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Middle East studies in the NewsGerman Outreach To Muslims Backfires [on Muhammed Sven Kalish]
by Ed Morrissey http://hotair.com/archives/2008/11/19/german-outreach-to-muslims-backfires/ http://www.campus-watch.org/article/id/6337 An attempt by German Academia to provide outreach to moderate Muslims may have significantly backfired, with its leading light becoming an apostate. Muhammed Sven Kalish has written a paper asserting that the prophet Mohammed never existed at all, and that Islam started as a Christian heresy. Needless to say, the same people who threatened death on editorial cartoonists merely for depicting Mohammed are not pleased:
Of course, Christians and Jews have dealt with critical research for many years on the historical accuracy of their scriptures. Claims that Jesus, Moses, and David didn't exist have been made, debunked, and made yet again so often that they no longer make news any more. Christians and Jews express annoyance at times with these claims, but they don't react to them with violence and rage. Neither should Muslims, Kalisch says, and the reluctance to even offer such a hypothetical amounts to bigotry:
I agree with Kalisch's response, but I think he misplaces the blame. Western intellectuals have this reaction because of the massive rage that comes not just from a few nutcases but millions of Muslims when the Koran or the Hadiths receive any sort of critical scrutiny at all. The Prophet Cartoon outrage was particularly instructive, as the resultant demonstrations had millions of participants worldwide calling for death to the editorial cartoonists — and they just drew pictures of Mohammed. It's that predictable rage that makes Western academics place Muslims in general in the category of ill-tempered children. However, I'd take his hypothesis with a large, Lot's wife-sized grain of salt. Modern academics show little respect to the value of oral traditions in these revisionist theories. It's certainly possible that Mohammed never existed, but it strikes me as extremely unlikely. Just because his story didn't get written in a traditional paper medium during his life doesn't make him a fable. It could certainly impact the veracity of his quotes and the stories told in the Koran, but his existence? Especially given the disputes over his succession that broke out after his death — all of which have fairly clear records and resulted in the Sunni-Shi'ite split within a generation or two — I'd call Kalisch's theory a long shot. Nevertheless, it's precisely this kind of critical thinking that Islam requires to bring it into modernity and toleration. Unfortunately, it's also this kind of critical thinking that provokes the most reactionary behavior, which them shuts down critical thinking. This will be a long process indeed, one I'm certain Germany's academics had no intention of starting with such a controversial launch. Note: Articles listed under "Middle East studies in the News" provide information on current developments concerning Middle East studies on North American campuses. These reports do not necessarily reflect the views of Campus Watch and do not necessarily correspond to Campus Watch's critique.receive the latest by email: subscribe to campus watch's free mailing list
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