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About Amil Imani
Amil Imani is an Iranian-American writer, poet, novelist,
essayist, literary translator, public speaker, political analyst and a
pro-democracy activist who has been writing and speaking out about the danger of
radical Islam both in America and internationally. He has become a formidable
voice in America against Islamic terrorism as well as for the struggling people
of his native land of Iran. Imani has been educating Americans regarding the
danger of radical Islam, and has encouraged democracy for Iran and helping the
Iranian people. His numerous articles about radical Islam have been published in
many newspapers and magazines around the world as well as in thousands of
Internet magazines, websites and blogs. Imani's writings can be found on his
website
Amilimani.com. He is a regular go-to-guy on the
Iranian issues on BBC World News. He is also 2010 honoree of EMET: "the Speaker
of the Truth Award" at the Capitol Hill. Imani is the author of the smashing
book "Obama
Meets Ahmadinejad." |
Click here to purchase Amil Imani's new book:
Obama Meets Ahmadinejad |
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Recent Articles
Islam
on a Collision Course
The
Odyssey of Islamism in America
What
Is Islam?
Islam
& The Mental Immune System
The
Spirit of Israel Lives On
Mosques & The Islamization of America
The
Islamic Republic Is Not Iran
Islam
Must Be Stopped in America
Obama
Meets Ahmadinejad: An Excerpt
Understanding the Muslims Mindset
The
Turkish Conundrum
America the Vulnerable
Iran,
Islam & Cyrus the Great
Will
America Survive Islamofascisim?
America: Break the Silence on Islam
Muslims' Sheep Mentality
Liberal
Pacifism v. Islamic Extremism
The
Anachronism of Apostasy
The
Islamic Republic of Torture, Rape & Murder
A New
Day for Iran
Empowering Iranians to Dislodge the Mullahs
Christmas Spirit & Islam
The Making
& Dealing with Jihadists
Islam
Bashers Repent
Does Islam
Breed Violence?
Religion &
The Marketplace
Saluting
Cyrus the Great on His Day
President
Obama's Policy Disaster
An American
Artist Immortalizes Neda
Islam is
Misunderstood
The Islamic
Republic Compassion
Islam is
Fire
Saluting
the Committee with a Cause
A Call to
New Resolve
The Islamic
Republic of Iran: A Reality Check
Saluting
Chancellor Merkel
France
Surrenders to Ahmadinejad
Liberal-Islamist Alliance
In
Solidarity with the Iranian People
What is
Neda's Fourth of July Message?
Islam's
Victimization of Iran
Neda: An
Angel of Freedom
Today
Everyone Is an Iranian
Liberty vs.
Demagogues
Is Democracy the Killer of Liberty?
Honoring Nazanin: An Angel of Iran
Countdown to Disaster? Who Says?
Pres. Obama: What Is It You Do Not Understand?
Obama & Khamenei
An Appeal to Cultural Muslims
A Salute to Champions of Liberty
Turning Universities into Graveyards
The Story of the Liberty Gene
Chaos, Crisis & Terror Serves the Islamic Republic
Good Hate, Bad Love
Islam Demands Surrender
Click here
for more articles by Amil Imani |
Amil Imani
Islam on a Collision Course
February 4, 2011
When he was asked why the vast majority of Egyptians, the heirs to a great
pre-Islamic civilization, speak Arabic rather than Coptic, a leading Egyptian
historian replied: "Because we had no Ferdowsi," the tenth-century Persian poet
and the author of the Shahnameh (Book of Kings) who revived, not only the
Persian language, but Persian identity. He is known for his efforts to save the
Persian language, and the history, from oblivion. It has been noted that
Ferdowsi is Iran's Homer:
"Twice as long as Homer's Iliad and Odyssey taken together, the
Shahnameh blends Iran's ancient myths and legends with accounts of major
events in its past. Its 55,000 rhyming couplets chart the history of the Iranian
world from its creation to the fall of the Persian Empire in the seventh
century."
The cruel successful subjugation of the Persian people by the Arab invaders
whetted their appetite for further conquests. They ventured into the civilized
world—to Egypt, Syria, the Levant, Spain, and eventually to the gates of Vienna.
Cruelty and terror were their instruments of policy.
Out of all the peoples conquered by the Arab invasion in the seventh century,
the Persians are the only ones who can boast of a major literature in the
indigenous language that they were using before the conquest. The Persian
language, culture and traditions have been Iranians' shields against the Muslim
hordes and their barbaric Islamic ideology for the past 1400 years.
In English, this language is historically known as "Persian", though some
Persian speakers migrating to the West continued to use
inaccurately and inappropriately the word "Farsi" to identify their language
in English. This word gained some circulation in English-speaking countries.
