The dissenting
Muslim
SDSU’s Khaleel Mohammed looks to the Quran for his controversial
thesis: Palestine belongs to the Jews.
By Judd Handler
Jews have a wealth of sacred passages to point to when arguing
for a Jewish right to Palestine. But what about the Quran (Koran)? Does
it claim an equal Islamic right to Palestine?
Not according to Dr. Khaleel Mohammed. In fact, according to
this professor of religious studies at SDSU, the Quran grants Jews sacred
right to the land of Palestine. This controversial thesis has predictably
made him few friends in the Muslim community.
Born in the South American republic of Guyana and educated
at Montreal’s McGill University, Dr. Mohammed believes that the Quran
unambiguously says that the Holy Land belongs to the Jews. He’ll go
to any mosque and debate any doubting imam. He hasn’t received any
death threats from fanatic Muslims, but he has gotten some bitter emails.
Those don’t frighten or deter him from his mission: to combat the
growing tide of Islamic political radicalization by teaching what the Quran
actually says – not how the Islamic holy text is interpreted by imams.
“We should do everything possible to encourage…
moderates like him to step forth and speak out,” says Rabbi Efraim
Warshaw, who runs Star Speakers, a speaker bureau that represents Dr. Mohammed.
“If they are the majority in the Moslem community, as is so often
claimed, America needs to hear from them and learn what they think and believe.”
So what’s the reason for Dr. Mohammed’s support
for Israel? Chapter 5, verse 21 in the Quran offers proof of a divine promise
to the Jews of a land of their own in the Holy Land:
“Moses said to his people: O my people! Remember the bounty
of God upon you when He bestowed prophets upon you, and made you kings and
gave you that which had not been given to anyone before you amongst the
nations. O my people! Enter the Holy Land which God has written for you,
and do not turn tail, otherwise you will be losers.” According to
Dr. Mohammed, if God has “written” that the land is for the
Jews, what human can erase His handwriting?
Dr. Mohammed also cites chapter 2:40, which says, “O
children of Israel! Call to mind My favor which I bestowed on you and be
faithful to (your) covenant with Me, I will fulfill (My) covenant with you.”
Although the Quran never says point-blank, “Israel belongs
forever to the Jews, Dr. Mohammed thinks these verses are unequivocal in
God’s commandment that Israel be the religious homebase for the Jews.
Even Medieval-era Islamic scholars such as Ibn Kathir and Muhammad al-Shawkani
recognized this right. Al-Shawkani interpreted “That which God has
written for you” as “that which God has allotted and predestined
for you in His primordial knowledge.”
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Furthermore, Dr. Mohammed contends the Quran never mentions
Jerusalem as a holy city.
As Dr. Mohammed leans back in a chair in his SDSU office,
where the walls are lined with religious texts and posters of Bob Marley
and Muhammad Ali, he explains that, contrary to popular opinion, history
backs him up. “If you’re going to take it from a secular point
of view,” he says, “you must involve history, which states
very clearly that in 70 A.D. the Temple burned, and in the year 135 the
Jews were exiled. And in 638 the Muslims full well knew whom the land
rightly belonged to…. Muslims left the borders of Arabia to enter
a land that according to their own scriptures, belongs to the people of
Moses.” He likens Muslim occupation of the land – and failure
to help Jews reacquire the land – to complacency in the face of
a crime.
But a Muslim could claim that Muslims controlled the Holy
Land for centuries under the Ottoman Empire, a lot longer than modern
Jews have controlled Israel.
Doesn’t matter, according to the professor. “It’s in
the Muslim consciousness that the land first belonged to the Jews. It
doesn’t matter if the Jews were exiled 500 years or 2000 years,
the Holy Land, as mentioned in Quran belongs to Moses and his people,
the Jews.” Dr. Mohammed says the conditions of the birth of the
State of Israel – which included the violent displacement of some
Arabs – are irrelevant.
So why is it that most Muslims, not even the scholars, don’t
see things the professor’s way? Naturally, politics and greed play
a crucial role in fomenting hate, but a major reason is the hadith, commentaries
on the Quran that are somewhat akin to Judaism’s Talmud. Dr. Mohammed
says you must look at the context of the hadiths’ origins. They
were conceived during medieval times, when Jews were demonized.
Dr. Mohammed doesn’t dismiss all hadith out of hand,
but he has problems with inserted comments that change the meaning of
the original text. For example, after the passage “Enter the Holy
Land which God has written for you,” a hadith adds “…but
not after Moses died.” “Allah tells Muslims that the Quran
is perfect,” says Dr. Mohammed.
Dr. Mohammed says he has convinced many of his Muslim students
to see things his way. But they tell him they are afraid of speaking up
at their mosque. “In a mosque, I always win an argument,”
he claims.
In essence, Dr. Mohammed sees politics, not religion, as the culprit for
the radicalization of Islam. It is not that radical Islam flowers naturally
from the Quran, but rather that it was borne out of the resentment and
turmoil of numerous Muslim defeats: the end of the Ottoman Empire, the
foundation of Israel, the Six-Day War, the fall of Iraq.
In an effort to shift the Muslim consensus, Dr. Mohammed recently
started the Foundation for the Abrahamic Study of the Religion. He says
he’s gotten interest from students as far away as Saudi Arabia and
Pakistan. These students, although he’s never met them, seem to
possess a more open-minded interpretation of Islam, rather than a strict
and violent one.
“Islam sees itself as something of a continuation of
the Abrahamic message,” says the professor. “Christianity
and Judaism don’t deny democracy. In Quran, the prophet Mohammed
says ‘Consult the people’ and therefore, Quran doesn’t
deny the development of human thought and a world in which we can respect
one another for our differences and come up with new ideas to make a better
world.”
To read the full text of an interview with Dr. Mohammed, see
www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Printable.asp?ID=13587
For feedback, contact editor@sdjewishjournal.com.
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