitudes of Muslims today are informed by the tenets of Islam. It covers topics including sharia law and antisemitism.

Reviews and reception

A November 2004 review of the book in Publishers Weekly said the book's theme "merits exploration", but that the book does not explain why Islam is "inherently intolerant". An August 2005 review of the book in Asia Times opined that:

... The Myth of Islamic Tolerance warrants our attention. Any study of contemporary Islam would be incomplete without it. Collectively, the essays expose an unsettling fact: that Islam's famed tolerance of non-Muslims has over the centuries fallen well short of an embrace ... However, the book is full of flagrant distortions and glaring omissions.

In September 2005 book review in The Middle East Journal reviewed the book, and a June 2006 book review in First Things said that the book "might be described as an extended bill of indictment against Islam and a debunking of the still commonly heard claim that Islam has been and is tolerant of minorities."

Writing in National Review in March 2007, Dinesh D'Souza described The Myth of Islamic Tolerance as being attractive to those who would like to criticize Muslims at large for 9/11. He suggested that the book uses a strategy of selective quotations from the Koran, which he calls "history for dummies".

Dr. Akbar Ahmed, professor of Islamic studies at American University, described the book as an example of one of the most humane religions in the world being misrepresented as a violent one. In his book Beyond the Veneer, Ioannis Gatsiounis says that the book "struggles to find an enlightened balance", as it sometimes overlooks complexities while at the same time avoiding a trend in many circles of viewing the issue it addresses solely as a non-religious one.

References

The Myth of Islamic Tolerance Wikipedia