"Farsi" is encountered in some linguistic literature as a name for the
language, used both by Iranians and by foreign authors. But in fact,
Farsi is the Arabized form of the native word Parsi. Due to a lack
of the 'p' phoneme in standard Arabic language, the word Farsi was born.
The
Academy of Persian Language and Literature has declared that the name
"Persian" is more appropriate, as it has the longer tradition in the western
languages and better expresses the role of the language as a mark of cultural
and national continuity.
The enumerating of the influences of Iranian civilization on the world cultures
is not the primary objective of this author and is out of the scope of the
present article. It is important, however, to demonstrate the salient point of
how Islam has been on a collision course with great ancient civilizations such
as Egypt, Persia and many more from its inception up to now. Just as it brutally
conquered and bitterly stifled one of the fountainheads of progress in ancient
countries, Islam still remains a very real threat to Western Civilization and to
any progressive civil society in the 21st century. It is virulently capable of
great destruction and retardation of minds, as we have seen in the past three
decades in Iran and elsewhere. Any and all enlightened citizens of this planet
who care about freedom, human rights and progress should take this clear and
present danger very seriously.
Egypt is one of the crown jewels of the ancient world that is rich in culture
and filled with illustrious antiquities. Unlike the Persians, the Egyptians
became completely Arabized and have little or no nostalgia for their ancient
past. Islam has dominated the Egyptian's lives.
Pew's Global Attitude Project poll shows that the Egyptians want more Islam
in politics.
Originally, the population of Egypt was made up of Christian Copts and estimated
to have been about nine million at the time of the Islamic invasion of 641 AD.
Today, Copts form almost 15% to 18% of Egypt's population. The Arab conquerors
imposed a special tax, known as
Jizya, on the Christians who acquired the status of
dhimmis. Egyptian converts to Islam, in turn, were relegated to the status
of
mawali.
Early on, the Prophet Muhammad explicitly said, "There is no compulsion in
religion." He further confirmed that admonition, "For you, your religion; and
for me, my religion." But as soon as he gathered enough power, he violated those
exhortations and set out to force his belief and way of life on others at the
point of the sword. Further, he conveniently ignored his own teaching by
unsheathing his sword at "the people of the book"—Jews and Christians. He spared
them death only if they converted or consented to pay the backbreaking religious
taxes of Jazya.
I believe that people in the West and in America are beginning to see the real
face of Islam and the danger it poses to the secular democratic societies. In
the past, Islam succeeded in largely displacing the magnificent Persian
civilization with a primitive myopic discriminatory system of belief. Presently,
once again with renewed vigor, Islam is aiming to destroy another
civilization—the Judeo-Christian civilization, a civilization that constitutes a
living falsification of the Islamic primitive and backward creed. Islamofascism
presents a clear and present danger, not only to Western civilization, but to
the entire civilized world as is evidenced by the ruling Islamists in places
such as Iran, the Sudan, Somalia, and Saudi Arabia.
With the current Egyptian uprising, the very notion of
rapidly advancing 1.5 billion human beings from illiteracy and barbaric 7th
century mentality up to 21st century western standards of democracy is an utter
impossibility. Over 60% of the 'Muslim world' (excluding Iran) are illiterate
and are only Quran trained. The task is insurmountable, in my opinion. I believe
first and foremost, we must free the Iranian people, draw them back into our
Western civilization and declare Islam a defunct ideology that has simply failed
in Iran.
While the Egyptian demonstrators are as much against Hosni
Mubarak as his tyrannical regime, they don't mind having ‘Sharia Law' injected
into their day-to-day life. On the contrary, the 2009 Iranian
protests were just as much against the Islamic Republic as they were against
Shi'a Islam. In fact, much of it was against Islam itself. People have
experienced what a primitive and defective system of belief Islam is and aim to
abandon it for good. In fact, millions of Iranians representing the entire
spectrum of society are demanding change from the repressive Islamic theocracy
to an open secular democracy.
Young Iranians, particularly the urban educated Iranians, are among the most
ardent believers in democracy in the world. Many view America as the country
that holds the best hope for spreading and protecting the high ideals of
democracy. In a sense, many Iranians feel a closer affinity with a democratic
Israel than all the neighboring Arab Muslim dictatorships. Although Islam was
imposed on Iran some 1400 years ago, Iranians deeply value their own ancient
non-Arab identity and have never fully surrendered to the Arab culture. During
the bloodletting past war, initiated by the late Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein
against Iran, all Arab states sided with the ‘Butcher of Baghdad' against Iran.
Yet, Israel was the only Middle Eastern country that remained neutral and in
fact helped Iran in the struggle. We Iranians don't forget our friends and we
also remember our enemies.
While I'm worried
that the Muslim Brotherhood will take over this quasi popular revolt in Egypt, I
am also hopeful that the Iranian patriots will see the Egyptian demonstrations
and be inspired to make yet another try at toppling the loathed mullahcracy in
Iran. |